Senators agree tm buyout plan WASHINGTON (AP) —Sens. Mark Hatfield. R-Ore., and Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio. have reached a tentative agree ment that would allow some 380 timbei\companies to buy out lumber contracts with the federal government, a Metzen baum aide said Sunday. Under the terms of the agree ment, each company will be able to buy its way out of government contracts for up to 200 million board feet, said Doug Lowenstein, special assis tant to Metzenbaum. He said the bill should reach the Senate floor sometime this week as Congress rushes to finish business before its Oct. 4 recess. If passed, the bill must still be approved by the House. "The bill appears in good shape unless the (Reagan) ad ministration decides to throw its body in front of it,” Lowens tein said in a telephone interview. In the past, the administra tion has consistently opposed allowing companies to buy their way out of government contracts. Lowenstein estimated that the bailout would cost the govern ment some $100 million in lost revenue. However, he said the Agriculture Department has estimated the loss at between $127 million and $427 million. Rates for the buyout would be calculated on a sliding scale based on each company’s finan cial condition, Lowenstein said. Financially ailing, smaller firms will pay as little as $10 per thousand board feet, while some of the industry giants will pay as much as $45 per thou sand board feet. The problem arose, Lowens tein said, when the companies overbid on federal timber con tracts in the late 1970s. Following the downturn in the housing market in the early 1980s, the contracts, bid to high levels, became unprofitable for the companies. V.M. “Whitey” Howard, vice president of Seneca Sawmill Co. of Eugene, Ore., said that his company is not holding out much hope that the contract Heroin production ‘simple’ BOULDER. Colo.(AP) - A man suspected of building a heroin production laboratory in Portland says the process is so simple a teen-ager could do it. “A 13-year-old could make heroin," Ronald "Sandy" Jones told the Denver Post during an interview at the Boulder County Jail on Friday. "If 1 was only interested in profit. 1 might publish a pam phlet and there'd be a thousand Ronnie Joneses next year." Jones. 41. was arrested at a storage locker business near Boulder last July 11 when he was spotted by Sheriffs Capt. George Epp and police infor mant Paul McGuirk, a former friend of Jones. He had been sought by authorities since May 1983 when they discovered what was described as a heroin laboratory in Jones's Longmont Colo, home. During the ensuing months as a fugitive, Jones set up another heroin laboratory in a rented apartment at Portland, authorities added. Since his arrest, Jones has been held in the Boulder Jail in lieu of $1.1 million bond. Jones, a physics enthusiast, told the Post he began making heroin a few years ago to supply his own habit. The process to make heroin “sort of fell into my lap one day,” he said. STORE-WIDE SCHOOL OPENING SPECIALS' 20% OFF ALL REGULAR PRICED MERCHANDISE Already reduced items at ; " EVEN GREATER SAVINGS!! "Set of 7 Rapidograph Technical Pens reg. $78.50 SALE $47.50 Set of 3 Rapidograph Technical Pens with Rapidomatic ,5mm Pencil ~I reg. $45.8Q SALE $35.50 / Strathmore Fine Oil | and Watered or Brushes . 35% OFF all in stock! I Art Prints and Posters (shrink wrapped) > 25% OFF all in stock! HURRY'!- SPECIAL . SALE PRICES EXPIRE Saturd.iv September 29th! STIC IAI HOCKS Open Enii.iv til " 00pm s.itur.l.iv hi 5 00pm 683-5232 142 W. 8th,x Eugene problem will be solved by legislation. Howard’s company is one of the plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit seeking to void these high-priced federal timber contracts. 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