From rstone@seacoast.com Sun Mar 28 09:54:42 1999 Received: from mxu1.u.washington.edu (mxu1.u.washington.edu [140.142.32.8]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW99.02/8.9.3+UW99.01) with ESMTP id JAA50000 for ; Sun, 28 Mar 1999 09:54:42 -0800 Received: from helios.worx.net (root@helios.NetWorx.net [204.178.64.124]) by mxu1.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW99.02/8.9.3+UW99.01) with ESMTP id JAA00622 for ; Sun, 28 Mar 1999 09:54:41 -0800 Received: from n52.argus.seacoast.com (n52.argus.seacoast.com [204.178.66.52]) by helios.worx.net (8.8.7/8.8.7) with SMTP id NAA25927 for ; Sun, 28 Mar 1999 13:04:02 -0500 Message-ID: <36FE9736.4631@seacoast.com> Date: Sun, 28 Mar 1999 12:55:18 -0800 From: Roger Stone Reply-To: rstone@seacoast.com X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01Gold (Win16; U) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: classics@u.washington.edu Subject: Greek & Roman Histories for Middle School Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit We are very luck to have introduced one semester courses in History of Greece and History of Rome in our middle school (Grade 7). We have been using the Oxford series for each of these, but the history teachers are looking for something less "civilization and culture" oriented and more "historical". We need suggestions. Can anyone help? Thanks, Roger -- Roger F. Stone Austin Preparatory School Reading, MA 01867 rstone@seacoast.com .