7,356 research outputs found

    Marriage record of Baxter, Daniel H. and Murphy, Nora

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    Marriage license for Daniel H. Baxter and Nora Murphy. John Grimaldi was the Notary Public

    Letter from N.J. Murphy to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from [N.J.] Murphy, 7 Eblana Avenue, Dún Laoghaire (County Dublin), to (Hagan), in thanks for the faculties. Asking for the papal blessing for William Searson and Nora Mary Kennedy's wedding. Discussing payment

    Letter From Nora G. to Alfred L. Shoemaker, March 17, 1948

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    A handwritten letter from Nora G. addressed to Alfred L. Shoemaker, dated March 17, 1948. Within, the author provides a list of old weather predictions accredited to Peter Derro, as well as information about special Saints\u27 days and agricultural advice.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/shoemaker_documents/1104/thumbnail.jp

    Interview with Filmmaker Pat Murphy

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    FILMMAKER Pat Murphy began studying art at the Ulster College of Art and Design and was the first European to spend a scholarship year at the Whitney Museum of American Art. She holds an MA in Film and Television from the Royal College of Arts, London. Pat Murphy was a founder board member of Film Base in 1987, and has taught Film Studies and Film History at a number of institutions. She is currently a lecturer in Film Studies at Queens University Belfast. Her Films include Maeve (1981) Anne Devlin (1984) and Nora (2001) which was selected for the Berlin Film Festival and won the First prize at the Trieste Film Festival for Best Script. (1) SOURCES Desmond Bell: Pat - where did the idea for the film Nora come from? Pat Murphy: It originally came from Brenda Maddox\u27s book of the same name.(1) I..

    Murphy, Nora. (Death, 1911-05-06)

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    Address: 1216 W. Front St.2430/1911Original record filed in drawer labeled 'MURPHY-MYTHASAY'

    Nora, Nora : a novel

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    Peyton is not ready to share her widowed father with anyone, let alone a barely remembered cousin who just rolled into town. However, her father seems to like Nora well enough, and prim Aunt Augusta hates her, which raises Nora slightly in Peyton's esteem. Maybe Nora is just what quiet Lytton, Georgia needs this summer. The whole household is revitalized by Nora's energy, and it looks like she might stay on forever. But soon it becomes clear that something is troubling Nora deeply. It has to be something from her past that's bothering her, something she is running away from. When the shocking truth comes to light, it stuns the residents of their small segregated town. It also teaches Peyton the enormous cost of loving -- and the necessity of doing it anyway. New York Times bestselling author Anne Rivers Siddons has created a quirky, wildly likeable, and truly unforgettable heroine. Nora, Nora is a wonderful novel, written with insight and a keen sense of time and place. It is destined to be Anne Rivers Siddons's biggest hit yet

    Murphy, Nora (Death, 1891-09-04)

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    Address: Good Samaritan Hospital 456 John St.Age at death: 2472/Pg 101/1891/F W S/Ireland/Dr. C.P. Judkins/Mulvihill/St. Joseph NewOriginal record filed in drawer labeled 'MURPHY-MYTHASAY'

    Opening the door : a director’s approach to Ingmar Bergman’s Nora.

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    In 1981, Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman radically adapted Henrik Ibsen’s classic stageplay A Doll’s House in order to create his own theatrical work, Nora. Through cutting much of Ibsen’s text and many of his characters, Bergman focused his adaptation on the figure of Nora Helmer, a naïve 19th-century wife and mother desperately trying to avoid the consequences of her past actions. This thesis examines the process undertaken in bringing Bergman’s play to its November 2015 performance run at Baylor University, with explorations of playwright and playscript histories, of directorial analysis and production concepts, and the creative collaborations established between director, designers, and actors

    Nora E. Floyd, Marian Henry, Edith Bythewood, Mamie Brydie, Anna Bothwell, and Others, February 6, 1911

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    Nora E. Floyd, Marian Henry, Edith Bythewood, Mamie Brydie, Anna Bothwell and others sit on the steps outside of North Hall. Written on verso: "1. [?]ell S[?]eight Chatano[?], 2.[?] Floyd, 3. Marian Henry (Emma Henry's sister) Chatanooga Tenn., 4. Edith Bythewood Savannah Ga., 5. Mamie Brydie 6. Anna Bothwell, 7. Mrs. O'neil Head of the Laundry. Taken on North Hall Entrance in our Sat. attire. Sat. 6 of Feb. 1911

    Nora McInerny Interview: Real College Podcast

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    Runtime (34:42).This week we have dedicated the entire episode to an interview with author, podcast host, non-profit founder, and really cool lady Nora McInerny.Support for this program comes from the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund.Radio K (KUOM). University of Minnesota. (2018). Nora McInerny Interview: Real College Podcast. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/218449
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