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Fulbright Grants Will Send 71 University Students, Alumni to Year's Study Abroad

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University Fulbright Award winners, 71 this year, will study over half the earth in the '51-52 school year, Provost Buck announced last Friday. The recipients of the State Department's grants represent 27 states and include 18 recent alumni.

Names of the winners, and their places and fields of study are:

Rufus B. Clark, administrative law, Oxford University, England.

Stanton A. Cook, botany, University of Oslo, Norway.

Daniel M. Moore, anthropology, a sociology, University of Rangoon, Burma.

Charles F. Gallagher, Cambodian Art History, University of Paris, France.

Robert T. Murphy, political science, Fouad I University, Cairo, Egypt.

Robert L. Montgomery, Jr., literature, University of Paris, France.

Edward L. Daugherty, city and regional planning, University of Liverpool, England.

Lloyd L. Rudolph, government, University of Toulouse, France.

Henry C. Galant, government, University of Paris, France.

Henry G. Grimball, architecture, American Academy or University of Rome, Italy.

James A. Storer, international trade, University of Philippines, Manila, the Philippines.

Pinkney L. Near, the history of art, University of Paris, France.

Richard J. Watts, history, University College, University of London, England.

George H. Mabry, commercial law, College of Economics, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

Andrew G. Whiteside, modern European history and the Austrian Empire, University of Vienna, Austria.

Anthony A. Giarraputo, Italian literature and culture, University of Florence, Italy.

Richard W. Lyman, modern English history, The London School of Economics, England.

Oscar A. Ornati, labor economics, University of Florence, Italy.

Peter G. Swing, music, University of Utrecht, the Netherlands.

Donald S. Marshall, anthropology, Auckland University College, Auckland, New Zealand.

John E. Rexine, Greek literature, American School of Classical Studies, Athens, Greece.

John L. Phelan, history, University of Bordeaux and University of Paris, France.

Franklin C. Southworth, linguistics, University of Liege, Belgium.

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