Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 17, 1966, Page Two, Image 2

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    Graduate School
Receives Grant
The University Graduate School
has received a $6,000 grant from
the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship
Foundation for the advancement
of graduate education.
The award is part of the Foun
dation’s $1.8 million program of
grants made this year to 81
graduate schools in this country
and Canada Funds are given to
those schools where Woodrow
Panels Discuss
Troubled Child
The “Troubled Child" will be
the focus of a workshop at the
University Thursday and Friday
which will feature two well -
known specialists in the field,
George Donahue and Dr. Kent
Durfee.
Donahue is currently establish
ing pilot programs for troubled
children in selected communities
under a government grant. He is
assistant sup erintendent of
schools in Elmont. N.Y.. and the
former supervisor of guidance for
the New York State Education
Department.
Dr. Durfee has conducted a pri
vate practice in adult and child
psychiatry in Phoenix. Ariz., since
July, 1964. He is a consultant to
various high schools, a juvenile
court, and Job Corps Center, and
has held a post-residency Fellow
ship in child psychiatry from the
Menninger Foundation.
Durfee’s Thursday evening din
ner address will concern the child
in difficulty.
Sponsored by School Psycholo
gical Services of the School of
Education, the workshop will be
attended by persons in general
education, special education,
counseling, and mental health,
and by social workers and psychol
ogists.
Three panel discussions will be
featured during the two-day work
shop, moderated by Lee Brissey,
professor of education.
“Dimensions of Trouble” will
be the topic of a 1:30 p.m. panel
discussion Thursday. The Friday
morning discussion will be on
“Plans, Programs, and Objec
tives.” Educational practices and
problems will be considered Fri
day afternoon by a classroom
teacher, residential school teach
er, and a psychologist.
Workshop registration fee is
S5.
Music Honorary
Elects Officers
Three music faculty members
have been elected officers of Phi
Kappa Lambda, national music
scholastic honorary.
H. Royce Saltzman, associate
professor of music, is the new
president of the local chapter;
James A. Miller, assistant profes
sor of music, vice president; and
John Gustafson, associate pro
fessor of music education, secre
tary-treasurer.
Oregon Daily Emerald
The Oregon Daily Emerald U oublished
fire times in September and five days a week
during the academic year, except during
examination periods, by the Student Publi
cations Board of the University of Oregon.
Second-class postage paid at Eugene, Ore
gon 97403. Subscription rates $5 per year,
%2 per term.
Party Supplies
— DECORATIONS
— IMPRINTED
NAPKINS
— MATCHES
_ ROD PAPERS
865 Willamette
Wilson Fellows have elected to
enroll for the 1965 66 year.
The University currently has
three Woodrow Wilson Fellows
enrolled. All are in their first
year of graduate study. The Fel
lows and their fields of study
are Kay Thornton Irwin, Eng
lish; K. Carol Griffith McNair,
English; and Kay Hemphill Mich
elfield, philosophy.
The grant given the Oregon
Graduate School is to be used,
in part, to aid students who have
completed at least one year of
graduate work. The remainder
will be used to advance gradu
ate education in a way to be de
termined by the school.
The Woodrow Wilson Fellow
ship Foundation, through its pro
gram of fellowships, recruits out
standing students to the profes
sion of college teaching.
Officials Will Explain
Latin American Study
Students wishing to learn about
the Fulbright Hays Program and
other study opportunities in Lat
in America arc invited to come
to the World Affairs Briefling
Center in the Student Union at
4:30 p.m. today. Representatives
of the U S. Department of State
and the Institute of International
Education will be present to ex
plain the program.
John Gange, director of the
Institute of International Studies
and Overseas Administration, is
the chairman of the regional
board of the National Screening
Committee set up by the Insti
tute of International Education
[of New York. Information on the
program may also be obtained
from him.
Friday Last Day
To Drop Classes
Friday is the last day to drop
courses, not Jan. 24 as was
reported.
Soloist to Give Faculty Recital
A wide variety of vocai mu
sic will bo presented in a Uni
versity faculty recital at It pin
Thursday in the School of Music
auditorium.
James A. Miller, tenor, will per
form works by Georg Philipp
Telemann, Handel Yrjo Kilpinen,
Reynaldo Hahn, and Charles
Ives He will be accompanied on
the piano by his wife, Helen S
Miller.
Miller is an assistant professor
of music who has presented nu
merous recitals throughout the
Midwest and on the West Coast
Mrs. Miller has taught at the
University of Missouri. William
| Carey College in Hatteshurg,
Miss., and Goshen College
The soloist will be assisted by
Richard Thombiey. (lute; Robert
1 Hladky, cello; and Victor Hill,
harpsichord, during Telemann's
j Cantata No 7, for the Feast of
the Purification of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, for Tenor, Flute and
Continuo."
Trombley and llladky are on
the Music Softool faculty, and
Mill is a graduate student in
mathematics.
The recital is open to the put),
lie free of charge.
Want to really get results’ -
Use Emerald Classified Ad*—
Phone 342-1411. Ext. 1818
GRADUATES —
GOT A GRIPE?
CALL
ROD ROTH
Graduate Student
Representative
345-8862
Is your required reading piling up?
Have you discovered you have time for little else but study... study ... study
Cut your homework time
Your required reading assignments are probably
taking too much of your time. You can tut litis
time in half because Reading Dynamics Institute
can triple your reading speed in just a few weeks
time. Not only will you read faster, but you'll
remember what you’ve read.
Rapid readers have better
concentration
In the very beginning when you learned to read,
you were told to read aloud. Remember? You
were taught to hear each word in order to under
stand it. Your reading speed was based on how
quickly you could hear the words, not how
quickly you could see them. Soon dull para
graphs found you daydreaming. YOUR READ
ING WAS NOT KEEPING PACE WITH
YOUR THINKING. Now, however, it is possi
ble lor you to read as fast as you tan think.
Now, at last, concentration becomes a nature
given fact.
What is Reading Dynamics?
It is the art ol teaching people to triple* their
reading s|>eed and at the same time inctease
their understanding of what they have read.
Reading Dynamits is not new. I wents seats ago
Evelyn Wood was working toward het M V She
discovered that one ol het professots could read
at the rate of b(M)0 words pet minute. She lelt^
this unusual gilt could be studied as a sot me
and passed along to others.
In the years ol study and rescan h that followed.
Reading Dynamics became pet let ted. The na
tion saw demonstrations of the Evelyn Wood
speed reading on the fatk Paar, Garry Moore
and Art Einkletter television shows, l ime, News
week, business Week and Esquire discussed the
ini pat t on those who had taken the Reading I)\
narnits tour.se. Time Maga/ine reported, "Wash
ington has seen nothing like it since the da\s
when Jctltly Roosevelt read tlnee hooks a clay
and ran the t ountt y at the .same time.”
Free Demonstration:
lues., Jan. lb J
7:30 p.m. J
Central Lane YM-YWCA
2055 Patterson ♦<
Wed., Jan. 19
7:30 p.m.
Phi Delta Theta
1472 Kincaid
(across from Library)
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute
1472 Orchard Campus Representative, Tony Hazapis 344-8345