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Richardson and agreed
He then approached whaling agent John T. Richardson, who told them to contact his son-in-law, whaling captain George Smith Anthony, who agreed to help.
In 2009 Fish & Richardson agreed to lease space in One Marina Park in South Boston as its new headquarters and abandon its current headquarters.
In December 2011, Richardson agreed to a four-year, $ 25 million contract to remain in Orlando.
Amongst the first audiences were Richard Burton and Ralph Richardson and being so taken by the achievement, Ralph Richardson immediately agreed to become the company's first President.

Richardson and Sanborn
On June 3, 1874 President Grant appointed Bristow Secretary of the Treasury after William A. Richardson was removed in light of the Sanborn incident.
In his last months in office Richardson became embroiled in the " Sanborn incident.
William Adams Richardson, Ulysses S. Grant ’ s Secretary of the Treasury, hired a private citizen, John D. Sanborn, to collect $ 427, 000 in unpaid taxes.

Richardson and could
Lieutenant Richardson could envy the officers and men of the John Harvey in their innocent assumption that the ship contained nothing more dangerous than high explosive bombs.
Naturalist John Richardson, who studied the breed in the 1820s, before it was diluted by crossings with other breeds, could detect no decided difference in form between the breed and coyotes, and surmised it was a domesticated version of the wild animal.
The Vase also inspired a 19th century competition to duplicate its cameo-work in glass, with Benjamin Richardson offering a £ 1000 prize to anyone who could achieve that feat.
In an interview with Richardson in 1979, Danish historian Mikael Venge, author of the article about Christian II in Dansk Biografisk Leksikon said: " I think you ought to protest the next time the Swedish radio claims anything so utterly unfounded that could be understood as if the Danes approved of the Stockholm bloodbath.
In particular, Richardson asked Hill if he could help shorten the chapters because Richardson was worried about the length of the novel.
Between 1744 and 1746, Richardson tried to find readers who could help him shorten the work, but his readers wanted to keep the work in its entirety.
Richardson once wrote to a friend that " my nervous disorders will permit me to write with more impunity than to read " and that writing allowed him a " freedom he could find nowhere else ".
Richardson had a " faith " in the act of letter writing, and believed that letters could be used to accurately portray character traits.
Commenting on Australia's victory, the team's vice-captain Vic Richardson said, "... we could have played any team without Bradman, but we could not have played the blind school without Clarrie Grimmett ".
Richardson was convinced that it could be a profitable annual event but found little support for the concept within the board of directors of the Calgary Industrial Exhibition.
He has made one-off appearances, including on Red Nose Day's The Ultimate Makeover, where Hancock, Anna Ryder Richardson, Phil Tufnell and TV gardener Joe Swift transformed a Liverpool play centre for children whose parents could not afford child-care.
In his early days at the Old Vic, Richardson was the target of the sometimes waspish reviews of leading critic, James Agate, who thought that Richardson could not play villains ; Agate said of Richardson's Iago, " he could not hurt a fly, which was very good Richardson, but indifferent Shakespeare ".
Other important early modernists were Dorothy Richardson ( 1873-1957 ), whose novel Pointed Roof ( 1915 ), is one of the earliest example of the stream of consciousness technique and D. H. Lawrence ( 1885-1930 ), who wrote with understanding about the social life of the lower and middle classes, and the personal life of those who could not adapt to the social norms of his time.
This makes the future of a team in Ottawa an uncertain one, because if it is decided to demolish the stadium, an Ottawa team would be without a stadium until another is built, and would have to play at a smaller venue in Ottawa or in another Ontario town such as Kingston, which has a stadium ( Richardson Memorial Stadium ) that could be raised to the CFL minimum of 25, 000 seats, and has hosted a Grey Cup game before, or the most likely scenario, the Ottawa Renegades will stay suspended for the foreseeable future until a new stadium is built or the team will be folded outright.
After his friend and council ally, Nick Lalich approached Federal MP Ted Grace for Ngo to join the ALP, Grace arranged a meeting with Senator Graham Richardson and Leo McLeay, Federal MP for Watson and Speaker of the House of Representatives, who decided that if promoted to be a member of Legislative Council ( MLC ), Ngo could be a potential " counter " to the Liberal party's Asian MLC Helen Sham-Ho.
William Blaine Richardson had descended to the Dominican Republic a family, senior resources at the time Trujillo kingdom which could highlight the Admiral of the Navy Rafael Benjamin Richardson Lightbourne as a relative of the same.
Richardson acknowledged the error which he claimed was unintentional, saying that he had been scouted by several teams and told that he " would or could " be drafted, but was mistaken in saying that he was actually drafted.

Richardson and keep
However, Richardson did not keep his authorship secret and, on the prompting of his friends like Samuel Johnson, dropped this framing device from the second edition.
However, once Stephen Richardson and his murderous alter-ego were finally dead and buried, the writers struggled to keep the momentum as several high-profile characters departed and new storylines seemed lame compared to what had happened before.

Richardson and half
Olmsted was a frequent collaborator with architect Henry Hobson Richardson, for whom he devised the landscaping schemes for half a dozen projects, including Richardson's commission for the Buffalo State Asylum.
Nearly half came from a few millionaires such as William H. Regnery, H. Smith Richardson of the Vick Chemical Company, General Robert E. Wood of Sears-Roebuck, Sterling Morton of Morton Salt Company, publisher Joseph M. Patterson ( New York Daily News ) and his cousin, publisher Robert R. McCormick ( Chicago Tribune ).
His father, William Blaine Richardson, Jr. ( died in 1972 ), who was of half Anglo-American and half Mexican descent, was an American Citibank executive who grew up in Boston, Massachusetts and lived and worked in Mexico City.
Richardson wrote more than half of the shows together with his long time writing partner Pete Richens, and he also directed most of the BBC series.
Sir Albert Edward Richardson K. C. V. O., F. R. I. B. A, F. S. A., ( London, 19 May 1880 – 3 February 1964 ) was a leading English architect, teacher and writer about architecture during the first half of the 20th century.
In 1904, Lockwood bowled very well early in the year against Derbyshire, but after that, despite hard pitches emerging, his form ( along with Richardson ) declined so much that Surrey dropped him before the season was half over.
The northeastern rim of Maxwell reaches the approximate midpoint of Richardson, and together with the outer rampart covers nearly half the interior floor.
Maurice Richardson of The Observer of November 30, 1952 summed up thus: " First half is lively and the trick alibi for the murder of the stepson neat enough ; there is a marked decline in sprightliness later on, but half a shot is better than no dope.
Unemployment in Richardson was half a percent lower than the Canberra average.

Richardson and what
Investigating the discrepancies in border estimation, Richardson discovered what is now termed the Richardson Effect: the sum of the segments is inversely proportional to the common length of the segments.
Dr. Richardson teaches Belinda sign language and what things are.
French and Saunders began to establish themselves in what was referred to as the " underground comedy " scene, along with many other prolific actors and comedians like Alan Rickman and Miranda Richardson, people whom they would go on to work with for the next twenty-plus years.
In " Chantilly Lace ", Richardson pretends to have a flirting phone conversation with his girlfriend ; the Mansfield record suggests what his girlfriend might have been saying at the other end of the line.
For example, Samuel Richardson, one of the first settlers in what is now the village, already had a mill in use along the Shunock river by 1702.
Richardson would continue to be a target of Fielding ’ s first novel, but the Pamela phenomenon was just one example of what he saw as a culture of literary abuses in the mid-18th century.
His book, Shadowlands, was serialized on Radio 2, read by Ian Richardson in what was one of the actor's last pieces of broadcast work recorded before his death.
Abraham Somes and James Richardson accepted the offer and settled their families at what is now Somesville.
Betty Richardson wrote that the store is " the Valhalla, of course, of a consumer society ... populated by acquisitive people who pose as mannequins by daylight ; by night, they emerge to grab what they want ": " Happy to sacrifice all human emotions — love, pity, integrity — for the sake of consumer goods, these denizens have their own pecking order and police.
Later works have further developed the concept in efforts to better understand what actual planners do when they plan ( Allmendinger and Gunder 2005 ; Flyvbjerg and Richardson 2002 ; Gunder 2003 ; Pløger 2001 ; Roy 2008 ; Tang 2000 ; Yiftachel 1998, 2006 ).
Their bid was successful, and the new company, Swan Hunter and Wigham Richardson Ltd, went on to build what was to become, in its day, the most famous ocean going liner in the world.
Further, Ellis suggests how Richardson ’ s criteria mesh with criteria mentioned by Bochner who describes what makes him understand and feel with a story.
The literary criteria he mentions are covered in what Richardson advocates: aesthetic value ( Richardson, 2000, p. 15 ).
Despite the late rally, however, the Panthers finished the season with an abysmal 4-12 record, and Capers, who less than two years prior was called " the perfect football coach ", and had what owner Jerry Richardson called a " lifetime contract " to coach the Panthers, was fired.
The Alaska Highway met the Richardson Highway at Delta Junction, five miles ( 8 km ) north on the Richardson Highway from what is now Fort Greely.
Lockwood could break back, though rarely as sharply as Richardson, but what really set Lockwood apart was his unpredictability, with extremely subtle variations of pace and pitch characterising his bowling.
Maurice Richardson in the 13 June 1943 issue of The Observer set the tone thus: " An atmosphere of perpetual, after-breakfast well-being ; sherry parties in a country town where nobody is quite what he seems ; difficult slouching daughters with carefully concealed coltish charm ; crazy spinsters, of course ; and adulterous solicitors.
This led Richardson to organise a meeting of eminent dance professionals at the former Trocadero Restaurant in Piccadilly, with Genée as one of the special guests representing what were, at the time, recognised as the leading methods of Classical Ballet training.
Richardson had led the Gamecocks to their first NCAA Tournament appearance in 1974, which set the stage for what would happen a year later in 1975 when South Carolina posted a 51-6-1 record, made the College World Series, and played for the National Title against Texas ( 5-1 Longhorns victory ).
The graveyard bears witness to the reason for name of the village, with many of the oldest graves bearing what seem more like English names than native Irish, names including ; Sampson, Blackburn, Richardson and Dawson.
Fez admits this to Charlie Richardson after he sees Kitty naked accidentally, asking what she looked like and saying " and I'm only asking this because I find Miss Kitty attractive in a sexual way.

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