Seven Dartmouth seniors have been designated as among the best future college teacher prospects on the continent by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. The 1969 designates from the College are: John L. Carter, a mathematics major from Ardmore, Pa.; Stephen J. Entin, an economics major from Fairhaven, Mass.; Chester I. Palmer Jr., a mathematics major from Portland, Me.; Paul R. Pillar, a government major from Livonia, Mich.; Bennett M. Pudlin, a comparative literature major from New Britain, Conn.; Charles R. Trainor, an English major from Melrose, Mass.; and Dennis M. Young, an international relations major from Dallas, Tex. In addition, four seniors received honorable mention: Eric Forsythe, a drama major from Tenafly, N. J.; Robert M. Gippin, a history major from Akron, Ohio; David N. Kinsey, a government-architecture major from Moorestown, N. J.; and Donald C. Pogue, a government major from Rockford, Ill.
The selection of 1969 Woodrow Wilson designates marked the second year of this particular program. Before 1968 the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, with Ford Foundation funds, annually made direct financial awards to 1,000 students for the first year of graduate study. Under the new procedure, graduate school deans will be sent lists of the 1,106 designates chosen this year in the United States and Canada with the recommendation that all are worthy of financial support in graduate school.