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22 result(s) for "Stanfield, James L"
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ADVISORY/Invitation to Cover/Calendar Alerts
Burma to Zimbabwe, weathered sandstorms with a Tuareg caravan, 'Eye of the Beholder': National Geographic's The Great Adventurers complements the spectacular National Geographic book, Eye of the
James Stanfield
  James Larry Stanfield, 66, of Visalia passed away Sun., Nov. 13, 2011. He was in sales.
James Stanfield
  James Larry Stanfield, 66, of Visalia passed away Sun., Nov. 13, 2011. He was in sales.
You looking at me?
Eye of the Beholder - (Hebrew) Ed Re'eya by James L. Stanfield. 120 color photographs, Tel Aviv, National Geographic Press/Hod Artzi. 168 pages. NIS 139NIS \"Your friend looks at me like he's going to eat me,\" whispered the Bedouin woman to the interpreter accompanying National Geographic Society (NGS) photographer James L. Stanfield as he shot a 1978 story on Syria. This intent gaze, that can fill subjects with fear and admirers with awe, has served Stanfield well. Hoping to photograph the pope, he sent 25 photos and an accompanying letter to Monsignor Stanislaw Dziwisz asking for permission to document the pontiff in his daily life. When Stanfield arrived at the Vatican, Monsignor Dziwisz told him: \"The Holy Father and I think your photographs are splendid. Meet us at four o'clock at the helipad.\" Eye of the Beholder contains just some of the many intimate photographs Stanfield took at the Vatican. The other pictures can be found in his book, Inside the Vatican.
IN THE FRAME
THE EXHIBITION Drink and be Merry: Wine and Beer in Ancient Times, chronicling nearly 5,000 years of bacchanalia and libation, first seen at the Israel Museum last year, opens next week at New York's Jewish Museum. The exhibits, mainly from the Israel Museum and the Antiquities Authority, date from between the fourth millennium BCE and the seventh century CE when consumption of alcoholic beverages declined with the spread of Islam. Among the more spectacular artifacts having either religious or secular significance is a portion of the Dead Sea Scroll referring to the ancient Festival of Tirosh (the new wine); and jars bearing the seal of King Herod attesting to his penchant for imported Italian wines. The New York version of this exhibition, which includes a reconstruction of an ancient wine store, is sponsored by Joseph E. Seagram & Sons Inc. On view till November 5.
SNAPSHOTS; One part unfailing eye, one part charisma
Legendary photojournalist James L. Stanfield is now deep into his 60s, and he looks pretty good for a man who's been in a plane crash, a helicopter crash, almost died of botulism, kept a bout of pneumonia hidden while photographing Pope John Paul II, required an airlift from a Greek island after his back went kablooie and lost a chunk of lung to tuberculosis, which he thinks he probably picked up while shooting (in the photographic sense of that word) rats. Stanfield's father and uncle were photographers at The Milwaukee Journal. Another uncle was a photographer at the Milwaukee Sentinel, and another worked in the Sentinel's photo lab. Stanfield's photographs will be displayed at VP Gallery, 320 E. Buffalo St., through the end of the year. You can see some of Stanfield's images by visiting the gallery's Web site: www.vpphotogallery.com/photog_stanfield.htm.
Larry Stanfield
  The family requests remembrances be made to the American Cancer Society, 2222 W. Shaw Suite 201 Fresno 93711 or the Walnut Grove Community Presbyterian Church Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 93, Walnut Grove 95690.
Larry Stanfield
  The family requests remembrances be made to the American Cancer Society, 2222 W. Shaw Suite 201 Fresno 93711 or the Walnut Grove Community Presbyterian Church Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 93, Walnut Grove 95690.