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Dr. Robert Warren Morse (May 25, 1921 [1] – January 19, 2001) was the first president of Case Western Reserve University, and the fifth and last president of Case ...
Robert Alan Morse (May 18, 1931 – April 20, 2022) was an American actor. Morse, known for his gap-toothed boyishness, started his career as a star on Broadway acting in musicals and plays before expanding into film and television.
In the same episode, "Close Encounters", the series is revealed to exist in the same universe as The Bob Newhart Show, suggesting that John Doe may be Oliver Clark's character, Ed Herd; fellow in-patient Elliot Carlin verbally abuses him in the same manner as when Carlin and Herd were patients of Dr. Robert Hartley (or "some quack in Chicago ...
Robert Sherwood Morse (April 10, 1924 – May 28, 2015) was an American bishop who became the founding archbishop of the Anglican Province of Christ the King. [1]A 1950 graduate of Seabury-Western Theological Seminary, he was ordained to the diaconate on July 8, 1950, and to the priesthood on February 22, 1951.
Robert Morse (1931-2022) was an American actor and singer. Robert Morse may also refer to: Robert S. Morse (1924–2015), American bishop; Robert W. Morse (1921–2001), American academic and administrator; Robert Morse Crunden (1940–1999), American historian; Bob Morse (born 1951), American basketball player
Hill Harper as Dr. Wesley Williams; Phil Buckman as Dr. Geoffrey Weiss; T. E. Russell as Dr. Arthur Jackson; Viola Davis as Surgical Nurse Lynette Peeler; Maya Rudolph as Nurse Grace Patterson (season 1; recurring season 2) Robert Morse as Edwin "Ed" O'Malley (season 1; recurring season 2) Gabrielle Union as Dr. Courtney Ellis (season 2)
A Guide for the Married Man is a 1967 American bedroom-farce comedy film directed by Gene Kelly and starring Walter Matthau, Robert Morse and Inger Stevens. [3] [4] [5] It features many cameos, including those by Lucille Ball, Jack Benny, Terry-Thomas, Jayne Mansfield, Sid Caesar, Carl Reiner, Joey Bishop, Art Carney and Wally Cox. [3]
Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills have their genesis with the father of William Henry Comstock, Edwin Perkins Comstock (1799–1837) who founded a drug company in New York City sometime before 1833. The Comstock patent medicine business was involved in the sale of a number of successful drugs, including Carlton's Pile Liniment, Oldridge's Balm of ...