Anthony Y.ll Cambee la01marned Karen Dar, Two A L ~ 70 r! a cnaw c D. NO..^ t9141r c r ~m .41*ene .a frlr ner C-l't'lll dlel? JCm non-..l SCn0C c' Mrilrlne Tyler I Ander: Churcl David tw~-ye H~ghei >"Vest( CO PC Julia 1 Aug 1 stwe at the Marlly8 U,,"",? Craig Kendall ('82)marned Laune Beth ien June 19 ~n A t k l n ~ nMemor~ai 1. Oregon City. Y. Marsh ('82) manied Phlllp G Beiger 8 n Beavenon. Ore. L. Myers ('81) s anendin bw schwl Unlversitq of Cai8Iom~a t \an D~ego n G. Ness ('82 MSW) marned Date A dun June 25 n Gethmane Lutheran Church. Portland Cynthia Marie Nudere ('81) marriedStephen Wayne Dave July 17 m Mount Tabar Presbylerlan Church Betty E. R- ('811lives in Panland and in punulng graduate sludles ~n psychology a1 PSU Patrlda J. R u m ('81Ph.D.1 wore in New Yoh as the Unsled Church of Chr~stsregjonal secretav far Latln Ameoca and the Caribbsan She formerly was cwrdlnalar of the Clv of Ponland's refugee pragram Lynn Msrle Syron 1821 mairted Steven M Dowts Aug 14 at Frrsl UnotarlanChurch. Portland c Weaver ('82) 8 sworking with three family mbers lo testare and operate Met.0 Acres. 8 acre farm located west at Banks. Ore. t until recently was one of Warhlngton unWs most bustt~n small fam~lyfarms. ?cia~mng In sales $fresh fruit and produce. laver, h15 w~feBarbara, and son Karl expect Ive on ,he farm "'estw, (62) 1s a sales and lease 8rt0r his lather's lrm, Jtm Weslan :-GMC. Inc, Gresham, Ore Juo prir rest l"Cl Lab M* ,-.=, Jou Phil pot,< nee, Sml Sun Memoriam mrnes Chesley Campbell ('69 MST) dled e 10 in a Hlltsboro hospltal He was lclpat of Hlllsbaro Hioh Schwt. and a dent of the area tori9 yean Suwwors ude hls wlle Camt, and children. Chns, Ine and Melissa. all 01 Hlltsbaro. RhW Ltpsmrnb ('611died of cancer 1 his 1 home July 9. He was 23. Employed ler wllh Pacltlc Wedtern Bank, he was ler of the Paclflc Northwest Sb Ponlant as a 121 a memi l"Shll~t8 swer and Tab mnlribr Cancer PSU. hc h- ~ - ors /\5sm#atun, the Sporlong House team, the Amencan lnrtltute of Banklng 1 Kappa Epsilon fratemltq Memorial llianr may be made lo the Amerlcan Swlefy. n A. Nleholls ('73, '79 MA) was killed I a tram accldent m Ihe Arab republlc I Yemen, where he was a Cathol8c eMCes program direnor While at I Wo*ed on the Vangusd smH and c,am e a specla1 wnter tor the Oragon mal. Ip L SmHh, mmmander of the Portland x Bureau's Centat Prs~inctd,led June 6 r Welche~, Ore. 01 a hean anack capt th anended PSU lram 1951 lhraugh 1962 tl~tng are his asre. Vlrg~nia, and three , Lezlie, Mah and Mlchasl, all of High Tech - Conhoued i rm page 1 has been the recent recipient of several major equipment grants from prlvate Industry and foundatron sources. A Murdock Char~tableTrust grant of $255,000 has flnanced the acquisltlon of a sophisticated computer and allled computer graph~csequipment to enable electronics englneerlng students to design and test "state of the art" electronic chlps. These chips can contain electronic circuits wlth uo to ha I a mt I on trans Ftors Tne eq. pmcnl wt oe an nteqra pan of 1% Jnversq s VLS, (very arqe scale Integrated system) Des~in Center whtch IS expected to further the development of a new computer englneering instructtonal option at PSU by 1983. Another recent gift to the school. this one from Intel Corporat~on,took the form of $120,000 in equlpmenf which will help expand the micrommputer laboratory In electrical engineering, and also make It posslble for students In mechantcal engineering to learn more sophlstlcated uses of mrcropiocessors Digital Equ~pmentCorporation provlded another local Industry equipment grant to the University - a palr of state of the art computers whlch were Installed in electrccal englneertng and physics labs. The phystcs department will use the new computer In 11smembrane biophysics laboratory to help research the mechanisms of toxiclty tn pestlcldes The electrical eng~neeringmmputer wlll be used as a process controi device, particularly in experiments in robotics Dean of the School of Engineerino and Applled Sctence. Chick Erzurumiu, noted that the recent grants underscore the Increased level of cooperation between engineering schools and industry While good th~ngsare beginnin! happen in the develooment of Davis considers Ihls area so important that he will appoint a full-time director to mordlnate all aspects of engineering and computer sclence programs around the state. PaRicularIy thelr Interaction with business and industrv ~n Oreoon. , . ~.~ . ano on tne nat ona an0 ntcrnat ona leve Tnc oirector HI be ~OUICO at PSI I "We've felt from the beginning," Davis said recently, "that this person should be located In Portland where there IS a great concentration of activity." NOone believes that the task of program development in engtneering and mmputer sclences is completed at PSU. It is a task that will take years to complete. And there IS the additional matter of graduate level programs, barely addressed at PSU. However, with a new commitment at the state level and active parttctpation by local buslness and industw. PSU'S School of Eng npbrlnq dnd App ed Sc ence nas made an exce ent hegnntng eng neertng an0 computer saence eoJcatlon at PSU the recent aclfonz arc on y tnc D P ~ nn ng Chance' or READY?TAKE ONE! Multnomsh County Olstrlcl Aftomey Mike Schrunk (65 64) laces the camera on campus while preparing one of a series 01 public servlce announcements on behalf of PSU. The announcements, f e a t u r i ~pr~ominent PSU alumn1,enwuraaeothersto maketheUniversltvtheir"1imtchoice"whencon~idrr- ingwhat sehwlio attend. KOlN~ubllcsewitebroducer 0anaka a n d i & e i i i Gray May0 produced the spots In ~ooperatidnwith the university's News and InformationOffice. They wlll begin airing on Ponlandstations later thls tall. Based loosely on the welt known credit card commercials, the spots feature the PSU aIUmnusaskmg,"Doyou know me.. ."andendwiththeadmonitiontochwse PSU. "and don't leavehomeat all." BesidesSchrunk, othergraduates alreadyon tapean Stste Atflrmative Action Mtlcer Kav Toran iMSW 70) and Flaatina Point Sv-'--- President Norman Winningstad (MBA 73). More spdts ere plann&
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