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Page "Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School for Boys" ¶ 4
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trustees and Elizabeth
Elizabeth Reid died in 1866, and left the college in the hands of three female trustees.
In January 1754 Elizabeth Sisson approached Thomas Birch one of the trustees of the newly established British Museum, loaning him the 12 volume catalogue, but again nothing was to come of the sale during Elizabeth Sisson's lifetime.

trustees and Allen
Allen was also the first chairman of the board of trustees for Piedmont Community College and later
1 and the other pieces of land acquired by Allen and Hamilton to Isaac Norris II and the other trustees of the province.
James Allen is a member of the board of trustees for the university and worked for the university at one time.
Glen Oaks is also led by a board of trustees, composed of members Blake Lebioda, David Locey, David Allen, James Moshier, Paul Schubert, Ruth Perry and Bruce Gosling.
In 1982, Teamster President Roy Williams, Central States Pension Fund administrator Allen Dorfman, and pension fund trustees were convicted of attempting to bribe a U. S. senator.

trustees and
After Frederick Rapp's death in 1834, George Rapp appointed Romelius Baker and Jacob Henrici as trustees to manage the Society s business affairs.
That same year, Occidental President John Willis Baer announced the trustees decision to convert Oxy into an all-men s institution.
After the project gradually lost the support of many of the museum s trustees, the plans were dropped in 1989.
Before the economic crisis of late 2008, the MoMA s board of trustees decided to sell its equities in order to move into an all-cash position.
Standard & Poor s raised its long-term rating for the museum as it benefited from the fundraising of its trustees.
California State University trustees on March 15, 2006 voted their unanimous approval of Envision 2035, the Cal State Northridge planning initiative that will help frame the university s physical development for the next several decades.
Elm Grove was a 16th-century house that had been the home of the Bishop of Durham ; Perceval paid £ 7, 500 for it in 1808 ( borrowing from his brother Lord Arden and the trustees of Jane s dowry ) and the Perceval family s long association with Ealing began.
As with Pitt s bill in 1788, there would be restrictions: the Regent s powers to create peers and award offices and pensions would be restricted for 12 months, the Queen would be responsible for the care of the King, and the King s private property would be looked after by trustees.
Under a 1942 agreement, the Convention chose the College s trustees.
The Consumers Association is made up of a board who report to a council of trustees.
Formed in 1943, in the year of the Mastership of Lindsay Cutler, and administered by trustees, the funds accumulated by members donations and fundraising generate income used to help those under the age of 25 for educational purposes as well as financial aid to overcome hardship and distress.
In 2002, after a two-year master planning process, the museum s board of trustees determined that a new wing was necessary to preserve the historic building and to provide improved spaces for programs that continue Isabella Gardner s legacy.
Through an agreement between the IU and Purdue trustees, most of IPFW s university services are administratively operated through Purdue s processes.
In 1723 Bray became ill and appointed trustees, including Hales, to administer a bequest from Abel Tassin, Sieur d Allone for ' The Conversion of Negroes Slaves in the West Indies '.
As both schools continued to grow in size towards the late 1980s, and as gender-exclusivity became less and less of a factor both in the schools reputations and desirability, the trustees of both Harvard and Westlake effectuated a merger in 1989.
At the outset of America s involvement in World War I in 1917, the Carnegie Endowment trustees unanimously declared that “ the most effective means of promoting durable international peace is to prosecute the war against the Imperial Government of Germany to final victory for democracy .” In December 1918, Carnegie Endowment Secretary James Brown Scott and four other Endowment personnel, including James T. Shotwell, sailed with President Woodrow Wilson on the USS George Washington to join the peace talks in France.
Thirty of the College s trustees are graduates of Gettysburg.
The 1970s and 1980s brought further change as president Dan C. West oversaw the implementation of significant curricular reforms ( including the adoption of a new core curriculum and the addition of many new non-traditional majors ), the introduction of innovative fundraising techniques ( including the creation of the college s own for-profit development corporation ), the establishment of an international studies program funded by a gift from former board of trustees president Shuford Nichols, and the development of the Scottish heritage program, which had come to be a defining symbol of the college by the twenty-first century.

trustees and s
He was instrumental in restoring some measure of family control to the Hearst Corporation, which under his father's will is ( and will continue to be while any grandchild alive at William Randolph Hearst Sr .' s death in 1951 is still living ) controlled by a board of thirteen trustees, five from the Hearst family and eight Hearst executives.
Furthermore, one of the trustees was a nephew of Taylor and would financially benefit from forcing up the price at which Scott could buy the paper, and another was the Manchester Guardian < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s manager, but faced losing his job if Scott took control.
In June 1938, the trustees discussed the possible renunciation of the college s ties to the Board of Christian Education of the Presbyterian Church.
Langdon was an alumna of Elmira College and the daughter of Jervis Langdon, one of the college s founding trustees.
Belz Hall, the first to be built, was completed in 1972, is named after pastor and Christian educator Max Belz, a member of Covenant College s original board of trustees.

trustees and Charity
However, the Trustees are still expected to follow the broad responsibilities of charity trustees, and may be subject to Charity Commission oversight on these elements of their activities.
The trustees of the foundation are the Council of Almoners, chaired by the Treasurer of Christ's Hospital, who govern the foundation according to a Scheme of Administration granted by the Charity Commission.
Plans by the current trustees, Haringey Council, to replace all the charitable uses by commercial ones by a commercial lease of the entire building, including a casino, have encountered considerable public and legal opposition, and on 5 October 2007, in the High Court, Mr Justice Sullivan granted an application by Jacob O ' Callaghan, a London resident, to quash the Charity Commission's Order authorising a 125-year lease of the entire building to Firoka Ltd.
It is now entirely self funding and is run by charity the Dunblane Youth and Sports Centre Trust ( Charity No. SC027397 ), with a board of trustees from the community ( Steve Birnie, Chris Finnerty, Anne Marie Campbell, Gerard Gourley, Claire Moore, Stewart Prodger and David Spooner.
These aspects do not appear to be discussed at all on its website, and the details of its trustees are given only in its legally required returns to the UK's Charity Commission.
For charity trustees, the Charity Commission of England and Wales, Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator of Scotland and Voluntary Activity Unit of Northern Ireland often has concurrent jurisdiction with the Courts.
The school was founded in the Parish Church in the centre of Loughborough in 1495, but was moved by the trustees of the Burton Charity to its present location in 1852.
Since 2008 under the Charity Commission's The Excepted Church Charity Programme, a PCC with an income of over £ 100, 000 is required to register as a charity, and the members of the PCC become trustees.
Women's Aid was set up and is run by women, although it has obtained a dispensation from the Charity Commission not to publish the names of its trustees, ( The trustees of Women's Aid are freely available through the Charity Commission's website along with audited reports ).
The Charity Commission for England and Wales has the statutory power to apply the cy-près doctrine on behalf of a charity where, for example, no trustees remain in a charity or the necessary mandate cannot be agreed.
In jurisdictions which have retained the English cy-près doctrine but do not have an equivalent state body to the Charity Commission ( or in relation to foreign charities ' assets in the United Kingdom ), charity trustees may seek the approval of the Court to their entry into cy-près arrangements to avoid later accusations of breach of trust.
Then, in 1878, the Buxton Bath Charity trustees under their doughty chairman Dr William Henry Robertson, persuaded the 7th Duke of Devonshire to give them the use of the whole building in exchange for providing new stables elsewhere in the town.
As mayor he took an interest in the significant local charity Watts ' Charity and was appointed to the board of trustees in 1871.
The Amenities Association therefore set up a charitable trust, which the Charity Commissioners recognised, and the trustees of the Driffield Navigation Trust became the new commissioners, with responsibility for the waterway.

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