4,750 research outputs found

    Tate Sculpture Replica Project

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    Narrative based on the diaries of John Morgan

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    Scan of a typed narrative based on the diaries of John Hamilton Morgan. Includes text of numerous writings by Morgan. Author of this narrative not stated, but may have been his son, Nicholas G. Morga

    Reverend Charles Morgan, Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, Tate, Georgia, November 2010

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    Reverend Charles Morgan, Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, Tate, Georgia, November 2010Reverend Charles Morgan, Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, Tate, Georgia, November 201

    Notes for corrections of John Morgan\u27s journal

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    Scan of corrections notes for a narrative based on the journal entries of John Hamilton Morgan from 1875 through 1892, covering his major missionary journeys in the Southern United States and his work in settling some of the Southern converts in the San Luis Valley of Colorado. Author of this narrative unidentified, but may have been Morgan\u27s son, Nicholas G. Morga

    Typed version of John Morgan\u27s journal told in the third person (1875-1892): Part [26]

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    Scan of part of a typescript narrative based on the journal entries of John Hamilton Morgan from 1875 through 1892, covering his major missionary journeys in the Southern United States and his work in settling some of the Southern converts in the San Luis Valley of Colorado. Author of this narrative unidentified, but may have been Morgan\u27s son, Nicholas G. Morga

    Shirley Roper Patrick, Reverend Charles Morgan, and Lynette Bridges, Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, Tate, Georgia, November 2010

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    (L-r) Shirley Roper Patrick, Reverend Charles Morgan, and Lynette Bridges, Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, Tate, Georgia, November 2010Shirley Roper Patrick, Reverend Charles Morgan, and Lynette Bridges, Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, Tate, Georgia, November 201

    Silo 1963–4 by James Rosenquist

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    This In Focus presents Rosenquist’s Silo as a reflection on the image of the female consumer in the 1950s and 1960s, casting its prominent sculptural ‘T-zone’ as a metaphor for taste, consumption and advertising’s persuasive tactics

    John Hamilton Morgan

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    Scan of a typescript with title, John Hamilton Morgan, ending at page 43, where John Morgan is en route to Salt Lake City. Author not given but probably his son, Nicholas G. Morga

    Russell V. Morgan Papers

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    Russell V. Morgan (1893-1952) was an American music educator, former President of the Music Educators National Conference (MENC), now known as the National Association for Music Education (NAfME), (1930-32) and MENC Hall of Fame inductee (1996). Morgan studied music education at Northwestern University where he received a BM (1915), MM (1921), and was awarded an honorary doctorate (1936). During his career, Morgan served as an army bandmaster during World War I, a church organist, a supervisor of music in public schools, and author of articles, books and school texts on music and music education. The Russell V. Morgan Papers covers the period from 1896-1998; the bulk of the materials date from 1920-1952. The collection consists of both personal and professional papers including published and unpublished writings, speeches, correspondence, programs, photographs, clippings, and articles related to the Morgans career as a music educator, his involvement with MENC, and music education and reference materials

    Interview with Bernice Morgan

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    Bernice Morgan (nee Vardy) is a Newfoundland author born in 1935 in St. John's. Her most well-known novel is Random Passage (1992) which, along with the sequel Waiting for Time (1994), was adapted into a CBC television mini-series in 2002. Additional publications include the anthology From This Place: A Selection of Writing by Women of Newfoundland and Labrador (1977) and Topography of Love (2000). She has received multiple Provincial Arts and Letters Awards; Thomas H. Raddall Atlantic Fiction Prize (1995); Canadian Authors' Association Literary Prize for Fiction (1995); Artist of the Year by the Newfoundland and Labrador Arts Council (1996); and received an honorary doctorate from Memorial University in 1998. Morgan has been very active in the province's arts community. She served on the board of the Provincial Arts Council, the editorial board of Killick Press, the executive of the Writers' Alliance of Newfoundland and Labrador, and the Newfoundland Writers' Guild
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