STUDENT WORKSHOPS, which have become an important though non-credit part of the educational program at Dartmouth, have recently had a new addition in the Motion Picture Workshop established by Dartmouth College Films. This latest student group has the distinction of being directed by a senior, Holden Higbee of Cleveland, rather than by a man with faculty rank.
As part of their extra-curricular training, students in the workshop will take motion pictures for the College and will re-edit some of the films produced in past years by Dartmouth College Films. The traditional movies of each senior class will also be handled by the workshop members, and as a major project for the year a film on the diagnosis and treatment of "aniseikonia" will be made for the Dartmouth Eye Clinic. Instruction in the fundamentals of motion-picture photography and training in advanced techniques for more experienced men will be available through the workshop.
The Motion Picture Workshop has quarters in Bissell Hall, where already exist the Student Workshop for handicrafts and the Dartmouth Outing Club's hobby shop. Other undergraduate workshops on the Dartmouth campus provide facilities and instruction in the fields of graphic jJrts, radio, natural history, and painting.
AMONG THE FACULTY -SPEAKERS AT HANOVER HOLIDAY, JUNE 16 TO 20, WILL BE PROF. CHURCHILL P. LATHROP OF THE ART DEPARTMENT (LEFT) AND PROF. LEON BURR RICHARDSON 'OO OF THE CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT, DARTMOUTH HISTORIAN AND AUTHOR OF THE ARTICLE ABOUT PRESIDENT HOPKINS IN THIS ISSUE OF THE MAGAZINE.