Article

Fellowships Awarded

June, 1911
Article
Fellowships Awarded
June, 1911

Announcement of the winners of the Parker and Chamberlain Fellowships has been made by the Committee on Graduate Instruction. The Henry Elijah Parker 'Fellowship was awarded to Walter A. Phelps 'lO, of Wakefield, Mass., who during the past year has been assisting in the physics laboratory. He plans to study Mathematics and Physics at Princeton. The fellowship is based upon a fund bequeathed to the College by Professor Parker, a teacher of Latin and literature at Dartmouth from' 1866 to 1896. The value of the fellowship is $500 a year and may be held for two years. If judged advisable by the faculty, the holder may be allowed a year for special preparation before entering upon the duties of his fellowship or receiving the income attached to it. During the time in which he is upon the fellowship he shall pursue advanced studies, not professional, subject to the approval of the faculty.

Bradley M. Patten '11 was elected to the George E. Chamberlain fellowship of $500, based upon a fund given by Mrs. Addie N. He Alpine ' in_ commemoration of the life and service of George E. Chamberlain, 1860, major of the eleventh regiment of the Vermont Volunteers in the Civil War, who was killed in the battle of Charleston. The conditions upon which this fellowship is held are the same as those of the Parker. Patten will study biology at Harvard.

Edward D. Dickinson, assistant in history for the last two years has been awarded by Harvard University the much coveted Ozias Goodwin fellowship of $525, and will study history at that institution.