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A Luce Scholar is a recipient of a cultural exchange and vocational fellowship sponsored by the Henry Luce Foundation, a private foundation established by Time, Inc. founder Henry R. Luce. The program
Jeremiah: Pain and Promise is the culmination of six years of work supported by the Henry Luce III Fellowship. She explores the book of Jeremiah as a history and biography of an ancient community seeking to restore a collapsed society. She seeks to convey her theology that "portrays God as equally afflicted by disaster; and invites a ...
He received research fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities (1976-77, 1983-84, 1991-92), the Louisville Institute (1998-99), the Pew Endowment (1998-99), and the Luce Fellowship Program of the Association of Theological Schools (2005-06), and he did research at Eberhard-Karls University in Tübingen, Germany in 1976-77 and ...
Luce was born in Tengchow, Shandong, China, now Penglai, on April 3, 1898, the son of Elizabeth Root Luce and Henry Winters Luce, who was a Presbyterian missionary. [3]At 15, he was sent to the U.S. to attend the Hotchkiss School in Connecticut, where he tried hard to overcome his stuttering.
Bunting Fellowship, Radcliffe College (1996) Claire Booth Luce Fellowship, Henry Luce Foundation (1989, 1990) Zonta Amelia Earhart Fellowship (1985, 1986, 1987) McCormick Fellowship, University of Chicago (1983 - 1986)
Cooks holds a PhD in Visual and Cultural Studies from the Department of Art History at University of Rochester. [1] Douglas Crimp advised her dissertation, for which she received a Henry Luce Dissertation Fellowship in American Art. [2]
Harkness Fellowship; Harry S. Truman Scholarship; Hathaway Scholarship; Health Professions Scholarship Program; Henry Fellowship; Henry Luce Scholar; Herbert Scoville Jr. Peace Fellowship; Higher Education Opportunity Program; Hispanic College Fund; Hispanic Scholarship Fund; Hodson Trust Scholarship; HOPE Scholarship; Horatio Alger Association ...
Drndic was awarded a Clare Booth Luce Fellowship, the Harold T. White Prize for Excellence in Teaching and the Robbins Prize from Harvard University. She remained there for her doctoral studies, working with Robert Westervelt on microelectromagnets for cold-atom experiments.