This lecture series
in anthropological archaeology is supported through a trust established
by Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Stigler of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, in their son's
memory Its purpose is to bring distinguished scholars to address the university
community and the public on diverse archaeological topics. The Stiglers'
generous endowment of this lecture series is an especially fitting memorial
to their son, who enjoyed a wide-ranging professional career in archaeology,
and provides opportunities for all of us to share in the knowledge of
past peoples and cultures.
Robert Leath Stigler,
Jr. (1921-1980) was born in Monroe, Louisiana, and attended public schools
in Little Rock and Pine Bluff. He was an honors graduate in 1939 of Pine
Bluff High School and in 1942, after three years of undergraduate study,
received a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics and political science
from Vanderbilt University. After serving in the U.S. Navy during World
War II, including intelligence duty in the southwestern Pacific and in
post-war Japan as part of the Strategic Bombing Survey, Stigler attended
graduate school at Columbia University and received a Doctor of Philosophy
degree in anthropology in 1954. Most of Stigler's professional career
was associated with Columbia, where he served as a research assistant
(1950-1953), an instructor (1954-1957), and a lecturer/projects administrator
(1962-1978). He also served as an assistant professor at Brandeis University
(1957-1960) and as the director of that university's Middle East Archaeology
Project to Iran and Israel. In 1962, he co-directed a Peace Corps training
program in Jamaica.
Dr. Stigler's Ph.D.
dissertation dealt with prehistoric pottery from northern Peru. He also
conducted archaeological research at sites in the American Southwest (Colorado
and Arizona), in Japan, and in North Africa (Egypt and Sudan). He was
a Fellow of the American Anthropological Association, and held memberships
in the Society for American Archaeology and the American Association for
the Advancement of Science. In addition to writing technical reports and
articles, he edited two books for St. Martin's Press, The Old World:
Early Man to the Development of Agriculture (1974) and Varieties
of Cultures in the Old World (1975).
Bob Stigler passed
away in 1980 in Pine Bluff after a long illness.