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673 result(s) for "Burton, H"
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The Players: Theatre lets director go
Jan. 13--SARASOTA -- A vote ended Burton H. Wolfe's position as executive and artistic director for The Players Theatre. The theater's board of directors decided not to renew Wolfe's contract during a vote Thursday. It also announced that Jo Ann Wolverton would be the interim executive director, effective immediately, until a replacement is found. Wolfe worked at the Players Theatre for six years.
BAHNSEN
Burton H. Bahnsen Burton H. Bahnsen, age 87, passed away peacefully March 24, 2016.
The Fraser Institute: Federal Government's Ability to Spend Money in Areas of Provincial Jurisdiction Rests on 'Shaky Legal Ground'
\"It is important to emphasize the general consensus among legal academics that there is no such thing as a federal \"spending power\" in the Canadian Constitution and there has been no explicit mention of this power in any judicial decision either,\" [Burton H. Kellock] said. \"Previous research calculates that conditional transfers from Ottawa to the provinces grew from less than one per cent of federal budgetary expenditures in 1945, to more than 13 per cent of federal expenditures in 1965, and almost 20 per cent of federal expenditures a decade later,\" [Sylvia LeRoy] said. \"Unless the federal government amends the Constitution, as it did in 1937, the continued transfer of tax dollars to the provinces contradicts established legal precedents, the written word of the Constitution, and the intentions of Canada's founding fathers,\" LeRoy said.
Trade Publication Article
Burton Stumpf
Survivors include his wife, Ruth E. FausStumpf; children, David (Jean) Stumpf, Bloomington, and Diane (Arthur Sutton) Stumpf; grandchildren, Peter Sutton,Sara Sutton andKatie (Ben) Hart;great-grandchildren, Lauren and Alex Hart;sister-in-law; nieces; nephews and cousins.
Players Theatre drops executive, artistic director Wolfe
Jan. 12--SARASOTA -- The Players Theatre board of directors announced they will not renew the contract for Burton H. Wolfe, executive and artistic director.
A landmark spared
Still, the church hasn't decided if it will renovate the tower. Estimates have put the cost at $25 million. The building's terra cotta face and its brick cornice would have to be removed during the renovation and then reattached. Even after the expense, ceiling heights and pillar placements would dampen office rental rates. Not only architecturally significant as a World War I-era structure, the building is the seat of power for the Eccles family, who founded First Security Corp. The bank was long based there; now it houses the family's George S. and Dolores Dore Eccles Foundation. Deseret National Bank -- founded by church leader Brigham Young in 1871 -- was to be replaced with a new office tower. [H. David Burton] said Thursday new office space may instead be built on 100 South on land earmarked for future housing development.
Report claims equalization's illegal; but Ottawa supports transfers
OTTAWA - A report that argues the federal equalization program may not be legally enforceable, and may even be illegal, will have no impact on the Conservative government's continuing commitment to the program -- through which Ottawa transfers funds to the so-called have not provinces, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says. The report by [Sylvia LeRoy], and co-author and lawyer Burton H. Kellock, argues Canada's constitutional commitment to equalization is a political policy that cannot be enforced by a court of law. The principle of equalization is in the Constitution Act, but the details were left open to negotiation, LeRoy said. \"The BNA Act is quite precise in its language that federal dollars cannot be directed to matters that fall under provincial jurisdiction,\" Kellock said, suggesting as well the Canada Health Act, and other programs under which Ottawa also transfers funds to the provinces, may be illegal.
LDS Church News: 'Humanitarian Services . . . make things better'
To underscore the increased emphasis being placed throughout the church on humanitarian aid, Bishop [H.
LDS Church assists the needy with 'best food money can't buy'
\"What we see today is the product of 60 years of inspired leadership and a lot of hard work,\" said [H. David Burton]. \"I can't tell you the cumulative investment, but it's minor in terms of the cumulative effort on the part of thousands and thousands.\" \"One of the things that makes it so hard is that you think it's just for people who don't have a job, not for someone like me, working, middle-class and educated,\" said [Jennifer Williams], 29, now of Washington, D.C. \"But, you know, needing help is OK.\" \"I think they play a critical role, it's just that there's no way to tell the size of the gap they fill,\" said [Glenn Bailey]. \"Obviously they are doing a lot of work and helping a lot of people who would go without or seek assistance elsewhere.\"
Parking lots could open next summer
\"We will be starting to complete various elements of the project in 2009, and we'll want the parking to support that,\" said Bishop [H. David Burton], who updated the Salt Lake City Council on the project's progress Thursday night. \"It just didn't make sense for us economically,\" Bishop Burton said. \"We're pushing forward and moving ahead as scheduled,\" Bishop Burton said.