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The camp's name was changed from Central Jewish Institute Camps to Cejwin Camps in 1933. [5] Cejwin consisted of seven camps, divided by age groups: three for boys (Hadar, Carmel and Aviv), three for girls (Hadas, Carmela and Aviva), and one co-ed (Yonim, the youngest). In the 1970s, Yonim was divided into Junior Hadar and Junior Hadas.
It moved from the Sandgate to a new location situated on Fort Street in 1800, with a further extension to the building added in the 1930s. Ayr Academy remained on Fort Street until a new school was built within the Craigie area of the town. Ayr Academy's coat of arms was awarded in 1912 and bears the school motto Respice Prospice which means ...
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The camp reopened in 1947 in Connecticut at a place called "Lord's Highway"; the camp migrated to several other locations until 1954 when East Hampton, New York, became the camp's permanent home. In 1963, Duke acquired a townhouse on East 94th Street in New York City to create a year-round center in the city for the Harbor children. The 1960s ...
Gathering to board buses. The Fresh Air Fund is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit agency founded in 1877. The Fund operates six sleep-away camps in New York’s Mid-Hudson Valley, places children with volunteer host families along the East Coast, and runs year-round leadership, career exploration and educational programs.
The New York Military Academy, in Cornwall-on-Hudson, has a special tie to the incoming president. Trump graduated from the boarding school in 1964 and was enshrined as an Alumnus of Distinction ...
Jewish summer camps in New York (state) (19 P) Pages in category "Summer camps in New York (state)" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total.