Class Notes

Ren茅 Millon鈥檚 death last February left many colleagues and former students bereft of his friendship. A professor of anthropology at Rochester from 1961 to 1986, Ren茅 remained interested in us, his students, throughout his academic career at the University and throughout his 30 years as professor emeritus of anthropology. In his 70s and 80s, he was still consulting and giving papers, and even in his 90s he was advising, telephoning, meeting, and corresponding with former students and colleagues.

Ren茅 secured his scholarly reputation in the 1970s with the Teotihuacan Mapping Project. The project, funded primarily through the National Science Foundation, involved mapping the eight-square-mile area of the pre-Columbian city of Teotihuacan in central Mexico. According to Ren茅鈥檚 former student Martha Sempowski 鈥83 (PhD), a research fellow at the Rochester Museum and Science Center, the project was 鈥渃onsidered groundbreaking in scope and scale. Its use of comprehensive aerial photography extended well beyond the estimated limits of the city proper. It was preceded and accompanied by surface survey and collection of about one million artifacts from some 5,000 sites within the mapped area.鈥
The project is ongoing, involving scholars from universities in Mexico, the United States, Canada, and Japan, and has had a significant impact on studies of urbanism worldwide.
Ren茅 displayed a close鈥攁nd sometimes maddening鈥攁ttention to detail. Warren Barbour 鈥76 (PhD), a colleague, former student, and cherished friend of Ren茅鈥檚, recalled Ren茅鈥檚 reaction when he handed him a paper with a typo. 鈥淲arren, it was a typo when you wrote it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was a colossal blunder when you handed it to me!鈥
In spite of his sometimes acerbic wit, there was something magical about Ren茅鈥檚 personality. His friend Kroum Markov 鈥91 fondly and most aptly dubbed him 鈥淢erlin.鈥 His many admirers were pleased when he was elected to membership in the National Academy of Sciences in 2002, and when he and his close colleague, George Cowgill, were jointly awarded the A. V. Kidder Award for 2004 by the American Anthropological Association.
Despite his modest height, Ren茅鈥檚 were the proverbial shoulders upon which many subsequent archaeologists must stand.
鈥擥retchen Koch Markov 鈥57, 鈥83 (PhD)
Markov is a former student of Millon鈥檚 and a retired teacher in the Rochester City School District.