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Members in the News
Archives

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Members in the News, October 2007

The debate over “human terrain teams,” or social scientists, including anthropologists, working with U.S. military/intelligence agencies in Iraq and Afghanistan, has captivated the anthropology community and news media alike in recent months. Members in the News regarding this issue include Andrew Bickford, Kerry Fosher, David Price, Roberto Gonzalez, Marcus Griffin, Hugh Gusterson, Montgomery McFate, Felix Moos, James Peacock, Brian Selmeski, and Gerald Sider.

News coverage includes articles and interviews by the New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, The Chronicle of Higher Ed, the San Francisco Chronicle, and “The Diane Rehm Show” on WAMU 88.5 FM.

For links to member op-eds and news coverage on the issue, click here.

Nadia Abu El-Haj, assistant professor of anthropology at Barnard College, was awarded tenure on November 2 after months of debate sparked by an online petition opposing her promotion. On October 2, 2007 the AAA Executive Board issue a resolution in opposition to the use of petitions to influence Ms. Abu El-Haj's bid for tenure. Click here for the New York Times article. Click her for a draft of the AAA resolution.

William Beeman, chair of the anthropology department at the University of Minnesota, published an op-ed in the Tehrain Times-Iran. Beeman counters the notion that Iran's domestic energy program is aimed at developing nuclear weapons. He argues that US sanctions on Iran will be ineffective and will not be supported by the international community.

Keisha-Khan Perry, assistant professor of anthropology and African studies at Brown University was interviewed on NPR for a piece on the fight for social change across the African Diaspora. The piece explores parallels between African activism movements and the US Civil Rights Movement.

Tom Turrentine, a research anthropologist at UC Davis Institute of Transportation is getting media attention for his research on new plug-in hybrid sedans. The new hybrids under testing can run on both oil and gas fuel and are less expensive to run than the conventional hybrid. Read the AScribe news article.

Penny Verin-Shapiro of Fresno State University was profiled in a news story by the Fresno Bee for her research on the Wiccans of Central Valley, California. Sabina Maglioco of California State University, Northridge, also offered insight on the worldwide growth of paganism in the article.

Cathleen Willging and Elizabeth Lilliott of the PIRE Behavioral Health Research Center of the Southwest and Gilbert Quintero of the University of Montana were cited in a PR Newswire release for their research on cultural stereotypes and Latino youth substance abuse. The PIRE study shows that four cultural stereotypes-family, religion and spirituality, gender roles and socioeconomic factors impede Latino youths from seeking treatment for drug and alcohol addictions.

David Harrison, professor at Swarthmore College and Director of Research at the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages, appeared on talk shows and newspaper headlines all over the world—including the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, the Australian, “Good Morning America” and “The Colbert Report.” Harrison answered questions about his recent book, “When Languages Die,” which points to five “hotspots,” or geographic regions, where native languages are gravely endangered. The book grew out of Harrison’s work for the National Geographic Society’s Enduring Voices Project.

LA Times
Washington Post
The Colbert Report
The Australian
Good Morning America

Eugenie S. Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education, was quoted in a New York Times article about a controversy over a creationist T.V. documentary hosted by Ben Stein, called “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed.” According to the article, Scott, Richard Dawkins, and others were interviewed for the film, but not warned about the creationist bias of its content, or even the real title of the film.

Meredith F. Small, an anthropologist at Cornell University wrote an article for LiveScience.com discussing a recent medical study on sleep. Small quotes James McKenna, an anthropologist at Notre Dame, on his cross-cultural research on sleep, as a challenge to research that suggests seven hours of uninterrupted sleep per night is the healthiest sleep pattern.

Janine R. Wedel, professor of public policy at George Mason University and a fellow at New American Foundation, called attention to the U.S. government’s growing use of private military contractors in a recent Op-Ed published in the Boston Globe. Wedel argues that the Blackwater scandal is just one part of a larger systemic problem that troubles U.S. military, intelligence and homeland security efforts.

"Michael Wesch, an assistant professor of cultural anthropology at Kansas State University who studies the impact of new media on human interaction, was quoted in a New York Times article on guerilla-style photographers hired to capture the surprise moment of marriage proposals. Wesch commented on the tensions of seeking fame and remaining authentic as it relates to archiving our lives on the Internet.

 

Members in the News, September 2007

Alex W. Barker, Director of the Museum of Art & Archaeology of the University of Missouri, was quoted on the significance of the settlement reached between Yale University and the government of Peru regarding collections excavated by Hiram Bingham from Machu Picchu in “Yale and Peru Reach Pact on Artifacts,” published in the September 17, 2007 issue of Inside Higher Ed.

Kate Browne of Colorado State University, aired the Post-Katrina documentary, “Still Waiting,” on PBS stations in late August to coincide with the two-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. The one-hour documentary, which Browne produced in collaboration with two-time Emmy award winning filmmaker Ginny Martin, follows three women in a family of 150 over the course of 18 months—from their evacuation to Dallas, TX to their heartbreaking return to the New Orleans area. Many markets are broadcasting the film in September or October 2007. For a list of when and where the film is being broadcast, to view a low-resolution streaming video, or to purchase the film for home or educational use, please visit: http://www.stillwaiting.colostate.edu/.

Elizabeth Greenspan, an anthropologist at Harvard University, and Silvia Grider, a retired professor of anthropology at Texas A&M, were quoted in a Denver Post article titled, “A Tribute Etched in Stone.” The article addressed the trend of fast-paced construction of memorial and shrines in face of tragic events. Greenspan is quoted stating, “The challenge is often bringing individual memories into some institutionalized story that every one agrees upon. That's where conflict arises."

Thomas Headland, an anthropologist at the Summer Institute of Linguistics and adjunct professor at University of North Dakota, was featured in a front page article in the Sunday Manila Times on September 2 (pp. A1 and A2) on his research among Philippine post-foraging societies. That article is titled "Negrito (Agta) languages' descent into extinction." Headland has identified over 30 endangered Philippine languages—mostly those of the Agta (or Aeta or Negrito). Today, the Negrito peoples number a mere 0.05% of the nation’s peoples.

John Tofik Karam, assistant professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at DePaul University in Chicago, was interviewed by the Instituto de Cultura Árabe (Icárabe)—a grassroots organization promoting Arab culture and history, based out of São Paulo, Brazil. Karam’s interview and two other reports about him were posted on the Institute’s website, http://www.icarabe.org. Karam spoke of his recent book, Another Arabesque: Syrian-Lebanese Ethnicity in Neoliberal Brazil, his own family history in Lebanon, the U.S., and Brazil, as well as post-9/11 racial politics in the Americas.

Heather Walsh-Haney of Florida Gulf Coast University was spotlighted for working to establish an outdoor research facility or “body farm” in Southwest Florida where anthropologists and criminologists could practice forensic science on donated cadavers. The article indicates that the proposed body farm would be closely modeled after the University of Tennessee's Forensic Anthropology Center.

Richard Wilk, professor of gender studies and anthropology at Indian University was featured as an expert on consumption for a Sept. 16 article in TheStar.com titled, “In an iPod world, the future is always now.” Wilk is currently working on a book on the history of men and consumption.

 

Nina Jablonski, department head and professor of anthropology at Penn State University and author of “SKIN: A Natural History,” was interviewed for a NPR Morning Edition piece on August 28, 2007. The arts & culture piece addressed a recent debate on the portrayal of King Tut’s race in the museum exhibit, “Tutankhamen and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs,” currently stationed at the Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia.

Jan Timbrook of the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History was featured in an article by the Santa Barbara Inquirer on her recent book, “Chumash Ethnobotany: Plant Knowledge Among the Chumash People of Southern Califronia.” The book which Timbrook has described as “my life’s work,” offers a comprehensive guide to the over 150 plant species utilized and mythologized by the Chumash People.

Richard Leakey of the State University of New York at Stony Brook and Zelalem Assefa of George Washington University were quoted in a Washington Post article on the controversial transportation of Lucy, the famous 3.2 million year old bone-set discovered in Ethiopia by paleontologists Donald Johanson of Arizona State University and Tom Gray in 1974. Leakey and Assefa spoke out against the transportation of Lucy to the US for an eight-month museum tour. In an Associated Press article, Rick Potts, director of the Smithsonian’s Human Origins program, also criticized the Houston Museum for risking the safety of the irreplaceable specimen.

David Lancy, an anthropologist at Utah State University, was recently hosted on “The Brian Lehmer Show” on WNYC radio. The topic of the show was inspired by a July 15 article in The Boston Globe which critiqued the notion that the “mom-on-all-fours” approach to parenting common among upper and middle class American families is the best and only way to raise a child. The Boston Globe piece cites Lancy’s cross-cultural research on mother-child play which was published in American Anthropologist in June 2007.

Edgardos Krebs, an anthropologist living in Washington, published an eloquent appreciation of Nazario Turpo in the Washington Post. Turpo was a Peruvian paqo and activist who also worked as a consultant with the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian. He recently died in a bus accident in the Andes.

Paul Draper, an anthropologist, actor and magician who was last seen on the History Channel special "Houdini: Unlocking the Mystery " appeared on August 21 and August 22 on the A&E series MINDFREAK with Chris Angel. In the episode titled, “Burning Man,” Draper discussed Southwestern Native American rites of passage.
http://www.aetv.com/criss_angel/index.jsp

Susan Anton, associate professor of anthropology at New York University, received widespread national media attention in August for her co-authorship of a study on two Kenyan fossils, a Homo erectus skull and Homo habilis jawbone. The recent discovery, led by Meave Leakey of the famous paleontologist family, provides evidence that the two species of early human ancestors may have co-existed for at least half a million years, casting serious doubt on the theory of linear evolution. Anton is quoted in several articles discussing the surprisingly small skull of the Homo erectus fossil which may indicate sexual dimorphism in the Homo erectus species and multiple mates for the Homo erectus male.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/09/science/ 09fossil.html?ref=world

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-earlyman_webaug09,1,2706577.story

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20178936/

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/ story.php?storyId=12630660&ft=1&f=17

John Brett of the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, Carole Counihan of Millersville University, Miriam Chaiken of Indiana University, Crystal Patil of the University of South Florida and James Watson of Harvard University were cited in the article “How the World Eats” by Bryan Walsh in the June 11 issue of Time Magazine. The article discussed changes in eating patterns around the world resulting from industrialization, globalization and the women’s movement. The above-cited members were quoted discussing Coca-Cola availability in African villages, meat consumption in China, family-style dining in Italy and urbanization-related changes in Latin America. “How the World Eats” was featured as one article in a collection of articles relating to diet and health topics in the June 11 issue.

Jeffrey H. Cohen, professor of anthropology at Ohio State University, was featured in the article “Hopping Good” on the culture page in the June 2007 issue of National Geographic. The article, based on his research in Oaxaca Mexico, discusses the importance of chapuline (grasshoppers) in the rural Oaxacan diet. .

Helen Fisher, an evolutionary anthropologist and human behavior researcher at Rutgers University, was referenced as an expert on the science of love in two LA Times articles in July and August titled “This is your brain on love” and “Are anti-depressants taking the edge off love?” The latter article cites Fisher’s 2006 book, “Evolutionary Cognitive Neuroscience” in which she published fMRI brain scans of men and women in the early phases of falling in love. Fisher concluded that the brain chemistry of an infatuated lover is similar to the brain chemistry of someone addicted to drugs. Her 2006 research previously gained national attention in “Love—The Chemical Reaction” featured as the cover story in the February 2006 edition of National Geographic Magazine.

Yolanda T. Moses, vice provost for diversity and conflict resolution professor of anthropology at University of California–Riverside and the Understanding Race and Human Variation advisory board chair, was quoted in The Politico on August 13, 2007. The article titled “Calling Color Into Question” addressed the issue of race in the campaign of 2008 presidential candidate Barack Obama. Moses was quoted stating, “Race is not about biology. Race is about the construction of social hierarchy.”

Shannon May, PhD candidate at UC Berkeley, was spotlighted in “China’s Green Revolution” by McKenzie Funk, an article featured in the July 2007 issue of Popular Science magazine. May’s dissertation research communicated via interviews from the field served as the basis for Funk’s analysis of the sustainable development project in Huangbaiyu, Liaoning, China, an experimental “green city” designed by Chinese architects and engineers to save the growing superpower from the environmental threats of rapid-paced urbanization.

Barbara King, a professor of anthropology at the College of William and Mary, has received widespread media coverage of her new book, “Evolving God: A Provocative View on the Origins of Religion,” which explores the prehistory of religion and was released in January 2007. Several news and literary organizations have given “Evolving God” favorable reviews, including the Chronicle of Higher Education, where King's book was noted in the April 20, 2007, essay “The DNA of religious faith.” “King's touchstone is 'belongingness,' the idea that 'hominids turned to the sacred realm because they evolved to relate in deeply emotional ways with their social partners, ... and because the human brain evolved to allow an extension of this belongingness beyond the hear and now,” wrote the CHE essayist. Other reviews and discussions of the book have included:
-“Matters of faith,”,” Boston Globe, April 8, 2007
-“A conversation with Barbara J. King,”, Critical Mass (National Book Critics Circle Board of Directors' blog), April 2, 2007
-“Did religion evolve?,” On Faith (a joint online religion feature of Newsweek and the Washington Post), March 30, 2007
-“We feel; therefore, we believe,” Dallas Morning News, Feb. 18, 2007
-“God and gorillas,” Salon.com, Jan. 31, 2007

Monica Schoch-Spana, chairwoman of the Working Group on Community Engagement in Health Emergency Planning for the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's Center for Biosecurity, appeared as a guest and a source in several news outlets' coverage of a recently released report that recommends that federal authorities make a sustained investment in local health emergency preparedness systems that collaborate with civic groups and private citizens. Schoch-Spana was interviewed on the public radio program  “Homeland Security: Inside and Out,” which aired April 17, 2007, on KAMU, Texas A&M University's campus radio station, and April 18, 2007, on WAMU radio in Washington, D.C. She was also quoted in an April 13, 2007, article in Congressional Quarterly's Homeland Security publication (“Citizen groups could be tapped as major force to mitigate death, destruction”). “Officials need to work with citizens and civic groups before disaster strikes to promote all the ways the public can contribute, including taking part in policy decisions, building volunteer networks, getting support for tax or bond measures that limit vulnerability and improve health and safety agencies, and yes, having family emergency plans, too,” Schoch-Spana was quoted as saying. Schoch-Spana was also quoted April 4, 1007, in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (“Allegheny County's emergency efforts national model of preparedness”). “Many years post-9/11, there's a call for enhanced citizen preparedness, and national polls continue to say Americans aren't prepared,” she was quoted as saying.

Eben Kirksey, an anthropologist investigating the 2002 shooting deaths of two Americans and one Indonesian in Papua Province, was named in an April 8, 2007, article in the International Herald Tribune. “New report sheds light on 2002 Papua shooting” noted Kirksey as a co-author of a new study that analyzed ballistics evidence in the shootings. The analysis found that 13 different guns were used and more than 200 shots were fired from different angles; this analysis was presented at the trial of a man who confessed to the shootings. “We are the first to publicly identify a smoking gun. In fact, we have unearthed evidence of 10 smoking guns. This means that there was another group of shooters, wielding enormous firepower,” Kirksey was quoted as saying.

A book by Richard Handler, professor and associate dean of anthropology at the University of Virginia, and Eric Gable, associate professor of anthropology at the University of Mary Washington, was cited in an April 6, 2007, article in the New York Times. “An upgrade for ye olde history park” reviewed the living history exhibition at Colonial Williamsburg. Handler and Gable's 1997 book, “The New History in an Old Museum: Creating the Past at Colonial Williamsburg,” was discussed in relation to how changing perspectives on history during the 1970s have influenced the image and symbolic character the historical village seeks to project.

Susan Brownell, an anthropologist at the University of Missouri at St. Louis and an expert on China sports, was quoted in an Associated Press story that ran March 24, 2007, in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. “Despite fast start, problems plague Beijing” examined preparations for the 2008 Olympics, including questions about the Beijing Organizing Committee's shunning of foreign experts. Brownell provided cultural context for the committee's actions. “Letting Westerners organize their Olympic sports would have a bad resonance. The Olympic Games should be a stepping stone to an increasing Chinese presence in the Western-dominated institutions and cliques that underpin the world of international sports. If you give Westerners too much control, it just reinforces the Western-dominated status quo,” Brownell was quoted as saying.

An obituary remembering the life of William Sturtevant, curator emeritus of North American ethnology at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, ran March 20, 2007, in the Los Angeles Times. The obituary noted Sturtevant's half-century career at the Smithsonian, his encyclopedic knowledge of the material culture of Native Americans, and his pioneering work in ethnohistory and ethnoscience. The Times adapted the obituary from an earlier one that ran in the Washington Post.

Robert Hayden, a social anthropologist at the University of Pittsburgh, was named in a March 15, 2005, piece in The Economist. “Really loving your neighbor” focused on efforts to shift the conventional wisdom of conflict studies and race relationship from understanding xenophobia to promoting allophilia (the liking of other groups) as a policy goal. Hayden was noted for coining the terms “antagonistic tolerance” to describe how sacred sites were shared by Christians and Muslims in the Ottoman world and by Hindus and Muslims in British India. “His point? The fact that groups accept a regime or 'truce' imposed by an imperial power does not mean they will refrain from competing once they get a chance,” wrote the piece's author.

Laura McNamara, an anthropologist with the U.S. Department of Energy's Sandia National Laboratories, and Alan Goodman, a professor of anthropology at Hampshire College and president of AAA, were quoted in a March 13, 2007, story in the online Daily News section of the Chronicle of Higher Education. ““Anthropologists discuss where to draw ethical lines in dealing with national-security agencies” covered a panel at Brown University involving several AAA members discussing how and where anthropology should draw ethical lines in working with national security agencies. The members were from AAA's Ad Hoc Commission on the Engagement of Anthropology with the U.S. Security and Intelligence Communities. The article noted a recent essay by McNamara, paraphrasing her points as arguing that “too many conversations about anthropologists and the military tend to 'recycle the same issues' about secrecy and informed consent. Anthropologists who work with military and security issues today...often face different, more subtle ethical challenges than did Vietnam-era social scientists.” Goodman explained the commission's work was part of a larger discussion about the rise of applied anthropology, in which anthropologists work for corporations and other agencies. He said the association needs to think about the degree to which anthropologists are working for corporations who want some control over the results of their research. “And that's related to what this committee will discuss. Is working with intelligence agencies really just a continuation of the same types of things that one might be doing for a corporation, or is there really something special about working in intelligence that makes it entirely different?,” Goodman was quoted as saying.

Nina Jablonski, a professor of anthropology and department head at Pennsylvania State University, was interviewed about her new book, “Skin: A Natural History,” on National Public Radio's March 3, 2007, Weekend Edition program. A clip of the interview is available on the NPR Web site. Additionally, Jablonski was a guest on the Feb. 28, 2007, Comedy Central program The Colbert Report, where she talked about her book and how skin color evolved as an adaptation to environment and different climates.

A column by Hugh Gusterson, a professor of cultural studies at George Mason University, was published Feb. 21, 2007, in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a magazine focusing on global security and analysis. “A parent's quandary” relayed a first-person account of Gusterson's participation, with his son, in a protest against the Iraq war. “While the Pentagon gets $450 billion a year...parents at my son's school sell Christmas tress in the cold rain, organize auctions and fundraising dances after they come home from work, and beg local businesses to donate to the school, arduously raising money dollar by dollar for books and teachers' aides. This is why, far from being ashamed, I felt that I was honoring my son by taking him to the protest. And honoring Martin Luther King. He said, 'A society that spends more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death,' ” Gusterson wrote.

A commentary by Roberto Gonzalez, an associate professor of anthropology at San Jose State University, was published Feb. 2, 2007, in the Chronicle of Higher Education. “We must fight the militarization of anthropology” discussed the issues surrounding military and intelligence interest in and use of academic knowledge, particularly as an element in the “war on terror.” “Recent events have dramatically demonstrated that anthropological and other scholarly information is a potentially valuable intelligence tool. But history tells us that such information can easily be misused when put into the wrong hands. That is why we, as scholars, must make a continuing effort to speak out against the misappropriation of our work,” Gonzalez wrote.

Research by Glenn Davis Stone, a professor of anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis, was covered in a Jan. 31, 2007, column on Salon.com. “Ganesh and Brahma bow to a new god” discussed the use of hybrid cotton seed varieties by farmers in India and genetically modified crops. The column noted Stone's paper, “Agricultural deskilling and the spread of genetically modified cotton in Warangal,” which was published in the February issue of Current Anthropology. “Stone obliterates the biotechnology industry thesis that small farmers are switching because the new seeds are demonstrably superior to the old ones — in the specific case of the Warangal district...Stone's research has poked holes in what proponents of GM technology want us to believe[; however,] that does not mean Stone believes there is no place for GM technology in the developing world,” wrote the columnist.

Richard Wilk, a professor of anthropology at Indiana University, was quoted in a series of stories in the San Francisco Chronicle in January 2007. “Spin the (water) bottle” ran Jan. 17 and investigated the $11 billion-a-year U.S. bottled water market. “This is an industry that takes a free liquid that falls from the sky and sells it for as much as four times what we pay for gas. There's almost nowhere in America where the drinking water isn't adequate. Municipalities spend billions of dollars bringing clean, cheap water to people's homes. But many of us would still rather buy it in a store,” Wilk was quoted as saying. On Jan. 19, the story “How water bottlers tap into all sorts of sources” examined the sources of bottled waters, which in many cases is not mountain springs but the same pipes from which tap water originates. Meanwhile, the story compared the price per gallon of bottled water ($7.50 to $11) vs. the price per gallon of gas ($2 to $3). “It's ridiculous. Why do people spend so much to drink water from glaciers or from Iceland? What's the difference?,” Wilk was quoted as saying.

A commentary by William Peace, author of “Leslie A. White: Evolution and Revolution in Anthropology,” was published Jan. 18, 2007, online in CounterPunch, a biweekly newsletter created by journalists Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair. “Protest from a bad cripple: The Ashley treatment and the making of a pillow angel” discusses 9-year-old Ashley, a mentally and physically disabled girl subjected to surgery and hormone treatments to prevent growth, and the lack of progress made in social perceptions of disability and disability rights. “I am less concerned with medicine as science but rather with the social decision that went into the application of the Ashley Treatment. The problem Ashley's parents encounter is not within the walls of the hospital where such extreme measures were taken but in the social construction of disability in the eyes of American society,” Peace wrote.

Jane Adams, an anthropology professor with Southern Illinois University, was mentioned in a column Jan. 14, 2007, in the Los Angeles Times. “Definitions of whiteness amid the Delta blues” contemplated the concept of “whiteness” and noted Adams' research on the topic in the Mississippi Delta. “...to Adams and Gorton,” the columnist wrote, “the Delta is also a regional petri dish that can be analyzed to better understand the construction of white identity in the United States. What I learned is that even in the one place where you'd expect the issue of black and white to be, well, black and white, it's a whole lot more complicated, and that it's a mistake, as Angelenos well know, to think that racial identities always obliterate ethnic and class distinctions.”

The International Herald Tribune published a commentary by Diane King, a cultural anthropologist who studies Kurdistan, is a fellow at Brown University and a researcher at Washington State University. “A 16-year cycle of treachery” reviewed the history of U.S.-Kurd alliances from 1975 through current Kurdish-American cooperation in Iraq. “Iraqi society has as its sociopolitical bedrock a patron-client system. A rich patron provides for, protects and lends identity to clients, who pledge loyalty in exchange. By participating vigorously in the American project in Iraq, many Kurds may have initially thought they were hitching their wagon to a star patron,” King wrote. Meanwhile, their relationship with the United States has not gone unnoticed by other Iraq ethnic groups, and King warned retribution will follow. In the past, when the U.S. has withdrawn support or failed to follow through with assistance, Kurds have suffered. “...America must not repeat these mistakes. It must recognize the responsibility it has taken in depending so heavily on the people of Iraqi Kurdistan for its mission in Iraq, and consider what will happen to them when it significantly scales back its military presence,” King concluded.

A letter to the editor by Dan Segal, an anthropology professor at Pitzer College, was printed in the Jan. 8, 2007, issue of the New York Times. In “Climate change: No time to debate,” Segal commented on an article covering the global warming debate that claimed to identify an intermediate position between the Bush administration and Al Gore's documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth.” “The notion that the truth is midway between two poles of debate is a longstanding American myth, but it does not work in this case. While neither “An Inconvenient Truth” nor the so-called middle stance is the final word on climate change, both are responsible efforts to get at the truth,” Segal wrote.

An op-ed by David Vine, a public anthropologist in residence at American University, was published Jan. 2, 2007, in the Washington Post. “Island of injustice” discussed the forced expulsions of the native population of the Chagos Archipelago by the British and U.S. governments nearly 40 years ago to make way for a U.S. military base. That base, according to Vine, has recently been used as a key launching pad for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The commentary also reported on the status of recent lawsuits brought against the U.S. and British governments; the British High Court has ruled the islanders' expulsion illegal, opening the door to resettlement in the Chagos. Meanwhile, lawsuits in the United States have been dismissed. “Forty years almost to the day after the signing of the initial Diego Garcia agreement, there should be no difficulty in assessing the responsibility of the United States: The U.S. government developed the idea for a base on Diego Garcia, demanded the removal of the islanders, paid the British for the deportations and gave the orders to complete the removals,” Vine wrote.

An opinion piece by William Beeman, a professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota, was published Dec. 22, 2006, by New America Media, a news service and collaboration of ethnic news organizations founded by Pacific News Service in California. “Democracy gets traction in Iran” analyzed recent elections and political trends in Iran, including increased participation and activism by Iranian youth and women. “If left to its own devices without foreign interference, Iran undoubtedly [would] be more democratic, more liberal, more secular and more positively disposed toward the West than ever before in the Islamic Republic,” Beeman wrote.

Theodore Schurr, North American director for the National Geographic Society's Genographic Project and an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania, was mentioned in a Dec. 10, 2006, article in the New York Times. “DNA gatherers hit snag: Tribes don't trust them” covered the Genographic Project's efforts to collect 100,000 indigenous DNA samples and criticism that scientists seeking the DNA are underselling the risks to donors, such as the impact on long-held beliefs and cultural preservation. Schurr, however, is working with a review board in Alaska, sponsored by the federal Indian Health Service, to create a consent form for DNA donors that details the potential risks, including database links between DNA and tribal information. Meanwhile, early results in Schurr's work have surprised some Alaskans who have already volunteered their DNA, including one woman whose DNA linked her to a different tribe than expected, sparking her interest in further research.

Nikolai Ssorin-Chaikov, an anthropologist at the University of Cambridge, was noted in an Oct. 30, 2006, article in The Times (U.K.) newspaper. “But comrade Stalin, I thought you'd like an Indian bonnet” covered the opening of a Moscow exhibit “Gifts to Soviet Leaders,” which Ssorin-Chaikov helped to compile. The exhibit featured objects presented to Soviet leaders by peasants, workers, heads of state and others. “In many ways, the scale of gift-giving is similar to that for the British monarchy. Stalin and Brezhnev received the most, but we were surprised to find so many for Krushchev,” Ssorin-Chaikov was quoted as saying.

A guest column by Josiah Heyman, an anthropology professor at the University of Texas at El Paso, was published in the El Paso Times Sept. 19, 2006. “Immigration debate has moral heart” discussed immigration in the United States and called for citizens and immigrants to work together in the society they have mutually created, where relationships are not only expressed person to person but through laws. “A comprehensive immigration reform is our collective national expression of bonds between host society and new immigrants, the sum of all our individual encounters. A legalization program for settled undocumented immigrants recognizes the ties and loyalties they have developed in America. A program supporting communities adjusting to new immigrant populations – helping with hospitals, schools, police and fire departments – acknowledges their pioneering role in the renewal of America,” wrote Heyman.

Mary Pohl, an Olmec expert at Florida State University, was featured on National Public Radio's Morning Edition Sept. 15, 2006. “Earliest New World writing discovered” discussed archaeological investigations involving hieroglyph-bearing stone blocks found in Veracruz, Mexico, which appear to be the oldest writing ever found in the Americas. “We see that the writing is very closely connected with ritual and the early religious beliefs, because they are taking the ritual carvings and putting them into glyphs and making writing out of them — and all of this is occurring in the context of the emergence of early kings and the development of a centralized power and stratified society,” Pohl was quoted as saying.

Montgomery McFate, an anthropologist and Pentagon consultant, was among those profiled in the Dec. 18, 2006, article in the New Yorker “Knowing the enemy: Can social scientists redefine the 'war on terror'?” The article discussed the relationship between the government and anthropology, as well as McFate's work with the U.S. Department of Defense, including Iraq and her Pentagon project Cultural Operations Research Human Terrain. CORHT involves social scientist teams who will serve as cultural advisers on tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Pilot teams are slated to leave next spring. The article's author wrote that McFate told him she is making it her “ 'evangelical mission' to get the Department of Defense to understand the importance of 'cultural knowledge'.”

An essay by Lawrence Breitborde, a dean and professor of anthropology at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill., appeared Dec. 5, 2006, in the online magazine Inside Higher Ed. The essay, “Don't tell me what I said. I know what I meant,” is an adaptation of a talk Breitborde gave during AAA's 2006 Annual Meeting. It discussed his experiences as a dean with higher education management and how principles of sociocultural anthropology play a role in those experiences.

Catherine Besteman, an anthropology professor and director of African studies at Colby College in Waterville, Maine, was noted in a Dec. 11, 2006, New Yorker article, “New in town: The Somalis of Lewiston.” The article discussed the lives and experiences of Somali refugees who have settled in Lewiston, Maine, and recounts Besteman's participation in a college panel about “Recent Shifts in Lewiston's Refugee Population.” Besteman and her husband had lived in a Somali Bantu village, Banta, in the 1980s. She later wrote a book titled “Unraveling Somalia: Race, Violence and the Legacy of Slavery.” After the Somali civil war, Besteman had tried to find some of the families she knew in the Banta area, but her efforts were unsuccessful. When she arrived at the panel to speak, other panelists recognized her. Three of her fellow panelists turned out to be men she had known as children in Banta. Later, Besteman and her husband met with the Lewiston Bantus community to share photos from Banta. “Most of those who made it over here were babies then. They never knew their parents. People in the audience were seeing their moms and dads for the first time. It was very, very moving,” Besteman was quoted as saying.

Several members were included in a Nov. 22, 2006, article in the online magazine Inside Higher Ed. “Torture and social scientists” discussed resolutions regarding Iraq and torture that were voted on during AAA's 2006 Annual Meeting, as well as the possible use of anthropological research in creating tactics used at Abu Ghraib prison. Alan Goodman, AAA president and a professor of anthropology at Hampshire College in Massachusetts, commented on the message that the vote on the resolutions sent. “I think this shows how outraged members of the association are. Anthropological knowledge has been implicated in nefarious forms of torture. It's vital to show that we are opposed,” Goodman was quoted as saying. Gerald Sider, an emeritus anthropology professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center and the College of Staten Island, also commented on the efforts behind the resolutions. “We're trying to do something against mealy-mouthed policies that don't hold responsible those scum with Ph.D.s who stand beside torturers,” Sider was quoted as saying. Roberto Gonzalez, associate professor of anthropology at San Jose State University, and Kanhong Lin, a graduate student in American University's anthropology department, were noted as sponsors of the resolutions. Gonzalez and Lin expressed how they experienced increasing anger and disgust with reports of anthropology being used to shift the focus of interrogation techniques from physical to culturally based tactics. “This is a gross misuse of social science knowledge,” Gonzalez was quoted as saying. Lin also noted anthropologists' obligation to speak out because of anthropology's past ties with U.S. and British colonial governments. “We've had a closely intertwined relationship with the CIA in the past,” Lin was quoted as saying. Felix Moos, an anthropologist with the University of Kansas, was noted for urging scholars to work with the federal government and share expertise; he stressed he does not approve of torture but was unsure about the effectiveness of anthropologists' position. “The anthropological community is one that I have felt is somewhat resistant to see the real conditions in which the world unfortunately finds itself. The United States finds itself up against serious challenges today and we should do our utmost to reasonably approach those many challenges rather than rely on the rhetoric of resolutions that in practical terms simply stir up counterproductive reactions,” Moos was quoted as saying.

Mark Lewine, an anthropology professor at Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland, Ohio, was named as a recipient of a U.S. Professors of the Year award in a Nov. 15, 2006, USA Today article. The awards are sponsored by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. “Professors honored for creativity” explained the awards and introduced the 2006 roster of recipients. Judges select national winners in four categories, and each winner receives $5,000. The categories are baccalaureate colleges, community colleges, doctoral and research universities, and master's colleges and universities. Lewine won in the community college category “for his dedication to promoting community college education.” He said the award was a high point in his teaching career. Lewine also described what he likes about the community college environment. “A community college to me is a very magical place for anyone interested in interacting with a highly diverse group of people,” he was quoted as saying.

Kerry Fosher, a security anthropologist, a research assistant professor at Dartmouth Medical School and an associate with Syracuse University's Institute for National Security and Counter-Terrorism, was quoted in two recent articles in Government Executive Magazine. “Disaster drills” (Nov. 1, 2006) explored how effective emergency and preparedness exercises are, as well as the flaws relating to preparedness tests. Fosher was quoted in a section discussing the follow-up procedures government agencies are to carry out after tests, including completion of an after-action report, which summarizes lessons learned in a drill and corrective actions. The reports, the reporter wrote, are “at last partially made public, so it's perhaps understandable that they omit some weaknesses identified in the exercise.” Fosher's quote immediately followed. “In good organizations, those things get taken care of. In bad organizations, those things get swept under the rug,” Fosher was quoted as saying. The other article, “One-hit wonders” (Oct. 1, 2006), critiques Department of Homeland Security and other agency habits of “allowing single events and their public attention to shape security policies” and allocating funding for emergency preparedness in an after-the-fact fashion. Fosher, a member of the AAA Ad Hoc Commission on the Engagegment of Anthropology with the U.S. Security and Intelligence Communities, was quoted about how the overall disaster preparedness system can suffer when solutions are focused on specific threats rather than all potential disasters. “The thing that's particularly frustrating is that many of us work very hard to develop an all-hazards approach to planning. We want to be efficient with tax dollars and effective in terms of plan sustainability. Then the press and Congress get enamored of a particular problem and all of the sudden you have mandates that locals need to generate smallpox or pandemic flu plans after you promised them that you will not make them plan for the disease of the week. Funds for planning are in very short supply and the all-hazards model tends to be a cost-saver in the long run,” Fosher was quoted as saying.

William Beeman, now with the University of Minnesota anthropology department, was quoted in an Oct. 29, 2006, story in U.S. News and World Report. “Hey, let's play ball: The insular world of intelligence reaches out for a few new ideas” covered efforts of U.S. intelligence agencies to engage experts outside of the intelligence community to help understand topics such as why people join terrorist and other groups, why extremism is spreading worldwide, and how to stop it. Included was a discussion of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence's Summer Hard Problems workshop, or SHARP, which brought together specialists from the social sciences, including anthropology, to help inform analysts from the Central Intelligence Agency and several other intelligence agencies. The article also discussed concerns within anthropology over intelligence work and mentioned AAA's actions regarding a CIA ad and recent launch of a commission to investigate anthropology and U.S. Intelligence. Beeman, who has participated in seminars under every administration since Carter's, talked about the desire to lend expertise to an intelligence community asking for help. He stressed the importance of lending expertise in light of Washington's recent record of intelligence failures. “I am very disposed to doing anything I can to bring some enlightenment to these people,” Beeman was quoted as saying.

Several members were quoted in a Sept. 5, 2006, article in PC magazine. “How to build a better product — study people” explored ethnographic research and development and how they help create new products. Intel and Microsoft, both of whom employ anthropologists (including many AAA members), were used as examples in the piece. John Sherry, an Intel ethnographer, works in the company's Digital Health organization. His comments related to Intel researchers' multi-year study of the aging process in various cultures; this research contributed to several new technologies to help caregivers keep a remote eye on their loved ones. “We don't want [the elderly] to feel like they're under surveillance so we try and stay away from cameras and work more with sensors. By putting simple sensors in doors, chairs and under mattresses you can get a sense of how much a person moves around the house and you can track their activities,” Sherry was quoted as saying. Meanwhile, Ken Anderson, an anthropologist with Intel's People and Practices Research Group and an organizer of the AAA-sponsored Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference, commented about Intel's research on globalization and technology, specifically the company's studies of transnational people (those who are born in one place but live in another). “Besides the sheer value of money we're also interested in the understanding of technology. For example, a man from Ghana who was living in London went back to Ghana with his iPod and transferred music onto his cousin's hard disk. His cousin didn't have an iPod so he ended up cracking the hard disk out of his machine and taking it to parties,” Anderson was quoted as saying. The article also mentioned EPIC 2006, the American Anthropological Association and AAA's Web site. Additionally, past AAA member Tracey Lovejoy was quoted in the piece.

George Baca, an assistant professor of anthropology at Goucher College in Baltimore, was guest editor of Urbanite magazine's November 2006 issue, which featured a section on "The race thing: Why Baltimoreans don't talk about it." The section included two articles: "The elephant in the city" by Matthew Crenson, who teaches political science at Johns Hopkins University; and "Alone at the table" by R. Darryl Foxworth, a freelance journalist who grew up in Baltimore. Urbanite is a monthly magazine published in Baltimore, focusing on its cosmopolitan communities and explorations of issues behind the news. Each edition of the magazine centers on a theme and brings in a guest editor "who has demonstrated visionary thinking on that topic locally or nationally."

Alex Golub, assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, published a column Nov. 2, 2006, on Inside Higher Ed, an online magazine. In "Christianity: You're soaking in it," Golub describes how he began incorporating the anthropology of Christianity into his classes after an epiphany about its pervasiveness in American society and his students' lives. Golub details how, in his introductory anthropology courses, he now uses communion and Christian ritual - rather than those from cultures foreign to his students - to explain how symbolic action reinforces worldview through culturally specific metaphors. "I begin by having students explain what communion is to members of the class not familiar with it, and we pause to consider the special fact that practices within Christianity vary greatly from one church to another. This is, literally, anthropology 101: Cultural traditions are not internally homogeneous," Golub writes. He later describes how he wraps up his course, noting that "metaphors and identifications continue to circulate in our own culture and keep us 'soaking' in Christianity."

Alex Barker, director or the University of Missouri's Museum of Art and Archaeology, was quoted in an Oct. 15, 2006, column in the Columbia (Mo.) Daily Tribune. "Rational policies keep drapes off 'nekkid' art" discussed school policies regarding class field trips where students might be exposed to nudity in art. Barker provided context about the symbolism and cultural meanings of the use of nudity in artwork. "Nudity in classical art, for example, isn't simply an aesthetic decision by the artist but has specific meanings that are fundamental to understanding both the canons of classical art and the way the classical world understood and expressed the numinous," he was quoted as saying.

Barbara King, a professor of anthropology at the College of William and Mary, published a column reviewing "To Cherish the Life of the World: Selected Letters of Margaret Mead" in the October 2006 edition of Bookslut.com. The book and other readings lead King to view Mead as "a person most at home in two places at once," describing how that is demonstrated in her career and personal life. King also writes that "[a]nthrophiles will be rewarded for a close reading of these letters by references to 'Papa Franz' (Franz Boas), Alfred Kroeber, and Bronislaw Malinowski and by nuggets like this one: 'When the idea of studying what the natives do instead of what they say they do was invented, any sort of peaceful life for field workers was over.' Mead occasionally muses on specific theories in the culture-and-personality school of thought, and on the jealousy felt by others in the face of her rising fame."

Kristen Godshee, the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study and an assistant professor of gender and women's studies at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, was interviewed on the BBC radio program "The World" Oct. 6, 2006. She discussed her current research on Islamic revivalism in Bulgaria, especially the "tug-of-war" between conservative and secular Muslims in that country. A clip of the interview is available on The World's Web site.

 

Alex Golub, assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, had a column published Sept. 19, 2006, by Inside Higher Ed. In "Stepping onto the tenure track," Golub relates his personal experience with the tenure process, including a resulting "strange sense of dislocation and culture shock."

U.S. News and World Report published a letter to the editor by Mark Davidheiser, an assistant professor of anthropology at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Davidheiser wrote in response to a caption on a photo taken in Lebanon showing a woman gesturing. The caption referred to the gesture as a "victory sign." Davidheiser cautioned against interpreting the actions and opinions of Lebanese civilians. His letter appeared in the Sept. 11, 2006, print edition of the magazine and was posted on its Web site Sept. 3. Also during the past year, Davidheiser was interviewed on Radio France International about joking kinship, also known as joking relationships, in Africa. He spoke about how the relationships can play a role in preventing and managing conflicts from interpersonal to intergroup levels. The interview was aired in December 2005.

Barbara King, a professor of anthropology at the College of William and Mary, was quoted in an Aug. 28, 2006, column in The Washington Post. "What one fewer planet means to our worldview" explored why human beings care so intensely about definitions and categories in the context of the recent debate over Pluto's planetary status. King provided the answer to the "why" question. She was paraphrased as saying that people care so much about one definition over another because definitions serve as markers of group identity.

Ken Anderson, an anthropologist and senior researcher at Intel Corp. in Oregon, was a source in an Aug. 24, 2006, story in The New York Times. "Laptop slides into bed in love triangle" covered changing trends in how people use wireless technology around their homes, including using Blackberries and other devices in bed. "The most comfortable spot in the world is in bed, and that's where people start their day and end their day," Anderson was quoted as saying. The article also mentioned his research on the role technology plays in people's daily lives, including a paper, published with other colleagues, that found more technology is ending up in the bedroom.

Jennifer Babiarz, a University of Maryland archaeologist, was quoted in a recent Associated Press story circulated to newspapers in August. The (Raleigh, N.C.) News and Observer published the AP story Aug. 20, 2006, under the headline "Digging for slaves' history." The article covered archaeological research at the site of Frederick Douglass' childhood home, a plantation near Easton, Md. Babiarz talked about the importance of uncovering the history of the people who worked on the plantation. "We were very interested in what daily life would have been like for people who were enslaved on this plantation and making sure that people knew the rich history, not just of the Lloyds [who owned the property], but of all the people who lived and worked here," she was quoted as saying.

David Koester, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks, was quoted in an Associated Press story that ran Aug. 14, 2006, in the Casper (Wyo.) Star Tribune. "Humble, historic cabin reels anthropologists in" was a feature about the Rainey-Skarland cabin, which has served as home to anthropologists (including Frederica de Laguna, a past AAA president) since 1936 and a center for researchers studying the history of Alaska's indigenous populations. The university's anthropology department decides who lives in the cabin, and typically, it's faculty. "These are all the people who developed the understanding of Eskimo prehistory…Anybody who gets to live there, in the Anthropology Department, really feels the historical weight that goes with living there," Koester was quoted as saying. He lived in the cabin for more than two years, shortly after moving to Fairbanks.

Jack Rossen, an anthropology professor at Ithaca College and a Frontenac Historical Society member, was mentioned in an Aug. 14, 2006, story in The (Auburn, N.Y.) Citizen. "Union Springs unveils history" covers efforts to study and preserve the history of the Union Springs, N.Y., area, including Rossen's work with the Frontenac Historical Society and Museum to establish "What's in Your Backyard?," a program discussing Native American history and remnants in New York's Cayuga Lake region. Many of the remnants include Cayuga fishing camps and settlements. "We have to preserve and respect these sites. I work with [Native American representatives] and respect what they believe; digging up burial grounds is the greatest disrespect to their culture and beliefs. By respecting these beliefs, I have been able to be guided to important sites and have some great finds. History is a story and archaeologists are the conduits of that story. All we can do is look for the pieces and let them tell us their story and try to put it together," Rossen was quoted as saying.

John Bryan Page, chairman of the University of Miami's anthropology department, was quoted toward the end of an Aug. 13, 2006, story in the Miami Herald. "Area sees middle class exodus" is an investigative news piece exploring an outbound migration of South Florida's middle class driven by declining quality of life, such as increased traffic congestion and rising costs of housing and windstorm insurance. Page commented on the compromises people make - such as having roommates or commuting longer - in response to climbing housing costs. "To look at what kinds of adaptations take place, you need to look at places like San Francisco and New York City where people have been living [in over-priced markets] for a long time," he was quoted as saying. "People are opting for living down in Homestead [a community in Florida's Miami-Dade County] and places they can afford. If I had that kind of commute, I would slash my wrists."

The Washington Post published an op-ed by Alex Hinton, an associate professor of anthropology at Rutgers University, Aug. 4, 2006. "We can't let the Khmer Rouge escape" discusses the recent death of Ta Mok, a former Khmer Rouge military commander; the recent swearing in of legal personnel in a long-awaited, United Nations-sponsored trial of former Khmer Rouge leaders; and how "Ta Mok's death underscores the urgency of pressing forward with the tribunal as quickly as possible" to give Cambodians a chance to see those responsible for genocide held accountable.

Harold Dibble, a curator at the University of Pennsylvania's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, and John Relethford, an anthropologist at the State University of New York at Oneonta, were included in a July 31, 2006, story in The Philadelphia Inquirer. "Love with a certain Neanderthal? It could have happened" explores the idea of interbreeding between early Homo sapiens and H.  neanderthalensis (aka Neanderthals), following an announcement of pending research to seek clues from Neanderthal DNA. The piece approaches questions about Neanderthals' physical and intellectual attractiveness to our known ancestors. On the physical side, the story dispels the pop culture misrepresentation of Neanderthals as stooped, hairy, apemen (and women). Dibble was paraphrased as saying there is no evidence suggesting Neanderthals were hairier than modern people. In terms of intellect, the article also talks about archaeological evidence suggesting our cousins could control fire and create complex tools. "No matter how you cut it, they were not the Stone Age idiots they were portrayed as in bad movies," Relethford was quoted as saying.

Paul Shackel, a University of Maryland anthropology professor, and Christopher Fennell, an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, were featured in a recent Los Angeles Times story, which was subsequently picked up by other newspapers. An abridged version appeared July 31, 2006, in the Belleville (Ill.) News-Democrat. "Dig seeks history of racially diverse town" talks about archaeology research and preservation (including National Register listing) at the site of New Philadelphia, the first U.S. town planned and legally founded by an African-American. Shackel called the project unusual because many archaeological projects studying African-American culture before the Civil War focus on excavating slave quarters. "By looking at the remains of a free community, it's helping us fill important gaps we have about America's past," he was quoted as saying. Fennell also was quoted in the story's original version, which is available in the pay-per-view section of the Times' archives (search for the headline "A land of racial harmony?"). He described the strong involvement of descendants and local community members in the project. "It was clear that this was a community grass-roots project, which is unusual in [archaeology]. Normally, the public doesn't get this involved. Who comes out to walk through a plowed field, looking for shards of glass?," Fennell was quoted as saying. More information on the New Philadelphia project is available here, or you can find a link to it under the archaeology section of AAA's anthropology links online.

John Tofik Karam, assistant professor of the Latin American and Latino studies at DePaul University, was interviewed June 28, 2006, on Latino USA radio. Karam spoke with host Maria Hinojosa about Arab history in Latin America, including a more than 100-year migration history. He also discussed the Lebanese-Brazilian community and the current Israel-Lebanon conflict. Thousands of Lebanese-Brazilians vacationing in Lebanon, he said, were caught in recent Israeli bombing attacks.

Kathleen Dahl, an associate professor of anthropology at Eastern Oregon University, was included in a story July 24, 2006, in the Billings (Mont.) Gazette. "Modern explorers have it easier than Lewis, Clark" contrasts the "camping" experience of 19th-century explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark with modern travelers' adventures in "roughing it." Dahl was interviewed about her blog project, Lewis and Clark Trail Watch, an academic blog that explores the interpretation of the Lewis and Clark expedition and bicentennial celebrations in museums, historic sites, interpretive centers and the mainstream media. Dahl has done previous research about "how regional culture and history, particularly native culture and history, have been portrayed in museums and historic sites throughout the Pacific Northwest," according to the blog. The Gazette story describes some of her experiences while working on her current research, including traveling some 40,000 miles, often camping along the way. So far, Dahl said she has found a decidely patriotic undertone to Lewis and Clark bicentennial celebrations. "There's a lot of spin being put on it. I'm debating how to handle that it was so patriotic. Yet for the Indians, it was the beginning of the end," she was quoted as saying.

Anne Kirah, a senior design anthropologist at Microsoft, was quoted in an Associated Press story that appeared in the Houston Chronicle July 19, 2006, as well as numerous other newspapers nationwide. "E-mail is so last millenium, young communicators say" discusses how e-mail has become " 'the new snail mail,' " losing favor against instant and text messaging and blog chatter. Kirah, who studies people's high-tech habits for Microsoft, talked about the advantages of different communications methods and the appeal of newer tools to young people. She suggested young people's brains may work differently and make them more adept at using new technology because they've grown up with instant messaging (IM). As such, Kirah said employers should be responsive to how people work and communicate , whether it be e-mail or IM, and focus more on the outcome. "Nine to 5 has been replaced with 'Give me a deadline and I will meet your deadline.' [Young people are] saying 'I might work until 2 a.m. that night. But I will do it all on my terms.' "

Chris Kovats-Bernat, an anthropologist with Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pa., was quoted July 17, 2006, in a news piece in The Philadelphia Inquirer. "Clothing optional may not be way of historical human" discussed "humanity's deep connection to clothes" and how there is evidence early in human evolution for the ability to make clothing. Kovats-Bernat commented on the cultural tendency to forgo much clothing in hot, humid climates. "The vast majority of populations that have gone naked or mostly naked have done so because climatically it makes sense. If you're in the jungle or the South Pacific your sweat needs to be evaporated," he was quoted as saying.

Rosalind Shaw, an associate professor of anthropology at Tufts University, was included in a story July 16, 2006, in The Boston Globe. "Community builders: Project tells a new generation how black middle class came to Medfortd" covers "The West Medford Afro-American Project," which draws on oral histories, photographs and archival research to tell the story of the West Medford, Mass., community. The project's work is now on exhibit at the Medford Public Library. Shaw included aspects of the project in an undergraduate course at Tufts, and her students helped with project research. "It's quite a remarkable history, with many details that are virtually unknown outside West Medford and even to the newcomers who are moving in today," she was quoted as saying. Information about the project is also available on the Medford Historical Society Web site.

John Bryan Page, chairman of the University of Miami's anthropology department, was quoted July 15, 2006, in an Associated Press story that appeared in the (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) Sun-Sentinel. "Release of  'Miami Vice' film conjures images of city's cocaine past"  reflects on the drug trade in Miami and past violence among drug traffickers. Page commented on the city's "cocaine cowboy period," which began in the 1970s. "The violence that was taking place was essentially Colombians taking over Cuban territory. They were very bold. People would get shot up sitting at traffic lights. It was that kind of Wild West atmosphere that attracted the attention of the people putting together Miami Vice," he was quoted as saying. Page has done extensive sociocultural research on drug use among a variety of groups, including Miami's Cuban population.

Lee Baker, an associate professor of cultural anthropology at Duke University, provided context in a July 16, 2006, story in The Herald-Sun. "Reunions inscribe values, kinship" explores the significance of family reunions and lessons that can be learned at them. "Family reunions are important on a variety of different levels, least of which is the actual ritual which symbolically both describes and inscribes family history, values and kinship," Baker was quoted as saying.

The New York Times recently published a letter to the editor by William Beeman, now a visiting professor at the University of Tokyo. "Negotiating with Iran" responded to a June 13, 2006, op-ed by Warren Christopher, former U.S. secretary of state. Of the op-ed, Beeman wrote that Christopher "presents a small mystery that is easy to explain when Iranian cultural interaction practice is understood." Beeman explained how, in Iran, a mediator is needed to help reconcile estranged parties. The letter ran June 20.

Helen Rountree, a Virginia anthropologist helping to authenticate Jamestown 2007, was part of a recent Associated Press story that ran in Virginia newspapers, including the Culpeper Star-Exponent. Jamestown 2007 is a commemorative celebration for America's first permanent English colony. The AP article discusses a trip that representatives of Virginia's eight recognized tribes will make to tour England and speak about their history and culture. Rountree was paraphrased about the physical size of the Powhatan Nation and the size of Virginia's tribal population in 1607, when Englishmen arrived in what is now Virginia. She said that at that time, the population was as high as 20,000. The story reports that today there are 17,613 Native Americans in Virginia, according to the U.S. Census. The AP story appeared July 9, 2006, in the Culpepper newspaper under the headline "Reconciling the past."

Lawrence Todd, a Colorado State University archaeologist, and David Rapson, an Iowa State University archaeologist, were mentioned in the July 4, 2006, Rocky Mountain News (Denver) story "Tackling 10,000-year-old mystery." The article detailed research on faunal remains at the Hudson-Meng Bison Kill on the Oglala National Grassland, northeast of Denver, including investigations into who or what killed the bison. The cause of death has been debated for decades, with some researchers espousing a "stamped-'em-and-spear-'em" theory that attributes the cause to Paleoindian hunting. Others advocate a natural cause, such as a lightening strike or grass fire-asphyxiation scenario. Among the natural cause theorists are Todd and Rapson, who was quoted about their interpretations in the story. "We're in kind of a funny situation here. We feel our research has brought into question the original [hunting] interpretation. But if it's natural mortality, we're unable to provide a strong interpretive answer for what did happen. This dispute will go on for years and will be seriously, acrimoniously debated," he was quoted as saying. The story outlines the site's history and background of both theories.

J. Mark Kenoyer, a University of Wisconsin anthropology professor, was quoted in a July 4, 2006, story in the San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News. "Group guarding world's heritage" covers the work of a California-based conservancy group that aims to preserve ancient architecture worldwide, especially in regions most plagued by poverty and war. Kenoyer is working with the group, Global Heritage Fund, to build a museum and research center on the Indus civilization in Pakistan. He commented on how the organization is working to improve local and global appreciation of our common global cultural heritage. Preservation workers worldwide must contend with threats to resources that include looting, erosion and encroachment by urban sprawl. "When you rip up archaeology, it's gone forever. You can't bring it back," Kenoyer was quoted as saying.

Two members were included in a Washington Post feature July 5, 2006, about the donation of Grover Krantz's skeleton to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. JoAllyn Archambault, director of the NMNH Division of Ethnology's American Indian program, and Don Tyler, a University of Idaho anthropology professor, were among anthropologists who remembered Krantz's life and work in the story, "Using his cranium." Krantz was a longtime Northwest anthropologist better known to the public for his hobby research on Sasquatch. Before his death in 2002, he arranged to donate his skeleton and those of his beloved dogs to the Smithsonian.

Helen Fisher, a Rutgers University anthropologist, was quoted July 5, 2006, in a Maureen Dowd column in The New York Times. "How to train a woman" talked about a recent Times column by Amy Sutherland in which she detailed how she used animal training techniques to shift her husband's behavior. Dowd posed the question of whether it would work the other way around - men training women. Fisher provided the answer and explained how differing gender roles in evolution make men and women react differently to nagging or requests to change behavior. "If I were a man rewarding a woman, I'd do it in the format women find intimate, which is face to face. I'd go straight up to her, while she was doing the dishes, I'd turn her around face to face, and I'd say: 'Thanks so much for being on time last night. It meant a lot to me.' "

Allan Ainsworth,