Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1950 — Page 21
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BY BUTLER | GENE CHENOWETH, guild. J ance director at Jordan Lge ‘of Music, believes the real aim of vocational guidance is to help people - help themselves. » : That might sound a bit obvious, but Mr, Chenoweth hastens to ‘add, “You'd be surprised at the ‘number of people who believe if they take enough tests, they'll ‘find all the answers to thelr ques- | tions.” : ! Jordan newcomers go through
which investigates Intelligence : and musical aptitude and even | includes medical’ and X-ray
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Open Tonite 6:18 William Lundigan
“ALASKA PATROL" INEE SATURDAY * “TRIGGER MAN" 4 CARTOONS
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H » | 70 MR. CHENOWETH, the « tests are only a beginning. “Our aim is to help the individual adjust himself to the school, and the school tq. adjust itself to the ‘individual ' Some students, he says, think the tests mean everything. Some {others think. the tests are nonw {gense. “Once In a while we find {an individual who has chosen an , {unrealistic goal Maybe some not- > too-talented student is determined {to “be ‘a concert artist. On the | basis of what we learn from the { musical aptitude test, we must {ask that studént: ‘What are you {going to do if you don't make the grade?” Even then, the task of guid- Gene Chenoweth. . - tend to resist advice. They've got| Chenoweth feels keenly about 'to find within themselves the re. the problem of meaning and i sources to - tackle thelr own communication, Where - people k problems " he told me: | understand each other, in music rn » | or ‘words, there's more chance of
| THE INTEREST in guidance *tRity than where they don't. {grew out of Mr. Chenoweth's| * & w.
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Al interest in people. Back in thel 4 COUPLE OF YEARS ago,
late 1930s, when he was working he got steamed up about seman{hard at being a professional mu- tjcs, the study of meaning which psician (he was a violist. with the had huge publicity ‘before World | Indianapolis Symphony in the war II. Summer, 1947, he at{first season of Fabien Sevitzky's| tended the Institute of General | guest-conductorship), he decided Semantics in Lakeville, Conn. {teaching meant more than per-| presided over by the late Alfred | forming, M. Korzybski, author of “Science { “My interest shifted from *in-/gng ; Sanity,” provocative and {wards to outwards, Performers hafing book on the ghastly gap {are interested in themselves—in| between words and meaning. i performance. Teachers are in-|And he wrote a paper on “Gen{terested in pupils,” he explained. eral Semantics in Music,” which i Born in Shelbyville In 1911, he was accepted hy last summer's. rcame to Indianapolis as a kid, International Congress on Gen{attended School 29 and was eral Semantics in Denver, Colo. graduated from Shortridge. A be- With his wife, the former Miss \ lated start on the fiddle at age Carolyn Mullet of Nappanee, and 111 led him to study violin with. two sons: Pet yl 8: er, 7, and Hugh McGibeny at Jordan, where gionhen 5. he lives at 6590 I {he earned a joint Jordan-Butler ogy s¢ ‘Peter WABtS: ‘ta gt “ bachelor of music degree in 1935. —— hibit 3e a Playing and teaching ocoupie the years until 1941, when h took a master's degree in music education, also at Jordan, #8 wn HE SERVED six years as a public school music director in Elkhart County, in which time he played viola with the South Bend Symphony, After one year as director of instruméntal mugic in the South Bend Schools, he took over the chairmanship of school music in New Castle in 1942. There he remained until his arrival at Jordan in 47, * In the coming season, ha will edit the Indiana Musicator, offi. cial publication of the Indiana Music. - Educators’ Association. And he is a vice president and ‘member of the board of Indiana J Mental Hygiene -Society. : | The mental hygiene Gnection might seem’ remote, but Mr,
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But parents can be spared the sense of guilt which so often results from “accidental suffocation.” Doctors have found
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+ guidance director. fireman, and Stephen, a locomotive engineer, ! But it was Peter who switched on again some outlandish modern symphonic composition the
Chenoweths recently turned off
from their radio listening to the New York Philharmonic. Peter sald: “Why'd you turn that off? That's what I wanted to ~hear.” 3 :
At MIT They Have _ The Weérds for It
CAMBRIDGE, Mass, June 9 (UP)-~Among 74 philosophy doc torates awarded at Massachusetts Institute of Technology's 84th
| { commencement exercises today] 2nd FLOOR SAVINGS FIT,
were degrees for theses on the following topics “Reactions of 1-Bromobicyeio (3.3.1): nonan-9-one; intermediates in the synthesis of cycloocta~ tetraene-1,5-dicarboxylic acid,” “Synthesis of pseudopelletierine and its use in an attempted synthesis of cycloctatetraenecarboxylic acid.”
1 Heading the cast will he Bill!
" |Smaill, John P. Kestler, Evelyn
i Brady; Herbert Gibson, Janet!
J (Markey, Catherine Radez, Phyllis | Lambert and Dallas Kelsey,
“Our Town,” to be presented Fri-
day and Saturday, June 16 and 17, at Cathedral High School,
!
Gardiner, David Feld, Fred Gisler, Therese Roembke, Mary Mala. testa, Thomas Williams, Rita Small, Edward Warnicke and,
Geraldine Schloeman. - i Others are: Bud Hagner, Barth |
Thompson, John M, Peity and | i
Xtras in the cast are: Jean
{ Myers, Eleanor Boersig, Therese i McCarthy, Helen Lieland, Anne
Play will be under the direction {ot Margaret R. Mellen. Charles { Johnson will be technical director, { Joseph Feld and Joe Gisler are stage managers, assisted by Jack Baker and Gene Henn,
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