“… you can’t sleep in phlebotomy. It’s full of blood, urine and a skeleton.”
“So what? So am I.”
- Colette and Morgan, The Mindy Project s6 e1
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helo…. morgan tookers headcanons 🤕🤕
he was one of those kids who played with inanimate objects like socks rather than actual toys
similarly, he didn't have a teddy bear, he had a ratty old baby blanket
says oopsie
has full conversations with dogs
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Further work in anthropology and related fields was carried out
by Henry Morgan, Diamond Jenness, W. Vernon Kinietz, James V.
Wright, Elizabeth Tooker, Conrad E. Heidenreich, John Steckley and
Marguerite Tehariolina Vincent. Although Morgan’s anthropological
classic on the Iroquois, published first in the mid-nineteenth century,
does not necessarily belong to this category, because the Iroquois
nation was never part of the active Jesuit mission, the frequent reprints
of his academic contribution repeatedly stimulated later anthropologists of the twentieth century. Jenness studied the native groups of
Canada, and in 1932 published a general guidebook. In 1940, Kinietz
focussed on the Huron and Algonquian groups along the Great Lakes
and attempted to explain their culture. In 1955, Wright collected the
research data of the Iroquoian tribes of the part of New France that
is part of today’s Ontario, and discussed their cultural development.
In 1964, Tooker consulted the accounts of Samuel de Champlain,
founder of New France in the early seventeenth century, as well as
accounts of missionaries, in order to create Huron ethnography. In
the 1960s and 1970s, Heidenreich discussed the historical geography
of the Huron country as well as the cultural interaction through trade.
In 1982, Steckley re-examined Tooker’s article of 1970, on the sociopolitical organisation of Huron clans. Finally, in 1984, Vincent published a synthesis of ethnographic works and available historical data
of the Huron nation.45
Ontario, 1955); J. N. Emerson, ‘Cahiagué 1961’, Ontario History 54 (1962): 136–37; and
Martha A. Latta, ‘Identification of the seventeenth century French Missions in Eastern
Huronia’, Journal of Canadian Archaeology 9 (1985): 147–71. 45 Henry Morgan, The League of the Ho-de’-no-sau-nee, Iroquois (Rochester: Sage &
Brother; New York: Mark H. Newman; Boston: Gould & Lincoln, 1851), or The League
of the Iroquois (1851, reissue ed., A Citadel Press Book, New York: Carol Publishing
Group, 1993); Diamond Jenness, The Indians of Canada (Ottawa: National Museum of
Canada, 1932); W. Vernon Kinietz, The Indians of the Western Great Lakes, 1615–1760
(Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P; Rexdale: John Wiley & Sons Canada, 1940); J. V. Wright,
‘The Middleport Horizon’, Anthropologica 2 (1960): 113–20; Wright, The Ontario Iroquois Tradition National Museum of Canada Bulletin No. 210, Anthropological Series
No. 75 (Ottawa, 1966); Elizabeth Tooker, An Ethnography of the Huron Indians, 1615–
1649, Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 190 (Washington, D. C., 1964); Tooker,
‘Northern Iroquoian Sociopolitical Organization’, American Anthropologist 72 (1970):
90–97; Conrad E. Heidenreich, ‘Indian Occupance of Huronia, 1600–1650’, in Canada’s
Changing Geography (ed. R. Louis Gentilcore, Scarborough: Prentice-Hall of Canada,
1967); Heidenreich, Huronia: A History and Geography of the Huron Indians, 1600–1650
(Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1971); Conrad E. Heidenreich & Arthur J. Ray, The
Early Fur Trades: A Study in Cultural Interaction (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart,
1976); John Steckley, ‘The Clans and Phratries of the Huron’, Ontario Archaeology 37
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Morgan I think is my favourite person in The Mindy Project I just love him so much
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Morgan and Danny’s friendship is so lovely I can’t lie. Morgan just wants what’s best for Danny hence mailing the letter. And even if it was wrong his thought process was sweet
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