There was a recent article in USAToday about the growth of Latin in the US: you can see the first three paragraphs from the July 25, 2002 issue. Unfortunately, the rest is a paid download, but you can find it perhaps in your libraries. Our own Matt Amt is interviewed in there as well, promoting Roman reenactors.<br>
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Classics on odyssey from stuffy to cool ; It's all Greek (and Latin) in popular lit, classrooms<br>
USA TODAY; McLean, Va.; Jul 25, 2002; Deirdre Donahue;<br>
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DC_ABS<br>
Bookstores groan with classical titles. They range from a new accessible biography of the Roman orator Cicero to recent novels such as Last of the Amazons by Steven Pressfield and cultural histories such as Route 66 A.D.: On the Trail of Ancient Roman Tourists by Tony Perrottet.<br>
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* High school enrollment in Latin classes is booming, says Adam Blistein, executive director of the American Philological Association, which represents college and university classics professors. The number of students taking the National Latin Exam has more than doubled since 1985 from 53,000 in 1985 to 123,000 in 2002. And more college students are choosing to major in the classics (Latin, Greek and classical civilization).<br>
<p>Richard Campbell, Legio XX.
http://www.geocities.com/richsc53/studies/ </p><i></i>