Four seniors have been awarded Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for graduate study by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, and five other seniors and three alumni will' do graduate study abroad as recipients of Dartmouth's own James B. Reynolds Scholarships for Foreign Study.
The four Woodrow Wilson award recipients and their fields of study are: Peter J. Bush, Sanborn, N. Y., political science; Arthur M. Harvey Jr., Birmingham, Mich., French; Paul M. Jones Jr., White Plains, N. Y., comparative literature; and John C. Nelson, Winona, Minn., philosophy. Six other Dartmouth seniors received honorable mention.
The fellowships, awarded to 1,395 students this year, cover tuition and fees for the first year at the graduate school of their choice, plus $1800 for living expenses and extra allowances for children.
The Reynolds Scholarships, which are made possible through a bequest by the late James B. Reynolds '90, have been awarded annually since 1951 to seniors and recent graduates for foreign study. The awards are $2300 each and may be used for study in any field, usually at a recognized educational institution, although some may be awarded for independent study. They are based on the applicant's intellectual ability and character and the value to the community of his program of study.
This year's winners and their study plans are: Dana W. Atchley III '63, New Haven, Conn., now a graduate student in fine arts at Yale, for research on "The Making of the Renaissance Book" in Belgium, Italy, and England; David M. Feldshuh '65, Scarsdale, N. Y., for the study of acting at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts; Peter P. Jennings '63, Rolling Hills, Calif., now a graduate student in Asian geography at the University of Hawaii's East-West Center, for research in geography on the island of Bali, Indonesia; Richard A. Joseph '65, Brooklyn, N. Y., for the study of philosophy, politics, and economics at Oxford University; Alan S. Kravitz '63, Chapel Hill, N. C., now a graduate student in city planning at the University of North Carolina, for research in city planning at the London School of Eco- nomics; Lawrence S. Lowic '65, Port Chester, N. Y., for the study of painting in Italy; John C. Nelson '66, Winona, Minn., for the study of philosophy at either Oxford University or the University of Edinburgh; and Donald L. Ruben '65, Columbus, Ohio, for the study of philosophy, politics, and economics at Oxford University.