FOR both seniors, in the Great Issues Course, and freshmen, in the new required course The Individual and the College, the educational process is stimulated by distinguished visiting lecturers. The two main articles this month are examples of this stimulation at the two ends of the Dartmouth class spectrum.
The Great Issues lecture given November 22 by Lloyd V. Berkner, president of Associated Universities, Inc., dealt with society's adjustment to the technological revolution. It begins on Page 12, under the title The PublicInterest and the Technological Revolution. As head of the organization which operates the Brookhaven National Laboratory, and as a man of broad scientific experience, he is in an authoritative position to raise questions, as he does, about technological secrecy.
The freshman lecture - Man's AggressiveNature (Page 24) — was given in November by Dr. George E. Gardner '25, head of the Judge Baker Guidance Center in Boston and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard. It is recommended as especially enlightening reading for parents.
Other February contents:
Hanover Browsing 3
Dartmouth Authors 5
The College 9
The Hanover Scene 11
The Faculty 19
Alumni Council Photo Feature 20
The Undergraduate Chair 28
The U.N. as Classroom 30
With Big Green Teams 32
News from Clubs and Classes 35
Associated School News 75
In Memoriam 76
The Cover
Even though on crutches, the real schusser can't stay away from the reports about powder snow at those magical Eastern ski centers that draw the college crowd. Adrian Bouchard was the sympathetic photographer.