Two hundred and sixty-five scholars and artists were awarded Guggenheim Fellowships in 1961. More than $1,350,000 was disbursed.[1]

1961 U.S. and Canadian Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowInstitutional associationResearch topicNotesRef
Creative ArtsChoreographyPaul TaylorPaul Taylor Dance CompanyAlso won in 1966, 1983[2][3]
Drama and Performance ArtRobert Goode HoganCreative writing in drama[4]
FictionGeorge Paul ElliottUniversity of Iowa, Barnard CollegeWritingAlso won in 1970[5]
Curtis A. HarnackSarah Lawrence College[6]
John C. Keats[7]
Paule Burke Marshall[8]
Grace PaleyGreenwich Village Peace Center[9]
Mordecai Richler[10]
Fine ArtsHarold AltmanUniversity of WisconsinDrawing and printmakingAlso won in 1960[11]
Al BlausteinThe Art Center of Northern New JerseyPrintmakingAlso won in 1958[12]
Edward Colker[13]
Worden DayAlso won in 1952[14]
Arthur DeshaiesCreative printmaking[15]
Jimmy ErnstBrooklyn CollegePainting[16]
Gray FoyDrawing[17]
Robert W. HansenOccidental College[18]
David Vincent HayesSculpting[19]
Jerome Eugene KaplanPhiladelphia College of ArtPrintmaking[20][21]
Daniel U. NewmanPainting[22]
John W. RhodenSculpting[23]
George Warren RickeyRensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Tulane UniversitySculptingAlso won in 1960[24][25]
Music CompositionHalim El-DabhComposingAlso won in 1959[26]
Arnold FranchettiUniversity of Hartford[27][19]
Karl George KohnPomona College[27][28]
Theodore S. NewmanUniversity of Miami[27][29]
Burrill PhillipsUniversity of IllinoisAlso won in 1942[30][31]
William Overton SmithUniversity of Southern CaliforniaAlso won in 1960[18]
PhotographyBruce L. DavidsonYouth in America[32]
John SzarkowskiStudy of Quetico Provincial Park-Superior National Forest in Canada and the United StatesAlso won in 1954[33][11]
PoetryWendell Erdman BerryWriting[34]
Kay BoyleEminent figures in German historyAlso won in 1934[35][19]
James DickeyBurke-Dowling-AdamsWriting[36]
Kenneth Koch[37]
George Edwin StarbuckHoughton Mifflin Company[15]
HumanitiesAmerican LiteratureEverett CarterUniversity of California, DavisIdea of progress in American literatureAlso won in 1952[38]
Clarence Louis Frank GohdesDuke UniversityWork on proposed bibliography of regional literature and drama in the U.S.[39][40]
Leo MarxAmherst CollegePastoral impulse in American literature and thoughtAlso won in 1965[15]
William Harwood PedenUniversity of MissouriAmerican short story between 1940 and 1960[41]
Architecture, Planning and DesignHarold Edelman[42]
Stanley SalzmanPratt Institute, New York School of Interior Design[43]
Eduard SeklerHarvard UniversityUrban designAlso won in 1963[15]
Rudolf Jacob WittkowerColumbia University[44]
BibliographyDonald C. Gallup (de)Yale UniversityBibliographical studies of the works of Ezra PoundAlso won in 1968[19]
Edwin Wolf IILibrary Company of Philadelphia[45]
BiographyIrvin EhrenpreisIndiana UniversityLife of Jonathan SwiftAlso won in 1955[4]
British HistorySidney Alexander BurrellBarnard College[46]
Margaret Gay DaviesPomona CollegeContinuing work started by her father on economic fluctuations in the Restoration Period of England[28]
William Roger GrahamUniversity of SaskatchewanSecond volume of biography on Arthur Meighen[47]
Alfred M. GollinUniversity of California, Los AngelesAlso won in 1964, 1971[18]
William Best HesseltineUniversity of WisconsinManuscript jornals, in several languages, of Hekekyan Bey[11][48]
Thomas H. D. MahoneyMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyEdmund Burke and the American Revolution[15]
Leo Frank SoltIndiana UniversitySectarian tracts of the Commonwealth and The Protectorate[49][4]
ClassicsFrancis DvornikDumbarton Oaks Research LibraryOrigin of early Christian political philosophy[50]
Kenan Tevfik Erim[51]
Herbert HoffmanMuseum für Kunst und Gewerbe HamburgAlso won in 1972[2]
Sesto PreteFordham University[52]
Cedric Hubbell WhitmanHarvard UniversityAristophanes as a comic poetAlso won in 1976[15]
East Asian StudiesHarry J. BendaYale UniversitySocial and political history of Southeast Asia since 1950[19]
Relman MorinAssociated PressOrigins of colonialism in the Far East[1]
Donald KeeneColumbia UniversityAlso won in 1971[53][54]
Economic HistoryCharles IssawiColumbia UniversityAlso won in 1968[55][56]
English LiteratureJohn Lewis BradleyMount Holyoke CollegeLife and works of Henry Mayhew[15]
Dwight CullerYale UniversityPoetry of Matthew ArnoldAlso won in 1975[19]
Joseph FrankUniversity of RochesterPoetry of the period from 1641 to 1660Also won in 1958[57]
Walter John Hipple, Jr.Cornell College19th century British philosophy from the time of Dugald Stewart to that of Samuel Alexander[5]
Dan H. LaurenceShavian researchAlso won in 1960, 1972[58]
Lowry Nelson, Jr.University of California, Los Angeles[18]
Robert OrnsteinUniversity of IllinoisShakespeare's history plays in relation to Elizabethan historical and political thought[30][31]
David Dodd PerkinsHarvard UniversityLife and poetry of William WordsworthAlso won in 1972[15]
John Henry RaleighUniversity of California, BerkeleyEnglish fiction from Dickens to Joyce[38]
Charles H. ShattuckUniversity of IllinoisEnglish language prompt books of Shakespeare's playsAlso won in 1968[30][31]
George Robert StangeUniversity of MinnesotaPoetry of Matthew Arnold[59]
Frank W. WadsworthUniversity of California, Los AngelesRevivals of Elizabethan plays in 19th century United States and England[18][60]
Harris Ward WilsonUniversity of IllinoisH. G. Wells and the Fabian Society[30][31]
Andrew WrightOhio State UniversityAlso won in 1970[61]
Fine Arts ResearchWen FongPrinceton University[62][63]
Curtis Howard ShellWellesley CollegeFlorentine painting of early Renaissance[15]
Folklore and Popular CultureFelix Johannes OinasIndiana UniversityRelationship of Russian and Balto-Finnic folklore and linguisticsAlso won in 1966[49][4]
Harry OsterLouisiana State University[25]
French HistoryDavid Duckworth BienPrinceton University[64][65]
Jere Clemens KingUniversity of California, Los Angeles[18]
Andrew LosskyUniversity of California, Los Angeles[18]
French LiteratureJules BrodyColumbia University[66][67]
Wallace FowlieBennington CollegeWork of Marcel ProustAlso won in 1947[15]
Raymond Dorner GiraudStanford UniversityOrigins and development of the concept of art for art's sake in 19th century French literature[38]
Edward B. Ham (de)University of Michigan[68]
Lawrence Elliot HarveyDartmouth CollegeWritings of Samuel Beckett[15]
Neal Oxenhandler (fr)University of California, Los AngelesAesthetic basis of the poetry of Max Jacob[18][60]
Michael RiffaterreColumbia UniversityAlso won in 1977[69]
Georges Markow-TotevyPrinceton University[70]
General NonfictionBen Haig BagdikianProvidence Journal, Evening BulletinDevelopment of contemporary American press[15]
Helen HenleyaChristian Science MonitorFamily farm in contemporary U.S.[15]
German and East European HistoryHajo HolbornYale UniversityPhilosophical foundations of historical knowledgeAlso won in 1954[19]
German and Scandinavian LiteratureMartin DyckUniversity of Michigan[71][68]
Hans Albert MaierUniversity of ConnecticutGoethe's West–östlicher Divan[19]
Walter Friedrich NaumannUniversity of Wisconsin, MadisonAlso won in 1951[72]
Italian LiteratureEric William Cochrane JrUniversity of ChicagoHistory of Florence[31]
Nicolae IliescuHarvard UniversityPetrarch's Il Canzoniere in perspective of the writings of St. Augustine[15]
Sergio PacificiYale UniversityModern Italian novel[19]
Latin American LiteratureNorman F. MartinUniversity of Santa ClaraUnemployment faced by New Spain during the 17th and 18th centuries[60]
LinguisticsNicholas C. BodmanForeign Service InstituteTibeto-Burman languages[50]
Literary CriticismRobert BrusteinColumbia University[73]
Murray KriegerUniversity of IllinoisClassic vision in post-Renaissance literatureAlso won in 1956[30][31]
Yvor WintersStanford UniversityAspects of the short poem[38]
Medieval HistoryDavid HerlihyBryn Mawr College[74]
Richard Eugene SullivanMichigan State UniversityHistory of Christian monasticism from the fourth to the 10th century[71][68]
Medieval LiteratureCharles William DunnNew York University[75]
David C. FowlerUniversity of WashingtonAlso won in 1975[76]
Robert KaskeUniversity of North CarolinaHeroism and the hero in Old English poetryAlso won in 1977[40]
Paul Murray KendallOhio UniversityWarwick the KingmakerAlso won in 1957[77]
Joseph Szövérffy (de)University of AlbertaHistory of vernacular lyric poetry in the Middle AgesAlso won in 1969[78]
Erik WahlgrenUniversity of California, Los Angeles[18]
Music ResearchWilliam Weaver AustinCornell UniversityMusic of the 20th century[79][80]
Ralph Thomas DanielIndiana UniversityOrigin and development of the English anthem[49][4]
Near Eastern StudiesBen HalpernHarvard UniversityContemporary Israel[15]
Anne Draffkorn KilmerUniversity of ChicagoLexical texts of ancient MesopotamiaAlso won in 1962[31]
Samuel Noah KramerUniversity of PennsylvaniaAlso won in 1937, 1938[81]
William R. PolkHarvard UniversityRelations of U.S. and Arab World[15]
Isaac RabinowitzCornell UniversityWorking on an annotated translation of The Book of Honeycomb's Flow of Judah Messer Leon[79][80]
PhilosophyJ. Glenn GrayColorado CollegeWork on book tenatively titled To Make Men Seekers - A Theory of American Education[82]
Wallace I. MatsonUniversity of California, BerkeleyExplanatory concepts[38]
Abraham Irving MeldenUniversity of Washington[83]
ReligionPeter de Beauvoir BrockUniversity of AlbertaHistory of pacificism[78]
Edward Atkinson Dowey, Jr.Princeton Theological SeminaryIntellectual history of the 16th and 17th centuries, with reference to religious thought in the reformed areas of Protestantism[84]
James Alvin SandersColgate Rochester Crozer Divinity SchoolAlso won in 1972[57]
Russian HistoryAlexander DallinColumbia University[85]
Martin Edward MaliaUniversity of California, BerkeleyRussian radial intelligentsia from 1825 to 1917[38]
Slavic LiteratureRufus Wellington Mathewson, Jr.Columbia University[86]
Spanish and Portuguese LiteratureWillis R. BarnstoneWesleyan UniversityLife and works of Antonio Machado[49][19]
Ángel del Río (es)Columbia University[87][88]
Edward Glaser (es) (de)University of Michigan[71][68]
Theatre ArtsBenjamin Hunningher (nl)Columbia University[89]
Dorothy JeakinsLos Angeles Civic Light Opera[18][90]
United States HistoryArthur BestorUniversity of IllinoisAmerican constitutional developmentAlso won in 1953[30][31]
Francis L. Berkeley, Jr.University of Virginia[91][92]
Paul Wilbur GladCoe CollegeUnited States from World War I to the Great Depression[93]
Hugh Dodge HawkinsAmherst CollegeAmerican university presidents, 1865-1915[15]
William Ransom HoganTulane University[25]
Stephen Guild KurtzWabash CollegePolitical philosophy and statecraft of John Adams[4]
David Sievert LavenderThe Thacher SchoolAmerican Fur CompanyAlso won in 1968[94]
Samuel Eliot Morison[95]
Richard B. MorrisCity College of New YorkAlso won in 1947, 1982[96]
Natural SciencesApplied MathematicsBernard BudianskyHarvard UniversityTheory of thin shells[15]
Charles Danne Graham, Jr.University of Pennsylvania[97]
David OkrentArgonne National LaboratoryHigh temperature experimentsAlso won in 1977[31]
Robert D. RichtmyerNew York University[98]
Ronald Samuel RivlinBrown University[99]
Hans Jürgen Eduard SchmittHarvard UniversityScattering of electromagnetic waves from acoustic disturbances[15]
Richard Thorpe ShieldBrown UniversityMathematical theories of elastic and plastic solids[15]
Harold StarasRCA LaboratoriesCommunications systems that utilize new modes of wave propagation[100]
Biochemistry and Molecular BiologyHorace Albert BarkerUniversity of California, BerkeleyBiochemistry of the cobamide coenzymesAlso won in 1941[38]
ChemistryRichard J. BearmanUniversity of KansasStatistical mechanics transport processes in mixtures[41]
Ernst BerlinerBryn Mawr College[74]
Robert Kenneth BrintonUniversity of CaliforniaTransfer of excitation energy between molecules in solution[38]
William Andrew ChupkaArgonne National LaboratoryMass spectrometry[31]
Robert Hugh ColeBrown UniversityEquilibrium and relaxation theories of dielectricsAlso won in 1955[15]
James John FritzPennsylvania State UniversityLow temperature research and studies in the theory of magnetism[74][101]
Robert Maurice HexterMellon InstituteProblem of predicting the electronic and vibrational spectra of molecular crystals[102]
Kenneth Keith InnesVanderbilt UniversityOrganic molecular structure[103]
Herbert August Laitinen (fi)University of IllinoisHigh temperature electrochemistryAlso won in 1953[30][31]
William Eugene ParhamUniversity of MinnesotaOrganic chemistry[59]
John Michael PrausnitzUniversity of California, BerkeleyThermodynamics of solutionsAlso won in 1972[38]
Benton Seymour RabinovitchUniversity of Washington[104][105]
Charles Norwood ReilleyUniversity of North CarolinaMetal chelate relations[40]
Kenneth Lloyd Rinehart, Jr.University of IllinoisApplication of physical and chemical methods to problems of organic structure determination[30][31]
Frank Sherwood RowlandUniversity of KansasChemical effects of nuclear transformationsAlso won in 1973[41]
Zevi W. SalsburgRice UniversityThermodynamic theory of reactive shock waves and detonations[106]
Raymond E. ShapiroUnited States Department of AgricultureSoil factors in soil-plant relationships[50]
Robert G. ShulmanBell Telephone Laboratories[107]
William SpindelRutgers University–NewarkRare oxygen isotopes[108]
Thomas Tamotsu SugiharaClark UniversityEffects of angular momentum and excitation energy in high-energy fission[15]
Dean S. TarbellUniversity of RochesterNew techniques for investigations in organic chemistryAlso won in 1945[57]
Robert UllmanPolytechnic Institute of Brooklyn[109]
Kenneth Berle WibergUniversity of Washington[110][111]
Benjamin WidomCornell UniversityLong-range correlations in fluidsAlso won in 1968[79][80]
Earth ScienceDouglas Lamar InmanScripps Institution of Oceanography[112]
Charles David KeelingScripps Institution of Oceanography[113]
Paul E. PotterIllinois Geological SurveyPrimary directional properties in sedimentary rocks[49][31]
Lionel Edward WeissUniversity of California, BerkeleyProperties of rocks deformed by flow in the solid stateAlso won in 1969[38]
EngineeringBoris BreslerUniversity of CaliforniaImproved methods of design for control of crack and formation in concrete structures[38]
Ferdinand FreudensteinColumbia UniversityKinematics of mechanismsAlso won in 1967[114]
William Wilson MullinsCarnegie Institute of TechnologyTheoretical problems relating to shapes and rates of changes of surfaces under various environmental conditions[102]
William Tyrrell ThomsonUniversity of California, Los Angeles[18]
Geography and Environmental StudiesAndrew Hill ClarkUniversity of WisconsinHistorical geography, especially of maritime Canada[11]
Sheldon JudsonPrinceton UniversityAlso won in 1966[115]
W. Barclay KambCalifornia Institute of TechnologyRelation between state of stress and preferred orientation of ice crystals in selected glaciers of the AlpsAlso won in 1959[60]
Herold Jacob WiensYale UniversityHistorical and regional geography of Sinkiang[19]
MathematicsLeon A. HenkinUniversity of California, Berkeley; Dartmouth CollegeModels of the simple theory of types[38][15]
Louis Norberg HowardMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyGeophysical fluid dynamics[15]
Ellis Robert KolchinColumbia UniversityAlso won in 1954[116][117]
George Whitelaw MackeyHarvard UniversityTopological groupsAlso won in 1949, 1970[15]
Albert NijenhuisUniversity of Chicago[81][97]
Medicine and HealthFrederik Barry BangJohns Hopkins UniversityResponses to diseases in various marine intervertebrates[50]
John Frederick BellU.S. Public Health ServiceComparative study of Eurasian and American tularemia[118]
Dana Charles BrooksCornell University Medical CollegeBasis of electrical activity in the mammilian brain[80]
Robert James GorlinUniversity of MinnesotaOral pathology book preparation[59]
Lawrence Ennis SavageUniversity of WashingtonGastric physiology[119]
Henry Orson WheelerColumbia University[120]
Molecular and Cellular BiologySeymour BenzerPurdue UniversityCellular control mechanisms[4]
William Clouser BoydBoston University School of MedicineImmunochemical specificityAlso won in 1935, 1937[121][15]
Herbert E. CarterUniversity of IllinoisBiochemistry[122][30][31]
Gertrude FalkUniversity of Washington[123]
Malcolm Stephen GordonUniversity of California, Los Angeles[18]
Benjamin D. HallUniversity of IllinoisMolecular structure and biological specificity of ribonucleic acid synthesized in virus-infected bacteria[30][31]
Robert Manoah KarkUniversity of IllinoisNephrotic syndrome in ratsAlso won in 1974[30][31]
Robert Berner LoftfieldHarvard Medical SchoolAmino acid sequence of proteins[15]
Robert Eugene OlsonUniversity of PittsburghMechanism of control of certain aspects of cell metabolism in heart muscleAlso won in 1970[102]
Paul Karl StumpfUniversity of California, DavisFatty acids in plant tissuesAlso won in 1968[38]
Charles Wyvil ToddDuPontImmunology and protein synthesis[124]
Charles Allen WestUniversity of California, Los AngelesEnzymatic mechanisms and intermediates involved in the biosynthesis of the gibberellins[18][60]
Harry Curtis Young, Jr.Oklahoma State UniversityElimination of wheat leaf rust as a major disease problem[125]
Organismic Biology and EcologyGeorge A. BartholomewUniversity of California, Los Angeles[18]
Francis C. EvansUniversity of Michigan[71][68]
Julius H. FreitagUniversity of CaliforniaComparison of certain vectors of plant viruses[38]
William Neil HolmesUniversity of British ColumbiaHow do some birds, mammals and fish manage to live in, or drink, either fresh or salt water?[126]
Otto KinneUniversity of Toronto[127]
Lawrence B. SlobodkinUniversity of MichiganAlso won in 1974[128][71][68]
Paul SludAmerican Museum of Natural HistoryBirds of Cocos Island[129][130]
Leroy Carlton Stevens, Jr.Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial LaboratoryMicroscopic tumors in early stages of development[15]
Howard Elliott WinnUniversity of MarylandComparative studies of sound production as means of communication in certain fish species[50]
PhysicsErnst BleulerPurdue UniversityHigh-energy physics[4]
Robert BroutCornell UniversityApplications in ferromagnetism[79][80]
Sidney David DrellStanford UniversityQuantum field theory on the structure of elementary particlesAlso won in 1971[38]
William A. FowlerCalifornia Institute of TechnologyAlso won in 1954[131]
Hans Pieter Roetert FrederikseNational Bureau of StandardsPhysical properties of oxide semi-conductors[50]
Donald Arthur GlaserLawrence Radiation LaboratoryBiophysics[38]
Erwin L. HahnUniversity of California, BerkeleyNuclear magnetism at low temperaturesAlso won in 1969[38]
Bernard G. HarveyUniversity of California, BerkeleyNuclear stripping and pick-up reactions[38]
Evans Vaughan HaywardNational Bureau of StandardsPhotonuclear reactions[50]
Arthur Kent KermanMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyTheory of nuclear structure[15]
Francis E. LowMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyInteractions of elementary particles by application of Quantum field theory[15]
Steven Alexander Moszkowski (de)University of California, Los Angeles[18]
David S. SaxonUniversity of California, Los AngelesOptical model of the nucleusAlso won in 1956[18][132]
Jabez Curry StreetHarvard UniversityHigh-energy particle physics[15]
Robert Rathbun WilsonCornell UniversityProton as revealed by high-energy electrons[79][80]
Plant ScienceHenry Nathaniel AndrewsWashington University in St. LouisCritical study of certain groups of early land plantsAlso won in 1951, 1958[133]
Herbert Bashford CurrierUniversity of CaliforniaPhysiology of callose and associated phenomena in plant cellsAlso won in 1954[38]
Thor KommedahlUniversity of MinnesotaRelation of root-rotting organisms to residues of crop plants and weeds[59]
Hui-Lin LiUniversity of Pennsylvania[81][97]
Lewis Glen WeathersUniversity of California, RiversideEffect that two or more viruses in combination have on plant growth and the role they play in diseases of plants[134]
Carl Leslie Withner (es) (fr) (pt)Brooklyn Botanical Garden, Brooklyn CollegeOrchids[135]
StatisticsRoy RadnerUniversity of CaliforniaProblems of organizationAlso won in 1965[38]
Charles Max SteinStanford UniversityApplication of group theory to statistics[38]
Social SciencesAnthropology and Cultural StudiesDavid Lockwood OlmstedUniversity of California, DavisComparative American Indian linguistics[38]
William Francis ShipleyUniversity of CaliforniaNisenan language[38]
EconomicsRichard S. EckausBrandeis UniversityEconomic characteristics of technology, particularly in metal-working industries[15]
Jack HirshleiferUniversity of California, Los Angeles[18]
John Seneca McGeeUniversity of ChicagoGovernment regulation in Spanish industry[31]
John Michael MontiasYale UniversityPresent-day economic organization in Eastern Europe[19]
Ira Oscar Scott, Jr.Columbia University[136]
Joseph John SpenglerDuke UniversityDevelopment of economic thought[40]
Jaroslav VanekHarvard UniversityYugoslavia as decentralized socialist economy[15]
LawFranklin Johnson PeguesOhio State University[137]
Political ScienceHarry V. JaffaOhio State University[138]
Wladyslaw W. KulskiSyracuse UniversityNational interests in contemporary FranceAlso won in 1969[139]
Norman Dunbar PalmerUniversity of Pennsylvania[81][97]
Paul SeaburyUniversity of CaliforniaNon-military conflict and competition between Russia and the West[38]
Jacobus tenBroekUniversity of CaliforniaU.S. citizenshipAlso won in 1953[38]
Panayiotis J. VatikiotisIndiana UniversityDevelopment of Egypt from 1800 to the present[49][4]
Myron WeinerUniversity of ChicagoCongress party since Indian independence[31]
PsychologyEmory L. CowenUniversity of RochesterAdjustment to auditory disability[57]
Eric Gustav HeinemannVassar College[140]
Harold Brenner PepinskyOhio State University[141]
SociologyRenée Claire FoxUniversity of Pennsylvania[97]
Sidney GoldsteinBrown University[15]

1961 Latin American and Caribbean Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowInstitutional associationResearch topicNotesRef
Creative ArtsFine ArtsLuis CamnitzerEscuela de Bellas Artes, MontevideoAlso won in 1982[142][143]
Sarah GriloPaintingAlso won in 1963[144]
David Manzur LondoñoUniversity of the AndesPaintingAlso won in 1962[145][146]
Armando MoralesEngravingAlso won in 1958[147][148]
Music CompositionMario DavidovskyComposingAlso won in 1960[149]
HumanitiesHistory of Science and TechnologyAlair de Oliveira Gomes (pt)Federal University of Rio de Janeiro[2]
Iberian and Latin American HistoryRafael Olivar-BertrandUniversidad Nacional del SurAlso won in 1963[150]
Natural SciencesMathematicsJosé Barros-NetoYale UniversityAlso won in 1962[151][152]
Elon Lages LimaBrazilian Center for Research in PhysicsAlso won in 1963[153]
Juan Carlos MerloUniversity of Buenos AiresAlso won in 1962[154]
Nelson Onuchic (pt)São Paulo State UniversityAlso won in 1962[155]
Molecular and Cellular BiologyEmiliano Cabrera JuárezNational School of Biological Sciences, Mexico[156]
Mitzy CanessaUniversity of ChileAlso won in 1959[157]
NeuroscienceAdolfo Davidovich GuerberofPontifical Catholic University of Chile[158]
Organismic Biology and EcologyFederico Medem (es)National University of ColombiaSystematics of Colombian turtles, snakes and lizardsAlso won in 1952[159]
Francisco NemenzoUniversity of the Philippines[160]
Genaro O. RanitUniversity of the PhilippinesAlso won in 1960[161]
Leonila Vázquez GarcíaNational Autonomous University of Mexico[162]
PhysicsJacobo RapaportUniversity of Chile[163]
Plant ScienceHernán Caballero DelpinoUniversity of Concepción[164]
Milán Jorge Dimitri (es)National Parks, Argentina[165]
Faustino Miranda González (es)National Autonomous University of MexicoManual of trees in southeastern Mexico[166]
Social SciencesAnthropology and Cultural StudiesFelipe Landa JocanoNational Museum of the Philippines[167]

See also

References

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  2. 1 2 3 "Paul Taylor". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  3. Kaufman, Sarah (2018-08-30). "Paul Taylor, prolific modern dance choreographer, dies at 88". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Guggenheim grants go to 9 Hoosiers". The Star Press. Muncie, Indiana, USA. 1961-05-01. p. 5. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
  5. 1 2 "Cornellian, SUIowan earn Guggenheims". Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA. 1961-05-07. p. 33. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
  6. "Sarah Lawrence aide given study grant". The Daily Item. Port Chester, New York, USA. 1961-05-02. p. 10. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
  7. "John C. Keats". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  8. Cromie, Robert, ed. (1961-10-22). "The Bystander". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois, USA. p. 146. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
  9. "Gracey Paley". Poets.org. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  16. "Artist to tell experience behind Iron Curtain in Saturday night talk at Sedona 'Art Barn'". Arizona Daily Sun. Flagstaff, Arizona, USA. 1961-07-14. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
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  26. "Award winner". The Record. Hackensack, New Jersey, USA. 1961-05-01. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
  27. 1 2 3 "Guggenheim Fellows 1960-1964". University of Washington. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
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  29. "Miamian wins fellowship". The Miami Herald. Miami, Florida, USA. 1961-06-25. p. 135. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
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  37. "Guggenheim grant". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. 1961-05-11. p. 20. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
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  41. 1 2 3 "On Guggenheim List". The Kansas City Times. Kansas City, Missouri, USA. 1961-05-02. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
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  43. "Stanley Salzman". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  48. "Clark, Hesseltine win fellowships". Wisconsin State Journal. Madison, Wisconsin, USA. 1961-05-02. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
  49. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "University Honors & Awards". Indiana University. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
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  51. "Kenan Tevfik Erim". Institute of Advanced Study. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  58. "Dan H. Laurence". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  62. "Wen Fong". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  69. "Michael Riffaterre". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  73. "Robert Brustein". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  79. 1 2 3 4 5 "5 from Cornell get fellowships". The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York, USA. 1961-05-01. p. 31. Retrieved 2023-06-08 via newspapers.com.
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  82. "Dr. Gray honored". The Daily Item. Sunbury, Pennsylvania, USA. 1961-05-16. p. 16. Retrieved 2023-06-09 via newspapers.com.
  83. "Abraham I. Melden". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  84. "Son of Dunmore pastor given Guggenheim $6,000 grant". The Times-Tribune. Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA. 1961-09-12. p. 13. Retrieved 2023-06-09 via newspapers.com.
  85. "Alexander Dallin". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  88. "Dr. Angel del Rio Dead at 62; Spanish Professor at Columbia". The New York Times. 1961-03-26. p. 31. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  89. "Benjamin Hunningher". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  90. "Dorothy Jeakins". Variety. 1995-12-03. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
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  95. "Samuel Eliot Morison". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-02.
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  98. "Robert D. Richtmyer". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-02.
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  119. "Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Denfeld". Argus-Leader. Sioux Falls, South Dakota, USA. 1961-07-02. p. 20. Retrieved 2023-06-09 via newspapers.com.
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  121. "William C. Boyd, Ph.D." The American Association of Immunologists. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
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  125. "OSU scholar will explore wheat rust". Tulsa World. Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA. 1961-05-22. p. 9. Retrieved 2023-06-09 via newspapers.com.
  126. "Zoologist to study turtle secrets". The Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 1961-06-10. p. 25. Retrieved 2023-06-09 via newspapers.com.
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  135. "Indianians making summer headlines". The Indianapolis Star. Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. 1961-08-06. p. 54. Retrieved 2023-06-09 via newspapers.com.
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