Difference between revisions of "Kellett Fellowships"
(New page: The '''Euretta J. Kellett Fellowship''' is a prestigious prize awarded to two graduating seniors a year at Columbia College. The prize enables up to two years of study at either [[Oxfo...) |
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The '''Euretta J. Kellett Fellowship''' is a prestigious prize awarded to two graduating seniors a year at [[Columbia College]]. The prize enables up to two years of study at either [[Oxford]] or [[Cambridge]] Universities. | The '''Euretta J. Kellett Fellowship''' is a prestigious prize awarded to two graduating seniors a year at [[Columbia College]]. The prize enables up to two years of study at either [[Oxford]] or [[Cambridge]] Universities. | ||
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+ | It is rumored to have been begun as a consolation prize for seniors failing to win either a [[Rhodes]] or a [[Marshall]] Scholarship. | ||
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+ | You can begin the application process at the [[Fellowships Office]]. | ||
==Notable winners== | ==Notable winners== | ||
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[[Category:Awards]] | [[Category:Awards]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Post-graduation]] |
Revision as of 14:47, 2 April 2007
The Euretta J. Kellett Fellowship is a prestigious prize awarded to two graduating seniors a year at Columbia College. The prize enables up to two years of study at either Oxford or Cambridge Universities.
It is rumored to have been begun as a consolation prize for seniors failing to win either a Rhodes or a Marshall Scholarship.
You can begin the application process at the Fellowships Office.
Notable winners
- Barry Bergdoll, art historian and Chief Curator of Architecture and Design, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
- John Berryman, poet
- José A. Cabranes, judge on the US Court of Appeals; first Puerto Rican to sit in a US District Court
- Christopher Dell, career diplomat; current US ambassador to Tanzania
- Eric Foner, historian of the American Civil War and the Reconstruction
- David Lehman, poet
- Norman Podhoretz, a foundational figure of the neoconservative movement
- Norman F. Ramsey, winner of the 1989 Nobel Prize in Physics
- David Shapiro, poet
- Thomas Sugrue, historian of twentieth-century U.S. and civil rights
- Lionel Trilling, literary critic
- Leon Wieseltier, literary editor for the New Republic
- Sean Wilentz, historian of nineteenth-century U.S. and music critic