Volume 58 (1954) Index
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CHG Library Book List
CHG Library Book List (Belgium), M. r. d. a. e. d. h. (1967). Galerie de l'Asie antérieure et de l'Iran anciens [des] Musées royaux d'art et d'histoire, Bruxelles, Musées royaux d'art et dʹhistoire, Parc du Cinquantenaire, 1967. Galerie de l'Asie antérieure et de l'Iran anciens [des] Musées royaux d'art et d'histoire by Musées royaux d'art et d'histoire (Belgium) (1967) (Director), T. P. F. H. (1968). The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin: Volume XXVI, Number 5. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art (January, 1968). The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin: Volume XXVI, Number 5 by Thomas P.F. Hoving (1968) (Director), T. P. F. H. (1973). The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin: Volume XXXI, Number 3. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art (Ed.), A. B. S. (2002). Persephone. U.S.A/ Cambridge, President and Fellows of Harvard College Puritan Press, Inc. (Ed.), A. D. (2005). From Byzantium to Modern Greece: Hellenic Art in Adversity, 1453-1830. /Benaki Museum. Athens, Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation. (Ed.), B. B. R. (2000). Christian VIII: The National Museum: Antiquities, Coins, Medals. Copenhagen, The National Museum of Denmark. (Ed.), J. I. (1999). Interviews with Ali Pacha of Joanina; in the autumn of 1812; with some particulars of Epirus, and the Albanians of the present day (Peter Oluf Brondsted). Athens, The Danish Institute at Athens. (Ed.), K. D. (1988). Antalya Museum. İstanbul, T.C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı Döner Sermaye İşletmeleri Merkez Müdürlüğü/ Ankara. (ed.), M. N. B. (Ocak- Nisan 2010). "Arkeoloji ve sanat. (Journal of Archaeology and Art): Ölümünün 100.Yıldönümünde Osman Hamdi Bey ve Kazıları." Arkeoloji Ve Sanat 133. -
1 Joan Breton Connelly Department of Classics, New
Joan Breton Connelly Department of Classics, New York University Room 503 Silver Center, 100 Washington Square East New York, New York 10003 [email protected] Employment New York University: Professor of Classics and Art History 2007-present; Associate Professor of Art History, 1992-07; Assistant Professor of Art History, 1986-92. Institute of Fine Arts, Institute Lecturer for the Conservation Center, 1993-present. NYU Graduate program in Ancient Near Eastern and Egyptian Studies, faculty, 2007- present. Bryn Mawr College: Assistant Dean of the Undergraduate College, 1982-84. Lecturer in Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology, 1982-84. American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Greece: Centennial Secretary, 1981. Education Bryn Mawr College, PhD. 1984: Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology. M.A. 1979: Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology. Princeton University, A.B. 1976: Classics. American School of Classical Studies at Athens: Associate Member 1981; Regular Member 1979- 80; Summer School Member 1974. Archaeological Fieldwork Director, NYU Yeronisos Island Excavations and Field School, Cyprus, 1990-present. Princeton Cyprus Expedition, Polis tis Chrysochou, Cyprus, 1983. Walters Art Gallery Excavations at the Sanctuary of Apollo Hylates, Kourion, Cyprus, 1982. Department of Antiquities of Cyprus Excavations on the Kourion Acropolis, Cyprus, 1982. Department of Antiquities of Cyprus Excavations at the Tombs of the Kings, Paphos, 1981. Excavations at Failaka, Kuwait, Maison de l’Orient, Université de Lyon, member of publication team, 1987-1992. American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Corinth Excavations, Greece, 1980. University of California at Berkeley Nemea Excavations, Greece, 1977. American School of Classical Studies at Athens Agora Excavations, assistant to Dorothy Burr Thompson, 1975 and 1976. -
Annual Reports of the President of Bryn Mawr College, 1935-1942
Bryn Mawr College Library Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/annualreportsofp06bryn rP 10® REPORT to THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS of BRYN MAWR COLLEGE for the year 1935-36 Published by Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania May, 1937 CONTENTS PAGE Report by the President of the College 5 With Changes in the Academic Staff Appended 21 Report by the Dean of the College 25 Report by the Dean of the Graduate School 33 Report by the Librarian * 41 Report by the College Physician 51 Report by the Director of Publication on Official Pub- lications 60 On Faculty Publications • 61 On Lectures and Entertainments 6S Report by the Director of the Bureau of Recommenda- tions 77 Report by the Secretary and Registrar 79 Report on the Summer School for Women Workers in Industry Made by the Chairman of the Summer School Board 82 REPORT BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE The year 1935-36 included several events which will seem impor- tant in the history of the college. For one of these, the Fiftieth Anniversary, it was necessary for me to go through many early papers relating to the founding of the college and also to read through 1 the president's reports which exist for each year of President Rhoads term, 1885-1894, and for the first eleven years of President Thomas's term, 1895-1906. After that time, as the Directors probably know, she ceased to present any narrative account of the year and the president's reports as annually published consisted only of statistics tabulated by the various offices. -
Lucy T. Shoe Meritt Papers M50 ?, Melissa Torquato
Lucy T. Shoe Meritt papers M50 ?, Melissa Torquato. Last updated on August 31, 2020. Bryn Mawr College Lucy T. Shoe Meritt papers Table of Contents Summary Information....................................................................................................................................3 Biography/History..........................................................................................................................................4 Scope and Contents....................................................................................................................................... 5 Administrative Information........................................................................................................................... 7 Controlled Access Headings..........................................................................................................................7 Collection Inventory...................................................................................................................................... 9 Correspondence........................................................................................................................................9 Publications............................................................................................................................................ 29 Academic Materials............................................................................................................................... 36 Professional Affiliations....................................................................................................................... -
Mirabile Dictu: the Bryn Mawr College Library Newsletter 10 (2006)
Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Mirabile Dictu: The rB yn Mawr College Library Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Newsletter Collections, Digitized Books 2006 Mirabile Dictu: The rB yn Mawr College Library Newsletter 10 (2006) Bryn Mawr College Library Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.brynmawr.edu/mirabile Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons, and the Library and Information Science Commons Custom Citation Mirabile Dictu: the Bryn Mawr College Library Newsletter 10 (2006) This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/mirabile/9 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Mirabile Dictu The Bryn Mawr College Library Newsletter Katharine Hepburn as Rosaline, in As You Like It, produced by the Theatre Guild at the Cort Theatre in New York, 1950. Unknown photographer. Fall 2006 Issue 10 Mirabile Dictu The courtesan The Bryn Mawr College Library Newsletter Thais from Terence’s “Eunuchi”, Comoediae. Strassburg: Johann Mariam Coffin Canaday Library Gruninger, 1 Nov. 1496 Bryn Mawr College 101 North Merion Avenue Bryn Mawr, PA 19010-2899 Table of Contents Friends of the Library Fall 2006 calendar 1 Letter from the Director 2 News Graduate & Undergraduate Research Interns 4 Enormous Changes at the Last Minute! 6 Accessible eReserves in the Bryn Mawr Library 7 Bound and Determined: Identifying American Bookbindings 8 Summer Multimedia Development Institute 9 Celebrating Kate 14 Articles Archaeology at Bryn Mawr 10 From Cooperation to Collaboration: Seventy-five Years of Tri-College Library History 12 Elizabeth Chudleigh, Dutchess of Kingston, threatening her recalcitrant banker, from The Chronicles of Crime: or, The New Newgate Calendar, London: Reeves and Turner, 1886. -
Volume 39 (1935) Index
AMERICANJOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY MON O V V I MEN RVM TA o oRVnPR 0 INCof THE JOURNAL OF THE ARCHAEOLOGICALINSTITUTE OF AMERICA PUBLISHED QUARTERLY BY THE INSTITUTE VOLUME XXXIX 1935 Printed by The Rumford Press, Concord, N. H. EDITORIAL BOARD MARY HAMILTON SWINDLER, Bryn Mawr College, Editor-in-Chief DAVID M. ROBINSON, Johns Hopkins University, Editor, News, Discussions and Bibliography EDITH IHALL DOHAN, University Museum, Philadelphia, Editor, Book Reviews ADVISORY BOARD OF ASSOCIATE EDITORS GEORGE A. BARTON, University of Pennsylvania (Oriental) CARL W. BLEGEN, University of Cincinnati (Aegean) LACEY D. CASKEY, Boston Museum of Fine Arts (GreekArchaeology: Vase Painting) GEORGE H. CHASE, Harvard University (American School at Athens) WILLIAM B. DINSMOOR, Columbia University (GreekArchaeology: Architecture) GEORGE W. ELDERKIN, Princeton University (Editor, 1924-1931) HETTY GOLDMAN, New York City (New Excavations and Discoveries) BENJAMIN D. MERITT, Johns Hopkins University (Epigraphy) CHARLES RUFUS MOREY, Princeton University (Mediaeval) EDWARD T. NEWELL, Numismatic Society, New York (Numismatics) GISELA M. A. RICHTER, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (GreekArchaeology: Sculpture) MICHAEL I. ROSTOVTZEFF, Yale University (Roman) ALFRED TOZZER, Harvard University (American Archaeology) HONORARY EDITORS EDWARD CAPPS, Princeton University (Chairmanof the Managing Committeeof the School at Athens) LOUIS E. LORD, Oberlin College (President of the Institute) MILLAR BURROWS, Yale University (President of the American School of Oriental Research) CONTRIBUTORS TO ARCHAEOLOGICAL NEWS, DISCUSSIONS, AND BIBLIOGRAPHY SAMUEL E. BASSETT FRANKLINP. JOHNSON Classical Archaeology Classical Archaeology CARROLLN. BROWN ROLAND S. KENT Classical Archaeology Linguistics MARY H. BUCKINGHAM STEPHENB. LUCE Classical Archaeology Classical Archaeology SIDNEY N. DEANE CLARENCE MANNING Classical Archaeology Slavic Archaeology ROBERT E. DENGLER GEORGEE. MYLONAS GreekArchaeology Aegean Archaeology VLADIMIR J. -
125 Years of Collections at Bryn Mawr College
Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Books, pamphlets, catalogues, and scrapbooks Collections, Digitized Books 2010 Worlds To Discover: 125 Years of Collections at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_books Part of the Liberal Studies Commons, and the Women's History Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Custom Citation Worlds To Discover: 125 Years of Collections at Bryn Mawr College. (Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania: Bryn Mawr College, 2010). This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. https://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_books/9 For more information, please contact [email protected]. WORLDS TO DISCOVER 125 Years of Collections at Bryn Mawr College WORLDS TO DISCOVER 125 Years of Collections at Bryn Mawr College September 24, 2010 – May 28, 2011 BRYN MAWR COLLEGE Class of 1912 Rare Book Room, Canaday Library Foreword Elliott Shore Introduction Eric Pumroy Exhibition Catalogue Eric Pumroy Marianne Hansen Emily Croll Marianne Weldon FOREWORD Elliott Shore Constance Adelaide Jones Director of Libraries Bryn Mawr College opened its doors in 1885 as an less, significant to scholars. We are learning now from institution with a revolutionary agenda: to provide an our libraries something that we already knew, but of education to women that was the equal of any avail- which we needed to be reminded: the original source able to men. For the first time, women would benefit has amazing stories to tell. And some of those stories from—and in turn be expected to originate—scholarly can only emerge when original sources are connected achievement of the highest order, and nothing would by digital means to each other and to the apparatus stand in the way of their chances at success. -
Dorothy Lamb (1887–1967): a Pioneering Mediterranean Field-Archaeologist* by David Gill
Dorothy Lamb (1887–1967): A Pioneering Mediterranean Field-Archaeologist* By David Gill The period before the First World War witnessed the growing involvement of British women in fieldwork in the Mediterranean.1 Women had been involved with museum-based studies and lectures in London from the late nineteenth century,2 but they soon became actively involved with the work on institutions such as the British School at Athens and the Egypt Exploration Fund.3 Dorothy Lamb was one of the series of Cambridge-educated women who continued their classical studies by attending the British School at Athens. Lamb was one of the first British women to work on a British field project in Greece, and is likely to have been the target of J.P. Droop’s warning about the dangers of ‘mixed’ excavations. In spite of her contribution to the Catalogue of the Acropolis Museum, Lamb’s work has tended to be overlooked.4 Dorothy Lamb was the youngest daughter of the mathematician Professor (Sir) Horace Lamb and his wife Elizabeth.5 She was born on 4 October 1887 after the family had returned to * I am grateful to Dr Christopher Stray for providing me with information about Newnham College. Alison Heath, the Archivist of Wycombe Abbey School kindly provided me with information about Dorothy Lamb’s early career. Nicholas Griffin and Sheila Turcon me with supplied information about Dorothy Lamb from the Bertrand Russell archive at McMaster University. Andrew Hambling, the Haileybury archivist, supplied information about John Reeve Brooke. The following abbreviations have been used: ODNB Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) Newnham Register Newnham College Register 1871-1971, vol. -
ELLEN ALIX DU POY (DU POIS, DU POISE) DANIEL (February 6, 1889 – February 23, 1980) JOURNALIST…AUTHOR…O
The Newsletter of The Haycock Historical Society ⚫ Fall 2020 ELLEN ALIX DU POY (DU POIS, DU POISE) DANIEL (February 6, 1889 – February 23, 1980) JOURNALIST…AUTHOR…O. HENRY MEMORIAL AWARD WINNER …AND THE INTERESTING PEOPLE SHE HOSTED IN HER HAYCOCK HOME PART TWO By Joe and Karen Cappella FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES THAT archaeology. In 1938-39, since housing for the team had MRS. DANIEL HOSTED IN HER HAYCOCK always been difficult in the small village of Episkopi, he built a two-story house where he lived and which also served as HOME: the excavation house for the team. He left the house to the Cypriot government, and it is now the Kourion Museum. On April 19, 1953, George McFadden, an experienced lifelong sailor, went sailing in a new, small, lightweight sailboat. The boat capsized off the coast of Cyprus within view of the ruins of Kourion, and he drowned; his body was never found. A ninety-foot yacht, named the Samothrace, owned by George McFadden, was one of the vessels used as part of the OSS operation in Cyprus during World War II. In 1947 he sold that yacht to King Farouk I of Egypt. (See Penn Museum, George H. McFadden III) and (Classical Spies by Susan Heuck Allen) George McFadden (Sanctuary of Apollo, Cyprus) Penn Museum Archives eorge McFadden, (1907-1953) was an archaeologist associate of Mrs. Daniel’s G husband at the University of Pennsylvania, as well as Dr. Daniel’s team member of the Greek section of George Dillon (Public Domain) the OSS (code name “Daffy” to Dr. -
Bryn Mawr College Annual Report , 1917-18. Bryn Mawr College
Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Annual Reports of the President of Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special College Collections, Digitized Books 1918 Bryn Mawr College Annual Report , 1917-18. Bryn Mawr College Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_annualreports Part of the Liberal Studies Commons, and the Women's History Commons Citation Bryn Mawr College, "Bryn Mawr College Annual Report , 1917-18." (1918). Annual Reports of the President of Bryn Mawr College. Book 5. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_annualreports/5 This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. http://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_annualreports/5 For more information, please contact [email protected]. !l !<);!: m.-l'.:: iiiiiiit Bryn Mawr College Library Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from LYRASIS IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/annualreportofpr05bryn Bryn Mawr College ANNUAL REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT 1917-18 *'^f^£~fM^^t0^^ Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Published by Bryn Mawr College. December, 1918. ()( ( I f;r I ff;l:/-.!' Corporation. Academic Year, 1917-18. RuFus M. Jones, President. Asa S. Wing, Anna Rhoadh Lauij, Treasurer. Secrctiirtj. RuFus M. Jones. Frederic H. Strawhridge. M. Carey Thomas. Abram F. Huston. Francis R. Cope, Jr. Anna Rhoads Ladd. Asa S. Wing. Arthur Henry Thomas. Charles J. Rhoads. William C. Dennis. Thomas Raeburn White. Arthur Perry. Arthur F. Chace. Board of Directors. Academic Year, 1917-18. RuFUs M. Jones, Chairman. Asa S. Wing, Anna Rhoads Ladd, Treasurer. -
Prehistory and Protohistory Primary Focus Is the Technology of Human Modification
Book Reviews BOOK REVIEWS Prehistory and Protohistory primary focus is the technology of human modification. The book employs descriptive and quantitative approaches and is richly documented New Light on Palaeolithic and Mesolithic with tables, diagrams and three appendices. The Ornament finds are illustrated by informative high-resolution colour photographs. The book operates on multiple levels. It Catherine Perlès. Ornaments and other complements the other, more eminent categories of ambiguous artifacts from Franchthi, archaeological evidence recovered from Franchthi, Volume I, the Palaeolithic and the the bread and butter of a prehistoric site’s inventory Mesolithic, excavations at Franchthi Cave, such as the lithic finds, the pottery and the figurines, Greece, Fascicle 15. pp. xx+ 322, b/w/ that have already seen publication in previous years colour illustrations. 2018. Bloomigdon: or decades. It thus presents a more complete picture Indiana University Press. ISBN 978–0– of the full gamut of material remains left behind 25303184–6 hard/paperback £43. by the Palaeolithic and the Mesolithic groups who lived in the cave. At the same time, it complements the 1989 volume authored by Judith Shackleton Under the modest heading of a fascicle, the 15th on Marine Molluscan Remains, with its distinctive volume of the Excavations at Franchthi Cave palaeoenvironmental and economic focus. Perlès publication series is entitled Ornaments and Other has been inspired by this early work and her fine Ambiguous Artifacts from Franchthi and is authored observations, shifting her attention to shells as by Catherine Perlès. Unlike her previous studies ornamentation elements and windows to the origins of the knapped stone artifacts that were delivered of human technology and spiritual life. -
Ákouefall 2010, No. 63
NEWSLETTER OF THE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES AT ATHENS ákoueákoueFall 2010, No. 63 Doreen Canaday Spitzer on a School trip in Mantineia, 1936. See related story on page 2. IN THIS ISSUE: McCredie Retires, McCabe Joins Board 3 Managing Committee Appointments 3 Alumni Week & Development News 4 Rotroff Wins Award 4 Agora Excavation Season 5 Student Trips 7 Reinhard Joins Publications 8 Kress Publications Update 10 NEH Fellows Reports 14 Corinth Coin Project 15 Student Reports 15 Solow Fellows Research 18 Class of 2011 19 Wiener Lab Reports 24 INSERT: Cotsen Retires from Board G1 Art Exhibition & Benefit G1 Rare Maps Digitized G2 New Griffon on Varnalis G2 Mystras Exhibit G4 Gennadeion Collaborates on Mitropoulos Scores G4 Doreen Canaday Spitzer 1914–2010 “I have seen the Parthenon in full moonlight; I have seen Sophocles’ Electra in the Odeon of Herodes Atticus; I have seen Pan, almost, playing his pipes (my wooden flute) near the Corycian Cave, and a darling little shepherd boy named Achilles in the mountains at Del- ákoue! phi. I have got lost, almost, on the slopes of Hymettus, of honey fame, and seen such sun- sets and sunrises as people only dream of. Sometimes I can’t believe it’s really true…. not even the newsy letters of my friends at home and at college..can do more than pro- duce a slight and soon-vanishing nostalgia in the face of this positively thrilling existence.” (letter from Doreen Canaday to her cousin, Oct. 21, 1936) With the death of Doreen Canaday Spitzer Doreen in 1987. on September 6, age 95, the American School, and Greece, lost one of their dearest friends.