The sweet soul of Charin Lee Buchan, 75, was greeted in Heaven by Jesus on September 25, 2021. Charin is survived by her daughter Cathy Landry, grandchildren Ashlee Linebaugh, Shelby Vincent, and David Weimer, great-grandchildren Tawyna and Kaylin Linebaugh and her brother Bobby Jackson.
Portland investor still aims to sell ‘red house’ back to Kinneys, but says bigger societal issues remain ‘about mortgages and laws and law enforcement’
Updated Dec 20, 2020;
Posted Dec 20, 2020
A Monday morning look inside the blocks-long stretch that includes the red house. Sentries guarding the south end of the area say the streets, still blocked, will be opened by 6 p.m. Monday night. December 14, 2020Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian
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Since they came to this country years ago, Ukrainian-born brothers Roman and Edward Ozeruga have lived the American dream.
While still in their teens, Roman got his contractor’s license and Edward, a real estate license. They learned the arcane details of land-use laws and building codes and by their 20s, were buying real estate.
davis/bacon, but also concern about construction industry wage rates which were so high led to the white house conclusion that wage and price controls might work nationally. of course, they didn t. and shortly after wage and price controls were invoked, i was put on a committee with herb stein and jim lin to plan our exit of wage and price control. in the meantime, jim hodgson and other cabinet members seemed to spend and i occasionally replacing jim spent almost every day at the white house in cabinet-level meetings trying to ameliorate wage and price increases or come up with decisions on various wage and prices across the country which was bizarre. in remember, george schultz was john connolly and george schultz both had a role in administering that program and arnie weber was the executive director. and then don rumsfeld was, too. well, in an interview with secretary schultz said he was against wage and price control. i think it s true. it was connolly that
the wine industry. it was truly bizarre. it was a nightmare. but one funny incident. the television networks came in to see me. i don t know why i was designated as the person to see on this, but the office of the legal counsel assistant attorney general, he had not yet been appointed to the supreme court, came in my office as well because the network ceos and their general counsels were asserting it was unconstitutional to impose price controls on the network. the first amendment protected their right to set prices. bill and i had a short conference in which we agreed that this was ridiculous. as a legal matter. but i told bill, let me handle it a different way. i said, you know, gentlemen, if we conclude that price controls on the networks are constitutionally dubious, it would follow that we would have to suspend any wage controls on the network. oh, well, we don t want that. that was the end of that. but if you would have used that argument, you could have also found