At the time of his death he was president and a director of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation and director of The Hearst Foundation.
Richard E. Berlin (1894-1986) was the president and chief executive officer of the Hearst Foundation.
In 1981, architectural historian Margaret Burke began working under a grant from the Hearst Foundation to inventory the remaining stones.
Mr. Massi was also a director of the Hearst Foundations and a trustee of the trust established under the will of William Randolph Hearst, the founder of the company.
The George R. Moscone Elementary School in San Francisco received a five-year grant for dozens of computers from the Hearst Foundation.
The theater is supported and endorsed by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Texas Commission on the Arts, the Hearst Foundation, and the Kresge Foundation.
The Hearst Foundation signed on early with $100,000 and has since given $1 million.
It was restored initially in 1884, and then again in 1949 with funding from the Hearst Foundation.
The Edward Hopper gallery will become the William Randolph Hearst Gallery, in acknowledgment of support from the Hearst Foundation.
(NSF, Hearst Foundation and others)