Wilson Foote, Joe Cox, President Robert MacVicar and Stafford Hansell visit during President MacVicar's tour of the Squaw Butte Experiment Station. Robert W. MacVicar was president of Oregon State University from 1970-1986. MacVicar was also a professor of chemistry and tripled the size of the university's budget. During his years as president, the size of the campus increased with 23 additional buildings.
USFS photo #370680 The deflector that the men are installing is firmly anchored in the stream and is then covered with sod. The enrollees are digging under the farther bank to form a hole for trout shelter. The deflector will narrow the stream, thus increasing the speed of the flow of the water. The area in back of the deflector will all fill in.
James R. Beck during visit at various Kasetsart University facilities in Bangkok, Thailand. He is examining a rattan poke (without pig) at the Kasetsart meat processing plant. James R. Beck was an agent for the Lincoln County Extension Station.
Four hundred miles of magnificent beaches await the motorist who travels the Oregon Coast Highway (U. S. 101). Oregon's beaches are owned by the state and are free to the world. This photograph was taken beneath Neahkahnie mountain north of Tillamook. (Photo, Courtesy Oregon State Highway Department)
This oblique aerial view of Corvallis, Oregon, shows downtown (lower right), the Oregon State College campus (middle left), and residential areas north and west of the campus and downtown. The hills, [now McDonald and Paul Dunn Forests] are located to the northwest. Because it is a composite of two prints, there is some discontinuity of roads in the middle-to-upper right portion. Notable landmarks include: Corvallis Lumber Company, established in 1909, at the confluence of the Marys and Willamette Rivers (center bottom). Hops Field on the east bank of the Willamette (bottom right corner) at the current location of the Corvallis Bypass and Alan B. Berg/Martin Luther King, Jr. Parks. Corvallis High School, constructed in 1935, at northern extent of residential areas (middle right). Fire-gutted Central School (middle) served as the Senior High School until 1935 and subsequently as the Junior High School until it was destroyed by fire in 1946. Western Oregon Packing Corp. Cannery on 9th Street.