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41. Asia Bookroom: Middle East - Archaeology
middle east Archaeology. The great cities and ancient palaces of Mesopotamia had lain buried for over two millenia, and were all but forgotten The phoenicians.
http://www.asiabookroom.com/currentlists_xAfrMidAusPac/mideastarchael.htm
Asia Bookroom specialises in out-of-print, antiquarian and secondhand books on Asia, the Pacific, Africa and the Middle East . We regularly issue lists on these areas and we also issue a general antiquarian list occasionally. These lists are available by email and on our web site. Our shopping cart on this site supports secure ordering. Middle East - Archaeology Adams, Robert Mc., and Ofer Bar-yosef et al. The Hilly Flanks. Essays on the Prehistory of Southwestern Asia. Presented to Robert J. Braidwood. November 15 1982. Black and white photographic illustrations, black and white line drawings, figures, tables, ix + 374pp.. A very good copy in wrappers. University of California Press. Chicago. 1983. This book is a compliation of eighteen papers 9four in French text) put together by his colleagues as a tribute to Robert J. Braidwood. T is no. 36 in the series Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization.
(ISBN ). AU$55.00 [Please quote ID:65097 when referring to this item] Helms, S.W. Jawa. Lost City of the Black Desert. Maps, plans, illustrations, xviii + 270pp, appendices, bibliography, dustjacket patchily faded and shelf-rubbed upper edge. Methuen. 1981.

42. Regents Prep Global History & Geography: Vocabulary Words Starting With Letter Ã
dominated the middle east from the middle of the pharaoh In ancient Egypt, title given to the phoenicians An early trading civilization located in present
http://regentsprep.org/Regents/global/vocab/topic_alpha.cfm?topic=p

43. Cultural Travel Index Of Middle East Tour Hosts
Traveller Tour Host ID 396 (England) Destination middle east Theme History. ancient Grecian sites following the search for the phoenicians, the early
http://www.culturaltravels.com/Destinations/IDCs/Middle.asp
There are 37 Tour Hosts for Destination Middle East
Narrow search - select a particular country in Middle East:
Choose a Country Iran Iraq Israel Jordan Kuwait Lebanon Oman Saudi Arabia Syria Turkey United Arab Emirates Yemen Home: CulturalTravels.com Spiekermann Travel Service, Inc.
Web Page Ad - Full View

Tour Host ID: 782 (USA)
Destination: Middle East
... Registered Traveler or Non-Registered Traveler Abu Dhabi Holidays
Tour Host ID: AB649 (UK)
Destination: Middle East

Theme: Adventure
... Registered Traveler or Non-Registered Traveler Aladin Tours
Tour Host ID: AL620 (Egypt)
Destination: Middle East

Theme: Adventure
... Registered Traveler or Non-Registered Traveler Jordan Experience Tours
Tour Host ID: JO681 (JOR) Destination: Middle East Theme: Adventure ... Registered Traveler or Non-Registered Traveler Yemen Explorer Tours Tour Host ID: YE211 (YEM) Destination: Middle East Theme: Adventure ... Registered Traveler or Non-Registered Traveler Matiana Travel Tour Host ID: MA444 (Turkey) Destination: Middle East Theme: Art ... Registered Traveler or Non-Registered Traveler Worcester Art Museum Tour Host ID: 483 (USA) Destination: Middle East Theme: Art ... Registered Traveler or Non-Registered Traveler Holly Chase Travel Designs Tour Host ID: 549 (USA) Destination: Middle East Theme: Education ... I like to think of myself as a facilitator of travel in Turkey (and a few other places). As far as Turkey is concerned, my Istanbul agents and I can handle virtually any possible program there. Whether you’re planning an international convention, a family vacation, or a weekend escape for two we can help you from the beginning or merely apply the final polish to your program.

44. Middle School Early World History Curricula
contributions of the Israelites, phoenicians, and Lydians achievements and shortcomings of ancient Rome; Describe of the Crusades on Europe and the middle east.
http://www.calvertnet.k12.md.us/instruct/socialstudies/earlywrldhist.shtml
Calvert County Public Schools
Middle School
Early World History Curricula
Unit One: Concepts and Skills for Studying History and the Beginnings of Civilization
Unit One, Part One
Unit Objectives The student will be able to:
  • Define history as it pertains to the economic, political, social, and religious characteristics of early world civilizations. Describe concepts and processes of archaeology to learn about past civilizations. Analyze geographic characteristics that influenced the location of past human activities.
  • Unit One, Part Two
    Unit Objectives The student will be able to:
  • Summarize how early people interacted with their environment to meet their basic needs. Explain how the interactions of early people led to the development of separate cultures. Analyze the effects of human beings transformation from food collecting to food producing. Describe the causes and effects of agricultural diversity.
  • Unit Two: Early Civilizations
    Unit Objectives The student will be able to:
    I. Mesopotamia
  • Explain how the geography of the Fertile Crescent influenced the development of the world's first civilization. Describe the development of culture among the civilizations of the Fertile Crescent.
  • 45. Kuoni Travel - Lebanon Holidays
    Centuries beforehand, the phoenicians had worshipped Baal Shamen on a rare feature in such ancient constructions. establishment of its kind in the middle east.
    http://www.kuoni.co.uk/countryinformation/lb/main.shtml
    Home Holiday search Book your holiday Online brochures ... Contact us Lebanon 'Playground of the Middle East' Currently re-establishing itself as an exciting holiday destination, Lebanon is growing in popularity. Our Lebanon Explorer tour will take you back in time as you visit ancient ruins dating from the times of the Crusaders and Romans. Enjoy spectacular views of Beirut at Harissa, visit the spectacular acropolis of Baalbeck and take a tour of Beirut City during your tour. The Lebanon Explorer makes a wonderful contrast to Jordan and Dubai and can be combined with any of our featured itineraries. The following climate information has been supplied by the Meteorological Office, local tourist offices and other sources and is given as a guide only. Reborn Again
    To the Lebanese poet Khalil Gibran, Beirut was the city that "died and was reborn a thousand times". It's true that the history of the Lebanon is a perpetual tale of destruction and resurrection, ever since its foundation by the Phoenicians in the 3rd millennium BC. There must surely be more than a tenuous connection between the Phoenicians and the phoenix, the legendary bird said to build its own funeral pyre and rise anew from its ashes.
    This small strip of land between the mountains and the sea was assailed by wave upon wave of conquerors: Egyptians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Arabs, Franks and Turks. Every conquest brought its share of devastation, but also a promise of regeneration. The proud Phoenicians could never be quashed. Long before the Greeks, they sailed far afield, beyond the confines of the Mediterranean to the west coast of Africa, even to Britain.

    46. The Legacy Of The Middle East
    discovery of rotary motion, and the phoenicians took the Chicago Recommended Reading on the ancient Near east The Legacy of the middle east was designed and
    http://www.humanities-interactive.org/ancient/mideast/mideast_teacher_guide.htm
    THE LEGACY OF THE MIDDLE EAST
    A Teacher’s Guide
    On the occasion of the centennial of King Abdul Aziz Ibn Abdul Rahman Al-Saud, The Legacy of the Middle East celebrates the glorious heritage from the region presently known as the Arab World. It steps back in time to honor some of the profound economic and social changes, technological inventions, and cultural and artistic innovations made in the Middle East that changed forever the face of the world. The archaeological panels highlight, in particular:
    Economy and Society
    The Origins of Agriculture Domestication of Animals Beginnings of Cities The First States
    Technology
    Monumental Architecture Metallurgy Alloys The Wheel Glass
    Culture
    Concrete Counting Abstract Counting Writing The Alphabet This publication is sponsored by the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia, Washington, D.C., the Society of Jeddah Historic Preservation, Saudi Arabia, American Consulate General, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, The Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, and Texas Humanities Resource Center, Austin, TX. This teacher’s Guide focuses on the archaeological portion of the exhibition.

    47. Gravity, Grime ‘n Gravel: A Wild Mountain Bike Ride Down ‘the World&
    other early states in the middle east, Maya texts between the Mayans and the ancient middle eastern world to the mollusk which gave the phoenicians the renowned
    http://www.thetravelrag.com/docs/10060.asp

    home
    features accom review spotlight ... TTR team Mystical builders: linking the ruins of Syria and Mexico
    Habeeb Salloum
    investigates the mystical connection between a rather handy Mayan dwarf and ancient spirit builders of Syria. My driver, Ahmad, was beaming as, together we stood atop Qalaat Ibn Maani (Ibn Maani's castle), on a hill top overlooking the remains of Palmyra - known to the Arabs as Tadmur - in Syria.
    "See these ruins? They say Solomon sent his Jinn (mythical Arab spirits) to build this city in one night."
    For me it was déjà vu. A few months earlier I had been at the Mayan city of Uxmal in Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula and the guide had told a story of how a magician built its pyramid in one night.
    The two cities were thousands of kilometers apart, separated by great oceans, yet both had eerily similar tales about the supernatural nature of their construction.
    The remnants were once thriving desert metropolis, 220 km (134 mi) northeast of Damascus, in Syria, and for centuries inspired romantic recollections by wayfarers and literary men. Looking over them today, it is no wonder they believed only a supernatural being could have conjured such a magnificent metropolis in the middle of a desert.
    "Rise up and go into the world to release it from error and send word to the Jinn and I will give them leave to build Tadmur with hewn stones and columns." God said to Solomon according to the pre-Islamic Arab poet Nabigha al Dhubyain

    48. Les Ivoires Phéniciens
    Aubet, ME The phoenicians and the West Politics, Colonies and Trade, Mary Turton (Translator), Cambridge D. ancient Ivories in the middle east and Adjacent
    http://www.mari.org/JMS/july99/Les_Ivoires_Pheniciens.htm
    Les Ivoires Phéniciens 2000 Ans
    d'Art en Orient By Guita G. Hourani
    Chairwoman of MARI

    Les Ivoires Phéniciens: 2000 Ans d'Art en Orient. By Fady Stéphan.
    Bibliothèque de l'Université Saint-Esprit, Institut d'Histoire, XXXIII, Kaslik-Liban, 1996, 266 pages. Les Ivoires Phéniciens: 2000 Ans d'Art en Orient (The Phoenician Ivories: 2000 Years of Art in the Orient), is a book in French about the Phoenician ivories. It is the second book that the Holy Spirit University, in Kaslik, Lebanon has published in the field of Phoenician studies. The first was Grammaire Phénicienne by Albartus van den Branden, 1969. The Phoenicians, a Semitic race, are in fact the Canaanites who, about 7,000 years ago, inhabited the area now known as Lebanon and Syria. Some of their main cities were Tyre, Sidon, Arqad, Aradus, Byblos, Berytus, and Ugarit. Their main colonies were Carthage (in Tunisia), Malta, Sicily, Sardinia, Corsica, the Balearic Isles, Cyprus, and Gades (in Spain). The Phoenician people mystified historians and archaeologists for although they had developed the first alphabet, they left so few written records of their history. We have learned much of what we know about this enigmatic people from the writings of other people who came in contact with them. The other source of information is the archaeological diggings, especially in Byblos. Among the discoveries that teach us about the Phoenicians are the artifacts made of ivory. The Phoenicians were great artists of luxury items fashioned from ivory. They imported the raw material of animal tusks from Egypt, Africa and India.

    49. Ancient Near East: Internet Resources
    on geography, Sumarians, Hittites and phoenicians, Hebrew Civilization archives of early middle east excavations and expeditions to this ancient city including
    http://www.internet-at-work.com/hos_mcgrane/mesopotamia/eg_neast_intro.html
    [Grade 6 Projects] [Ancient History Menu] Ms Hos-McGrane's Grade 6
    Social Studies Class Welcome to our Ancient Near East
    Internet Resources Page
    [Agricultural Revolution]
    [Mesopotamia: General Resources]
    [Mesopotamia: Lecture Notes]

    [Student Projects]
    ...
    [Return to Ancient History Menu]
      Student Projects on Ancient Near East
      Track Star: Mesopotamia: Student Activity
      Marilee Lindgren This track is designed for the use of students. The goal is for students to learn more about some aspects of Ancient Mesopotamia by following selected web links. Topics include: artifacts, the wheel, chariots, sailboats, maps, and Hammurabi's Code. This is part of a larger site Track Star , web-based lessons desiged by other teachers and archived at this site. Mesopotamia
      Urbana Middle School, Illinois Classroom projects, artifacts and selected links produced by middle school classes in as part of a museum grant to provide middle school ancient history resources on the Internet. Visitors to the site will find student projects on a variety of topics including: Hanging Gardens and Ziggurat , Tablet, Cylinder Seal and Bulla, Cities, Wheels, Writing, Religion, Helmets, and Sumerian City - Ur. Ancient Mesopotamia
      Grade Six Projects. William Penn Charter School, Philadelphia, PA

    50. Middle East Bronze Age Weights Compared To Today S Metric Weights
    World History Dawn of Civilization to Napoleon Units of Study Prehistory Mesopotamia phoenicians ancient Egypt Greece Rome Medieval History
    http://65.127.178.115/news_brzweights.html

    51. The Legend Of Joseph Of Arimathea
    specifically, to the ancient phoenicians, providing clues been found in early Phoenician archaeological sites that the bagpipe originated from the middleeast.
    http://artsjournal.info/e-zine/bardic_journal/joseph_story.html
    The Legend of Joseph of Arimathea
    Ancient Craft Traditions Kept a Lost Story Alive by Gregory Jon Harbert Inside the various ancient traditions of art reside keys that often unlock the doors to many mysteries of our past. As we journey farther and farther into the mists of the Celtic world, we discover not an isolated culture, but rather a culture connected to the rest of the world.
    This Page Sponsored by :
    The treasure map that began this voyage to discovery was created by an anthropologist who was studying the oral traditions of the miners of Cornwall. He recorded traditional songs sung by the tinsmiths there, including: "Joseph was a tin man, Joseph was in the tin trade...". After some investigation, he discovered that the Joseph being referred to was none other than Joseph of Arimathea, great uncle of Jesus Christ, Mary's uncle.
    Upon further investigation, a rather large pantheon of local oral traditions were discovered. Sir Edward Shepherd Creasy in his "History of England" writes, "The (early) British mines mainly supplied the glorious adornment of Solomon's Temple." Specifically, the aqueducts of Jerusalem built by King Solomon, thousands of miles from England. These aqueducts were made from lead found only in England - Cornwall, specifically. This lead was transporting on large ships, known as 'Hippos,' as long ago as 1,500 B.C. or earlier.
    These oral traditions, refer to an ancient connection that links Cornwall, Glastonbury specifically, to the ancient Phoenicians, providing clues to a cultural connection between the pre-Celtic/Celtic cultures to the Phoenician cultures.

    52. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
    Young Students Learning Library; January 1, 1996 Phoenicia was an ancient region in the middle east. The phoenicians were great seafarers and traders.
    http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru

    53. East : Ancient Egypt Artifact Book Archaeology Gold
    what importance page copyright It is the middle title Portions of mirrors the item east between and of ancient TOWNS in ISRAEL ancient phoenicians,Carthage,Illus
    http://www.eboomersworld.com/etc/MSIDN/ancient.egypt.artifact.book.archaeology.g
    Accessories Airline Artistic Services Audio ... Middle East > Ancient Egypt Artifact Book Archaeology Gold
    Ancient Egypt Artifact Book Archaeology Gold
    Ancient Egypt Artifact Book Archaeology Gold Archaeology Book Ancient Greece Atlantis Art Kab Quibell Egypt Archaeology Reprint Ancient Egypt Time Life Ages Man ...
    World
    Ancient Egypt Archaeology Exploration History
    The Other Side of Deception by V Ostrovsky.
    in it's spying provides on george bushe's life. mail (7-21 the attempt The insights into the 7.00_. post (5-10 actions, including 3.00_ parcel costs: media opening reading exposes secret agent ostrovsky experience. Counterfeiting, days) days) cover) mossad An excellent an eye days) cold and human experiamentation are revieled 4.00_ express read!_ shipment experiments... All and abc unvarnished truth! 24.00-hard eby0006 (list mail (3-5 politics of
    Mummy, Budge,1974 Ancient Egypt History pict
    A. Wallis akhmim embroideries Covers: language, egyptian illustrations, photos, of egypt, causeway books archaeology'. By beadwork on egyptian the nomes amulets, budge, kt. mummy labels, sir e. of the implements, text. Name methods of mummies, the hardbound and much Published writing, writing the toilet in 1974 the decipherment egyptian chronology, anointing tablets, the in the loaded with the history of egypt, egyptian funerary 404 pages, by. mummy cloth, handbook of outline of mummifying, the dead, diagrams, etc. egyptian hieroglyphs, torn powered , scarabs, more. Illustrations objects for in front rosetta stone mummy a book of - dustjacket

    54. Near And Middle Eastern Civilizations Undergraduate Student Association Website
    Palestine including the Canaanites (phoenicians, Hebrews/Israelites courses in modern and ancient languages as of the modern historical middle east is studied
    http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/nmcusa/whatsNMC.html
    Welcome to the
    Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations Undergraduate Students' Association Website
    at the University of Toronto
    WHAT'S "NMC?"

    " N ear and M iddle Eastern C ivilizations." The Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations department is devoted to the study of the ancient (from c. 3100 BCE) and contemporary cultures found within modern day Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Rhodes, Cyprus, Iraq, (to some extent Armenia, Azerbaijan, and the Republic of Georgia) and western Iran.
    This encompasses the Ancient civilizations of Egypt, Libya and Nubia/Kush, those of the Levantine Coast and Palestine including the Canaanites (Phoenicians, Hebrews/Israelites, Philistines, Arameans, Amorites, and so on) the Hittites, Phrygia, Lydia, the Hurrians and the Kingdom of Mitanni, Urartu, the Scythians, the Cimmerians, Assyria, Babylonia, Sumer, Elam, and the Persians and Medes to mention only a few. Occasionally course content includes modern Bahrain (ancient Dilmun), the southern area of the Saudi Arabian pennisula, and the ancient Indus Valley civilization.
    The department offers courses in modern and ancient languages as its primary strength. In fluxuating years, Standard Arabic, modern Hebrew, Persian, and Turkish are offered, while the history and culture of the modern historical Middle East is studied within NMC from its inception, through the Medieval Period, to the modern day.

    55. Syria Gate - About Syria - Amrit By Carol Miller
    See Gwendolyn Leick, Who s Who in the ancient Near east was a continental foothold for the phoenicians (SyroCanaanites See The Art of the middle east, New York
    http://www.syriagate.com/Syria/about/cities/Tartous/amrit-cm.htm
    Home Clients Syrian Companies Services ... Search Tartous
    Amrit
    Articles AMRIT
    By Carol Miller
    "To gain time, offer what you cannot give And ask for what cannot be given."
    Sun Tzu, The Art of War Amrit's enigmatic cistern, in actual fact a beautiful fountain, nearly square, is presumed to date from the fifth and fourth centuries before Christ, though many consider it much older, the work of a long-vanished cult. It measures exactly 56.48 meters long by 50.49 meters wide; and was enclosed by a princely arcade whose lintels were supported on sturdy and well-worked stone pilasters. In the center stands, to this day, an elaborate stone altar, supposedly, in its time, consecrated to Melkart in his avocation of healer, though it surely had an oracular application as well. Oracles were a common form of healing, through communion with "the powers", or were used as cautionary tales concerning "right conduct", as well as for more politically oriented interests, such as the rights of the monarch, royal policy, even military strategy. Later, in the confusion of migrations in search of water, new pasture lands, new trade routes and new markets, combined with the missionary zeal of any incoming populace, the gods and cult-figures began to merge. Melkart, originally a Greek deity associated with curative powers, became identified, for the coastal Phoenicians, with the Egyptian healer Eshmun, and for later Greeks, more attuned to conquest than curing, with Hercules. But was Amrit Phoenician or Greek? It might have been a colony of the ubiquitous Arameans, an Aryan offshoot, who are presumed to have come from the Caspian, or perhaps the Indus Valley, ultimately to dominate western Syria. (See: Gregory L. Possehl, Indus Age, The Beginnings, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, 1999.)

    56. Middle East And India
    World of the phoenicians. Emergence of the middle east 19141924. Our price $16.00. 42520 Sasson, Jack M., ed. Civilizations of the ancient Near east Vol.
    http://www.blakesbooks.com/dbqs.cgi?keyword=mideast&keyword_lgconn=or&head=Middl

    57. Chapter 3, Student Web Activities, Our World Today, Glencoe, 2003
    Start at the ancient Civilizations Web site. Click on the middle east box at the bottom of the screen. Scroll down and click on the phoenicians box on the left
    http://www.glencoe.com/qe/qe28.php?st=171&pt=2&bk=11

    58. THE INFLUENCE OF THE ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN CIVILIZATION ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF HU
    The Canaanites, following the Amorites, called phoenicians by the In Lebanon, from ancient times (1500 BC), Beirut North Africa and the middle east, to eastern
    http://www.medbc.com/annals/review/vol_5/num_1/text/vol5n1p5.htm
    Annals of the MBC - vol. 5 - n' 1 - March 1992 THE INFLUENCE OF THE ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN CIVILIZATION ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF HUMAN CULTURES Poiycratis G.S. Athens University, Athens, Greece opening Lecture, Athens MBC Meeting, November 1991 SUMMARY. An account is given of the contributions made to Mediterranean culture by all the peoples that have populated the various countries, at different moments of history.
    Introduction
    The ancient Mediterranean civilization, from ancient times to the beginning of the Middle Ages, is a result of remarkable historical events, and it is one of the most distinguished civilizations which have influenced positively a wide development of the human cultures.
    Many favourable circumstances have contributed to this, especially the privileged geographical location of the Mediterranean area between 3 continents, the mild and healthful climate, the inheritance of important civilizations of Mesopotamia, India and China, the facile communication by maritime routes, as well as the invention of writing.
    Here in parenthesis I mention what the Greek philosopher Plato states in - his writings: "people established themselves around the seashores of the Mediterranean Sea, like the frogs which do the same around the water".

    59. Mesopotamia
    Hittites (20001200BC) phoenicians (1300-700BC). GATEWAY SITES. Mesopotamia. Subject Guides. ancient Mesopotamian History. Mesopotamia. middle east Civilizations.
    http://www.saintmarksschool.org/public/library/webliographies/pages/mesopotamia_
    MESOPOTAMIA
    Prepared for students in Saint Mark's Sixth Grade Online Subscription Databases BigChalk Library World Book Online Britannica Online Mine these resources first!!!! Mesopotamia Babylonian/Chaldean Empire (2000-539BC)Assyrian Empire (2000-609BC) Israelites (2000-500BC) Sumerian Empire (5000-2000BC) ... GATEWAY SITES Mesopotamia Subject Guides Ancient Mesopotamian History Mesopotamia Middle East Civilizations Timeline and Chronology MESOPOTAMIA TIMELINE EAW Chronology: the Near East Informational Pages Mesopotamia Ancient Mesopotamia Ancient Middle East Civilizations Mesopotamia, A Place to Start ... Iraq: History and Culture from Noah to Present Art and Archeology Subject Guide Mesopotamian Art and Archeology Timeline Timeline of Mesopotamian Art Virtual Museums Assyrian Gallery Mesopotamian Gallery Mythology and Religion Subject Guide Mesopotamian Religion and Culture Informational Pages Mesopotamian gods The Assyro-Babylonian Mythology FAQ Sumerian Mythology FAQ Language and Writing CUNIAFORM Sumerian Language Page Write Like a Babylonian (see your name in cuneiform) Games The Royal Game of Ur Dogs and Jackels Recreation in Mesopotamia Transportation The Wheel The Reluctant Rider Geography Mesopotamian geography Agriculture The Development of Agriculture Government/Law Timetable of Legal History includes law before Hammurabi's codes

    60. Elsa Marston Children's Author - Biography
    THE phoenicians. THE ancient EGYPTIANS. nonfiction. WOMEN IN THE middle east TRADITION AND CHANGE coauthored with Ramsay M. Harik a look at the variety of
    http://www.elsamarston.com/bio.htm
    @import "images/adeptor-with-palette-70.css"; /* */
    Elsa Marston
    children's author
    Home My Works Biography Presentation ... Links
    Thinking deep thoughts...
    Starry-eyed Girl Scout
    With my sister Lee, at sixteen
    Living on a houseboat on the Nile
    Our family at Christmas
    With two young friends and "Desert Wind"
    About Elsa Marston . . .
    What was your "growing-up time" like?
    With New Englanders for parents, I grew up in Newton Centre, Massachusetts. I had (still do!) a twin sister named Lee. We were quite different: she was outgoing and sociable, while I was shy and liked to do things by myself. We fought a bit as kidsbut we're great friends today. Our dad, a professor of English at Northeastern University in Boston, often invited students to our home. Being part of the Northeastern community was a big part of our lives. Our mom, a home economics teacher, made our clothes and excellent pies. We were lucky kids.
    I liked lots of different things. I climbed trees, painted and drew; played the piano, tennis, cymbals, and basketball (I was awful); loved drama, read tons of books, and kicked footballs (I was pretty good). I longed to travel and see other parts of the world, and I've always loved the sea.
    What about school and college?

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