Classical Association of Canada / Société canadienne des études classiques





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                    C A N A D I A N   C L A S S I C A L



                       B   U   L   L   E   T   I   N



         C A N A D I E N   D E S   E T U D E S   A N C I E N N E S



                VOLUME/TOME 4, NUMBER/NUMERO 6, 1998 02 15



        Published by e-mail by the Classical Association of Canada/ 

                  Publie par courrier electronique par la 

                  societe canadienne des etudes classiques



                 President:  A. Daviault, Universite Laval

                       ANDRE.DAVIAULT@LIT.ULAVAL.CA

        Secretary/Secretaire:  I.M. Cohen, Mount Allison University 

                              ICOHEN@MTA.CA                     

          Treasurer/Tresorier:  C. Cooper, University of Winnipeg

                        CRAIG.COOPER@UWINNIPEG.CA

                      

                           Edited by/redige par 

                       K.H. Kinzl, Trent University

                             KKINZL@TRENTU.CA





http://www.trentu.ca/cac/                                     ISSN 1198-9149

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CONTENTS:



[1]  Association announcements; editor's remarks

[2]  Lectures and seminars

[3]  Job openings

[4]  Summer 1998: summer courses

[5]  Conferences

[6]  Calls for papers

[7]  Varia

[8]  WWW sites noted



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[1]  Association announcements;  editor's remarks



[1.1]  Word has reached me that Professor S.E. Smethurst, past president of

the Association (http://www.trentu.ca/cac/presidents.html), has died in

Victoria, BC, in January, 1998. 



[1.2]  The directory *Classical Studies in Canadian Universities* 

(http://www.trentu.ca/classics/cacdir.html) is undergoing a complete 

updating at this moment.  About one-third of enquiries have been answered.  

I hope to have all responses before the end of March.  Gratitude is 

expressed here, rather than by individual message, to all those who have 

already donated time.

  I hope to be able to produce a hardcopy version like the one we used to

have by the time of the CAC meetings, or at least *something* printed. 



[1.3]  I know nothing about the situation at Carleton which goes beyond

what can be read in bulletins. This is meant to deflect enquiries. 



[1.4]  A reminder again that there is our Classics-Canada list which has 

functioned extremely effectively last autumn.  Departmental reports 

received by it have been collected in a digest which is somewhat slim.  I 

would urge especially chairs to subscribe to Classics-Canada.  All relevant

information and instructions can be found at our web site. 



...........................................................................



[2]  Lectures and Seminars 



From:	IN%"mcropp@acs.ucalgary.ca" 15-JAN-1998 10:59:52.53



UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY

Department of Greek, Latin & Ancient History

Research Seminars, Winter 1998



Times: 3.00-4.30 in SS 541 unless otherwise announced



Enquiries: Prof. M. Cropp (220-7861;  mcropp@acs.ucalgary.ca)

or to the Department (220-5537; glah@acs.ucalgary.ca)



Fri. Feb. 20: Herman Pontes (University of Alberta)

Reading the ancient Virgils

Fri. March 13: David Mirhady (University of Calgary)

Isocrates' Helen

THURS. March 19: Kelly Olson (University of Chicago)

Cultural studies and the ancient historian

Fri. April 3: Dawn Cain (University of Calgary)

Telling Stories with Pictures: the Nature of Narrative in Aegean Bronze Age

Art.



                         --------------------





From:	IN%"hmason@chass.utoronto.ca" 19-JAN-1998 10:43:45.42 19-JAN-1998 10:43:00.00



UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO



Departmental Seminars.

Friday, 20 March, 3:10, UC 144

Thomas Martin (Holy Cross College) "Enduring Failure in Early Hellenistic

Athens: from Plutarch *Phocion* 28 to IG (II)2 657".

(Professor Martin is also a key member of the Perseus consortium.)



Friday, 3 April, 3:10, UC 144

Robert Kaster (Princeton University) "The Taxonomy of Patience, or When is

*Patientia* not a Virtue?". 



Finally, a reminder: Friday, 6 March, 1:10 p.m., 123 St. George St. 

Dr. Arkadi Kovelman (York University) "Humankind as a crowd: Philosophical

and Rabbinical Approaches to Misanthropy". 

This talk is co-sponsored by Religious Studies (hence the unusual time and

place). 



                         --------------------



OBERLIN COLLEGE 



The 1998 Charles Beebe Martin Classical Lectures



Four public lectures by 

Professor Mark W. Edwards, Professor of Classics, Stanford University.



Sound, Sense and Rhythm: Listening to Greek and Latin Poetry.



Feb. 16, 20:00 hrs: Homer I: Scene-Change and Summary

Feb. 17, 20:00 hrs: Homer II: Poetry and Speech

Feb. 19, 20:00 hrs: Music and Meaning in Three Songs of Aeschylus

Feb. 20, 16;30 hrs: Poetry in the Latin Language



All lectures will be held in the Bailey Lecture Hall (Room 106) of the King 

Building at College and Professor Streets on the Oberlin College Campus.



                         --------------------



Cambridge Ancient History Seminar, Lent Term 1998



`The Ancient Economy Twenty-Five Years After "The Ancient Economy"'



Tuesdays, 5.00 p.m., Cambridge Classics Faculty, Room G 21. ALL WELCOME.



                         --------------------



UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER



CLASSICS RESEARCH SEMINAR: TOPICS IN CURRENT RESEARCH



Feb.-May programme



All meetings are held in room S 3.10 (south side, third floor) in the

Arts Building, at 4:00 p.m.



Thurs. 5 Feb.

Andrew Dalby: A lost genre: memoirs and anecdotes in classical Greek

literature 

Thurs. 19 Feb

Steven Green: The Hercules and Cacus episode in Fasti 1

Thurs. 5 March

Robert L. Fowler: Pelasgians

Thurs. 26 March

Mark Edwards: Pagan and Christian Monotheism in the age of Constantine

Thurs. 23 April

Philip van der Eijk: Was there such a thing as intellectual historiography

in the ancient world? 

Thurs. 7 May

Iveta Mednikarova: Epithets in Latin Funerary Inscriptions: some patterns

of regional and social variation 



...........................................................................



[3]   JOB OPENINGS



There are two prime locations listing job openings, the latter only for the 

USA:



http://www.umich.edu/~classics/archives/jobs/

    There is also a convenient link from Michigan to the APA site:

http://scholar.cc.emory.edu/scripts/APA/positioninfo.html



I draw attention to two sessional opening at Royal Holloway College, 

University of London, listed at the Michigan site.



                         --------------------



POSITION AVAILABLE



ANDREW W. MELLON PROFESSOR OF CLASSICAL STUDIES AT

THE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES AT ATHENS



Term:	July 1, 1999 to June 30, 2002.

Compensation: Commensurate with rank and experience.  Health insurance,

TIAA- CREF, and housing at the School (residence is required) are provided.

Qualifications:	Competence in Classical philology, literature, history, and

archaeology sufficient to provide a graduate-level introduction to the

sites, monuments, museums, and topography of Greece.  It is essential that

the Mellon Professor of Classical Studies be a proven, productive scholar

with long experience in Greece. 

Duties:	Responsible for planning, organizing and conducting the academic

program of the School under the supervision of the Director.  Advises

Members of the School on their research.  May be asked to collaborate in

the administration of the School, and in the Director's absence or

incapacity, to assume the duties of the Director. 

Application: A cover letter and curriculum vitae constitute the application

and should be sent to: Professor John H. Kroll, Chair, Committee on

Personnel, American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 6-8 Charlton

Street, Princeton, NJ 08540-5232. Tel: 609-683-0800  Fax: 609-924-0578

E-mail: ascsa@ascsa.org  Website: www.ascsa.org 

DEADLINE FOR COMPLETED APPLICATIONS:  MARCH 1, 1998.

The appointment will be announced May 9, 1998.



...........................................................................



[4]  Summer 1998: summer courses



From:	IN%"hmason@chass.utoronto.ca" 30-JAN-1998 

Subject: Summer Courses in Classics in Toronto

 

This is what I have so far about 1988 summer courses. Please let me know in

the next few days of any additions, corrections (including typos), before

it is put up as page on the web-site 



A.   St. George Campus, University of Toronto (Undegraduate)



     CLA 205Y   GREEK AND ROMAN MYTHOLOGY

     MW 6-8

     May 11 - August 7 + exam in period August 10-13



     CLA 230F   INTRO TO GREEK HISTORY

     TR 1-4

     May 11 - June 19 + exam in period June 22-26



     CLA 231S   INTRO TO ROMAN HISTORY

     TR 1-4

     June 29-August 7 + exam in period Aug 10-13





          !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                              R E M I N D E R

               CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION OF CANADA MEMBERSHIP:  

          The bulletin is meant primarily to represent a service 

          by the CAC to members of the CAC.  If you are not at 

          present a member, you may wish to consider joining.  The 

          regular annual membership (which includes *Phoenix* and 

          *Classical Views/Echos du monde classique*) is CAD 75 

          (sustaining CAD 90, life CAD 750, student or retired 

          CAD 30);  contact:

               Professor Craig Cooper, Treasurer,  

               Department of Classics, University of Winnipeg, 

               515 Portage Avenue, Winnipeg MB  R3B 2E9, 

               e-mail craig.cooper@uwinnipeg.ca

          !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!





     GRK 100Y   INTRO CLASSICAL GREEK

     MWF 9-12

     May 11-Aug 7 + Exam in period Aug 10-13

     R.M. Toporoski



     There is also the possibility of Independent Study

     (CLA 401H, GRK 429H, LAT 429H) 



     The following courses, offered by other departments, can be counted

     in Classics Programs:



     FAH 203S   GREEK ART AND ARCHITECTURE

     FAH 208F   CITIES IN ASIA MINOR

     PHL 200Y   ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY



     (They will be taught in the evening session)



A final timetable will be issued March 23



University of Toronto students may enrol in the usual way, beginning

April 13



Students at other universities should obtain a "letter of permission" 

from their own institution, and contact Woodsworth College,

119 St. George Street, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A9, 416-978-4444 (voice)

978-4088 (fax) info@woodsworth.utoronto.ca to be admitted as a "Visiting

Student" Deadline for admission: 15 March 



B.  York University (Undergraduate)



AK/GK 1410 Intro Modern Greek. MW 7-10. York Campus. May-August

AK/LA 1400 Intro Latin. MW 6:30-9:30. Glendon campus.May-August

AK/HIST 3740. Classical World. MTWRF 9-12 noon. York Campus. May-mid-June.

Topic: ancient warfare. 



York University, 4700 Keele Street Toronto M3J 1P3. Admissions enquiries

416-736-5000.

Info: Jonathan Edmondson, jedmond@YorkU.ca 416-736-5123 (voice) 736-5836 (fax)



University of Toronto students should apply to their College Registrar

for a "Letter of Permission."



C.  Medieval Latin (Graduate) at the Centre for Medieval Studies



An MA course and a PhD course will be offered 22 June - 7 August



Fee: Canadians, $600 (CDN), non-Canadians $600 (US)



Prospective students must take the Centre's MA exam in April; admission

and placement will depend on performance in this exam.



Applications are due by 1 March 1998



Centre for Medieval Studies, 39 Queen's Park Crescent E

Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2C3



medieval@chass.utoronto.ca



www.chass.utoronto.ca:8080/~medieval/www/programs/latinp.html



                         --------------------



From:	IN%"ggf2@psu.edu" 22-JAN-1998 11:31:47.61



Pennsylvania State University Summer course

http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/g/g/ggf2/sumlat.html



Garrett G. Fagan

Assistant Professor of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies and History

Penn State University

108 Weaver Bldg

University Park, PA 16802-5500

(814) 863-0091 (tel)

(814) 863-7840 (fax)

ggf2@psu.edu

                         --------------------



In the summer of 1998, the UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS

will offer Latin as part of the University's Summer Foreign Language

Institute. The course will take place from June 9 through August 6. It is

an intensive course, designed to cover two years of college-level Latin (12

credit hours earned). Students may also choose a non-credit option, which

is available at a much lower cost. The Summer Latin Institute is an

excellent opportunity for motivated students to gain rapid proficiency in

Latin.

[.........................]

For further information, visit our homepage at

http://www.virginia.edu/~classics/sli98.html



                         --------------------



Information about the summer courses in Greek & Latin at the University of

Chicago can be found on the web page



http://www2.uchicago.edu/grahamschool/summer/greek.html



...........................................................................



[5]  Conferences



From:	IN%"pocleiri@uoguelph.ca"  "Padraig M O'Cleirigh" 11-FEB-1998



THE GOD IN THE TEXT:  A literary and philosophical Symposium, University of

Guelph, MacKinnon Building, Room 107, Saturday 28 February 1998. 



8.45: Registration. (Fee of $5 includes a sandwich lunch)



There will be ten minutes for discussion after each presentation.



9.15: Riemer Faber (U of Waterloo), "The Portrayal of Juno and Pallas

			Athena in Book One of Vergil's Aeneid".

9.55: Peter Erb (Wilfred Laurier U), "Divinities in `The Death of Vergil'

							by Hermann Broch".

10.35: Break for Refreshments.

10.55: Ken Dorter (U of Guelph), "Reading and Writing the God".

11.35: Jackie Murray (U of Guelph), "ALIEN SUN RISING: Apollo in the

					`Argonautica' of Apollonius".

12.10: David Beiles (U of Western Ontario), "A Reminiscence of Cretan

					Apollo in the `Iliad' of Homer"

12.45: Break for Lunch.

13.45: Hans Eichner (U of Toronto), "`God' in T.S. Eliot's Poems".

14.45: James Lafferty (St James H.S. Guelph), "GIFTS OF THE GODDESS:

						Heaney's Bog People".

15.15: Break for Refreshments.

15.30: Metka Zupancic (U of Guelph), "LANGUAGE AS GOD: Orphism and

		approaches to myth in contemporary French literature".

16.10: Jeff Mitscherling (U of Guelph), "Divine Inspiration in Plato"

16.50: Padraig O'Cleirigh (U of Guelph), "WEAVING IN REALITY: The God of

				some philosophers in a pern of poems".



Further details available from the President of the Classics Club, Ms Sujun

Myong by telephone at: (519) 763 6976 or by e-mail at: pocleiri@uoguelph.ca



                         --------------------



				ATHENA

			IN THE CLASSICAL WORLD



		Lincoln College Oxford, 2nd-4th April 1998       

		Organisers: Susan Deacy and Alexandra Villing



Speakers:  Nick Allen (Oxford), Ina Altripp (Bonn), John Betts (Bristol),

Anna de Pretis (Bristol), Antonia Faita (Bristol), Thomas Ganschow (Basel),

Daniel Gershenson (Tel-Aviv), Fritz Graf (Basel), Leslie Hammond

(University of Missouri, Columbia), Virginia Hicks (Virginia), Carolyn

Higbie (Harvard), Andromache Karanika (Princeton), Alexandra Karentzos

(Essen), Barbara Kowalzig (Oxford), Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones (Cardiff), Elsie

Mathiopoulos (Bonn), Silvia Milanezi (Universite Francois Rabelais, Tours),

Jenifer Neils (Case Western Reserve University), Thalia Papadopoulou

(Cambridge), Stefan Ritter (Freiburg), Noel Robertson (Brock), Gerald

Schaus (Wilfrid Laurier University - paper co-written with Hector Williams,

University of British Columbia), Anastasia Serghidou (Centre Louis Gernet),

Eleanor Sibley (Nottingham), Sarah Spence (Georgia), Chikako Sugaya

(Athens), Annette Teffeteller (Concordia), Claudia Wagner (Oxford) 



Early booking is essential as space is very limited.  Deadline for receipt

of forms and cheques: 

2 March 1998



http://www.keele.ac.uk/depts/cl/athena.htm

(the website will be regularly updated in the run up to the conference)



                         --------------------



From: Willard McCarty 

Subject: Computing in Classical Studies



Computing in Classical Studies



A colloquium on the current role, possible futures and both the scholarly

and professional implications of applied computing in classical Greek and

Roman studies. Sponsored by the Centre for Computing in the Humanities and

Department of Classics, King's College London, and the Institute of

Classical Studies, University of London.

Thursday, 12 February 1998, Institute of Classical Studies, University of

London, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU 

Programme and registration details available at

.



...........................................................................



[6]  Call for papers



CAMWS SOUTHERN SECTION, CALL FOR PAPERS, OCTOBER 29-31, 1998



All classicists and members of CAMWS (especially, but not limited to,

members of the Southern Section) are cordially invited to attend our next

biennial gathering, October 29-31, 1998, in Waco, Texas.  The meeting is at

the invitation of Baylor University, and will be held at the Waco Hilton

Inn on the Brazos River adjacent to the downtown district and a short

distance from Baylor.  Meeting concurrently with us will be the Texas

Classical Association. 

The deadline for submission of abstracts for the program is MAY 15, 1998

(postmark).  We will offer our traditionally congenial sessions for your

scholarly and paedagogical papers.  Papers on the major authors taught in

secondary schools, as well as those dealing with all aspects of teaching,

are eagerly sought.  Colleagues at institutions with graduate programs are

urged to encourage submission of abstracts by graduate students. 

We welcome proposals for special sessions:  we hope to offer a panel on the

Victorians and the Classics to be held in the inspiring Armstrong Browning

Library at Baylor amid memorabilia and rare book collections relating to

Robert Browning, and  sessions on New Testament Greek and on archaeology; a

panel has been planned to mark the 1900th anniversary of the publication of

Tacitus' Agricola and Germania. 

One-page abstracts for all papers, identified  by title only, should be

sent to the Southern Section Secretary-Treasurer; in lieu of a cover

letter, please include on a separate page your name and academic

affiliation as you would like them to appear on the program, the title of

your paper, and your address (including e-mail if possible).  Finally,

please indicate any audiovisual equipment required.  Standard length of

papers will be 15 minutes, 20 minutes for illustrated presentations. 

Robert W. Ulery, Jr., Secy.-Treas., CAMWS Southern Section, Wake Forest

University, Dept. of Classical Languages, Box 7343 Reynolda Station,

Winston-Salem, NC  27109-7343;  e-mail:  ulery@wfu.edu 



                         --------------------



CALL FOR PAPERS



FOOD STORAGE AND URBANIZATION IN ANTIQUITY



ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE OF AMERICA, 100th MEETINGS.

DECEMBER 1998, WASHINGTON, DC



I am organizing a colloquium on centralized food storage in urban centers

in Egyptian, Mediterranean and Mesopotamian antiquity.  The chronological

span is from the earliest cities and states through the Roman period. The

papers should ad-dress problems concerning food storage, management and

redistribution either in urban centers, or affecting them.  Preference

will be given to papers that address specific archaeological data and

their interpretation, but theoretical issues may also be included.

Abstracts are to be no longer than 250 words, and are due by March 1,

1998.  Abstracts will be accepted by normal mail or email.  If interested

please email me at the address below.



Dr. Thomas F. Strasser, Department of Humanities and Religious Studies,

California State University, Sacramento, Sacramento, CA,  95819;  (916)

278-7329;  TSTRASS@SACLINK.CSUS.EDU 



                         --------------------



DRH98 - Digital Resources for the Humanities 1998

University of Glasgow

Humanities Advanced Technology and Information Institute

9 September 1998 to 12 September 1998

Information: http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/HATII/DRH98/

Email enquiries: enquiries@drh98.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk

Important dates

Submission deadline:    March 15th, 1998

Notice of acceptance:   April 15th, 1998



                         --------------------



Ohio Classical Conference Call for Papers 

76th Annual Meeting in Athens, Ohio 

October 22 - 24, 1998  



DRAMA IN THE CLASSROOM



The Ohio Classical Conference invites submissions for paper abstracts on 

any aspect of ancient drama.  We shall consider our theme, "Drama in the 

Classroom," broadly.  We welcome abstracts on Greek and Roman drama, 

comedy and tragedy, and the archaeology of the ancient theater. We would 

also welcome abstracts on teaching ancient drama and the use of drama 

itself as a teaching method for the Classical languages and Classical 

Civilization.          



Abstracts should not exceed 750 words in length.  Presentations 

ordinarily last between 15 and 20 minutes.  Please indicate whether you 

will need any special equipment, audio-visual or computer, for your 

talk. Send five copies of the abstract by July 1, 1998 to:



Professor William Owens, Department of Classics, Ellis Hall, Ohio

University, Athens, OH 45701-2979, E-mail Address: owensb@ohiou.edu 



...........................................................................



[7]  Varia



Date: Thu, 15 Jan 1998 09:09:21 -0700

From: "Theodore F. Brunner" 

To: classics@u.washington.edu

Subject: Thesaurus Linguae Graecae



I wish to announce my decision to retire from the directorship of the

Thesaurus Linguae Graecae, a position which I have held since the beginning

of the TLG in 1972.  My retirement will become effective on February 1,

1998.  Professor Maria Pantelia will assume the directorship on that date,

and all TLG-related matters of concern to members of the Classics list

should be addressed to her.  Professor Pantelia's e-mail address is

mcpantel@uci.edu. 



Theodore F. Brunner



[TLG Mailing address:  UCI, TLG, 3450 Berkeley Place, Irvine CA 92697-5550

Tel.: 824-7031,  Fax: 824-8434, AREA CODE as of 1998 04 17: 949 (until then 

714),  e-mail tlg@uci.edu                  http://www.uci.edu:80/~tlg/]



                         --------------------



*ATHENS NEWS*, 1997 12 21 (Sunday)

Electronic edition: http://athensnews.dolnet.gr



        Pakistani visitors claim link to Alexander the Great's army



     Lineage traced back to Macedonian conqueror's expeditionary troops



SOME dark-skinned, others fair with light brown hair and blue eyes, but all

speak a language with Greek roots and believe in 12 gods like those of

ancient Mount Olympus. If you ask them who they are, they answer, "We

belong to Alexander the Great." Thirteen children from the Kalas tribe who

claim their ancestors were Alexander the Great's soldiers arrived in Greece

yesterday. "We have come to discover the culture and history of Greece,"

said one of the young girls dressed in a traditional black dress with an

embroidered hem. She bears tribal markings on her cheeks and forehead and a

plait at the front of her hair crowns her face before disappearing beneath

a bright woollen hat. Their home, the roots of which they trace back to the

ancient Hellenistic Kingdom of Bactria, lies at an altitude of 2,500 metres

in the snowy slopes of the Caucasus mountains, bordering Pakistan and

India. The village is believed to have been founded by ancient Greek

soldiers who served under Alexander the Great, King of Macedonia (356-323

BC) who conquered Persia and a part of India during his short reign. "We

must not see them as mythical beings," said Thanasis Lerounis, a member of

the Teachers Federation Committee (OLME) who is accompanying the children.

"They often go hungry, lack medical treatment and even drinkable water. And

the tragedy is that the tribe, their customs and traditions are facing

extinction," he added. 



[Reprinted by permission of the Editor, Mr Gandolfo]



...........................................................................



[8]  WWW sites noted





I have the pleasure to announce that the Latin text of Books 2, 3 and 4 of

Pliny the Elder's Natural History are now on the Web at the LacusCurtius

site at

http://www.ukans.edu/history/index/europe/ancient_rome/E/Roman/Texts/Pliny_the_E

lder/home*.html

Book 5 is in process, and I hope to have all 37 up by July 1st. The text is

also being linked to a Geographical Index, major websites, etc.

Bill Thayer



LacusCurtius

http://www.ukans.edu/history/index/europe/ancient_rome/E/Roman

RomanSites

http://www.ukans.edu/history/index/europe/ancient_rome/E/Roman/RomanSites*



                         --------------------



Home Page of the Chair of Classical Philology, Tartu University, Estonia:

   http://www.ut.ee/klassik/



                         --------------------



Virtual Rome:

   http://www.aud.ucla.edu/~dabernat/rome/index.html



                         --------------------



The Ancient Medicine/Medicina Antiqua website is pleased to announce an

important new hypertext translation of Galen's Commentary On Hippocrates' On

the Nature of Man.  This translation is the work of W. J. Lewis, assisted by

her colleagues working at the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae, Irvine, California

(J.A. Beach and S. Rubio-Fernaz).

http://www.ea.pvt.k12.pa.us/medant/hyprtxts.htm

The main index page for Ancient Medicine/Medicina Antiqua is

http://www.ea.pvt.k12.pa.us/medant



                         --------------------



".... hypersite, 'The Corax Zone,' ....



   http://omni.cc.purdue.edu/~corax



"This has a large collection of links to classics metasites, to sites

grouped by area of interest (mythology, rhetoric, etc), to ancillary tools

(postclassical text-databases, lexica, university directories, etc), to

cyber-journals and listservs, to visual resources, and so forth."





::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



       VISIT THE WWW HOME PAGE OF THE CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION OF CANADA

                  SOCIETE CANADIENNE DES ETUDES CLASSIQUES:



                         http://www.trentu.ca/cac/



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          NEXT REGULAR ISSUE:   1998 03 15.   Deadline: 1998 03 10



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