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Corvallis Gazette-Times from Corvallis, Oregon • 8
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Corvallis Gazette-Times du lieu suivant : Corvallis, Oregon • 8

Lieu:
Corvallis, Oregon
Date de parution:
Page:
8
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11 3 3 10 1 4 1 4 s1.10 12 10 11 11 Times, Corvallis, Oregon, Tuesday, September 28, 1982 (Continued from Page 1) sunder way this year in Lincoln County schools. Joy Wallace, a former Corvallis leads the project, which is sponsored by the Portland-based Northwest. Regional Educational Laboratory. Board member Karl Drlica had some questions. "I wonder if you're trying to throw (in) a quota system without getting quality he said.

Assured that that isn't the case, he wondered if Wallace might be a "change agent. Board member Zel Brook asted Drlica. to define the term. "It's a person or a group of persons that are put into a group" to change people's values without them realizing it, he said. "It's a subversive-type thing.

Wallace and district superintendent Thomas Wogaman said the sponsoring education laboratory is a private, nonprofit group that gets money from, -federal and state grants as well as school district contracts. They said the laboratory is controlled by school officials and has no hidden agenda. Also during the meeting, business manager Hal Brauner said the school district would lose roughly million il Ballot Measure 3, the taxlimitation measure, passes in November. Chairwoman Kathryn Smedema said such a cut would be The board resolved on voice vote to oppose the measure. In other action, Smedema named members of a task force to study the possible closure of Dixie School.

They are board member Thomas Pederson, an accountant; Mary Hamlin and Mary Ann. Matzke, Dixie parents; Marvin McDonald, a banker; Charles Sutherland, a forest economist; Linda Smith, a free-lance writer; and Bob Mittleider, principal at Mountain View. POLICE CARS ONLY DON'T EVEN THINK OF PARKING HERE The writing on the wall 4 4 4 Joy IC Al 1 N.M., so the second one was added. The sign on top didn't do the job at the municipal building in Eunice, Election change of letters last spring involving Atiyeh and Reagan and David A. Stockman, the director of the Office of Management and Budget.

Atiyeh had complained to Reagan about the deficit budget. He argued that it would contribute to continued high interest rates, which have cut back home construction and hurt Oregon's lumber industry. When Stockman, in his answer to Atiyeh, said Oregon would lose if federal spending were cut back, Atiyeh replied: not pat me on the head. When the national economy cools off, Oregon gets penumonia. Of this, Kulongoski said, "It wasn't criticizing, it was political posturing." markets 6 Cri-teed Chmpin ChartCo Cham5p Chart 4 Chase ChesPa 715 CiPaT 1.52 Chrysir Citicrp Bak Am CitiSve 1.60 Bausch 1533 CitSve BaxTr Cityin 1.70 6 x1973 BeatF4 Clark Beker ClevEl BelHow Clorox Bendix Coastal BenfCp CocaC ColgPal 18 BestPd ColPen BestP Coltin Bethel ColGas BlackD CmbEa Boeing BoiseC 115 Comsat BickHR Comdi 1016 Borden ConEd Borg 1 ConFds BosEd CnsNG s1.88 BristM 12 1130 2.44 BritP1 Cont Air Braswk CatiCp BuyEr Burlind Contill BriNth 6 1045 ContTel Burgh 2.80 600 CiData on Coopr CBS CorinG CIGNA CrockN CPC Int 2.10 CrwnCk CSX eZel Caesar Cart 64 CRIK.

Caring Day Hid 14 1554 Catrp7 Dennys CamSp DataGe 100 CarPer Dayt.PL 608 CenSoW Celanse Det Ed CartHw Deere Castick Delta 52 2740 CentIPS 14 DiamS OnSoya Digital Advanced technology at an affordable price. 3-20 8 20: 1808 Alarm and stop watch features in men's and ladies' styles. Coleman, Jewelers 753-37210 255 S.W. Madison 11 3 4 1 4 11 (Contissed from Page acres of land across the road from the Oregon Institute of Technology. The city cleared the site, put in sewers, water and streets, and in 1978 opened the College Industrial park with hopes of attracting small, high-technology industries that would tie in with OIT's engineering and computer-technology programs.

Nearly four years later, only seven of the park's 23 lots have been sold and of those, just two are occupied, according to Klamath Falls city planner Jerry Green. The only tenants so far are Swiss Precision Products, a producer of electronic aviation instruments, and Quality Components an electronicparts manufacturer. The economy has slowed things Green conceded. "But the concept is still good and the city provides good lease-terms and other incentives that should bring more business in here when things get Education meets industry Some 250 miles to the north, in Washington County, private enterprise is putting together a "science park" that is even closer to what some people envision for Corvallis. The $120 million park is to be built on 175 acres next to the Oregon Graduate Center complex between Beaverton and Hillsboro.

The center is a small, private educational institution that offers postgraduate degrees in a few highly technical fields, including applied physics and environmental science. Construction of the science park is scheduled to begin next spring. The graduate center owns the land, and is leasing it to the Portland-based Rembold Beverages (Continued from Page 1) quire at least a 5-cent deposit on virtually all cans and bottles of beer and soft drinks sold in California. It is an attempt to reduce litter and save natural resources by encouraging consumers to return cans and bottles to the store or a recycling center to claim their deposit. Opponents argue that the proposal would do little to ringive the litter problem, while eliminating jobs in the can and bottle industry, boosting beverage prices, and causing sanitation problems in grocery stores.

Californians for Sensible Laws reported large donations from beer and soft-drink companies, grocery store chains and other segments of the beverage industry, including: The Can Manufacturers Institute, the Glass Packaging Institute, Adolph Coors $108,181, and Anheuser-Busch, $250,000. Honig, a former state Board of Education member, spent $1.2 million in the June primary to force Riles into a runoff. He reported spending $1.34 million through Sept. 17, and had $84,650 in the bank and a $698,688 deficit. Riles, seeking a fourth term as superintendent of public instruction, reported spending $645,716 through the same period.

He had $26,291 in the bank and $108,469 in debts. McCarthy, D-San Francisco, said he had spent just over $730,000 and had $400.620 in the bank. Hallett, R- Atascadero, reported spending $1.2 million, but she had only $69,325 in reserve. GibrFn Merry Smk8 Gillette Mesa Pi 10 2091 GidNug MidSUI 6 1012 Sonat Gdrich MMM 12 2493 SCHEG Goodyr MinPL 6 167 SCalEd Gould Mobil 6 2243 Grace Mohk DE Monsan GUNFin Greyh 4 MonPe Squibb Grumm Morgan 3.40 GIfWst Morton GulfOil Motrola 1.60 15 1274 79-14 StOlnd 1.56 2.44 101 StaufCh GulfUtd 1.32 SteriDe NOR Stern! HRT NL. Ind 17 1003 SanCe 2.30 Halbin 5 2462 NUT 11 261 Sybron Harind NabscB 8.

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We hope to be very closely married to the high-tech companies that locate in the park." said Marianne L. Crayne, assistant to Graduate Center President F. Paul Carlson. Carlson recently told the Wall Street Journal that he had been "inundated" with inquiries from businesses interested in moving to the science park. Crayne said Carlson and his staff spent nearly two years quietly assembling the land needed for the park, gathering financial support and putting together a detailed development plan.

All this was done before the project was made public this past May, she said. From there, it was a relatively easy task to win county zoning approval, even though the project will occupy land that had been earmarked for housing and until recently was being farmed. took a lot of preparation," Crayne said, once the county was aware of our plans, we had no major problems. we started," Crayne added, "it was before everybody woke up to economic development and hightechnology. If we were starting again now, I think we'd have to push it faster." In Corvallis, the Council of Governments study states that the Oregon Graduate Center park would not be major competition for a similar facility located here.

The Graduate Center has only about: 100 students and does research in far fewer fields than does OSU, the report points out. Obituary Roger Case Memorial services will be at 1 p.m. Thursday in the chapel of the McHenry Funeral Home, 206 N.W. 5th for Roger W. Case, 60.

Mr. Case, who lived at 3378 U.S. Highway 20, died Sunday at Albany General Hospital. Mr. Case was born to Willis and Alice Nelson Case on Sept.

22, 1922 at Chadron, Neb. He entered the U.S. Army in 1943. He married Carol Arner at Crawford, Neb. on Nov.

18, 1944. They lived there before moving to Wyoming, where Mr. Case worked for the Highway Department. The couple moved to Seattle. where he worked for Boeing Company, in 1966.

In 1973 they came to Corvallis, ASciE Asamr ALsCM Armim Atlas Banstr BryBr Beverly BowVal BradNt Brasce Cireik Cons0G 13 1791 Corel 4 Cross CrutcR 194 4 Damson Datapd DorGas Dynietn GILkCh GIICA HollyCp HooT Husky Impoit Int Blent KeyPh Kirby MOO Rd MCO Rs Marndo 7-16 Marm Mrshin MediaG Mick5g 4 NKiney NtPatnt NPrec NoCd0 Nemac 715 2144 4 O0kiep OsarkA 730 PalliCp PEC Pellev Pittway SecCap Solitron Senair 6 1196 TIE TchAm EN TranEn Tub ME UnFond UnivRs 166 Vernit1 Wang 2166 129 3576 Wetbr 1161 WetFin Wichita WwdeR Copyright by The Associated Press Over the Counter PORTLAND, Ore. sociation of Security Dealer Tuesday They de not markdown or Bohemia Cascade Corp Deta Systems Edwards Ind Gran Tree FrontRd GRI Gat VT. Gold Rangro Ranche Rest A In King Table Longview Fibre Brew Ore. Ore. PACCAR Pacific Gamble Pay Save Precision Cast Research Sharing the wealth? Other indicators, though, are pointing the Portland metropolitan as the state's most likely center for hightechnology research and development A case in point: the state System of Higher Education's recent decision to spend nearly all of a $1 million hightechnology windfall in the Portland area.

That and other actions have sent tremors through the state's two biggest educational institutions, OSU and the of Oregon, and the communities that surround them; In reaction, government, education and business leaders from the two areas have made tentative overtures toward organizing a joint effort to create research stretching from Corvallis to Eugene. A start has been made. Last month, representatives of both universities and the cities of Corvallis, Eugene, Springfield and Junction City met to begin talks. Another meeting is planned soon. and is expected to include representatives from Linn-Benton and Lane communitie colleges.

The thought is, let's not compete with each other for resources that we can share," said Linda Barton, Corvallis' deputy city manager. let's not let everything in research happen in the northern end of the Reagan on TV today WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan will hold a press conference today in the White House East Room. The press conference, scheduled for 4:30 p.m. PUT, will be televised over ABC, CBS and NBC. It will be Reagan's 13th press conference since taking office.

His most recent was on July 28. (Continued from Page 1) he was a few months old. He tells of living in a home for boys in St. Louis from the age of 4 to 12. Then be rejoined his mother, who had remarried.

He served in the Marines after high school, was graduated from the University of Missouri and its law school and came to Oregon. In his administration as well as in campaign speeches, Atiyeh tends to avoid controversial statements. He is said to have few enemies. can always tell a fellow who has done nothing," Kulongoski has said. is mad at him.

He also takes a cynical view of an ex- Today's stock quotations are received AMIDG directly from special wires of The AuRich sociated Press which is respensible for the listings. Stocks listed are primarily the Gasette mest actively traded ones. The Times has no ever the listings or any typographical errors which may Bkrint! Bally MI NEW YORK (AP) Selected late BaliGE national prices for New York BangP Stock Exchange issues: PE Me High Low Last Cog. ACE AbtLab AirPre Alcan Algint AllisCh Alone 13 Am Hes AmAir ABrand ABdest 9 1067 AmCan ACyan 910 573 AmEn 9 1351 AF amil 10 A Home A Hose ANaR Am Std ATT AMPin Anchor Anther ArchDe ArmPS Armco 1.10 70 18 Asarco Achi0il 7 3 where Mr. Case sold insurance for The Grange Mutual Insurance Company.

He sang with many choral groups. He was a member of the Nazarene Church in Corvallis. Survivors include his wife Carol of Corvallis; two daughters, Connie Jean Otto of Seattle and Ruth Irene Wheeler of Roseburg: and four grandchildren. Also surviving are his mother, Alice Case of Oakley, two brothers, Lyle Case of Antioch, and James Myers of Vancouver. and a sister, Tolly McQuay of Nampa, Idaho.

The family suggests memorial contributions to any charity. Private concluding rites will be at Mount Crest Abbey, Salem. Rainier Bane U.S. Bancorp Amer Guaranty Salece 97 NW Nat Gas Telephone Util Columbia Col. Daily Ine Dow Jones NEW YORK (AP) Dow stock averages 30 Industrials Transportation Is Utilities 117.00 4 Stocks Portland Grain 24- PORTLAND, Ore.

(AP) Ma Tuesday for grains arriving at Portland for current shipment by rail, truck or barge, per No.I soft white No.I hard red winter No.1 white club 4 Nonferrous NEW YORK RAP: 17 130 Associated Press (AP) Selected late for prices Lions Copper cents a Lead Dec 40-42 cents a Tin 36.2177 Metals 1 Alumimm 76-77 cents a Gold Handy Harman Silver Harman daily Silver ounce, NY Comes month closed Merrury per Platinum 00 NY. 5.000 dollars 1.54 1.62% open int 6, Oats 17 170 Dow Jon Dres du Pont DukeP EastAir 1250 54 EastGF 314 EsKod 4246 Eaton 9 Echlin EiPaso EmsEl 1665 Enserch Esmark Ethyl ExCele Exxon EvanP FMC FairchdME Feders FedNM Floor a FlaPL FiChrt Fintste FleetEn Gen FordM For MK GAP GTE Gannett 3124 GnDy: GenE 0 de RES Gn Mille GMot GPU GTire Genses GaPac Getty 6 21M ago Portland Livestock PORTLAND. Ore. (AP-USD4) tative livestock the Portland livestock auction reported by the U.S. Department of A Prices trading Cattle and Receipts timated at 1.625 compared to last and 1.200 last year.

I to last firmer advance utility early Cows the total cattle Feeder cattle steers steady to Demand moderate to Slaughter Commercial 24, 41. Utility Cutter Canner cutter 50. Yield grade 1400-170 dual 53.50. Yield grade 2. Few 1685-1960 lbs.

04.00-44 50 Good ine. 30.00 Feeder 1134 Lbs. Holsteins large frame 2 550-750 Lam. 25: 1005-1215 Heifers mostly 50 200 De 50 Che. 700-790 Las.

50.06-53.75 Medium Uh. Receipts to last Last The prime with no. And 1 pelts lots 10 44.25-44.75 Stauchter utility and good Calls Mi. 27.00 21. Feeder he Few 93 choice and fancy with no.

And pelts.

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Pages disponibles:
793 015
Années disponibles:
1865-2024