3,944 research outputs found

    J. Murphy with Mrs. Yate and Others, circa 1960

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    Group portrait of J. Murphy with Mrs. Yate and others.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of historic collections as part of the project: Our Story: Digitizing Publications and Photographs of the Historically Black Atlanta University Center Institutions.</em

    Letter from Fintan Murphy to T J Hickey

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    Manuscript letter from Fintan Murphy informing Mr Hickey that the author wishes his resignation to stand. Dated 15 March 1939

    Life of David Garrick, esq. Vol. 1

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    Murphy, Arthur (1727-1805) London: J. Wright, 1801 First edition David Garrick (1717-1779) studied for a short time under Samuel Johnson before they both went to London. Garrick began his passionate career with the stage as a drama critic and a playwright. He began acting in 1741 and became an instant sensation. In 1747, he went into partnership to buy the theater at Drury Lane, and went on to make the theater a popular success, introducing more authentic costumes and stage settings. Garrick continued his acting to rave reviews. Although he continued to manage the Drury Lane theater, Garrick stopped acting in 1766. Garrick\u27s biographer, Arthur Murphy, was an Irish attorney, journalist, actor playwright, and biographer. He began work at a merchant\u27s counting-house on the recommendation of his uncle in 1747. After refusing to go to Jamaica for the merchant, and thereby alienating his uncle, Murphy went to London. In 1754 he began acting, playing the title roles of Richard III and Othello. He wrote more than twenty plays. His first play, The Apprentice, was performed at Drury Lane in 1756. Murphy\u27s plays were almost all adaptations from the French, and very successful, earning him fame and fortune. His career illustrates the precarious financial and legal situation of dramatic authors in Georgian England. He worked and wrote at a time when the English theater was redefining the playwright\u27s position within the burgeoning culture of print. Murphy spent his entire life as a playwright and barrister addressing the professional status of the dramatic author. His greatest success in this endeavor came from his play, Hamlet, with Alterations, a parody of David Garrick\u27s radical adaptation of Shakespeare\u27s Hamlet. Although the play was not produced or published in Murphy\u27s lifetime, it changed the conversation about the bond between a dramatic author and the dramatic text as product

    Filmmaker Noel Murphy describes the creation and content of his film, "The last dymaxion : Buckminster Fuller's dream restored"

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    Filmmaker Noel Murphy describes the creation and content of his film, "The Last Dymaxion: Buckminster Fuller's Dream Restored." Murphy talks about the genius and legacy of Richard Buckminster "Bucky" Fuller, an American architect, author, inventor, and futurist as he introduces the film. The discussion is interrupted for the special screening of the film and picks up again after the screening. The soundtrack is not recorded. Murphy talks about re-editing the film to emphasize the design science thesis and synergy motif and make connections between Fuller's vision and technology being used today. He responds to audience questions and entertains additional questions after his presentation. Murphy is introduced by Michigan State University Librarian Michael Rodriguez. Part of the MSU Libraries' Colloquia Series and the Library Film Series. Cosponsored by: MSU Art, Art History & Design; Michigan State Historic Preservation Office; East Lansing Film Society; and the East Lansing Public Library. Held at the MSU Main Library

    Survey report 1978/79 Glaciology department Author - B.A. Murphy

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    Progress Code: completedStatement: See the report for further information. The values provided in spatial coverage are approximate only. The values provided in temporal coverage are based on the assumption that B.A. Murphy travelled to and from Davis by scheduled Australian Antarctic voyages.Taken from sections of the report:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Introduction:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;The following report is a detailed summary of the surveying and mapping tasks undertaken in the Vestfold Hills and Mac. Robertson Land regions of the Australian Antarctic Territory during the period from 22 December 1978 to 25 February 1979. A copy of the project instruction detailing the tasks originally intended to be undertaken is attached at Annex 37.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;The entire report is available as a pdf download from the URL given below

    sj-pdf-1-ajs-10.1177_03635465221120388 – Supplemental material for Comparison of Walking Biomechanics After Physical Therapist–Led Care or Hip Arthroscopy for Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome: A Secondary Analysis From a Randomized Controlled Trial

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-ajs-10.1177_03635465221120388 for Comparison of Walking Biomechanics After Physical Therapist–Led Care or Hip Arthroscopy for Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome: A Secondary Analysis From a Randomized Controlled Trial by Tamara M. Grant, Laura E. Diamond, Claudio Pizzolato, Trevor N. Savage, Kim Bennell, Edward J. Dickenson, Jillian Eyles, Nadine E. Foster, Michelle Hall, David J. Hunter, David G. Lloyd, Robert Molnar, Nicholas J. Murphy, John O’Donnell, Parminder Singh, Libby Spiers, Phong Tran and David J. Saxby in The American Journal of Sports Medicine</p

    Collaboration and interconnectivity: Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Services and higher education institutions in Nottingham

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    This paper will describe the developing relationship between Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Services and the two Higher Education Institutions in Nottingham. It will chronicle how a very traditional relationship has been transformed, initially by a simple consultancy project, into a much closer working relationship characterised by a much richer variety of collaborative projects. It demonstrates the potential mutual benefits that greater trust and reciprocity between the institutions can bring to both academia and to practice and the impact it has already had on curriculum development, teaching and learning in Nottingham

    Miscellaneous Residences-Log P.19

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    8700 The man who bought the property (Nick, on Nicholas, Murphy) Gift of Dan Kelle

    Miscellaneous Residences-Log P.17

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    8698 The man who bought the property (Nick, or Nicholas, Murphy) Gift of Dan Kelle
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