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Richard and Christiansen
Bootstrapping was also expanded upon in the book Bootstrap Business, by Richard Christiansen.
Richard Elliott, Andrew Unsworth, and Clay Christiansen are the current organists.
* Charles Dempsey, Keith Christiansen, Richard E. Spear, and Erich Scheier.
Clay Christiansen, Richard Elliott, and Andrew Unsworth are full-time organists, while Bonnie Goodliffe and Linda Margetts are part-time organists.
She has premiered dozens of works, by composers Malcolm Arnold, Gordon Jacob and Richard Harvey, as well as Daniel Börtz, Erik Haumann, Hans Kunstovny, Erling Bjerno, Thomas Koppel, Ove Benzen, Vagn Holmboe, Piers Hellawell, Gary Kulesha, Asger Lund Christiansen, Egil Harder, Michael Berkeley, Butch Lacy, Miklos Maros, Ezra Laderman, Jens Bjerre, Henning Christiansen, Niels Viggo Bentzon, Axel Borup Jørgensen, and Gunnar Berg.

Richard and Chicago
In 1966, James Bevel, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Albert Raby led the Chicago Open Housing Movement, which culminated in agreements between Mayor Richard J. Daley and the movement leaders.
Major construction projects, including the Sears Tower ( now known as the Willis Tower, which in 1974 became the world's tallest building ), University of Illinois at Chicago, McCormick Place, and O ' Hare International Airport, were undertaken during Richard J. Daley's tenure.
* Richard J. Daley, former long-serving mayor of Chicago.
* Richard M. Daley, former long-serving mayor of Chicago.
In January, he played the title role in Richard III in St. Louis and then made his Chicago debut.
* 2004 – Millennium Park, considered Chicago, Illinois's first and most ambitious early 21st century architectural project, is opened to the public by Mayor Richard M. Daley.
He is currently starring in the Starz drama series Boss, as a fictional mayor of Chicago in the mold of Richard J. Daley which premiered in October 2011.
* 1924 – University of Chicago students Richard Loeb and Nathan Leopold, Jr. murder 14-year-old Bobby Franks in a " thrill killing ".
* 2003 – Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley orders the midnight destruction of Meigs Field Airport
Richard Henry Lee Elementary School in Rossmoor, California and Richard Henry Lee School in Chicago, Illinois are also named in his honor.
The shop owner, Bill Richard, made a deal with the Chicago Roller Skate Company to produce sets of skate wheels, which they attached to square wooden boards.
Richard Carrigan, a particle physicist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory near Chicago, Illinois, suggested that passive SETI could also be dangerous in the style of computer viruses.
* December 20 – Richard J. Daley, Mayor of Chicago for 21 years, dies.
* December 20 – Richard J. Daley, American Mayor of Chicago ( b. 1902 )
* July 25 – July 28 – In Chicago, the 1960 Republican National Convention nominates Vice-President Richard Nixon as its candidate for President of the United States, and Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., as its candidate to become the new Vice-President.
* May 21 – University of Chicago students Richard Loeb and Nathan Leopold, Jr. murder 14-year-old Bobby Franks in a thrill killing.
** Richard Speck murders 8 student nurses in their Chicago dormitory.
** Murderer Richard Speck is sentenced to death in the electric chair for killing eight student nurses in Chicago.
** Richard J. Daley defeats Robert Merrian to become Mayor of Chicago by a vote of 708, 222 to 581, 555.
Richard Joseph Daley ( May 15, 1902 – December 20, 1976 ) served for 21 years as the mayor and undisputed Democratic boss of Chicago and is considered by historians to be the " last of the big city bosses.
Richard M. Daley, his son, is the former and longest-serving mayor of Chicago.
Richard J. Daley was born in Bridgeport, a working-class neighborhood of Chicago.
Their eldest son, Richard M. Daley, was elected mayor of Chicago in 1989, and served in that position until his retirement in 2011.
Since Daley's death and the subsequent election of son Richard as mayor in 1989, the first Mayor Daley has become known as " Boss Daley ," " Old Man Daley ," " Papa Bear ," or " Daley Senior " to residents of Chicago.

Richard and Tribune
Before the cold war began in the late 1940s, Foot favoured a ' third way ' foreign policy for Europe ( he was joint author with Richard Crossman and Ian Mikardo of the pamphlet Keep Left in 1947 ), but in the wake of the communist seizure of power in Hungary and Czechoslovakia he and Tribune took a strongly anti-communist position, eventually embracing NATO.
" The signature act of Richard Daley's 22 years in office was the midnight bulldozing of Meigs Field ," according to Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn.
Foster had been introduced to the story by the widow of novelist Richard Wright, an agent for Edmund Naughton, who was then living in Paris and working for the International Herald Tribune.
These entries were originally published by the Tribune Company in 1923 under the title Tribune Tower Competition and later in The Chicago Tribune Tower Competition: Skyscraper Design and Cultural Change in the 1920s by Katherine Solomonson and Richard A. Etlin, 2001.
The film was completed $ 201, 000 over budget and seventeen days behind schedule, and Richard Watts, Jr. of the New York Herald Tribune described it as " dull and commonplace ," with Merman doing " as well as possible " but unable to register " on the screen as magnificently as she does on the stage.
Another reviewer, Lawrence Gilman, a Richard Wagner specialist who later wrote a famously devastating review of Gershwin's Porgy and Bess, commenting on the Rhapsody in the New York Tribune on February 13, 1924, said:
In his November 10, 1933, review in The New York Herald Tribune, Richard Watts, Jr. wrote that Sullavan " plays the tragic and lovelorn heroine of this shrewdly sentimental orgy with such forthright sympathy, wise reticence and honest feeling that she establishes herself with some definiteness as one of the cinema people to be watched ".
* " John Wheatley: The Labour lion who led ", Richard Leonard, Tribune, 12 May 2010
In March 2009, Tribune replaced Carver with Richard Graziano, who was given a dual role as Courant publisher and general manager of Tribune's two Hartford television statons.
The paper was home to such writers as Dorothy Thompson, Red Smith, Richard Watts, Jr. and Walter Kerr and begat the International Herald Tribune and New York magazine.
Among her correspondents were editor William Hayes Ward of the New York Independent, Richard Watson Guilder of the Century Magazine, and publisher Whitelaw Reid of the New York Daily Tribune.
Among journalists on Tribune in the 1950s were Richard Clements, Ian Aitken and Mervyn Jones, who related his experience on the paper in his autobiography Chances.
" A Line o ' Type Or Two ," Bert Leston Taylor's verse column in the Chicago Tribune, was now being done by Richard Henry Little.
Her performance prompted Richard Watts of the New York Herald Tribune to call her " the greatest feminine performer in the American theatre ," and Brooks Atkinson described her as " a goddess " in his review in the New York Times.
* 1983: Richard Locher, Chicago Tribune
* Richard H. Askin, CEO of Tribune Entertainment and President of Samuel Goldwyn Television
Richard Harry ' Dick ' Clements ( 11 October 1928 – 23 November 2006 ) was editor of the left-wing weekly Tribune from 1961 to 1982.
In 1938, Richard Little, owner of Scranton's Sunday paper, The Scrantonian ( founded 1897 ), teamed up with M. L. Goodman to buy the Tribune as well.
Ebert's co-host on the television program Ebert & Roeper, Chicago Tribune critic Richard Roeper, said that the documentary was " a brilliantly executed, brutally entertaining dissection of what one observer called the greatest corporate fraud in American history.
Axelrod contributed an op-ed to the Chicago Tribune in defense of patronage after two top officials in the administration of longtime client Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley were arrested for what federal prosecutors described as " pervasive fraud " in City Hall hiring and promotions.
According to the Chicago Tribune, " full-time ghost hunter " Richard Crowe has collected " three dozen.
His mentors include Virgil Thomson, a critic for the New York Herald Tribune, and Richard Dyer, who was the Boston Globe's classical music critic for 33 years.

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