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Showing 2381 – 2400 of 4102

Elton S. Morel was a medical doctor who led out in several health reforms both in the Philippines and the United States, most specifically the Five-Day Plan to Stop Smoking campaign.

Eleazar Alburo Moreno was an Adventist educator in the Philippines.

Ernestina Moreno was a consummate teacher, Bible instructor, and nurse from Venezuela.

Joaquim Alegria Morgado and his wife Milca were Adventist missionaries in Africa from Portugal.

​Irene Morgan (Kirkaldy) was a pioneer of the 20th-century civil rights movement in America. Her bold refusal to submit to racial discrimination in July 1944 led to a landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling against segregation in interstate public transportation.

Deneke Morie was a preacher and church planter who introduced Seventh-day Adventism to Hadiya. He was a strong advocate of Adventist education.

The Morning Watch is a devotional exercise adopted by the Young People’s Missionary Volunteer Department (today Youth Ministries) at the time of its organization in 1907 and later embraced by the Pathfinder program.

The Morobe Mission is the Seventh-day Adventist administrative entity for the Morobe region on the northern coast of Papua New Guinea. Its headquarters are in Lae, Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea.

​Morocco is the most western country of North Africa and is known as the Maghreb or the “Arab West.” Its first exposure to Seventh-day Adventists began in the city of Casablanca in 1925.

The Morogoro Seventh-day Adventist Dispensary was established in 1970 to provide medical services to Adventist missionaries as well as non-Adventists in the surrounding community. The dispensary is located in Morogoro, Tanzania.

Harvey Arch Morrison, an Adventist educator and administrator, was president of Union College and Washington Missionary College, General Conference education secretary, and business manager of the Review and Herald Publishing Association.

James Harvey Morrison was a Seventh-day Adventist pastor and administrator, born in Beaver, Pennsylvania, on October 22, 1841.

​Byron ‘Lee’ Lowell Morse was a pioneer missionary to Kenya, educator, and church administrator.

George Warren Morse worked in the editorial department of the Review and Herald office at Battle Creek and later pioneered publishing work in Canada.

Washington Morse was a pioneering Adventist evangelist, colporteur, minister, author, and conference president.

Eliza Happy Morton was an Adventist author, educator, pedagogical reformer, poet, musician, musical composer, church administrator, and philanthropist. She is best remembered for her geography textbooks.

Helen Luella Morton was an Adventist teacher, student, doctor, and missionary who lived an extraordinary life. Morton faced numerous difficulties throughout her life, especially with her health, yet she persevered and achieved many amazing accomplishments. She had great love and passion for both teaching and mission work.

Moscow Conference is a part of the West Russian Union Conference in the Euro-Asia Division of Seventh-day Adventists. It was organized in 2003 and reorganized in 2007. Its headquarters is in Moscow, Russian Federation.

Calvin Edwin Moseley, Jr., served the Seventh-day Adventist Church for more than sixty years as a pastor, educator, administrator, and accomplished musician.

​Kalapala John Moses served as a pastor, evangelist, college professor and adminstrator, and executive officer in the Southern Asia Division.