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Recent Graduates
Alumni Notes
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Recent Graduates
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Elizabeth Waraksa
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2007. Egyptology
CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow
11630D Charles E. Young Research Library
UCLA - Box 951575
Los Angeles , CA 90025-1575
tel 310-206-2473
fax 310-825-3777
ewaraksa@library.ucla.edu
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Lance Allred
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2007. Assyriology
Postdoctoral Associate
Department of Near Eastern Studies
Cornell University
409 White Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853-7901
allred@jhu.edu
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Alhena Gadotti
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2006. Assyriology
Postdoctoral Associate
Department of Near Eastern Studies
Cornell University
409 White Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853-7901
alhena@jhu.edu
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Yekaterina Barbash
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2006. Egyptian Art
Assistant Curator, Arts of Ancient Egypt
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY 11238-6052
T (718)-501-6285 F (718)-501-6140
yekaterina.barbash@brooklynmuseum.org
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Nozomu Kawai
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2006. Egyptology
Visiting Associate Professor
Research Institute for Science & Engineering
Waseda University
Project Room for the Research in Egypt
907 Measurement 55-S
Waseda University, Okubo Campus
3-4-1 Okubo, Shinjuku-ku Tokyo, 169-8555, JAPAN
Phone/Fax +81-3-5286-3142
nozomu.kawai@aoni.waseda.jp
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Yoo-Ki Kim
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2006. Hebrew Bible, Northwest Semitic Philology
Lecturer
Presbyterian Theological Seminary
Seoul, Korea
yk@jhu.edu
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Tammy Krygier
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2006. Egyptian Art and Archaeology
takrygier@verizon.net
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Ishwaran
Mudliar
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2005. Hebrew Bible, Northwest Semitic Philology
Assistant Professor of Old Testament
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
P.O. Box 22386
Fort Worth, TX 76122-0386
817-923-1921, ext. 4452
imudliar@swbts.edu
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JJ
Shirley
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2005. Egyptology
Assistant Professor (UK Lecturer) in Egyptology
Department of Classics, Ancient History & Egyptology, School of
Humanities
University of Wales Swansea
Singleton Park
Swansea SA2 8PP
Wales, United Kingdom
j.j.shirley@swansea.ac.uk
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Alice
Petty
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2004. Archaeology
Lecturer
Stanford University
aapetty@stanford.edu
damiqti@gmail.com
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Violaine
Chauvet
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2004. Egyptian Art and Archaeology
Assistant Professor, History
Framingham State
College
100 State Street
Framingham, MA 01702
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Ken D. Fentress
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2004. Hebrew Bible, Northwest Semitic
Philology
Dean of Intercultural Programs
Assistant Professor of Old Testament
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
2825 Lexington Road
Louisville, Kentucky 40280
Office: 502-897-4863
kfentress@sbts.edu
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Susanna Garfein
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2004. Hebrew Bible
Assistant Professor of Hebrew and Bible Coordinator of Hebrew Language
Baltimore Hebrew University
5800 Park Heights Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21215
410-578-6925
sgarfein@bhu.edu
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John Nichols
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2004. Near Eastern Archaeology
kirmak@westinternet.net
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Kathlyn
Mary (Kara) Cooney
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2003. Egyptology
Lecturer
Introduction to Humanities
Stanford University
kcooney@standford.edu
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Daniel Kirsch
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2003. Hebrew Bible, Northwest
Semitic Philology
University of Maryland Baltimore
County
kirsch@umbc.edu
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Bruce Wells
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2003. Hebrew Bible, Ancient Law
Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Religion, Gustavus Adolphus
College
407 W. Nassau St., St. Peter, MN 56082, 507-933-6296
bwells@gustavus.edu
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Ryan
Byrne
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2002. Hebrew Bible, Northwest Semitics
Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible
Department of Religious Studies
Rhodes College
2000 North Parkway
Memphis, TN 32112
901-843-3258
byrner@rhodes.edu
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Simone
Burger Robin
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2002. Egyptology
Independent scholar researching issues related to late Ramesside
statuary, specifically iconographic issues, family deities and visual
analysis. Teaching undergraduates at Parsons School of Design, Paris
Campus.
Avenue Prekelinden, 152
1200 Brussels
, Belguim
32(0) 2 733 6534
snrobin@tiscali.be
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Annalisa Azzoni
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2001. Hebrew Bible, Northwest Semitics
Assistant Professor of Near Eastern Cultures
228 Divinity School
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN 37240
615-243-3987
annalisa.azzoni@Vanderbilt.Edu
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Kevin Wilson
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2001. Hebrew Bible
Professor of Biblical Studies
Lithuania Christian College
Klaipeda, Lithuania
kwilson@lcc.lt
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Joel Burnett
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1999. Hebrew Bible
Assistant Professor of Religion
Baylor University
Waco, Texas
Joel_Burnett@baylor.edu
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Chris Rollston
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1999. Hebrew Bible, Northwest Semitic
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Gonzalo Rubio
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1999. Assyriology
Work focuses on the languages and literatures of Ancient Mesopotamia
(Sumerian and Akkadian), Semitic linguistics, and cultural interaction in
the ancient Mediterranean.
Professor
Departments of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies, and History
and Religious Studies
Pennsylvania State University
108 Weaver Bldg.
University Park, PA 16802
814-863-4846
gxr18@psu.edu
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Seth Sanders
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1999. Hebrew Bible
University of Chicago
Chicago, IL
sanders@uchicago.edu
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Peg Boden
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1998. Assyriology
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Tawny Holm
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1997. Hebrew Bible
Associate Professor
Department of Religious Studies
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
452 Sutton Hall
Indiana, PA 15705
724-357-2310
tholm@iup.edu
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Philip Jones
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1997. Assyriology
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Alumni Notes
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Simon Parker
('67)
Simon B. Parker, a graduate of the Department of Near Eastern Studies and
professor at the Boston University School of Theology and Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences who specialized in the Hebrew Bible, died on April
29, 2006. His dissertation titled"Studies
in the Grammar of Ugaritic Prose Texts" was written
under the direction of Johns Hopkins University Professor Delbert R.
Hillers.
Obituaries from may be found at the following links:
Boston University
The
Boston Globe
Society
of Biblical Literature
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A Note from Evelyn Aye, wife of John Thompson ('43):
My husband, John Thompson, Jack to me, graduated from the Hotchkiss School
in Lakeville, CT in 1932; from Princeton University, majoring in History,
in 1936 (Phi Beta Kappa in his Junior Year); received two graduate degrees
from Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, I think in 1939 & 1940; and his
PhD from Johns Hopkins University, about 1943. At Hopkins he was in the
Department of Middle East Studies and studied Old Testament Language &
Literature under Dr. Albright. I became acquainted with Jack at
"Biblical" (Seminary) in 1942, when he went to teach there and I
was a new student there. Born in Egypt, he returned there to
teach in 1948, and taught there for a span of 20 years. It is interesting
to note that Jack, his father, and his grandfather all graduated from
Pittsburgh Theological Seminary or its predecessor(s), his grandfather in
1874. They all became United Presbyterian ministers; all served as
educational missionaries in Egypt.
After teaching for a span of 18 years in Egypt, where two of my four
children were born, I made a 12-day trip (Oct 30 to Nov 10, 2005) to Cairo
for the Evangelical (Protestant) Denomination's 150th Anniversary
celebration; and for the 50th anniversary of their conference center on the
Mediterranean coast. I was representing my late husband, the Rev. Dr. John
Alexander Thompson, his parents, the Rev. Dr. F. Scott Thompson &
May Alexander Thompson, and his grandparents, the Rev. Dr. John Romich Alexander
& Carrie Elder Alexander. Together, as Presbyterian
missionaries, we comprise three generations of our family's service to
the church in Egypt,
covering, I figure, a span of 93 years. Seeing former students of my
husband's, and mine, and visiting historic and modern places were a great
privilege. Actually, five generations of our family have lived in Egypt,
because my elder son, Henry Alexander Thompson, lived and worked there
also, and his daughter, my only grandchild, Alexandra Thompson, was born
there.
Latest publication by
Joseph A. Fitzmyer ('56):
THE GENESIS APOCRYPHON OF QUMRAN CAVE 1 (1Q20): A COMMENTARY, THIRD EDITION
(Biblica et orientalia 18B; Rome:
Biblical Institute Press, 2004). Its new 80 pages include the columns and
partial columns that have recently been read, along with an updated
grammatical analysis of the Aramaic text.
Robert Biggs ('62) writes:
My bit of news is that I retired in June 2004 after 41 years at the
Oriental Institute. I remain on the Editorial Board of the Chicago Assyrian
Dictionary and, for the moment, I am remaining as editor of the Journal of
Near Eastern Studies.
A. H. Mathias Zahniser ('73) has been appointed
interim director of the Jewish-Christian Studies program at Greenville College,
Greenville, Illinois.
Diane Krasner ('76) writes:
Life is going well for me . . . . I am living part-time in Baltimore
and part-time in York, PA
having married Mr. David Welber of York
about 1 1/2 years ago. We live in a splendid brownstone in Historic
Downtown York and are very, very happy. Professionally, I am quite busy
serving a two year term as President of our national wound association, the
Association for the Advancement of Wound Care (www.aawcone.org)
and working full-time as a Regional Clinical Manager for Coloplast Corp. (www.us.coloplast.com).
Michael Dick ('77) writes:
I have just been awarded the Catholic Biblical Association Visiting
Professorship to the Pontificio Istituto Biblico in Rome for Fall 2006. I am of course quite
happy but also somewhat saddened to think how much my friend and teacher
Del Hillers had looked forward to that position before his illness
interrupted it. So now I have to stop my Czech Classes and work on my
Italian since I committed myself to teach in Italian.
Sad news: Evelyn Perry ('86)
passed away last week. Simone Robin writes: She was a wonderful
person, a very close friend and we were the NES Egyptology
"group" of Paris.
She will be missed by all who knew her.
New publications from Mark
Phelps ('94):
2006 "Catholic Epistles and Hebrews," a chapter in an untitled
introduction to the New Testament, edited by Kim Paffenroth (in press).
2005 "North Africa and the Middle
East," in Encyclopedia of Pentecostal
and Charismatic Christianity , published by Routledge (in press).
Peg Boden ('99) writes:
While I was completing my dissertation as a non-resident student, I began
working in the cultural resources management industry to earn some income.
Some friends of mine who have graduate degrees in Classics were doing the
same thing. We got together and formed our own company in the spring of
2002. We do studies and produce reports, mostly for government agencies who must follow regulations about historic preservation.
We have completed about 30 projects. I'm now leading a large study of the
Middle Missouri River for the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. It involves a
synthesis of the known resources and a write up of the cultural history of
the region.
Although I've had to switch my focus to North America,
I still use all the education I received about doing research, writing
clearly, etc. I specialize in interpreting historic documents, such as
records of land transactions. You can visit our website (which will soon be
updated) at www.4gconsulting.net.
I try to keep up my Near Eastern reading. I still buy books and have a pile
to read.
Seth Sanders ('99) writes:
I will be visiting assistant professor of Hebrew Bible at Cornell next
year, as well as a faculty guest at Telluride House. My publication plans
involve the completion of three books over the next year (Cuneiform in Canaan with Wayne
Horowitz and Takayoshi Oshima; the Margins
of Writing Oriental Institute conference volume; my own Vernacular Revelation: The Language of the
Hebrew Bible and the Politics of Ancient Israel, all three of
which are in various manuscript stages).
Simone (Burger) Robin ('02) writes:
I would love to send news of my own publications, but at the moment I have
other "obligations." I now have three children (Theodore 5;
Eugénie 3; and "little" Max who will be 1 in a few more
weeks). Now that Max does not need my constant presence, and Teddy
and Eugénie are in school, I am planning to return to the topic of my
dissertation and will be presenting a paper at the upcoming ARCE
conference, entitled "Towards a definition of three-dimensional
Ramesses IV statuary."
Congratulations to Alison
Schofield ('02) who has been appointed Assistant Professor
of Religious and Judaic Studies and the University of Denver,
starting next January.
Congratulations to Bruce
Wells ('03), who has been appointed to a tenure-track
position in Hebrew Bible at St. Joseph's
University in Philadelphia,
beginning in the Fall.
Congratulations to Violaine
Chauvet ('04), who has been appointed Assistant Professor
for one year at Framingham State College, beginning in the Fall.
Nozomu Kawai (06) writes:
I will be a Lecturer (part-time) at the School
of International Liberal Studies
at Waseda University from the fall semester
2006. I shall be teaching four classess in both
Egyptology and Humanities in English.
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