JAMES B. REYNOLDS Scholarships for foreign study were awarded early in June to two alumni and three members of the senior class: Nathaniel C. Merrill '48 of Newtonville, Mass., for a study of operatic production and stage direction at Munich; Wilcomb E. Washburn '48, Hanover, N. H., for research on "Justification for the Dispossession of the Indians" in England; John L. Buchanan '53, Wray, Colo., for Russian or Slavonic studies at Oxford; Richard S. Dosik '53, Brooklyn, N. Y., for study of economics and international relations at the London School of Economics; and Edward S. Klima '53, Cleveland, Ohio, for the study of Old Norse at the University of Iceland.
In addition, eight seniors and three alumni received other awards and fellowships for graduate study, it was announced by Prof. Henry M. Dargan, chairman of the Fellowships and Prizes Committee.
The James B. Richardson Fellowship was given to Donald P. Hansen '53, of Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y., for study at Harvard. The George E. Chamberlin Fellowship was won by Thomas G. Song '53, Hyde Park, Mass., who plans to study mathematics at the University of Michigan. Lowell H. Holway Jr. '53 of Groton, Conn., winner of the Fred DeMeritte Barker Fellowship, will go to Harvard to do graduate work in nuclear physics.
Four seniors were named recipients of James K. Colby Memorial Fellowships. Edward M. Condit '53, La Grange, I11., Richard C. Cahn '53, Freeport, N. Y., and Weyman I. Lundquist '52, Holden, Mass., plan to study law-Cahn at Yale and Condit and Lundquist at Harvard. William R. Johnson '53, Excelsior, Minn., intends to use his fellowship to study business administration at Harvard.
Two Richard Crawford Campbell Jr. Fellowships for graduate study in English Literature went to David S. Chamberlain '52, Boston, Mass., who is studying at Oxford University, and Richard W. Nunley '53, Marshfield, Mass., who will pursue his studies at Cambridge University.
A graduate and a senior received Charles O. Miller Jr. Memorial Fellowships. Russell B. Capelle '36, Bradford, Mass., will study government at various libraries; while Martin G. Gold '53, Passaic, N. J., plans to do graduate work in social psychology at the University of Michigan.