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ENGLISH FELLOWSHIPS OPEN TO U. S. STUDENTS

BOTH MEN AND WOMEN ELIGIBLE FOR STIPEND OF 500 POUNDS

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Applications for the four Henry Fellowships which will be awarded this year to American students, must be filed by January 1, 1934, either in the secretary's office at Harvard, or the secretary's office at Yale. Both men and women may apply, but candidates must be unmarried and preferably in the last year of undergraduate, or first year of graduate study.

These four Fellowships are part of the Charles and Julia Henry Fund which was founded "in the earnest hope and desire of cementing the bonds of friendship between the British Empire and the United States." The awards, which carry a stipend of 500 pounds, entitles the holder to a year's study at Oxford or Cambridge University; while similar awards in Great Britain enable the holder to study at either Harvard or Yale University. Candidates must submit evidence of distinction in some recognized branch of learning, and at the same time, must present a definite scheme of study or research to be carried out, while only students who are prepared to give their whole time to study are considered.

The Harvard members of the American committee of management include President Conant, Francis W. Hunne-well '02, secretary to the Harvard Corporation, and Alfred C. Hanford, dean of Harvard College.

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