Section Five of the Camelot Trust states in part: "The trustees serving under this Declaration of Trust are authorized to pay to themselves amounts for reasonable expenses incurred and reasonable compensation for services rendered in the administration of this trust, but in no event shall any trustee who has made a contribution to this trust ever receive any compensation thereafter." My questions: a) May recruiting, assembling, organizing, conducting a music orchestra properly be deemed "services rendered in the administration of this trust"? b) May giving trumpet lessons to (indigent) students properly be deemed "services rendered in the administration of this trust"? c) May a trustee who has made a financial or non-financial contribution to the trust during the term of his trusteeship accept "reasonable compensation" for services rendered to the Trust subsequent to relinquishing that trusteeship ? d) May a Trustee serve as a paid employee of the Trust ? e) May a Trustee as an independent contractor paid by the Trust serve as an agent of the Trust ? Since I don't know the answers, I suggest that until the Trust has accumulated sufficient donations from non-family donors, Nathaniel institute concert performances subsidized with family funds only in his own name, asking members of the audience to consider making income tax-deductible donations to the Camelot Music Trust.