Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 30, 1955, Page Three, Image 3

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    44 AFROTC Students
Complete Summer Camp
Forty-four University students
have completed h four-week Air
Force UOTC Hummer training
course at varlouH western Air
Force banes. Four of the stu
dents, at tending summer camp
after their senior year at Oregon,
received commission* as second
lieutenants in the U. S. Air Force
reserve.
Those receiving commissions
were George McKnight, Hugo
Schindler, Richard Reinhart and
Ronald Carlson. McKnight,
Schindler, and Reinhart were
sworn in at McChord AFB, Ta
coma, Wash., while Carlson re
ceived his bars at Fairchild AFB,
SjHikane, Wash.
Completing summer training at
McChord were Mulcolrn Aniomi
sen. Gerald Campbell, Otto Crum
roy, Kent Dorwin. Richard El
llngson. Philip Hanson, George
Johnston, McKnight, Gary Mc
Manus, Donald Mead, Henry MIs
hima, Gilbert Moore, Kenneth
Moore, Ken Morlarty, Otto Nel
son. Robert Ransom, Dennis
Rapp, Duane Reeves, Bryce Rei
mer, Reinhart, Schindler. Justin
Smith. Nicholas Smith, Ev<*rett
Stiles. Richard Van Allen, George
16 ROTC Seniors
Awarded Honors
Special honors for outstanding
seniors in the Army ROTC have
been announced by the military
department.
Sixteen men have been des
ignated as Distinguished Military
Students for the school year
1955-56.
They are William C. Baker.
Richard L. Barker. Martin C.
Brandenfels. Ronald L. Chris
tensen. Kenneth A. Erickson.
Robert J. Fudge, David E. Goode.
Jerry D. Hamilton, Robert D Mc
Cracken, Gordon H. Nobriga
Richard w, Proctor, Gordon K.
Rice. George E. Schultz. John H.
Socolofsky. Alonzo P. Stiner and
Lee W. Tucker.
Kwamas to Distribute
Pompoms in Portland
Free pompoms will be given
away in Portland Saturday, from
9:30 a m. to 4 30 p.m. at Berg's,
before the Oregon-Washington
game.
They will be distributed by
members of Kwama, Sophomore
womens honorary, according to
Jane Bergstiom, IT. of O. rep
resentative on Berg's college
board.
Men's Rush
Ends Tonight
Midnight tonight marks the
end of men's rush week.
Between 10 p.m. and midnight
most of the nearly 600 men who
participated in formal rushing
will sign preference cards at. the
Student Union ballroom.
Meanwhile the 21 fraternities
will be compiling preference lists
of the men whom they desire to
pledge. After midnight IFC and
Student Affairs officials will
match the rushees' cards with the
lists from the houses.
Kach fraternity will receive
the results by telephone some
time during the night. Rushees
may pick up the results Satur
day morning.
Emerald Staff
Appointments Listed
Staff appointments on the Km
erald recently announced are
Shirley Saunders, aa. Religious
Notes editor, and Tom Brown, as
Radio and Television Editor.
The Religious Notes will run
every Friday, with copy deadline
at noon Wednesday. Radio and
Television features will run in
Monday Emeralds.
Waller, James Walton, Art
Weatherford and Art Weber.
Training at. Fairchild were
Charles Carlbom, Carlson, Joe
Davie, Robert Freirich, Fred Gus
tafson, Walt Hennlngson, James
Mizner, Eugene Nordling, Dale
Oderman, Oerald Ross, Donald
Schwartz, George Watte and Bob
Weal.
Bill Dellinger trained at March
AFB, Rlveralde, Calif., and Ben
son IJoyd trained at Mather
AFB, Sacramento, Calif,
Business Prof.
On Adviser Board
Jessie Smith, associate profes
sor of business administration, is
In Portland today for the first
monthly meeting of the State
Advisory Committee on Em
ployment and Unemployment In
surance.
Recently appointed by Gov.
Paul Patterson to serve a two
year term, the five-member
committee will study the opera
tion of the Oregon legislature in
regard to unemployment insur
ance matters.
This is the ffrat such commit
tee to be appointed by a governor
under the provisions of the 1933
Wagner-Payser Act. Membership
Includes two representatives each
from labor and management and
Miss Smith who represents the
public-at-large and is chairman.
Dean Jacobson Heads
Workshop in Seattle
Paul B. Jacobson, dean of the 1
University of Oregon school of
education, conducted a work
shop for elementary school prin
cipals in Seattle Thursday. He is
there as the head of a two-day
conference at the request of the
Seattle superintendent of schools,
Law School Adds
4 Staff Members
The University school of law
has added two associate profes
sors and two special lecturers to
ita staff for the coming year.
Allen Morris Singer and James
Munro have been appointed as
sociate professors, and Kenneth
Pool and Frank Ft. Lacy have
been appointed special lecturers.
Singer From Chicago t’K
Singer, who received his law
training at the University of Chi
cago was a teaching fellow at
Stanford university a year and
then went into private practice
at Beverly Hills, Calif., from
1949 to 1955.
Munro, who earned his J.D. de
gree from Northwestern univer
sity school of law, has been active
in the adult education field as
well as lecturing at Northern
Wyoming Community college.
Pool L'O Graduate
Graduating from the Univer
sity of Oregon school of law at
the top of his class in 1952, Ken
neth Pool entered private prac
tice in Eugene. He was recently
named Lane county district judge
by Governor Patterson, to com
plete the term of office left va
cant by resignation. He will lec
ture In first-year criminal law
and procedure.
Former law school staff mem
ber Frank Lacy was named spe
cial lecturer in second year
Equity IT. He was assistant pro
fessor of law here from 1949 to
1954, and is now engaged in pri
vate practice.
Wanted: Bloodhound
To Track Bloodhound
SACRAMENTO, Calif. </n —
Staff S|ft. Melvin I>ahl of near
by Mather Air Force Base lost
his pet Monday at Folsom llam.
He said Thursday he wished
someone with a bloodhound
would help him find it. His
pet: a bloodhound.
Coon, Neuberger Continue
Debate in Eastern Oregon
LA GRANDE, Ore, 10) S^n,
Richard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.)
contended Thursday night that
private utilities In the North
west are not discriminated
against by federal agencies in
the distribution of Bonneville
produced power as he and Rep.
Ham Coon (D-Ore) carried their
series of public ^debates farther
into Eastern Oregon.
"In the last 16 years, Bonne
ville has sold 28 billion kilowatt
hours of current to public or
ganizations and 32 billion to
private concerns,” Neuberger as
serted. "Private utilities pay
Bonneville the rate of 2.34 mills
per kilowatt hour while public
bodies pay 2.81 mills.”
The series of 10 debates cen
Pearson to Discuss
Trade With Russia
OTTAWA 101—Foreign Secre
tary Lester B, Pearson said
Thursday he will talk about de
veloping trade and Canadian
Russian contacts when he is in
Moscow.
He told a news conference the
day before leaving for a week
long Russian visit that more Ca
nadian-Russian contacts might
include exchange visits of Par
liamentarians.
tern on a bill introduced by Coon
for "partnership” construction
of the John Day dam on the Co
lumbia River. Neuberger con
tends the bill is not in the public
interest. Coon is arguing the
affirmative.
"Rep. Coon complains that
Oregon gets only 24 per cent of
Bonneville power to Washing
ton’s 76 per cent,” the senator
asserted. “But let us remember
that Oregon produced only 17
per cent of the power. If he di
vides it up by states as he fool
ishly wants to do, then we would
be down to 17 per cent.”
Wednesday night, Coon said
the preference clause, which
gives public agencies first call
on the federally-produced power,
should be modified because it
favors the State of Washington.
Coon reiterated he is the au
thor of the bill and accused Neu
berger of "misleading the peo
ple.” The representative, refer
ring again to a national maga
zine article in which he said the
senator had admitted deviating
from the truth on occasions,
said:
“Perhaps he (Neuberger) was
immature then. But he is a sen
ator now. and he shouldn’t be
misleading and misrepresent
ing.”
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