Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 01, 1974, Page 6, Image 6

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    BRIEFS
SPEAKERS
Dr Paul Holbo, acting dear, of the College
of Liberal Arts, will speak to the Rubicon
Society luncheon at noon today at the House
of Lee 165 W 11th Ave The speech, open to
the public, will deal with "Where Your
Dollars Go In Higher Education " There is a
charge for lunch
MEETINGS
The faculty of the School of Architecture
and Allied Arts will meet Monday at 5 p.m. in
141 Lawrence Coffee and donuts will be
served at 4 30 p.m
(Continued on Page 14)
YOU CREATE - WE PRINT
OFFSET PRINTING
1QO OFFSET PRINTS
business cards • resumes • flyers
TMESIS & DISSERTATION REPRODUCTION
BUS. REPORTS ^ FORMS • BROSmuRES
INVITATIONS & ANNOUNCEMENTS • BINDING
RUBBER STAMPS • FOLDING • LAMINATING
STATIONERY ENVELOPES • NEWSLETTERS
cJol}nny'cPiint copy shop
1219 ALDER / EUGENE, OREGON 97401 / 345-4141
HOURS9 to 9 Monday thru Thursday, 9 to 6 on Friday, 10 to 5 on Saturday
Easter Seal Fund drive underway
By GRAHAM KINGSBURY
Of the Emerald
Five-year-old Jeff Stout opened the 1974 Lane
County Easter Seal campaign yesterday, by
mailing the first appeal letter from Children s
Hospital School in Eugene. Jeff, a victim of cerebral
palsy and the 1974 Oregon Easter Seal Child, is a
student at the Hospital School.
The first donors of this year’s campaign, Steve
Leonard and Diana Muss on, representing Demolay
and the Rainbow Girls, also made a $260 con
tribution during the ceremony.
ALSO PRESENT at the morning ceremonies
were Lane County Commissioner Nancy Hayward,
Lane County Campaign chairer Lloyd Stamp and
Byron Krog, managing director of the Hospital
School.
Stamp said bu.uuu leuers luhuiiuuik
Seals and appeals were mailed yesterday
throughout Lane County. “We hope to raise at least
$25,000 in Lane County this year,” he added, “too
help finance Easter Seal projects and services for
crippled children and adults throughout the state.
He emphasized that over 2,900 Oregonians
received aid from Easter Seals last year, an in
crease of 25 per cent over the previous year. “This
was possible,” he said, “through public support of
annual Easter Seal sales and other fund faising
projects.”
COMMISSIONER HAYWARD, who once worked
at the Hospital School, said, “nearly 3,000 people
who received help last year provides an ample
statement of the good which the Easter Seal
organization does.”
Here in Lane County, the Children’s Hospital
School serves over 150 physically handicapped
children annually, Krog explained and the school
provides physical, occupationnal and speech
therapies—as well as general classroom in
struction—for both pre-school and school age
children. “In addition,” he said, “the Hospital
School also houses a Learning Disabilities Center
for children with perceptual and special
neurological problems.”
Yet the Hospital is only one of many state
Easter Seal projects. Some of the other projects and
services, according to Stamp, include a special
housing development for crippled persons in the
Portland area, a Speech and hearing center in
Grants Pass and a summer camp for crippled
children on the Oregon coast. He said Easter Seals
also provides mobile therapy units and clinics
which serve persons in outlying areas across the
state.
Cannon appointed
as DEQ director
SALEM (UPI) — Kessler Cannon was formally
sworn in as director of the Department of En
vironmental Quality (DEQ) ’niursday by Gov. Tom
McCall.
Cannon previously was assistant to the
governor for natural resources.
McCall also named Harold (Hal) Brauner to
succeed Cannon as natural resources assistant.
Brauner, 34, has been a budget supervisor in the
executive department and previously served as
Cannon’s assistant.
Cannon was appointed to fill the DEQ post
following the resignation of former DEQ director
Diarmudd O’Scannlain, who resigned to seek the
republican nomination for Congress.
HOWARD ROBERTS . .
• in Eugene
in our store
(and around the Eugene area)
all day
Monday,
March 4 only
You probably know these Howard
Roberts albums . . . "Howard Rob
orti is a Dirty Guitar Playor" . . .
"Howard Roberts Guilty" . . .
"Jaunty Jally" . . . “Color Him
Funky" . . . “Out of Sight" . . .
"Goodies'' . . . "Something's Cook
in" . . . and many others.
. . . probably the giant of the guitar" in the world today
here to help
us with the gala
opening of our new
GUITAR GALLERY
A ROOM OF THEIR OWN!
FOR OUR HUGE SELECTION
OF GUITARS and AMPS
COME enjoy a closeup visit with on* of tho finest jazz guitarists of our time . . . bring your
questions, your problems-and. most of all. your listening ears. You’ll find him willing to
share with you the knowledge gained by his vent experience. ITS FREE I
Eugene Music Co.
201 WEST EIGHTH Ph. 345-2333
H« ha* playad with over SO famous band*
• . . such as Frank Devol, Hanry Mancini,
Quincy Jonas. Las Brown. Dave R
ilactric Pruna, Chariio Fox . . . even
L.A. Symphony. Movies and TV: ... *
Sandpipers," “The Odd Couplo" . . .
Hopo Show . . . Danny Thomas . . . Dick
Von Dyka . . . "Mission Impossible" . . .
“To Catch a Thief" . . . "Shaft" . . .
"Portnoy's Complaint" . . . Featured with
Frank Sinatra, Lena Horne, Julie London,
The Supreme*. The Fifth Dimension, etc. etc.
mi