Under her stage name, Margaret Lynn, she was a dancer and dance captain with the Radio City Rockettes in New York City, and appeared in seven Broadway shows, including Oklahoma!, Carousel, and Mike Todd's Mexican Hayride.
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With her protégé Donn B. Murphy she established summer workshops at Georgetown University to which she brought Army Entertainment Directors from all over the world who met with civilian theater directors, producers and teachers.
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She earned a Master's degree in Speech and Drama at Catholic University of America in Washington DC in 1943, studying with the renowned Rev. Gilbert V. Hartke, O.P.
Margaret Thatcher | Margaret Atwood | Margaret | Lynn Anderson | Margaret Mead | King's Lynn | Loretta Lynn | Lynn Swann | Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon | Margaret Weis | Vera Lynn | Princess Margaret | Margaret Cho | Princess Margaret Hospital | Lynn Harrell | Margaret Mitchell | Lynn Chadwick | Margaret Bourke-White | Joe Lynn Turner | Margaret of Anjou | Margaret Court | Margaret Becker | Lynn, Massachusetts | Margaret Sullavan | Margaret Hodge | Lynn University | Lynn Redgrave | Bob and Margaret | Margaret Murray | Greg Lynn |
Barry W. Lynn (born 1948), American attorney and ordained minister, best known for his leadership of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State
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Barry C. Lynn, American writer who covers global economic issues
The architect was George Devey but, according to Jeremy Williams, '... that feeling of being built up over the centuries that distinguished Devey's work was entirely lacking, partly due to the job being supervised by W.H. Lynn the Belfast architect at his most relentless ... The western-most gate lodge, gabled and galleried, which survives, is Devey at his most delightful.'
She helped those who sought her counsel in seeking after the Lord, one of whom was Watchman Nee.
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Barber referred him to books by J. N. Darby, Madam Jeanne Guyon, Jessie Penn-Lewis, D. M. Panton, T. Austin Sparks, and of others, which had been of help to her.
The first was Hannah Wilkinson Slater, wife of industrialist Samuel Slater: she invented two-ply thread, becoming in 1793 the first American woman to be granted a patent.
In 1998, Florida child welfare officials invited Johnson to bring the program to Daytona Beach, and legislation authored by State Representative Evelyn J. Lynn mandated a sibling foster care program and initial funding from the state's Department of Children and Families.
Well-known members of his congregation were Evan Hopkins and Margaret Barber.
Others considered as part of the Lord’s recovery are Johann Arndt, Theodore Austin-Sparks, Margaret E. Barber, Bernard of Clairvaux, Jacob Boehme, Peter Böhler, John Bunyan, Brother Lawrence (Nicholas Herman), Jan Hus, George Henry Lang, William Law, Dwight Lyman Moody, Charles Haddon Spurgeon, William Tyndale, John Wycliffe, Aiden Wilson Tozer,and many others.