Four seniors and a recent graduate have been awarded Reynolds Scholarships by the College for study abroad next year. Justin J. Rudelson '83, an Asian Studies major, plans to use his Reynolds to study advanced technologies developed in Israel for desert agriculture and then adapt them for use in China's largely unproductive arid regions. Deborah A. Cohen, an '83 who graduates this June, will use her scholarship to introduce the Rassias method of language instruction at a Swiss home for orphans, refugees, and needy children from many nations. Gordon Piatt '84, majoring in an individually-designed program of government and Soviet studies, plans to study the politics and government of Russia in a one-year master's program at the London School of Economics. Sarah P. Budde '84, a religion major, will also travel to England for a master's program, going to Balliol College at Oxford University to study British European history. And Stephen P. Cho '84, also a religion major, plans to study the Chinese language first at Dartmouth's intensive summer program at Beijing Normal University and then in a year-long program in Taiwan.
■ A new scholarship fund for Native Americans has been established at the College through a $10,000 bequest from the estate of the late Charles S. Marx '31 of Fort Pierce, Fla. Marx was self-employed most of his life, first as an automobile dealer and later as a real estate and investment broker. During World War II he served for four years in the Air Force, attaining the rank of captain while in the India-Burma theater. He was the recipient of numerous medals, including the Bronze Star. Before his death in December 1982, he donated to the College a fine collection of rare U.S. coins. There currently are about 50 Native American students enrolled at Dartmouth, and 16 are planning to matriculate this fall.
" Jay O. Emery '60, a 21-year Air Force veteran, has joined the Alumni Fund staff as an associate director, and Charles S.C. Clement 'BO has been named an assistant director of the Fund. Emery most recently was selfemployed in Portsmouth, N.H., providing financial programming assistance to military officers. He retired from the Air Force in 1982 with the rank of major after serving in a dozen different locations around the world. He was presented with the Distinguished Flying Cross in 1967. In college, he majored in geography and was a member of Sigma Nu, the ski patrol, and Air Force ROTC. He earned an M.B.A. in 1979 at Troy State University in Alabama. Clement has been associate director of alumni affairs and development at the Groton School in Massachusetts, his alma mater, and has also worked for the Population Institute in New York as director of information and news services. At Dartmouth, he majored in anthropology, was a member of Green Key, Sphinx, and the rugby club, and was social chairman and acting president of Chi Phi.
■ The Rev. Robert S. Mac Arthur '64, an Episcopal priest, has been named acting associate director of the Tucker Foundation. Director of the Dartmouth Outward Bound Center for the past 12 years, Mac Arthur has been affiliated with the Tucker Foundation since 1967 when he was named Episcopal chaplain. A Greek and Roman studies major, Mac Arthur was also a member of Casque and Gauntlet, Phi Kappa Psi, and the varsity baseball team. He was graduated cum laude from Berkeley Divinity School at Yale in 1967.