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Corvallis Gazette-Times from Corvallis, Oregon • 20
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Corvallis Gazette-Times from Corvallis, Oregon • 20

Location:
Corvallis, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
20
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A-20 Gazttt-Times, Corvallii, Tuesday, Novtmbar 24, 1970 Review Time Capsule Medicine May Be Hazardous Idaho Towns Aidil ng Recital By Borgir Rewarding Tiny Hunting Victim WASHINGTON (AP) There is no evidence so-called time capsule arc more effective than regular preparations and in some cases may.be highly dangerous, Senate investigators have been told. One possible hazard cited in testimony was described by Dr. Sidney Merlis, director of psychiatric research at New York's Central Islip State Hospital. Merlis said a nurse at the hospital died from an adverse reaction to a powerful tranquilizer called chlopromazine. when tiny pellets from.

the time capsule, or sustained action drug, were caught in the crevices of her stomach lining and could not be flushed out. Merlis testified Monday as the subcommittee, chaired by Seit, Gaylord Nelson, opened four days of hearings into government purchasing of drugs. Sustained action drugs- generally take the form of capsules containing tiny pellets with a protective coating of varying thicknesses that wears off gradually, releasing steady and continued small dosages. The subject of this type of drug came up during questioning of Merlis; Dr. Leo Hollister, a medical investigator with the Veterans Administration; and Dr.

Jonathan Cole, superintendent of the Boston State Hospital. Subcommittee counsel Ben Gordon told Hpllsttr that in 1969 the VA bought a tranquilizer called meprobamate from a Danish firm for $1.55 per 500 tablets while at the same time it was buying the sustained release form of the drug from an American firm for $7.25 per 100 tablets. Gordon said the sustained release form cost the VA 2,300 per cent more and he asked: "Does this kind of buying seem sensible to you?" Hollister said it did not because there was no evidence the sustained action form of the drug was more effective. Cole commented that he, too, was against such drugs and said he once told a drug salesman that if he could prove a sustained action preparation was more effective than the regular dosage he would buy it. "I haven't heard from him yet," Cole said.

By SALLY McBRIDE For The Gazette-Times The greatness of a composer is measured In part by the ever-newness of his music no matter how long he has been deceased and by the art's constant plumbing of depths within the listener to eventually raise his earth-bound self a few inches higher while reaching inside him a bit deeper. Beethoven, of course, is such a composer. ting of Schumann. Mr. Borgir played with warmth and clarity as he surely must have enjoyed it, too.

Of a much different tenor is the Sonata in Minor. Beethoven was moving into his stormy and prolific second period, and each movement reflects a different mood of the man. The turbulent Allegro is announced by a short opening Largo, and the agitation ends very calmly, as if the storm had passed. The Adagio, a hymn-like song of confidence in the "loving was played sensitively. The Allegretto with its recurring four-note figure moved smoothly to the final cadence.

This movement must move, and it did. For those who braved, the heavy downpour, Monday evening was a worthwhile experience. SALMON, Idaho (AP)-Six-year-old Karyn Prestwich entered first grade this year, and school immediately assumed prime importance for her. She hurried home every afternoon to spell new words for her mother, Mrs. Donald Prestwich, and to read her first-grade primer.

And the slender, blue eyed blonde couldn't wait to go to school next morning. On Nov. 5, Karyn, clad in a red jumper and brown coat, was waiting as usual for her schoolbus at the side of a highway near her home in North Fork, a rural town in east-central Idaho, One hour later, she was battling for her. life in a hospital in nearby Salmon, with a bullet wound in her abdomen. Lemhi County Sheriff Bill Baker said the child was shot, when she was mistaken for a deer.

She was rushed to the hospital by Roy Wells, 52, Torrance, who was later charged with assault with a deadly weapon. "The man didn't mean to shoot me," Karyn told the doctor who first treated her. "He thought I was a deer." She was later transferred to the University of Utah Medical Center in Salt Lake City, where she remains in critical "condition. Her kidneys were seriously damaged and a kidney machine is keeping her alive. "She's really fighting to make it," says Mrs.

Andy Hagel, Karyn's grandmother. "The doctors think she may have come around the corner." Wells visited Karyn several times a day while she was in the hospital at Salmon, and he calls her parents often in Salt Lake City. The residents of several small towns surrounding North Fork have mounted fund-raising campaigns help defray skyrocketing hospital expenses for the girl, whose father is a U.S. Forest Service employe. So far, $1,500 has been deposited in the Karyn Prestwich fund at a local bank.

An anonymous donor has sent an additional $2,000 to the Prestwich family, which also includes 3-year-old Kerry and one-year-old Jenny. Salmon radio station KSRA broadcasts hourly appeals for money' for Karyn." Karyn's parents maintain a constant vigil by their daughter's bedside. They hope and pray. BROKEN LEGS AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) Three graduating cadets were in leg casts at this year's commencement at the U.S.

Air Force Academy. James McCandless, 21, of El Paso, Texas, and Richard Downing, 22, of Fontana, broke legs playing soccer. Allan Bloor, 21, of Leetonia, Ohio, got his break playing rugby football. He says with great persuasiveness many things to many people, and during the past several weeks Corvallis audiences have attended recitals of his music given by members of the Oregon State University Music Department. Tharald Borgir, musicologist and pianist, in his second program of the current Beethoven series presented an evening of uiano music Monday! for a warm attentive audience in the Home Economics auditorium.

For this listener, it was a truly rewarding musical experience. Apart from the Rondo, Opus 51, No. 1 in Major, his program was made up of three early piano sonatas: Opus 10, No. 1 in Minor; Opus 28 in Major and Opus 31, No. 2 in Minor, sometimes called "The The Opus 10, Io.

1 with its upward climbing principal subject opened the program. Principal and secondary subjects throughout the four works heard were a carefully underscored by the pianislAt rough pedalling, dynamics, phrasing, and an unashamed Romantic approach, though never overdoing the latter. The finale of Opus 10 contains two delightful themes. The Pastoral Sonata is a piece full of the effervescence of Nature. Except for the Andante with its austere walking bass, the work is joyous.

What a delicious piece of writing is the final Rondo! Folk song-like, followed by an expanse of counterpoint hin a time for the gathering ot friends and relatives on Thanksgiving is a special occasion and should be at a special place the International King's Table has always been a tine place for families HUOM iejjjjjjjjJJjjeeejlJiiM Mir it tin EVENINGS OPEN 6:45 ALSO Thanksgiving Day Continuous From 2 PM FAST PICK-UP For Particular PEOPLE IN A HURRY! OREGON GROWN ROAST TURKEY CREAMY GIBLET GRAVY SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN FLAVOR PACKED BAKED DRESSING VIRGINIA SMOKED HAM SMOTHERED IN CHERRY SAUCE SWEET POTATOES I jieiww mil 30 Days to Christmas Ev WIN A BIKE FOR HI THE PROFESSOR SCORES A NEW hi Happenings TUESDAY, NOV. 24 7:30 p.m. Corvallis School District Board will meet in the administration building. 7:30 p.m. Benton County Planning Commission will meet in the District Courtroom at the courthouse.

7:30 p.m. A stage band festival, featuring bands from Cottage Grove, Albany, Lebanon, McMinnville, McKenzie, Thurston and the Bluetones from Corvallis High School, will be held at CHS auditorium. Admission i free. 8 p.m. The OSU Geology Club will sponsor a public lecture by Robert Lawrence, OSU structural geologist, on "Striking, Slipping and Faulting in the North Cascades Recent Results," in Pharmacy 305 on campus.

A coffee hour will follow. r-8 p.m. Philomath School Board will meet in the administration building. 8 p.m. A Thanksgiving "Pops" Concert will be presentedo in the OSU Memorial Union Lounge by the OSU-Corvallis Symphony Orchestra.

The public is invited. Debra Ann Gordon Ends Basic Training Debra Ann Gordon of Corvallis has completed 10 weeks of basic training for women at Naval Training Center, Bainbridge, Md. She was graduated during a military review held Nov. 13. The daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Max Gordon, 820 NW Witham Drive, Seaman Gordon will have a 14-day leave with her family before reporting to the Naval Air. Station, San Diego, for general duty administration. She is a graduate of Corvallis High School. She enlisted in the WAVES at the Corvallis Navy Recruiting Station for three years and was sworn into the service at the' Portland Navy Recruiting Station on Sept.

3. 839 N. 9th 753-4276 HIGHINFUN! Plenty of Room for jjp fnt at Hugh'. Arco, No Purchase nwMtary, Ikemed driven only, no limit en entries. Varsity LARGE FAMILY 'HUGH CROWE'S ARCO 4thA Von Burn 752-7011 Home of 24 hour service.

OPEN 6:45 all of this plus our speaal PUMPKIN PIE and hosts of other taste-tempting treats for the most discriminating gourmet! i GROUPS 4. A man went looking for America. And wouldn't find WEDNESDAY IS FAMILY NITE AT NOW OPEN. Corvallis Appliance Repair i anywnere. in Only $2.00 plus beverage! Children 10t a year thru 10 years old i i 11:00 AM to 8:00 PM lAmajor oppManc rnodels ia mokes-Also household re i frigeration repair) vrrnr I lit 1 1422 NW 9th INTERNATIONAL KING'S TABLE ED WALKER GARY BUTTERS 753-7125 I 00 FAMILY SIZE PIZZA DISCOUNTED 1.

I I easu nitlen Peter Fonda Dennis Hopper SOFT DRINKS 72 riisc Jack NicholtH COLOR frSMACMURRAY MrOISON WYNN A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION HWmtiniuiAisiisiinmaia.iic lM III I lliHillil urn mm Leonardo da Vinci died while a guest of King Francis at the chateau, Amboise, IJ 2475 N. 9lh 753-2656 Adults 1.25 Juniors .1.00 Children .50 EASTMAN COLOR PANAVISION in the Loire Valley in France. Mom Coi'imba Pictures LUM LEE'S yV HELD SHOWTIMES 7:00 9:15 GEN. ADM. 1.50 OVER IVS JEW Restaurants AW i50S.W.4ih SonnybrooV U9 S.VrV.

3ra WW 'IfSllIlll I I- T77 CZfS UTUUU IS, QUITE SIMPLY, THE BEST AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" Served Thanksgiving Day jr Dear friends, dselvisou, meeting nu a COCKTAIL: SHRIMP 01 FRUIT SOUP: TURKEY USQUE 01 EGG FLOWER SALAD: TOSSED GREEN OR FRUIT JELL0 MOLD ENTREE AMMCHOlSFILM ALAMH wm'iiMilr ROAST STUFFED YOUNG TURKEY, CRANBERRY SAUCE IAKED SUGAR CURED HAM, FRUIT SAUCE. JtStMKUfl 1 1 jfc If I I Wit' 1 Cnwo annum www. to wwmwmMmmjsmmmmmnk COMBINATION IAKED HAM 1 ROAST TURKEY PLATTER ROAST PRIME III OF IEEF, AU JUS $2.50 $2.50 $2.95 $125 yu' uno I dosed rating BROILED CHOICE NEW YORK STEAK, MUSHROOM CAPS -BROILED CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN STEAK, MUSHROOM CAPS. BROILED CHOICE III STEAK, ONION RINGS TERI YAKI STYLE CHICKEN, FLUFFY IICE FRIED CHICKEN ALA MARYLAND JO $2.50 IREADED VEAl CUTLETS, COUNTRY GRAVY CHICKEN FRIED STEAK, CREAM GtAVY IREADED PORK CHOPS, APPLESAUCE THE CRAB DEEP FRIED EASTERN SCALLOPS, COLE SLAW PAN FRIED OYSTERS, TARTAR SAUCE. FRIED AIALONE STEAK, TARTAR SAUCE GRILLED FRESH RAZOR CLAMS A then.

Sincerely, ill Rl I "Tf TV 1 (later Tnankcnivmn Wnv COFFEE 01 TEA a 3 II ti ltd 1 1 1 IAKED POTATO 01 CANDIED YAMS BUTTERED GARDEN PEAS BLUEBERRY MUFFIN CHOICE OF DESSERTS: PUMPKIN PIE WITH WHIPPED CREAM (HOMEMADE) CHOICE OF DESSERTS: PUMPKIN PIE WITH WHIPPED CREAM (HOMEMADE) HOT MINCE PIE, BUM SAUCE (HOMEMADE) CUSTARD PUDDING JEIL0 WITH WHIPPED CREAM ICE CREAM, SHERBET 01 ICE CREAM SUNDAES v-1 wr -vr4 420 NW 3rd at Harrina 7J3-22M a L3 h-drSfaOpai SaLllJMSaVfJI A Happy Thanksgiving Day! I I "II II Ml 1.

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About Corvallis Gazette-Times Archive

Pages Available:
792,824
Years Available:
1865-2024