Perspective_Spring_1985

Compiled by Cliff lohnson '61 D. Edward Growes (BS) hils been elected president of the 17,500-memlx.-r Mullnomah Athletic. Club in Portland. He is an assistan! vice president of group pension administration for Standard Insurance Co. '65 Hon. Charles P. LiUlehales (SS) is an Oregon Circuit Coort judge in lincoln County, Ore. His currenl six-year term expires January 2.1989. Don.Ild Wenzel tBSJ recently received the Northwe~t Sleelhead and Salmon Council's highest hOOO( for indi\'iduill achievement dunng 1984, the "Conservationist of the Year Award," He was singled out from oW'r 4,000 members in the Washington statewide organi2C1lion for his voluntet"r effoMs associated With construction of new facilities al trn' Whatcom Faits Hatchery. '66 Sen. Rod Monroe (BS, '69 MST), a DernocrJtic stale senator from Muhnomah County recently re--elec\ed \0 another term, is serving a5 chauman of the Senate Revt'nut' Committee during the current Jegi5lative 5eS5iun In Salem flQyd Smith (SA) ha~ been named vice president of public relations ill the Portland headquarter5 of First Interstate Bank of Oregon. He formerly was director of tile news bureau and plIblications at Northwest Natural Gas Company. Carol Vernon (B5) is an artist and a professor who has taught ceramics, M:ulpture and design classes (or the p.llil ten years at Soulhw~lt'fn Oregon Community College in Coos 6t1y, Ore. She wlls her artistic works throughout the local area. '68 GET CAMPUS CALENDAR Alumni Benefit!. Cdrd 22'1-4948 Gk'n 8. B«J(k'y ISS) is manager of Arthur Young & [0.'5 Northwest Consulting Group, and helps dient companies decide which computers to use in their accounting and management S)'§lems. He also serves as an instructor fat microcomputer classes ilt PSU. Dorothy C~ino (6A) recently retired ilS chairman of lhe Pendleton, Ore. HiSh School English Department. Winner of the Pendleton Chamber gf Commerce's Teacher of the Year Award in 198], she had taught business education and English courses there since 1968. Sill Ceiz (BA), formerly a radio and television news reporter/producer and a former press aide for Portland Cit)' CommlssioMr Mik~ lindberg, has been n;amed In h~.ad the newly-created ~Iectronic nev.rs division at the Portland public relations firm of Hauser-, Webb, Wykoff and frerichs. lohn Wykoff ('65 SA) is a principal in lhefirm. Robert E. McCOll" (8S) has been promoted to manageT 01 U.s. National 8ank of Oregon's Nooh Beaverton, Ore. branch. He will also supervise the bank's Cedar Hills, Cedar Mill and Eiectrofllc Park branche'S. He formerly managed the bank's Peninsula branch in Portland. 4 '69 Michael A. Vidal1 (85) has been named vice president for wood products sales at Georgla'Pacific Corp., Atlanta, GA. He formerly ~Ned as vice presidenl of G-p's International Division. He is it Portland native. Jess A. Armas (MSW1, assistant administrator for the stdle Children's SeNices Divi~ion ~ince 1982, has been appoimed to the State Developmental DiSdbilities Planning and Advi~ry Council. 'aile Josselyn (SA) now coordinates alumni affairs at Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland. She formerly was heOldmislress of Portland's French-American Bilingual School, and prior to that was a I~achef·ad m i nistratof lor \ 4 years .11 Callin Gabel School, west of Portland. James P. j10ake (85) operates three ~pecialty hOI clog restaurants in rhe Portland metro are.;!. Rooke bought hi~ original "hot dog st<lnd" in Ihe Jennings lodge area near Milwau~le, Ore. in 1976, years after he did a term paper on ils kitchen operation for one of his classes al PSU. '70 William R. BI'ff (SS) is a senior environmental analyst and waste reduction program coordinator wilh the Oregon Department of Envlronmemal Quality. He has bet>n with the DEQ since 1973. and helped develop ilnd lobby for legl~lation relating to recycling cenle.rsiflthe~te. Jacob L. Oriesen (BS, '77 MSl has opened a private practice in psychology in Klamath Falls, Ore. Most recently he ~Ned as sta(( psychologist at the Klamath Menlat Health Center and was coordinator of the center's crisis services. Norman Gould (BS) exhibited a series of his drawings at Southwestern Oregon Community College during March. The Coos Bay.area artist h,lS exhibited both film and two-dimensional works for several years, including showS at galleries in San francisco, Toronto and Seattle. Gary W. Smith (BS, '74 MSW), program manager of the alcohol and drug program office in the Multnomah County Social and Aging Services Division. has won a two-year term in Zone 7 on the Beaverton School Board. He also serves on the Multnomah Counry Employee and Organizational Development Commi"ee. '71 Dougl," E. Butk'r (BS) has joined The Koll Co" Beaverton, Ore. as development man;lget in charge of real estate development at Kon Center·Creek~ide as well as future company developments in the Portland area. He is a founder of the Portland Special Olympics program, and currently serves on the board of the Christie School for emotionally disturbed children. ~i. W~yl'tlt. A. Gemme, \8S) has ~n awarded a Navy Commendation Medal for meritorious ~ice while serving as a program analY5t during 1981 to 1984 at the U.S. Marine Corps headquartef§ in Washington, D.C. Joseph Maio (BS) has been promoted to director for customer seNices marketing at Pacific Northwest Bell. His t~rritory will include DrPgon, Washington and Idaho. '72 Keturah A. Brown (BA, '74 MA) has joined the Beaverton, Ore. law firm of ThompSOn, Adam~ & DeBitS!' Prior to admission to the Oregon bar, she o;.ervro on 1M {iK\llty ",I PaCific. Univt'f'5ity, forest Grove, Ore. She is a 1984 graduate of Lewis & Clark College of Law. Marilyn McGlasson (8A, '77 MS), principal of Gaston Elementary School and assistant to the superintendent (Of the Gaston School District, has won a three-year term for position·al-Iarge on the Washington County, Ore. Education SeNice District. She also is a member of the Oregon Departmem of Education Cooperative Pef5Of1n{'1 Planning Council. '73 Rep. Rid P~uman (BS), a Democratic slate representative from MullnOmah County recently re-elected to his fourth term, is serving as speaker pro tem in the House of Representatives during the current session. R..1.ndall Bristlin (65) is the new postmaster at longview, Wash. His post office employs 7J people, has a budget of about $2 million annually, and operate; in the black, he reports. He previously $t'Ned as interim postmaster at Astoria and Hiflsboro in Oregon, and at Redmond oimd Kelso in Washington. Conrad Pearson /8A) is a finanCial planner who uses hiS skills to help church members and churches save enough money 10 invest the savings in church programs 10 help those who are less fortuna tp. HI' is employed by Resource FinOlncial Planning, Inc. in Tigard, Ore Randall Sprick (BS), an independent consultant and teacher Ir<liner In di~ip\ine and leac.hmg techniques, is the author of The Solurian Book: A Guide to Classroom Discipline, jlIlblished by Science Reo;earch Associates, Chicago. C. Norm~n Winningstad (MBA) found!;'r and chairman of Floating Point Systems, Inc., Beaverton, Ore., has been singled out by "8usiness Week" magazine as a member of "the new cOrpDfilte elite" _ 50 men and women. who ace changing the face of U.S. business. He was one of '7 high-tech entrepreneurs selected. SWIM & GYM '74 Alumna Benefits Card 22q-~948 Shirkoy Ann BHS (BA) is a Hillsboro, are. attorney who is listed in Ihe \ 985 edition of "Who's Who of American WOmen." She i~ cunel\tly emolled in PSU's Ma~le' 01 Tdxation graduate degree program, Peter 8. Meyer (BAJ has authOfed thr<'t' books: jiJmt>S £arl Caner (1978); The Yale Murder (1982) and Death of Innocence (198S). The fil)t book profiles the former President, and the others portray famous criminal CiJ5eS. Meyt'r now edit~ "Street~," a n,llionally circulated labloid newspapc:ox ~pplement aimed al the youlh market. Ron Sh.y (MS), chief of information and education fm the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, was recently n,m1ed "Waltonian of the Veilr" by the Olegon Division of the Isa~c Walton L~ague of ARlerica. His weekly radiO programs and reports on hunting and fishing conditions are heard ,lfound the 5tate and he continues 10 appear on local wildlife' shows airing over KOIN-TV, Channel/) In Portland . Conlinued on p. 10 WE NEED SUMMER JOBS PSU students provide an excellent resource of talent for summertime help As an alum, you may remember how important a summer job waS for continuing your education. Do yourself - and a student - a good turn. Check with PSU Placement Services noW for full-time, part-time employees, Call Marilyn Oold, student employment coordinator, 229-4958, for your summer nelp. FREE SEMINARS Alumni are invited to participate in business-oriented seminars held each Friday during July al psu Placement Services. Friday job seminars include: Job Searcn, Self Assessment. Resume Preparation, Resume Critique, Interview Tips and Effec ti ve Interviews. Call 229-4613 for details. PSU ALUMNI PROGRAMS p () So\' --l~ Pr)rll,lI1d (lit "<.;(111 !j-~(l­ 'ill ~ ~~q ~'I~d

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