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Noteworthy October 2005 Announcing To enhance dissemination of Latin American Protestant theological reflection in the English-speaking world, the Fraternidad Teológica Latinoamericana, Santiago, Chile, is launching a new journal in English called Latin American Theology. Editor for the journal is Lindy Scott, associate professor of Spanish and Latin American studies and director of the Center for Applied Christian Ethics at Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. Contact him at lindy.scott@wheaton.edu. Global Missiology, an online missiological quarterly, has developed a Chinese language version in both full-script and simplified-script formats. “In accordance to the missiological principle of indigenization, everything in the Chinese version is originally developed by Chinese missiologists, not translation from English,” according to editor Enoch Wan, a native of China who is chairman of the Division of Intercultural Studies at Western Seminary, Portland, Oregon. The Web site address will change from www.globalmissiology.net to www.globalmissiology.org. The fall meeting of the Eastern Fellowship of the American Society of Missiology, November 4–5, 2005, will focus on Stephen Bevans and Roger Schroeder’s Constants in Context: A Theology of Mission for Today. With Bevans and Schroeder present to respond, selected interlocutors will examine the book from historical, theological, and pedagogical perspectives. For details, contact William Burrows, president, at bburrows@maryknoll.org. The Methodist Missionary Society History Project of the U.K. will hold its annual conference November 22–23, 2005, at United College of the Ascension, Birmingham, with the theme “Methodist Missions and the Organization of Society.” Visit www.div.ed.ac.uk/other/mms for details. “Empires of Religion,” a conference jointly sponsored by the Centre for Australian Studies, School of History, Humanities Institute of Ireland, and Micheál Ó Cléirigh Institute, all at University College Dublin, will be held June 20–21, 2006, to “consider the many ways in which religion served, thwarted, transformed, mitigated and reinforced the bonds of empire in the colonised world during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.” Submit proposals for papers by November 30, 2005, to conference organizers Hilary Carey or Hugh McLeod at hilary.carey@ucd.ie or d.h.mcleod@bham.ac.uk. For details, visit www.ucd.ie/austud/empreligion.htm. Personalia Allan Anderson, author of books on global Pentecostalism, including Asian and Pentecostal: The Charismatic Face of Christianity in Asia (2005), has been appointed chair of global Pentecostal studies by the Graduate Institute for Theology and Religion at the University of Birmingham, U.K., where he has been a reader on the same topics. Luther Seminary, St. Paul, Minnesota, named Richard H. Bliese president, effective July 1, 2005, replacing David L. Tiede. Bliese was the seminary’s dean of academic affairs and associate professor of missions. He also served as president of the Center for World Christian Interaction. The new president coedited The Dictionary of Mission: Theology, History, Perspectives (1997). Joel A. Carpenter, provost since 1996 of Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan, announced in May that he will not seek another term next year as the school’s chief academic officer. Instead, as a faculty member, he will direct the Calvin Institute for the Study of World Christianity, which will be launched in 2006. Carpenter is coeditor with IBMR contributing editor Lamin Sanneh of The Changing Face of Christianity: Africa, the West, and the World (2005). American Bible Society president Eugene B. Habecker resigned after fourteen years to become president of Taylor University, Upland, Indiana. His appointment, replacing David J. Gyertson, was effective August 15. George Kovoor, who is from the ancient Mar Thoma Church in India, has been named principal of Trinity College, Bristol, U.K. A chaplain to Queen Elizabeth II since 2003, he was director of mission education for the Church Mission Society and principal of the society’s Crowther Hall mission training center. Michael Montoya, M.J., has been selected as the new executive director of the United States Catholic Mission Association, Washington, D.C., replacing Roseanne Rustemeyer, S.S.N.D. Montoya, associate pastor of Precious Blood Church in Los Angeles, will take office December 1, 2005. He will be presented to the USCMA members at their annual Mission Congress, October 13–15, in Tucson, Arizona. A member of an international missionary community based in the Philippines, Montoya earned the doctor of ministry degree at Catholic Theological Union, Chicago. Died. Kenneth N. Taylor, 88, author of The Living Bible, June 10. When he could not find a publisher for his contemporary paraphrases, Taylor founded Tyndale House Publishers, Wheaton, Illinois, and published the best seller The Living Bible (1971). He was instrumental in founding the Christian Booksellers Association. Taylor also started Evangelical Literature Overseas and Short Terms Abroad, which merged with Seattle-based Intercristo in 1976. Died. Per S. Hassing, 89, Methodist missionary in Africa and professor of missions, March 12, 2005, in Asheville, North Carolina. A native of Norway, Hassing graduated from the Methodist seminary in Göteborg, Sweden, in 1937 and went to Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) as a missionary in 1939. He worked as a pastor, theological educator, head of the Mutambara Mission, and superintendent of churches and schools in the eastern districts of Zimbabwe; from 1954 to 1959 he was treasurer and assistant to the bishop of the Methodist church. He used his furloughs to earn an M.A. from Hartford Seminary in 1948 and a Ph.D. in African history from American University in Washington, D.C., in 1960. From 1960 to 1979 he served as professor of world Christian missions at Boston University School of Theology. Following retirement from Boston University, he taught for a year at the Lutheran Makumira Theological College in Tanzania, followed by two years as pastor of the Lillestrom United Methodist Church in Norway. He and his wife, Ruth, returned to the United States in 1981 and lived first at Lake Junaluska, North Carolina, then moved in 1995 to Ashville. July 2005 Announcing The fourth International Conference on Baptist Studies will be held July 12–15, 2006, at Acadia University, Wolfville, Nova Scotia, with “Missions” as the theme, encompassing home and foreign mission, as well as evangelism and social concern. Thirteen main speakers will address aspects of the subject, but short papers related to Baptists and missions are also welcome. Selected conference papers will be published in the series “Studies in Baptist History and Thought,” published by Paternoster Press. Papers from the first conference have been published as The Gospel in the World: International Baptist Studies, edited by D. W. Bebbington. For details contact Bebbington, Department of History, University of Stirling, Scotland, at d.w.bebbington@stir.ac.uk. The annual meeting of the Interdenominational Foreign Mission Association and the Evangelical Missiological Society will be held September 22 - 24, 2005, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. For details, visit www.ifmamissions.org. The International Association for Mission Studies archives are now being housed as part of Special Collections at the Yale Divinity School Library, New Haven, Connecticut. For details, contact Martha Smalley, research services librarian and curator of the Day Missions Collection, at martha.smalley@yale.edu. The World Council of Churches and the Yale Divinity School Library are collaborating on a five-year microfilming project that will result in the preservation and publication of documents important to mission history. For questions about the current phase, “Dialogue with People of Living Faith,” contact Paul Stuehrenberg, the divinity librarian, at paul.stuehrenberg@yale.edu. The next phase of the Yale-WCC archives endeavor will catalogue correspondence of the WCC general secretariat. The Pacific Journal of Baptist Research will be launched in October 2005. Providing an international vehicle for research and debate, the journal will be published twice a year, in April and October. The editor, Martin Sutherland, is director of the Center for Theological Studies at Carey Baptist College, Auckland, New Zealand. Topics are not limited to the Pacific region; all subject matter potentially of significance for Baptist communities will be considered, especially theological and historical themes. Submissions for the first issue should be received by July 31, 2005. Manuscripts may be submitted to the editor at martin.sutherland@carey.ac.nz. Personalia James J. Stamoolis has been appointed senior vice president of academic affairs and dean for Trinity College and Trinity Graduate School, Deerfield, Illinois, effective July 1, 2005. Stamoolis will also hold the rank of professor of biblical studies. His teaching career has included professorial roles and lectureships on missions and intercultural studies at Wheaton College and the Bible Institute of South Africa. He has served as president of the American Society of Missiology and is author of Eastern Orthodox Mission Theology Today (Orbis Books, 1986; reprint, Light and Life Publishing, 2001). Died. Frederick Hollander Bronkema, 71, American Presbyterian missionary and ecumenist, April 3, 2005, following a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, at Penney Farms, Florida. A graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary, he helped establish the ecumenical Center for Reconciliation in the 1960s in Portugal and was president of Lisbon’s Ecumenical Group. In the 1970s he directed a documentation project, “The Future of the Missionary Enterprise,” out of the International Documentation Center in Rome. From 1977 to 1986 he helped build up the Ecumenical Development Cooperative Society, today known as Oikocredit with a portfolio of more than $200 million, into one of the first socially responsible investment funds and microcredit institutions geared toward using the capital of churches for the developing world. Bronkema directed the Project of Reconciliation for the Christian Commission for Development in Honduras from 1986 to 1988 and served as director of the human rights office of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. from 1989 to 1993. In 1995 he retired to Florida with his wife, Marguerite. Died. William Richey Hogg, 83, American missiologist and ecumenist, January 29, 2005, in Dallas, Texas. He received his B.A. from Duke University in 1943 and a B.D. in 1946 and Ph.D. in 1951 from Yale University. While at Yale he worked as the student secretary to Kenneth Scott Latourette, with whom he coauthored Tomorrow Is Here: A Survey of the Worldwide Mission and Work of the Christian Church (1948). The appointment in 1950 of Richey and his wife, Wilma, by the Methodist Board of Missions to teach in Nanjing, China, was aborted by political events in China, and they were reassigned to the New York office of the International Missionary Council. In 1952 the two were assigned to Jabalpur, India, where Richey taught at Leonard Theological Seminary. In 1955 they returned to the United States, where he taught at Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, until he retired in 1987 as professor emeritus of world Christianity. Among his publications are Ecumenical Foundations: A History of the International Missionary Council and Its Nineteenth-Century Background (1952) and One World, One Mission (1960). His presidential address to the American Society of Missiology in June 1984, “The Scriptures in the Christian World Mission: Three Historical Considerations,” was published in Missiology, October 1984. Died. Louis J. Luzbetak, S.V.D., 86, Roman Catholic missionary anthropologist, March 22, 2005, of a heart attack, in Techny, Illinois. Luzbetak, born in 1918 in Joliet, Illinois, was ordained a priest in 1945. He obtained a licentiate degree in theology at Gregorian University, Rome, and a doctorate in anthropology from the University of Fribourg (Freiburg) in Switzerland. As a result of doing fieldwork in Papua New Guinea (1952–56), Luzbetak was convinced that missionaries, while highly dedicated, needed anthropological tools to help them understand Melanesian culture, a conviction that led him into missionary anthropology. Luzbetak was best known for his Church and Cultures: An Applied Anthropology for the Religious Worker (1963, 1989). A founder of the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, Washington, D.C., he became the first Catholic president of the American Society of Missiology (1975–76) and also was president of Divine Word College, Epworth, Iowa (1973–79). In 1979 Luzbetak became editor of Anthropos and director of the Anthropos Institute in Germany. From 1987 to 1989 he was on the staff of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Culture, and in 1998 the Catholic Theological Union, Chicago, established the Louis J. Luzbetak S.V.D. Chair in Mission and Culture. April 2005 Announcing Crowther Hall in Selly Oak, Birmingham, England, has been closed. For thirty-five years (1969–2004) it served as the center for missionary training for the Church Mission Society. The decision to close Crowther Hall, despite a growing student body, came from Anglicanism’s need for “more contextually appropriate [training] approaches as, increasingly, churches everywhere throughout the world are sending people in mission,” according to Tim Dakin, CMS general secretary. George Kovoor was director and principal of Crowther Hall, which was named in honor of African missionary bishop Samuel Adjai Crowther. A Chinese-language edition of Rescuing the Memory of Our Peoples: Archives Manual has been produced by the Centre for the Study of Christianity in Asia, Trinity Theological College, Singapore. The original, in English, was compiled by Martha Lund Smalley and Rosemary Seton and published in 2003 for the International Association for Mission Studies. Both editions are available online without charge at www.OMSC.org (Research and Publications). Samford University’s Beeson Divinity School, Birmingham, Alabama, will commence a missionary-in-residence program with the 2005–6 academic year. In exchange for teaching two courses and speaking in various campus forums, the individual chosen will receive a stipend of $15,000. Those who offer a minimum of five years experience in cross-cultural ministry and affirm both the Lausanne Covenant and Samford’s Statement of Faith may contact Mark R. Elliott for details at the Global Center, Beeson Divinity School, global@samford.edu or www.samford.edu/groups/global. The Outreach Foundation of the Presbyterian Church, Franklin, Tennessee, and Presbyterian Frontier Fellowship, Eden Prairie, Minnesota, in cooperation with the Worldwide Ministries Division of the Presbyterian Church (USA), Louisville, Kentucky, will sponsor a mission conference, “From Everywhere to Everyone: The New Global Mission,” on October 20–22, 2005, at Peachtree Presbyterian Church in Atlanta, Georgia. The conference will focus on ways Western churches’ evangelistic witness and missional identity are being shaped by the growth and mission initiative of the global church. Speakers include Samuel Escobar, missiologist and author of The New Global Mission: The Gospel from Everywhere to Everyone (2003); Kwame Bediako, director of the Akrofi- Christaller Memorial Centre for Mission Research and Applied Theology, Ghana; and Andrew F. Walls, professor emeritus, Centre for the Study of Christianity in the Non- Western World, University of Edinburgh, Scotland. Details are available from The Outreach Foundation, info@theoutreachfoundation.org, or Presbyterian Frontier Fellowship, shells@pff.net. To commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary of the establishment of a chair of missiology at Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands, a conference is being organized for October 28, 2005, with the theme “Southern Christianity and Its Relation to Christianity in the North.” Philip Jenkins, author of The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity (2002), will be the keynote speaker. Contact Frans Wijsen, chair of missiology, f.wijsen@theo.ru.nl. The Baylor Institute for Faith and Learning, Baylor University, Waco, Texas, will host the Pruit Memorial Symposium on “Global Christianity: Challenging Modernity and the West,” November 10–12, 2005. Dana L. Robert of Boston University School of Theology, Lamin Sanneh of Yale Divinity School, and Brian Stanley of the University of Cambridge, all of whom are contributing editors of the INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN OF MISSIONARY RESEARCH, will be among the plenary speakers. Proposals for papers are welcomed until May 15. Contact Douglas Henry, director, at ifl@baylor.edu or visit www3.baylor.edu/IFL. The British Library is hosting a project for Endangered Archives funded by the Lisbet Rausing Charitable Trust. The project is particularly concerned with endangered archives of non-Western societies and may therefore be applicable to missionary archives and related materials in those countries, according to Rosemary Seton, archivist at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. The Endangered Archives Program aims to safeguard archival material relating to societies before “modernization” or “industrialization” generated institutional and record-keeping structures for the systematic preservation of historical records. The time period will therefore vary according to the society. Any theme or regional interest will be considered, although particularly welcomed are applications concerned with non-Western societies. For details, visit www.bl.uk/endangeredarchives. Personalia Darrell L. Guder, professor of missional and ecumenical theology at Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, New Jersey, has been appointed dean-elect of the seminary, effective July 2005. Recently named a contributing editor of the INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN OF MISSIONARY RESEARCH, Guder is author of The Continuing Conversion of the Church (2000) and editor of Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America (1998). The World Evangelical Alliance Mission Commission, at its September 17–19, 2004, meeting held in the Netherlands, appointed Bertil Ekström as executive director-designate, effective in July 2006. Ekström, 52, is a missionary with InterAct, or Evangeliska Frikyrkan, a Swedish missionary society. A resident of Campinas, Brazil, Ekström has led the Brazilian Association of Mission Agencies, been president of COMIBAM Internacional, and chaired the Great Commission Roundtable. Outgoing executive director William D. Taylor will continue as a staff member, interfacing with North American mission movements and initiating a task force for mentoring younger global mission leaders. He will continue to edit Connections: The Journal of the WEA Mission Commission. Jonathan Lewis was released from his role as Mission Commission associate director to become full-time director of WEA’s International Missionary Training Network and to focus on MC publications. At the meeting, the WEA/MC changed its name from “Missions Commission” to “Mission Commission,” which, they said, “underscores the MC’s intent to advance its missional and holistic commitments, while keeping a sharp focus on the cross-cultural mission of God’s people.” Geoff Tunnicliffe, director of global initiatives, Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, has been appointed interim international coordinator for WEA, following the recent resignation of Gary Edmonds as WEA general secretary. David A. Kerr, professor and director of the Centre for the Study of Christianity in the Non-Western World, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, has been appointed chair of missiology and ecumenics at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Lund University, Sweden. He is a contributing editor of the INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN OF MISSIONARY RESEARCH. On September 22, 2004, Hwa Yung, director of the Centre for the Study of Christianity in Asia, Trinity Theological College, Singapore, and former principal of Seminari Theoloji Malaysia, was elected bishop of the Methodist Church in Malaysia. Hwa is also chairman of the board of directors of the Oxford Centre for Mission Studies. Died. J. T. Seamands, 87, Methodist missionary to India (1940–60) and professor of Christian mission at Asbury Theological Seminary (1961–87), August 29, 2004, in Wilmore, Kentucky. John Thomas Seamands grew up in India as the son of Methodist missionary parents. Known for his musical talent and linguistic skills, he mastered the Kanarese language of South India and wrote many Christian songs and his first two books in that language. Twelve more books followed in English, including his well-known Tell It Well: Communicating the Gospel Across Cultures (1982). In his 26 years teaching at Asbury Seminary, Seamands became famous for encouraging students to enter cross-cultural ministry and for teaching future pastors how to develop a church mission program. He was also the founding director of the E. Stanley Jones School of World Mission and Evangelism, in 1982. Died. Jacques Dupuis, S.J., 81, of a cerebral hemorrhage, December 28, 2004, in Rome. Born in Belgium, Dupuis entered the Jesuit novitiate before departing for India in December 1948. He finished theological studies in India and was ordained there, received a doctorate from Gregorian University (1959), and returned to India, where he taught theology until 1984, when he was assigned to teach at Gregorian. Dupuis edited Vidyajyoti in India and Gregorianum in Rome. He wrote Jesus Christ at the Encounter of World Religions (1991), Who Do You Say I Am? (1994), Toward a Christian Theology of Religious Pluralism (1997), and Christianity and the Religions: From Confrontation to Dialogue (2002). Dupuis’s teaching and writing centered on articulating for the contemporary era a Christology that was faithful to Scripture and tradition, while dealing forthrightly with the challenge of religious pluralism. Catherine Rae Ross, director of the School of Global Mission, Bible College of New Zealand, Auckland, has accepted the position of mission interchange adviser for the Church Mission Society, U.K. Ross and her husband spent time in Rwanda and Belgium prior to working with the Anglican Church for three years in the Democratic Republic of Congo. She previously worked for CMS, 1991–98. January 2005 Personalia Michael W. Treneer is the first non-American to be appointed international president of the Navigators, Colorado Springs, Colorado, effective January 1, 2005. Treneer, an Englishman trained as a chemical engineer, served as the Navigators’ director for Africa from 1981 to 1998. In 1998 he became an international vice president, overseeing ministries in Australia and New Zealand, Russia, Ukraine, and the Baltic States. For the past three years he has led the European work. Treneer, with his wife, Chris, pioneered the Navigator ministry in Nigeria. A staff of more than 4,000, representing 63 nationalities, ministers among college students, military personnel, business and professional people, communities, and churches in 110 countries. For details, visit www.navigators.org. Frontier Internship in Mission elected Manuel Quintero, an electrical engineer and journalist from Cuba, as director, during their International Coordinating Committee meeting in Indonesia in October 2004. Quintero, who assumes his duties in January 2005, was director of communications for the Latin American Council of Churches, Quito, Ecuador. Previously he was general secretary of the World Student Christian Federation. FIM, based at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva, Switzerland, offers internships with emphasis on justice issues in South-to-South exchanges. FIM is guided by representatives from the World Council of Churches, the regional ecumenical councils, and the World Student Christian Federation. For details, visit www.tfim.org. The Lutheran Society for Missiology chose Allan Buckman, 64, as executive director effective November 1, 2004. A North Dakotan, he was an evangelistic missionary in Nigeria among the Yala people and supervised the translation of the Yala New Testament. In 1977 Buckman became area secretary for Africa, Europe, and the Middle East for the Board for Mission Services of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, and in 1989 the board named him director for world services. Society information is found at www.lsfmissiology.org. Richard J. Wood, president of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, will retire in December 2005. He became president in 2001 after retiring from Yale Divinity School, New Haven, Connecticut, where he was dean. He also served for eleven years as president of Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana. As professor of philosophy at Earlham, Wood became well known for his contributions to the understanding of Japanese philosophy in the English-speaking world. He was instrumental in establishing Earlham College’s Japanese Studies Program. The United Board, based in New York City, makes grants and operates programs supporting colleges and universities throughout Asia with the stated aim of “enhancing Christian presence” in Asian higher education. Under Wood’s leadership, the United Board expanded the Asia-based programs while continuing its grantmaking with greater focus on particular needs and demonstrated outcomes. For details, see www.unitedboard.org. Johannes J. Visser, 60, principal since 1993 of the Hendrik Kraemer Institute, Utrecht, Netherlands, was granted early retirement. Before coming to the institute, he served in Gambia and Kenya. At the celebration of his retirement, October 8, he was honored with a Festschrift, A New Day Dawning: African Christians Living the Gospel, edited by Kwame Bediako, Mechteld Jansen, Jan van Butselaar, and Aart Verburg. Announcing “Unexpected Angles: The Potential and Challenges of Missionary Archives” is the theme for a roundtable at the American Historical Association annual meeting in Seattle, Washington, January 7, 2005. This session will bring together historians and archivists to reflect on the characteristics, potential, and limitations of missionary archives for historical research. Jon Miller, professor of sociology and director of the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, will chair the roundtable. Ryan Dunch and Jane Samson of the University of Alberta, Rhonda Semple of the University of Northern British Columbia, and Martha Lund Smalley of Yale Divinity School are the panelists. Register by visiting www.historians.org. The Nordic Institute for Missionary and Ecumenical Research will hold a course, “Methodological Plurality and Academic Integrity in Missiology,” March 7–11, 2005. Doctoral students are invited for the research course, which will be held in Magleås, Denmark. Details may be found at www.missionresearch.net. The Yale-Edinburgh Group on the History of the Missionary Movement and Non-Western Christianity will hold its annual meeting July 7–9, 2005, at Yale Divinity School, New Haven, Connecticut, addressing the theme “Identity, Ethnic and Christian, in the History of Christian Missions.” The study group is cosponsored by the Centre for the Study of Christianity in the Non-Western World at the University of Edinburgh, the Yale Divinity School, and the Overseas Ministries Study Center. Visit www.library.yale.edu/div/yaleedin.htm for details. Catholic missiologists gathered September 29 to October 3, 2004, in Cochabamba, Bolivia, for the Second General Assembly of the International Association of Catholic Missiologists. They discussed the theme “Hear What the Spirit Says to the Churches: Sharing Diversity—Issues of Theological Language.” The assembly, which drew seventy three participants, was hosted by the Missiological Institute of St. Paul’s Catholic University, Cochabamba, the Bolivian Episcopal Commission for Mission and Dialogue, the Maryknoll Language School, and the Bolivian Mission Secretariat of the Divine Word Missionaries. Outgoing IACM president John Gorski, M.M., of St. Paul’s University, an IBMR contributing editor, convened the meeting. Teresa Okure, S.H.C.J., a New Testament scholar from Port Harcourt, Nigeria, gave the foundational address, “The Diversity of Theological Language in the New Testament.” The Internet Mission Photography Archive, a new Web resource hosted by the University of Southern California, offers a database of more than two thousand mission photographs dating from the nineteenth century to World War II from repositories in Britain, continental Europe, and North America. Included are photographs from the Leipzig Mission, Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America (Maryknoll), Norwegian Missionary Society, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, and Yale Divinity School Day Missions Library. Photographs from the archives of the Moravian Church and other missions will be added to the database. Jon Miller, jonmill@usc.edu, is leading the project. To search the photography archives, visit http://library.usc.edu/uhtbin/ catstat.pl/impa.
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