Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, April 21, 1963, Image 7

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    EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Sunday, April 21. 1963 Pile 7A
Completition of Ideologies
Veteran Lecturer's Topic
Air Force Team
To Visit Campus
Two Air Force officer selec
tion representatives will visit
the University of Oregon cam
pus Tuesday to discuss the Air
Force's officer training school
with interested students.
Capt. Berlyn E. Schulti and
Capt. Carey A. Springer will be
at tho University's Erb Memor
ial Student Union from B a.m.
to 4 p.m. Appointments may be
arranged through the Eugene
Air Force recruiting office,
Dl 3-2021.
All-Day Seminar Planned
By Trial Lawyers Tuesday
A panel of nationally-known
trial lawyers is expected to lead
an all-day seminar in Eugene
Tuesday on the trial of personal
injury cases.
Tho meeting will be held in
Harris Hall at the Lane County
Courthouse.
The seminar is open to all
lawyers and is sponsored by the
National Assn. of Claimants
Compensation Attorneys
(NACCA). The organization has
a membership of about 20.000.
A key panelist will be John
Lane of Charleston, W. Va.,
president of the organization.
He is one of the nation's out
standing trial lawyers, accord
ing to Eugene attorney E. B.
Sahlstrom, who is making ar
rangements for the seminar.
The seminar will open at 8:30
a.m. and adjourn at 5:30 p.m.
No advanc- registration is being
taken. The fee is $10.
Few speakers have had more platform ex
and trade orgamrations. In 1962 he made a
six-week official lecture tour of nine Latin
American countries.
Vetter has been in government service
since 1950. when he was a research and liaison
officer with the Department of State. He has
been with the U.S. Information Agency since
1953.
Vcttcr is a graduate of Hamilton College
and received his LL.B. degree from National
University Law School and his LL.M. degree
from George Washington University Law
School.
In recent months, Vetter has also been en
gaged in training of over 40 Peace Corps
groups throughout North and South America.
Vetter's lecture appearance at the Univer
sity of Oregon is open to the public.
perience than Charles T. Vetter. Jr., lecturer
who will speak at a University of Oregon as
sembly Monday.
The assembly will be at 8 p.m. in the hall
room of the Erb .Memorial Union. Vetter's
lecture will be on "Competing Ideologies
Today's Challenge."
Vcttcr. lecturer and training officer for
the U.S. Information Agency, is a regular lec
turer at the State Department Foreign Serv
ice Institute, the Military Assistance Institute,
the Air University, the School in International
Service of American University (where he is
a professional lecturer), and for other over
seas orientation programs. He also lectures
before state and national meetings of educa
tional, service, government, military, religious.
Student Head Elected
CORVALLIS ( Oregon
State University students elect
ed a new student body president
Friday. He is Grant W. Watkin
son, junior science major from
Newport.
Watkinson polled 1,802 votes
to 1.452 for Michael Koch, St.
Paul.
In addition to information
about the officer program, the
men will be prepared to answer
questions about other programs
of the Air Force.
MM &
u II k K j
t
Vote
Robot
For NW Conference
600 Recreationists
Expected in Eugene
FRANK OKTAVEC
Umrersil! Man Kejnoter
Special Program
At UO Concerns
Library Careers
A special program concerning
career opportunities in librar
ianship will be held Wednesday
by the University of Oregon Li
brary to coincide with National
Library Week.
"Life as a Librarian" is the
theme ot the program scheduled
for 2 p.m. in the Current News
paper Reading Room of the Uni
versity Library. It is open to
both students and the public.
Short films on librarianship,
a tour of the library, and a dis
play of rare books will be fea
tured. The event is sponsored by the
Staff Assn. of the University of
Oregon Library. Marian Greene,
reference librarian and Judith
Doig, head circulation librarian,
are handling arrangements.
Librarians who will be pres
ent to answer questions include:
CaTl W. Hintx, university librar
ian: Alan Wolstcncroft of the
Oregon State Library in Salem;
Elizabeth Findly, head reference
librarian at the University;
Claire Meyer, social science li
brarian; Perry D. Morrison, as
sistant universi'y librarian: Jo
Anne Kingdom, humanities li
brarian; and Robert Lockard,
tocial science librarian.
Representing education for
librarianship will be Edward
Brazee, visiting field work
scholar from the University of
Washington, and lone F. Pier
ron, assistant professor of li
brarianship at the University of
Oregon.
Social Security
Receipts Totaled
Almost S13 million was re
ceived in Lane County during
1062 in benefits paid out by the
V. S. Social Security Adminis
tration, according to the Eugene
district office of the federal
agency.
The county has about 15 000
persons receiving benefits.
These include retired and dis
abled workers, the spouses of
retired or disabled workers,
widows or widowers, dependent
parents, and children nf retired,
deceased or disabled workers.
In the Eucene office, the
number of persons receiving
benefits is increasing For De
cember. 192. there were 15.371
beneficiaries receiving SI 4 mil
lion about a 9 per cent in
ereane over the same month the
year before.
i
I
(Register-Guard photo by Mtrko Pltner)
Nancy Prociw, of Springfield, ninth
grade student at St. Francis High
School, got herself all wound up in the
student election campaign at the
school Friday. The robot, though, can
only reply with more tape publicizing
the campaign efforts of Mike Herring,
who wants to be student body president.
The unusual campaign gimmick was
manufactured, unknown to Mike, by
some classmates. The election is Tuesday.
An estimated 600 persons are
expected in Eugene from
throughout the Pacific North
west during the next four days
to attend the Northwest District
Recreation and Parks Confer
ence of the National Recreation
Assn.
Park and recreation person
nel from throughout Oregon,
Washington, Alaska, Idaho,
Montana and the three western
Canadian provinces of British
Columbia, Alberta and Sas
katchewan are expected to par
ticipate in the conference to
night through Wednesday.
A number of Eugene and
Springfield public officials and
park and recreation leaders will
address the conference. It is
co-sponsored with the associa
tion by the Parks and Recrea
tion Division of the State High
way Department.
Mayors to Give Addresses
The conference, to be held at
the Eugene Hotel, will have its
opening session at 7:43 p.m.
Sunday. Mayor Edwin Cone of
Eugene and Mayor B. J. Rogers
of Springfield are scheduled to
give welcoming addresses.
Frank Oktavee, chairman of
the department of hygiene,
physical education and recrea
tion at Wayne State University
at Detroit, is scheduled to de
liver the conference's keynote
speech Monday.
Others on Program
Other principal speakers dur
ing the conference will include
Roger Allin, field representa
tive for the Bureau of Outdoor
Recreation; Arthur Todd, man
ager of the field department of
the National Recreation Assn.,
and Lyn Rodney, chairman of
the parks and recreation de
partment at the University of
Oregon.
Also on the program are Paul
Reistel, superintendent of the
Lane County Parka & Recrea
tion Department; city managers
Frank Smiley of Springfield
and Hugh McKinlcy of Eugene;
Noel Lesley, superintendent of
the River Road Parks and Rec
reation District; R. W. McDuf
fie, chairman of the Willama
lane Board of Directors and
others.
Natural Gas
Line Given
FPC Okay
W ASHINGTON t.fl A Fed
eral Power Commission exam-
incr's ruling ran mean natural
gas service for Southern Ore
gon soon.
Examiner Robert M. Weston
has recommended that El Paso
Natural Gas Co. be authorized
to extend its pipeline from Eu
gene to a point near Grants
I Pass, about 128 miles to the
south. The cost would be $7,
693.000. This would enable El Paso to
deliver gas to California-Pacific
Utilities Co, San Francisco,
which In the meanwhile would
extend its main line 53' miles
to Ashland and build distribu
tion laterals off El Paso's main
line The estimated cost would
be $5,277,600.
The recommendations will go
into effect if no review is initi
ated within 30 days.
The new facilities would bring
service to Ashland. Canyonvtlle.
Central Point. Gold Hill. Grants
Pass. Jarkorvi!le. Mdford.
Myrtle ( reek. Oakland. Phoenix.
Riddle. Rocue Ruer. Roieburc,
Sutherlin, Talent and Winston-Dillard.
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