Two hundred and sixty-nine scholars and artists were awarded Guggenheim Fellowships in 1963. More than $1,388,000 was disbursed.[1][2][3]

1963 U.S. and Canadian Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowInstitutional associationResearch topicNotesRef
Creative ArtsDrama and Performance ArtJack GelberAlso won in 1966[4]
FictionIvan GoldWriting[4]
John Alexander Graves IIITexas Christian University[5]
James PurdyAlso won in 1958[6]
Fine ArtsCarmen CiceroSarah Lawrence CollegePaintingAlso won in 1957[7][8]
Harrison CovingtonUniversity of South FloridaPainting[9]
George J. MiyasakiCalifornia College of Arts and CraftsPrintmaking[10]
Roland C. PetersenUniversity of California, DavisPainting[11]
Rudolph O. PozzattiIndiana UniversityCreative printmaking[12][2]
Lorinda Roland[13]
Seymour RosofskyWright Junior CollegePaintingAlso won in 1962[14]
Satoru Abe[15]
Abram SchlemowitzPratt Institute[16]
Julius SchmidtCranbrook Academy of Art[17]
Louis B. SloanPennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts[18]
Jerome P. WitkinMaryland Institute College of ArtPainting[19]
Music CompositionAlvin EtlerSmith CollegeComposingAlso won in 1940, 1941[20][21][22][23]
Gene GutchëAlso won in 1964[24]
Billy Jim Layton (de)Harvard University[25][22]
Gunther A. SchullerManhattan School of MusicAlso won in 1962[26][27]
Robert StarerJuilliard SchoolAlso won in 1957[28]
Peter Talbot WestergaardColumbia University[29][30]
Michael White[29]
Charles WhittenbergColumbia-Princeton Electronic Music CenterAlso won in 1964[29]
PhotographyDiane Arbus"American Rites, Manners and Customs" projectAlso won in 1966[31]
Dave HeathThe human condition in the United StatesAlso won in 1964[32]
PoetryAlan DuganWritingAlso won in 1972[4]
Robert Duncan[10]
Edward Field[4]
Donald HallUniversity of MichiganAlso won in 1972[17]
Richard Purdy WilburWesleyan UniversityAlso won in 1952[1][4]
HumanitiesArchitecture, Planning and DesignFrederick Doveton NicholsUniversity of Virginia[33]
Bernard RudofskyMuseum of Modern ArtAlso won in 1964, 1971[34][35]
Eduard SeklerHarvard UniversityHistorical urban spacesAlso won in 1961[22]
American LiteratureSherman PaulUniversity of IllinoisEmersonian influences in contemporary intellectuals[4][36][14]
BibliographyThomas Randolph AdamsBrown UniversityBritish pamphlet literature relating to the American revolutions[23]
James MeriwetherUniversity of North CarolinaTextual bibliography of the writings of William Faulkner[37][38]
British HistoryCarl B. ConeUniversity of KentuckySocial and economic history of English Protestant dissent in the 18th century[39]
David DaviesClaremont CollegesLives and times of Sir Thomas Shirley and his three sons[40]
Lacey B. SmithNorthwestern UniversityPolitical power during the last phase of the reign of Henry VIII[4][14]
David Harris WillsonUniversity of MinnesotaAlso won in 1941, 1943, 1948[41]
ClassicsLouis Harry FeldmanYeshiva CollegeFlavius Josephus and his relation to Hellenistic writers and traditional Jewish literature[42]
Harald ReicheMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyProblem of anthropomorphism in Greek philosophy and early Christian theology[22]
East Asian StudiesCyril BirchUniversity of California, BerkeleyChinese writers[10]
William SamolinColumbia University[8]
Economic HistoryLance E. DavisPurdue UniversityEffects of capital immobility on structure and location of US and British industry[2]
English LiteratureJerome Hamilton BuckleyHarvard UniversityVictorian literatureAlso won in 1946[43][22]
Thomas Wellsted CopelandUniversity of MassachusettsBiography of Edmund BurkeAlso won in 1951[21][22]
Mario A. Di CesareHarpur CollegeWork on his book Vergil's Aenid and the Epic Tradition[44]
Oliver Watkins FergusonDuke UniversityWritings of Oliver Goldsmith[38]
Thomas B. FlanaganUniversity of California, BerkeleyRise of modern Irish literature[10]
George H. FordUniversity of RochesterConcept of time in Victorian literature[45]
Oliver Bennett Hardison, Jr.University of North CarolinaBook-length study of the origins of medieval drama[37][38]
William Harvey MarshallUniversity of Pennsylvania[46]
Robert D. MayoNorthwestern UniversityOliver Goldsmith's periodical writings as a phase of his development[4][14]
Martin MeiselDartmouth College19th-century English theatreAlso won in 1987[23]
Constantinos A. PatridesUniversity of California, BerkeleyMilton's conception and presentation of the central themes of the Christian faithAlso won in 1960[10]
James Louis RosierUniversity of Michigan[17]
George Winchester Stone, Jr.New York UniversityLondon stage, 1660-1800Also won in 1950, 1951[47]
Fine Arts ResearchDore AshtonCooper UnionAlso won in 1969[48][49]
John Franklin HaskinsFinch CollegeThomas JeffersonAlso won in 1958[50]
Richard KrautheimerNew York UniversityAlso won in 1950, 1953[51][52]
Earl E. Rosenthal (es)University of ChicagoOriginal design in the Palace of Charles V in Granada[53][4][14]
French HistoryPeter Henry AmannOakland University[17]
Nancy Lyman RoelkerWinsor SchoolLife of Jeanne d'Albret and her role in the history of French Protestantism[22]
French LiteratureLeonard PronkoPomona CollegeInfluence of the Oriental theater and dance on the contemporary French theater[40]
Karl David Uitti (de)Princeton University[8]
General NonfictionBenjamin DeMottAmherst CollegeAmerican attitudes toward work and leisureAlso won in 1967[21][22][23]
Dwight MacDonaldEdgar Allan Poe[4]
German and East European HistoryWillard Allen FletcherUniversity of ColoradoGerman occupation of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg during World War II[54]
Stavro SkendiColumbia University[55]
Eugen WeberUniversity of California, Los Angeles[56][57]
German and Scandinavian LiteratureBernhard BlumeHarvard UniversitySymbolism in German and French poetryAlso won in 1954[22]
Walter Grossman (de)Harvard UniversityJohann Christian Edelmann (de)[22]
Gerhard Loose (de)University of ColoradoWorks of Heinrich Mann[54]
History of Science and TechnologyJosef Eisinger (de)Bell Telephone LaboratoriesRole of metal ions in protein synthesisAlso won in 1977[8][58]
June Zimmerman FullmerNewcomb CollegeLife and letters of Humphry Davy[59]
Italian LiteratureFrancis FergussonRutgers UniversityBiography of Dante[60][8]
Nicolas J. PerellaUniversity of California, BerkeleyLife and works of Giacomo Leopardi[10]
LinguisticsDean Stoddard WorthUniversity of California, Los Angeles[61][62]
Gerta Hüttl-Folter WorthUniversity of California, Los Angeles[63][64]
Literary CriticismHerschel Clay BakerHarvard UniversityRennaisance thoughtAlso won in 1956[22]
Peter Alexis BoodbergUniversity of California, BerkeleyClassical Chinese scriptAlso won in 1938, 1955[10]
Walker GibsonNew York UniversityModern prose style[8][65]
William Hugh KennerUniversity of California, Santa BarbaraResearch for his book The Pound EraAlso won in 1956[66]
Medieval HistoryJohn Frederic BentonUniversity of Pennsylvania[46]
William Marvin BowskyUniversity of NebraskaItalian commune Siena during the 13th and 14th centuriesAlso won in 1985[67]
James A. BrundageUniversity of WisconsinStatus, obligations and privileges of the Crusaders in medieval law[68]
Robert I. BurnsUniversity of California, San FranciscoClash between Muslims and Christians in the 13th century[10]
Ihor ŠevčenkoColumbia University[69][70]
Robert Lee WolffHarvard UniversityRelations between Byzantium and the West from the reign of Justinian I to the fall of Constantinople to the Turks[22]
Medieval LiteratureWilliam Compaine CalinDartmouth CollegeFrench epic in the 13th century[23]
Arthur R. HeisermanUniversity of ChicagoNarrative techniques in medieval romances[4][14]
Music ResearchHoward Mayer BrownUniversity of ChicagoMusic in the 16th-century Italian theater[14]
Near Eastern StudiesGeorge Fadlo HouraniUniversity of Michigan[17]
Erle Verdun LeichtyUniversity of ChicagoAncient Mesopotamian rituals[14]
PhilosophyBruce Arthur AuneUniversity of PittsburghProblems concerning the relation between the mental and the physical[71]
John F. A. TaylorMichigan State University[17]
ReligionBrevard Springs ChildsYale University Divinity SchoolExegetical methods by which the rabbinic sages interpreted the Book of Exodus[1]
Julian N. HarttYale UniversityTheological interpretations of the arts[1]
John H. HickPrinceton Theological SeminaryAlso won in 1985[8]
Edward L. Long, Jr.Oberlin CollegeTypes of religious morality[72]
Rennaisance HistoryDeno J. GeanakoplosUniversity of IllinoisInfluence of Byzantine- and Venetian-dominated Crete on the Renaissance of Europe[36][14]
Russian HistoryAlfred MeyerMichigan State University[17]
Slavic LiteratureWilliam B. EdgertonIndiana UniversityLife, thought and art of Nikolai Leskov[12][2]
Spanish and Portuguese LiteratureManuel E. DuránYale UniversityWorks of Francisco de Quevedo[1]
Joaquín González-Muela(es)Case Western Reserve UniversitySyntactical problems in the Spanish language[72]
Theatre ArtsEldon Elder[73]
United States HistoryHugh Coleman BaileyHoward CollegeLife and achievements of Edgar Gardner Murphy in the fields of race relations, child labor and public education in the South at the turn of the century[74]
Charles Albro BarkerJohns Hopkins UniversityAmerican public thought from colonial to recent times[75][33]
Thomas D. ClarkUniversity of KentuckyNewspapers of Louisville and their influence on the economic, social and political history of the Ohio Valley[12][39]
Fred Louis EngelmanYoung and RubicamDomestic history of the War of 1812, a study of the administration of James Madison, and the campaign to conquer Canada[7]
E. James FergusonUniversity of Maryland[33]
Jack Douglas ForbesSan Fernando Valley State CollegeInter-ethnic relations in California, particularly on the dynamics of European-Indian contacts in the Chumash region[76]
Mary Elizabeth MasseySouth Carolina State College for WomenEffects of the American Civil War on women[77][78]
Malcolm C. McMillanAuburn UniversityBiography of Daniel Pratt[79][74]
Doyce Blackman NunisHudson’s Bay Company and the California fur trade during the Mexican Era[80][81]
Charles Grier SellersUniversity of California, BerkeleyBiography of James K. Polk[10]
Marshall SmelserUniversity of Notre DameUS History from 1801-1817 with emphasis on public affairs[2]
Edouard A. StackpoleMarine Historical AssociationAmerican whaling industryAlso won in 1951[1]
David Dirck Van TasselUniversity of Texas[5]
Natural SciencesApplied MathematicsEli SternbergBrown UniversityMathematical theories of elasticity and viscoelasticity[23]
Astronomy and AstrophysicsLeon TrillingMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyProcess of interaction of gas molecules with solid surfaces under conditions of very low density[22]
ChemistryRalph N. AdamsUniversity of KansasEPR-electrochemistry[82][83]
Fred Colvig AnsonCalifornia Institute of TechnologyElectrical double layer[84]
James A. CampbellHarvey Mudd CollegeAbsorption spectra of chromium compounds[40]
Samuel Henry Davis, Jr.Rice University[5]
Arthur William FairhallUniversity of Washington[85]
Harold M. FederArgonne National Laboratory, University of ChicagoThermodynamic transport properties of alloys[14]
Frank Henry FieldHumble Oil[5]
Carl Wesley GarlandMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyElastic properties of crystals near a lambda point[22]
John Ferguson Harris, Jr.DuPontChemistry of small-ring compounds[86]
Frank B. MalloryBryn Mawr College[87]
Norman E. PhillipsUniversity of California, BerkeleyProperties of metals at extremely low temperatures[10]
Eugene George RochowHarvard UniversityOrganosilicon chemistry[22]
Ignacio TinocoUniversity of California, BerkeleyConformation and sequence of nucleic acids[10]
Jürg WaserCalifornia Institute of TechnologyMethods of teaching chemistry[84]
Computer ScienceLloyd D. FosdickUniversity of IllinoisProbabilistic methods for solving problems in statistical physics using high-speed computers[36][14]
Marvin L. SteinUniversity of Minnesota[41]
Earth ScienceGeorge Edward BackusUniversity of California, San DiegoMethods of obtaining approximate solutions of linear short-wave-propagation problems of geophysical interestAlso won in 1970[88]
Charles W. CollinsonIllinois State Geological SurveyEuropean and American Devonian and Carboniferous faunas[36][14]
Robert Ross ComptonStanford UniversityStructural development of the Santa Lucia Mountains[10]
John L. RosenfeldUniversity of California, Los Angeles[89][90]
William Harris TaubeneckOregon State UniversityPetrogenesis of granitic rocks[91]
George A. ThompsonStanford UniversityUltramafic rocks[10]
James Burleigh ThompsonHarvard UniversityRegional metamorphism and its relation to Alpine structure and phase equilibria in metamorphic rocks[22]
J. Lamar WorzelColumbia University[92][93]
EngineeringEmin Turan Onat (tr)Brown UniversityMechanics of nonlinear materials[23]
Donald O. PedersonUniversity of California, BerkeleySemi-conductor integrated circuits[10]
Walter Guido VincentiStanford UniversityHigh temperature gas dynamics[10]
MathematicsJames Gilbert GlimmMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyNonlinear ordinary differential equations and partial differential equationsAlso won in 1965[22]
David Kent HarrisonUniversity of PennsylvaniaTheory of Abelian groups[94][95]
Lawrence MarkusUniversity of Minnesota[41]
Medicine and HealthJosé Manuel Rodriguez DelgadoYale UniversityPhysiological basis of behavior[1]
Molecular and Cellular BiologyRonald BentleyUniversity of PittsburghMetabolism in molds[71]
Ernest B. Bueding (de) (pt)Johns Hopkins UniversityRelationship between the biochemical and the electrophysiological actions of adrenalin on smooth intestinal muscle[75][33]
Eugene A. DelwicheCornell UniversityElectron transport reactions of certain bacteria[96]
Edmond Henry FischerUniversity of Washington[97]
Heinz Fraenkel-ConratUniversity of California, BerkeleyAlso won in 1967[98]
George Brampton KoelleUniversity of Pennsylvania School of MedicineTransmission of nerve impulses and their modification by drugs[46][99]
Franklin HutchinsonYale UniversityGenetic coding problem, particularly by the methods of bacteriophage genetics[1]
Salvador E. LuriaMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyBiosynthetic processes initiated by phage infectionAlso won in 1942, 1953[22]
Alexander RichMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyMechanism of protein synthesis[22]
Verne Normal SchumakerUniversity of Pennsylvania[46][100]
Alec SehonMcGill University[101][102]
Roberts A. SmithUniversity of California, Los Angeles[103]
Harold Edwin UmbargerCold Spring Harbor Laboratory[104][105]
Heinz von FoersterUniversity of IllinoisMolecular mechanisms in biological memoryAlso won in 1956[36][14]
Raymond Grover WolfeUniversity of OregonChemical structure of enzyme proteins[106]
NeuroscienceCharles Maitland FairNeurophysiology substrates of behavior[107]
Elwin MargUniversity of California, BerkeleyResponse to microstimulation within the visual system[10]
C. Ladd ProsserUniversity of IllinoisCentral nervous changes in fish acclimated to different temperatures[36][14]
Organismic Biology and EcologyAngel Chua AlcalaStanford UniversityAlso won in 1965[108]
Richard John AndrewYale UniversityCausation of vocalisation and associated behavior in chicks and primates[1]
Lester G. BarthColumbia University[109][110]
Lincoln BrowerAmherst CollegeEcology and animal behavior[21][22][23]
Perry Webster GilbertCornell UniversityShark reproductionAlso won in 1956[111]
Charles E. HuntingtonBowdoin CollegeLeach's Petrel for publication[112]
Leonard MaGruder Passano IIIYale UniversityElectrical activity of the nervous system[1]
John Cassidy MarrU.S. Bureau of Commercial FisheriesFluctuations in abundance and distribution of certain marine fishes[113]
Jay M. SavageUniversity of Southern CaliforniaTropical biology[114]
Evelyn ShawAmerican Museum of Natural History[115][116]
George WaldHarvard UniversitySingle and multiple visual systems in invertebrates[22]
Mary Ann WilliamsUniversity of California, BerkeleyRelationships between diet and tissue enzymes and coenzyme levels[117][10]
PhysicsAnthony Schuyler ArrottFord Motor Company[17]
Eugene I. BlountBell Telephone LaboratoriesElectric properties of crystals[8][58]
Robert R. BrownUniversity of California, BerkeleyIonospheric and geomagnetic disturbance accompanying electron bombardment of the auroral zone atmosphere[10]
Kenneth CaseUniversity of Michigan[17]
Kurt GottfriedHarvard UniversityTheories of ferromagnetism[22]
Charles KittelUniversity of California, BerkeleyMagnetic properties of the transition metalsAlso won in 1945, 1956[10]
Walter KohnUniversity of California, San Diego[88]
Riccardo Levi-SettiUniversity of ChicagoLambda-binding energy of heavy hypernuclei[53][14]
Hugh McManusMichigan State University[17]
Michael NauenbergColumbia University[118]
Reinhard OehmeUniversity of ChicagoStructure and interactions of elementary particles[53][14]
Samuel PennerNational Bureau of StandardsPhotoproduction of elementary particles[119][33]
Aihud PevsnerJohns Hopkins UniversityProperties of fundamental particles and resonancesAlso won in 1970[75][33]
Edward A. SternUniversity of Maryland[33]
Stephen TamorGeneral Electric Research Laboratory[120]
Theos Jardin ThompsonMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyProblems of nuclear reactor safety[22]
Michael TinkhamUniversity of California, BerkeleySolid-state physics, with emphasis on superconductivity and magnetism[10]
Christopher Bland WalkerU.S. Army Materials Research AgencyThermal vibrations in crystals[22]
Byron Terry WrightUniversity of California, Los Angeles[121]
Plant ScienceJohn Grieve BaldUniversity of California, Los AngelesAlso won in 1955[122]
Harlan Parker BanksCornell UniversityDevonian fossil plants[96]
Ellis F. DarleyUniversity of California, Riverside[123]
David GottliebUniversity of IllinoisDevelopmental biochemistry of fungi as related to the cellular basis of aging[36][14]
Walter Hepworth LewisStephen F. Austin State University[5]
Lawrence RappaportUniversity of California, DavisPost-harvest physiology of plants[11]
Clarence SterlingUniversity of California, DavisPlant crystal structureAlso won in 1956[11]
Frederick C. StewardCornell UniversityCell biology, metabolism, growth and development in plants[96]
Paul Edward WaggonerConnecticut Agricultural Experiment StationMethods for regulating the water economy and energetics of plants[1][124]
StatisticsRosedith SitgreavesColumbia University[125]
Social SciencesAnthropology and Cultural StudiesLoren Corey EiseleyUniversity of PennsylvaniaAlso won in 1972[46][126]
Robert F. HeizerUniversity of California, BerkeleyDevelopment of technologies in early societies, with special reference to the long distance transport of multi-ton stones for monuments and constructionAlso won in 1972[10]
D'Arcy McNickleAmerican Indian Development, Inc.Community development and leadership training in the eastern Navajo district centered at Crownpoint, New Mexico[54]
Irving RouseYale UniversityProcesses of cultural evolution[1]
EconomicsArcadius KahanUniversity of ChicagoIndividual and collectivized agriculture[14]
Dwight E. RobinsonUniversity of Washington School of BusinessFashion and design[127]
Geography and Environmental StudiesErich IsaacCity College of New York[128]
Frederick J. SimoonsUniversity of WisconsinOrigins and spread of dairying in the Middle East of Africa[68]
Norman J. W. ThrowerUniversity of California, Los AngelesEdmond Halley[129]
William Huston WallaceUniversity of New HampshireChanging role and functions of New England railroads[23]
LawEdward L. BarrettUniversity of California, BerkeleyLaw and practices in the investigation of crime and the handling of suspected offenders prior to trial in certain European countries[10]
Julius CohenRutgers University School of Law[8]
Political ScienceCarey B. JoyntLehigh University[130]
Donald Elkinton Stokes (de)University of Michigan[17]
SociologyRobert DubinUniversity of OregonGerman industry and employee relations[106]
Kurt B. MayerBrown UniversityImpact of post-war immigration on Switzerland[23]
Robert A. NisbetUniversity of California, RiversideWork on what would become Sociological Tradition (1966)[123][131]
Donald Pierson (pt)Escola de Sociologia e Política (later part of University of São Paulo)Spanish and Portuguese traditional cultural patterns as compared to those of Latin America[38]

1963 Latin American and Caribbean Fellows

CategoryField of StudyFellowInstitutional associationResearch topicNotesRef
Creative ArtsFine ArtsSarah GriloPaintingAlso won in 1961[132]
Alfredo Da Silva[133]
HumanitiesIberian and Latin American HistoryRafael Olivar-BertrandUniversidad Nacional del SurAlso won in 1963[134][33]
Spanish and Portuguese LiteratureRaúl Silva Castro (es)[135]
Natural SciencesApplied MathematicsEnrique Grünbaum DanielUniversity of ChileAlso won in 1963[136]
Earth ScienceOsvaldo Alfredo Reig (de)Universidad de Buenos AiresAlso won in 1970[137][138]
MathematicsDjairo Guedes de FigueiredoUniversity of BrazilAlso won in 1982[139]
Elon Lages LimaBrazilian Center for Research in PhysicsAlso won in 1961[140]
Medicine and HealthJacques P. BalansaHospital Universitario Asunción[141]
Samy Frenk GuiloffUniversity of Chile[142]
Norberto A. SchorNational University of Córdoba[143]
Molecular and Cellular BiologyLivio Barnafi GodinaPontifical Catholic University of Chile[144]
Raúl N. Ondarza VidaurretaNational Autonomous University of Mexico[145][146]
Américo Pomales-LebrónUniversity of Puerto Rico School of MedicineAlso won in 1954[147]
Marco Aurelio RivarolaHospital de NiñosAlso won in 1965[148]
Marino Villavicencio Núñez (es)National University of San MarcosAlso won in 1962[149]
NeuroscienceEnrique López MendozaNational Institute of CardiologyAlso won in 1962, 1964[150]
Organismic Biology and EcologyMoacir AlvarengaNational Museum of Brazil[151]
Plant ScienceBernardo Rosengurtt Gurvich (es)University of the Republic[152]
Social SciencesEducationJohn Joseph Maria Figueroa[153]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "11 from state receive Guggenheim Fellowships". Hartford Courant. Hartford, Connecticut, USA. 1963-04-30. p. 16. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Hoosiers win Guggenheim fellowships". The Indianapolis Star. Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 9. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
  3. "Search Results - John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation". Archived from the original on 2011-06-22. Retrieved 2010-04-26.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Guggenheim Goings-On". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois, USA. 1963-05-26. p. 233. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "TCU prof awarded fellowship". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Fort Worth, Texas, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 5. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
  6. "James Purdy". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  7. 1 2 "Teacher receives grant; his student exhibiting". The Herald Statesman. Yonkers, New York, USA. 1963-05-04. p. 7. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "N.J. residents win fellowships". The Record. Hackensack, New Jersey, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 31. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  9. "Guggenheim Fellowship". The Tampa Tribune. Tampa, Florida, USA. 1963-05-02. p. 35. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 "Guggenheim fellowships given to 18 on U.C. faculty". Oakland Tribune. Oakland, California, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 6. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  11. 1 2 3 "Three Davis teachers get Guggenheim awards". The Sacramento Bee. Sacramento, California, USA. 1963-05-30. p. 35. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  12. 1 2 3 "University Honors & Awards". Indiana University. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
  13. "Lorinda Roland". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
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  15. "Abe Satoru". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  16. "Abram Schlemowitz". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  17. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "11 Guggenheim fellowships to Michigan men". The Herald-Palladium. Benton Harbor, Michigan, USA. 1963-05-01. p. 31. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  18. "Louis B. Sloan". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  19. "Institute's gallery opens today with staff exhibit". The Evening Sun. Baltimore, Maryland, USA. 1963-10-01. p. 22. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  20. "Alvin Etler". University of Washington. Retrieved 2022-10-22.
  21. 1 2 3 4 "Area educators get Guggenheim Foundation grants". The Recorder. Greenfield, Massachusetts, USA. 1963-04-30. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
  22. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 "Guggenheim awards go to 24 in Bay State". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  23. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Guggenheim grants given 43 in region". The Berkshire Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 9. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  24. "Gutche gets fellowship". The Albuquerque Tribune. Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA. 1963-05-01. p. 14. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
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  28. Rickards, Guy (2001-05-05). "Robert Starer". The Guardian. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
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  34. "Bernard Rudofsky". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  35. "Bernard Rudofsky". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2023-07-14.
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  37. 1 2 "English professors given fellowships". The Chapel Hill News. Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA. 1963-05-26. p. 13. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  38. 1 2 3 4 "English prof gets grant". The Durham Sun. Durham, North Carolina, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 11. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  39. 1 2 "UK's Clark, Cone get Guggenheim fellowships". Lexington Herald-Leader. Lexington, Kentucky, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
  40. 1 2 3 "Three given Guggenheim fellowships". Progress-Bulletin. Pomona, California, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 15. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  41. 1 2 3 "Gguggenheim Fellowship". University of Minnesota. Retrieved 2023-06-12.
  42. "Ex-city man gets award for study in Jerusalem". Hartford Courant. Hartford, Connecticut, USA. 1963-04-30. p. 29. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  43. Gewertz, Ken (2003-02-06). "Buckley, champion of the Victorians, dies at 85". The Harvard Gazette. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
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  45. "Grant for study in Europe given professor at U. or R." Democrat and Chronicle. Rochester, New York, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 21. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  46. 1 2 3 4 5 "Guggenheim Fellowship". University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 2023-06-17.
  47. "George Winchester Stone Jr..." Daily News. New York, New York, USA. 1963-05-26. p. 399. Retrieved 2023-06-18 via newspapers.com.
  48. "Dore Ashton". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  49. "Dore Ashton Remembered". The Cooper Union. 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2023-07-14.
  50. "John Franklin Haskins". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  51. "Richard Krautheimer". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  52. Nicholas Adams; James S. Ackerman; Pamela Askew; Phyllis Lambert; John Coolidge; Craig Hugh Smyth (March 1995). "In Memoriam: Richard Krautheimer (1897-1994)". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 54 (1): 4. doi:10.2307/991022. Retrieved 2023-07-14.
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  54. 1 2 3 "Three Coloradans win fellowships". The Daily Sentinel. Grand Junction, Colorado, USA. 1963-04-29. p. 3. Retrieved 2023-06-17 via newspapers.com.
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  73. "Eldon Elder". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
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  83. "Ralph N. "Buzz" Adams". The University of Kansas. Retrieved 2023-07-14.
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