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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1947)
' Counsel Service to Aid In Student Adjustment Organization of a counseling service to assist students not getting the most out of University work was announced yes terday by Curtis E. Avery, registrar. The service has been set up to meet the growing need for testing, counseling, and advis ing students on an individual and specialized basis, Avery said. Included in the new office will be the speech correction clinic, the reading clinic, and all the facilities of the University tcouing uuieau. opences uanson, present head of the testing bureau, will be in charge of the service which will have its headquarters in Emer ald hall. Full Fall Service A limited number of students will be taken for the remainder of this term and the service will be operating fully next fall, Avery said. Because of an expected large num ber who will want this work in the fall, students now on the campus should make reservations at once, Avery said. These should be made with the testing bureau in the men's physical education building. t i Freedom Fashions for Young America Sizes ... 9 to 15 $10.95 SMITHS Women's Shop 20 E. Broadway - Phone 2911 “Not only will the counseling ser vice help those students who have had difficulty in adjusting to Uni versity life, but it also will be of great value to any student who feels that he is not getting the most out of his work.here,” Avery said. “By guiding his work along the lines in which he is most interested and strongest, it can aid him in ob taining the satisfaction of doing a better job,” he added. Expects Available To this end, the training and ad vice of experts in their fields will be made available through the new service. The reading clinic will be under the direction of Dr. P. A. Kill gallon, professor of education, who has a long record of work in this field, particularly in remedial and corrective reading. Heading the speech clinic will be K. S. Wood, assistant professor of speech and drama, whose experience and train ing in speech correction will assist students needing this service. Dr. Leona Tyler, assistant professor of psychology, will act as counselor. Sessions Pleased (Continued from page one) age of 12. During the last two years at the University of California he has done his fastest work, he re vealed. Last fall, for example, he composed a piano sonata in five weeks. Sessions dates the beginning of contemporary music as the period immediately following the first World war. “Contemporary music,” he said, "was a kind of pulling things together after the romantic movement had reached a dead end.” The fact that the audience for con temporary music is increasing again now after the war shows that people need new expression after a period of world strife. During the depression, the withdrawal of a worried public caused a trend of lighter music to gain popularity. “You can’t have art when people don’t feel fully alive,” Sessions ex plained. Teaches Seminar Sessions studied with Ernest T’-ck, something, he said, that was b' t than any degree. Now, in addition to composition work of his own, Sessions teaches a seminar in composition, a course in musical analy-is, and has taught an 850 studert class an introduction to mu sic course. The composer expressed his hope that a g owing interest in undertak ing ■ su ' -3 the festival will come about, and smiled graciously before turning to attend the next concert. Night Slrff; Cy Laurie night editor Betty Lrgo 'mrsino Walt Me”in my It is estimated that the average man shaves 20 r qrare miles of face during a life time. FOR YOUR HOtJSE DANCE . Rent A P A System Record Player SMEED SOUND SERVICE G. H. Snieed Phone +402-M CAMPUS CALENDAR Westminster open house tonight from 8 to 12. All students planning to attend the Methodist conference at Bar View should have their luggage and bedding at Wesley house by noon today. Former commissioned officers who plan to receive degrees in June a#d who are interested in applying for a commission in the regular army are requested to attend a talk in Fenton hall today at 3 p.m. Piggers' Guide Petitions Petitions for the positions of editor and business manager of the student directory for 1947-48 are due Saturday noon, accord ing to Dick Williams, educational activities manager. They should be turned in to the educational ac tivities office at McArthur court. Tea Chairman Petitions Sophomore and junior women may petition for chairman to head an AWS tea during freshman week next fall. Petitions should be turned Gamma house by Monday noon, IQ ta Barbara Johns at the Delta May 19. — VETERANS! ' • I NO G. I. MATERIAL FOR THIS TERM WILL BE ISSUED AFTER MAY 20th. J § •J __ I I Jnioersity ‘CO-OP’ -.- j ^LINDA DARNELL starring in "FOREVER AMBER" forthcoming 20th Century-Fox Production ....v—<”x."—ca -- '_ -Stsw,)\ f § "'./j? 7~/isr£ :' New.ALL New . . s;.' -• —~ ► ■ — ' II — — f pROOPPOSfflVG!m *”**1 Uess0wmt&w™y^ Tests certified by o jury of 14 distinguished doctors New Freshness! Made by the revolutionary new “903” moisturizing process. Bene ficial moisture penetrates every to* bacco leaf—gives you a smoother, milder, better smoke! Get new Raleigh “903” Cigarettes today. SHEET MUSIC For EVERY TASTE The entire stock of sheet music from an old music store is being sold at but a fraction of its marked price. We are turning our saving over to you! COLLECTORS ITEMS AT . . . % PRICE Or LESS This selection contains many old favorites that are no longer in print. It includes vocal solos and albums, both, secular and sacred, organ studies and solos, piano numbers, methods and compositions, togeth solos and albums er with some foreign ad- for ditions and some popular instrumentals— music of 20 years ago. strings and reeds Every one a choice item woods and winds you've been looking for. L—— You are invited to drop in and browse through this fascinating array of old music. There will be something there you can't afford to miss. 58 West Eleventh