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3 Essayists Win Bowdoin Prizes

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Three winners of the 1965-66 Bowdoin prizes for outstanding undergraduate dissertations in English have been nominated.

Rand E. Rosenblatt '66 of Adams Honse and Rome, Italy, won the $600 first prize for his essay, "The British Foreign Office in the 1930's: Three Events and a Theme."

The second prize of $400 was given to Thomas R. Webster '66 of Cambridge and Tuscon, Arizona, for "Williams Carios Williams" A. Final Statement of the Dance."

"The Intensest Rendezvous: George Herbert and the Problems of Religious Poetry" won third place and $150 for Jonathan D. Culler '66 of Kirkland House and Hamden, Conn.

The Faculty of Arts and Sciences will confirm the awards when they meet May 17.

In addition to the three Bowdoin Prizes in English, two awards are given annually to undergraduates for translations of English prose into Greek and Latin. Five Bowdoins also go to graduate students.

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