Word: carmell
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...members of the 1940-41 board who assumed executive offices yesterday are as follows: Spencer Klaw of Carmel, New York, President: Alfred J. Gilbert of New York City. Managing Editor: Field Haviland, West Orange, New Jersey, Advertising Manager; Henry Doerr III of Minneapolis. Business Manager; Richard Edwards of Pittsburgh. Editorial Chairman: William Pyne of Darion, Connecticut, Executive Editor: P. Donald Peddle of Minneapolis, Sports Editor: Julian Sobin of Boston. Circulation Manager: and John C. Cobb of Milton. Photographic Chairman. They will serve until February...
Klaw, who lives in Adams House and Carmel, N. Y., prepared at Loomis, where he edited the Loomis Log. He was appointed to the Student Council last spring and is now serving on the Council's standing committee on Teaching. Previously he was active on the Council's Committee on Housing. On the CRIMSON he has held the positions of Secretary and House Editor. He is a member of the Signet...
William L. Healey Jr. of Rosindale was appointed from the Sophomore Class. The two other Sophomores appointed were: Spencer Klaw of Carmel, N. Y. and Adams House, and Seth Crocker of Milton and Eliot House...
...most artists of his generation, Evans got as far east as Paris. He returned to photograph life on the eastern seaboard with solitary detachment, a refined eye and a sharp sense of history. Meanwhile, Weston was in business as a portrait photographer in Glendale, San Francisco and finally in Carmel, California. Among professionals his off-hour studies of dunes, shells and vegetables became noted for their miraculous clarity. In 1936 he won the first Guggenheim fellowship ever given a photographer...
...about ten miles south of Nazareth, 15 miles from the Mediterranean coast of Palestine. The Hebrew word is har magiddo, which may originally have meant "fruitful mountain" or "desirable city." Megiddo, the name by which the site is known to modern archeologists, guards the pass from Egypt through the Carmel ridge to the once-rich valleys of the Euphrates and Tigris. There, according to the Old Testament, "Pharoaohnechoh king of Egypt went up against the king of Assyria" and Josiah, in disguise, battled against him. * There Thutmose III of Egypt vanquished the rebellious King of Megiddo and his Asiatic allies...