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Classics

Student Planning Calendar

Grant and Fellowship Opportunities

Jobs and Internships

Grad Schools

Study Away

Alumni

 

Students

Classics Student Planning Calendar -link

Grant and Fellowship Opportunities

Scholarship and Grant listings are available in the Classics Department office in the Classics Student Resources file cabinet drawer. Other information can be found on the Macalester College Academic Programs Website or at the links below.

Scholarships and Grants for Juniors and Seniors and Sophomores

Keck Grants - for summer research

Jane C. Waldbaum Archaeological Field School Scholarship - for summer excavation

Jobs and Internships

Macalester Career Development Center
See the CDC's Classics page.

Macalester Internship Program

The Minnesota Historical Society, The Science Museum of Minnesota and The Minneapolis Institute of Arts have had both paid work and volunteer internships available.

Archaeological Fieldwork Opportunities Bulletin (AFOB), lists different projects for students.

Grad Schools

We plan to add this content soon.

Study Away -link

Alumni

Alumni! We want to hear from you. What are you up to? Have news to share with your fellow Classicists? Send us an email at pitman@macalester.edu and we will happily include you in this section.

Sophie Lowry, '05: graduated with an MSc with distinction in November 2006 from the University of Edinburgh's Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies department. Her dissertation entitled "Conflict and Conciliation: A Survey of the Relationship Between the French State and its Muslims" focused on the ways in which a presence of Muslim minority throughout the EU, in particular France, challenges many existing philosophies of citizenship, ethnicity and religiousity in both non-Muslim and Muslim perspectives. She is currently working for the University of Edinburgh at the recently-formed Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab World.

Patrick D'Silva, '03: writes, "I am living in Boulder, CO where I am working as a freelance Arabic translator and teaching Arabic classes. I graduated from Harvard Divinity School in 2005 with a Master's in Theological Studies.
My best to everyone in the department"

Jason Schlude, '02: wrote in June 2004 that he passed his MA exam at Berkeley. He said, "As for what's next, I continue on here in the doctoral program this coming
fall". He assures us that, "I have not yet, to my knowledge anyway, completely stained the reputation of Macalester here at Berkeley. Then again, I still have plenty of time for that next year and perhaps in the years thereafter".

Tim Wallace, '02: "I am in England now, Southampton, doing a MA in Maritime Archaeology. The course (Maritime Archaeology MA/MSc - University of Southampton) has really started to pick up now that we are in our second semester. I am taking courses on conservation of underwater cultural materials, maritime geoarchaeology, conservation of the maritime cultural zone and a class on methods in underwater archaeology. The conservation of underwater cultural materials class is based in Portsmouth, at the Mary Rose Trust. [The Mary Rose was a 16th century English warship and favorite of Henry VIII - it was excavated and raised in the late 70's and early 80's - one of the largest (famous, expensive, etc.) maritime archaeological investigations of our time] We will be working primarily with artifacts from the Mary Rose. My dissertation is due in September, which will more than likely involve a GIS investigation of a European port-city and its changes through time through the use of historic maps, archaeological remains and survey, etc. It's still in its 'convoluted' stage, as what I am going to write is not too clear just yet. After my program here, I plan to (eventually, but I don't know when - could be next spring, or the following fall) pursue a masters in GIS. I suppose the most important thing to say is that the course here is really great. I was a little down on it last semester, but now that things have gotten a little more interdisciplinary (chemistry, geology, geography, etc.) I am really loving it."

Ben Rubin, '01: " I am currently finishing up my second year of grad school at the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) in the Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology and I'm having a great time. The classes I have taken thus far have been challenging, enlightening and extremely varied, ranging from basic language classes like Herodotus to more exotic seminars on topics such as Iranian Art and Archaeology, Power and Ideology and Survey Methodology. The wide range of material covered in these classes has helped me to approach my main research interests (i.e. the Roman Imperial cult,Greek/Jewish identity under the Roman empire) in new ways. In addition to my PHD, I am working on obtaining a certificate in Greek and Roman History, as well as masters degree in the Greek language. This summer I will be working at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology (Ann Arbor) doing research in connection with a show entitled "Individual and Society in Ancient Egypt" (March 7-August 9 if anyone's in town). I hope to finish an article on Egyptian bronze votive dedication from the late New Kingdom to the Hellenistic Period."

Rebecca Blom Carle, '98: "I am living in rural Salisbury, NH, and enjoying the thrill of being a new mom to my son born in January 2004. I continue to work part-time as Collections Manager at the Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum and am really enjoying the opportunity to mentor those who are just beginning their museum careers. I am fortunate to work at a family-friendly place that allows me to continue pursuing my career goals while caring for my son, something I was not certain I would be able to do when I was dreaming about my future when I was still at Mac. I guess all things are possible if you look hard enough.
It is great to hear about all the exciting activities going on at Mac Classics. Best of luck to all."

Chris Dayton, '98 "I'm in my third year of study in the Archaeology Department at Boston University. I will be focusing on the central Andean region of South America in my dissertation work, but my technical experience (oddly enough) brings me back to classics now and then. For instance, last summer I worked briefly
at a site on the Spanish island of Menorca, carrying out ground-penetrating radar surveys for the Boston University field school there. Most of my other fieldwork since I participated in the Macalester Black Sea Project in 1998 has been in Peru and Bolivia. I'll be getting married this coming summer, so further fieldwork will have to wait, but eventually I'll be using ground-penetrating radar and other geophysical methods to map buried structures at several South American sites."


Did we forget something? Have alumni news to share? Contact pitman@macalester.edu

 


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