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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1973)
Thursday, November 1, 1973 The Nyssa Gate City Journal, Nyssa, Oregon (k>unty Receives Highway Fund» Salem Scene The Oregon Transportation Commission today announced distribution of $7,209,863 13 in poultry or with cotta highway-user tax fundstottie 36 MYSTERIES OF TROJAN SOI m two dlffeient markets last for a delightful salad. VED FOR VISITORS counties of tlie state. »rek1 Now I know we can get A modest c'jncrete building The allocation is based on tlie tli.ni lot our holiitayciKiklng and ( RANHERRY FROSTY PIE 42 miles north of Portland on statutory 20 |ier cent for tbepe- tiaking. riod Julv 1 On onghSejiteml..; 30 Highway 30 lias an odds a 1 saw cranberries tie mg har 1-8'' baked pie shell, cooled .... — ■ • 1973 Tlie funds i ome - from — the - chance <it becoming Oregon’s vested on Hie east coast and 1 1/2 ' Ups Relish motor ve busiest tourist attraction also In Washington on the west 1 pint softened vanilla icecream following sources But it wasn'tnecessarib plan hicle registration and o|*- coast. Hie fields are fascina Fold crantierry orange relish rators’ license tees, gasoline ned that way. ting. You can't see the berries into softened ice cream Pour The reason for the bright as they grow close to tlie ground. into pie shell and freeze until tax. use fuel tax, motor ear structure's impend ner fees, and lines andpenal- orange Wlien the grower thinks it might firm Decorate with whipped ing popularity lies in the fact freere, they simply flood the cream and fresh cranlrrries. ties colle< ted for violations of tlie sip and weight statutes it stands in tlie shadow of the bog” »ith water. Machinery If you wish, grind the orange where (omplaints are marie by state's most imposing man is used to scoop the < rentier - and i rantierrles in your blender the Highwai Division uer.-li- made landmark. t ies from Its- plants. They are III Hie 1/2 cup of rold water The landmark is the 499-f""t then processed and packaged. (You might need tn stir a couple rnasters. The allocation to each county high cooling tower for tlie Tro When you grind cranberries, of times) Grind tlie orange is based on the numtier of ve jan nuclear power plant and the freeze them first and Hie |uice first in Hie water, then the cran in« les registered in It. Mal Halloween-colored tourist at doesn’t drip on the floor' Of berries. heur County will receive $93.- traction houses the electrical i nurse, If vou use a blender, baaed on 22,073 ve generating facility's visitors’ 527.34 you don’t have this problem. CRANBERRY JEWEL SALAD information renter It >>pens to hicles. the public on Saturday, N'>- CRANBERRY ORANGE RELISH 1 pa< kage raspberry flavored solve. Add 1/2 cup cold wa verritier 10. gelatin Trojan won’t start genera- ter and set aside to cool Put Put Ihrougti c arse blade if 1 cup hoi water raw crantx-rries and quartered ting electricity in tune to case food «hopper 4cups0-lb.)fresh 1/2 cup < old »ater orange through food chopper. the Pacific Northwest energy cranberries and 2 oranges 2 cups fresh cranberries Add sugar, and mix well When crisis this winter. Its 1,130,000 (seeds removed) including rind. 1 orange gelatin tiegins to thicken, fold kilowatts won't become part of Stir in 2 cups sugar and chill. 1 < up sugar in cranberry-orange mixture, the region’s hard-pressed pool Makes about 2 pints. Serve re Dissolve raspberry gelatin in pour into large mold, or in of electrical power t*fore Sep maining relish with meat or I « up hot water. Stir to dis- dividual smaller molds andchill tember 1975. But the visitors' information until firm. Serves 4-6. center likely will host upwards of a million guests tefore Hie initial kilowatt flows from Tro jan Planners and owners of the $354 million Trojan facility early recognized the nee«l for public education regarding bene PROTEIN ANALYSIS IN HAY fits of electric power generated Livestock operators may want to consider determining by nuclear fission. But events subsequent to Trojan’s concep the protein content of their tion have pressed the subject hay before figuring a ration FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE WILL DO of public information into a for the »inter. forefront priority. Protein is one of the essen Owned jointly by Portland tial elements of feed for ef General Electric Company, the ficient gains on cattle. Eugene Water A Electric Board CLEANING AND ADJUSTING OF YOUR Work at Squaw Butte deter and Pacific Power A Light PRESENT HEARING AID mined that 4“* difference in Trojan’s attraction for the pub protein content of hay made lic stemmed early from the the difference of 22 lbs. gain fact it will 1»> Oregon’s first per ton fed to weaner calves nuclear powered generating fa or on 30C calves a difference cility. The newness of the in hay value of $22.00 per ton project-- combined with its using $25.00 per ton hay. This size--were bound to attract at year with the value erf hay and tention. 10 A. M. Io 5 r. M. cost of protein supplements the After all, said a PGE spokes spread in value would be even man. the cooling tower is so more. huge the First National Bank's 44-story tower in Portland Protein analysis can be ob would fit inside and barrir For Home Service Cali 372-3347 tained at Oregon State Univer peek over the top. sity or from several private Then came the environmen- laboratories in the western tai controversy--ranrngall the states. Pharmacy way from an imagined threat An atk-quau- and economical CM ir> »»o to wfnter headquarters of mf- ratio* can hardly be figured KM X-W IM grating whistling swans to ti without definitely knowing the midity regarding proximity of content erf the feed. an atom-splitting facility to the state's largest population center. There followed a yearslong controversy involving federal, state and local government res o trictions on Trojan’s construc o tion and operation. The Oregon o Legislature enacted laws re X) gulating siting of nuclear plants U» and disposal of their waste. Federal regulations covered the entire subject with an intri- □ by Jzck Zimmerinin cate overlav of restrictions, one bv one each hurdle in tlie path of tlie project's com pletion was cleared. Ground »as broken, a workforce as large as a thousand men at a time began work on the 634-acre site nrai Rainier on tlie west bank of the Columbia River and pro cess continued in spite of work stoppages, legal intervention and shortages of materials. Rubin lurinsitv increaseda- I u e as eat h objection was ■ver< ome And then came mur- inuiiiKs o! a present regional power shortage and public in terest in Trojan attained new heights 7 tie Trojan information < en ter ofiens next month on Hie crest of an interest wave that ajipears likeh to increase in direct proportion with tlie diminution of electrical power. Page Nine And nobody's forecasting an electrical energy surplus in the near future. It is designed to accommodate 500,000 visitors annually and will be open from 9:30 a.m. un til 5 p.in. daily and from l.OOp. m. until 5p.m. Sundays. Nosim ple chronicle of the project’s ilevelopment from ground breaking to initial atom split ting, the information center of fers a show and exhibits of worlds fair caliber. Situated across a reflecting p<ind from the pioject’s reac tor, generator and cooling to wer. it contains intricate audio visual exhibits tracing man's emergence into the Age of the At 'in. Complex theories of physics, mathematics and che- mistri are .qifiealingh reduced to lai comprehension A startling inulti-media ex perience awaits those who visit tlie darkness of the 'Ecosphere” and suddenly find themselves in the midst of an explosion of sight and sound The story of man's dependence upon energy un folds and members of tlie au dience emerge feeling more like participants than spectators. Completing the etkica- cational concept of the 4,800 square-foot center’s infor mational facility is a battery of computer teaching machines upon which the visitor can test his own comprehension of what he has seen and heard. Constructed at a cost in ex cess of $2 million, tlie visitor information center is only a first step in the process of acquainting Trojan and nuclear fission with its neighbors. Once completed, many facilities will tie i>pen to public inspection via guided tours. T rojan's proponents long have trumpeted the benefits of electric power as one of the best tools with which to im prove and sustain nun’s natural environment. Restricted by dwindling supplies of other sour ces with which to generate elec - tricitv--and hampered by a temporary lack of techno logy sufficient to stave off grea ter energy shortages in the im mediate futuie--it wouldajipe.ir Trojan and sister projects will become part of our way of life. Extension Workshop At TVCC Three Days The Lingerie Demonstration Workshop will be held on three consecutive Tuesdays beginning November 6. Each two hour pre sentation will begin at 1:30p.m. at Treasure Valley Community College, Administration Bldg , Room C-21. Jane Betts, Ex tension Home Economist from Washington County, Idaho will demonstrate and discuss fabric selection, care, patterns, and construction techniques. Locally the workshop is spon sored by the Malheur County Extension Office. Extension programs arenondiscnminatory and are open to all without re gard to race, color or national origin. A visit to the site quite Ukelv w ill make acceptance of this new neighbor--and those yet to come--lots easier for those ol der and more timid among us. And as far as youngsters are concerned, they’ll probably eat it up*. THE BICYCLE PRIZE SUBSCRIPTION Speaking To Hearing Aids The Consumer CONSULTATION FREE Campaign Ends SATURDAY NIGHT FREE HEARING TESTS Eri., Nov. 2, 1973 V Details of the Final Count Tbe subscription contest will be brought to a close Saturday night. The candidates will de posit the subscriptions and money they have for the final report, in a sealed ballot box which is located in the Journal office. The campaign manager will place any subscriptions paid at the office in the ballot box and marked for the contestant designated by the subscriber. If any candidate cannot come to the office tlieir subscrip tions must reach the office before the closing hour of the campaign and their subscrip tions will tie placed in tlie ballot box for them. An envelope will lie furnished each contestant in which to place their slips and money for tlieir last report of tlie contest. At eight o'clock Saturday night tlie contest will be over anil the judges will start the final count of votes and points. The winners will lie deter mined by the tlie judges adding the votes and points for sub scriptions in tlie ballot Imx to those each candidate had for the earlier reports. Tlie judges will finish tlie count late Saturday night mid the results will be placed ill tlie Gate City Journal window as soon as they are completed. READ ALL OF THIS Thoroughly I o o X) cn Birch Doors Prefinished with some irregularity ’12.95 2' m *'•" I*»" Hollow core Reg 22.80 Now 3'x 0'8" I*." Hollow Core Reg. 28.80 Now □ o o X) cn □ O o 2'8"x8'8" 1*4" Hollow Core Reg 33.40 Now Zi <✓> Campaign Ends Promptly at 8:00 Sat. Night Professional Directory & X W: Physicians and Surgeons K. E. KERBY M.D. K. A. DANFORD, M.D. Physicians and Surgeons Dial 372-2241 HOURS: 9 to 12 noon A 2 to 5 P.M. - Monday through Friday, 10 to 12 Saturday. PAY 's' YOUR SUBSCRIPTION & SIX NEW BICYCLES TO YOUR WILL BE GIVEN TO FAVORITE 3'x*'8" »*•" Solid Core Reg. SI.80 Now □ O O 2'8"x*'8" 1*4” Solid Core Reg. 49.00 Now X) Birch Bifold Boors t/» a Prefinished unit complete with hardware □ O o X) co ’24.95 ’24.95 5'xO'l" Bitold Reg. 74.20 Now ’25.95 O'xO'8" Bifold Reg »79.00 Now 3'x4'8" I’«" Eagle Door* Reg. 40.00 Now ’32.95 3'xi'O" 1*4" Baroque Door Reg. 44.80 Now 32a95 « 4'x*'8" Bitold Reg. *9.80 Now □ o o X) tn C o o X) vn Stunz Lumber Co Nyssa 707 Adrian Blvd 372-2237 O O O X) t/> o o o X) <Z> MAULDING CLINIC L. A. Maulding, M.D. Charles E. Vanetti, M.D. Physicians and Surgeons Dial 372-2216 HOURS 9 to 12 noon and 2 to 5 P.M., - Monday, Thursday and Tuesday, Friday. 9 to 12 noon, Wednesday and Saturday. Weight labs. “By appoint ment only’’ Wednesday. DAVID * . SARAZIN, M.D. Physician and Surgeon 10 to 12 noon 4 HOURS 2 to 5 P.M. - Monday, Tue'dai, Wednesday, Fri day. 10 to 12 Saturday. Phones: Office 372-3809 372-3173 Residence HAPPY V SATURDAY SIX IV AFTER \ \ KIDS THIS TOO SATURDAY LATE! NIGHTI Optometrists DR. JOHN EASLY 387 S. W. 4th AVENUE Ontario, Oregon - Phone • Ontario .... 889-8017 $10 Cash Prize Will Be Won Saturday DR. J. E. HEITZMAN 7 North 2nd Street Nyssa .... 372-3747 IN ADDITION TO NEW BICYCLES ANO LIBERAL CASH COMMISSIONS Veterinaria ns TREASURE VALLEY ANIMAL HO6P1TAI Phone 372-2251 DR. B. E. ROSS Nyssa .... 372-3552 DR. ROBERT DERBY DOORS I CANDIDATE’ Pa rm.I 722-6537 Nyssa Gate City Journal PHONE 372-2233 OFFICE OPEN ALL DAY UNTIL 8 P. M. CAMPAIGN ENDS SATURDAY EVENING, NOV. 3