The deans and chancellors of these institutions are committed to working for change. |
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Guests at the graduation ceremony included Lord Taylor of Blackburn, the Mayor and Mayoress of Blackburn and University chancellors. |
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Tonight's ceremony will be attended by the chancellors of the universities, the Mayor of Salford and the Lord Mayor of Manchester. |
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The new academic standards are part of a series of NCAA reforms championed by Division I university presidents and chancellors. |
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Mr Patten's former college, Balliol, has produced a number of the university's chancellors. |
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He spent 30 years as an adviser to the Treasury, working closely with nine chancellors. |
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Enhanced autonomy for universities and new powers for university chancellors will lead to the raising of tuition fees or the introduction of enrolment fees. |
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These were the products of intellectuals, bishops, and churchmen who were nevertheless still connected with the diocesan and imperial courts, in some cases as chancellors. |
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Major cabinet turnovers have been rare, although chancellors occasionally have reshuffled their cabinets, shifting a minister from one post to another. |
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It's since been pointed out that the last Soviet tanks left Austria two years before Arnie was born, and all the chancellors who governed in his youth were conservatives. |
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We're working on leadership development for presidents and chancellors. |
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Bishops, abbots, chancellors, archdeacons, deacons, and archpriests all took their ranks from heathen equivalents. |
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Henry's chancellors, and those of his queens, became bishops of Durham, Hereford, London, Lincoln, Winchester and Salisbury. |
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The Pac-12's presidents and chancellors also voted Sunday to use sideline spotters to identify injuries during football games. |
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By February 2013, he had had to write 14 such letters to chancellors. |
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The new chancellors had difficulty in performing their roles, especially the additional role as Prime Minister of Prussia assigned to them in the German Constitution. |
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This led to calls from the vice chancellors of the universities of Aberystwyth, Bangor, Cardiff, Glamorgan and Swansea for the University of Wales to be wound up. |
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Its abolishment has been announced by two Chancellors, but never actually enacted. |
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Governors and Chancellors have to be careful of saying anything that might move the markets. |
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After all, nobody gets worked up when German Chancellors commemorate the thousands of ordinary soldiers who died for their motherland during the war. |
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It also has two Masters in Chancery, who are assigned by the Chancellor and Vice Chancellors to assist in matters as needed. |
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Chancellors often had theological and clerical training and were well versed in Roman law and canon law. |
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As the early Chancellors lacked formal legal training and showed little regard for precedent, their decisions were often widely diverse. |
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Lord Chancellors perform various functions relating to the established Church of England. |
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Prior to the Union there were separate Lord Chancellors for England and Wales, for Scotland, and for Ireland. |
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Since the 19th century, however, only Lord Chancellors have been appointed, the other offices having fallen into disuse. |
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Ecclesiastics made a brief return during the reign of Mary I, but thereafter, almost all Lord Chancellors have been laymen. |
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Formerly, there were separate Chancellors of England, Scotland and Ireland. |
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Most Lord Chancellors by the end of the twentieth century gave judgments only in cases reaching the House of Lords. |
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There is an unofficial precedent that Lord Chancellors that do not have a legal background do not get to wear a wig. |
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Anthony Trollope's Palliser novels feature a number of references to fictitious Lord Chancellors. |
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The recent Chancellors, George Osborne, Alistair Darling and Gordon Brown, opted for water. |
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