Seven Carolina students receive Critical Language Scholarships from U.S. Department of State
The Carolina awardees are among the approximately 550 U.S. students who received a scholarship from the U.S. Department of State’s CLS Program in 2018.
The Carolina awardees are among the approximately 550 U.S. students who received a scholarship from the U.S. Department of State’s CLS Program in 2018.
The Carolina awardees are among the approximately 550 U.S. students who received a scholarship from the U.S. Department of State’s CLS Program in 2018.
The awards, which total $978,122, enable students to study outside the U.S. for a semester, summer or year.
Carolina ranks 30th in the world and 22nd in the U.S. among global universities, according to the 2018 Academic Ranking of World Universities.
A 2018 graduate, Holder is the first Carolina student to receive the scholarship, which funds an interdisciplinary master’s degree in China studies from the Yenching Academy of Peking University in Beijing, China.
A team of Malawian health and government officials met with UNC Health Care and university leaders, researchers and clinical staff across three days to prepare for the opening of the first dedicated cancer center in Malawi.
The discoveries indicate villagers flourished under early fifth-century Christian rule, contradicting a widespread view that Jewish settlement in the region declined during that period.