As the graduate school admissions cycle begins again, the Classical Journal calls your attention -- and that of your students -- to its updated and expanded 2008 Graduate Study in the Classics page, which now includes: * answers to a set of Frequently Asked Questions about the graduate school admission process * a complete list of North American MA, PhD, and post-baccalaureate programs in Classics, with links to those programs' websites * supplementary information from a large number of programs based on a 2008 survey (including basic admission statistics, self-identified areas of program strengths and specializations, information about graduate student support, and a precis of likely hires and other program changes in the next few years) * links and information about select overseas graduate programs in Classics * a link to /Diadochoi/, the new /CJ/ wiki-style searchable database, offering information about the number of PhDs produced by given departments and advisers, their titles, and job-placement information * for current graduate students, advice on giving a conference paper and attending CAMWS for the first time, along with a list of upcoming graduate student conferences with calls for papers. The address for the page is: http://classicaljournal.org/study_classics.php Please pass this email on to your students who are considering graduate work in Classics, as well as to other faculty members or current graduate students who might find it useful, or link the CJ Graduate Studies page to your own department home-page. Graduate departments wishing to add or clarify information about their programs on the CJ Website should write directly to CJ's assistant editor, Tim Beck at [log in to unmask] You may remove yourself from the CJ-Online list-serve by sending an email to: [log in to unmask] Leave the subject line blank, and in the first line of the message write: UNSUBSCRIBE cj-online