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    Overcoming the Obstacles to Counselling Research

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    The author of this article, Brother Marion F. Belka, S.M., is Vice President of St. Mary\u27s University in San Antonio, Texas, and President of the National Catholic Guidance Conference

    Oral History Interview: Marion F. Brown (0578)

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    In her two 2002 interviews with Barry Teicher, Marion Brown explains the path that led her to the University of Wisconsin-Madison and eventually into a central role in the Chancellors Scholarship Program. She details the development of the program, largely at the prompting of Mercile Lee, and in the process discusses a number of major figures in UW campus life. This interview was conducted for inclusion in the University of Wisconsin-Madison Archives Oral History Project. In her 2014 follow-up interview with Peyton Smith, Marion Brown relates changes and continuities in the Chancellors Scholars Program from 2002 to 2014. She emphasizes the need to continue the energy of founder Mercile Lee, and explains some of the successes and challenges of the programs last decade. This interview was conducted for inclusion in the University of Wisconsin-Madison Archives Oral History Project

    Letter re: letter

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    Letter from Marion F. Peters of the West Texas Gas Company to Amon Carter requesting that he send a letter to Will Rogers

    Letter re: sketch

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    Letter from Marion F. Peters of the West Texas Gas Company to Amon Carter enclosed with his sketch from Will Rogers

    Marion F. Holt Interview - Transcript

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    Marion Francis Holt (1895- ) Marion F. Holt was born in Marshall County, Tennessee. He was trained as a teacher at the Teacher’s Training Course at A and I State College in Nashville. He was married for several years to Thelma Holt and they had six children, two of whom became preachers. While in Indianapolis, he preached for several years and taught school for a time before returning to Tennessee to the Jefferson Street Church of Christ. He also taught at the Nashville Christian Institute. The interview focuses on his early remembrances of the Churches of Christ in Tennessee and his association with many early evangelists mentioned in the book Our Ministers and Song Leaders by Annie C. Tuggle

    Marion F. Wolff Collection 1888-2003

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    The contents of the collection concerns the parents of Marion Freyer Wolff, Leo and Eva Freyer née Lichtenstein, as well as other extended members of the family. Included are school certificates, report cards, marriage certificates, correspondence, documents on World War II internment in Theresienstadt, and manuscripts about the German Socialist politician Hugo Haase who was assassinated in 1919. His wife was the sister of Marion Wolff's grandfather.All folders include a descriptive note of the contents written by the donor, Marion Wolff.Marion Freyer Wolff’s parents were Leo Freyer and his wife Eva, née Lichtenstein. Eva's father was Max Lichtenstein, a lawyer active in the workers’ movement in East Prussia and a member of the Koenigsberg city council; he died in Theresienstadt in 1942. Erwin Lichtenstein was Eva Freyer’s brother. Max Lichtenstein's sister, Thea was married to Hugo Haase (1863-1919), a Socialist representative to the German Reichstag who was assassinated in 1919.processed for digitizationSent for digitizationdigitize

    Godfroy Marion F., Kourou, 1763, le dernier rêve de l’Amérique française, 2011

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    Rivallain Josette. Godfroy Marion F., Kourou, 1763, le dernier rêve de l’Amérique française, 2011. In: Outre-mers, tome 100, n°380-381,2013. Missions chrétiennes et pouvoir colonial. pp. 396-397

    Godfroy Marion F., Kourou, 1763, le dernier rêve de l’Amérique française, 2011

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    Rivallain Josette. Godfroy Marion F., Kourou, 1763, le dernier rêve de l’Amérique française, 2011. In: Outre-mers, tome 100, n°380-381,2013. Missions chrétiennes et pouvoir colonial. pp. 396-397
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