List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1945
Appearance
Ninety-six Guggenheim Fellowships were awarded in 1945.[1] More than 36 additional awards were postservice fellowships given to artists and scholars unable to apply in previous years due to the war.[2][3][4]
1945 Post-Service Fellows
[edit]Category | Field of Study | Fellow | Branch/service | Civilian institution | Research topic | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Creative Arts | Fine Arts | Donald Whitney Burns | Painting: Oil industry's part in World War II | [5][6] | |||
Adolph Dioda | Sculpture | [6][7] | |||||
Frank Davenport Duncan | Also won in 1947 | [6][8] | |||||
James E. Peck | United States Army Air Force | Painting: Ohio landscapes | [4] | ||||
Edward A. Reep | United States Army | Painting | [9][8] | ||||
Mitchell Siporin | United States Army | Also won in 1947 | [10][8] | ||||
Frank Vavruska | United States Army | Painting: Works based on his convalescence in England in World War II | [11] | ||||
Frede Vidar | United States Army | Painting: Southwest Pacific, based on combat sketches | [4] | ||||
Rudolph Charles von Ripper | Also won in 1947 | [8] | |||||
Fiction | Oliver La Farge | Air Transport Command | History of the Air Transport Command | Also won in 1941 | [4] | ||
Caroline Bache McMahon | Office of Strategic Services | Book about Japan | [4] | ||||
William E. Wilson | United States Navy | Writing | Also won in 1944 | [6][12][4] | |||
Poetry | Ben Belitt | United States Army | Prose based on his army experience | [4] | |||
Humanities | American Literature | Lawrance Thompson | Princeton University Library | Biography of Robert Frost | [13][14] | ||
Biography | John Edwin Bakeless | United States Navy | New York University | Biography of Lewis and Clark | Also won in 1936 | [4] | |
Classics | Walter Allen, Jr. | United States Navy | Yale University | Cicero and great Roman nobles | [4] | ||
Economic History | Henry William Spiegel | Duquesne University | Industrial planning in Brazil | [7] | |||
English Literature | Gordon Norton Ray | United States Navy | Harvard University | Edition of the letters and private papers of Thackeray | Also won in 1941, 1942, 1956 | [15] | |
Fine Arts Research | Harry Bober | City College of New York | Study of the printed books of hours, their development, style, schools, iconography, and influences | [14] | |||
French History | William Farr Church | United States Army | University of Kentucky | Political thought in 17th-century France | Also won in 1948, 1953 | [16][14] | |
General Nonfiction | Hodding Carter | Delta Democrat Times | Establishment of the West Florida Republic | [3][8][13][14] | |||
Paul G. Horgan | United States Army | New Mexico Military Institute | Rio Grande | Also won in 1958 | [4] | ||
History of Science and Technology | Edward Rosen | United States Army Air Corps | City College of New York | Place of Copernicus in the development of modern thought | Also won in 1941 | [17][14] | |
Italian Literature | Bernard Weinberg | Washington University in St. Louis | United States Army | Literary theory in the Italian Renaissance | [4] | ||
Medieval History | Barnaby Conrad Keeney | Harvard University | Origin and development of the feudal institution, and judgment by peers on the Continent and in England | [15][18][14] | |||
Medieval Literature | Claude Willis Barlow | United States Army | Mount Holyoke College | Critical edition of the works of St. Martin of Braga | [15][14] | ||
Near Eastern Studies | Donald E. McCown | University of Chicago | Early cultures of Baluchistan, and the relationships of the civilizations of the Indus Valley and Mesopotamia during the third millenium | [14] | |||
Philosophy | Morris T. Keeton | Southern Methodist University | Evaluation of the work of Edmund Montgomery | [4] | |||
Revilo P. Oliver | United States Army | University of Illinois | Ethico-philisophical content of humanism of the first half of the 15th century | [4][19] | |||
United States History | Adrienne Koch | Office of Economic Warfare | Social and political philosophy of Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and James Monroe | Also won in 1944 | [4] | ||
Dale L. Morgan | Office of Price Administration | History of Mormonism and the Mormons, with particular reference to the influence of the Mormons upon American life since 1830 | Also won in 1970 | [3][14] | |||
Henry Fowles Pringle | History of World War II on the home front and the military front | Also won in 1944 | [3][14] | ||||
Henry L. Smith | University of Minnesota | America's part in the development of world air routes and the history of American foreign air policy | [14] | ||||
C. Vann Woodward | United States Navy Reserve | Scripps College | Origins of the New South, 1880-1913 (published 1951) | Also won in 1959 | [18][14] | ||
Natural Sciences | Applied Mathematics | Leo Beranek | Office of Scientific Research and Development | Harvard University | Acoustics | [15][3][20] | |
Medicine and Health | Orville T. Bailey | Office of Scientific Research and Development | Harvard Medical School | Application of physiological methods to problems of degeneration in nerve fibers and myelin sheaths | [2][4] | ||
Organismic Biology and Ecology | Harold Francis Blum | United States Naval Research Laboratory | Evaluation of evolutionary concepts | Also won in 1936, 1953 | [4] | ||
Physics | Charles Kittel | United States Navy | Electrical and mechanical properties of matter at microwave radio frequencies | Also won in 1956, 1963 | [4] | ||
Plant Science | E. Yale Dawson | United States Army | University of California | Marine algae and marine flora on the Pacific coast of Mexico and Central America | [4] | ||
Roy Overstreet | University of California | Absorption and behavior of inorganic ions in plant nutrition | Also won in 1957 | [4] | |||
Social Sciences | Anthropology and Cultural Studies | Roy Franklin Barton | St. Andrews High School | Philippine folklore | Also won in 1941 | [4] | |
Dorothy Mary Spencer | Office of Strategic Services | Munda people | Also won in 1941 | [4] | |||
Education | Robert King Hall | United States Navy | Harvard University | Educational system in Japan with a view to rehabilitation after the war | Also won in 1949, 1952 | [15] | |
Political Science | Richard Poate Stebbins | Office of Strategic Services | Historical study of art patronage | [3] | |||
Psychology | G. LaVerne Freeman | United States Navy | Northwestern University | Nervous tension in man | [4] | ||
Alexander H. Leighton | United States Navy | Comparative study of Navajo, Eskimo, and Japanese peoples | [4] | ||||
Dorothea Leighton | Also won in 1947 | [4] | |||||
Sociology | Herbert Aptheker | United States Army | African Americans in World War II | [4] |
1945 U.S. and Canadian Fellows
[edit]Category | Field of Study | Fellow | Institutional association | Research topic | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Creative Arts | Fine Arts | Karl E. Fortress | [citation needed] | |||
Donal Hord | Also won in 1947 | [6] | ||||
Fred Kabotie | Prehistoric Mimbres pottery | [21][6] | ||||
Edward Laning | [6] | |||||
Jacob Lawrence | Painting: Harlem life and 14-panel series on war | [22] | ||||
Jack Levine | Painting | Also won in 1947 | [15][6][23] | |||
Eleanor Platt | Sculpture | [24][6] | ||||
Ellis Wilson | Painting | Also won in 1944 | [6][25] | |||
Fiction | Robert Pick | Writing | [13] | |||
Jean Stafford | Also won in 1948 | [13] | ||||
Music Composition | Samuel Barber | Composition | Also won in 1947, 1949 | [26] | ||
Charles F. Bryan | [8][26] | |||||
Elliott Carter | Also won in 1950 | [26] | ||||
Lukas Foss | Boston Symphony Orchestra | Also won in 1959 | [15][8] | |||
Norman Dello Joio | Also won in 1944 | [27] | ||||
Dai-keong Lee | Also won in 1951 | [26] | ||||
Nikolai Lopatnikoff | Also won in 1953 | [26] | ||||
Photography | Jack Delano | Farm Security Administration; Office of War Information | [28] | |||
Theodore Brett Weston | [29] | |||||
Poetry | Stanley J. Kunitz | Writing | [13][30] | |||
Marianne Moore | [13] | |||||
Theodore Roethke | Also won in 1950 | [13] | ||||
Humanities | American Literature | Richard Beale Davis | University of South Carolina | Also won in 1959 | [31] | |
Richard Gordon Lillard | Indiana University | Part played in American history by the forest between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mississippi River | Also won in 1946 | [14] | ||
Ralph Leslie Rusk | Columbia University | Ralph Waldo Emerson | [14] | |||
Architecture, Design and Planning | Henry-Russell Hitchcock | [6] | ||||
Biography | Marie Kimball | Thomas Jefferson, 1776-1789, including his governorship of Virginia and his ministry to France | Also won in 1946 | [14] | ||
British History | Franklin Le Van Baumer | Yale University | [32] | |||
William Huse Dunham, Jr. | Yale University | Also won in 1944 | [33] | |||
Garrett Mattingly | Long Island University | Also won in 1936, 1953, 1960 | [34] | |||
Classics | Thomas R. S. Broughton | Bryn Mawr College | Preparation of an annual list of the magistrates of the Roman Republic, including minor officials and members of the priestly colleges | Also won in 1958 | [14][35] | |
Israel E. Drabkin | [36] | |||||
Louis Alexander MacKay | University of British Columbia | Structure and composition of the Iliad | [37][38] | |||
English Literature | James Emerson Phillips, Jr. | University of California, Los Angeles | [39] | |||
Frederick A. Pottle | Yale University | James Boswell | Also won in 1952 | [40][14] | ||
Film, Video and Radio Studies | Siegfried Kracauer | "Social, political, and artistic situation of postwar Germany" | Also won in 1943, 1944 | [41] | ||
Fine Arts Research | Otto Benesch | [Harvard University]] | Corpus of Rembrandt's drawings | Also won in 1942 | [15][6] | |
Edward Millman | [42][6] | |||||
Elizabeth Wilder Weismann | Library of Congress | Studies and sculpture of colonial Mexico | Also won in 1944 | [3][6] | ||
Folklore and Popular Culture | George Kumler Anderson | [43] | ||||
C. Grant Loomis | University of California, Berkeley | White magic and the miracles of Christian legend | [39] | |||
General Nonfiction | Jerre G. Mangione | [13] | ||||
Bradford Smith | Narrative on immigration of Japanese to the United States | Also won in 1946 | [15] | |||
German and East European History | Hans Rosenberg | Brooklyn College | Book titled The Prusso-German Junkers: A History of a Social Class | Also won in 1946 | [14] | |
German and Scandinavian Literature | Alrik Gustafson | University of Minnesota | Biography of August Strindberg | Also won in 1946 | [44][14] | |
Intellectual and Cultural History | Ernest Campbell Mossner | Syracuse University | Also won in 1939 | [45] | ||
John William Shirley | Michigan State College | Unpublished manuscripts of Thomas Hariot | [46] | |||
Medieval History | Benjamin N. Nelson | Relations between conscious and casuistry in the moral philosophy and law of the later Middle Ages (12th-16th centuries) | [14] | |||
Medieval Literature | Charles W. Jones | Cornell University | History of Romanesque literature in Western Europe between approx. 325 and 1125 A.D. | Also won in 1939 | [47][48] | |
Mary Hatch Marshall | Colby College | History of the medieval religious plays of France, Germany, and England exclusive of the saints' plays | Also won in 1946 | [49][15][14] | ||
Music Research | Richard S. Angell | Columbia University | Organization of music libraries and archives | [50] | ||
Jacques Barzun | Columbia University | Hector Berlioz | [14] | |||
Philosophy | Frederic Brenton Fitch | Yake University | [51] | |||
Abraham Kaplan | [52][dead link] | |||||
Norman A. Malcolm | Princeton University | [53] | ||||
Charles Leslie Stevenson | Yale University | [54][6][55] | ||||
Frederick Ludwig Will | University of Illinois | Theory of knowledge, with special reference to the problems of empiricism | [56] | |||
United States History | Clement Eaton | Lafayette College | Liberalism in the New South, 1865-1929 | [18][14] | ||
Paul Henry Giddens | Allegheny College | Growth of the petroleum industry in the United States, 1870-1895 | [14] | |||
Merrill Monroe Jensen | University of Wisconsin | History of the United States during the confederation period, 1781-1789 | [14] | |||
Natural Sciences | Astronomy and Astrophysics | Samuel Herrick | University of California | Also won in 1952 | [39][57] | |
Chemistry | Lindsay Helmholz | Dartmouth College | [2] | |||
Dean S. Tarbell | Office of Scientific Research and Development | Also won in 1961 | [3] | |||
Mathematics | John Williams Calkin | Office of Chief of Naval Operations | Also won in 1946 | [3] | ||
Paul Erdős | Also won in 1946 | [58] | ||||
Edwin Hewitt | Harvard University | Topology | Also won in 1955 | [15] | ||
Walter H. Pitts | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Also won in 1947 | [2] | |||
Medicine and Health | Chandler McCuskey Brooks | Office of Scientific Research and Development | [3] | |||
Molecular and Cellular Biology | Damon Boynton | Cornell University | Ion competition as a factor in the nutrition of plants | [48] | ||
Britton Chance | University of Pennsylvania | Also won in 1947 | [59] | |||
Seymour S. Cohen | Office of Scientific Research and Development | Also won in 1982 | [3] | |||
Denis Llewellyn Fox | Scripps Institution of Oceanography | [39] | ||||
Frank H. Johnson | Princeton University | Fundamental mechanisms that control biological processes and phenomena | Also won in 1944, 1950 | [60] | ||
Roger Yate Stanier | Merck & Co. | Nature, relationships, and biological activities of bacteria, particularly myxobacteria | Also won in 1951, 1967 | [37][61] | ||
Organismic Biology and Ecology | Kenneth W. Cooper | Princeton University | Research at the California Institute of Technology | Also won in 1944 | [62] | |
Ellsworth Charles Dougherty | University of California | Certain parasitic nematodes | Also won in 1948 | [39] | ||
Johannes F. Holtfreter | McGill University | Genetics | Also won in 1944 | [37] | ||
Lewis H. Kleinholz | Cambridge Junior College | Physiological and chemical interrelationships in crustaceans | [2][49] | |||
Edward Novitski | Genetic effect of ultra-high frequency irradation | Also won in 1974 | [63] | |||
Plant Science | Carlos E. Chardón | Tropical Agriculture Institute | [64] | |||
Aaron John Sharp | University of Tennessee | Correlations between plants of the Southern Appalachians and the temperate floras of the mountains and highlands of Mexico and Central America | Also won in 1944 | [65][8] | ||
Social Science | Economics | Leonid Hurwicz | University of Chicago | [66] | ||
Mabel F. Timlin | University of Saskatchewan | Welfare economics | [37][67] | |||
Psychology | George L. Kreezer | Cornell University (visiting) | Mathematical analysis of physiological regulatory systems on the basis of physical automatic control theory | Also won in 1947 | [68] | |
Theodore Christian Schneirla | New York University; American Museum of Natural History | Relationship between instinct and learning in insect psychology | Also won in 1944 | [69] | ||
Sociology | Charles Wright Mills | University of Maryland | White Collar: The American Middle Classes (published 1951) | [3][70] |
1945 Latin American and Caribbean Fellows
[edit]Category | Field of Study | Fellow | Institutional association | Research topic | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Creative Arts | Fine Arts | José Alonso | Also won in 1946 | [71] | ||
Mauricio Lasansky | Also won in 1943, 1944, 1953, 1964 | [72] | ||||
Jesús Escobedo Trejo | [73][dead link] | |||||
Music Composition | Juan A. Orrego-Salas | Also won in 1954 | [74] | |||
Humanities | Geography and Environmental Studies | Gerardo A. Canet | Institute of La Víbora, Havana | Also won in 1947 | [75] | |
Iberian and Latin American History | Ramón Iglesia | El Colegio de México | Mexican historiography in the 16th century | Also won in 1943 | [76] | |
Linguistics | John Corominas | National University of Cuyo | Also won in 1948, 1957 | [77] | ||
Natural Sciences | Astronomy and Astrophysics | Félix Cernuschi | National University of Tucumán | Also won in 1942 | [78] | |
Guido Münch Paniagua | University of Chicago (PhD student) | Also won in 1944, 1958 | [79] | |||
Carlos Ulrrico Cesco | La Plata Astronomical Observatory | [80] | ||||
Mathematics | Rafael Laguardia | University of the Republic (Uruguay) | [81] | |||
Medicine and Health | Eduardo Aguirre Pequeño | [82] | ||||
José Jesús Estable | Instituto de Medicina Experimental | Also won in 1947 | [83] | |||
Alfonso Graña | University of the Republic | [84] | ||||
Molecular and Cellular Biology | Otto Guilherme Bier | Biological Institute (São Paulo) | Also won in 1941, 1946 | [85] | ||
Organismic Biology and Ecology | Manuel Maldonado Koerdell | Autonomous University of Nuevo León | Comparative anatomy, especially of the vertebrate skeleton | Also won in 1944 | [86] | |
Luis René Rivas y Díaz | La Salle College | Also won in 1946 | [87] | |||
Bernardo Villa Ramírez | National Autonomous University of Mexico | Also won in 1946 | [88] | |||
Plant Science | Sigurd Arentsen Steeger | Ministry of Agriculture (Chile) | [89] | |||
Elisa Hirschhorn | University of La Plata | Plant pathology | Also won in 1944 | [90] | ||
Social Science | Economics | Raúl García | National University of Córdoba | Agrarian policy in the United States | Also won in 1943 | [91] |
See also
[edit]- Guggenheim Fellowship
- List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1944
- List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1946
References
[edit]- ^ "1945". Guggenheim Foundation. Archived from the original on 2008-03-24. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- ^ a b c d e "4 Guggenheim Fellowships won by N.E. scholars". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 1945-10-22. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "D.C. area residents win Guggenheim Fellowship awards". Evening Star. Washington, DC, USA. 1945-04-23. p. 2. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "Post-service awards made by Guggenheim". The Daily Oklahoman. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA. 1945-10-22. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Donald W. "Don" Burns". Meibohm Fine Arts. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Guggenheim Art Awards". College Art Journal. 5 (1): 52–53. November 1945.
- ^ a b "Pittsburghers win $2500 fellowships". The Pittsburgh Press. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. 1945-04-24. p. 4. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "41 men in service win fellowships". Chattanooga Daily Times. Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA. 1945-04-23. p. 9. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Edward Reep biography". California Watercolor. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Mitchell Sporin". chicagomodern.org. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Frank Vavruska". Corbett vs Dempsey. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Ellis Wilson, Artist, 76; Painted Harlem and Haiti, Was Guggenheim Fellow". The New York Times. New York City, New York, USA. 1977-01-07. p. 19.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Haynes, Caroline (1945-06-07). "Book Briefs". The Leaf-Chronicle. Clarksville, Tennessee, USA. p. 7. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "Historical News". The American Historical Review. 50 (4): 878–879. July 1945.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "1 Maine woman, 10 Bay State men get fellowships". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 1945-04-23. p. 2. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Famous Guggenheim Fellowship won by William F. Church". The Herald-Palladium. Benton H arbor, Michigan, USA. 1945-04-30. p. 3. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ Waggoner, Walter H. (1985-03-30). "DR. EDWARD ROSEN, CITY U. PROFESSOR". The New York Times. New York City, New York, USA. p. 28. Retrieved 2022-10-22.
- ^ a b c "U.N.C. alumni win Guggenheim Awards". The Herald-Sun. Durham, North Carolina, USA. 1945-05-25. p. 5. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "OLIVER, Revilo Pendleton". Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Leo L. Beranek". Memorial Tributes. Vol. 22. National Academies Press. 2019. p. 25. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Grand Canyon recognizes Fred Kabotie in November". NHO News. 2020-12-01. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "1945". MoMA. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Jack Levine, 95, an artist who always kept it real". amNY. 2010-12-22. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Eleanor Platt". National Academy of Design. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Ellis Wilson, Artist, 76; Painted Harlem and Haiti, Was Guggenheim Fellow". The New York Times. New York City, New York, USA. 1977-01-07. p. 19.
- ^ a b c d e "Guggenheim Fellowship (1945-1949)". University of Washington. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Norman Dello Joio". American Ballet Theatre. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Jack Delano". Photographs Do Not Bend Gallery. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ Nicholson, Rupert (2018-04-17). "End Frame: Mendenhall Glacier, 1973 by Brett Weston". On Landscape. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ Matz, Aaron (1999-08-23). "Roll Over, Sophocles-Kunitz Is Now Oldest Poet Ever". Observer. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ Lemay, J.A. Leo (2018). "Richard Beale Davis". Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Franklin L. Baumer". John Simon Guggeheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "William H. Dunham Jr". John Simon Guggeheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Garrett Mattingly". John Simon Guggeheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "BROUGHTON, Thomas Robert Shannon". Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Notes and Events". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 20 (3): 283. July 1965.
- ^ a b c d "Two British Columbia men win Guggenheim Awards". The Province. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 1945-04-23. p. 3. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "MACKAY, Louis Alexander". Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ a b c d e "U.C. leads in Guggenheim Fellowships". Metropolitan Pasadena Star-News. Pasadena, California, USA. 1945-05-03. p. 13. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Frederick Pottle". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ Quaresima, Leonardo (2004). "INTRODUCTION TO THE 2004 EDITION: REREADING KRACAUER". From Caligari to Hitler. Princeton University Press. p. xx. doi:10.1515/9780691192086-003.
- ^ Meyerowitz, Lisa. "Edward Millman". chicagomodern.org. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ Mitchell, Martha. "Anderson, George K." Brown University. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "News and Notes". Scandinavian Studies. 42 (4): 472. November 1970.
- ^ "Ernest C. Mossner". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- ^ "Fellowship in England to an ex-Algona boy". Kossuth County Advance. Algona, Iowa, USA. 1945-05-01. p. 6. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Charles W. Jones". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
- ^ a b "Fellowships awarded 2 Cornell men". The Ithaca Journal. Ithaca, New York, USA. 1945-04-23. p. 3. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b "Former Colby instructor gets Guggenheim Award". Kennebec Journal. Augusta, Maine, USA. 1945-10-27. p. 10. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Leonia resident has fellowship". The Record. Hackensack, New Jersey, USA. 1945-04-23. p. 5. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Frederic B. Fitch". John Simon Guggeheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Abraham Kaplan". Zenith City Press. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Norman A. Malcolm". John Simon Guggeheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Guggenheim Award won by former Cincinnatian". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. 1945-04-24. p. 20. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ Frankena, William K. (May 1979). "Chrales Leslie Stevenson". University of Michigan. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Dr: F. L. Will is Guggenheim Award winner". The Evening Courier. Urbana, Illinois, USA. 1945-04-23. p. 3. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ Aller, Lawrence; Barnes, John L.; Abell, George O. "Samuel Herrick, Engineering; Astronomy: Los Angeles". University of California Libraries. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "News and Notices". The American Mathematical Monthly. 52 (7): 406. 1945. doi:10.1080/00029890.1945.11991595.
- ^ "Britton Chance". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Frank H. Johnson". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ Clarke, Patricia H. (December 1986). "Roger Yate Stanier. 22 October 1916-29 January 1982". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 32: 546.
- ^ "In Memoriam: Kenneth Willard Cooper". University of California Academic Senate. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "Guggeheim Fellowship given Edward Novitski". The Times Leader. Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, USA. 1945-04-24. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-10-24 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Carlos E. Chardon". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ McFarland, Kenneth D.; Anderson, Lewis E.; Crum, Howard A. (1998). "A Tribute to Aaron John Sharp. July 29, 1904-November 16, 1997". The Bryologist. 101 (4): 484.
- ^ "Leonid Hurwicz". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ Spafford, Duff (May 1977). "In Memoriam: Mabel F. Timlin". The Canadian Journal of Economics. 10 (2): 280.
- ^ "Cornell man awarded fellowship". The Ithaca Journal. Ithaca, New York, USA. 1945-10-24. p. 4. Retrieved 2022-10-25 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "Theodore C. Schneirla". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Charles Wright Mills". Columbia University. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "José Alonso". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Mauricio Lasansky". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
- ^ "Jesús Escobedo". Blanton Museum of Art. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Juan A. Orrego-Salas". University of Iowa. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Gerardo A. Canet". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Ramón Iglesia". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
- ^ "John Corominas". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Félix Cernuschi". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
- ^ Münch, Christopher (2020-08-31). "Guido Münch". Physics Today. doi:10.1063/PT.6.4o.20200831a.
- ^ "Carlos Ulrrico Cesco". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Rafael Laguardia". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Eduardo Aguirre Pequeño" (in Spanish). H. Congreso del Estado de Nuevo León. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "José Jesús Estable". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Alfonso Graña". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Otto Guilherme Bier". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-22.
- ^ "Manuel Maldonado Koerdell". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
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- ^ "Villa Ramírez, Bernardo" (in Spanish). Enciclopedia Guerrerense. 2020-03-11. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ "Sigurd Arentsen Steeger". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
- ^ Vergara, Ángela (2021-08-04). "Latin American Women and the Guggenheim Foundation". Latin American Women and the Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
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