2,349 research outputs found

    Falls in Wilson Canyon

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    Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows a cascade in Wilson Canyon, a tributary to the Colorado River

    Keyhole, Glen Canyon, 1958

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    Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows The Keyhole, a landmark along the Colorado River

    Camp layout, Dr. Barbury in forefront

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    Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows Dr. Barbury and others in the expedition setting up camp on a beach by the Colorado River in Glen Canyon

    Swimming deer, Colorado River

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    Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows a deer swimming in the Colorado River

    Maurice Cooley pondering his next climb. Frank Wright\u27s boat is in the river

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    Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows Maurice Cooley standing in a small motorized boat on the Colorado River in Glen Canyon, Utah

    Benny Bullard at an Anasazi ruin

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    Color photograph by Lloyd M. Pierson, who participated in an archeological survey trip through Glen Canyon with the National Park Service and the University of Utah\u27s Department of Archeology in 1958. This photo shows Benny Bullard at Wasp House, an Ancestral Puebloan ruin in Lake Canyon, a tributary side canyon of Glen Canyon, Utah

    Harry Ueno

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    Color photograph of Harry Ueno. Mr Ueno was a prisoner at the Moab Isolation Center and inspired LLoyd Pierson, to visit the Manzanar War Relocation Center in California for research

    Unknown man in shorts at Manzanar War Relocation Center prison guard building

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    Color photograph of prison guard building at the Manzanar War Relocation Center. The Moab Museum curator at the time, LLoyd Pierson, went to visit the camp in California for research

    David Martyn Lloyd-Jones 1899-1981 and twentieth-century evangelicalism.

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    The purpose of this thesis was to demonstrate the significance of the life and ministry of David Martyn Lloyd-Jones in post-war British evangelicalism and to show that, so far as Protestant churches in England and Wales were concerned, no history of the period can afford to ignore him. It is our contention that despite differences of opinion and self- marginalization Lloyd-Jones was and has remained a major force in evangelical thinking. In order to understand how this developed the thesis has been structured along thematic lines highlighting events, persons and questions. The study begins by setting the stage with a biographical chapter and goes on to examine the kind of impact that Lloyd-Jones's preaching had on Christians of all denominations. He believed preaching to be the greatest need of the day and the position of this thesis is that preaching was Lloyd-Jones's greatest contribution to twentieth- century Christianity. As a preacher he attracted one of London's largest congregations and in chapter three we look at the history and nature of Westminster Chapel comparing it with neighbouring ministries, and establishing the kind of people who went to hear him. Chapters four and five ascertain the factors which shaped Lloyd-Jones's views on the church and show how his Reformed evangelicalism led in a separatist as opposed to an ecumenical direction and finally, to a position which was neither Congregational nor Presbyterian. Our further argument is that while he favoured unity among believers his separatist ecclesiology only exacerbated the situation and left evangelicals more divided than before. Chapters six to eight evaluate Lloyd-Jones's background, the nature of his leadership and the extent of his influence - factors which either shaped or were the outcome of his ministry - and looks at the issues which these questions raise

    Letter from Margaret Lloyd to Charlotte Michaud

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    Letter from Margaret Lloyd to Charlotte Michaud, 11/19/1938. Note written on envelope: From Margaret Lloyd, then dance critic for Christian Science Monitor. Kirstein was author of Blast @ Ballet — had nice remarks therein for Michaud.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/michaud-1938-1964/1002/thumbnail.jp
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