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Charles M. "Bubber" Murphy (December 15, 1913 – January 31, 1999) was an American college football, college basketball, and college baseball coach and athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Middle Tennessee State University from 1947 to 1968, compiling a record of 155–63–8.
As Edexcel is the only privately owned examination board in the UK, questions have been raised on whether the examination board is acting in the best interest of students, or solely as a profit making business, due to the wide range of Edexcel-endorsed text books published by Pearson, the international multi-billion company which owns the board.
The building opened December 11, 1972, and is named in honor of former athletics director Charles M. "Bubber" Murphy, a standout athlete at the college in the 1930s, who also served as head coach of Middle Tennessee State's football (1947–1968), basketball (1948–1949), and baseball (1951, 1953–1955) programs.
Charles M. Murphy is an American Roman Catholic priest of the Diocese of Portland, Maine.Monsignor Murphy formerly served as the academic dean and rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome from 1979 to 1984.
Black Men Speaking (with John McCluskey Jr., 1997) Africans in America (with Patricia Smith, 1998) I Call Myself an Artist: Writings by and about Charles Johnson (edited by Rudolph Byrd, 1999) King: The Photobiography of Martin Luther King Jr. (with Bob Adelman, 2000) Turning the Wheel: Essays on Buddhism and Writing (2003)
Charles Melvin Hudson Jr. (1932–2013) was an anthropologist, a professor of anthropology and history at the University of Georgia. He was a leading scholar on the history and culture of Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands of the present-day United States.
Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960–2010 is a 2012 book about class stratification of White Americans by Charles Murray, a political scientist and W.H. Brady Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. [1]
Charles Patrick Murray Jr. (September 26, 1921 – August 12, 2011) was a United States Army officer and a recipient of the United States military's highest decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in World War II.