On front cover, clockwise from top-left: Research Center at the School’s Athenian Agora excavations Photo: Craig Mauzy Corinth Excavations Director Guy Sanders points out architectural details at the Argive Heraion during the School’s Fall Program Photo: Kirsten Day Students on colossal statue of Dionysos at Naxos Photo: June Allison 2002-03 NEH Senior Research Fellow Mark Lawall doing research at the Stoa of Attalos Photo: Craig Mauzy

Please visit our website at www.ascsa.edu.gr for up-to-date information on the School and its activities. Copyright 2007. The American School of Classical Studies at . All rights reserved. THE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES AT ATHENS ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIRST THROUGH ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIFTH ANNUAL REPORTS, 2001–2002 through 2005–2006

Foreword ...... 2 Introduction ...... 3 Overview ...... 4 The Academic Program ...... 5 In the Classroom and Beyond 6 Lectures and Informal Presentations 7 Conferences and Exhibitions 9 Summer Sessions 9 Archaeological Fieldwork ...... 11 Agora Excavations 12 Corinth Excavations 14 Excavations, Surveys, and Synergasia by Cooperating Institutions 16 Research Facilities ...... 18 Blegen Library 19 Gennadius Library 20 Archives 22 Wiener Laboratory 23 Publications ...... 25 Administration ...... 27 Trustees 28 Managing Committee 28 Operations: Athens and Princeton 29 Finances and Development 29 ASCSA Alumni/ae Association 30 Addenda ...... 31 Representative Lectures 31 Volumes Published 33 Appendices ...... 34 FOREWORD

The School has much The Chair of the to be proud of! During Managing Committee the years covered by this of the ASCSA enjoys an Annual Report—as it especially privileged po- has throughout its 125- sition, one that affords a year history—the School broad perspective of the has maintained a steady School. From this van- focus on its academic tage point I have been goals amidst an ever- able to observe closely changing social, political, the workings of this insti- and economic landscape. tution during the years covered by this report. I have In these increasingly complex times, the School viewed the activities of the School in Athens—its is successfully following a path of progress and in- academic programs, its excavations, its two libraries, clusiveness while continuing to honor its mission its archaeological lab, and its interactions with the and build on its areas of traditional strength. Today, Greek archaeological community and other foreign internet connections and computer accessibility en- schools. The School stands out as a clear leader in all hance the academic experience and open new av- these areas. enues for the dissemination of scholarly work. Lec- I have also witnessed the work conducted by the turers from around the globe convene at the School’s Managing Committee as its Chair. From the hiring of newly opened Cotsen Hall to share the fruits of their personnel, to the selection of students, to the award- research. Excavations, surveys, and synergasia con- ing of fellowships, to the preparation of the budget, ducted under the auspices of the School forge strong to the oversight of publications, and much else, the connections between the School’s Cooperating Insti- labor of the Managing Committee on behalf of the tutions, Greek colleagues, and other foreign archae- School is extraordinary. Such a system of communal, ological schools. I am confident that the School will voluntary governance is highly unusual for an institu- continue along this path in this new millennium. tion like the School and is certainly one of its greatest The School’s continued vibrancy and relevance is strengths. a direct result of the stewardship of those who serve I have also been privileged to sit on the two as Board and Managing Committee members and Boards of Trustees of the School. The men and who give so much of their time, energy, and support women who compose these boards bear the ulti- to shape the School’s present and future. A remark- mate responsibility for the well-being of the School. ably loyal and hardworking staff is the backbone of It is no exaggeration to say that the School would the School’s existence, in Athens and in Princeton, not flourish as it has without their great generosity, and an exceptional cadre of generous alumni/ae and wisdom, and effort on its behalf. friends provide support for the ongoing operation The School, the Managing Committee, and the of the School. All of us who believe in the School Trustees all rely on the many staff members, both and its mission owe these individuals our deepest in and in the United States, who work tire- gratitude. lessly to advance the mission of this great institution. Again, as Chair of the Managing Committee, I have — James R. McCredie President, Board of Trustees been put in a position to appreciate the caliber of 2001–present the School’s many fine employees. Having seen the School from all these perspectives, I can attest with great confidence its many successes in the first years of this new millennium. I am equally positive in projecting even more successes to come. — Rhys F. Townsend Chairman, Managing Committee 2002–2006

   The School from Mount Lykavitos

introduction

The American School of Classical Studies at in Greece for American scholars of ancient and Athens was established in 1881 by a consortium of post-classical Greek studies, serving the students nine American universities, under the leadership and faculty of more than 170 affiliated colleges and of Charles Eliot Norton of Harvard University and universities in North America, as well as the Greek with the assistance of a small group of influential scholarly community. Guided in academic matters businessmen. Their intention was to create a school by a Managing Committee composed of faculty rep- where (in Norton’s words) “young scholars might resentatives from member institutions, and a Direc- carry on the study of Greek thought and life to the tor who, along with a Mellon Professor, oversees the best advantage, and where those who were propos- academic program in Athens and functions as liai- ing to become teachers of Greek might gain such ac- son between the School and the Greek community, quaintance with the land and such knowledge of its the American School continues true to its original ancient monuments as should give a quality to their mission: to teach the archaeology, art, history, lan- teaching unattainable without this experience.” They guage, and literature of Greece from earliest times formed a Managing Committee to provide academic to the present; to survey and excavate archaeological leadership and opened the School, soliciting contri- sites in Greek lands; and to publish the results of its butions from the cooperating colleges and universi- excavations and research. ties to operate. Within a few years of its founding, Some 350 students and scholars from North the School added archaeological excavation and re- America, as well as numerous scholars from Greece search to its primary focus as a teaching institution. and Europe, avail themselves of the School’s facili- Today the School remains, as its founders en- ties each year. Many of today’s college and univer- visioned, a privately funded, nonprofit educational sity professors in the classics and related fields have institution, incorporated in the Commonwealth attended one of the School’s academic programs or of Massachusetts and operating in Greece as a pri- excavations. Thanks to the School, these men and vate cultural institution. From modest beginnings, women have come to know Greece itself, and have the American School of Classical Studies at Athens touched the source of one of the world’s great cul- has grown into one of the leading research centers tures, an experience that has enriched their teaching in Greece as well as the most significant resource and given new dimension to their scholarship.

   overview

This report, which covers the academic years the academic program continued almost normally. 2001–2002 through 2005–2006, summarizes the These years also saw a dramatic growth in computing School’s accomplishments in teaching, research, and at the School and the consequent hardware to support publication during this period and outlines its prog- it. The two sides of Souidias Street were connected by ress in strengthening its position as a premier insti- hard wire, and wireless internet connection was intro- tution of higher learning and an example of interna- duced into the Blegen Library and Loring Hall; these tional academic cooperation. upgrades were a great boon to the students. Finally, Integral to the achievement of those goals are the a unified online catalogue (AMBROSIA) was created contributions of the Director of for the libraries, in collabora- the School, appointed by the Man- tion with the British School. aging Committee for a five-year The recently completed term. Concluding his term in the Cotsen Hall has been the 2001–02 academic year, James D. site of numerous events, at- Muhly (University of Pennsylva- tracting attendees from both nia) faced the obstacles of height- academia and government ened security concerns and inter- and forging new bonds with national instability in the wake of the Athenian community at the events of September 11, 2001. large. The Olympic Games The end of Mr. Muhly’s tenure provided additional visibility also witnessed the introduction and opportunities for foster- of the euro as the legal currency ing of goodwill. In his role as of Greece. While both of these Director, Professor Tracy ac- events posed challenges, the daily tively cooperated with Greek operations of the School contin- institutions, universities, and ued smoothly. museums and with the other For the balance of the pe- foreign schools in lectures, riod covered by this report, the seminars, and colloquia. The School was under the director- The Olympic flame passes through the Agora list includes, among many, ship of Stephen V. Tracy (Ohio the Capodistrian Univer- State University). During his tenure, the School has sity of Athens, the National Technical University of faced a sustained period of weakness of the dollar as Athens, the University of Crete at Rethymnon, the well as an everchanging world political climate. These Greek National Research Foundation, the Greek Epi- factors presented strong challenges; despite them, the graphical Society, the Cycladic Museum of Art, the School remained a vigorous and healthy academic in- Epigraphical Museum, the German Archaeological stitution—indeed, one of the premier institutions of Institute, the French School, the Netherlands Insti- its kind in the world. In this period too, major build- tute, the Danish Institute, the Nordic Libraries, the ing projects were brought to completion: earthquake British School, the Australian Archaeological Insti- repairs to the director’s residence and to the main tute, and the Canadian Institute. He also instituted a reading room of the Blegen Library and the con- well-received policy of visiting the School’s projects struction of the School’s state-of-the-art auditorium, each summer as well as paying courtesy calls on the Cotsen Hall, whose completion was celebrated with local ephoreias. a dedication ceremony on January 24, 2005. Greece’s The School community celebrated some major preparations for the Olympic Games, held in Athens milestones in 2006: while the School itself celebrat- in 2004, resulted in a significant number of museums ed the 125th anniversary of its founding, 2006 also (including the National Archaeological Museum) and marked the 75th anniversary of the Agora Excava- sites closing for renovations; the disruptions created tions, the 50th anniversary of the Stoa of Attalos, and were met with ingenuity and good humor by all and the Gennadius Library’s 80th year.

   Student report by Joann Gulizio in Mycenae, fall 2002

THE ACADEMIC PROGRAM

ach year, 15 to 20 students, most of whom have completed one or more years of graduate work, are admitted to the Regular Program through the School’s own E stringent competitive examinations. They participate in an academic curriculum that is built around extensive travel to sites and museums throughout Greece, augment- ed by seminars and lectures by specialists in the fields of classics, art history, archaeol- ogy, history, and other areas that take place both in the field and at the School itself. The academic program is overseen by the Andrew .W Mellon Professor of Classical Studies, assisted by the Rhys Carpenter Faculty Fellow in Classical Studies. Annually, two appointed Whitehead Visiting Professors lead seminars in an area of their current research or special interest. Other School academic staff, along with resident emeritus staff, research fellows, Associate Members of the School (graduate students and senior scholars whose research interests require them to be in Greece), and other indepen- dent scholars in Athens and throughout Greece, share their wealth of expertise with the students during School trips, within the regular teaching program, in seminars and lectures, and in informal talks. The School’s vibrant academic community provides students and teachers alike with unparalleled opportunities to broaden their scope of knowledge and amplify their area of research interest.

   In the Classroom and Beyond… goals for this portion of the academic program and provide a more directed educational experience. During the period of this report, the School’s aca- demic program continued to evolve, with the ad- Whitehead seminars remained a staple of the dition in 2001–02 of the Assistant Professorship School’s academic program, providing students (modified in 2005–06 to the Rhys Carpenter Faculty with an intense 12 weeks of exposure to a variety Fellow in Classical Studies) and in 2004–05 of the of topics. In 2001–02, John E. Coleman (Cornell position of Malcolm Wiener Visiting Professor in University) led a seminar on the transition to the the Wiener Laboratory. Early Bronze Age, while Pierre MacKay (Univer- sity of Washington) conducted a roving seminar by From academic years 2001–02 through 2005–06, the joining all four School trips, where he contributed School continued its successful formula of blending his knowledge of medieval and Ottoman associa- seminars and lectures with extensive travel to sites tions with each site. In 2002–03 John H. Kroll and academic program and museums throughout the Greek world. The Mel- Lisa Kallet (both from University of Texas at Aus- lon Professors, aided by assistant professors through tin) taught seminars on numismatics and the Athe- 2004–05 and by the Rhys Carpenter Faculty Fellow nian empire, respectively. Topics for 2003–04 were in 2005–06, orchestrated, and contributed their own the Late Antique city (taught by Carolyn S. Snively, particular expertise to, an ever-changing menu of Gettysburg College) and Greek agriculture (Gary academic experiences. The first year of this report L. Reger, Trinity College); for 2004–05, Whitehead saw the conclusion of the tenure of Mellon Profes- seminars addressed Venice and Greece (taught by sor Merle K. Langdon (University of Washington), Glenn R. Bugh, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and who, in addition to providing general oversight of State University) and law and dispute settlement in the School’s academic program, offered a seminar Athens and the Greek world (Adele Scafuro, Brown on the topography and monuments of Athens and University). In 2005–06, Whitehead Professor Les- Attica. He was supported by Assistant Professor of lie P. Day (Wabash College) gave a seminar entitled Classical Studies Brendan Burke (University of Cali- “Death in Transition in Prehistoric Crete” and Kent fornia at Los Angeles), whose term also concluded J. Rigsby (Duke University) taught on the topic of in 2002. science and scientific writings.

From 2002–03 through 2004–05 James Sickinger In recognition of the Olympic year in 2004, a special (Florida State University) served as Mellon Profes- winter seminar on Olympia was given by Corinth sor, aided by Assistant Professors Kevin Glowacki Excavations Assistant Director Emerita Nancy (Indiana University), who served a two-year term, Bookidis, culminating in a March trip to Olympia. and Michael C. Nelson (Macalester College), serv- Further broadening the School’s academic program, ing a one-year term. During these years, great effort inaugural Malcolm H. Wiener Visiting Research was made to integrate even more School staff into Professor Maria Liston (University of Waterloo) in the academic program. A course on Greek epigra- 2005 offered a Winter Term seminar on “The Uses phy was added to the curriculum, and a number of and Abuses of Physical Anthropology.” This con- short workshops and seminars augmented the tradi- tribution to the academic program was continued tional Whitehead seminars. the following year, when Wiener Visiting Research John H. Oakley (College of William and Mary) Professor Hariclia Brecoulaki (University of Paris I, served the first year of his term as Mellon Profes- Panthéon-Sorbonne) taught a seminar on “The Uses sor in 2005–06, supported by Rhys Carpenter Fac- and Function of Color in Ancient Greek Painting.” ulty Fellow Susanne U. Hofstra (Rhodes College). During the period covered by this report, annual Professor Oakley’s contributions included codifying Regular Program activities included four staff- a set of flexible requirements for the Spring Term, led Fall Term field trips, broadly covering Central with the goal of better defining the academic expec- Greece, Northern Greece, the Peloponnese, and ei- tations for Regular Members. Individual consulta- ther Crete and Santorini or Corinthia and the Ar- tions with Regular Members prior to the start of the golid. Itineraries varied slightly from year to year to Spring Term by the Director and by the Mellon Pro- take advantage of the strengths of the various School fessor are crucial to the Members’ ability to establish

   academic progr academic AM

Left: Mellon Professor 2005–06 John Oakley lectures despite the weather in central Greece. Right: Mellon Professor 2002–05 Jim Sickinger at Marathon. faculty and to focus on ongoing archaeological eighth nearing completion of its endowment). All of work. A Winter Term course in the topography and these School Members benefited, as always, from the monuments of Athens continued to be a staple of willingness of various Greek archaeologists, members the program, as did the numerous staff-led day trips of the other foreign schools in Athens, School staff to important sites and museums throughout Attica. members, and other scholars to share their knowl- Destinations of various other optional School trips edge of Greece and their expertise in a wide range of during the years 2001–02 through 2005–06, sched- subjects. A list of School Members and their institu- uled during the Winter and Spring terms, included tional affiliations, along with any fellowships held, is Corinth/Argolid, the Saronic Gulf, Crete, Turkey, included in the Appendices. Monemvasia, Sicily, and Albania.

Adding to the diversity of the School community are Lectures and Informal Presentations several Mellon East European Fellows, scholars from During the period covered by this Annual Report, Eastern and Central European universities who visit scholars from within the School community and be- the School each year to further their research on a yond shared the fruits of their academic research in variety of classical and post-classical topics. The Ae- both scheduled lectures and more informal venues. gean Fellows Exchange Program brought Turkish scholars to the School for brief periods; their pres- As in years past, the School’s well-received “Tea ence, and the presence of other visiting scholars and Talks” afforded Regular and Associate Members, as Associate Members of the School, further enriched well as School faculty and special guests, the oppor- the academic atmosphere. Many of these individu- tunity to present ongoing research, providing a use- als participated in lectures and informal talks and ful forum to discuss working ideas and new inter- shared information about their research topics with pretations. The tea talks also provided a constructive Regular Students and School faculty. and supportive format for students seeking feedback on their research and also gave students the oppor- In the period covered by this report, 87 Regular Mem- tunity to rehearse their upcoming presentations for bers were admitted to the School, along with some the Annual AIA/APA Meeting. 342 Associate Members. Many enjoyed the support of various School fellowships; by the end of the period Formal lectures drew renowned academics to the covered by this report, the School offered eight fully School; these lectures were always well attended endowed Associate Member fellowships and seven and intellectually stimulating. The Walton Lectures, fully endowed Regular Member fellowships (with an Lectures for the Open Meeting on the Work of the

   es i ersar l Anniv hoo Sc

Above: Mary Zelia Philippides with Agora Excavations Direc- tor John Camp. Mrs. Philippides is the only surviving member of the original Agora excavation team.

Top & Above: The Stoa of Attalos was the scene of an exhibition and reception commemorating the Agora’s 75th anniversary. Right: The School’s 125th anniversary was marked with an all-day conference at Cotsen Hall. U.S. Ambassador Charles Ries (center) with School Director Stephen Tracy and School Trustee Robert McCabe.

   academic progr academic School, Wiener Laboratory Lectures, and Trustees An international conference held in Cotsen Hall in Lectures were annual offerings. A special feature of March 2006 attracted over 400 scholars and students the School’s 2001–02 lecture series was a number of from around the world. Titled “Mesohelladika” and lectures on “Exploring the Frontiers of the Greek jointly sponsored by the École française d’Athènes, World,” designed to examine the new archaeologi- the American School, and the Netherlands Institute cal and textural evidence for relationships between in Athens, the event featured 50-plus papers focusing Greece and its eastern neighbors. A major Greek on the Greek mainland in the Middle Bronze Age. scholar has led off the School lecture series in recent Various events in 2006 commemorated the history years; featured speakers have been V. Lambrinouda- of the Agora Excavations in conjunction with its kis, A. Mantis, P. Themelis, and M. Hatzopoulos. A 75th anniversary. Celebrations were kicked off by a listing of each year’s major lectures is included as an AM joint APA/AIA session, “The Athenian Agora: Cele- addendum to this report. brating 75 Years of Discovery,” on January 7, 2006, in Montreal. This was followed in Athens on June 15–16 Conferences and Exhibitions by an exhibition at the Agora with an all-day con- ference in Cotsen Hall, at which some speakers also By organizing, sponsoring, hosting, and participat- focused on the last quarter-century of work carried ing in a variety of conferences and exhibitions on out by the School, marking its 125th anniversary. topics related to its mission and fields of instruction, the School continued to build on its image as an aca- demic and cultural leader in the world of classical Summer Sessions and post-classical studies. These events routinely The Summer Sessions, patterned after the Regu- drew crowds of renowned academicians and pro- lar Program trips, are designed to introduce par- vided members of the School community with the ticipants to the most relevant archaeological sites opportunity to expand their educational horizons. and museums in Greece. These programs annually In November 2002 the School sponsored, along with broaden the perspectives of undergraduates, high the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut (DAI) and school teachers, graduate students, and college pro- the Fritz-Thyssen Stiftung, a colloquium on “Early fessors in a variety of fields. Each Summer Session Hellenistic Portraiture: Image, Style, Context.” Held program takes on a personality of its own, shaped at the DAI, the two-day colloquium brought to- by the background and interests of Summer Ses- gether 14 noted scholars from North America and sion Directors and participants, and provides a truly Europe to reassess Early Hellenistic portraiture in memorable whirlwind tour of Greece. light of new finds and new approaches to the study of Greek sculpture.

In November 2003 Mellon Professor James P. Sick- inger organized an Epigraphy Colloquium at the School. The one-day session presented new research by a select group of scholars working at the School and throughout Greece.

In November 2005 the School was well represented at a first-ever exhibition illustrating the work of Greece’s 17 foreign schools. Entitled “Foreign Ar- chaeological Institutions in Greece: 160 Years of Cultural Cooperation,” the exhibition was on display at the Megaron Mousikis for two months. School Director Stephen V. Tracy gave an address, “The “Mesohelladika,” an international conference sponsored American School of Classical Studies at Athens: 125 by the School and two other institutions in 2006, attracted Years of Work in Greece.” 400 scholars and students to Cotsen Hall.

   academic program

Students and teachers gather in front of the Temple of Athena at Assos (Behramkale) in the first Summer Session held in Turkey, 2004.

The typical six-week Summer Session schedule, in medieval Turkey. This historic session—the first ever which two groups of 20 students and their Session to take place in Turkey—was led by Charles Gates Directors explore as many as 100 sites, hear dozens (Bilkent University), who introduced the 26 partici- of on-site lectures, and share countless student re- pants to a broad range of sites and monuments from ports and site talks, was maintained for four of the the Greco-Roman, pre-Greek, and post-Roman five years covered by this report. Summer Sessions periods. were directed in 2001 by Mark Fullerton (Ohio State During the period covered by this report, a concert- University) and Clayton M. Lehmann (University ed effort was made to admit more secondary school of South Dakota), in 2002 by Ruth Palmer (Ohio teachers and undergraduates than was typical of past University) and Lisa R. Brody (Oregon State Uni- years. As a result, while graduate students continued versity), and in 2003 by Christina Salowey (Hollins to make up the majority of the Summer Session class University) and Peter Krentz (Davidson College). In roster, Summer Session attendees during these years 2005, each Summer Session was team-led by a pair benefited from experiencing Greece amidst an in- of co-directors: Mark and Mary Lou Zimmerman creasingly diverse student base. (Penn State University) led Summer Session I, and Christina Salowey (Hollins University) and Lee Ann Riccardi (The College of New Jersey) co-directed Summer Session II.

With the Olympic Games coming to Athens in summer 2004, the regular Summer Sessions were canceled; in their place, the School offered a single, four-week Summer Session focusing on ancient and

 10  Members Lisa Mallen and Angela Ziskowski at Corinth, 2006

archaeological fieldwork

he American School of Classical Studies at Athens has sponsored archaeo- logical exploration since its earliest years. In 1896, it began digging at ancient T Corinth, and today, over a century later, the excavation continues. In 1931, the School opened a second great site in Athens itself: the Agora, the ancient city’s com- mercial and political center. Both of these excavations have contributed immeasurably to expanding our knowledge of the ancient Greek world and have yielded invaluable research material for School Members, staff, and other scholars, as well as opportuni- ties for students to gain hands-on experience in excavation techniques. Thanks to the generosity of generations of benefactors, the School has built museums and research centers at both sites, and continues to produce a rich array of publications documenting the results of these excavations. Equally important are the many projects done under the auspices of the School by cooperating universities and colleges. All of these proj- ects stress cooperation with our Greek colleagues and often include Greek students and scholars in the work. In 1928, the Greek government recognized the American School of Classical Studies at Athens as the permanent American archaeological presence in Greece. As such, the School is the official link between American researchers and the Greek Archaeological Service of the Ministry of Culture. Broadly responsible for all American archaeological projects in the country, the School obtains, assigns, and supervises the permits (granted by the Ministry of Culture) for excavations, surveys, and synergasia (cooperative projects).

 11  Agora Excavations the fourth century A.D., along with one example of elephant ivory; they were presumably made for and During the years covered by this report, the Agora used at an adjacent altar found years ago. Two mod- Excavations continued operation under the direc- ern buildings along Astingos Street were demolished tion of John McK. Camp II, with Craig Mauzy as in 2003 and 2005, and the remains of private houses Resident Director, supervising the teams of summer in use in the eleventh century A.D. were exposed. student volunteers in addition to working with the regular professional excavation staff. Other Agora Additional work in the Eleusinion, on the north slopes staff members, in addition to supporting the field- of the Acropolis, produced a well of the early fifth work, provided logistical support in archives, pho- century B.C., a well of the late fourth century A.D., tography, conservation, and drafting for a range of and a portrait head of the late second century A.D. visitors and scholars working on Agora research and The portrait, wearing a crown decorated with small publication projects. carved busts of Roman emperors, must be of a priest or high Imperial official; such portraits are common Primary support for the excavation during this pe- in Asia Minor and very rare in mainland Greece. riod was once again provided by the Packard Hu- manities Institute, which also provided funding for In 2005, excavations expanded to include a reinves- the acquisition of several pieces of property overly- tigation of the building tentatively identified as the rchaeological fieldwork ing the Stoa Poikile for future excavation. Separate Strategeion (headquarters of the generals), south- A grants from the Packard Foundation enabled the west of the Tholos. Work in that area clarified the staff to continue its efforts to put the entire Agora re- plan of the building and also yielded a large hoard of cord system in a database, and permitted renovation more than 400 Athenian silver tetradrachms dating of the conservation laboratory and construction of to the years around 300 B.C. a climate-controlled storage area for metals. In ad- Numerous scholars and students worked on Agora dition, grants from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation publication assignments in the Stoa during the pe- supported the Agora’s publication program, while riod covered by this report. Their diverse topics Randolph-Macon College (Ashland, VA) and the included Roman and Hellenistic pottery, sculpture, Panathenaic Society provided supplementary funds amphoras, human and animal bones, glass, inscrip- for the excavations. tions, and houses. Excavations during the years covered by this report On April 16, 2003, the Stoa of Attalos was the venue continued to broaden the picture of the various for the accession ceremony of 10 new members to stages of development and habitation of early Ath- the European Union. The ceremony and signing ens. Excavation concentrated primarily on areas at of the Accession Treaty were a prelude to the offi- the northwest corner of the Agora, along both sides cial addition of the acceding countries to the EU in of an ancient street. Commercial buildings seem to 2004. In June of 2005 celebrations were held to mark have lined the east side of the street from the fourth the 75th anniversary of the excavations as well as the century B.C. until the fifth century A.D., while the 50th anniversary of the reconstruction of the Stoa of western side was occupied by a Roman bath. Sev- Attalos, the landscaping project, and the restoration eral terracotta figurines showing Aphrodite drying of the Church of the Holy Apostles. her hair were also recovered, dating from the first to

In 2003, the Stoa of Attalos was the venue for the accession ceremony of ten new members to the European Union.

 12  AGORA

I N N RE V IEW

Above: Roman Imperial priest por- trait head in Pentelic marble from the 2002 season; and the head in situ.

Top: Finds from 2004—a gold pendant from Early Roman fill and a gold solidus of Leo I, recovered from a layer of rubble and debris in Section BZ. Above: The north– south street excavated in 2003 in the northwest section of the Agora. Left: Concreted mass of Athenian silver tetradrachms, part of a large buried hoard uncovered in the 2005 season.

 13  Corinth Excavations a faceted column drum built into it. This closely re- sembles others thought to have marked Geometric Excavations at Corinth during the years covered by graves excavated elsewhere in Corinth. Four of the this report continued under the direction of Guy graves had rich burial assemblages mainly consist- D.R. Sanders. This period was marked by the retire- ing of oinochoai, amphoras, skyphoi, and aryballoi. ment of several staff members, most significantly of The over 50 complete or substantially complete Geo- Assistant Director Nancy Bookidis and Head Con- metric vessels have increased the number in the col- servator Stella Bouzakis, in 2003. New members are lection by half again. Curator Ioulia Tzonou-Herbst and James Herbst, a licensed architect, who both joined the School in Study of assemblages of Hellenistic pottery exca- 2001, and Nicole Anastasatou, a conservator, who vated in 2003–05 indicates that a reexamination of joined the staff in 2002. all published contexts from Corinth is in order, with a view to down-dating much of it by as much as 50 Ongoing excavations at the Panayia Field, south- to 100 years. Another assemblage dates to after the east of the Forum at Corinth, have revealed a small Mummian sack and contains a mold for a mold- Geometric cemetery. The five graves all date to the made bowl. These deposits have far-reaching impli- ninth century B.C. and three are remarkable for cations, including a redrafting of the chronology of the size and date of the monolithic sarcophagi they the monuments in the area of the Roman forum. rchaeological fieldwork contained. Two of the sarcophagi, made from sand- A stone probably quarried near Temple Hill, date to Other focal points of excavation within the complex the Early Geometric I period, ca. 900 B.C., and are stratigraphy of the Panayia Field included a Late An- thus the earliest known on the Greek mainland and tique house, Early Roman floors, and frescoes. Study can be seen as the earliest known form of monu- and publication of the Panayia Field discoveries con- mental stone architecture after the Bronze Age. The tinued hand in hand with the excavations. third sarcophagus, dated Middle Geometric I, was The opening of the areas on the north side of the made from oolitic limestone and is very much more Panayia Field yielded evidence of the existence of finely worked than its sandstone predecessors. It was earlier Roman and Hellenistic structures under the placed in a pit cut in the bottom of the grave shaft. garden of the fourth-century urban domus; initial A niche sealed with a large vertical slab on the south excavations of these structures commenced in 2005. side contained most of the burial assemblage. A Ro- Other areas with potential for future excavation were man wall which cut the north side of the grave had investigated in a remote sensing project, conducted in collaboration with the Fitch Laboratory at the British School, which focused on the area of the Late Roman city wall east of the village and at Korakou where a possible fortification wall was identified.

The Corinth Excavation staff has been increasingly involved in condition studies of Corinth’s monu- ments and in site enhancement projects conducted under the aegis of the Central Archaeological Coun- cil (KAS) of the Greek Ministry of Culture. A site management plan, prepared by Corinth staff mem- bers in close collaboration with the Ephoreia of the Corinthia, was approved by the KAS in 2004 and received funding from the EC Regional Council. Implementation of the plan, which includes visitor Former Corinth Excavations Director Charles K. Wil- access and parking improvements, began in 2005. liams, II and current Director Guy Sanders congratulate Corinth Conservator Stella Bouzaki and Assistant Director Nancy Bookidis at their retirement party in 2003.

 14  CORI NT H

I N N RE V IEW

Ongoing excavations in the Panayia Field yielded a Geometric cemetery dating to the ninth cen- tury B.C. Counter-clockwise from top-right: Excavation of Grave 2003-12 in 2003; plan of Geomet- ric burials; assemblage from the niche of Grave 2003-12 in situ and again after conservation. Above: Hellenistic cistern from the east after the 2005 season

 15  rchaeological fieldwork A

Aerial view of the South Acropolis at Azoria

Excavations, Surveys, and Synergasia by In 2002, Project Director Donald C. Haggis (Univer- Cooperating Institutions sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) and Field Di- rector Margaret S. Mook (Iowa State University) un- During the years covered by this report, changes in dertook a five-year excavation program at the Early archaeological laws governing foreign excavations Iron Age town of Azoria, on Crete. The objective is in Greece, announced in February 2003, effectively to explore the changing dynamics of crop process- limited the number of projects allowed under the ing, subsistence, and land-use practices at Azoria as auspices of each foreign school to three regular proj- they relate to social processes involved in the forma- ects (excavations or surveys) and three synergasia. tion of small-scale polities in the eastern Mediter- With ongoing excavations at Corinth claiming one ranean during the first millennium .B C. regular project permit (excavations at the Agora fall under a special law of 1931 of the Greek government The Eastern Korinthia Archaeological Survey and thus continue on a separate permit), leaving (EKAS), under the direction of Timothy Gregory only two discretionary permits available annually, it (Ohio State University) and Daniel Pullen (Florida was necessary for the School to delay a significant State University), took place in 2000–02, and Brad- amount of planned activity. ley Ault (SUNY-Buffalo) directed a geophysical sur- vey at Halieis in 2003. Excavations and Surveys The Dorati Surface Survey, an intensive survey of a newly discovered Bronze Age site in the north- A five-year program of excavations at Nemea, begun eastern Peloponnesos, took place in 2004 under the in 1997 under the direction of Stephen G. Miller direction of Jeannette Marchand-Niterou (Wright (University of California at Berkeley), came to a State University). The study seasons that followed close in 2001; subsequent years have focused on the involved analysis of approximately 5,000 sherds and study and publication of past years’ discoveries. 100 artifacts collected during the survey season.

 16  A

In 2005 a three-year surface survey project began fieldwork rchaeological at Galatas on Crete, under the direction of L. Vance Watrous (SUNY-Buffalo). The project seeks to pro- vide a regional context that will help to better un- derstand the function of the recently discovered Mi- noan palace and to examine the developing history of local settlement by producing a series of chrono- logical maps of all sites in the region ranging in date from late Neolithic to Venetian/Ottoman periods.

Synergasia— Joint Greek/American Projects A two-year excavation of Late Mycenaean chamber In its first season in 2004, the Mitrou Archaeological tombs in Barnavos, Nemea, under the direction of Project uncovered this Middle Protogeometric cist tomb James C. Wright (Bryn Mawr College) in synergasia with the body of a child. with Evangelia Pappi (4th Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities at Nauplion) was com- Also beginning in 2004 was the three-year Palaeo- pleted in 2003. That same year saw the conclusion lithic surface survey at Grevena, co-directed by of a two-year excavation of a Bronze Age burial cave Katerina Harvati (New York University) and Eleni near Agios Charalambos, directed by Philip Be- Panagopoulou (Ephoreia of Palaioanthropology and tancourt (Temple University) in collaboration with Speleology). Costis Davaras (Honorary Ephor of Agios Nikolaos) and Eleni Stravopodi (Ephoreia of Palaioanthropol- In 2004–05 excavations at Mochlos resumed under ogy and Speleology). the direction of Jeffrey Soles (University of North Carolina at Greensboro) and Costis Davaras (Hon- Also in 2003, Curtis Runnels (Boston University) orary Ephor of Agios Nikolaos). led a one-year synergasia survey of Mesolithic sites at Kandia in the Argolid with Eleni Panagopoulou Finally, in 2006 a new three-year excavation project (Ephoreia of Palaioanthropology and Speleology). began at the Sanctuary of Zeus at Mt. Lykaion in Arcadia, co-directed by David G. Romano (Univer- The five-year Mitrou Archaeological Project (MAP), sity of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and co-directed by Aleydis Van de Moortel (University Anthropology) and Mary E. Voyatzis (University of of Tennessee) and Eleni Zahou (14th Ephoreia of Arizona) in collaboration with Anastasia Panagio­ Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities at Lamia), had topoulou (5th Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical its inaugural season in 2004. The first season of ex- Antiquities at Sparta). This archaeological project cavation revealed the presence of an Early Iron Age also includes architectural documentation, geologi- settlement and cemetery above the earlier strata, cal and geophysical exploration, and study of the with surface finds indicating human habitation cultural landscape of a portion of western Arcadia. stretching back to the beginning of the Neolithic.

 17  Scholars and students in the main reading room of the Gennadius Library

RESEARCH FACILITIES

he School counts as two of its most precious assets its research libraries. The Blegen Library, dedicated to , covers virtually the entire field T of classical antiquity, with an emphasis on , literature, art, and archaeology. The Gennadius Library, focused on post-classical Greek culture, is a trea- sure house of books, rare bindings, research materials, archives, and works of art, and also serves the Athenian community with a series of lectures, concerts, and exhibitions. Both collections present unparalleled research facilities for students and visiting schol- ars and have, over the years, spawned hundreds of dissertations, articles, and books. In addition to a combined number of over 190,000 volumes in its libraries, the School possesses important archives. The School Archives contain materials recording the his- tory of American humanistic studies in Greece from the nineteenth century to the pres- ent, and the Gennadeion holds papers, notebooks, diaries, and letters of pivotal figures in the history and letters of modern Greece and the Balkans. The Wiener Laboratory, located in the School’s main building in Athens, houses a growing scientific library and developing reference collections that focus primarily on the areas of biological anthropology, faunal analysis, and archaeological geology. Es- tablished in 1992 to apply scientific techniques to the study of archaeological materials, particularly those from School-sponsored excavations in Greece, the Wiener Labora- tory has quickly become an important presence in the world of scientific archaeology, not only supporting research in the Lab, but also serving as a foundation for develop- ment of multidisciplinary research projects.

 18  research facili research during repairs. The new and improved main reading room reopened in September 2003, complete with improved lighting and wireless internet access.

Also in 2002, the Blegen, Gennadius, and British School libraries selected ALEPH 500 as the platform for creation of a joint online catalogue (known as AMBROSIA: American British Online Search In Athens [www.ascsa.edu.gr/ambrosia/]) of the three libraries. Subsequent years saw gradual progress on implementation of AMBROSIA, including staff t

training on the ALEPH software and cataloguing ies of records in the union catalogue. A grant from the Stavros S. Niarchos Foundation underwrote the School’s share of the software, as well as hardware Chuck Jones was hired as Head Librarian of the Blegen in and training costs. During the period covered by 2005 and is one of the leaders of the School’s digital asset this report, work also continued on the ARGOS (Ar- management project. chaeological Greek On-Line System) Project, a joint library computerization project established in 1992. Blegen Library Digital asset management was an area of growing Camilla MacKay joined the School staff as the new concern for both the Blegen Library and the School head librarian, effective July 1, 2001, succeeding during the years covered by this report. Upon join- long-time Blegen Head Librarian Nancy Winter. ing the staff, Head Librarian Charles E. Jones as- Upon Ms. MacKay’s resignation in November 2003, sumed a leadership role in the continuing discussion Associate Librarian Demetra Photiadis served as act- of this issue. Mr. Jones was appointed to co-chair ing librarian pending the appointment of a new head the newly formed Library and Information Servic- librarian. After a lengthy search, Charles E. Jones, es Unit, which will draw on staff from the School’s formerly research archivist and bibliographer at the libraries, archives, and Information Technology University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute, joined the Department. The goal of this unit is to develop a School staff as Head Librarian of the Blegen Library coordinated services model to address the manage- in July 2005. In other major staff changes, part-time ment of the library and archival collections and to library employee Benjamin Millis joined the staff facilitate research through integration of IT services. full time in November 2004, as Acquisitions Librar- ian, upon the departure of Assistant Librarian Phyl- lis Graham; and Demetra Photiadis retired in Oc- tober 2005, after a 34-year career at the School. In January 2006, Panagiota Magouti joined the staff of the Blegen as Cataloguing Librarian. These new staff members joined “old hands” Elizavet Gignoli and Maria Tourna. Major improvements to the Blegen Library were un- dertaken in 2002, in part to address damages caused by the 1999 earthquake; these renovations necessi- tated the closing of the Library’s main reading room in June 2002. Renovations to the basement of the New Extension of the library (left unfinished since its construction in 1991) created additional stor- The Blegen Library was renovated and then reopened in age space as well as a temporary space for staff and September 2003, complete with wireless internet access, library users, enabling the Blegen to remain open among many other improvements.

 19  Much of this process is being funded by a grant from ian Anna Nadali and Secretary Maria Vastardi. In

ies the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. August 2004 Maria Georgopoulou succeeded Haris t Kalligas as Director of the Gennadius Library. Li- The Blegen Library collection continued to grow brarian Irini Solomonidi joined the staff in August during the five-year period covered by this report. 2005, and Maria Smali was hired as a secretary in More than 8,100 volumes were acquired in that November 2005. In February 2006, Head Librarian time, the majority of which were purchased with Sophie Papageorgiou retired after 36 years of service. funds from the annual budget. On February 9, 2002, Phase II of the Gennadius Li- Gennadius Library brary building project got underway with a ground- breaking ceremony attended by the President of From academic years 2001–02 through 2005–06, the Greece, Constantine Stephanopoulos. Work on Gennadius Library acquired 7,200 volumes, more Phase II, which included the renovation and expan- research facili than half of which were gifts. Notable acquisitions sion of the East Wing and construction of Cotsen included a rare copy of a fragment of the History Hall, a new 370-seat School auditorium designed to of Alexander the Great by Curtius Rufus printed in be used for lectures, conferences, and other public Venice in 1520; a Latin edition of Hero of Alexan- events, was essentially complete in late 2004, and the dria’s Military Science of 1616; a 1765 translation of East Wing was formally inaugurated on January 24, Johann Joachim Winckelmann’s Reflections on the 2005, by President Stephanopoulos. The expanded painting and sculpture of the Greeks, with Instruc- East Wing houses new offices for the secretaries, li- tions for the connoisseur, and an essay, on Grace in brary staff, and fellows; ample storage areas of com- works of art, donated by the Philoi of the Gennadius pact stacks for the Gennadeion Archives and books; Library in memory of former School Director Wil- and three new public spaces. liam D.E. Coulson; a rare Turkish naval history by During the years covered by this report, the Gen- Mustafa Ibn Abdallah, printed in Constantinople nadeion hosted a variety of cultural and scholarly in 1729; Godfrey Levinge’s 1839 The Traveller in the events, which were well attended by School Members East, acquired through the generosity of Gennadius and the greater Athens community. Annual Walton Library Trustee Theodore Sedgwick; a manuscript Lectures continued to draw scholars to speak on a topographical plan of Athens, drawn in 1826; an variety of interesting topics. The Cotsen Lecture Se- extremely rare illustrated astronomical primer by ries, established in 2005–06, broadened the Library’s Dionysios Pyrrhos, published in Athens in 1836; schedule of public lectures and events. and a facsimile of a Greek illuminated manuscript, Parisinus suppl. Gr. 247. Several manuscripts from In May 2002, the Gennadeion hosted the opening of Venice-ruled Corfu belonging to the Kapadochos an exhibition on the vernacular architecture of the family were acquired by the Gennadeion Archives northwest Peloponnesos, the result of Frederick A. to bolster its Venetian studies collections. Cooper’s (University of Minnesota) 10 field seasons as director of the Morea survey project. In January The Gennadeion also significantly broadened its 2005, the Gennadeion sponsored a conference (co- collections on Venetian studies when it acquired the organized by the Academy of Athens and the Hel- gamut of publications issued by the distinguished lenic Institute for Byzantine and Post-Byzantine Venetian research center, Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Studies in Venice) in memory of Manoussos Ma- Lettere ed Arti, including the Atti dell’ Istituto Vene- nousakas, Member of the Academy of Athens and to, as well as the journals Arabica, Central European former President of the Philoi of the Gennadeion. History, Middle Eastern Studies, and Zeitschrift für A symposium on the material culture of the Mid- Religions und Geistesgeschichte. dle Ages, organized by Gennadeion Director Maria This period saw notable staff changes at the Gen- Georgopoulou, was held in Cotsen Hall in April nadeion. In summer 2004, Director Haris Kalligas 2005. A symposium of 32 speakers titled “War and stepped down after nine years at the Library. Also Identities,” co-organized by the Library, the Hellenic departing in summer 2004 were Associate Librar- Studies Program at Yale University, the Hellenic Ob-

 20  G e nn ade i o n in R in n e vi Left: The President of Greece, Constantine Stephano­

poulos, laid the cornerstone for the East Wing renovation ew in 2002 while Library President Catherine deG. Vander- pool and Director Haris Kalligas look on. Above: The 370-seat, state-of-the-art Cotsen Hall became available for lectures, musical performances, and special events in 2004. Below, left: The John B. Mandilas Rare Book Reading Room opened in 2005. Below, right: In 2005, the Gennadius Library held an exhibition of rare and important bookbindings from its collection.

Staff arrivals and de- partures at the Library during this period: Right: Library Director Haris Kalligas retired in 2004. Far Right: Head Librarian Sophie Papa- georgiou (center) retired after 36 years of service. Standing with her is School Director Stephen V. Tracy and new Library Director Maria Georgo- poulou, who succeeded Kalligas in 2004.

 21  servatory of the London School of Economics, the Archives

ies Kokkalis Foundation, and the Network for the Study During the period covered by this report, Archives t of Civil Wars, was held in May 2006. staff, under the leadership of Natalia Vogeikoff- Several exhibitions at the Gennadeion highlighted Brogan, made considerable progress in the admin- the wealth of the Library’s various collections. A istration of the ASCSA archives, keeping abreast of December 2003 exhibition, “Greece and Her Neigh- developments in cataloguing, preservation, access, bours in Historic Postcards: 1895–1920,” featured and promotion of the School’s archival collections. postcards donated to the Gennadeion Archives by In 2005 Leda Costaki was hired as special research Philip Betancourt (Temple University). An exhibi- archivist to replace Alexis Malliaris, who opted for tion of 79 of the most interesting and significant of an academic career at Ionian University. Reference the Gennadius Library’s collection of Byzantine and archivist Maria Voltera continued to offer her ser- post-Byzantine manuscripts, organized by the Greek vices at the archives of the Gennadius Library. Of research facili Palaeographic Society in collaboration with the li- great importance to the School’s Archives was the brary, followed a one-day conference on the Genna- relocation of the archival collections of the Gen- deion’s collection and was held at the library in May nadius Library to the newly built East Wing, which 2004. A small exhibition of rare books was set up by offers large storage space and a controlled environ- Sophie Papageorgiou to celebrate the opening of the ment. The new premises carries the name “The John Mandilas Rare Book Reading Room in April 2005. L. Caskey Archives Room.” An exhibition of important bookbindings from the Gennadeion was put together by Vangelio Tzaneta- Much important work has taken place in the Ar- tou in conjunction with the international sympo- chives since 2001. In 2000 the Institute for Aegean sium “The Book in Byzantium. Byzantine and Post- Prehistory (INSTAP) awarded the Archives a three- Byzantine Bookbinding,” organized by the National year grant ($65,000) to catalogue the outgoing part Hellenic Research Foundation in October 2005. of Heinrich Schliemann’s vast correspondence, which was largely completed in 2003. To date, Ste- In May 2003, the Gennadeion organized a concert fanie Kennell, who remains responsible for cata- of baroque music in memory of Gennadius Library loguing Schliemann’s correspondence, has entered Trustee Constantine Leventis, who died the previ- more than 20,000 items in the database. During the ous July. Another concert of baroque music, titled same time, the Archives formed a collaboration with “Natività di Christo,” was held in December 2005. A the Heinrich Schliemann Gesellschaft in Germany jazz concert featuring singer Dr. Catchie Cartwright to digitize the incoming correspondence of Hein- and jazz musicians from the music department of rich Schliemann. The Schliemann papers remain the the Ionion University of Corfu was co-organized by the Gennadeion, the Fulbright Foundation, and the U.S. Embassy in Athens in April 2006.

The Gennadeion inaugurated a new four-week sum- mer session in 2005, designed to familiarize partici- pants with medieval Greek language and literature. The program includes visits to museums, libraries, archaeological sites, and Byzantine monuments in and around Athens. Future sessions will take place biannually. Also inaugurated in 2005 was the Cotsen Traveling Fellowship, which supports travel for se- nior scholars and graduate students for short-term projects and research at the Gennadeion.

Notebooks and letters from archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann. The Schliemann papers are the most sought- after archival collection of the School.

 22  research facili research most sought-after archival collection of the School, figuring in world-wide documentary films such as the recent “Treasure Seekers: Glories of the Ancient Aegean” and “Helen of Troy.” The correspondence between Heinrich Schliemann and his wife Sophia, also housed at the Gennadius Library, was recently published in a thorough monograph.

The staff of the Archives, especially Alexis Malliaris, contributed to the cataloguing of the map collection of the Gennadius Library (more than 2,500 items), t

which formed part of a larger project to create an in- ies ventory of the map collections of American overseas research centers in the Mediterranean, funded by the Council of American Overseas Research Centers In 2003, Archives staff participated in the organization of (CAORC). an exhibit entitled “Greece and Her Neighbors in Historic Postcards: 1895–1920,” which featured material from the The Archives are among the beneficiaries of a recent collection of Philip Betancourt donated to the Gennadeion major grant awarded to the ASCSA by the European Archives. Here, a 1912 postcard of the personification of Union to digitize its archaeological and historical Greece pointing the way for the Kings of Bulgaria, Serbia, Montenegro and Romania as they charge Ottoman soldiers. collections and make them accessible to the public. The Archives have digitized several photographic collections from both the Blegen and the Gennadius has been undertaken on the papers of archaeologist libraries. Virginia R. Grace, whose work on the chronology of the wine amphoras has been a landmark in classi- In 2003, Archives staff participated in the organiza- cal archaeology. Through funding from INSTAP, the tion of an exhibit entitled “Greece and Her Neigh- records of the Lerna excavations were shipped from bors in Historic Postcards: 1895–1920,” which fea- America to Athens to be housed and catalogued at tured material from the collection of 200 historical the School’s archives. postcards donated to the Gennadeion Archives by Philip Betancourt of Temple University. The Ar- The Archives of the Gennadius Library have acquired chives also provided content and images for “Foreign a number of important archival collections recently, Archaeological Institutions in Greece: 160 Years of including the papers of novelist Angelos Terzakis, Cultural Cooperation,” the exhibit organized by the friend and contemporary of Stratis Myrivilis, whose Ministry of Culture to honor the work of the foreign papers have also been recently deposited at the Gen- archaeological schools in Greece. nadius Library. Finally, the royalties from the use of Dimitri Mitropoulos’s musical works not only en- In addition to participating in special projects and abled the microfilming and digitization of the Mit- curating exhibitions, the staff of the Archives con- ropoulos papers, but also contributed to the micro- tinued steadily processing and cataloguing archival filming of one-quarter of the George Seferis papers. collections at the Gennadeion and in the reposi- tory in the main building. The cataloguing of the administrative records of the School has been com- Wiener Laboratory pleted, providing a valuable research tool to those During the period covered by this report, the Wie- who study the history of American archaeology in ner Laboratory supported scholars applying a wide Greece. The cataloguing of the Homer A. Thompson variety of analytical techniques from the physical papers, which were received in 2000 and document and biological sciences to archaeology and history. the history of the Agora Excavations during the sec- Through fellowships, associate memberships, con- ond half of the twentieth century, has also been com- sultations, lectures, seminars, and workshops, the pleted. The photographic collection of Alison Frantz Lab played an integral role in encouraging scien- is now accessible via the School’s web page. Work tific work and collaboration, as well as enlarging the

 23  scholarship base and scope of research in Aegean

ies archaeology. t Wiener Laboratory Director Sherry Fox Leonard, supported by Administrator Eleni Stathi, were joined annually by a dozen or so researchers, including Wiener Laboratory Fellows and Research Associates who were on site for varying periods of time as they pursued their research topics. They were joined in 2004–05 by Malcolm H. Wiener Visiting Research Professor Maria Liston (University of Waterloo), and in 2005–06 by Wiener Visiting Research Professor Hariclia Brecoulaki (University of Paris I, Panthéon- research facili Sorbonne). This new staff position provides another avenue for integration of the Lab into the academic program of the School while promoting research op- portunities for appointees. The Lab continued to offer fellowships in human skeletal, faunal, and geoarchaeological studies and in 2003–04 offered a new fellowship in environmen- tal archaeology. Wiener Visiting Research Professor Hariclia Brecoulaki On September 23, 2002, the Wiener Laboratory cel- presents a seminar on pigments in the Wiener Laboratory. ebrated its 10th anniversary with an open house, followed by a garden reception in honor of ASCSA Trustee Malcolm H. Wiener. The Lab was also the raphy, ancient Greek ceramic manufacturing tech- site of a reception for the annual meeting of the Hel- niques, and geology and archaeology in the Corin- lenic Society for Archaeometry in May 2003. In 2006 thia. The annual Malcolm H. Wiener Lecture, open the Lab and its staff contributed to the organization to the School and the greater Athens community, of the 16th European Meeting of the Palaeopathol- continued to be popular. ogy Association, scheduled to be held in Fira, San- The Laboratory continued to expand and refine its torini, later that summer. existing permanent reference collections, which in- Annual Wiener Laboratory Workshops were offered clude human skeletal, botanical, faunal, lithic, char- on topics including methods and themes of zooar- coal, and pigments and minerals collections. These chaeological analysis and their application to the ar- collections, as well as other Laboratory facilities, chaeology of Greece; an overview of the prehistoric including the Wiener Laboratory Library, support- bone tool analysis process; and geoarchaeology. ed the research of numerous School Members and During the years covered by this report, the Wiener scholars from other institutions in Greece. Labora- Laboratory sponsored or co-sponsored (jointly with tory facilities were also enhanced with the addition the Fitch Laboratory at the British School at Athens, of new computer equipment, a rock saw, a new drill under a joint Fitch-Wiener Labs Seminar Series on for sampling marbles and plasters, and a new Leica Science-Based Archaeology launched in February incident light microscope and digital camera. 2004) dozens of lectures and seminars that addressed contemporary goals and methods in archaeological science. Seminar and lecture topics included ancient DNA research, human skeletal remains from the Byzantine period in Greece, the Aegean-type EBA technology for copper production, ceramic petrog-

 24  publica t io n s

Some of the titles produced by the ASCSA Publications Department during the period of this report

publicationS

o be effective and useful, research must be communicated. Ever since the first Papers of the American School of Classical Studies, which appeared in 1882, the T School has honored its commitment to assure timely and responsible publica- tion of the results of its Members’ studies and excavations. Over the years, the ASCSA Publications Office has also produced books and journal articles reaching far beyond the School’s own researches to reflect the institution’s central position in all areas of Greek studies, from prehistory to the recent past. Many of the School’s publications are excavation and survey reports that describe projects run by the ASCSA at Corinth and the Athenian Agora, or that present the results of American fieldwork conducted in Greece under the School’s auspices. The re- sults of excavations in the Athenian Agora now fill 30 volumes, while the number from more than 100 years of archaeological work at Corinth has reached over 40. The excava- tions at Isthmia, Kea, and Lerna are each the subject of separate series. The quarterly journal,Hesperia , begun in 1932, presents articles on School-directed and School-sponsored excavations as well as other original research. Numerous monographs have also been published, almost 35 titles in the Hesperia Supplement series alone. For a broader audience, the School has produced basic texts such as the Guide to the Palace of Nestor, and popular illustrated paperbacks, like the Agora Picture Book series. Also produced by the School are slides, facsimiles, notecards, postcards, and exhibition catalogues. The semiannual Newsletter reports research, events, and activities related to the School’s and its Members’ work throughout Greece and in America.

 25  During the years covered by this Annual Report, the Later that year the Publications staff added Timothy United States–based Publications Office worked to D. Wardell as a third book editor, joining Michael A. implement streamlined and cost-effective produc- Fitzgerald and Carol A. Stein. Ms. Stein, who started tion processes and to further integrate current tech- work at the School in 2002, was promoted to the new nology into these processes. New computer tech- post of Managing Editor in July 2005. Rounding out nology created opportunities for putting Hesperia the staff, Production Manager Sarah George Figueira online, communicating more effectively between in 2006 celebrated her 25th anniversary as a member Athens and Princeton, and increasing productivity. of the Publications Office.

publications Thanks to the Trustees of the American School, the In 2003, the Kress Foundation awarded a $150,000 Publications Office was able to purchase five new five-year grant to the Agora Publications Fellowship Macintosh G5s in 2004–05, loaded with the latest program. The grant provides $30,000 annually to design and production software, placing the office in support postdoctoral scholars working on a Corinth a good position for future electronic experimenta- or Agora publication assignment. tion in a rapidly changing publishing environment. The Association of American Publishers (AAP) pre- Accessibility of out-of-print and current titles was one sented the Publications Office with an award for Out- of the areas benefiting from modern technology. In standing Achievements in Professional and Scholarly 2002, the entire prior run of Hesperia became avail- Publishing. This prestigious prize, for the best book able online through JSTOR, an electronic archive of published in the fields of Classics and Archaeology scholarly journals. Subsequent issues were made avail- in 2004, recognized Michael A. Fitzgerald’s work on able on the Atypon Link hosting platform. In 2004 the The Propylaia to the Athenian AkropolisII: The Classi- online journal became available free of charge to print cal Building, by William B. Dinsmoor and William B. subscribers and, through various licensing agree- Dinsmoor, Jr., edited by Anastasia Norre Dinsmoor. ments, to thousands of readers worldwide. In addition to the quarterly journal Hesperia, nu- Other technological innovations led to the produc- merous volumes were published during the period tion, in collaboration with the Agora Excavations, of covered by this report, including, in 2003, Corinth, digital versions of a number of School guides, includ- the Centenary: 1896–1996 (Corinth XX), the much- ing almost all the Agora Picture Books. These became anticipated collection of 25 papers from the 1996 Ath- available to download free of charge from the School’s ens symposium celebrating the 100th anniversary of website, http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/publications. the School’s excavations at Corinth. Edited by Charles In the wake of the departure of Editor-in-Chief Kath- K. Williams, II and Nancy Bookidis, the volume in- leen A. Cox in June 2003, that position was recon- cludes papers that explore current research on An- ceptualized to emphasize overall management of the cient Corinth, approximately 500 illustrations, and a Publications Office, project scheduling and coordina- full general bibliography of articles and volumes con- tion, monograph development, marketing and distri- cerning material excavated at Corinth. Other notable bution, and digital publishing. During this time, the publications are listed as an addendum to this report. Committee on Publications also approved and imple- mented changes in the review process for Hesperia manuscripts, with an eye toward ensuring the timeli- ness, quality, and diversity of published articles. These changes, along with dissemination of recently revised guidelines for authors, resulted in a smoother review and production process and an increasing number of articles covering a broad range of topics. Tracey Cullen was named acting Editor-in-Chief and served in that position (while maintaining her existing role as Editor of Hesperia) until February 2004, when Charles Watkinson assumed leadership of the Publi- Director of Publications Charles Watkinson confers with cations Office under the title Director of Publications. Editor Timothy Wardell.

 26  admi n is t ra t io n

The School’s administrative offices at 6-8 Charlton Street in Princeton, New Jersey

administration

he work of the School is governed by a Managing Committee composed of elected representatives from more than 170 affiliated Cooperating Institutions through- T out North America, and is administered in Athens by the Director of the School and supporting faculty and staff. Athens-based staff are also responsible for administering the day-to-day operations of the School’s physical plant, and for facilitating its continued function as a nonprofit institution operating on Greek soil. The administrative activities of the Managing Committee and its subcommittees are facilitated by staff in the School’s Princeton, New Jersey office, which also has responsibilities for fundraising, financial and budgetary matters, liaison with the Board of Trustees, communications, and marketing. Through a Chair and a network of elected subcommittees, on which key Greece-based staff members are also represented, the Managing Committee oversees the School’s exca- vation and academic programs, appoints the Director and other officers of the School, and participates in budgeting activities. The Chair of the Managing Committee also servesex of- ficio as a member of the School’s Board of Trustees, composed of committed, talented men and women from business and academia. The Trustees are responsible for the operation and maintenance of School property, investment of the School’s endowment, approval of budgets and appointments, and general advocacy and fundraising on behalf of the School. In 1995, the School Board established a separate Gennadeion Board, comprising distin- guished women and men from the worlds of business and culture, to which it delegated its responsibilities for oversight of operations, advocacy, and fundraising in connection with the Gennadius Library.

 27  During the period covered by this report, admin- istration of the School’s current operations and the development of future directions continued to be the result of joint efforts by a number of responsible parties in the United States and in Greece. High- lights of their achievements are described herein.

Trustees From 2001–02 through 2005–06, the Board of Trust- administration ees of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens met biannually, in October/November and May/June. During this period, James H. Ottaway, Jr., School Trustee since 1988, continued in the position of Chairman, with James R. McCredie as President of the Board and William T. Loomis as Secretary. Treasurer Hunter Lewis was succeeded in Novem- ber 2003 by Henry Davis, who had joined the Board in 2002. Also joining the School’s Board of Trust- ees during this period were academician Hunter R. Rawlings III, Wellesley College professor Mary Lefkowitz, and businessman Robert Maguire. The Board of Trustees of the Gennadius Library convened annually in Athens from 2001–02 through Thanks to the generous contributions of Gennadius Library 2005–06. During this time period, publisher Theo- and School Trustee Lloyd Cotsen, a much-needed audito- dore Sedgwick, businessman Nicholas G. Bacopou- rium, Cotsen Hall, opened in 2004. los, attorney Olga Maridakis-Karatzas, businessman term projects and research at the Gennadeion, was Anthony G. Lykiardopoulos, businessman Petros established in 2005; a biannual Summer Session in K. Sabatacakis, and University of Athens professor medieval Greek was launched; and a Trustees Annu- Yiannis Stournaras joined the Gennadeion Board. al Award Dinner was launched in 2003 to celebrate Lloyd E. Cotsen and Ted Athanassiades continued individuals who foster an understanding of Greek as, respectively, Chairman and Vice Chairman of the culture and civilization; honorees have included Gennadeion Board. noted writers Edmund Keeley and Sir Patrick Leigh The School and Gennadeion Trustees worked dili- Fermor, and hellenophile Lloyd E. Cotsen. gently to provide financial leadership and pursue fundraising opportunities on behalf of the School Managing Committee and the Gennadius Library. A major undertaking during this time was the initiative, under the leader- Stephen V. Tracy (Ohio State University) chaired the ship of School Executive Vice President and Genna- Managing Committee during academic year 2001– dius Library President Catherine deG. Vanderpool, 02; he was succeeded by Rhys F. Townsend (Clark to give the School the auditorium it has needed for University) for academic years 2002–03 through decades. Gennadeion and School Trustee support 2005–06. During this period the Managing Com- for this multi-year initiative culminated in the open- mittee expanded to 174 Cooperating Institutions. ing of the state-of-the-art auditorium in late 2004. During the years covered by this report, the Man- Under the leadership of Gennadius Library Board aging Committee held meetings twice each year: in Chairman and School Trustee Lloyd E. Cotsen, the May in New York City, and in January in the cities Cotsen Traveling Fellowship, supporting travel for that hosted the annual meeting of the Archaeologi- senior scholars and graduate students for short- cal Institute of America.

 28  admi The Managing Committee adopted a misconduct Excavations also constituted a major effort during policy in 2004, which endorses the Code of Ethics of this period. the Archaeological Institute of America and clarifies

The staff in Princeton, under the direction of Cath- n the ethical responsibilities of School members and erine deG. Vanderpool, Executive Vice President of is officers. In 2005, the Managing Committee approved

the School and President of the Gennadius Library, t changes in School regulations that enabled each Co- supported and facilitated the operations of the ra operating Institution to have as many as three voting Managing Committee and its standing committees; members in the Managing Committee and clarified t

worked closely with School leadership in Athens on io the rules governing membership on the Managing overseeing the design and construction of the East

Committee with nonvoting status. n Wing of the Gennadeion and Cotsen Hall; expanded alumni outreach, especially through the prizewin- Operations: Athens and Princeton ning Newsletter, rebaptized as ákoue in 2002; and spearheaded development activities. Among the During the years covered by this report, the staffs achievements of the Princeton office were a number of the Princeton and Athens offices worked in con- of successful grant and funding applications, includ- cert to ensure the smooth operation of the School, ing grants from the NEH, the Kress Foundation, and constantly streamlining routine administrative pro- the Niarchos Foundation (for the ALEPH software cedures as well as responding to such intermittent to support the creation of a joint online catalogue of challenges as conversion to the euro, implementa- the Blegen, Gennadius, and British School libraries); tion of post–September 11 security measures, and and several planning grants from the Mellon Foun- the upheaval created by the 2004 Olympic Games. dation for library and information resource man- In Athens, the Director and the School’s General agement, culminating in an approximately $300,000 Manager oversaw numerous projects and processes grant for the School’s digital asset management pro- related to purchasing; building construction, im- gram, redesigning the website, and streamlining li- provements, and general maintenance; government brary operations. In 2005, the office also concluded and private funding; and security. Frequent consul- the successful first phase of fundraising for the Gen- tations and negotiations with Greek government nadius Library renovations and expansion, which officials on financial and tax matters affecting the brought in some $11 million since the campaign be- School have resulted in significant cost savings over gan in 1993. In June 2006 Ms. Vanderpool retired as these years. Athens administration also spearheaded Executive Vice President, and was appointed Presi- numerous successful funding applications for vari- dent of the Gennadius Library Board of Trustees. ous projects, including government funding (subsidy Irene Bald Romano was appointed to fill the role of and interest-free loan) for earthquake repairs and a Administrative Director of the Princeton office. grant of 700,000, under the EU’s “Information So- ciety” initiative, for the digitization of the notebooks Finances and Development of the Corinth Excavations and specific collections in the Gennadeion and School Archives. The IT De- During the five years covered by this report, the partment, headed by Tarek Elemam and assisted by School’s endowment rose from $110,916,383 as of Nikolaos Manias, has been at the forefront of these July 1, 2001, to $157,539,731 as of June 30, 2006. digital initiatives, as well as other computer-based The extraordinary performance of the endowment projects and day-to-day computer activities. and the protection of its value in euros, through a sharp downturn in equities, are due in large mea- During this time, the Athens and Corinth staff sure to the excellent management of Hunter Lewis helped to secure major funding (2,300,000) for the as Treasurer. Mr. Lewis was ably succeeded in 2003 local ephoreia for cultural heritage management at by Henry P. Davis, and growth has continued at a Ancient Corinth. Oversight of the construction of remarkable rate. Cotsen Hall and the East Wing of the Gennadeion as well as deferred maintenance of the entire physi- Also in the five years covered by this report, the op- cal plant and the expropriation of land for the Agora erating budget rose from $6,854,705 to $9,354,543

 29  School excavation and archival materials; and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, for the creation of a digital repository for the School’s varied and impor- tant records, an enhanced and newly designed web site, and an integrated approach to the technical ser- vices of the Blegen and Gennadius Libraries. During this period, the School received generous bequests from former School Member and Manag- ing Committee Member Emily Dickinson Townsend Vermeule, from Mary C. and Carl A. Roebuck, and administration from the estate of Lucy Shoe Meritt. The School also received significant gifts from Katherine Keene, for funding of a Summer Session scholarship for high Catherine Vanderpool, shown here with School Trustee school teachers; the family of Ione Mylonas Shear, President James McCredie, left her post as Executive Vice President of the School in summer 2006 after a long and for the establishment of a fellowship for Associate productive tenure. Members; the family and friends of Paul Rehak, who endowed a Memorial Traveling Fellowship in his (a detailed financial breakdown is included as an honor; Lloyd E. Cotsen, in support of a five-lecture appendix to this report). This growth has been series at Cotsen Hall in the 2005–06 academic year; made possible by the School’s healthy endowment. and Elaine and Ted Athanassiades and Lana Mandi- During this period and following the introduction las and the Mandilas family, for the furnishing of the of the euro in January 2001, the budget has had to Gennadeion’s Athanassiades Seminar Room and the bear the burden of soaring exchange rates. The bud- John B. Mandilas Rare Book Reading Room, respec- get for 2001–02 was set at a rate of one euro costing tively. Above all, School and Gennadeion Trustees $0.96, while two years later it was budgeted at $1.10. have been exceedingly generous in their support of In order to spare department heads the difficulties all aspects of the School. of absorbing double-digit currency exchange costs each year, in 2003–04 a decision was made to freeze ASCSA Alumni/ae Association the $1.10 budget exchange rate. This stratagem has allowed for much greater growth in the School’s pro- The ASCSA Alumni/ae Association continued its grams than would otherwise have been possible. efforts to establish more effective relations between the Alumni/ae, the School, and its supporting insti- From 2001–02 through 2005–06, the School received tutions; to cooperate with the School in suggesting major grants from a number of sources, including or carrying out proposals looking toward its prog- the Packard Humanities Institute, for the Athenian ress and welfare; and to increase the influence and Agora Excavations and computer upgrades at the usefulness of the School. In addition to funding an Stoa of Attalos; the Stavros S. Niarchos Foundation, annual Summer Session scholarship during the years for the purchase and implementation of electronic covered by this report (and renewing its support for catalogue and library management software; the such funding through 2010), the Alumni/ae Associa- Samuel H. Kress Foundation, for the Corinth/Agora tion annually presented material gifts to enhance the Publication Fellowship program (a five-year cycle, quality of life of those residing at the School. Gifts beginning in academic year 2004–05), conservation during this period included a new set of the entire internships at the Agora, and support of an exhibi- Loeb Classical Library for the Loring Hall saloni, as tion of the works of Piet de Jong and the publication well as new sofas and cooking equipment and fund- of a book in conjunction with the exhibition; the ing for internet hubs and an A3 scanner for the hall. National Endowment for the Humanities, for Senior Research Fellowships through 2007; the European Union’s Information Society program, for the scan- ning, cataloguing, and online delivery of a range of

 30  adde Representative ASCSA Lectures

2001–02 2002–03 n

Third Annual Trustees Lecture: Crawford H. Fourth Annual Trustees Lecture: John Cherry, da Greenewalt, Jr., University of California at Berkeley: University of Michigan: “Thirty Years of Regional “Sardis and the Lydians” Survey and Aegean Prehistory: Achievements, Problems, and Prospects” Tenth Annual Wiener Laboratory Lecture: Debo- rah Ruscillo, University of Winnipeg: “To Dye For: Eleventh Annual Wiener Laboratory Lecture: Floyd Making Royal Purple and Biblical Blue from Murex McCoy, University of Hawaii: “New Perspectives on sp.” the Late Bronze Age Eruption of Thera”

Twenty-First Annual Walton Lecture of the Twenty-Second Annual Walton Lecture of the Gen- Gennadius Library: Philippos Iliou, “Βιβλία με nadius Library: Sergei Karpov, Moscow University: συνδρομητές” “Pontic Hellenism and the Empire of Trebizond in the 13th–15th Centuries” Mary B. Moore, Hunter College: “The Passas Paint- er: A Protoattic ‘Realist’?” Jane Buikstra, University of New Mexico: “Vener- ated Ancestors: Mummies of the Ancient Andes” Angeliki Andriomenou, Emeritus Ephor of Prehis- toric and Classical Antiquities of Thebes: “The -Ar Vasilis Lambrinoudakis, University of Athens: “Rites chaic Tombs of Akraiphia and the Attic Grave Stele of Consecration in Ancient Naxian Sanctuaries” of Mnasitheios” Lecture for the Open Meeting on the Work of the Wolf D. Niemeier, Deutsches Archäologisches Insti- School: Guy D.R. Sanders, Director, Corinth Exca- tut, Athens: “Hittites and Western Anatolia prior to vations: “A Summary of Excavation and Survey at the Ionian Migration” Corinth since 1997”

Askold Ivantchik, Institute of World History, Mos- cow: “Cimmerians and Scythians: Herodotus and 2003–04 Archaeology” Fifth Annual Trustees Lecture: Gloria Pinney, Har- Mary M. Voigt, College of William and Mary: vard University: “The Thera Miniature Fresco and “Gordion and the Phrygians” the Problem of Continuities of Traditions from the Bronze Age” Javier Teixidor, Collège de France: “Canaanites and Phoenicians: Homer, Archaeology, and Epigraphy” Twelfth Annual Wiener Laboratory Lecture: Julie Hansen, Boston University: “Plants and People in Jane Buikstra, University of New Mexico: “The Greek Prehistory” Kings of Copan: A Bioarchaeologial Perspective” Twenty-Third Annual Walton Lecture of the Gen- Lecture for the Open Meeting on the Work of the nadius Library: Chryssa Maltezou, Director of the School: Stephen V. Tracy, ASCSA Managing Com- Hellenic Institute of Byzantine and Post-Byzantine mittee Chairman and Director-Elect: “Studying Studies: “Two Tragic Figures on the Border of the Athenian Letter-Cutters” Byzantine and New Hellenic Worlds: Bessarion and Anna Notara”

Norman Herz, University of Georgia at Athens: “The Getty Kouros—6th-Century .B C. Masterpiece or 20th-Century Hoax?”

 31  Anthony Grafton, Princeton University: “Monu- 2005–06 da ments and Meanings: Obelisks in Renaissance n Rome” Seventh Annual Trustees Lecture: Brian Rose, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania: “Monumental Tombs near Alexandros Mantis, Ephor of Prehistoric and Clas- Troy: Recent Discoveries” dde sical Antiquities of Nauplion: “The Reconstruction A of the ‘Lost’ Parthenon Sculptures” Fourteenth Annual Wiener Laboratory Lecture: Albert Ammerman, Colgate University: “A Tale of Lecture for the Open Meeting on the Work of the Two Tells” School: James Sickinger, ASCSA Mellon Professor: “Reading Greek Inscriptions” Twenty-Fifth Annual Walton Lecture of the Gen- nadius Library: Nina Athanassoglou-Kallmyer, University of Delaware: “Classicism and Resistance 2004–05 in the Mediterranean”

Sixth Annual Trustees Lecture: Richard Martin, Anna Stavrakopoulou, University of Thessaloniki: Stanford University: “Finding Homer in the 21st “Mise Kozis: The Theatrical Origins of the Raciest Century” 19th-Century Greek Comedy”

Thirteenth Annual Wiener Laboratory Lecture: Ma- Peter Mackridge, University of Oxford: “Kathar- ria Liston, University of Waterloo: “The Early Iron evousa, Demotic, and Greek National Identity from Age Graves from the Agora Excavations: To Burn the 18th Century to the 1976 Language Reform” or Not to Burn?” David B. Gracy II, University of Texas at Austin: Twenty-Fourth Annual Walton Lecture of the Gen- “Archives begin at ‘A’ but Where Do They End?” nadius Library: Helen Evans, Curator of Medieval Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art: “Visions of Byz- Alex Nagel, University of Toronto: “Presentations of antium: Past, Present, and Future(?)” the Byzantine Icon in Renaissance Art”

Petros G. Themelis, Director, Society of Messenian Tony Molho, European University Institute in Flor- Archaeological Studies: “The Agora of Messene: ence: “Merchants and Discoveries” New Finds” Lecture for the Open Meeting on the Work of the Charles K. Williams, II, Director Emeritus of the School: John McK. Camp II, Director, Agora Exca- Corinth Excavations: “H.S. Robinson and the Mod- vations: “Recent Work at the Athenian Agora” ernization of the Corinthian Excavations”

Thomas .F Mathews, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University: “Icons, Pagan and Christian”

Lecture for the Open Meeting on the Work of the School: Maria Georgopoulou, Director of the Gen- nadius Library: “Mediterranean Trade and the Arts in the Thirteenth Century”

 32  adde Volumes Published, 2001–2006

ASCSA Publications Office Mabel L. Lang (rev. John McK. Camp II), The Athe-

nian Citizen: Democracy in the Athenian Agora n Martha K. Risser, Corinthian Conventionalizing (Agora Picture Book 4, rev. ed.) (2004) da Pottery (Corinth VII.5) (2001) James C. Wright, ed., The Mycenaean Feast(2004) Carl W. Blegen and Marion Rawson, rev. Jack L. Davis and Cynthia W. Shelmerdine, A Guide to the Fariba Zarinebaf, John Bennet, and Jack L. Davis, Palace of Nestor, Mycenaean Sites in Its Environs, A Historical and Economic Geography of Ottoman and the Chora Museum (2001, reprinted 2004) Greece: The Southwestern Morea in the 18th Century (Hesperia Suppl. 34) (2005) Joseph W. Shaw, Aleydis Van de Moortel, Peter M. Day, and Vassilis Kilikoglou, A LM IA Ceramic Joseph W. Shaw, Kommos: A Minoan Harbor Town Kiln in South-Central Crete: Function and Pottery and Greek Sanctuary in Southern Crete (2006) Production (Hesperia Suppl. 30) (2001) Susan I. Rotroff and Robert .D Lamberton, Women James Wiseman and Konstantinos Zachos, eds. in the Athenian Agora (Agora Picture Book 26) Landscape Archaeology in Southern Epirus, Greece I (2006) (Hesperia Suppl. 32) (2003) Carol L. Lawton, Marbleworkers in the Athenian Charles K. Williams II and Nancy Bookidis, eds., Agora (Agora Picture Book 27) (2006) Corinth, the Centenary: 1896–1996 (Corinth XX) (2003) Craig A. Mauzy, Agora Excavations, 1931–2006: A Pictorial History (English and Greek editions, 2006) John McK. Camp II, The Athenian Agora: A Short Guide to the Excavations (Agora Picture Book 16, Gennadius Library rev. ed.) (English edition 2003, Greek edition 2004) New Griffon, vol. 5: Αφιέρωμα στον Sir Steven Run- Jenifer Neils and Stephen V. Tracy, The Games at ciman / A Tribute to Sir Steven Runciman (Greek / Athens (Agora Picture Book 25) (2003) English) (2003)

Christopher A. Pfaff,The Architecture of the Classi- New Griffon, vol. 6: Εύνοστος / Eunostos (Greek / cal Temple of Hera (Argive Heraion I) (2003) English) (2003)

John K. Papadopoulos, Ceramicus Redivivus: The New Griffon, vol. 7: Το Γεννάδειον· Δημιουργία και Early Iron Age Potters’ Field in the Area of the Classi- Μεταμορφώσεις / The Gennadius Library: Its Cre- cal Athenian Agora (Hesperia Suppl. 31) (2003) ation and Transformation (edited by Haris Kalligas) (Greek / English) (2004) Anne P. Chapin, ed., ΧΑΡΙΣ: Essays in Honor of Sara A. Immerwahr (Hesperia Suppl. 33) (2004) Αλφαβητάριο: A Greek Alphabet Book for Children (reprint; in Greek) (2005) W. B. Dinsmoor and W. B. Dinsmoor Jr. (Anastasia Norre Dinsmoor, ed.), The Propylaia to the Athe- New Griffon, vol. 8: Χαρτογράφηση της Μεσογείου nian Akropolis II: The Classical Building (2004) / Mapping Mediterranean Lands (edited by Maria Georgopoulou) (Greek / English) (2006) Mary C. Sturgeon, Sculpture: The Assemblage from the Theater (Corinth IX.3) (2004)

 33  da n dde A

Agora Director John Camp (far left) discusses conservation methods with Trustees and supporters on a Trustee trip in summer 2004.

APPENDICES

Trustees and Committees ...... 35 Trustees of the School Trustees Emeriti Chairs, Trustee Committees Trustees of the Gennadius Library Officers of the Managing Committee Chairs, Committees of the Managing Committee

Staff of the School ...... 37 In Greece In the United States Alumni Council Officers

Members of the School ...... 40

Cooperating Institutions and Their Representatives 49

Friends of the School 53

Financial Reports 59

 34  appe Trustees and Committees

Board of Trustees of the School n

Charles K. Williams, II, John H. Biggs (’01–’04) Mary Patterson McPherson dices Chairman (’01–’06) Alan L. Boegehold (’01–’03) (’01–’06) James R. McCredie, Edward E. Cohen (’01–’06) James H. Ottaway, Jr. (’01–’06) President (’01–’06) Lloyd E. Cotsen (’01–’06) David W. Packard (’01–’06) Hunter Lewis, Henry P. Davis (’02–’03) George Rapp (’01–’06) Treasurer (’01–’03) Elizabeth R. Gebhard (’01–’06) Hunter R. Rawlings III (’03–’06) Henry P. Davis, Mary R. Lefkowitz (’04–’06) William Slaughter (’01–’06) Treasurer (’03–’06) Hunter Lewis (’03–’05) Judith Ogden Thomson (’01–’06) William T. Loomis, Herbert L. Lucas (’01–’02) Rhys F. Townsend (’02–’06) Secretary (’01–’06) J. Robert Maguire (’04–’06) Stephen V. Tracy (’01–’02) Robert A. McCabe (’01–’06) Malcolm H. Wiener (’01–’06) Marianne McDonald (’01–’05)

Trustees Emeriti

Alan L. Boegehold (’03–’06) Hunter Lewis (’05–’06) William Kelly Simpson (’01–’06) Charles Fleischmann (’01–’06) Herbert L. Lucas (’02–’06) Doreen C. Spitzer (’01–’06) Richard H. Howland (’01–’06) André W.G. Newburg (’01–’06)

Chairs, Trustee Committees

Executive Committee: Charles K. Williams, II (’01–’06) Nominating Committee: James H. Ottaway, Jr. (’01–’02), Mary Patterson McPherson (’02–’05), Judith Ogden Thomson (’05–’06) Finance Committee*: Hunter Lewis (’01–’03), Henry P. Davis (’03–’06) Publications Committee: James H. Ottaway, Jr. (’01–’06) Cooperating Institutions Committee: Mary Patterson McPherson (’01–’06) Wiener Laboratory Committee: George Rapp (’01–’06) Development Committee (’05–’06): James R. McCredie *Renamed Finance and Audit Committee, 2005

Board of Trustees of the Gennadius Library

Lloyd E. Cotsen, Ted Athanassiades (’05–’06) Nassos Michas (’01–’05) Chairman (’01–’06) Alan L. Boegehold (’01–’06) The Honorable E. Leo Milonas Ted Athanassiades, Michael B. Cosmopoulos (’02–’05) (’01–’06) Vice Chairman (’01–’05) Apostolos Th. Doxiadis (’01–’06) André W.G. Newburg (’01–’06) Nicholas G. Bacopoulos, The Honorable Michael .S Dukakis Helen Philon (’01–’06) Vice Chairman (’05–’06) (’01–’06) Petros K. Sabatacakis (’05–’06) Nassos Michas, Edmund Keeley (’01–’06) Margaret Samourkas (’01–’06) Vice Chairman (’05–’06) Loucas M. Kyriacopoulos (’01–’06) Christine D. Sarbanes (’01–’06) Alexander E. Zagoreos, Constantine Leventis (’01–’02) Theodore Sedgwick (’02–’06) Secretary-Treasurer (’05–’06) Anthony G. Lykiardopoulos Elias M. Stassinopoulos (’01–’06) (’05–’06) Yiannis Stournaras (’05–’06) Lana J. Mandilas (’01–’06) Rhys F. Townsend (’02–’06) Olga Maridakis-Karatzas (’05–’06) Stephen V. Tracy (’01–’02) Richard P. Martin (’01–’02) Alexander E. Zagoreos (’01–’05)

 35  Officers of the Managing Committee dices

n Chairman: Stephen V. Tracy (’01–’02), Rhys F. Townsend (’02–’06) Vice Chairman: Stella Miller-Collett (’01–’02), Jane B. Carter (’02–’06) Secretary: Carla M. Antonaccio (’01–’06) appe President, Alumni/ae Council: Carol Mattusch (’01–’04), John H. Oakley (’04–’06) President of the Corporation (’02–’06): James R. McCredie

Chairs, Committees of the Managing Committee

Committee on Admissions and Fellowships: Sarah Peirce (’01–’03), Carolyn Snively (’03–’06) Committee on the Blegen Library: Niall Slater (’01–’04), Gerald Schaus (’04–’06) Committee on Committees: Lee Ann Riccardi (’01–’02), Barbara Barletta (’02–’03), Michael Hoff (’03–’05), David Romano (’05–’06) Committee on the Gennadius Library: Richard Martin (’01–’02), Michael Cosmopoulos (’02–’05), Glenn Bugh (’05–’06) Committee on Personnel: Carol Lawton (’01–’02), Kevin Clinton (’02–’06) Committee on Publications: Carol Mattusch (’01–’02, ’03–’06), Thomas Palaima (’02–’03) Committee on the Summer Sessions: Michael Hoff (’01–’03), Timothy Winters (’03–’06) Committee on the Wiener Laboratory: Susan I. Rotroff (’01–’05), Jane Buikstra (’05–’06) Excavation and Survey Committee: Leslie Day (’01–’03), Barbara Tsakirgis (’03–’04), Jack Davis (’04–’06)

 36  appe Staff of the School

IN GREECE n

Director: Accountant: Demetra Bakodima Blegen Library dices James D. Muhly (’01–’02), (’01–’06) Stephen V. Tracy (’02–’06) Head Librarian: Assistant Accountant: Camilla M. MacKay (’01–’03), Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Dina Zissopoulou (’01–’06) Charles E. Jones (’05–’06) Classical Studies: Bursar: Niamh Michalopoulou Merle K. Langdon (’01–’02), Acting Head Librarian: (’01–’06) Demetra Photiadis (’03–’05) James P. Sickinger (’02–’05), John H. Oakley (’05–’06) Couriers: Associate Librarian: Panagiotis Asiatides (’01–’05), Rhys Carpenter Faculty Fellow in Demetra Photiadis (’01–’05), Pantelis Paschos (’03–’06) Classical Studies (’05–’06): Elisavet Gignoli (’05–’06) Susanne U. Hofstra Manager of Loring Hall: Assistant Librarians: Demetra Barbou (’01–’06) Assistant Professor (’01–’05): Elisavet Gignoli (’01–’05), Phyllis Graham (’02–’04), R. Brendan Burke (’01–’02), Secretary: Benjamin W. Millis (’05–’06) Kevin Glowacki (’02–’04), Elena Kourakou (’02–’06) Michael Nelson (’04–’05) Assistant Librarian for Book Con- Day Receptionist (’02–’06): servation and Electronic Resources Secretary of the School: Venetia Barbopoulou (’02–’04), (’01–’02): Phyllis Graham Robert A. Bridges, Jr. (’01–’06) Amalia Zaharaki (’04–’06) Secretaries: Whitehead Professors: Evening Receptionist (’02–’06): Eleni Marantou (’01–’03), John E. Coleman and Pierre A. Stavros Oikonomidis (’02–’03), Maria Tourna (’02–’06), MacKay (’01–’02), Lisa Kallet and Susanna Ipirotis (’03–’05), Juliette Ventouri (’05–’06) John Kroll (’02–’03), Gary Reger Hara Ageletou (’05–’06) and Carolyn Snively (’03–’04), Library Assistant (’05–’06): Information Systems & Glenn R. Bugh and Adele C. Scafuro Susanna Ipirotis (’04–’05), Leslie P. Day and Kent Technology Manager: J. Rigsby (’05–’06) Tarek Elemam (’01–’06) Receptionists (’01–’02, ’05–’06): Stavros Ikonomidis (’01–’02), Information Technology Assistant: Directors of the Summer Sessions Eleni Kourakou (’01–’02), Nikolaos Manias (’01–’06) (’01–’03, ’04–’06): Lisa R. Brody Hara Ageletou (’05–’06), and Ruth E. Palmer (’01–’02), Doctor: Nikos Michalopoulos, M.D. Amalia Zaharaki (’05–’06) Peter M. Krentz and Christina (’01–’06) A. Salowey (’02–’03), Mark H. Librarians Emerita: Mary Zelia Philippides (’01–’06), Munn/Mary Lou Zimmerman Archives Munn and Lee Ann Riccardi/ Nancy Winter (’02–’06) Archivist: Christina A. Salowey (’04–’05), Retired Librarian (on leave ’01–’02): Natalia Vogeikoff-Brogan (’01–’06) Daniel B. Levine and William E. Nancy Winter Hutton (’05–’06) Assistant Archivist: Director of Summer Program in Maria Voltera (’01–’06) Gennadius Library Turkey (’03–’04): Charles Gates Special Research Archivists: Director: Haris Kalligas (’01–’04), General Manager: Alexis Malliaris (’01–’05), Maria Georgopoulou (’04–’06) Stefanie Kennell (’02–’06), Pantelis Panos (’01–’06) Head Librarian: Leda Costaki (’03–’06) Photographer (’01–’03): Sophie Papageorgiou (’01–’06) Photographic Archives (’03–’05): Marie Mauzy Associate Librarian: Katerina Papatheophani Administrator: Anna Nadali (’01–’04), Maria Pilali (’01–’06) Irini Solomonidi (’05–’06)

 37  Assistant Librarian: Head Conservator (’03–’05): Corinth Excavations Andreas Sideris (’01–’06), Alice Paterakis (’03–’04), Gabriella Vasdeki (’05–’06) Amandina Anastassiadis (’05–’06) Director: Guy D.R. Sanders (’01–’06) dices Research Assistant: n Acting Head Conservator: Aliki Asvesta (’01–’06) Assistant Director: Amandina Anastassiades (’04–’05) Nancy Bookidis (’01–’03) Cataloguer (’04–’06): Conservators: Conservator: appe Giannis Valourdos Alice Paterakis (’01–’03), Stella Bouzaki (’01–’03), Photographic Archives (’05–’06): Julie Unruh (’01–’03), Nikoleta Anastasatou (’03–’06) Katerina Papatheophani Amandina Anastassiades (’03–’04), Claudia Chemello (’05–’06) Numismatist: Secretaries: Orestes H. Zervos (’01–’06) Gabriella Vasdeki (’01–’05), Storage Manager (’04–’05): Maria Vastardi (’01–’05), Wendy Porter Curator: Ioulia Tzonou-Herbst (’01–’06) Maria Smali (’05–’06) IT Consultant: Runners: Euphrosyne Pana- Bruce M. Hartzler (’01–’06) Architect: James A. Herbst (’01–’06) gopoulou (’01–’06), Katerina Data Management Project Papatheophani (’01–’05), Supervisor: Director Emeritus: Mary Stavropoulou (’01–’06), Patricia A. Felch (’01–’06) Charles K. Williams, II (’01–’06) Dimitris Velentzas (’01–’06) Data Management Project Assistant: Assistant Director Emerita: Agora Excavations Irini Marathaki (’01–’06) Nancy Bookidis (’03–’06)

Director: Data Entry: Wiener Laboratory John McK. Camp, II (’01–’06) Pia Kvarnström (’02–’06), Nomiki Palaiokrassa (’02–’03), Director: Manager: Vassilis Spanos (’03–’06) Sherry C. Fox (’01–’06) Craig A. Mauzy (’01–’06) Photography (’02–’06): Administrative Assistant: Secretary: Jan Jordan (’01–’06) Angelique Sideris Eleni D. Stathi (’01–’06) Architect: Draftspersons (’04–’06): Wiener Laboratory Visiting Richard C. Anderson (’01–’06) Anne Hooton (’04–’06), Research Professor (’04–’06): Associate Registrar: Frederick N. Ley (’05–’06) Maria A. Liston (’04–’05), Sylvie Dumont (’01–’06) Hariclia Brecoulaki (’05–’06)

 38  appe IN THE UNITED STATES

Executive Vice President of the Administrative Assistant: Managing Editor (’05–’06): n

School and President of the Robin Bentley (’01–’06) Carol A. Stein dices Gennadius Library: Catherine deG. Vanderpool Editor-in-Chief of Publications Manuscript Editor (’02–’04): (’01–’06) (’01–’04): Carol A. Stein Kerri (Cox) Sullivan (’01–’03) Executive Assistant: Editors (’04–’06): Mary E. Darlington (’01–’06) Acting Editor-in-Chief of Carol A. Stein (’04–’05), Publications: Timothy D. Wardell (’04–’06) Consulting Chief Financial Officer: Tracey Cullen (’03–’04) John J. Sproule (’01–’06) Production Manager: Director of Publications (’04–’06): Sarah George Figueira (’01–’06) Accounts Manager: Charles Watkinson Richard Rosolino (’01–’06) Creative Coordinator (’01–’02): Editor, Hesperia: Jordan Peled Bookkeeper: Linda Ferry (’01–’06) Tracey Cullen (’01–’06) Editors Emerita: Development Assistant: Editor, Monographs: Lucy Shoe Meritt (’01–’03), Susan Bombieri (’01–’02), Michael A. Fitzgerald (’01–’06) Marian H. McAllister (’01–’06) Jane C. Goble (’02–’06)

ALUMNI/AE COUNCIL OFFICERS

President: Council: Naomi Norman Representatives to the Carol Mattusch (’01–’03), (Past President ’98–’00) (’01–’04), Managing Committee: John H. Oakley (’04–’06) Carol Mattusch Carol Mattusch (as President) (Past President ’01–’03) (’04–’06), (’01–’03), Secretary: Brendan Burke (’01–’02), John H. Oakley (as President) Paul Rehak (’01–’04) Michael Cosmopoulos (’01–’06), (’04–’06), Treasurer: John Fischer (’01–’02), Susan Heuck Allen (’01–’06), John Younger (’01–’04) Kevin Glowacki (’01), Thomas R. Martin (’01), Daniel Levine (’01–’03), Eric Cline (’02–’04), Secretary-Treasurer: Margaret S. Mook (’01–’04), Christopher A. Pfaff (’05–’06) John Younger (’04–’05), Timothy Winters (’01–’06), Susan I. Rotroff and Lee Ann Riccardi (’02–’06), Athens Representative: Robert D. Lamberton (’05–’06) Nicholas Rauh (’03–’06), Brendan Burke (’01–’02), Jennifer Tobin (’04–’06), Loeta Tyree (’03–’06) Glenn Bugh (’05–’06)

 39  Members of the School Athena Hadji Betsey A. Robinson UC, Berkeley Oscar Broneer Fellow University of Pennsylvania 2001–02 Zoe S. Kontes dices Fulbright Fellow Heather F. Sharpe n Regular Members Brown University Eugene Vanderpool Fellow Indiana University Fellows of the School Jennifer L. Palinkas Bronwen L. Wickkiser

appe Emory University Philipp D. Borbonus Bert Hodge Hill Fellow Gorham Phillips Stevens Fellow Christine A. Smith University of Texas at Austin University of Pennsylvania Fulbright Fellow Washington University, St. Louis Henrietta L. Wiley William J.E. Davis Martin Ostwald Fellow Kress Joint Athens-Jerusalem Fellow Hilda E. Westervelt Harvard University University of Pennsylvania Norton Fellow Fred K. Drogula Harvard University İpek Yosmaoğlu Thomas Day Seymour Fellow Fellow University of Virginia Associate Members Princeton University

Laura C. Gawlinski Holding School Fellowships Student Associate Members

Lucy Shoe Meritt Fellow Chryssi Bourbou Cornell University Hariclia Brecoulaki J. Lawrence Angel Fellow Wiener Laboratory Research Catherine P. Hammer University of Crete Associate Brunilde Ridgway Fellow William R. Caraher Université de Paris, Sorbonne University of Michigan Jacob Hirsch Fellow Leda Costaki Craig I. Hardiman Ohio State University University of Toronto

Brunilde Ridgway Fellow Freya R. Evenson Ohio State University Alexandra Lesk-Bolmerus Samuel H. Kress Fellow University of Cincinnati Kieran A. Hendrick UCLA Sarah Lepinski John Williams White Fellow Carina A. Iezzi UC, Berkeley Fulbright Fellow Doreen C. Spitzer Fellow and Bryn Mawr College Carol J. King Wiener Laboratory Research James Rignall Wheeler Fellow Associate John R. Leonard Brown University SUNY, Buffalo SUNY, Buffalo

Mike B. Lippman Valasia Isaakidou Jeannette Marchand Faunal Fellow UC, Berkeley Mary & James H. Ottaway Jr. Fellow Duke University University College, London Peter Schultz Kyriaki Karoglou University of Athens Sara M. Palaskas Virginia Grace Fellow Homer and Dorothy Thompson Evangelia Sikla UCLA Fellow Bryn Mawr College Princeton University Lowry P. Sweney Caitlin D. Verfenstein Michael Jameson Fellow Athanasia Krahtopolou Fulbright Fellow UCLA Geoarchaeology Fellow University of Minnesota Sheffield University James B. Wells Angelica Volan Philip Lockhart Fellow Donal S. McGay Fulbright Fellow Indiana University Bikakis Fellow University of Chicago Fordham University

Other Regular Members Warren T. Woodfin Georgi R. Parpulov CAORC Regional Research Fellow Sarah B. Ferrario M. Alison Frantz Fellow University of Illinois, Urbana- University of Chicago Fulbright Fellow Champaign Princeton University

 40  appe Senior Associate Members Zdravka Mihaylova Sinan Sülüner

Mellon Research Fellow Aegean Fellow Sulochana R. Asirvatham Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Sofia Middle East Technical University, NEH Fellow n Ankara Montclair State University Margaret S. Mook dices

Solow Summer Research Fellow Jason Tipton Marshall Becker Iowa State University Wiener Laboratory Research Solow Summer Research Fellow Associate West Chester University Polymnia Muhly Tulane University

Judith P. Binder Michael Nelson Barbara Tsakirgis Solow Summer Research Fellow Thomas M. Brogan Kress Publications Fellow Macalester College INSTAP East Crete Study Center Vanderbilt University

Maria Ntinou Frederick A. Cooper E. Loeta Tyree Wiener Laboratory Research NEH Fellow Associate Aleydis Van de Moortel University of Minnesota University of Valencia Solow Summer Research Fellow

Miriam E. Caskey Yildiz Ötüken Nina Voutova Steven R. Diamant Aegean Fellow Mellon Research Fellow

Hacettepe University, Ankara National Library, Sofia Yiğit Erbil Aegean Fellow Anastasia Papathanasiou L. Vance Watrous Hacettepe University, Ankara Wiener Laboratory Research NEH Fellow

Associate SUNY, Buffalo Douglas Faulman INSTAP East Crete Study Center Nellie Phoca-Cosmetatou Harriet White

Wiener Laboratory Research Wiener Laboratory Research Suna Naziyet Güven Associate Associate Aegean Fellow University of Cambridge University of Sheffield Middle East Technical University, Ankara Ireneusz Ptaszek George Zouganelis

Mellon Research Fellow Wiener Laboratory Research David R. Jordan Jagiellonian University, Cracow Associate

Nigel M. Kennell Mary B. Richardson Memorial University, 2002–03 Newfoundland Deborah Ruscillo

Wiener Laboratory Research Regular Members R. Brady Kiesling Associate Fellows of the School Carol Lawton University of Missouri, St. Louis

Solow Summer Research Fellow Mark C. Alonge Jan M. Sanders Lawrence University Philip Lockhart Fellow Arcadia University Stanford University Angeliki Kosmopoulou Kathleen W. Slane Timothy R. Beck Maria Liston Solow Summer Research Fellow Lucy Shoe Meritt Fellow Wiener Laboratory Research University of Missouri-Columbia University of Minnesota Associate Angus R. Smith University of Waterloo Sarah Bolmarcich Solow Summer Research Fellow Fulbright Fellow, Honorary Yannis Lolos Bryn Mawr College School Fellow Sotiris Manolis Mary C. Sturgeon University of Virginia

Wiener Laboratory Research Solow Summer Research Fellow William S. Bubelis Associate University of North Carolina, John Williams White Fellow University of Athens Chapel Hill University of Chicago

Katherine May INSTAP East Crete Study Center

 41  Charles D. Graninger Kristen E. Seaman Sedef Çokay Michael Jameson Fellow Fulbright Fellow Aegean Fellow Cornell University UC, Berkeley Istanbul University dices Joann Gulizio Leda Costaki n Associate Members Bert Hodge Hill Fellow University of Toronto

University of Texas at Austin Holding School Fellowships Freya Evenson

appe James M. Hunt William Caraher UCLA

James Rignall Wheeler Fellow Doreen C. Spitzer Fellow Catherine Hammer Fordham University Ohio State University University of Michigan

Lawrence J. Myer Craig Hardiman Dimitris Kontogiorgos Honorary School Fellow, Samuel H. Kress Fellow Wiener Laboratory Research Norton Fellow Ohio State University Associate Harvard University Sarah Lepinski University of Sheffield

Michael K. Pluta Homer and Dorothy Thompson Michael Lippman Heinrich Schliemann Fellow Fellow Duke University University of Texas at Austin Bryn Mawr College

Gloria R. Park Chad M. Schroeder Jennifer Palinkas Colburn Fellow, Fulbright Fellow Virginia Grace Fellow Gorham Phillips Stevens Fellow University of North Carolina, University of Michigan Emory University Chapel Hill

Erin J. Walcek Spencer A. Pope Peter Schultz Brunilde Ridgway Fellow Eugene Vanderpool Fellow University of Athens University of Missouri-Columbia Brown University

Evangelia Sikla Justin St.P. Walsh Rossitza Roussanova Bryn Mawr College Honorary School Fellow, M. Alison Frantz Fellow Fulbright Fellow University of Maryland Anne Stewart University of Virginia UC, Berkeley Kära L. Schenk Christopher S. Welser Kress Joint Athens-Jerusalem Fellow Dushanka-Christina Urem-Kotsou Thomas Day Seymour Fellow Johns Hopkins University Wiener Laboratory Research Brown University Associate

Aikaterini Akrivi Skourtopoulou University of Thessaloniki Andrew T. Wilburn Wiener Laboratory Brunilde Ridgway Fellow Geoarchaeology Fellow Caitlin D. Verfenstein University of Michigan University of Cambridge University of Minnesota

Arden Williams Eleni Stravopodi Thanos Webb Martin Ostwald Fellow Wiener Laboratory J. Lawrence Wiener Laboratory Research University of British Columbia Angel Fellow Associate

Athens University UCLA Claudia Zatta Mary & James H. Ottaway Jr. Fellow Hilda Westervelt George Zouganelis Johns Hopkins University Edward Capps Fellow Wiener Laboratory Research Harvard University Associate Other Regular Members University of Athens

Student Associate Members Johanna L. Beck Senior Associate Members

University of Minnesota Hariclia Brecoulaki June Allison University of Paris, Sorbonne Andrew Insua Ohio State University

University of Pennsylvania Ann Brysbaert Barbara Barletta Brenda J. Longfellow Wiener Laboratory Research NEH Fellow Rackham Fellow Associate University of Florida University of Glasgow University of Michigan

 42  appe Judith Binder Vasilica Lungu Timothy Brelinski Senior Research Fellow Mellon Research Fellow Virginia Grace Fellow

University of Bucharest University of Virginia Chryssi Bourbou n

Wiener Laboratory Research Shun-Yu Ma Amelia Robertson Brown dices Associate The Chinese University of John Williams White Fellow University of Crete Hong Kong UC, Berkeley

Thomas Brogan Michael MacKinnon Ari Bryen INSTAP East Crete Study Center Wiener Laboratory Research Thomas Day Seymour Fellow

Associate University of Chicago Peter Bystrický University of Winnipeg Mellon Research Fellow Leslie Kirsten Day Comenius University Sotiris Manolis School Fellow

University of Athens University of Arkansas Miriam Caskey

Benjamin Millis Amy Dill Rosalia Christidou Fulbright Fellow, Honorary Wiener Laboratory Faunal James D. Muhly School Fellow Studies Fellow Polymnia Muhly University of Texas at Austin Paris X-Nanterre University

Lale Özgenel Jamieson Donati Horia Ion Ciugudean Aegean Fellow School Fellow Mellon Research Fellow Middle East Technical University, Florida State University Muzeul National at Unirii Ankara Sean Lake Stephen Diamant Mary B. Richardson Philip Lockhart Fellow

Emel Erten Fordham University Jan Motyka Sanders Aegean Fellow Arcadia University Michael Laughy, Jr. Mersin University Michael Jameson Fellow Maryann Schultz Douglas Faulman UC, Berkeley Solow Summer Research Fellow INSTAP East Crete Study Center University of Buffalo Ephraim Lytle

John C. Franklin James Rignall Wheeler Fellow Lea Stirling Oscar Broneer Fellow, CAORC Duke University Solow Summer Research Fellow Multi-Country Research Fellow University of Manitoba Dimitri Nakassis American Academy in Rome Heinrich Schliemann Fellow Billar Tekkök Michael Ierardi University of Texas at Austin Aegean Fellow Solow Summer Research Fellow Bilkent University Aaron Poochigian Bridgewater State College Mary & James H. Ottaway Jr. Fellow Mark Toher David Jordan University of Minnesota NEH Fellow Angeliki Kosmopoulou Union College Kathryn Topper

Lucy Shoe Meritt Fellow Elizabeth Langridge-Noti E. Loeta Tyree Harvard University

Mark Lawall Natalia Vogeikoff-Brogan Christopher Trinacty NEH Fellow Solow Summer Research Fellow Martin Ostwald Fellow University of Manitoba ASCSA Brown University Carol Lawton Kress Publications Fellow 2003–04 Other Regular Members Lawrence University Regular Members Jonathan David

John R. Leonard Penn State University Fellows of the School

Yannis Lolos Sarah James Amalia Avramidou Jacob Hirsch Fellow University of Toronto UC, Berkeley Bert Hodge Hill Fellow Johns Hopkins University

 43  Philip Sapirstein Leda Costaki Antonia Stamos Fulbright Fellow University of Toronto Fulbright Fellow

Cornell University Temple University Melissa S. Eaby dices Fulbright Fellow Anne Stewart n Associate Members University of North Carolina, UC, Berkeley

Holding School Fellowships Chapel Hill Andrew White

appe Kieran A. Hendrick Alexander Fantalkin Fulbright Fellow Eugene Vanderpool Fellow University of Tel Aviv University of Maryland

UC, Berkeley Laura C. Gawlinski Georgia Tsouvala Yoranidis Nicholas F. Hudson Cornell University CUNY

Kress Joint Athens/Jerusalem Fellow Fatma Yaprak Gursoy George D. Zouganelis University of Minnesota University of Virginia Wiener Laboratory Research

Associate Hüseyin Şükrü Ilıcak Athena Hadji University of Athens M. Alison Frantz Fellow UC, Berkeley Harvard University

Craig I. Hardiman Senior Associate Members Brenda J. Longfellow Ohio State University Samuel H. Kress Fellow Ayşe Nükhet Adiyeke University of Michigan Danielle L. Kellogg Aegean Fellow

University of Pennsylvania Mersin University Gloria R. Park Gorham P. Stevens Fellow Zoe S. Kontes June W. Allison University of North Carolina, Brown University Ohio State University

Chapel Hill Dimitris Kontogiorgos Dimitra Andrianou Brandie Ratliffe Wiener Laboratory Associate Jacob Hirsch Fellow CAORC Multi-Country Fellow University of Sheffield Bryn Mawr College

Columbia University John R. Leonard Ayşe Aydın Georgia Tsartsidou SUNY, Buffalo Aegean Fellow

Wiener Laboratory Fellow, Mersin University Kirsi Lorentz Environmental Studies Wiener Laboratory Associate Mark C. Bartusis University of Thessaloniki Cambridge University NEH Fellow

Erin J. Walcek Northern State University Samantha L. Martin Homer & Dorothy Thompson Fellow Fulbright Fellow Judith P. Binder University of Missouri-Columbia Cambridge University Nancy Bookidis Thanos Webb Sara M. Palaskas Wiener Laboratory Fellow, UCLA Dimitar Boyadzhiev Faunal Studies Mellon Research Fellow UCLA Jennifer L. Palinkas Sofia University Emory University Bronwen Wickkiser Thomas M. Brogan Harry Bikakis Fellow Laurialan B. Reitzammer INSTAP East Crete Study Center

University of Texas at Austin UC, Berkeley Miriam E. Caskey

Claudia Zatta Kristen Seaman Rosalia Christidou Doreen C. Spitzer Fellow UC, Berkeley Wiener Laboratory Associate Johns Hopkins University Evangelia Sikla CNRS, Jalès, Berrias

Student Associate Members Bryn Mawr College David W. Dahle Ann Nicole Brysbaert Christine A. Smith Augustana College

Wiener Laboratory Associate Washington University

University of Glasgow

 44  appe Brian Damiata Ruth Siddall Paul William Salay Jr. Wiener Laboratory Fellow, Wiener Laboratory Associate James Rignall Wheeler Fellow Environmental Studies University College, London California State University,

n UCLA Long Beach E. Loeta Tyree dices

Stathis Gourgouris Andrew Thomas Siebengartner Bonna Wescoat NEH Fellow Philip Lockhart Fellow Solow Summer Research Fellow Columbia University Royal Holloway College, Emory University University of London Janet D. Jones Remzi Yağcı CAORC Multi-Country Fellow Gregory Smay Aegean Fellow Bucknell University School Fellow Mersin University UC, Santa Barbara David R. Jordan Ahmet Yürür Jonathan R. Strang Nigel M. Kennell Aegean Fellow John Williams White Fellow Yildiz Technical University Stephanie A.H. Kennell SUNY, Buffalo CAIA

2004–05 Other Regular Members Dorothea W. Lalonde

Regular Members Seth G. Bernard Gerald V. Lalonde Fulbright Fellow Grinnell College Fellows of the School Amherst College

Elizabeth M. Langridge-Noti Britta Kristina Ager Richard Fernando Buxton American College of Greece Thomas Day Seymour Fellow Vassar College University of Michigan Shawna Leigh Alicia Louise Carter Solow Summer Research Fellow Silviu Anghel University of Texas at Austin Gettysburg College Heinrich Schliemann Fellow

Columbia University Clay Matthew Cofer Kathleen Lynch Bryn Mawr College Solow Summer Research Fellow Christopher Eckerman University of Cincinnati Virginia Grace Fellow Yuki Furuya

UCLA University of Cincinnati James D. Muhly

Polymnia Muhly Thomas S. Henderson II Amy A. Sowder Lucy Shoe Meritt Fellow Emory University Marek Titien Olszewski Florida State University

Mellon Research Fellow Associate Members Warsaw University Gregory Shane Jones Bert Hodge Hill Fellow Holding School Fellowships Irene Polinskaya Johns Hopkins University Bowdoin College Amalia Avramidou Rebecca A. Karberg Homer & Dorothy Thompson Fellow Lee Ann Riccardi School Fellow Johns Hopkins University Solow Summer Research Fellow UC, Berkeley The College of New Jersey Veronica della Dora Lynne Kvapil M. Alison Frantz Fellow Mary B. Richardson Martin Ostwald Fellow UCLA University of Cincinnati Ligia Cristina Ruscu Laura C. Gawlinski Mellon Research Fellow Evangeline Lyons Eugene Vanderpool Fellow Babes-Bolyai-University Cluj Mary & James H. Ottaway Jr. Fellow Cornell University Duke University Jan Motyka Sanders Evi Margaritis Arcadia University Sara Saba Wiener Laboratory Environmen- Peter Schultz Michael Jameson Fellow tal Studies Fellow Duke University University of Cambridge

 45  Maureen Reissner O’Brien David K. Pettegrew Ann Brysbaert Kress Joint Athens-Jerusalem Fellow Ohio State University Wiener Laboratory Research

University of North Carolina, Associate Sarah Roland

dices Chapel Hill University of Leicester Columbia University

n Kimberley-Anne Pixley Ayşın Candan Kristen E. Seaman Colburn Fellow Aegean Fellow UC, Berkeley University of Toronto Yeditepe University appe Evangelia Sikla Christine Ann Smith Miriam E. Caskey Bryn Mawr College Gorham Phillips Stevens Fellow Lidia Dimitrova Domaradzka Washington University Anne Stewart Mellon Research Fellow UC, Berkeley Kathryn Rose Topper Sofia University

Samuel H. Kress Fellow ŽarkoTankosić Paraskevi Elefanti Harvard University Indiana University Wiener Laboratory Geoarchaeol- Georgia Tsouvala Sanjaya Thakur ogy Research Associate Doreen C. Spitzer Fellow Fulbright Fellow University of Southampton

CUNY University of Michigan Ivan B. Gatsov Christopher Scott Welser Marianne Eileen Wardle Mellon Research Fellow Edward Capps Fellow Duke University New Bulgarian University, Sofia

Brown University Thanos Webb Edward M. Harris UCLA NEH Fellow Student Associate Members Brooklyn College, CUNY

Mark C. Alonge Senior Associate Members David R. Jordan Stanford University June W. Allison Mustafa Erdem Kabadaı Stamatis Chatzitoulousis Ohio State University Aegean Fellow Wiener Laboratory Research Albert J. Ammerman University of Munich Associate Wiener Laboratory Fellow, Aristotle University of Panagiotis Karkanas Environmental Studies Thessaloniki Wiener Laboratory Fellow, Colgate University Geoarchaeology Melissa S. Eaby Yusuf Ayönö Ephoreia of Palaeoanthropology University of North Carolina, Aegean Fellow and Speleology Chapel Hill Ege University Stefanie A.H. Kennell Jon M. Frey Kellee Barnard CAIA UC, Berkeley Solow Summer Research Fellow Elizabeth M. Langridge-Noti Eugenia Gorogianni University of Massachusetts American College of Greece University of Cincinnati Bestami S. Bilgiç Allyson McDavid Kieran Hendrick Aegean Fellow UC, Berkeley George Washington University Benjamin W. Millis

Jane Knobbe Hickman Judith P. Binder Sarah Purefoy Morris

Fulbright Fellow NEH Fellow Sarah Bolmarcich University of Pennsylvania UCLA Hirsch Fellow John R. Leonard University of Virginia James D. Muhly

SUNY, Buffalo Nancy Bookidis Polymnia Muhly

Stavros Oikonomidis Kress Publications Fellow Tatyana Novikova University of Ioannina ASCSA Wiener Laboratory Research Jennifer L. Palinkas Thomas M. Brogan Associate Emory University INSTAP East Crete Study Center National Observatory of Athens

 46  appe Krzysztof Nowicki Brian L.W. Frazer Sertaç Erten Mellon Research Fellow Thomas Day Seymour Fellow Coulson-Cross Aegean Fellow Polish Academy of Sciences UC, Berkeley Middle East Technical University

n

Andrei Opaiţ Emily K. Gangemi Jon M. Frey dices Kress Publications Fellow Heinrich Schliemann Fellow Gorham Phillips Stevens Fellow University of Texas at Austin Harvard University UC, Berkeley

John K. Papadopoulos Theodora B. Kopestonsky Jennifer L. Heuser Kress Publications Fellow John Williams White Fellow Oscar Broneer Traveling Fellow UCLA SUNY, Buffalo Harvard University

Christopher Pfaff Lisa R. Mallen Dimitris Kontogiorgos Solow Summer Research Fellow Honorary School Fellow, Wiener Laboratory Florida State University Fulbright Fellow Geoarchaeology Fellow

Bryn Mawr College University of Sheffield David Reese Solow Summer Research Fellow Emil H. Nankov T. Ephraim Lytle Yale University School Fellow Edward Capps Fellow

Cornell University Duke University Mary B. Richardson

Jeremy J. Ott Şenay Özdemir Betsey A. Robinson School Fellow Coulson-Cross Aegean Fellow Solow Summer Research Fellow Institute of Fine Arts, NYU Mersin University Harvard University

Ryan A. Ricciardi David K. Pettegrew Viorica N. Rusu-Bolindet Honorary School Fellow, Jacob Hirsch Fellow Mellon Research Fellow Fulbright Fellow Ohio State University National History Museum of University of Cincinnati Transylvania Philip N. Sapirstein

Ioannis Sapountzis Homer & Dorothy Thompson Fellow Jan Motyka Sanders Mary & James H. Ottaway Jr. Fellow CAORC Multi-Country Research Arcadia University Boston University Fellow

Kathleen W. Slane Cornell University Angela Ziskowski University of Missouri, Columbia Virginia Grace Fellow Jonathan R. Strang Anne Stewart Bryn Mawr College Eugene Vanderpool Fellow UC, Berkeley SUNY, Buffalo

Other Regular Members E. Loeta Tyree Paraskevi Tritsaroli Amanda A. Flaata Wiener Laboratory

2005–06 Fulbright Fellow J. Lawrence Angel Fellow University of Wisconsin-Madison National Museum of Natural Regular Members History, Paris

Associate Members Fellows of the School Caitlin D. Verfenstein

Holding School Fellowships Solow Summer Research Fellow Lisa A. Çakmak British School at Athens Bert Hodge Hill Fellow Travis Lee Clark University of Michigan CAORC Multi-Country Denis Vovchenko M. Alison Frantz Fellow Amanda J. Coles Research Fellow Temple University University of Minnesota James Rignall Wheeler Fellow University of Pennsylvania Clay M. Cofer Thanos Webb Doreen C. Spitzer Fellow Jody E. Cundy Samuel H. Kress Fellow Bryn Mawr College UCLA Lucy Shoe Meritt Fellow

University of Toronto Baki Demirtaş

Coulson-Cross Aegean Fellow Ankara University

 47  Student Associate Members Miriam E. Caskey Jeannette C. Marchand

Solow Summer Research Fellow Niels Henrik Andreasen Jacquelyn C. Clinton Wright State University Wiener Laboratory Research Associate Cornell University

dices University of Cambridge John C. McEnroe n Kevin F. Daly NEH Fellow Melissa S. Eaby Bucknell University Hamilton College University of North Carolina, Joseph W. Day

appe Chapel Hill Ian D. McPhee Wabash College Kress Publications Fellow Hallie M. Franks Heidi M.C. Dierckx LaTrobe University Mellon Fellow Elmira College Harvard University Fragkiska Megaloudi

Elissavet Hitsiou Wiener Laboratory Marina D. Haworth Wiener Laboratory Environmental Fellow Norton Fellow Geoarchaeology Fellow University of the Aegean, Rhodes Harvard University University of Sheffield and Centre d’Anthropologie

Kieran A. Hendrick CRNS Toulouse Anne Ingvarsson-Sundstrom UC, Berkeley Wiener Laboratory Research Richard D. McKirahan, Jr. Evi Margaritis Associate Pomona College

Wiener Laboratory Research Societas Archaeologica Upsaleinsis James D. Muhly Associate David R. Jordan University of Cambridge Polymnia Muhly

Nigel M. Kennell Lawrence J. Myer Andrei Opaiţ Norton Fellow Stefanie A.H. Kennell Kress Publications Fellow Harvard University CAIA University of Texas at Austin

Jennifer L. Palinkas Nancy L. Klein Şenay Özdemir Emory University NEH Fellow, Fulbright Fellow Coulson-Cross Aegean Fellow

Indiana University Mersin University Kimberley-Anne Pixley University of Toronto Sonia Klinger Alexander Panayotov

Solow Summer Research Fellow Mellon East European Fellow Sara Saba University of Haifa New Bulgarian University, Sofia Duke University

Mait Kõiv Stefka Parveva David R. Scahill Mellon East European Fellow Mellon East European Fellow University of Bath University of Tartu Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

Kristen E. Seaman Margaret L. Laird Elizabeth G. Pemberton UC, Berkeley CAORC Multi-Country Kress Publications Fellow Evangelia Sikla Research Fellow University of Melbourne

INSTAP East Crete Study Center University of Washington Mary B. Richardson

Žarko Tankosić Elizabeth M. Langridge-Noti Betsey A. Robinson Indiana University American College of Greece NEH Fellow Brian W. Trail Stephanie L. Larson Harvard University

Florida State University Bucknell University Jan Motyka Sanders Kathleen Lynch Arcadia University Senior Associate Members Kress Publications Fellow Robert A. Seelinger, Jr. June W. Allison University of Cincinnati Westminster College Ohio State University Elçin Macar E. Loeta Tyree Judith P. Binder Coulson-Cross Aegean Fellow Yıldız Technical University Bronwen L. Wickkiser

Thomas M. Brogan Gustavus Adolphus College INSTAP East Crete Study Center

 48  appe Cooperating Institutions and Their Representatives

Agnes Scott College Carleton College Davidson College n

Sally MacEwen (’01–’06) Nancy C. Wilkie (’01–’06) Peter M. Krentz (’01–’06) dices American Numismatic Society Case Western Reserve University Denison University (’01–’05) Carmen Arnold-Biucchi (’01–’02) Donald R. Laing (’01–’06) None elected (’01–’05) Peter G. van Alfen (’03–’06) Jenifer Neils (’01–’06) DePauw University (’05–’06) Amherst College Central Pennsylvania Consortium: None elected (’05–’06) Rebecca H. Sinos (’01–’06) Franklin and Marshall College Dickinson College Ann R. Steiner (’01–’06) Arcadia University R. Leon Fitts (’01–’06) Jan Motyka Sanders (’01–’06) Gettysburg College Duke University Carolyn S. Snively (’01–’06) Austin Peay State University Diskin Clay (’01–’06) Timothy F. Winters (’01–’06) City University of New York Sheila Dillon (’02–’06) Hardy Hansen (’01–’06) John F. Oates (’01–’05) Bard College Carla M. Antonaccio (’06) None elected (’01–’06) Clark University Rhys F. Townsend (’01–’06) Dumbarton Oaks Research Barnard College Library Nancy Worman (’01–’06) Colgate University John Duffy (’01–’06) Albert Ammerman (’01–’06) Boston College Emory University Eugene W. Bushala (’01–’04) College of Charleston (’05–’06) Sandra L. Blakely (’01–’06) David H. Gill, S.J. (’01–’06) James M.L. Newhard (’05–’06) Niall W. Slater (’01–’06) Boston University College of New Jersey Bonna D. Wescoat (’06) James R. Wiseman (’01–’06) Lee Ann Riccardi (’01–’06) Fairfield University Brandeis University College of the Holy Cross Katherine A. Schwab (’01–’06) Leonard Muellner (’01–’02) Blaise Nagy (’01–’06) Florida State University Ann Koloski-Ostrow (’03–’06) Ellen E. Perry (’01–’06) Daniel J. Pullen (’01–’06) Brevard College College of William and Mary James P. Sickinger (’01–’06) Robert A. Bauslaugh (’01–’06) John H. Oakley (’01–’06) Christopher A. Pfaff (’06) William E. Hutton (’05–’06) Brigham Young University Fordham University Linda C. Reilly (’05–’06) Nanci DeBloois (’01–’04) Sarah Peirce (’01–’06) Michael A. Tueller (’05–’06) College of Wooster (’01–’04) George Mason University Thomas M. Falkner (’01–’04) Brock University Carol C. Mattusch (’01–’06) Noel Robertson (’01–’02) Columbia University George Washington University David W. Rupp (’01–’06) Roger Bagnall (’01–’06) Kim J. Hartswick (’01–’06) Richard W. Parker (’03–’06) Richard Brilliant (’01–’05) Georgetown University Brown University Connecticut College Catherine M. Keesling (’01–’06) Alan L. Boegehold (’01–’06) Dirk Held (’01–’06) Adele C. Scafuro (’01–’06) Grand Valley State University Cornell University (’02–’06) Bryn Mawr College Kevin Clinton (’01–’06) Melissa Morison (’02–’06) Gregory W. Dickerson (’01–’04) John E. Coleman (’01–’06) William Morison (’05–’06) Stella G. Miller-Collett (’01–’06) Creighton University James C. Wright (’01–’06) Grinnell College Geoffrey .W Bakewell (’01–’06) Camilla MacKay (’06) Gerald V. Lalonde (’01–’06) Dartmouth College Bucknell University Gustavus Adolphus College Jeremy B. Rutter (’01–’06) Greta Ham (’01–’05) Stewart G. Flory (’01–’04) William C. Scott (’01–’04) Kevin F. Daly (’05–’06) Bronwen Wickkiser (’04–’06) Janet D. Jones (’05–’06) Stephanie L. Larson (’05–’06)

 49  Hamilton College Loyola College in Maryland Pitzer College Barbara Kirk Gold (’01–’06) Martha C. Taylor (’01–’06) Stephen L. Glass (’01–’06) Hampden-Sydney College Loyola University of Chicago Pomona College dices C. Wayne Tucker (’01–’06) (’01–’05) Richard D. McKirahan (’01–’06) n Darice Birge (’01–’05) Harvard University Princeton Theological Seminary Gloria Pinney (’01–’03) Macalester College (’04–’06) (’01–’04)

appe Carmen Arnold-Biucchi (’02–’06) Joseph L. Rife (’04–’06) James H. Charlesworth (’01–’04) Betsey A. Robinson (’04–’06) Mary Washington College (’01– Princeton University Hollins University ’04) T. Leslie Shear, Jr. (’01–’06) Christina A. Salowey (’01–’06) Liane R. Houghtalin (’01–’04) Christian Wildberg (’01–’06) Hope College (’01–’03) McMaster University Radcliffe College Jacob E. Nyenhuis (’01–’03) Gretchen Umholtz (’01–’02) David G. Mitten (’01–’06) Michele George (’03–’04) Hunter College Randolph-Macon College Celina Gray (’04–’06) Robert Koehl (’01–’06) Elizabeth Ann Fisher (’01–’06) Mary B. Moore (’01–’06) Michigan State University Randolph-Macon Women’s (’01–’04, ’05–’06) Illinois College (’02–’05) College, in consortium with Joseph Scholten (’01–’03) None elected (’02–’05) Sweet Briar College None elected (’03–’04) Amy R. Cohen (’01–’06) Illinois Wesleyan University Carl Anderson (’06) Nancy E. Sultan (’01–’06) Rhodes College Middlebury College Kenneth Morrell (’01–’06) Indiana University Jane D. Chaplin (’01–’06) Kevin Glowacki (’01–’06) Pavlos Sfyroeas (’06) Rutgers, The State University Karen D. Vitelli (’01–’05) Jack L. Cargill (’01–’04) Mount Holyoke College Thomas .J Figueira (’01–’06) Indiana University – Purdue None elected (’01–’02) Sarolta A. Takács (’05–’06) University at Indianapolis Paula Debnar (’02–’06) Robert Sutton (’01–’06) San Francisco State University New York University None elected (’01–’06) Institute for Advanced Study Christopher Ratté (’01–’06) Glen W. Bowersock (’01–’06) Scripps College Northwestern University Heinrich von Staden (’01–’06) Ellen D. Finkelpearl (’01–’06) Robert W. Wallace (’01–’06) Institute of Fine Arts, NYU Smith College Oberlin College James R. McCredie (’01–’06) Caroline M. Houser (’01–’05) James Helm (’01–’02) Katherine Welch (’01–’06) None elected (’05–’06) Kirk W. Ormand (’03–’06) Iowa State University Smithsonian Institution Ohio State University Margaret S. Mook (’01–’06) None elected (’01–’06) Timothy E. Gregory (’01–’06) Johns Hopkins University Stephen V. Tracy (’01–’02) Southern Methodist University H. Alan Shapiro (’01–’06) Fritz Graf (’03–’06) Karl Kilinski (’01–’06) Dimitrios Yatromanolakis (’05–’06) Mark Fullerton (’03–’06) Southwestern University Lake Forest College (’01–’03) / Ohio University Halford W. Haskell (’01–’06) Lake Forest University (’03–’06) Ruth Palmer (’01–’06) Stanford University Louis Lombardi (’01–’06) Ohio Wesleyan University Ian Morris (’01–’02) Lawrence University Donald Lateiner (’01–’06) Richard P. Martin (’02–’06) Carol L. Lawton (’01–’06) Pembroke College, Represented State University of New York, Lehigh University (’01–’02) by Brown University (’01–’04) Buffalo C. Robert Phillips (’01–’02) None elected (’04–’06) Carolyn Higbie (’01–’06) L. Vance Watrous (’01–’06) Louisiana State University Penn State University Patricia Lawrence (’01–’06) Mark H. Munn (’01–’06)

 50  appe Swarthmore College University of California, University of Massachusetts Rosaria Vignolo Munson (’01–’06) Santa Barbara David F. Grose (’01–’05) Borimir Jordan (’01–’06) None elected (’05–’06) Sweet Briar College, in consor- n Brice L. Erickson (’05–’06) tium with Randolph-Macon University of Michigan dices John W.I. Lee (’05–’06) Women’s College Sharon C. Herbert (’01–’06) Judith A. Evans-Grubbs (’01–’06) University of Chicago John G. Pedley (’01–’03) Jonathan M. Hall (’02–’06) Temple University University of Minnesota Richard Neer (’02–’06) Philip Betancourt (’01–’06) Frederick A. Cooper (’01–’06) Daniel Tompkins (’01–’06) University of Cincinnati S. Douglas Olson (’01–’06) Diane Harris-Cline (’01–’02) Texas A & M University University of Mississippi Jack L. Davis (’03–’06) George F. Bass (’01–’02) Robert A. Moysey (’01–’06) Kathleen M. Lynch (’04–’06) Cemal M. Pulak (’02–’06) University of Missouri University of Colorado Trinity College Kathleen W. Slane (’01–’06) John Gilbert (’01–’03) Martha K. Risser (’01–’06) Ian Worthington (’02–’06) Elspeth R.M. Dusinberre (’03–’06) Trinity University University of Missouri, University of Florida Mark B. Garrison (’01–’06) St. Louis (’03–’06) Barbara A. Barletta (’01–’06) Michael B. Cosmopoulos (’03–’06) Tufts University Robert S. Wagman (’01–’06) Jodi Magness (’01–’02) University of Nebraska University of Georgia None elected (’02–’06) Michael Hoff (’01–’06) Naomi J. Norman (’01–’06) Tulane University Nancy Felson (’05–’06) University of North Carolina, Jane B. Carter (’01–’06) Chapel Hill University of Illinois at Chicago Kenneth Sams (’01–’06) Union College Jennifer L. Tobin (’01–’06) Mary C. Sturgeon (’01–’06) Mark Toher (’01–’06) University of Illinois at Urbana- Jodi Magness (’03–’06) University of Arizona (’03–’06) Champaign University of North Carolina, Mary Elis Voyatzis (’03–’06) William M. Calder (’01–’06) Greensboro James A. Dengate (’01–’06) University of Arkansas, Jeffrey S. Soles (’01–’06) Fulbright College University of Iowa University of Notre Dame Daniel B. Levine (’01–’06) Mary J. DePew (’01–’06) Robin F. Rhodes (’01–’06) University of British Columbia University of Kansas University of Oklahoma (’01–’05) Phillip Harding (’02–’04) Michael Shaw (’01–’06) J. Rufus Fears (’01–’05) Hector Williams (’05–’06) John Younger (’05–’06) University of Oregon University of California, Berkeley University of Kentucky (’01–’05) Jeffrey M. Hurwit (’01–’06) Stephen G. Miller (’01–’06) Ross Scaife (’01–’05) Ronald S. Stroud (’01–’06) University of Pennsylvania University of Manitoba Jeremy J. McInerney (’01–’06) University of California, Davis Michael Cosmopoulos (’01–’02) Ralph Rosen (’01–’06) Lynn E. Roller (’01–’06) Mark L. Lawall (’03–’06) University of Pennsylvania University of California, Irvine University of Mary Washington Museum of Archaeology & Margaret M. Miles (’01–’06) (’04–’06) Anthropology Liane R. Houghtalin (’04–’06) University of California, Keith DeVries (’01–’04) Los Angeles University of Maryland David G. Romano (’05–’06) Mortimer Chambers (’01–’04) Marjorie Venit (’01–’06) University of Pittsburgh Steven Lattimore (’01–’06) University of Maryland, Harry C. Avery (’01–’06) Kathryn A. Morgan (’01–’06) Baltimore County University of Rhode Island Carolyn G. Koehler (’01–’06) Mary B. Hollinshead (’02–’06)

 51  University of Richmond Vassar College Stuart Wheeler (’01–’06) Robert L. Pounder (’01–’06) University of South Dakota Virginia Polytechnic Institute dices Clayton M. Lehmann (’01–’06) Glenn R. Bugh (’01–’06) n University of South Florida Wabash College William M. Murray (’01–’06) Leslie P. Day (’01–’06)

appe John E. Fischer (’01–’04) University of Southern California Bryan E. Burns (’02–’06) Wake Forest University (’01–’05) James T. Powell (’01–’05) University of Southern Indiana Michael Dixon (’01–’06) Washington University Robert D. Lamberton (’01–’06) University of Tennessee Susan I. Rotroff (’01–’06) Geraldine C. Gesell (’01–’02) None elected (’02–’03) Wayne State University (’03–’06) Aleydis Van de Moortel (’03–’06) Sarah E. Bassett (’04–’06) University of Texas at Austin Wellesley College John H. Kroll (’01–’02) Mary R. Lefkowitz (’01–’06) Thomas G. Palaima (’01–’06) Miranda C. Marvin (’01–’06) Glenn A. Peers (’01–’06) Wesleyan University Paula J. Perlman (’02–’06) Carla M. Antonaccio (’01–’05) University of Toronto None elected (’05–’06) Eric G. Csapo (’01–’05) Wichita State University Margaret Miller (’02–’05) Frederick Hemans (’01–’06) None elected (’05–’06) Wilfrid Laurier University (’01–’02; University of Vermont in consortium with University of Mark Usher (’01–’06) Waterloo ’03–’06) University of Victoria (’04–’06) Gerald P. Schaus (’01–’02, ’03–’06) R. Brendan Burke (’04–’06) William Marsh Rice University University of Virginia Michael Maas (’01–’04) Elizabeth Meyer (’02–’06) Caroline K. Quenemoen (’04–’06) Jon D. Mikalson (’01–’06) Williams College University of Washington Kerry A. Christensen (’01–’06) Daniel P. Harmon (’01–’04) Elizabeth P. McGowan (’01–’06) James J. Clauss (’04–’06) Wright State University University of Waterloo, in con- Janice J. Gabbert (’01–’04) sortium with Wilfrid Laurier None elected (’04–’05) University (’03–’06) Jeannette Marchand (’06) None elected (’03–’05) Xavier University (’01–’04) Maria Liston (’05–’06) George W.M. Harrison (’01–’04) University of Wisconsin Yale University Barry B. Powell (’01–’02) None elected (’01–’06) William Aylward (’02–’06) Valparaiso University None elected (’01–’02) Mark S. Farmer (’02–’06) Vanderbilt University Barbara Tsakirgis (’01–’06)

 52  appe Friends of The School

The American School of Classical Studies at Athens owes its continued vitality to the philanthropy of hun- n dreds of donors. The following list includes individuals who made monetary contributions during academic dices years 2001-02 through 2005-06 in support of the School or one of its programs (including the Gennadius Library), as well as institutions and organizations that generously provided financial support.

Most Excellent Councillors Estate of Professor Carl Roebuck The Fleischmann Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Alexander G. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Samourkas Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Friedland Anagnos Samourkas Foundation Professor Frank J. Frost Mr. Stathis Andris Ms. Alexandra Shear Professor Elizabeth R. Gebhard Mr. and Mrs. Ted Athanassiades Dr. Julia Louise Shear and Dr. Matthew Dickie Dr. Nicholas G. Bacopoulos and Professor T. Leslie Shear Professor and Mrs. Costas Gogos Dr. Calypso Gounti Dr. William Kelly Simpson Golden Family Foundation Shirley C. Burden Charitable Solow Art & Architecture Mrs. C.B. Goulandris Lead Trust Foundation Professor Crawford H. Council of American Overseas Mrs. Doreen C. Spitzer Greenewalt, Jr. Research Centers Mr. and Mrs. George Taniskidis Mrs. Themis .J Hadgis Dr. and Mrs. Edward E. Cohen Estate of Professor and Mrs. Professor Evelyn B. Harrison Mr. L. Eric Cotsen Homer Thompson Mr. Robert P. Hubbard Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd E. Cotsen Estate of Mrs. Elizabeth Tourtellot Dr. and Mrs. George L. Huxley Mr. and Mrs. Henry P. Davis Estate of Emily Townsend Vermeule Mr. and Mrs. Panagiotis Iliadis N. Demos Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm H. Wiener Inavale Foundation Jessie Ball duPont Fund Malcolm Hewitt Wiener Mr. and Mrs. Michael Jaharis, Jr. The .J Paul Getty Trust Foundation Mr. Acheilles Kanellopoulos Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Professor Charles K. Williams, II Mr. and Mrs. Constantine A. INSTAP Study Center for East Mr. and Mrs. Alexander E. Zagoreos Karatzas Professor and Mrs. Edmund Crete National Councillors Joukowsky Family Foundation Keeley Ms. Katherine M. Keene Anonymous Mr. Costas Kondylis Samuel H. Kress Foundation Archaeological Institute of America The .F Kostopoulous Foundation A.G. Leventis Foundation ASCSA Alumni/ae Association Ms. Maureen L. Kovacs Mr. Hunter Lewis and The Barrington Foundation Mr. Loucas Kyriacopoulos Ms. Elizabeth Sidamon-Eristoff Professor Philip Betancourt Professor Donald R. Laing, Jr. Harrison Lovegrove & Company, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Biggs Professor Mary R. Lefkowitz and Ltd. Professor and Mrs. Alan L. Sir Hugh Lloyd-Jones Mrs. Lana J. Mandilas and Boegehold E.W. Littlefield Foundation Mr. Pavlos Gavrilidis Ms. Jane Bracken Mr. and Mrs. William T. Loomis Professor and Mrs. James R. Mr. Andrew P. Bridges and Mrs. Maria N. Lyras McCredie Professor Rebecca Lyman Mr. and Mrs. Alexander N. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Professor William M. Calder, III Macridis Estate of Dr. Lucy Meritt Mrs. Efi Cannelopoulou Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert Maguire Mr. and Mrs. Nassos Michas Mr. Irwin Cherashore Mr. and Mrs. Christos Maniatakis National Endowment for the Mrs. Sarah Walton Clark Mrs. Olga Maridakis-Karatzas Humanities Miss Mary Comstock Mr. Louis J. Marisco, Jr. Dr. Barbara Newborg Mr. and Mrs. John J. Creedon Professor Miranda C. Marvin The Stravros .S Niarchos Foundation Mr. Constantine Dakolias and Mr. and Mrs.Tony Masouridis Mr. and Mrs. James H. Ottaway, Jr. Ms. Monique Cusson Mr. George S. Mavrogenes Packard Humanities Institute Mrs. Helen Dracopoulos Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. McCabe Philoi tes Gennadeiou Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Edwards Mr. John K. Menoudakos Randolph-Macon College Mr. Mark W. Edwards Mrs. Annette Merle-Smith Mr. and Mrs. Stanislav Rehak Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Egon Hon. Mr. and Mrs. E. Leo Milonas Luther I. Replogle Foundation Eta Sigma Phi Mr. and Mrs. Andre Newburg EuroBank E.F.G. AE Mr. Danforth Newcomb

 53  Ms. Jeannette Nolen Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Professor Carolyn Snively Mr. and Mrs. Thomas .M O’Brien Contomichalos Dr. Constantinos Sofocleous Professor John G. Pedley Mr. and Mrs. Nikos Ebeoglou Ms. Alexandra Spyridakis

dices Ambassador and Mrs. Alexander Mr. Mark W. Eisenbraun Mr. and Mrs. James Stefatos

n Philon Ms. Elizabeth King Filiotis Professor Ann R. Steiner Mr. and Mrs. John S. Price Mrs. Prudence G. Fitts Professor H. Lloyd Stow Miss Mary P. Proddow Professor Geraldine C. Gesell Mr. and Mrs. Christos Stratakis

appe Mr. Paul Reed Mrs. Clara B. Gianni Dr. Robert D. Taggart Mrs. Maureen Richards Mr. and Mrs. Harold Isbell Dr. Juergen Trumpf Dr. Alice Swift Riginos Mrs. Virginia B. Jameson Ambassador and Mrs. Professor Jeremy B. Rutter Mr. James E. Jordon Loucas Tsilas Mr. and Mrs. Petros K. Sabatacakis Professor Lynn Kirtland Mr. and Mrs. Dimitris Tzoannos Ms. Marinela Samourkas Ms. Eileen Koerner Mr. and Mrs. Yiannis Vikelas Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Sedgwick Dr. Ellen L. Kohler Mr. Ian Vorres Mr. Elias Sitinas Mr. and Mrs. Takis Kouvoutsakis Mrs. Elizabeth Lyding Will Mrs. Herman Sokol Mr. and Mrs. George Kovas Ms. Joannah C. Wilmerding Mr. and Mrs. Elias M. Mrs. Richard Krementz Dr. Margaret C. Winston Stassinopoulos Professor Gerald V. Lalonde Mr. Willard R. Wirth Mr. Dimitrios Stephanakis Mr. Warren A. Larson Professor William F. Wyatt, Jr. Professor and Mrs. Yiannis Mr. and Mrs. Athanassis Laskaridis Stournaras Mr. and Mrs. Sperry Lea Sustaining Friends Elbridge and Evelyn Stuart Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Lemos Mr. William S. Andreas Mr. Carmine Tenga Mr. Arthur L. Loeb Mr. Georgios Aragos Lady Judith and Sir John Thomson Mr. and Mrs. Vasilis Mandilas Professor Helen H. Bacon Professor and Mrs. Rhys F. Mr. Alexander P. Marchessini Mr. and Mrs. Theo Baktidy Townsend Professor Carol Mattusch and Professor and Mrs. William R. Professor Stephen Tracy and Dr. Richard Mason Biers Professor June Allison Dr. Anna Marguerite McCann Mrs. Eleni H. Bourodimos and Dr. and Mrs. Constantine T. Tsitsera Mr. Dennis C. McGlade Mr. Kosta Veves University of North Carolina, Mr. George R. Mercer, Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Brumback Dept. of Anthropology Dr. Catherine Mercer Professor Mary R. Bynum and U.S. Embassy, Athens, Greece Professor Stephen G. Miller Mr. J. Philip Calabrese Dr. and Mrs. P. Roy Vagelos Mr. Guy N. Molinari Mr. and Mrs. Constantine Carras Dr. Catherine Vanderpool and Mr. Eric Moscahlaidis Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Carter Dr. Theodore Politis Mrs. Irini Moscahlaidis Professor Diskin Clay Dr. and Mrs. Dietrich von Bothmer Professors Jenifer Neils and Mrs. Minna Colakis Mrs. Alexandra Vovolini-Laskaridi James McInerney, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Constantin G. Contant Ms. Shelby White Mr. and Mrs. John Nicolaides Mrs. Ethel S. Cook Professor John Younger Professor Helen F. North Professor Athina Coronis Ms. Aspasia Zoumas Mr. Laurie Olin Mme. Eustathia P. Costopoulos Alexander S. Onassis Public Mr. Oliver S. Crosby Benefactors Benefit Foundation Mrs. Susan B. Denbrow Dr. and Mrs. Elie Abemayor Mrs. Arge Pyrovolakis Professor Keith DeVries Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Amodeo Dr. Isa Ragusa Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth Mrs. Paulette Anagnostaras Mr. Theodore Rammelkamp Mr. and Mrs. Spiros Dracopoulos Mr. and Mrs. Constantinos Bacouris Professor Linda Collins Reilly Ms. Melba Dwyer Dr. and Mrs. John Bailey Ms. Mary J. Riley Dr. and Mrs. Harrison Eiteljorg, II Mr. Edward L. Baker Senator and Mrs. Paul Sarbanes Dr. Ernestine S. Elster Professor Anna S. Benjamin Dr. Elizabeth M. Schofield Entelco Foundation Professor Emmett L. Bennett, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Seibert Ms. Lily Fichopolos Mr. and Mrs. Stamatis Boudouris Dr. Marion Sereti and Mrs. Ioanna Focas Mrs. Patricia N. Boulter Mr. John Seretis Mr. Sumner Gerard Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Burns Dr. Peter E. Sifneos Ms. Maud W. Gleason Mrs. Efthalia Constandinidi Professor Rebecca H. Sinos Mr. and Mrs. Michael Glenn

 54  appe Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Goennel Professor Robert L. Pounder Mrs. Virginia M. Besl Professor David F. Grose Ms. Kathryn A. Price Dr. Elizabeth C. Boggess Mr. Christopher Hadzopoulos Mr. Konstantinos Protopappas Mrs. Gregory Bookis Mr. and Mrs. Costas Halaris Mr. Dan Quigley Dr. and Mrs. John Brademas n Ms. Lee Hall Professor Margaret E. Reesor Ms. Carol Ann Bratley dices Ms. Louise McG. Hall Professors Susan I. Rotroff and Ms. Barbara S. Brookes Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hansel Robert Lamberton Professor and Mrs. Edwin L. Brown Mr. Richard D. Hare Professor Christina A. Salowey Ms. Anne Bryant and Ambassador and Mrs. Andrew Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Mr. Peter Ross Jacovides Sarantopoulos Professor Glenn R. Bugh Mrs. Mary Johnson Ms. Ludmila Schwarzenberg Professor Jack L. Cargill Mr. and Mrs. Phil Karahalios The Seattle Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Thomas .A Cassilly Dr. Dimitris Katsarellias Mr. and Mrs. Peter M.F. Sichel Mr. and Mrs. Philip Cavanaugh Mrs. Susan Katzev Professor Marie Spiro Professor and Mrs. Mortimer Mrs. Laurie D. Kefalidis Mr. Nicholas C. Spitzer Chambers Mr. John Kellar Professor and Mrs. Robert Dr. Alexander N. Christakis and Mr. John P. Ketseas Sutton, Jr. Ms. Helen Weisz Mr. and Mrs. George P. Kolovos Dr. and Mrs. Apostolos P. Tambakis Professor Constantine Christofides Mrs. Pauline Kotsilimbas Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Taplin, Jr. Mrs. Mary Christy Mr. and Mrs. Elias J. Kulukundis Mr. and Mrs. Humphrey Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Dan P. Cole Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Lalos Professor Martha C. Taylor Mr. George Constantine Professor Mabel Lang Professor Mark Toher Mrs. Lisa A. Cox Professor John C. Lavezzi Dr. and Mrs. Sotirios Vahaviolos Mr. John A. Crawford Dr. and Mrs. Athanase Lavidas Mr. John C. Vassil Mr. and Mrs. John S. Crawford Professor Carol L. Lawton and Mr. John K. Wallace Mrs. Mary Jane Crotty Professor Jere Wickens Mr. and Mrs. Steven Weiss Mrs. Nina Dana Mr. George Leventis Professor William C. West, III Mrs. Paula Dardoufas Mr. Arthur Logan Miss Nancy P. Weston Ms. Jean M. Davison Mrs. Martha B. Lucas Mr. Leavitt S. White Mr. Samuel DeMerit Mr. John D. Mabie Ms. Susan Whitehead Professor James A. Dengate Mr. W. Thomas Maccary Mr. Orrin S. Wightman III Professor Michael Dixon Mr. and Mrs. George Makkos Mr. George E. Wishon Mr. and Mrs. John Draper Dr. and Mrs. George Maragos Wyeth, Inc. Mrs. John F. Dusenbery Mr. and Mrs. Markos Marinakis Ms. Megan Edwards Mrs. Helen Mavrophilippas Supporting Friends Ms. Sarah Gay Edwards Ms. Barbara McCauley Miss Ruth Gale Adelman Ms. Mary C. Eliot Mr. Donald McCree, Jr. Professors Peter S. and Professor and Mrs. Robert Fagles Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Merker Susan H. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Hart Fessenden Dr. and Mrs. C. Dean Metropoulos Dr. Ann H. Allison Miss Susan J. Finke Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Miller Professor Rebecca M. Ammerman Professor John E. Fischer Mr. and Mrs. Spiros Milonas Ms. Georgette M. Anagnostaras Ms. Marjorie Anne Flory Mr. George S.B. Morgan Mrs. Sherry D. Anderson Miss Frances Folsom Ms. Judith Nelson Professsor Virginia Anderson- Mrs. Elizabeth R. Fondaras Colonel Andonios Neroulias Stojanović Mr. and Mrs. Philip Foote Captain and Mrs. Andreas Nicolaou Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Asser Professor and Mrs. Charles A. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Novak Mr. Ronald Atkins Frazee Professor and Mrs. John H. Oakley Mr. J. Keith Ausbrook Ms. Mary S. French Ms. Susan O’Donnell Professor Harry C. Avery Mrs. Patricia Fried Mr. and Mrs. Pantelis Panos Miss Kay Babbitt Ms. Laura M. Gadbery Pepsico Foundation Professor and Mrs. Roger Bagnall Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Geagan Ms. Constance Pierce Dr. Elizabeth J. Barber Mrs. Anastasia Gerontis Mr. and Mrs. Constantine Ms. Judith M. Barringer Ms. Mary Ann Haas Polymeropoulos Mr. Lloyd E. Beebe Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hadjipateras Dr. Paula N. Poulos Mrs. Nancy Bernard Professor Richard Hamilton

 55  Mr. Harry Haralambakis Ms. Lisa Mamounas Mr. and Mrs. Evan Sakellarios Mrs. Ernestine Harmel Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas A. Mastoris Ms. Smaro A. Salaoutis Ms. Cynthia M. Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Earnest M. May Professor Gerald P. Schaus

dices Professor Karelisa Hartigan Dr. Marian H. McAllister Professor Rebecca K. Schindler

n Professor Kim J. Hartswick Mr. William B. McCredie Professor Katherine A. Schwab Professor Christine M. Havelock Mr. James H. McCrory Ms. Cynthia Schwenk Professor Guy M. Hedreen Professor John C. McEnroe Mrs. Carol Selle

appe Mrs. Sophia P. Henry Professor Elizabeth P. McGowan Mrs. Beverly S. Sensbach Mr. Arthur C. Hodges Mrs. Harriet A. Mercati Ms. Kim A. Severson Professor Mary B. Hollinshead Ms. Sandra Mermelstein Professor H. Alan Shapiro and Mr. Richard Hollinshead Professor Jon D. Mikalson Professor Joseph Shaw Ms. Margaret E. Horsnell Ms. Ann M. Miller Ms. Ann Cornell Sheffield Dr. Richard H. Howland Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Miller Ms. Dorothy M. Shepard Dr. and Mrs. Henry R. Immerwahr Miss Linda L. Miller Mr. Alexander Gail Sherman Mrs. Sarah Immerwahr Professor Mary B. Moore Mrs. Odyssia Skouras Mr. and Mrs. Thomas .P Jedele Professor John D. Morgan Professor Kathleen W. Slane Mr. and Mrs. Keith D. Jewell Ms. Margaret Mottier Mr. Trent J. Slansky Fran Justa Professor Alexander Nehamas and Mrs. Sarah C.D. Slenczka Professor Ioli Kalavrezou Ms. Susan Glimcher Ms. Joanna S. Smith Ms. Basilia C. Karageorgis Mrs. Bess Nicholas Ms. Susan M. Smith Professor and Mrs. Ioannis Karatzas Dr. and Mrs. James Nicholas Dr. Stephanie B. Spanos Mr. Preston B. Kavanagh Hon. Mr. and Mrs. William Nitze Mr. and Mrs. George Professor Shigenari Kawashima Dr. Andrew Oliver, Jr. Stamatoyannopoulos Ms. Hilary Kenyon Ms. Dorinda J. Oliver Professor Andrew Szegedy-Maszak Professor Ross S. Kilpatrick Professor S. Douglas Olson Dr. Thomas Talboy Mrs. Elena Kingsland Mrs. Jane Sammis Ord Ms. Kim S. Tarka Mrs. Caryl F. Kittredge Mrs. Jane H. Otte Mrs. Helayna Thickpenny Ms. Theodora Klissas Dr. J. Michael Padgett Ms. Carol Trapp Professor Helmut Koester Ms. Jennifer Palinkas Mr. Michael P. Tremonte Ms. Janine Brita Korringa Mr. William Pannill Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Triant Dr. Robert J. Kossmann Dr. S. Victor Papacosmas Mrs. Ypatia Vavayannis Mr. and Mrs. K. Koutarellis Mrs. Aphrodite Papantoniou Mrs. Joan R. von Koschembahr Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Kraft Mr. Dimitris Paraskevas Mr. and Mrs. Franz Von Ziegesar Mr. George Labalme Jr. Professor Richard W. Parker Mr. and Mrs. George Votis Ms. Irene Ladas Ms. Martha H. Paull Ms. Margaret A. Waggoner Professor and Mrs. Merle Langdon Ms. Susan G. Pearl Dr. Israel Walker Mr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Lansdale Ms. Margaret L. Peirce Mrs. Barbara G. Walsh Professor Donald Lateiner Professor George E. Pesely Professor Allen Mason Ward, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Van P. Latsey Mrs. Anna Peters Mrs. Ann K. Warren Professor Steven Lattimore Mr. and Mrs.William O. Petersen Ms. Sandra Karaus Wertis Professor and Mrs. Gilbert Lawall Dr. Constantine Photos Mrs. John H. Winder Professor Eleanor W. Leach Reverend Daniel E. Pilarczyk Professor James R. Wiseman Mr. and Mrs. Brian Legakis Professor Jerome J. Pollitt Mrs. Sandria E. Woodruff Professor Clayton M. Lehmann Professors Kurt A. Raaflaub and Mrs. Jenny Xanthos Dr. Phyllis Williams Lehmann Deborah Baedeker Mr. Marinos Xanthos Mrs. Edmée Leventis Mr. and Mrs. William Remillong Ms. Maria D. Yatrakis Professor Daniel B. Levine Professor Lee Ann Riccardi Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Yeonas Drs. Anthony and Maria Mr. Lawrence Richardson, Jr. Ms. Mary Zahoudanis Limberakis Professor Brunilde S. Ridgway Ms. T.L. Loftin Mrs. Rebecca Robinson Mrs. Nellie C. Logothetides Professor David W. Rupp Ms. Alison D. Lonshein Dr. Deborah Ruscillo Cosmopoulos Mrs. Billie M. MacGregor Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ryan Dr. Georgia Ann Machemer Mrs. Marian H. Sagan

 56  appe Friends Ms. Honora Chapman Professor Sharon E. Gerstel Mr. Thomas Adamescu Mr. Mark Chekola Dr. Linda Marie Gigante Mrs. Judith A. Chester Dr. Hugh Gilchrist

Mrs. Karen B. Alexander n Mrs. Alkestis Choremi Ms. Teresa Gloster

Ms. Catherine Alexopoulou dices Mr. Peter Amram Professor Jenny Strauss Clay Mrs. Priscilla B. Grace Ms. Ellen Amyx Mrs. Barbara G. Clinkenbeard Dr. John Gary Green Mr. Demetris Argyriades Dr. Jacqueline C. Clinton Mr. Richard A. Grossmann Mr. Nolis S. Arkoulakis Professor Kevin Clinton Dr. Rosanne Gulino Mrs. Pauline Arkoulakis Dr. and Mrs. Timothy Clougherty Mr. Andrea Guzzetti Dr. Carmen Arnold-Biucchi Ms. Hope Cobb Ms. Victoria M. Gyori Ms. Amalia Avramidou Ms. Ada Cohen Ms. Rachel Hadas Mr. Timothy O. Baldwin Ms. Judith Mae Cole Ms. Karen J. Hammerlof Professor Anastasius C. Bandy Professor William J. Connell Mr. Kristopher Hartley Mr. Henry Barker Ms. Molly A.K. Connors Dr. Helen Hatzichronoglou Mrs. Anne Fiske Barnes Reverend and Mrs. Demetrios J. Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Hewlett Mr. Robert E. Barton Constantelos Dr. Frank C. Hibben Ms. Sandra J. Bartusis Ms. Teresa Conway Mr. James H. Hicks Ms. Lydia Morris Baxter Mr. Robert J. Cooley Ms. Carolyn W. Hill Mrs. Lily Y. Beck Mrs. Ann Criswell Mr. Theodore .S Hirtz Mr. Donald J. Ian Begg Mrs. William C. Cullen Professor James C. Hogan Mr. Charles F. Begley Mr. and Mrs. Richard Daily Mrs. Ann Bryant Holt Ms. Evelyn E. Bell Dr. Brian Damiata Professor Rolf O. Hubbe Ms. Rebecca R. Benefiel Mr. Henry Darbee Professor Eleanor G. Huzar Mrs. Shirley H. Bennette Mr. John C. Dayton Ms. Carina A. Iezzi Mrs. Joanne H. Bielfelt Ms. Jill Deal Mr. Jim T. Inscoe Dr. Judith Binder Mr. Raymond Den Adel Dr. and Mrs. David Jacobus Mrs. Carroll W. Bisson Dr. Nicholas Depastas Ms. Josephine D. Jardine Dr. Elizabeth T. Blackburn Ms. Jean H. DeWolfe Ms. Kathryn M. Jenkes Mr. Whitney Blair Dr. Frances H. Diamond Ms. Rita J. Jeremy Mr. Edmund Bleich Mrs. Anastasia N. Dinsmoor Professor Elias Kapetanopoulos Mr. Lawrence J. Bliquez Professor John J. Dobbins Dr. Michael Kaplan Mr. James F. Bogue Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Donenfeld Ms. Evelyn Karas Dr. Sarah Marie Bolmarcich Ms. Catharine-Mary Donovan Miss Elizabeth A. Keat Mrs. Elizabeth B. Bongie Professor Susan B. Downey Professor Catherine M. Keesling Dr. Christoph Borker Professor Christina Dufner and Professor John Kenfield Professor and Mrs. Eugene N. Mr. Joe Filippo Dr. Eva C. Keuls Borza Mr. David F. Durham Drs. Issa Khalil and Ann Knudsen Mr. Brian Bosworth Professor G. Roger Edwards Ms. Valarie Kinkade Mr. Thomas .D Boyd Ms. Marlene M. Estabrooks Ms. Vicky Knoedler Ms. Rachel A. Bradley Professor James A.S. Evans Professor Carolyn G. Koehler Professor and Mrs. Charles M. Ms. Laura L. Farnum Professor Peter J.J. Kosiba Brand Mr. Thomas Andrew Fitzpatrick Professor Edgar Krentz Miss Eva T.H. Brann Professor Stewart G. Flory Mr. Clifton Kreps, III Ms. Amelia Robertson Brown Ms. Barbara Forbes Ms. Katia Kubicek Mr. Andrew H. Brown Dr. Leila Foster Ms. Margaret L. Laird Ms. S. Shelby Brown Ms. Blair Fowlkes Childs Ms. Kay Smith Larrieu Ms. Margaret A. Brucia Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Francis Mrs. Elinor K. Leard Mr. Chris Brunelle Professor Richard M. Frazer, Jr. Mrs. Sarah Lepinski Kozlowski Professor and Mrs. Robert J. Buck Mr. Robert L. Friedlander Mr. Harold S. Levine Professor and Mrs. Richard W. Professors Mark and Monica Ms. Gwyneth Lewis Burke Fullerton Mr. Richard W. Lewis, Jr. Mr. Thomas .S Burns Mr. George G. Garrett Reverend and Mrs. Paul Miss Margot C. Camp Professor Charles Gates Lionberger, USN (ret.) Mrs. Lela Cassavetty Ms. Laura Gawlinski Mr. Robert R. Logan

 57  Dr. Yannis Lolos Dr. Ellen Dryden Reeder Ms. Victoria Tsoukala Mr. Joseph T. Lynch Mr. Jeremiah Reedy Mr. Justin Tullius Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Mr. Tibor P. Rich Dr. Frances Van Keuren

dices MacNaughton Ms. Betsey A. Robinson Dr. and Mrs. Anthony Vasilas

n Professor Jodi Magness Professor Linda Jones Roccos Ms. Dora Vassilicos Mrs. Martha Manheim Mr. George A. Rodetis Ms. Laura A. Voight Mr. Christopher Marchetti Mr. and Mrs. James A. Rogers Mrs. Helen E. Wagner

appe Mr. Leon Marinakos Professor Matthew B. Roller Dr. J.M. Wagstaff Ms. Sherry Marker Mr. Stanley H. Rosenberg Professor Michael B. Walbank Mr. Paul L. Marsolini Dr. John C. Rouman Ms. Lillian G. Wallis Mr. David G. Martin Dr. Louis A. Ruprecht, Jr. Ms. Irene E. Wanner Professor Thomas R. Martin Dr. Peter M. Russo Mr. James M. Wells Mr. Mark S. Mathern Professor Jeffrey Rusten Dr. Emily Blanchard West Ms. Joan Mavity Mr. David Penn Ryan Ms. Susan H. Wester Ms. Nancy L. McGlashan Mr. Hugh Sackett Ms. Wendy P. White Professor A. Dean McKenzie Ms. Mariko Sakuri Mrs. Martha Wiencke Mrs. Stephanie. L. Melius Ms. Susan C. Salay Professor Nancy C. Wilkie Professor Elizabeth Meyer Ms. Natalie Saltiel Mrs. E. Marie Williams Dr. Michele A. Miller Ms. Holly L. Schanz Professor and Mrs. Richard S. Miss Dorothy Monahan Ms. Alesandra M. Schmidt Williams Mr. James P. Moore Ms. Erica Lynne Schmitt Ms. Emily Howe Wilson Mr. Roland Moore Professor Peter Schultz Mr. and Mrs. Spyros Xenakis Mr. Timothy J. Moore Ms. Patricia M. Seabolt Professor Charles J. Zabrowski Dr. Marcia Morrisey Ms. Heather F. Sharpe Ms. Noelle Zeiner Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Munn Mrs. Carole Shea Ms. Laura Myers Mrs. Charles M. Shea Dr. Joseph L. Nelson, Jr. Mrs. Phoebe A. Sheftel Mr. and Mrs. W. Wayne Nichols Ms. Janice Siegel Mr. Brian T. Nolan Mr. Robert M. Simms Ms. Phyllis Odiseos Dr. Frantisek Simon Professor Eric Orlin Ms. Ileana Sioris Professor and Mrs. Martin Ostwald Professor Peter Skiadas Professor John Overbeck Professor Niall W. Slater Mr. Karle S. Packard Professor Jeffrey .S Soles Professor Thomas Palaima Ms. Stephanie S. Spaulding Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Pallister, Jr. Mr. Benjamin O. Sperry Miss Hazel Palmer Ms. Allaire Brisbane Stallsmith Mr. George D. Panagiotou Dr. Paul A. Stavrolakes Mr. and Mrs. Demetrios Professor Zeph Stewart Papageorgiou Mrs. Marilyn Stewart Ms. Tally A.W.W. Parham Professor Ian C. Storey Mr. David Parshall Professor Olin J. Storvick Dr. Thomas .D Paxson, Jr. Professor Thomas .F Strasser Professor Martha J. Payne Mr. Barry Strauss Professor Elizabeth Pemberton Mr. John N. Sullivan and Dr. Ian McPhee Ms. Diane Arnson Svarlien Mr. Ronald Perez Miss Lauren E. Talalay Professor Karl M. Petruso Dr. Alice-Mary Talbot Mrs. Robert S. Picard Mr. and Mrs. James Tanis Mr. Spencer Adams Pope Dr. Veronica Tatton-Brown Professor Daniel J. Pullen Mr. David E. Thomas Mr. Adam Rabinowitz Dr. Richard A. Todd Ms. Roberta A. Rankin Ms. Joan Tomaszewski Mr. William Reader Ms. Fanny Triantafillidou

 58  appe American School of Classical Studies Statement of Financial Position Years Ended June 30, 2002 through 2006

n Assets 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 dices

Cash and Cash Equivalents 2,002,197 1,232,149 5,751,341 5,771,309 4,933,776

Accounts Receivable 2,606,059 1,346,551 1,963,640 778,436 191,962

Accrued Investment Income 1,465,153 1,335,337 1,130,618 709,354 813,739

Prepaid Expenses 95,237 86,464 132,115 109,562 115,605

Investments (at Market) 108,805,758 124,135,915 137,043,996 144,703,564 157,539,731

Plant Assets, net of accumulated depreciation 3,942,478 5,548,880 8,557,853 8,660,357 8,324,376

TOTAL ASSETS $118,916,882 133,685,296 154,579,563 160,732,582 171,919,189

LIABILITIES & NET ASSETS 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Liabilities:

Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses 415,248 550,328 652,888 517,162 668,081

Deferred Revenues 109,670 280,133 284,114 265,568 141,557

Annuity Payable 113,264 85,086 85,271 55,370 18,297

TOTAL LIABILITIES $638,182 915,547 1,022,273 838,100 827,935

Net Assets:

Unrestricted

Operating 93,418,065 107,136,166 125,890,458 130,852,782 141,728,984

Net Invested in Plant Assets 4,157,029 5,790,672 8,843,267 8,826,692 8,428,165

TOTAL UNRESTRICTED ASSETS $97,575,094 112,926,838 134,733,725 139,679,474 150,157,149

Temporarily Restricted 2,618,629 1,725,372 555,926 1,241,772 1,647,719

Permanently Restricted 18,084,977 18,117,539 18,267,639 18,973,236 19,286,386

TOTAL NET ASSETS $118,278,700 132,769,749 153,557,290 159,894,482 171,091,254

TOTAL LIABILITIES & NET ASSETS $118,916,882 133,685,296 154,579,563 160,732,582 171,919,189

 59  American School of Classical Studies Statement of Activities Years Ended June 30, 2002 through 2006

dices REVENUES & GAINS 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 n Student Tuition & Fees 318,975 345,215 347,371 323,485 372,150

appe Federal Awards 64,200 – 73,333 70,000 70,000

Contributions 2,890,219 2,756,825 4,501,698 3,031,492 2,361,779

Interest and Dividend Income 37,095 175,266 25,669 371,211 138,342

Net Realized/Unrealized Gains (Losses) on Investments 4,192,128 4,550,419 4,781,750 5,065,000 5,423,701

Other Revenues (Losses) 271,123 (180,052) 157,446 (22,295) 232,095

TOTAL REVENUES & GAINS $7,773,740 7,647,673 9,887,267 8,838,893 8,598,067

EXPENSES 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Instruction 1,121,068 1,305,822 1,390,008 1,449,818 1,600,969

Publications 579,967 525,328 576,298 743,194 820,177

Libraries 1,668,403 1,755,150 1,817,104 2,278,510 2,468,221

Excavations & Research 2,317,508 2,574,853 4,220,627 2,775,772 3,134,064

General Administration 1,069,033 1,059,511 1,159,185 1,192,758 1,327,112

TOTAL EXPENSES $6,755,979 7,220,664 9,163,222 8,440,052 9,350,543

INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS (3,054,244) 14,491,049 20,787,541 6,337,192 11,196,772

NET ASSETS AS OF BEGINNING OF YEAR 121,332,944 118,278,700 132,769,749 153,557,290 159,894,482

NET ASSETS AS OF END OF YEAR $118,278,700 132,769,749 153,557,290 159,894,482 171,091,254

 60  Executive Editor: Irene Bald Romano Writer: Sally Fay Designer: Mary Jane Gavenda Photography: Archives, pp. 22, 23; Haris Akriviadis, pp. 8, 21, 28; June Allison, pp. 3, 7, 11, 19; Spiros Anagnos- topoulos, pp. 21, 30; Winn Burke, p. 17; Nikos Daniilidis, p. 21; Mary Jane Gavenda, pp. 25, 26; Donald Haggis, p. 16; James Herbst, Ino Ioan- nidou, Lenio Bartzioti, p. 15; Craig Mauzy, pp. 4, 8, 12, 13; Marie Mauzy, p. 5; Yvonne Mazurek, p. 10; Patrick O’Connor, p. 2; Pantelis Panos, p. 19; Alexandra Papakonstantinou, pp. 18, 21; Carol Stein, p. 27; Stephen Tracy, p.14; Klaus-Valtin von Eickstedt, p. 24; Charles Watkinson, p. 9

Thanks to the many staff members providing input to this five-year review. THE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES AT ATHENS 54 Souidias Street, GR-106 76 Athens, Greece Telephone: 011-30-210-723-6313 Fax: 011-30-210-725-0584 6-8 Charlton Street, Princeton, NJ 08540-5232 Telephone: 609-683-0800 Fax: 609-924-0578 www.ascsa.edu.gr