All the decisions taken were fully informed decisions of a conscientiously acting board or body of trustees. |
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The trustees can be expected to respect these wishes once there is no family or appropriate person to whom the money should be paid. |
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These newly elected trustees must surely be aware of the magnitude of their responsibilities. |
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The lease of the premises where the partnership practised was vested in the respondents as trustees for the partnership. |
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In their annual report for 1964-65, the trustees of the Tate Gallery announced their wish to demolish the gallery's portico. |
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The trustees present three projections, based on pessimistic, middle-of-the-road and optimistic economic assumptions, respectively. |
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In other words, the trustees have the discretion to make distributions, but haven't done so for years. |
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Some of the long-standing trustees are standing down either by retirement or resignation. |
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One brilliantly calm, cool summer evening, one of the trustees decides to take us around the campus. |
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Neither firm nor trustees inquired into alternatives for members other than closing the final salary pension scheme to one and all. |
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Four seminars were held in July, one each for trustees, presidents, deans, and school heads. |
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However, one of the trustees of the pension fund at Irish Sugar insists that there is no immediate cause for concern. |
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A Dartmouth College faculty chairwoman has weighed in on the much-watched race to elect two alumni to the college's board of trustees. |
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In some instances, with the agreement of trustees, an overseer might be employed by more than one local trust. |
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However, the trustees do have a responsibility to ensure that the centre's income is deployed in the most effective manner. |
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The trustees will form an electoral college and that will be another committee. |
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Cushioned by this revival, the port trustees resolved to implement fundamental changes. |
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Participation by trustees is crucial to their understanding of the issues before the board. |
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If the company became insolvent and pension contributions went down the plughole, workers would not receive any state aid, trustees argued. |
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This is the same Minister who sacks boards of trustees without gazetting it. |
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Nominations were made by their teachers and the finalists will be judged by the trustees of the fund. |
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The abbey and college are also Ryedale's second largest employer and trustees are asking planners to consider the benefits to the local economy. |
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The crowd jeered when the trustees refused to hear arguments about Hall's exclusion. |
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The quorum at meetings of the trustees is four, of whom two must be Employers' Representatives and two Members' Representatives. |
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A responsible actuary and pension fund trustees would never have allowed this to happen. |
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Equity, which imposed obligations on trustees and fiduciaries, was always a separate entity. |
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Registering trustees are required to report the aggregate amount of funds under supervision and the names of the trusts. |
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He would not think that the pension trustees intended to bring the tenancy to an end by re-entry in three weeks time. |
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As trustees we have to have regard to Sir Edward's stated desire to support the teaching of music and sailing. |
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According to the Forum's Web site, its 12-member board of trustees includes some real all-stars. |
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Faculties often take it amiss when critics appeal over their heads to alumni, trustees or parents. |
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This ensures that trustees and fiduciaries are financially disinterested in carrying out their duties. |
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Museum directors and trustees are required to honor the letter and spirit of benefactors' wishes. |
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The firm will likely be placed under court receivership, which would install trustees and freeze all company assets. |
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A general power of appointment permits the trustees to appoint in favour of anyone they choose. |
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Instead, trustees will take a different tack during their 30-minute meeting. |
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As I have already described, the trust was an English law governed trust with Manx trustees. |
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Or, they could reach an arrangement with the trustees if they could not afford to settle any deficit in the scheme in full. |
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Mr Mahon noted that the trustees of the site put the common good to the forefront and promised them a development they could be proud of. |
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Clause 3 sets out the employer's covenant to pay its own and the employees' contributions to the trustees. |
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It is imprudent of presidents and trustees to approve budgets that were not crafted by those with the relevant academic and fiscal know-how. |
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The university, in spite of the politicization of the trustees, has to stand for the freedom to pursue the truth wherever it may lead. |
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All three schemes were regulated by trust deeds or rules which conferred on the trustees wide powers of investment. |
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The wife remained dependent on the trustees and could not control the property herself. |
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Lawyers and trustees have statutory and other legal obligations but are still fiduciaries. |
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This is certain to give the new board of trustees a legal edge over its competitors. |
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He is deeply involved with our homeless ministry and serves faithfully on our board of trustees. |
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Income of unincorporated bodies, trustees and personal representatives is taxed at the standard rate. |
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Employers and pension fund trustees have been warned to think carefully about how to navigate the law changes on pensions. |
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It was given to trustees and the property was vested in the Charity Commissioners for the benefit of Haxby people. |
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As a twenty-one-year-old teacher, she requested and received authorization from the trustees to solicit funds for a new roof for Luther Hall. |
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He was chosen the first solicitor of the city, and a member of the first board of trustees of the public library. |
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Fraught bond negotiations concluded with the trustees selling 7.3 per cent thirty-year irredeemable gold bonds. |
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A meeting of trustees will be held at the Bird in Hand next Friday to discuss the future and take the decision to close. |
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Some boards like to put a positive spin on it as they did when I was on the board of trustees for a very large girls school. |
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All of them authorised the trustees to delegate their powers. |
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After the death of my wife, and in the meantime subject to her interest, my trustees shall hold my residuary estate and the income thereof in trust for my nephew. |
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The husband remarried, and in another complicated arrangement, assigned his life interest in the wife's fund to the same trustees upon trusts in favour of his second wife. |
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The 19 panel members, including Jiles, were chosen from among the Coordinating Board members, university regents and trustees, college administrators and community leaders. |
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Curricular authority derives from two sources, the expertise of the faculty and the fiduciary duties of trustees, presidents, and key academic administrators. |
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School trustees may have scored a goal with young athletes Monday night, approving a specialized sports course to be launched from Palmer secondary this fall. |
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The power would have to be exercised in accordance with the terms and purposes of the trust, the trustees' duty of care and their fiduciary position as trustees. |
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It seems to me to follow that, if the company refused to register the transfers, the registered holder would be compelled to hold the shares as trustees for the assignees. |
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Each year a report is produced by the trustees of your pension scheme and every three years there is a valuation by actuaries, who analyse financial risk. |
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Of course, that is what happened when this Government got rid of bulk funding and landed boards of trustees in the situation where they were the meat in the sandwich. |
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The chair has to communicate the frustrations of the active trustees to the nonactive trustees in order to stimulate their participation in board activities. |
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But, by making his trustees the sole judges of a question a testator does not entirely exclude recourse to the court by persons aggrieved by the trustees' decision. |
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That is, according to those former trustees, disingenuous in the extreme. |
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So, this temporary relaxation of the rule requiring trustees to provide transfer values to ex-members may halt the migration of some money from company pension schemes. |
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In August 2003 the museum approached the Attorney General to ask whether he has the power to authorise the museum trustees to restitute in the case of Nazi-era spoliation. |
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If I create a trust to dispose of all of my rights and interests, and I settle them on trustees, that is a trust despite the fact that it is not spelt out. |
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The standard of patient care has never been in question or doubt and remains high and unaffected by any of the issues being enquired into by the trustees. |
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But Ken Holmes and Moira Emmett, from Cliffe, near Selby, vowed to compete in a separate race today, despite trustees of the horse race urging them to think again. |
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The present trustees could never be accused of lacking ambition. |
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To back up its powers of scrutiny it can compel witnesses to provide information, freeze assets, suspend trustees and, in the final resort, dissolve a charity. |
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The expression of your wishes in an informal letter to the trustees and guardians is often an easier way of ensuring your children are brought up as you would wish. |
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Two people remain in the running for the rectorship of the University of Indonesia after its board of trustees dropped two candidates during a vote on Monday. |
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The objective is to gain time for markets to recover, if the trustees believe that they will, instead of immediately making irrevocable changes to the fund. |
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The largest of all the drawings Egerton acquired were the two Carracci cartoons he gave to London's National Gallery in 1837, while he was one of its trustees. |
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It also provided a window on the long-standing predilections of a generation or three of trustees who got goose-bumps when anything English strayed into their path. |
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The doctor had vested the advowson of Thame in a committee of trustees. |
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In March 1934, the trustees met the financial terms of the Bliss will, her bequest was accessioned and a Museum of Modern Art with a permanent collection became a reality. |
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The Independence Community College board of trustees voted last week to join Coffeyville and Neosho community colleges in the consortium. |
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He entered into disputes and disagreements with Loch, with Francis Egerton, and with the other two trustees. |
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My trustees are going to lend Earl Blessington sixty thousand pounds on a Dublin mortgage. Only think of my becoming an Irish absentee! |
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Some NHS charities have their own independent board of trustees whilst in other cases the relevant NHS Trust acts as a corporate Trustee. |
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The charter trustees for the City of Bath make up the majority of the councillors on Bath and North East Somerset Council. |
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In April 1980 a parish council was created for Lichfield, and the charter trustees established six years earlier were dissolved. |
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The city was unique, as it had no council or charter trustees and no mayor or civic head. |
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In 2011, he was named as a member of the board of trustees of the Ford Foundation. |
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Adam, who was a relative of one of the trustees, and the support of William Huskisson who knew the Marquess personally. |
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Council advises on shaping policy, raising and debating issues, providing guidance, perspective and a sounding board for the trustees. |
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The trustees are legally responsible for ensuring that the trust meets its charitable objectives. |
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Executive directors manage the everyday operation of the trust and develop policy and strategy for approval by the trustees. |
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Such a dispute between the trustees and master of Leeds Grammar School led to a celebrated case in the Court of Chancery. |
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The five trustees were Sidney Webb, Edward Pease, Constance Hutchinson, William de Mattos and William Clark. |
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In the 1920s, a board of trustees was set up under the guidance of manager Sir Henry Buckland. |
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Trungpa Rinpoche quickly came into conflict with both Akong Rinpoche and the trustees. |
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A critical House of Commons Report in 1851 called for the appointment of a director, whose authority would surpass that of the trustees. |
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Eastlake also amassed a private art collection during this period, consisting of paintings that he knew did not interest the trustees. |
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Chris Ofili, Anish Kapoor and Jeremy Deller later became trustees of the Tate. |
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In 1935 the trustees leased part of the palace to the BBC for use as the production and transmission centre for their new BBC Television Service. |
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The same day, Geneva's attorney general opened several procedures in reaction to a report about misconduct by Swiss lawyers and trustees. |
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The CCMS supports trustees in the provision of school buildings, and governors and principals in the management and control of schools. |
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Neither myself nor Alan thought we were signing it over to a board of trustees who would look after it like it was the Dead Sea Scrolls. |
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The University's governing body is the Court of Governors, and members of the Court of Governors are the University's trustees. |
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This concept was where all clansmen recognised the personal authority of the chiefs and leading gentry as trustees for their clan. |
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Guest named Clark, his widow Lady Charlotte Guest and Edward Divett as executors and trustees. |
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The trustees sank the Bute Merthyr Colliery in October 1851, at the top of the Rhondda Fawr in what would become Treherbert. |
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The six trustees of the Royal Collection Trust meet three times a year under his chairmanship. |
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Clark and Edward Divett would become executors and trustees of the Ironworks. |
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The council or trustees may apply for an Order in Council or Royal Licence to use the former borough coat of arms. |
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It is highly advisable for both settlors and trustees to seek qualified legal counsel prior to entering into a trust agreement. |
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If trustees do not adhere to these duties, they may be removed through a legal action. |
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Bewind trusts are created as trading vehicles providing trustees with limited liability and certain tax advantages. |
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Early chairs of trustees included Philip Lyttelton Gell and Lord Alfred Milner. |
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The trustees, as well as local hotel keepers and coach operators, promoted interest in the bridge among members of polite society. |
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He directed his trustees to spend his fortune on philanthropic projects, which they still do to this day. |
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The Act gave the trustees responsibility for maintaining a specified part of the existing highway. |
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The trustees could call on a portion of the statute duty from the parishes, either as labour or by a cash payment. |
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On January 2, 1882, they combined their disparate companies, spread across dozens of states, under a single group of trustees. |
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During this time the business was administered initially by trustees, including Henry Hoggarth, and John Thomas Illingworth. |
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Following the establishment of Cheshire East Council in 2009 the borough was abolished and the Mayoralty transferred to charter trustees. |
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I am never going to adopt the Uriah Heepish attitude toward trustees that characterized Mrs. Lippett's manners. |
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The lily-livered trustees had broached an important principle by making the BBC an arm of the welfare state. |
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Rodgers is a member of the board of trustees at Dartmouth College, where he graduated as Salutatorian with degrees in both physics and chemistry. |
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The sight of our five trustees and five other officials in their Sunday casuals walking into the board room at 7 in the morning is honorable. |
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As stated above, the trust concept involves two relationships which involve different trustors and trustees. |
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Jayne Knott will serve on the board of trustees and Andrew Salmon was appointed corporator. |
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We also welcome returning trustees Kathi Cypres and Steven Roth and our outstanding former interim director Maria Seferian. |
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The event was attended by Royal Mail area manager Jenny Cole, Michael Gregory, the Royal Mail's special handstamp manager, and abbey trustees. |
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Erburu's retirement, two other trustees have retired and were named trustees emeriti. |
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Practitioners, trustees, and clients often are clueless as to how a debtor's entireties assets will emerge from a bankruptcy proceeding. |
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I have been told the independence of the pension trustees and the rules that require them to seek to maximise the return, makes ethical investments difficult. |
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At the current stage, the CSE trustees have the right to carry out OTC transactions and are able to register the settlement orders in the Dematerialized Titles System. |
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Board work will get more complex and sophisticated as health care reform unfolds, demanding new competencies of hospital trustees, executives and physician leaders. |
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The management of the company was placed in the hands of three trustees. |
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Employers should encourage trustees to reconsider their approach to defined benefit pension transfer payments in response to recent regulatory changes, says Mercer. |
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Clemson's iconic Tillman Hall was named after Benjamin Ryan Tillman, an unapologetic racist and segregationist politician, but also one of the schools first trustees. |
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The races include two runoffs for the Los Angeles City Council and one runoff apiece for the Los Angeles school board and the Community College District's board of trustees. |
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As trustees of the will, next-door neighbours Eugene and Ann Wheatley, are responsible for keeping Tinker fed and watered and his litter tray clean. |
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The college eliminated the free-speech area after it was sued in 2003, but the policy was readopted by college trustees last year, according to Sinapi-Riddle's lawsuit. |
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About 50,000 AMA members contribute directly to AMPAC, which is officially affiliated with the AMA and overseen by a board appointed by the AMA's own board of trustees. |
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The family was philanthropic and Joseph and Sir Francis Crossley built and endowed almshouses for their workers, which exist to this day and are run by volunteer trustees. |
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Local gentlemen, clergy and merchants were nominated as trustees and they appointed a clerk, a treasurer and a surveyor to actually administer and maintain the highway. |
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William King, Daniel Giles, and Samuel Raven, the other defendants in the bill named, who were described as the trustees nominated by the parties, of the fifth part. |
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In the United States, the Uniform Trust Code provides for reasonable compensation and reimbursement for trustees subject to review by courts, although trustees may be unpaid. |
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In some cases dependent upon the trust instrument, the trustees must make discretionary decisions as to whether beneficiaries should receive trust assets for their benefit. |
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The trustee may be either a person or a legal entity such as a company, but typically the trust itself is not an entity and any lawsuit must be against the trustees. |
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In smaller boroughs, a town council was formed for the area of the abolished borough, while charter trustees were formed in other former boroughs. |
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Further Turnpike Acts came into force in 1799 and 1810, and these Acts allowed trustees to collect a toll for the use of certain roads within a district. |
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Webb, who chaired the board of trustees appointed to supervise the legacy, proposed to use most of it to found a school of economics and politics. |
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The CCMS represents trustees, schools and governors on issues such as raising and maintaining standards, the school estate and teacher employment. |
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In 1895 the trustees purchased the 69 houses surrounding the Museum with the intention of demolishing them and building around the West, North and East sides of the Museum. |
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After Beecham's death in 1961 advisers were appointed to assist the trustees, and in 1979 the administration of the Trust was taken over by the Musicians' Benevolent Fund. |
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Members of the church council are also trustees of the local church. |
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The 1795 Plan of Pacification permitted Methodist chapels to celebrate Holy Communion where both a majority of trustees and a majority of the stewards and leaders allowed it. |
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The trust is headed by a board of 10 trustees with a Chairman, which is obliged to ensure that the charity meets its objectives and sets strategy for the trust. |
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A key opposition figure in this had been Robert Haldane Bradshaw, one of the trustees of the Marquess of Stafford's Worsley estate, which included the Bridgewater Canal. |
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Where there is no such parish council, the district council may appoint charter trustees to whom the charter and the arms of the former borough will belong. |
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