Harvard students won six of the 30 Marshall Scholarships awarded this year, the British Embassy announced recently.
The award, which generally goes to students with extraordinary academic records, pays for two or three years of tuition and living expenses at a British university of the winner's choice, with a stipend left over to encourage travel during vacations.
The six winners, all seniors, are Daniel S. Benjamin '83, Christopher S. Forman '83, David B. Golub '83, Anne H. Manson '83, Bruce Tidor '83 and Gregory A. Wright '83. Four will study at Oxford University, Manson will go to the University of London and Wright will attend Cambridge University.
Harvard Highest
No other colleges had as many Marshall winners as Harvard this year. The next highest concentration came from Princeton, where three students won scholarships.
Harvard also announced yesterday the winners of the Fiske and de Jersey scholarships, which annually send two Harvard students to an all-expenses paid year at Cambridge University. Stephen A. Higginson '83 won the de Jersey; Eric P. Kaldjian '83 won the Fiske.
Read more in News
Summers: Memo 'Ironic'