DONALD BAKTLETT, grandson of Former President Bartlett, and nephew of Professor Edwin Bartlett, was graduated from the College in 1924. From Dartmouth he went to Oxford as a student, and returning here in 1927 was appointed an instructor in the newly created department of Biography.
HARRY W. SAMPSON, a Dartmouth man of the class of 1921, is clerk of the department of recreational activities. He is also manager of the cafeteria and grill of the Dartmouth Dining Association.
ROLAND BURNETT SUNDOWN, an Iroquois Indian, lives on the Tonawanda Indian Reservation, Akron, New York. He came to Dartmouth from Phillips Andover Academy. He is in his freshman year.
CARL B. SPAETH lives in Cleveland, Ohio. He came to Dartmouth from the South high school there. He is a senior and, in addition to much participation in sports, has attained Phi Beta Kappa.
ISABEL FOSTER was born in Portsmouth, N. H.; she was graduated from Bryn Mawr and started her newspaper work on a country weekly, The Reporter, Berlin, N. H. For five years she was with the ChristianScience Monitor and is now on the Sunday staff of the Hartford Courant.
PETER T. WASHBURN was a son of Reuben Washburn of the class of 1808. He was born in Lynn, Mass., September 7, 1814. He read law with his father at Ludlow, Vermont, and began practice in Ludlow in 1839; removed to Woodstock, Vermont, in November 1844; represented Vermont in the Legislature for two years; was reporter of the Vermont Supreme Judicial Court for eight years; Lt. Col. of the First Regiment of Vermont Volunteers; Adjutant and Inspector General of Vermont 1861-1865; Governor of Vermont 1869-1870. He published eight volumes of Vermont Supreme Court Decisions and a Digest of the same. Governor Washburn died in Woodstock, Vermont, February 7, 1870. Harold G.Rugg, Editor of Mr. Washburn's diary.