The Journal of Roman Archaeology is hardly light reading. The annual editions of this international academic publication weigh in at around a thousand pages each. The articles and reviews are generally penned by PhD classicists. But if you look in Volume 21 of the journal, you’ll come across an article whose author’s credentials include a Maryland Senior Cosmetologist license. Aaron Henkin reports on what she’s discovered, and how she’s untangled some stubborn academic assumptions.
Check out a video of Janet Stephens recreating the ancient Roman hairstyle, "The Seni Crines"
See what inspired Janet at The Walters Art Museum Roman Gallery
Janet solved her mystery with artifacts from the Johns Hopkins Archaeological Museum



We’ve become a lot more sophisticated in our scientific knowledge about how we impact our environment, but forty years ago, we were like babes in the woods – littering, polluting babes in the woods, blissfully ignorant of the damage we were capable of causing Mother Nature. Monday, April 22nd, is
At a Maryland Institute College of Art printmaking studio, the walls are lined with drawers of methodically arranged typesetting blocks, and down the middle of the room is a row of mechanical Vandercook proof presses. In 2010, MICA purchased this venerable set-up for teaching purposes – and in the process, rescued an endangered chapter of Baltimore history: 
Elisabeth Dahl’s
Holocaust Remembrance Day - Yom Hashoah - begins Sunday evening, April 7th, and continues through Monday until sundown. Writer 





