Example sentences of "[noun pl] of [art] [noun pl] council " in BNC.

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1 Furthermore , a quarter of the combined cases of the Drugs Council and the Detoxification Unit were known to have tried injecting heroin .
2 In the days of the Schools Council , a body largely controlled by teachers and concerned with curricular innovation , there were several suggestions for the reform of the sixth-form curriculum .
3 When the Drama sub-committees of the Schools Council English Panel were presented with a proposition from Lynn McGregor , a London teacher with a strong interest in the sociology of education and her own research into Drama teaching on its way ( 1976 ) , to launch a full-scale research project , the climate seemed ripe for the subcommittee to make a recommendation .
4 We will decentralise many of the responsibilities of the Arts Council , increasing the roles of Regional Arts Boards and local authorities .
5 I can do no better than to draw the attention of the House to this statement in Labour 's charter for sport : ’ We will review the composition and powers of the Sports Council to free them from political bias ’ .
6 This was opened in 1986 under the auspices of the Drugs Council and a local housing trust .
7 Compared with the early stages of the Schools Council , the Nuffield Foundation 's involvement in curriculum development paid greater attention to mechanisms for the diffusion of ideas ( Redknap , 1977 ; Weindling et al , 1983 ) .
8 The later stages of the Schools Council Music in Secondary Schools Project adopted this approach ( Paynter , 1982 ) .
9 LAST minute efforts to save Kent Opera from liquidation will be made tomorrow when members of the Arts Council 's advisory music panel , led by Robert Ponsonby , the former BBC Controller of Music , meet Luke Rittner , the council 's secretary-general .
10 Thus the initiatives of the Schools Council were not devices to control content , change teaching style or to formulate a nationally agreed curriculum .
11 Well I 'm not sure I mean it 's interest I mean the the Council erm with another the Council looked upon attendances of the things Council do and many people who use the facilities in Harlow will argue we do n't get anything like this where we live and we always find it like that you know it 's that sort of mentality where people in Harlow may or may not say well course you get it in Harlow we expect it it 's just there it just saves we know it 's getting them people to use it but I talk to people I 'm sure people who live in Harlow or the Council to people and Harlow people tend to think well yes yes it 's all with always it 's always there .
12 Prominent in the latter are property developer Trevor Osborne , effectively the group 's chairman , Michael Abrahams ( of the ‘ Pru ’ and a prominent fund-raiser for the Prince 's Institute ) and Lord Stevens ( incoming chairman of English Heritage ) , along with representatives of the Arts Council , Architecture Foundation and other interested parties .
13 Five former chairmen of the Arts Council , Lord Cottesloe ( 1960–65 ) , Lord Goodman ( 1965–72 ) , Lord Gibson ( 1972–77 ) , Sir Kenneth Robinson ( 1977–82 ) and Lord Rees–Mogg ( 1982–89 ) also wrote to The Times : ‘ It has been and remains the cardinal principle of the Arts Council since its formation , that the arts should be immunised from political control ’ .
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