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Samuel and Eliot
Holland, minister of the Ottawa church, in 1898, Samuel A. Eliot, President of the American Unitarian Association in 1908, Charles Huntingdon Pennoyer, minister of the Halifax Universalist Church in 1909, and Horace Westwood, a Unitarian minister in Winnipeg in 1913.
Portrait of George Eliot by Samuel Laurence circa 1860
The likes of Bob Dylan, Serge Gainsbourg and The Rolling Stones combined popular musical traditions with modernist verse, adopting literary devices derived from James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, James Thurber, T. S. Eliot, Guillaume Apollinaire, Allen Ginsberg, and others.
* Samuel Eliot Morison, Christopher Columbus, Mariner, Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1955.
Samuel Eliot Morison wrote that had Marshall carried out his constitutional duties, assumed the presidency, and made the concessions necessary for the passage of the League of Nations treaty in late 1920, the United States would have been much more involved in European affairs and could have helped prevent the rise of Adolf Hitler, which began in the following year.
Notable Unitarians include Béla Bartók the 20th century composer, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Theodore Parker in theology and ministry, Charles Darwin, Joseph Priestley and Linus Pauling in science, George Boole in mathematics, Susan B. Anthony, John Locke in civil government, and Florence Nightingale in humanitarianism and social justice, Charles Dickens, John Bowring and Samuel Taylor Coleridge in literature, Frank Lloyd Wright in arts, Josiah Wedgwood in industry, Thomas Starr King in ministry and politics, and Charles William Eliot in education.
Samuel Eliot Morison ( 1971 ) suggested the southern part of Newfoundland ; Erik Wahlgren ( 1986 ) Miramichi Bay in New Brunswick ; and Icelandic climate specialist Pall Bergthorsson ( 1997 ) proposed New York City.
* Morrison, Samuel Eliot.
* Morrison, Samuel Eliot.
The historian Samuel Eliot Morison wrote " this occurs at Angouleme ( New York ) rather than Refugio ( Newport ).
He also illustrated more than 50 works by other authors, including Samuel Beckett, Edward Lear, John Bellairs, H. G. Wells, Alain-Fournier, Charles Dickens, T. S. Eliot, Hilaire Belloc, Muriel Spark, Florence Parry Heide, John Updike, John Ciardi and Felicia Lamport.
* 1943: Admiral of the Ocean Sea by Samuel Eliot Morison
* 1960: John Paul Jones by Samuel Eliot Morison
It was attended by numerous notable figures of the time, including Charles Darwin, Samuel Colt, members of the Orléanist Royal Family and the writers Charlotte Brontë, Charles Dickens, Lewis Carroll, George Eliot and Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
* Samuel Eliot House, added November 9, 1972
b. The Founding of Harvard College, Samuel Eliot Morison, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1935, pages 91 and 396.
The scion of the wealthy Boston Eliot family, he was the grandson of banker Samuel Eliot.
This was a particularly bitter blow because of a change in his family's economic circumstances — the failure of his father, Samuel Atkins Eliot, in the Panic of 1857.
Another son, Samuel Atkins Eliot II ( August 24, 1862-October 15, 1950 ) was a Unitarian minister who became the first and longest-serving president of the American Unitarian Association ( 1900 – 1927 ).
Grace was a close relative of Frances Stone Hopkinson, wife of Samuel Atkins Eliot II, his son.
* Samuel Eliot Morison.
Professor Dennis Showalter, the 2005 recipient of the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Military History, is an expert on World War II, a Distinguished Visiting Professor at West Point and the United States Air Force Academy, reviewer for the History Book Club, and author of Tannenberg: Clash of Empires, the 1992 winner of the American Historical Association's Paul Birdsall Prize.
* Biographies of Samuel Johnson, Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift, George Eliot and Thomas Hobbes

Samuel and Morison
* Samuel Morison Brown, chemist, poet and essayist, 1817 – 1856
Halsey received much criticism for his decisions during the battle, with naval historian Samuel Morison terming the Third Fleet run to the north " Halsey's Blunder ".
Samuel Loring Morison was a government security analyst who worked on the side for Jane's, a British military and defense publisher.
Historian Samuel E. Morison wrote in 1949 that Spruance was subjected to much criticism for not pursuing the retreating Japanese, and allowing the retreating Japanese surface fleet to escape.
* Morison, Samuel Eliot, New Guinea and the Marianas, March 1944 – August 1944, vol.
Commager was coauthor, with Samuel Eliot Morison, of the widely-used history text The Growth of the American Republic ( 1930 ; 1937 ; 1942 ; 1950, 1962 ; 1969 ; 7th ed., with William E. Leuchtenburg, 1980 ; abridged editions in 1980 and 1983 under the title Concise History of the American Republic ).
Commager was representative of a whole generation of like-minded historians who were widely read by the general public, including Samuel Eliot Morison, Allan Nevins, Richard Hofstadter, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., and C. Vann Woodward.
Commager and his co-author Samuel Eliot Morison received vigorous criticism from African American intellectuals and other scholars for their very popular textbook The Growth of the American Republic, first published in 1930.
* The Growth of the American Republic ( with Samuel Eliot Morison, New York: Oxford University Press, 1930 Oxford History of the United States ; 7th ed., 1980 .. Revised and abridged edition with Samuel Eliot Morison and William E. Leuchtenburg published by Oxford University Press in 1980 as A Concise History of the American Republic, rev.
Samuel Eliot Morison, Rear Admiral, United States Naval Reserve ( July 9, 1887 – May 15, 1976 ) was an American historian noted for his works of maritime history that were both authoritative and highly readable.
Samuel Eliot Morison was born July 9, 1887 in Boston, Massachusetts to John Holmes Morison ( 1856 – 1911 ) and Emily Marshall ( Eliot ) Morison ( 1857 – 1925 ).

Samuel and ed
* Samuel C. Chu, ed., Madame Chiang Kai-Shek and Her China ( Norwalk, CT: EastBridge, 2004 ).
* " Vita ed opere dell ' astronomo e costruttore aeronautico Samuel Pierpont Langley ", by Giuseppe Ciampaglia.
His fame rests chiefly on the preface and notes to his translation of Samuel Pufendorf's treatise De Jure Naturae et Gentium, translated as Of the Law of Nature and Nations, 4th ed., 1729, London, by B. Kennett et al.
in Samuel Parr ( ed.
* Craig L. Carr ( ed ), The Political Writings of Samuel Pufendorf ( Oxford 1994 ).
* 2003, " Rawls and Liberalism ", in Samuel Freeman ( ed.
Samuel Sorbière, a disciple, recounts Gassendi's life in the first collected edition of the works, by Joseph Bougerel, Vie de Gassendi ( 1737 ; 2nd ed., 1770 ); as does Damiron, Mémoire sur Gassendi ( 1839 ).
* Richard Savage-The Works of Richard Savage ( Samuel Johnson, ed.
* Pepys, Samuel ( ed.
* Samuel Johnson ed., William Shakespeare-The Plays of William Shakespeare
" Gray, writing to Horace Walpole ( August, 1757 ), said that the author " seemed to have retrieved the true language of the stage, which has been lost for these hundred years ," but Samuel Johnson held aloof from the general enthusiasm, and averred that there were not ten good lines in the whole play ( Boswell, Life, ed.
* Hill, Samuel S., ed.
* Rosenberg, Samuel N. & Tischler, Hans ( ed.
* Platner, Samuel Ball and Thomas Ashby ( ed .).
* Lister, Raymond ed The Letters of Samuel Palmer OUP, Oxford 1974 ISBN 978-0-19-817309-0
* Crawford, Samuel J., ed.
* Crawford, Samuel J., ed.
* ' Samuel Scheidt ', The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed.
* Sir Samuel Hoare, Viscount Templewood, Ambassador on Special Mission, Collins ed.
Cameron Harvey, ed., Chief Justice Samuel Freedman: A Great Canadian Judge ( Winnipeg: The Law Society of Manitoba, 1983 ), ISBN 0-9691307-0-8
* Usque, Samuel, Consolaçam as Tribulaçoẽs de Ysrael ( Ferrara, 1553 ; 2d ed.

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