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Page "Statue of Liberty" ¶ 22
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firm and Frères
Christian Dior was born in Granville, a seaside town on the coast of Normandy, France, the second of the five children of Maurice Dior, a wealthy fertilizer manufacturer ( the family firm was Dior Frères ), and his wife, the former Isabelle Cardamone.
: a large 71-stop, 4-manual instrument in the west end gallery constructed by Flentrop firm of Zaandam, Netherlands ; and a smaller 19-stop, 2-manual instrument in the south chancel by Casavant Frères of Saint-Hyacinthe, Canada.
After the firing of Arthur Solomon as the head of Lazard's real estate division in 1999, Meyer sold his significant minority interest in Lazard Frères Real Estate Investors and moved on to establish Meyer and Co. LLC, an investment and venture capital firm.
Once the political situation was back to normal, in 1840, the firm was re-registered as Bovet Frères et Cie .; the share capital amounted to 1 million francs.
* In 1955 a great pipe organ from the world-renowned Casavant Frères firm of St-Hyacinthe, Québec was installed as a memorial to the parishioners who died in World War I and World War II.

firm and copper
The state-owned firm CODELCO is the world's largest copper-producing company, with recorded copper reserves of 200 years.
The use of a copper bowl, or the addition of cream of tartar is required to additionally denature the proteins to create the firm peaks, otherwise the whites will not be firm.
In November 2007 Australian mining firm Frontier Resources announced plans to divert a section of the track to make way for a copper mine.
Engineering consultant John G. Cooke of John G. Cooke & Associates collaborated with building contracting firm Lari Construction to repair, replace and repoint stones, install anchors, and install a new copper roof.

firm and merchants
Beginning slowly through contacts with Berber and Arab merchants engaged in the important caravan trades and rapidly advancing through the Almoravid conquests, Islamization did not take firm hold until the arrival of Yemeni Arabs in the 12th and 13th centuries and was not complete until several centuries later.
However, dealing between merchants, an offer can be made ' firm ' or irrevocable for a certain period of time.
The discount retailer named Job Lot used to be located at the World Trade Center but moved to Church Street ; merchants bought extra unsold items at steep prices and sold them as a discount to consumers and shoppers included " thrifty homemakers and browsing retirees " who " rubbed elbows with City Hall workers and Wall Street executives "; but the firm went bust in 1993.
As a senior partner in a firm of tea merchants, he modernized sugar production in Demerara.
A few years later the firm was sold to the Clydesdale Bank, putting Law's career in jeopardy until his uncles loaned him the money to buy a partnership in an iron merchants firm.
Working long hours ( and insisting that his employees did as well ), Law turned the firm into one of the most profitable iron merchants in the Glaswegian and Scottish markets.
After a few years schooling while living at Halsetown, near St Ives, Cornwall, he became a clerk to a firm of East India merchants in London, but he soon gave up a commercial career and started as an actor.
In 1825 the firm became merchants as well as manufacturers, and about the same time they erected a new spinning mill.
Ritchie was born at Dundee, Scotland, the third son of William Ritchie, of Rockhill near Broughty Ferry in Forfarshire, head of the firm of William Ritchie & Sons, of London and Dundee, East India merchants, jute spinners and manufacturers.
He started his career as a buyer in Thomas Furness and Company, wholesale provision merchants, a firm owned by his older brother Thomas, and became a partner two years later.
The magazine was first published in May 1903 as The Red Book Illustrated by Stumer, Rosenthal and Eckstein, a firm of Chicago retail merchants.
In Chicago he became a member of the wholesale and retail merchants firm Wadsworth, Dyer & Chapin until it was desolved in 1843.
He started his working life working for a Liverpool firm of merchants.
He became a senior partner in a Grimsby firm of jewellers and merchants.
In 1847 he was alcalde ’ s clerk under Bryant and Hyde, in 1848 a partner in the firm of McDonald & Buchanan, auctioneers and commission merchants.
He had many business interests, but was most notably a partner in Block, Grey and Block, a firm of wine merchants in South Audley Street, Mayfair, later joining Ellis, Son and Vidler of Hastings and London.
As a teenager, he moved to Liverpool, becoming apprenticed to a firm of shipowners and merchants.
There he became one of the city's most prominent merchants with the Front Street dry-goods firm he established with various partners, the last being Jonathan Sturges ( 1802 – 1874 ).
Though many of the other merchants traded in African slaves, Okill's was the only firm to take no part in the slave traffic, which instead " traded in wood and teeth ( ivory )"< ref > Williams, Gomer < cite > The Liverpool Privateers and The Liverpool Slave Trade </ cite > p. 472.
Vurjeevandas was educated in Bombay, started a new firm under the name of Vurjeevandas & Sons, and soon became one of the wealthiest merchants in Bombay.
His father forbade him to accept a scholarship to Cambridge and so he was apprenticed to a firm of Liverpool cotton merchants.
Claflin became a member of the firm of Bulkley & Claflin, wholesale dry goods merchants.
firm of B. D. Morehead and Company, general merchants, and stock and station agents, which afterwards became Moreheads Limited.

firm and donated
Ten areas were originally developed by the Olmsted Brothers landscaping firm, and other tracts have been donated to the city over the years.
Another early addition to the locomotive fleet was No. 6 Douglas, donated to the society by the Birmingham engineering firm Abelsons Ltd.
In 1927, Walter V. Cranford, a construction engineer whose firm built many of Brooklyn's subway tunnels, donated $ 15, 000 to BBG for a rose garden.
During the campaign, Doyle was dogged by charges that Georgia Thompson, a state employee, had steered a travel agency contract to a firm whose principals had donated $ 20, 000 to his campaign.
Designed by the Boston firm of Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge in the same academic classical style as their building for the Art Institute, it was located on Michigan Avenue between Washington Street and Randolph Street on land donated by the Grand Army of the Republic, a Civil War Veterans group led by John A. Logan, a Civil War General and U. S. Senator from Illinois.
Built between 1924 and 1933 by the architectural firm York and Sawyer with funds donated by William Cook ( an alumnus ), the Cook Law Quadrangle comprises four buildings:
Board members head fundraising efforts throughout the year, ranging from Donate a Day's Pay ( DADP ), in which highly paid law firm clerks donate a day's salary to SFF, to a grand auction in March that invites bids on various donated items, including sports tickets, meals with faculty members, and art.
Dorsey was a firm believer in education and he donated a large quantity of land for black schools.
The law firm donated $ 30 million to the Minneapolis Foundation in 1998, a contribution made possible by the settlement fee ; at the time, the gift was thought to be the largest contribution from a law firm to a community foundation.
A firm believer in universal, free and public education, Bamberger at one point donated some of his own money in order to keep the public school system solvent.
A charismatic figure, he was the founder of W. P. Carey & Co., the corporate real estate financing firm headquartered in New York City and donated the funds to establish the Carey School at Johns Hopkins, the Carey School of Law, and the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University.
*: Saudi Refining, a Houston-based subsidiary of state oil firm Saudi Aramco, donated $ 5 million to the American Red Cross, as well as $ 250, 000 from AGFUND.

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