[ noun ] a person who directs and manages an organization <noun.person>
Overseer \O`ver*seer"\, n. One who oversees; a superintendent; a supervisor; as, an overseer of a mill; specifically, one or certain public officers; as, an overseer of the poor; an overseer of highways.
The contract they found reads in part: "Any and all firearms will be bought by the business and held by the overseer for proper use."
There is little activity involving the records these days, according to Marion Johnson, a government archivist for 40 years and chief overseer of the Kennedy records.
But the Civil Aviation Administration of China, overseer of the airline industry, wants the most economical, versatile aircraft.
Its international arm - once the overseer of colonial mansions from the Cape to Rajahstan by way of the Antipodes - is to close.
We needed an overseer.
The Office of Economic Opportunity, although located in the executive office, was never more than a murky overseer of a loose mass of ever-shifting programs.
He's the leader, the owner, the overseer.
As the overseer of the 270-seat parliament, Karrubi could make or break legislation and curb Rafsanjani's policies.
Several companies, including Britain's Wellcome PLC and West Germany's Behringwerke AG, are in contact with the lab's government overseer about possible further collaboration.
"It's hard from a logistics standpoint to try to keep three vehicles (outfitted), any one of which you're trying to launch," said Roger Enlow, logistics director and overseer of the 220,000 shuttle parts.
Inmates and their overseer expressed satisfaction with the program in interviews with The Charlotte Observer.