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Through the Archaeological Institute of America a number of fellowships for foreign study are offered for 1908. The total value of the fellowships, 10 in number, amounts to $6800. They are open to graduates of American colleges, the candidates being chosen on the basis of competitive theses submitted before June, 1908. The fellowships, with their annual values, are as follows: Two at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, in Greek archaeology, of an annual value of $600 each; one in Greek architecture at the same school with $1000 annually, supported by the Carnegie Institute of Washington; two at the American School of Classical Studies at Rome of $800 each. (One of these is to be research work in Roman classical architecture; the other in Roman literature.) Two other fellowships, without any specified place of study, are those of Roman classical archaeology and of Christian archaeology, each with an income of $600 annually. Also, at the American School of Oriental Study and Research in Palestine, a fellowship of $600 is offered. American archaeology, and mediaeval and Renaissance archaeology, respectively, are the subjects for the other two fellowships, each of which has an income of $600.
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