Article

Scholars and Fellows II.

MAY 1966
Article
Scholars and Fellows II.
MAY 1966

The honors and opportunities for Dartmouth's outstanding students continue to accumulate. In addition to the eleven Woodrow Wilson Fellowships and the Rhodes Scholarship previously reported, the College can now boast about seventeen graduate and undergraduate students who have been chosen for National Science Foundation fellowship awards in two different programs.

The ten undergraduates and two graduate students who have been awarded NSF Graduate Fellowships are Michael D. Busch '66 of New York City, who will study mathematics at Princeton; Wallace M. Elton '66 of Brockport, N. Y., physical geography at Michigan State University; Richard A. Firtel '66 of South Orange, N. J., biology at California Institute of Technology; M.A. candidate Edward S. Gaffney of East Williston, N. Y., studies at U.C.L.A.; Frederick S. Gass of Greencastle, Ind., a graduate student in mathematics who will continue his studies at Dartmouth; Richard I. Gisselquist of St. Peter, Minn., to study mathematics at Dartmouth.

Also, Stephen B. Hladky '66 of Ridge wood, N. J., biophysics at Stanford University; Michael J. McConnell '66 of Long Beach, Calif., engineering at Stanford University; Loyal T. Ollmann '66 of Wantagh, L. I., N. Y., mathematics at the University of Washington; David T. Slaney '66 of Pawtucket, R. I., political science at Yale; Andrew P. Smith '66 of Wilmington, Del., biochemistry at Stanford University; Charles W. Thayer '66 of Springfield, Vt., paleontology at Harvard.

Hladky also is the recipient of one of four Henry Fellowships for study at Cambridge University in England.

The five Dartmouth graduate students who were awarded NSF Summer Fellowships are: Glenn A. Gerdin of Minneapolis, Minn., first-year graduate student in physics; Lloyd A. Gottlieb of Far Rockaway, N. Y., second-year student in life sciences; Raymond A. Greenwald of Chicago, Ill., second-year student in physics; Sandra J. Lohrman of Detroit, Mich., first-year student in genetics; and Michael R. Mayhugh of Citrus Heights, Cal., first-year student in physics.