2017 ANNUAL MEETING AND HUMANITIES ADVOCACY DAY PROGRAM CONTENTS

Meeting Program 2

Speaker Bios 4

Sponsors 9

Attendees 10

Getting Around Washington D.C. 17

1 MEETING PROGRAM

MONDAY, MARCH 13, 2017 9:00 a.m.– 4:45 p.m. The George Washington University Marvin Center 800 21st Street NW, Third Floor Ballrooms

8:30 a.m. Continental Breakfast

9:00 a.m. National Humanities Alliance Membership Business Meeting

Open to NHA Member Representatives

9:30 a.m. Welcome

Steven Knapp, President, The George Washington University

David Marshall, National Humanities Alliance President and Executive Vice Chancellor, University of California, Santa Barbara

10:00 a.m. Advocating for the NEH on Capitol Hill and in Your Communities

Stephen Kidd, Executive Director, National Humanities Alliance

Beatrice Gurwitz, Associate Director, National Humanities Alliance

Robert Bowen, Government Affairs Associate, National Humanities Alliance

11:15 a.m. The Humanities, Citizenship, and Civic Engagement

Lynn Pasquerella, President, Association of American Colleges and Universities (moderator)

Lauren Onkey, Chair and Dean, Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Humanities Center at Cuyahoga Community College

Katherine Joslin, Founding Director, University Center for the Humanities, Western Michigan University

2 12:30 p.m. Luncheon

Welcome: Frederick Lawrence, Secretary and CEO, The Phi Beta Kappa Society

Luncheon Address: Rush Holt, CEO, American Association for Advancement of Science

2:00 p.m. Cultivating the Humanities Major Pipeline

Edward Liebow, Executive Director, American Anthropological Association (moderator)

Paula Krebs, Dean, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Bridgewater State University

Molly Berger, Associate Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Case Western Reserve University

Cathy Gorn, Executive Director, National History Day

3:30 p.m. Making the Case: Federal Funding for the Humanities

Advocacy Training

Group Meetings

5:30 p.m.– 7:30 p.m. Capitol Hill Reception

Rayburn House Office Building, Room 2044

TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 2017

9:00 a.m.– 5:00 p.m. Humanities Advocacy Day

Delegation visits to Senate and House offices

9:00 a.m.– 5:00 p.m. Way Station Open

Capitol Hill Hotel, 200 C Street, SE (House side)

The Way Station is available for those advocates who need extra materials, a location to store luggage for the day, or a rest between Hill visits.

Please return your completed Post-Visit Worksheets to NHA staff at the Way Station.

3 SPEAKER BIOS

MOLLY BERGER

Molly W. Berger is associate dean in the College of Arts and Sciences and Instructor of History at Case Western Reserve University. She is the project director of the Cleveland Humanities Collaborative, a partnership between Case Western Reserve and Cuyahoga Community College that promotes a transfer pipeline for students to study the humanities at CWRU. Berger is a nineteenth- and early-twentieth century American cultural historian of technology. Her book, Hotel Dreams: Luxury, Technology, and Urban Ambition in America, 1829–1929 ( Press, 2011), won the 2012 Sally Hacker Prize from the Society of the History of Technology. Berger’s Ph.D. is from the Department of History at Case Western Reserve University.

ROBERT BOWEN

Robert Bowen is government affairs associate at the National Humanities Alliance (NHA). Before joining NHA, he served on the legislative staff of Senator Carl Levin, working on issues related to transportation, labor, trade, government oversight, and political reform. Prior to his work for Senator Levin, Bowen worked in the Office of the Provost at the University of Michigan, where he received his B.A. in history.

CATHY GORN

Cathy Gorn is the executive director of National History Day, Inc. (NHD) and an adjunct professor of history at the University of Maryland at College Park. Dr. Gorn has made numerous presentations on history education at forums for historians and teachers, including the National Council for the Social Studies, the American Historical Association, and the Organization of American Historians.

Her publications on teaching history to young people have appeared in several professional journals. In addition, Dr. Gorn has served as editor for more than 25 history curriculum guides and has directed 15 national institutes for teachers of history and social studies. She serves on the White House Historical Association Board of Trustees, the Education Committee of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, and the Education Committee of the American Bar Association. Dr. Gorn received her B.A. from Kent State University and her Ph.D. in history from Case Western Reserve University.

4 BEATRICE GURWITZ

Beatrice Gurwitz is associate director of the National Humanities Alliance (NHA). Prior to joining NHA, Gurwitz served as a consultant at the National Endowment for the Humanities and the U.S. Department of State. She has also taught at the University of Maryland and in the New York City public school system. She is the author of Argentine Jews in the Age of Revolt (Brill, 2016). Her writing has also appeared in Journal of Jewish Identities, Immigrants and Minorities, and the Chronicle of Higher Education. She holds a B.A. from Wesleyan University and a Ph.D. in History from the University of California, Berkeley.

RUSH HOLT

Rush D. Holt became the 18th chief executive officer of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and executive publisher of the Science family of journals in February 2015. In this role, Holt leads the world’s largest multi-disciplinary scientific and engineering society.

Over his career, Dr. Holt has held positions as a teacher, scientist, administrator, and policymaker. From 1987 to 1998, Holt was assistant director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), a Department of Energy national lab, which is the largest research facility of Princeton University and one of the largest alternative energy research facilities in the country. At PPPL, Holt helped establish the lab’s nationally renowned science education program. From 1980 to 1988, Holt served on the faculty of Swarthmore College, where he taught courses in physics and public policy. In 1982, he took leave from Swarthmore to serve as an AAAS/American Physical Society Science and Technology Policy Fellow on Capitol Hill. The Fellowships program, dating to 1973, places outstanding scientists and engineers in executive, legislative, and Congressional branch assignments for one or two years; by early 2015, the program had served nearly 3,000 alumni working worldwide in the policy, academic, industry, and nonprofit realms. Holt has said that his AAAS S&T Policy Fellowship was “life changing,” and served as a springboard to his role in Congress. He also served as an arms control expert at the U.S. State Department, where he monitored the nuclear programs of countries such as Iraq, Iran, North Korea, and the former Soviet Union. In 1981, Holt was issued a patent for an improved solar-pond technology for harnessing energy from sunlight.

Before coming to AAAS, Holt served for 16 years as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, representing New Jersey’s 12th Congressional District. In Congress, Holt served as a senior member of the Committee on Natural Resources and the Committee on Education and the Workforce. On Capitol Hill, Holt established a long track record of advocacy for federal investment in research and development, science education, and innovation. He served on the National Commission on the Teaching of Mathematics and Science (known as the Glenn Commission), founded the Congressional Research and Development Caucus, and served as a co-chair of the Biomedical Research Caucus. Holt served eight years on the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and, from 2007 to 2010, chaired the Select Intelligence Oversight Panel, which worked to strengthen legislative oversight of the intelligence community. His legislative work earned him numerous accolades, including being named one of Scientific American magazine’s “50 National Visionaries Contributing to a Brighter Technological Future” and a “Champion of Science” by the Science Coalition. He has also received awards from the American Chemical Society, the American Association of University Professors, the National Association of Graduate-Professional Students, the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, the Council of Scientific Society Presidents, the American Geophysical Union, and the Biotechnology Industry Organization. Holt is also a past recipient of two of AAAS’ highest honors: the William D. Carey Lectureship Award (2005) and the Philip Hauge Abelson Award (2010). From December 2014 to February 2015, Holt was appointed a Director’s Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.

5 Holt is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, and he holds M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in physics from New York University. He is an elected fellow of AAAS, the American Physical Society, and Sigma Xi, and he holds honorary degrees from Monmouth University, Rider University, University of Toledo, and Thomas Edison State College.

KATHERINE JOSLIN

Katherine Joslin is the founding director of Western Michigan University’s Center for the Humanities. A professor of English, she was named the Distinguished Faculty Scholar in 2011 and the Alumni Teacher of the Year in 1997. Her books include Jane Addams, A Writer’s Life (2004) and Edith Wharton and the Making of Fashion (2011), winner of a Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Title Award. Her book Theodore Roosevelt, A Literary Life, co-written with her husband Tom Bailey, will be published in 2018 by the University Press of New England. She was the 2014 Visiting U.S. Fellow at the Eccles Centre in the British Library. In 2008, she was a Fulbright scholar in Egypt and now serves on the Fulbright Senior Specialist Award Committee. She received a Ph.D. in American Literature from Northwestern University and a B.A. in English from Oakland University.

STEPHEN KIDD

Stephen Kidd is executive director of the National Humanities Alliance (NHA). Before joining NHA, he was director of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, the Smithsonian Institution’s “Museum without Walls.” As director, he oversaw the development of major, research-based exhibitions including, among others, Crisis and Creativity: Unfolding the AIDS Memorial Quilt (2012), Colombia: the Nature of Culture (2011), and Asian Pacific Americans: Local Lives, Global Ties (2010). At the Smithsonian, Kidd formed partnerships with ministries of culture, institutions of higher education, museums, and community-based organizations; advocated for the Smithsonian’s interests before Congress and federal agencies; and represented the exhibitions to a wide range of audiences. Prior to his work at the Smithsonian, he served on the staff of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. He holds a B.A. in history from the University of Pennsylvania and a Ph.D. in American Studies from the George Washington University.

STEVEN KNAPP

Steven Knapp became the sixteenth president of the George Washington University in August 2007. His priorities include enhancing the university’s partnerships with neighboring institutions, expanding the scope of its research, strengthening its worldwide community of alumni, enlarging its students’ opportunities for public service, and leading its transformation into a model of urban sustainability. A specialist in Romanticism, literary theory, and the relation of literature to philosophy and religion, Knapp taught English literature at the University of California, Berkeley before serving as dean of arts and sciences and then provost of the Johns Hopkins University. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and a member of the Modern Language Association. He earned his doctorate and master’s degrees from and his Bachelor of Arts degree from .

PAULA KREBS

Paula M. Krebs is dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Bridgewater State University in Massachusetts, a former board member of the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities, and a Victorianist by training. She writes frequently on issues of humanities and higher education for the Chronicle of Higher Education and Inside Higher Ed, and she coordinates the Humanities Student Success initiative, through

6 which New England community colleges, universities, public humanities staff, and employers work to name and measure what humanities graduates know and can do. She received a Ph.D. in English from Indiana University, Bloomington and a B.A. in English from La Salle College.

She is the author of many articles on topics in Victorian literature and culture as well as of Gender, Race, and the Writing of Empire: Public Discourse and the Boer War (Cambridge UP, 1999). She is co-editor, with Tricia Lootens, of the Longman Cultural Edition of Rudyard Kipling’s Kim (Pearson, 2011).

FREDERICK LAWRENCE

Frederick M. Lawrence is secretary of The Phi Beta Kappa Society, the nation’s most prestigious academic honor society. Founded in 1776 at the College of William and Mary, Phi Beta Kappa has chapters on 286 college and university campuses and well over a half-million living members. Its mission is to advocate and recognize excellence in the study of the liberal arts and sciences.

Lawrence is a Phi Beta Kappa member inducted at Williams College and a Yale Law school graduate. He previously served as Senior Research Scholar at Yale Law School and as President and Professor of Politics at Brandeis University. While there he ensured the future of the Rose Art Museum, a premier university-based museum of contemporary art; raised over $250 million in support of a wide range of programs, including financial aid; and oversaw a dramatic increase in the number of applications which reached an all-time high during his administration.

Lawrence previously served as Dean and Robert Kramer Research Professor at the George Washington University Law School and on the faculty of the Boston University School of Law, where he received Boston University’s Metcalf Award for Excellence in Teaching. He has written extensively, lectured internationally, and testified before Congress on bias crimes and freedom of expression. He is the author of Punishing Hate: Bias Crimes Under American Law, published by Harvard University Press.

Lawrence frequently contributes op-eds to various news sources, such as the Boston Globe, MSNBC Online, and Huffington Post. Prior to his academic career, he served as an Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York and as Chief of that office’s Civil Rights Unit.

EDWARD LIEBOW

Edward B. Liebow is executive director at American Anthropological Association (AAA). He came to the position in 2013 after a long career with the Battelle Memorial Institute, the world’s largest not-for- profit research and development organization. He first joined Battelle in 1986, the year he completed his Ph.D. in cultural anthropology from Arizona State University. He has conducted research and public policy analysis on a variety of energy, public health, and social policy issues concerning disadvantaged communities. While at Battelle, he rose from the rank of research scientist to project leader to director of research operations in the Seattle office.

Ed maintains a position as affiliate associate professor of anthropology and interdisciplinary studies at the University of Washington. He has been a visiting professor of Applied Anthropology and Comparative Economics at Università Carlo Cattaneo Castellanza, VA, Italy, a Senior Fellow of the Fulbright Commission, and have served on the faculty of the CDC-sponsored Summer Evaluation Institute. He has also served on the executive boards of the AAA, the Society for Applied Anthropology, the Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference, and the Jack Straw Media Arts Foundation.

7 DAVID MARSHALL

David Marshall is president of the National Humanities Alliance and executive vice chancellor of the University of California, Santa Barbara. Prior to his appointment as executive vice chancellor, Marshall served as dean of humanities and fine arts and professor of English and of comparative literature for 16 years. Marshall served from 2005 to 2012 as the campus’s first executive dean of the College of Letters and Science. Marshall chaired the UC President’s Advisory Committee on Research in the Humanities, which oversees the UC Humanities Network. Marshall came to UCSB from Yale University in 1997. He received his Bachelor of Arts from Cornell University and his Ph.D. from The Johns Hopkins University. He was a Guggenheim Fellow, and he also received a Yale University Morse Fellowship. His research focuses on 18th-century fiction, aesthetics, and moral philosophy.

LAUREN ONKEY

Lauren Onkey is dean and chair of the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Humanities Center. From 2008- 2015, Onkey served as Vice President of Education and Public Programs at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, where she oversaw the Museum’s award-winning education and community outreach programs. Prior to that, she was associate professor of English at Ball State University, where she taught cultural studies and postcolonial literature and served as Director of Graduate Programs in English. She received her MA and PhD in English from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and holds a BA in English and Government from the College of William and Mary. She is the author of Blackness and Transatlantic Irish Identity: Celtic Soul Brothers (Routledge, 2009) and numerous essays on popular music, postcolonial studies, women’s studies, and cultural studies.

LYNN PASQUERELLA

Lynn Pasquerella has been president of the Association of American Colleges and Universities since July 2016. A philosopher whose career has combined teaching and scholarship with local and global engagement, she has continuously demonstrated a deep and abiding commitment to ensuring that all students have access to excellence in liberal education, regardless of their socioeconomic background.

Pasquerella is a graduate of Quinebaug Valley Community College, Mount Holyoke College, and Brown University. She joined the faculty of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Rhode Island in 1985, rising rapidly through the ranks to the positions of vice provost for research, vice provost for academic affairs, and dean of the graduate school. In 2008, she was named provost of the University of Hartford. In 2010, she was appointed the eighteenth president of Mount Holyoke College. Pasquerella’s presidency of Mount Holyoke was marked by a robust strategic planning process; outreach to local, regional, and international constituencies; and a commitment to a vibrant campus community.

Pasquerella has written extensively on medical ethics, metaphysics, public policy, and the philosophy of law. She serves as senator and vice president of Phi Beta Kappa, as a Trustee of the Lingnan Foundation, and as host of Northeast Public Radio’s The Academic Minute.

8 SPONSORS

The George Washington University—Event Space HISTORY— Capitol Hill Reception The Phi Beta Kappa Society—Luncheon

American Alliance of Museums American Anthropological Association American Council of Learned Societies American Historical Association American Institute for Conservation of Historic & Artistic Works American Philosophical Association American Political Science Association American Schools of Oriental Research American Sociological Association Association of American Universities Association of American University Presses Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities Community College Humanities Association Council of Colleges of Arts & Sciences Federation of State Humanities Councils Midwest Political Science Association National Humanities Center Society for Classical Studies Syracuse University, College of Arts and Sciences The University of Texas at Dallas University of Iowa Libraries University of Maryland, College of Arts and Humanities University of Utah, College of Humanities Virginia Foundation for the Humanities

9 ATTENDEES

Kara Abramson American Political Science Association Kristen Adams Cornell University Tom Adams Tim Aiken National Endowment for the Humanities Denise Albanese George Mason University Jeff Allen Federation of State Humanities Councils Nicholas Allen Willson Center for Humanities and Arts Anneliesa C. Alprin National Trust for the Humanities LaKesha Anderson National Communication Association Andrew Annis Washington State University Mitch Avila CSU Dominguez Hills Razan Azzarkani The Phi Beta Kappa Society Michael D. Bailey Iowa State University Candace Bailey NC Central University David E Barclay German Studies Association Alex Barker Museum of Art and Archaeology University of Missouri Lizzie Barrie Timothy Beal Case Western Reserve University Glynda Becker Washington State University Heather Bené University of Colorado Office of Government Relations Molly Berger Case Western Reserve University Jessica Berman University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) David A. Berry Frank Biess University of California-San Diego Mary Jo Binker Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project Donald A. Bird Long Island University Robert Bowen National Humanities Alliance Alexis Boylan University of Connecticut

10 Jeff Braden NC State University Christopher Brick The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Liz Bucar Northeastern University Eva Caldera The Phi Beta Kappa Society Greg Campbell Community College Humanities Association (CCHA) Luis Campos University of New Mexico Mark Canuel University of Illinois at Chicago Madi Carper National Coalition for History Annemarie Carr Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute, Nicosia Alison Chapman University of Alabama at Birmingham Barbara A Ching Iowa State University John Paul Christy American Council of Learned Societies Monica Clark CAORC Nancy Clark Louisiana State University Diane Cline George Washington University Ada Cohen Dartmouth College Rebecca Copenhaver American Philosophical Association Aaron Cowan Stone House Center for Public Humanities at Slippery Rock University Amber Elaine Cox Council of Colleges of Arts & Sciences (CCAS) Nicole M Crawford University of Wyoming Andy Cullison DePauw University Helen Cullyer Society for Classical Studies Heather Darnell Northern Virginia Comunity College Cynthia Davis University of South Carolina Laura Ann De Lozier Wyoming Institute for Humanities Research Nathaniel Deutsch University of California, Santa Cruz Peter DeYoe Harvard University Angela Phillips Diaz University of California San Diego Bonnie Thornton Dill University of Maryland, College of Arts & Humanities Lillian Doherty University of Maryland, College Park Theresa Donofrio Coe College Erica Dowell University of Pennsylvania Derek Dyer Utah Cultural Alliance Nathan Eckstrand Marian University Kathy Eiler University of California, Irvine Amy J. Elias University of Tennessee Lillian Farhat

11 Rosemary G. Feal Modern Language Association Jennifer Feather The University of North Carolina Greensboro Valerio Ferme University of Colorado Amy Ferrer American Philosophical Association Gerald Fetz University of Montana Jack Fitzmier American Academy of Religion Kathleen Fitzpatrick Modern Language Association Mary Flanagan Dartmouth College Cody J. Foster University of Kentucky Cora Fox Institute for Humanities Research, Arizona State University Mona Frederick Warren Center/Vanderbilt University Carolyn J Fuqua American Academy of Arts & Sciences Jillian Galle Thomas Jefferson Foundation/Monticello Julia Galliker University of Michigan Renee Garris Kathryn Gehred Washington Papers Bob Goldberg Tanner Humanities Center, University of Utah Cassandra Good Papers of James Monroe, University of Mary Washington Cathy Gorn National History Day Valerie Gramling University of Miami Caitlin Green National Endowment for the Humanities Gerry Greenberg College of Arts and Sciences/Syracuse University Eric Gregory Jennifer Grodsky Boston University Jim Grossman American Historical Association Ian Grubman Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Maggie Guggenheimer Virginia Foundation for the Humanities Beatrice Gurwitz National Humanities Alliance Rosalind I. J. Hackett University of Tennessee Kelly Fisk Hamlin Wolf Gap Education Outreach J. Tyler Hamlin Yvonne Hammond West Virginia University Dianne Harris University of Utah Morgan Hayes Art Conservation Northwest John Heaton University of Alaska Fairbanks Carolyn Henrich University of California Jill Hernandez University of Texas at San Antonio

12 Lela Hilton Clemente Course in the Humanities Jonathan Hiskes Simpson Center for the Humanities Rush Holt American Association for the Advancement of Science Yurie Hong Gustavus Adolphus College Brian Hook University of North Carolina, Asheville Maria Iacullo-Bird Council on Undergraduate Research Alex Ilyasova Gene Jarrett Boston University Deborah Jenson Duke University Andy Jewell University of Nebraska-Lincoln Katherine Joslin Western Michigan University Robert Judd American Musicological Society George Justice Arizona State University Jeffrey Kallberg University of Pennsylvania Christine Keiner Rochester Institute of Technology Ben Kershaw American Alliance of Museums Nancy Kidd American Sociological Association Stephen Kidd National Humanities Alliance Peter Knox Case Western Reserve University Laura Stanton Conservation Center for Art & Historic Artifacts Alan Kraut Organization of American Historians Paula Krebs Bridgewater State University Dan Kubis University of Pittsburgh Humanities Center John F. Kutsko Society of Biblical Literature Jane Landers Vanderbilt University Peter Landgren University of Cincinnati Debra Lattanzi Shutika George Mason University Vanessa Lauber University of Wisconsin-Madison John M. Lawlor, Jr. Reading Area Community College Frederick Lawrence The Phi Beta Kappa Society Jeffrey B. Leak Kathryn Lebert The Washington Papers at the University of Virginia Ed Liebow American Anthropological Association Ursula Lindqvist Gustavus Adolphus College Rick Livingston Ohio State University Ignacio López-Calvo University of California, Merced Amelia H. Lyons University of Central Florida

13 Esther Mackintosh Federation of State Humanities Councils Jay Malone History of Science Society Teresa Mangum University of Iowa Jill Mannor Kaplan Institute for the Humanities - Northwestern University David Marshall University of California, Santa Barbara Jeff Martin American Anthropological Association Barbara McCaskill University of Georgia Jim McClure Princeton University Christopher McCord Northern Illinois University Jerry McCormick Don McCown West Chester University Ann McCulloch The Phi Beta Kappa Society Brenna McLaughlin Association of American University Presses Megan C. McNamee Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, The National Gallery of Art Margaret Eleanor Menninger Texas State University Elsie B. Michie College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Louisiana State University Matthew Thomas Miller University of Maryland, College Park Andy Mink National Humanities Center Arwen Mohun University of Delaware Dan Morse University of Nevada, Reno Timothy Murray Cornell University Larry Myers National Endowment for the Humanities Andrew Nestingen Simpson Center for the Humanities Meredith Neuman Clark University Robert Newman National Humanities Center Carey C. Newman Baylor University Press Carmen Nocentelli University of New Mexico Alexandra Nowicki National Humanities Alliance Nick Obourn College Art Association Hunter Ohanian College Art Association Lauren Onkey Cuyahoga Community College Dan O’Sullivan University of Mississippi Megan E. Palmer University of California, Santa Barbara Sheri Parks University of Maryland, College Park Adrian Parr Charles Phelps Taft Research Center at the University of Cincinnati Shawn J. Parry-Giles University of Maryland, College Park Lynn Pasquerella Association of American Colleges and Universities

14 Abby Paulson American Political Science Association Peggy Plympton National Endowment for the Humanities Irena Polic Institute for Humanities Research/UC Santa Cruz Kenneth Price University of Nebraska-Lincoln Maria Pulcini Joint National Committee for Languages Rhiana Quick The Phi Beta Kappa Society Gabriella Ra’anan Vanderbilt University Eric Rasmussen University of Nevada Erik Rau Hagley Museum & Library Joyce Rechtschaffen Princeton University Alyson Reed Linguistic Society of America Christy Regenhardt The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project Jacqueline Reilly National Communication Association Terry Ellen Rhodes University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Jason Rhody Social Science Research Council Malcolm Richardson Bill Rivers Joint National Committee for Languages Isabel Roche Bennington College Jane Rosecrans Reynolds Community College Lee Rothfarb University of California, Santa Barbara Andy Rusnak Community College Humanities Association (CCHA) Carmen Russell American Sociological Association Kathryn Salucka African Studies Association Elizabeth Say Cal State University Northridge Melissa Schaub University of North Carolina at Pembroke George L. Scheper Johns Hopkins University Gregory Schuckman University of Central Florida Julia Schwarz American Political Science Association Ruth Seyler American Institute for Conservation Olga Shevchenko Williams College David Shumway Carnegie Mellon University Megan Skord Kaplan Institute for the Humanities Kathryn Sloan University of Arkansas Julia A. Smith Association of American Universities Laura Stanton Conservation Center for Art & Historic Artifacts Karen Steele J Sargeant Reynolds Community College Todd Stein Mid-America Arts Alliance

15 Jennifer Stertzer University of Virginia Travis Stimeling West Virginia University Daniel Stout University of Mississippi Steve Stuempfle Society for Ethnomusicology Paul Sukys Community College Humanities Asscociation and North Central State College Andrea Tarnowski Dartmouth College Rob Townsend American Academy of Arts and Sciences Joe Trimmer Ball State University Samuel Truett University of New Mexico Christopher Tuttle CAORC Georges Van Den Abbeele UC Irvine Scott Vander Ploeg Madisonville Community College Rob Vaughan Virginia Foundation for the Humanities Andy Vaughn American Schools of Oriental Research (ASOR) Jenny Veninga St. Edward’s University Janet Ward University of Oklahoma Alisse Waterston American Anthropological Association/John Jay College, CUNY Mary Watt University of Florida, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences Eryl Wentworth American Institute for Conservation of Artistic & Historic Works Susan E. West Delaware State University Steve Wheatley American Council of Learned Societies Lee White National Coalition for History Marilyn P. Whittington Delaware Humanities Barbara Will Dartmouth College Kathleen Williams National Archives/NHPRC Owen Williams Folger Institute, Folger Shakespeare Library Greg Williams CSU Dominguez Hills Richelle Wilson University of Wisconsin-Madison Anne Windham Brown University Fred Winter F.A. Winter Associates Adam Wolfson National Endowment for the Humanities Peggy Wright-Cleveland Florida State University

16 GETTING AROUND WASHINGTON D.C.

GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY

17 CAPITOL HILL AND SURROUNDING AREAS

Capitol Hill Hotel

18 Washington D.C. Metro System WASHINGTON D.C. METRO SYSTEM

StarredSTARRED Metro METRO Stations: STATIONS Union Station Metro Station, Red Line (use for FOGGYFoggy BOTTOM-GWU Bottom- GWU METRO Metro STATIONStation, ,Orange/Blue UNIONSenate STATION Office BuildingsMETRO STATION & Sewall, Red-Belmont Line (use House) for Orange/BlueLine Line Senate• Office 2-3 blocksBuildings from & SenateSewall-Belmont Office Buildings House) • NW corner 23rd St. & I St. ■ NW corner 23rd and I St. ■ • 2-34 blocks blocks from from Senate US Capitol Office Building Buildings

■ • 4 blocks6-8 blocks from fromUS Capitol House Building Office Buildings DUPONT CIRCLE METRO STATION, Red Line ■ 6-8 blocks from House Office Buildings ■ SW corner Connecticut Ave. & Q St. NW Capitol South Metro Station, Orange/Blue Line Dupont Circle Metro Station, Red Line CAPITOL SOUTH METRO STATION, Orange/Blue Line ■ SW corner Connecticut Ave. & 19th St. NW (use for House Office Buildings) • SW corner Connecticut Ave. & Q St. NW (use for• House1-3 blocksOffice from Buildings) House Office Buildings • SW corner Connecticut Ave. & 19th St. NW ■ • 1-33 blocks blocks from from House US Capitol Office Building Buildings ■ •3 blocks4 blocks from from US SenateCapitol Office Building Buildings ■ 4 blocks from Senate Office Buildings NATIONAL HUMANITIES ALLIANCE 19