It's been a somewhat slow week, newswise, so let's see what's happening around the Classical blogosphere:

N.S. Gill starts us off with a series of Punic posts on the foundation of Carthage ... Punic War POWs ... the Third Punic War ... Second Punic War ... First Punic War ...

Academic Presentations on the Roman Empire had a guest post by Moya Mason on Roman Slavery ...

Over at Campus Mawrtius, Dennis was pondering the title of his OCT Aeschylus text ... Eric was pondering the sublime in a couple of Horace's Odes ... and vengeance in Odes 1.2 ...

Michael Gilleland is looking at a possible fragment of Heraclitus ...

Irene Hahn had a couple of posts on the Dream of Scipio here ... and here ...

Tony Keen marked International Pixel-Stained Technopeasants day by posting a lengthy article on Classics in modern pop culture (mostly Star Trek) ...

Dorothy King has some photos of real archaeologists in Athens ... she also has a photo and some French coverage of that colossal foot found in France ... there are also a couple of photos of that Bulgarian chariot find ...

Wm Annis comments on the recent problems at Perseus (and some implications therefrom) ...

Mary Beard comments on the use of Powerpoint by assorted Classics types (including herself) ...

... folks might also be interested in Peter Stothard's column mentioning how some of his posts ranked compared to Mary Beard's ... Mary Beard's thing on Beckham's tattoos, incidentally, were mentioned (positively) in the Chicago Tribune ...

Roger Pearse is spearheading an online collaborative translation of Eusebius' Chronicle ...

Nikolaos posted a handy list of Greek texts available on the web ...

In other roundups, we have Phil's weekly Patristics Roundup

On the web, there have been numerous announcements for Propylaeum DOK, which appears to be some sort of online index but for the life of me I can't get the darned thing to work ...

Peter Jones has posted a pile of his Ancient and Modern columns (including a review of 300) ...

There's also a Wikipedia in Ancient Greek project ...

Robert Maier has put up a Glossarium Culinarium Latinum ...

The Spring 2007 issue of the CSA Newsletter is now available online ...

... and just in case you missed it, the In Our Time episode on Greek and Latin Love poetry is still available for downloading ...

Other than that, the first issue of volume 10 of our Explorator newsletter is up at Yahoo ... the weekly version of our Ancient World on Television listings will follow in an hour or so ...