Four more seniors have been honored with Dartmouth's coveted James B. Reynolds Scholarships for foreign study during the 1966-67 academic year, making a total of twelve Reynolds awards for the year.
William J. Garry of Jacksonville, Fla., Jonathan E. Grindlay of Rochester, Minn., Michael M. Ransmeier of Concord, N. H., and Kenneth E. Sharpe of West Orange, N. J., were notified by President Dickey that they had been named to receive the $2300 awards.
Grindlay will study the philosophy of science, with emphasis on physics, at the University of Munich, Germany. Last summer he studied space physics at Columbia under a NASA scholarship.
Ransmeier will study the political theory of the late middle ages at either the University of Louvain or the University of Brussels, Belgium. He also has been awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship for graduate study in political science.
Sharpe plans to study political sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science, London, England. A chemistry major and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, he worked last year on a study of the structure of the cadmium atom nucleus under a National Science Foundation grant. He has served as WDCR's special events director for two years.
Garry has already accepted a Stanford University Fellowship for graduate study in the field of drama, instead of the Reynolds Scholarship. He held a Dartmouth Senior Fellowship for independent work on "Ibsen and His Milieu."