Word: winlock
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Tiny (pop. 975) Winlock, one of the bureau's early success stories, rose above the peril of a cutback in local timbering operations, went on to find a modest new industry, i.e., a $750,000 cedar-shake processing plant, and to pay for a wide range of community improvements with more than half a million dollars worth of bonds. It also reaped considerable nonmaterial bonuses: attendance at church and community functions has tripled, and election turnouts of 90% are common...
When Professor Joseph Winlock succeeded the second Bond as the Observatory director in 1866, the pressing need for new equipment resulted in the gift of a spectroscope and meridian circle from friends of the College...
...Winlock's career the first stage in the Observatory's development was completed. The second stage first stage in the Observatory's development was completed. The second stage which lasted up until the age or Shapley, was a time of valuable phometric and photographic studies, extending from...
Branard Hall, president, Denuise Mangravite '53; social chairman, Jean Ross '54. Bertram Hall: president, Mary E. Faigle '53. work chairman, Noelle B. Blackmer '54. Brigges Hall: president, Eleanor R. Levine ,53; social chairman, Thala Poleway '54; Community Service representative, Nancy P. Winlock '55. Cabot Hall: president, Anne W. Sears '53; social chairman. Ellen U. McHugh '54; work chairmen. Mary Anne Goldsmith '55 and Barbara A. Knauff '54; Community Service representative, Dale F. Dorman...
Died. Dr. Herbert Eustis Winlock, 65, famed Egyptologist, onetime (1932-39) director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art; in Venice, Fla. As associate curator of the museum's Egyptian Department, Winlock was one of the 22 people who saw King Tut-ankh-Amun's sarcophagus opened at Luxor...