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Richard and Brzezinski
* County Treasurer: Richard F. Brzezinski
* Richard Brzezinski and Mariusz Mielczarek, The Sarmatians 600 BC-AD 450 ( Men-At-Arms nr.
* Brzezinski, Richard.
* Brzezinski, Richard.
* Richard Brzezinski, military historian
Basic's list of authors includes Christopher Andrew, Anthony Appiah, Isaac Asimov, Robert Axelrod, Susan R. Barry, Daniel Bell, John Bradshaw, Allan Brandt, Richard Brookhiser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, William F. Buckley, Stephen Carter, Iris Chang, George Chauncey, Stephanie Coontz, Dinesh D ’ Souza, Devra Davis, Richard Dawkins, Hernando de Soto, Jared Diamond, Michael Eric Dyson, Thomas B. Edsall, Richard Evans, Graham Farmelo, Niall Ferguson, Richard Feynman, Richard Florida, Robin Lane Fox, Sigmund Freud, Howard Gardner, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Clifford Geertz, George Gilder, Barry Glassner, Robert Harms, Judith L. Herman, Christopher Hitchens, Douglas Hofstadter, Samuel P. Huntington, Jacqueline Jones, June Jordan, Leszek Kołakowski, Lawrence Krauss, Irving Kristol, George Lakoff, Edward Larson, Christopher Lasch, Mary Lefkowitz, Lawrence Lessig, Claude Levi-Strauss, Bernard Lewis, Robert Jay Lifton, Jeff Madrick, Nelson Mandela, Benoit Mandelbrot, Ernst Mayr, Walter A. McDougall, John McWhorter, Dana Milbank, Alice Miller, Walter Mosley, Charles Murray, Richard John Neuhaus, Donald Norman, Robert Nozick, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., James T. Patterson, Orlando Patterson, Jean Piaget, Steven Pinker, Karl Popper, Samantha Power, Diane Ravitch, Eugene Rogan, Juliet Schor, Brent Scowcroft, Anne-Marie Slaughter, Lee Smolin, Timothy Snyder, Thomas Sowell, Ian Stewart, Cass Sunstein, Beverly Daniel Tatum, Lester Thurow, Sherry Turkle, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Michael Walzer, Elizabeth Warren, George Weigel, Steven Weinberg, Cornel West, Frank Wilczek, A. N.
* Richard Brzezinski, Polish Winged Hussar 1576-1775 ( Warrior Series 94 ), Oxford: Osprey, 2006.
* Richard Brzezinski, Polish Armies 1569-1696, 2 vols, London: Osprey Publishing, 1987, ISBN 0-85045-736-X and ISBN 0-85045-744-0
* Richard Brzezinski, Polish Armies: 1569 – 1699, London 1987. vol.
* Richard Brzezinski, Polish Winged Hussar, New York 2006, pp. 8 – 10.
( 1 ) Richard Brzezinski, Polish Armies 1569-1696, volume 1, London: Osprey Military Publishing, 1987, p. 21, 39-41 ( also contains six contemporary illustrations of Polish hajduks, besides several modern reconstructions by Angus McBride ).
One hour later during another news break segment, her producer Andy Jones again pushed the story as the lead, ranking it over Indiana's Republican Senator Richard Lugar's break with President Bush on the Iraq war, which Brzezinski considered more important.

Richard and 1632
Ecological concepts such as food chains, population regulation, and productivity were first developed in the 1700s, through the published works of microscopist Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ( 1632 – 1723 ) and botanist Richard Bradley ( 1688 ?– 1732 ).
In the Star Chamber Coventry was one of John Lilburne's judges in 1637, but he generally showed conspicuous moderation, inclining to leniency in the cases of Richard Chambers in 1629 for seditious speeches, and of Henry Sherfield in 1632 for breaking painted glass in a church.
Those holding this view include: 1600s: Sussex Baptists d. 1612: Edward Wightman 1627: Samuel Gardner 1628: Samuel Przypkowski 1636: George Wither 1637: Joachim Stegmann 1624: Richard Overton 1654: John Biddle ( Unitarian ) 1655: Matthew Caffyn 1658: Samuel Richardson 1608 – 1674: John Milton 1588 – 1670: Thomas Hobbes 1605 – 1682: Thomas Browne 1622 – 1705: Henry Layton 1702: William Coward 1632 – 1704: John Locke 1643 – 1727: Isaac Newton 1676 – 1748: Pietro Giannone 1751: William Kenrick 1755: Edmund Law 1759: Samuel Bourn 1723 – 1791: Richard Price 1718 – 1797: Peter Peckard 1733 – 1804: Joseph Priestley Francis Blackburne ( 1765 ) ( 1765 ).
In August 1736, he and his mother swore oaths at the College of Arms in London that the Elliott family descended from a legal marriage of Richard Eliot ( b. 1614-unknown ), the wayward second son of Sir John Eliot ( 1592 – 1632 ) to Catherine Killigrew ( 1617 – 1689 ), daughter of Sir Robert Killigrew ( 1580 – 1633 ) and Mary Woodhouse ( CIR 1584-1655 ).
Richard Eliot ( 1614-unknown date in 1660s ) was the wayward second son of Sir John Eliot ( 11 April, 1592-27 November, 1632 ) and Rhadigund Geddy ( c. 1595-June 1628 ).
* Richard Sharpe ( actor ) ( died 1632 ), English actor
Dorset's children were Mary, who died young on 30 October 1632, Richard, fifth earl ( see below ) and Edward, who was wounded at Newbury on 20 Sept. 1643, and murdered in cold blood at Chawley in the parish of Cumnor, near Oxford, 11 April 1646.

Richard and Oxford
Though not well known among philosophers, his philosophical work was taken up by Owen Barfield ( and through him influenced the Inklings, an Oxford group of Christian writers that included J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis ) and Richard Tarnas.
Jean Froissart states as follows: " Now will I name some of the principal lords and knights ( men-at-arms ) that were there with the prince: the earl of Warwick, the earl of Suffolk, the earl of Salisbury, the earl of Oxford, the lord Raynold Cobham, the lord Spencer, the lord James Audley, the lord Peter his brother, the lord Berkeley, the lord Basset, the lord Warin, the lord Delaware, the lord Manne, the lord Willoughby, the lord Bartholomew de Burghersh, the lord of Felton, the lord Richard of Pembroke, the lord Stephen of Cosington, the lord Bradetane and other Englishmen ; and of Gascon there was the lord of Pommiers, the lord of Languiran, the captal of Buch, the lord John of Caumont, the lord de Lesparre, the lord of Rauzan, the lord of Condon, the lord of Montferrand, the lord of Landiras, the lord Soudic of Latrau and other ( men-at-arms ) that I cannot name ; and of Hainowes the lord Eustace d ' Aubrecicourt, the lord John of Ghistelles, and two other strangers, the lord Daniel Pasele and the lord Denis of Amposta, a fortress in Catalonia ".
* Richard P. Gabriel: Patterns of Software: Tales from the Software Community, Oxford University Press, 1998, ISBN 0-19-512123-6, PDF
* Richard Taylor and Colin Pritchard, The Protest Makers: The British Nuclear Disarmament of 1958-1965, Twenty Years On ( Pergamon Press: Oxford, 1980 ) ISBN 0-08-025211-7
* Denholm-Young, N. ( 1947 ), Richard of Cornwall, Oxford: Blackwell.
* Farnell, Lewis Richard, The cults of the Greek states I: Zeus, Hera Athena Oxford, 1896.
He obtained a bachelor of medicine in 1674, having studied medicine extensively during his time at Oxford and worked with such noted scientists and thinkers as Robert Boyle, Thomas Willis, Robert Hooke and Richard Lower.
Another new recruit, Richard Lovell Edgeworth, met Darwin, Small and Boulton in 1766 through a shared interest in carriage design, and he in turn introduced his friend and fellow Rousseau-admirer Thomas Day, with whom he had studied at Corpus Christi, Oxford.
In 2004 Richard Jones wrote Soft Machines ( nanotechnology and life ), a book for lay audiences published by Oxford University.
( 1973 ) Segregated Sabbaths: Richard Allen and the Rise of Independent Black Churches, 1760 – 1840, New York: Oxford University Press, LCCN 73076908
At first, the dictionary was unconnected to Oxford University but was the idea of a small group of intellectuals in London ; it originally was a Philological Society project conceived in London by Richard Chenevix Trench, Herbert Coleridge, and Frederick Furnivall, who were dissatisfied with the current English dictionaries.
Ramon Jiménez has credited Oxford with such plays as The True Tragedy of Richard III and Edmund Ironside.
" He also praises Oxford and Richard Edwardes as playwrights, saying that they " deserve the hyest price " for the works of " Comedy and Enterlude " that he has seen.
" On the other hand, Richard Caplan of Reading and Oxford University reviewed the work in International Affairs, where he described the work as " a revisionist and highly contentious account of western policy and the dissolution of Yugoslavia ".
Richard Lovelace attended Oxford University and he was praised by one of his contemporaries, Anthony Wood.
Richard Lovelace first started writing while he was a student at Oxford and wrote almost 200 poems from that time until his death.
* Joan of Arc and Richard III: sex, saints, and government in the Middle Ages by Charles T. Wood ( Oxford University Press ) ( ISBN 0-19-506951-X )
Although born in Oxford, Richard could speak no English ; he was an educated man who composed poetry and wrote in Limousin ( lenga d ' òc ) and also in French.
He persuaded Rhys to raise the siege of Carmarthen and accompany him to Oxford to meet Richard.
Rhys arrived at Oxford to discover that Richard was not prepared to travel there to meet him, and hostilities continued.
* Richard Jenkyns, Virgil's Experience, Oxford, 1998.
* June 19 – Brasenose College, University of Oxford, is founded by a lawyer, Sir Richard Sutton, of Prestbury, Cheshire, and the Bishop of Lincoln, William Smyth.
In 1943, at the age of eighteen, Richard Burton ( who had now taken his teacher's surname but would not change it by deed poll for several years ), was allowed into Exeter College, Oxford for a special term of six months study, made possible because he was an air force cadet obligated to later military service.
* Robinson, Richard, Plato's Earlier Dialectic, 2nd edition ( Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1953 ).
Richard Dawkins, formerly Professor for Public Understanding of Science at Oxford, writes that the same three names of British scientists who are also sincerely religious crop up with the " likable familiarity of senior partners in a firm of Dickensian lawyers ": Arthur Peacocke, Russell Stannard, and John Polkinghorne, all of whom have either won the Templeton Prize or are on its board of trustees.

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