BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC
DEF 14A, 1998-07-29
SURGICAL & MEDICAL INSTRUMENTS & APPARATUS
Previous: MERRILL LYNCH MORTGAGE INVESTORS INC, 8-K, 1998-07-29
Next: DREYFUS SHORT INTERMEDIATE MUNICIPAL BOND FUND, 485BPOS, 1998-07-29





                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION


Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934        (Amendment No.  )

Filed by the Registrant [x]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:
[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ] Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted
    by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[x] Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c) or
    Section 240.14a-12



                        BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.

- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X] No Fee Required
[ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

    1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------

    2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------

    3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant
       to  Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee
       is calculated and state how it was determined):
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------

    4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------

    5) Total fee paid:
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------

[ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided  by  Exchange  Act
     Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting fee was
     paid  previously.  Identify the previous filing by  registration  statement
     number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

    1) Amount Previously Paid:
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    3) Filing Party:
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    4) Date Filed:
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

                        Bioject Medical Technologies Inc.
                             7620 SW Bridgeport Road
                                Portland OR 97224


August 6, 1998


Dear Shareholders:

     You are  cordially  invited  to  attend  the  1998  annual  meeting  of the
shareholders  of BIOJECT  MEDICAL  TECHNOLOGIES  INC.,  to be held at the Oregon
Convention Center, 777 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Room C120-122, Portland,
Oregon, on Thursday, September 10, 1998 at 9:00 a.m., Pacific Daylight Time.

     The  matters  to be acted  upon at the  meeting  -- to elect  the  Board of
Directors;  to amend the Articles of  Incorporation  to provide for a classified
Board of Directors and a super  majority  vote to amend certain  portions of the
Articles of  Incorporation;  to amend the 1992 Stock  Incentive Plan to increase
the number of shares available for issuance under the plan; and to transact such
other  business as may properly  come before the meeting -- are described in the
attached Notice of Meeting and Proxy Statement.

     We  believe  the annual  meeting  provides  an  excellent  opportunity  for
shareholders to become better  acquainted with BIOJECT and its board members and
officers.  Although we would like very much to have each shareholder  attend the
1998  meeting,  we realize this is not  possible.  Whether or not you plan to be
present  at the  meeting,  it is  important  that your  shares  be  represented.
Therefore,  we urge you to complete,  sign and return the enclosed proxy as soon
as possible.

     If you return your proxy  promptly,  you can help BIOJECT avoid the expense
of follow-up mailings to ensure a quorum so that the meeting can be held. If you
decide between now and September that you can attend the meeting in person,  you
may revoke your proxy at that time and vote your shares at the meeting.

     We appreciate your continued  support of Bioject and look forward to either
greeting you personally at the meeting or receiving your proxy.

     Sincerely,


                    /S/ JAMES C. O'SHEA
                    ---------------------------------
                    James C. O'Shea
                    Chairman of the Board, President
                    and Chief Executive Officer


<PAGE>


                        BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.
                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS


     NOTICE IS HEREBY  GIVEN  that the annual  meeting  (the  "Meeting")  of the
shareholders of BIOJECT MEDICAL  TECHNOLOGIES  INC. (the "Company") will be held
on Thursday,  September 10, 1998, at 9:00 a.m.,  Pacific  Daylight  Time, at the
Oregon  Convention  Center,  777 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Room C120-122,
Portland, Oregon, for the following purposes:

     1.   To elect eight directors for the ensuing year;

     2.   To amend the  Articles of  Incorporation  to provide for a  classified
          Board of Directors  and to provide for a super  majority vote to amend
          certain provisions of the Articles of Incorporation;

     3.   To amend the 1992  Stock  Incentive  Plan to  increase  the  number of
          shares available for issuance under the plan; and

     4.   To  transact  such other  business  as may  properly  come  before the
          Meeting or any adjournment thereof.

     These matters are more fully described in the proxy statement  accompanying
this Notice.

     Accompanying  this  Notice of  Meeting is a proxy  statement  and a form of
proxy,  together with the annual report of the Company.  A copy of the Company's
Annual Report on Form 10-K/A  containing the consolidated  financial  statements
for the year ended March 31, 1998,  and the  auditors'  report on the  financial
statements is also included. Only holders of common stock of record at the close
of  business  on July 24,  1998 will be  entitled to vote at the Meeting and any
adjournments thereof.

     Shareholders  who are unable to attend the Meeting in person are  requested
to  complete,  sign,  date and return the  enclosed  form of proxy  directly  to
American  Stock  Transfer and Trust Co.,  postage  prepaid.  A proxy will not be
valid unless it is received at the office of American  Stock  Transfer and Trust
Co., 40 Wall Street,  46th Floor, New York, New York 10005 before the time fixed
for the Meeting.

     DATED at Portland, Oregon, this 6th day of August, 1998.

                    BY ORDER OF THE BOARD


                    /S/ MICHAEL A. TEMPLE
                    -------------------------------
                    Michael A. Temple
                    Vice President, Chief Financial
                    Officer and Secretary/Treasurer


<PAGE>


                        BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


MANAGEMENT SOLICITATION

APPOINTMENT AND REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES

VOTING OF PROXIES

VOTING SECURITIES AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS THEREOF

PROPOSAL #1: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
     Board of Directors Composition, Compensation and Committees

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS 
     Biographical Information
     Executive Compensation
     Grant of Stock Options
     Option Exercises and Fiscal Year End Values
     Ten-Year Option/SAR Repricings
     Employment Contracts
     Escrowed Shares
     SEC Filings

REPORT OF COMPENSATION AND STOCK OPTION COMMITTEES ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

STOCK PERFORMANCE CHART

PROPOSAL #2: AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

PROPOSAL #3: AMENDMENT TO 1992 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

OTHER MATTERS TO BE ACTED UPON

SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL AND NOMINATION PROCEDURES FOR THE MEETING

ANNUAL REPORT

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

PROPOSALS OF SHAREHOLDERS FOR THE 1999 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS


<PAGE>


                        BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.
                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                              as of August 6, 1998

MANAGEMENT SOLICITATION

     This  proxy  statement  and  accompanying  form of proxy are  furnished  in
connection with the solicitation of proxies by the Board of Directors of BIOJECT
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC. (the "Company"), for use at the annual general meeting
(the "Meeting") of shareholders of the Company to be held on September 10, 1998,
at the time and place and for the purposes set forth in the Notice of Meeting.

     The form of proxy  accompanying  this proxy  statement  is solicited by the
Board of  Directors  of the  Company.  Proxies  may be  solicited  by  officers,
directors and regular supervisory and executive  employees of the Company,  none
of whom  will  receive  any  additional  compensation  for  their  services.  In
addition,  the Company has retained the services of Allen Nelson & Co. to assist
in the solicitation of proxies.  Proxies may be solicited personally or by mail,
telephone,  telex, facsimile,  telegraph or messenger.  The Company estimates it
will pay Allen Nelson & Co. its  customary and  reasonable  fees not expected to
exceed $3,500,  plus reimbursement of certain  out-of-pocket  expenses,  for its
services in soliciting proxies. The Company will also pay persons holding shares
of the common stock in their names or in the names of  nominees,  but not owning
such shares beneficially, such as brokerage houses, banks and other fiduciaries,
for the expense of forwarding soliciting materials to their principals. The cost
of this solicitation will be borne directly by the Company.

     The approximate mailing date of the Notice of Meeting,  proxy statement and
form of proxy is August 6, 1998.


APPOINTMENT AND REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES

     The persons  named in the  accompanying  form of proxy are  officers of the
Company.

     In addition to revocation in any other manner permitted by law, a proxy may
be revoked by:

     (i) signing  another  proxy  bearing a later date and  depositing it in the
manner set forth in the Notice of Meeting;

     (ii) signing and dating a written  notice of revocation (in the same manner
as a proxy is required to be executed)  and either  depositing  it in the manner
set forth in the  Notice of  Meeting  at any time  before the time fixed for the
Meeting or an adjournment thereof or with the chairman of the Meeting on the day
of the Meeting or an adjournment thereof; or

     (iii) attending the Meeting or an adjournment thereof, and casting a ballot
in person.

     Such  revocation  will have effect only in respect of those  matters  which
have not  already  been acted  upon.  Additional  proxy forms may be obtained by
calling or writing to American Stock Transfer & Trust Co., Shareholder Services,
40 Wall Street, 46th Floor, New York, NY 10005. Telephone: (718) 921-8200.


VOTING OF PROXIES

     The  securities  represented  by the proxy will be voted or  withheld  from
voting in accordance with the instructions of the shareholder on any ballot that
may be called for, and if the shareholder specifies a choice with respect to any
matter to be acted upon, the securities shall be voted accordingly.  The form of
proxy  confers  authority  upon the named  proxyholder  with  respect to matters
identified in the  accompanying  Notice of Meeting.  If a choice with respect to
such matters is not  specified,  it is intended  that the person  designated  by
management  in the form of proxy  will vote the  securities  represented  by the
proxy in favor of each matter identified in the proxy statement and for election
to the Board of Directors the nominees named in this proxy statement.  The proxy
confers  discretionary  authority  upon the named  proxyholder  with  respect to
amendments to or variations in matters identified in the accompanying  Notice of
Meeting and other matters which may properly come before the Meeting.


<PAGE>


VOTING SECURITIES AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS THEREOF

     The voting  securities of the Company consist of common stock,  without par
value (the  "Common  Shares").  The Record Date has been fixed in advance by the
directors as July 24, 1998, for the purpose of determining shareholders entitled
to a notice of and to vote at the Meeting.  Each share issued at the time of the
Record Date carries the right to one vote at the Meeting. As of July 24, 1998, a
total of  28,449,558  shares of the  Company's  common  stock  were  issued  and
outstanding.

     The  presence  in person or by proxy of holders of record of a majority  of
the  outstanding  Common  Shares is  required  to  constitute  a quorum  for the
transaction  of  business  at the  Meeting.  If a quorum is  present,  the eight
nominees for election to the Board of Directors who receive the greatest  number
of votes cast at the Meeting shall be elected  directors.  For all other matters
to  come  before  the  Meeting,  a  proposal  will be  approved  only  upon  the
affirmative vote of shareholders  owning in the aggregate at least a majority of
the Company's Common Shares represented at the Meeting in person or by proxy and
entitled to vote.  With regard to the election of  directors,  votes may be cast
for or withheld from each  nominee.  Votes that are withheld will have no effect
on the outcome of the election because  directors will be elected by a plurality
of the votes cast.  An  abstention  may be specified in the proposals to approve
the  amendments  to the  Articles of  Incorporation  and the  increase of shares
available  under the Company's 1992 Stock  Incentive Plan. An abstention will be
counted as present for purposes of determining the existence of a quorum on such
proposal and, therefore,  have the effect of a negative vote. Shares represented
by duly  executed and returned  proxies of brokers or other  nominees  which are
expressly not voted upon the proposal  ("broker  non-votes") will have no effect
on the required vote.

The following  tables set forth certain  information  concerning  the beneficial
ownership of the  Company's  common stock at June 30, 1998,  by: (i) each person
known by the Company to own beneficially  more than 5 percent of the outstanding
capital stock of the Company;  (ii) each of the  directors  and named  executive
officers;  and (iii) all  directors  and officers as a group.  Each  shareholder
listed  below has sole voting and  investment  power with  respect to the shares
beneficially owned, except as indicated:

                                             NUMBER OF SHARES        PERCENTAGE
                                               BENEFICIALLY         BENEFICIALLY
NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                         OWNED (1)             OWNED
- --------------------------------             ----------------       -----------
Elan International Service, Ltd. (2)             4,477,273           15.15%
   Flatt Smiths SL04
   Bermuda

Hambrecht & Quist (3)                            2,193,400            7.56
   50 Rowes Wharf,
   Boston, Massachusetts 02110

DeSpain & Coby, Inc. (4)                         1,416,364            5.07
   1011 SW Emkay Dr., Suite 103
   Bend, Oregon 97702

James C. O'Shea (5)                                500,086            1.77

David H. de Weese (6)                               36,250              *

Grace Keeney Fey (7)                                36,000              *

William A. Gouveia (8)                              52,500              *

Eric T. Herfindal (9)                               66,250              *

Richard J. Plestina (10)                           170,500              *

John Ruedy, MD (11)                                126,950              *

Michael T. Sember (12)                               8,750              *


<PAGE>


J. Michael Redmond (13)                             93,234              *

Peggy J. Miller (14)                                46,120              *

Robert Gonnelli (15)                               537,243            1.90

All Directors, Executive and
  Officers as a Group (13 persons) (16)          1,761,505            6.03%
- -----------------------------------------
*     Less than one percent.

(1)  Beneficial  ownership is  determined  in  accordance  with the rules of the
Securities and Exchange  Commission and includes shares over which the indicated
beneficial  owner exercises  voting and/or  investment  power.  Shares of common
stock subject to options currently exercisable or exercisable within 60 days are
deemed outstanding for computing the percentage  ownership of the person holding
the options but not deemed outstanding for computing the percentage of ownership
of any other person. Except as indicated, and subject to community property laws
where  applicable,  the  persons  named in the table  above have sole voting and
investment  power  with  respect  to all  shares  of  common  stock  as shown as
beneficially owned by them.

(2)  Includes  warrants to purchase  1,750,000  shares of common stock which are
presently  exercisable.  Does not include 692,694 shares of Series A Convertible
Preferred Stock and 134,333 shares of Series B Convertible Preferred Stock.

(3)  Includes  warrants to purchase  1,190,000  shares of common stock which are
presently exercisable.

(4)  Includes  warrants to  purchase  116,280  shares of common  stock which are
presently exercisable.

(5)  Includes  options to  purchase  456,250  shares of common  stock  which are
presently  exercisable and 12,500 which are vested but are not exercisable until
October 1, 1998. Does not include 500,000 option shares which become exercisable
after 60 days.

(6)  Includes  options  to  purchase  26,250  shares of common  stock  which are
presently  exercisable.  Does  not  include  8,750  option  shares  that  become
exercisable after 60 days.

(7)  Includes  options  to  purchase  8,750  shares  of common  stock  which are
presently exercisable and 26,250 shares of common stock which are vested but are
not  exercisable  until September 11, 1998. Does not include 8,750 option shares
that become exercisable after 60 days.

(8)  Includes  options  to  purchase  8,750  shares  of common  stock  which are
presently exercisable and 43,750 shares of common stock which are vested but are
not  exercisable  until September 11, 1998. Does not include 8,750 option shares
that become exercisable after 60 days.

(9)  Includes  options to  purchase  26,250  shares of common  stock  which are
presently  exercisable.  Does  not  include  8,750  option  shares  that  become
exercisable after 60 days.

(10)  Includes  options to  purchase  26,250  shares of common  stock  which are
presently  exercisable.  Does  not  include  8,750  option  shares  that  become
exercisable after 60 days.

(11)  Includes  options  to  purchase  8,750  shares of common  stock  which are
presently exercisable and 52,500 shares of common stock which are vested but are
not  exercisable  until September 11, 1998. Does not include 8,750 option shares
that become exercisable after 60 days.

(12) Does not include 8,750 option shares that become exercisable after 60 days.


<PAGE>


(13)  Includes  options to  purchase  81,250  shares of common  stock  which are
presently  exercisable and 6,250 shares of common stock which are vested but are
not  exercisable  until October 1, 1998.  Does not include  50,000 option shares
which become exercisable after 60 days.

(14)  Includes  options to purchase  10,000  shares of common stock  exercisable
immediately  and 6,250 shares of common  stock which vested but are  exercisable
until  October 1, 1998 and  15,000  shares  which  vest and  become  exercisable
one-third on July 1, August 1, and September 1, 1998, respectively.

(15)  Includes  warrants to purchase  480,243  shares of common  stock which are
presently exercisable.

(16)  Includes  741,875  options  and  480,243  warrants,  which  are  presently
exercisable,  122,500  options  which are vested but are not  exercisable  until
September 11, 1998 and 43,750  options which are vested but are not  exercisable
until October 1, 1998. Does not include 771,250 options which become exercisable
after 60 days.

All of the outstanding capital stock of Bioject Inc. is owned by the Company and
80.1 percent of the outstanding  stock of Bioject JV Subsidiary Inc. is owned by
the Company.


                                  PROPOSAL #1
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The  Articles of  Incorporation  of the Company  provide for the holders of
Common Shares to elect a Board of Directors at the 1998 Meeting.

     If Proposal #2, which  provides for a classified  Board,  is not  approved,
each director  elected will hold office until the next annual general meeting or
until his successor is duly elected or  appointed,  unless his office is earlier
vacated  in  accordance   with  the  articles  of  the  Company  or  he  becomes
disqualified  to act as a director.  If Proposal #2 is approved,  the  directors
will be elected to the class indicated  below. See Proposal #2 for a description
of their terms.

     The following table sets forth the names and ages of the Company's  current
directors, each of whom is nominated for election.


THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE "FOR" THE NOMINEES
LISTED BELOW.

                     PROPOSED                                      YEAR ELECTED
NAME                  CLASS     AGE       POSITION                   DIRECTOR
- ------------------    -----    -----     ------------------------   ------------
James C. O'Shea         3        53      Chairman, Chief Executive
                                          Officer and President        1995
John Ruedy, M.D.        3        66      Director(b)(c)                1987
William A. Gouveia      1        56      Director(c)(d)                1994
Grace Keeney Fey        2        52      Director(a)(b)(e)             1995
Eric T. Herfindal       2        57      Director(b)(d)                1996
Richard J. Plestina     2        52      Director(a)(c)(e)             1997
David H. de Weese       1        56      Director(d)(e)                1997
Michael T. Sember       3        48      Director(e)                   1997
- -------------

(a) Member of Stock Option Committee
(b) Member of Compensation Committee
(c) Member of Nominating Committee
(d) Member of Audit Committee
(e) Member of Ad Hoc-Financing Committee


     JAMES C. O'SHEA has served as Chairman and Chief  Executive  Officer of the
Company since March 1995. Prior to joining  Bioject,  he was President and Chief
Operating  Officer  of  Biopure  Corporation,  a  developer  of red  blood  cell
substitutes. Prior to 1989, Mr. O'Shea was Executive Vice President of Marketing
and  Scientific  Affairs at Delmed Inc., a manufacturer  of peritoneal  dialysis
solutions and parenteral  products.  He is a member of the Board of Directors of
PSC,  Inc.,  serving as Chairman of the  Compensation  Committee and  previously
serving as Chairman of the Executive Committee.


<PAGE>


     JOHN RUEDY,  M.D. has served as a director of the Company since 1987. Since
July  1992,  he has  served as Dean of the  Faculty  of  Medicine  at  Dalhousie
University  in Halifax,  Nova Scotia.  From 1978  through  June 1992,  Dr. Ruedy
served as Professor of Medicine at the  University of British  Columbia and Head
of the  Department  of  Medicine  at St.  Paul's  Hospital,  Vancouver,  British
Columbia.  Since 1966, he has held an  appointment to the Department of Medicine
and  Pharmacology  at McGill  University  and was Chairman of the  Department of
Pharmacology and Therapeutics  from 1975 through 1978. Dr. Ruedy is also serving
as a director for the Canadian AIDS Clinical Trials Network.

     WILLIAM A.  GOUVEIA was elected a director of the Company in January  1994.
Mr.  Gouveia serves in two  capacities at Boston's New England  Medical  Center:
Director of Pharmacy (1972 to present) and Special Assistant for  Pharmaceutical
Research  and  Development  (1989  to  present).  He has the  following  faculty
appointments:  Associate  Professor  of Medicine at Tufts  University  School of
Medicine (1995), Adjunct Clinical Professor of Pharmacy at Massachusetts College
of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions, and Adjunct Professor at Northeastern
University Bouve College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences.  He has published over
75 articles in leading healthcare  journals,  as well as numerous book chapters,
and has  delivered  presentations  in the U.S.  and  international  health  care
organizations  and  colleges.  In  1984,  he  founded  the   Massachusetts-based
Chartwell  Home  Therapies.   He  is  a  Fellow  of  the  American   Society  of
Health-System  Pharmacists  (ASHP) and has served as chair and member of various
committees of the ASHP.

     GRACE  KEENEY  FEY,  CFA,  was elected a director of the Company in October
1995.  Ms. Fey is Executive  Vice  President  and  Director of Frontier  Capital
Management Company, a Boston-based investment management firm (1988 to present).
From 1986 to 1988,  she was a Senior Vice  President  of  Investment  Management
Associates,  an investment  management firm. From 1980 to 1986, Ms. Fey was Vice
President of Winchester Capital Management, also an investment management firm.

     ERIC T.  HERFINDAL has served as a director of the Company since  September
1996.  He was  Senior  Vice  President  of Axion  Healthcare,  Inc.,  a  disease
management  company,  from  1993 to 1996 and  continues  as a  director  of that
company,  and has also served as Executive  Vice  President  of OnCare Inc.,  an
oncology  physician  practice  management company and subsidiary of Axion, since
1993.  Prior to joining  Axion,  he served for over 20 years as a  Professor  of
Clinical Pharmacy,  School of Pharmacy,  at the University of California Medical
Center in San Francisco,  where he is currently a Professor Emeritus. He holds a
Doctorate in Pharmacy from the  University of California,  San Francisco,  and a
Masters in Public Health from the University of California,  Berkeley. He is the
author of  twenty-five  articles and the editor or co-editor of ten books in the
field of  pharmacy,  including  the TEXTBOOK OF  THERAPEUTICS:  DRUG AND DISEASE
MANAGEMENT,  currently in its sixth  edition.  Dr.  Herfindal has been active in
various professional organizations, serves on a number of editorial and advisory
boards,  and is a frequent  lecturer at national  and  international  healthcare
meetings.

     RICHARD J.  PLESTINA  was  elected a director of the Company in April 1997.
Mr. Plestina is President of Quelah  Corporation,  NW, a family owned investment
firm (1986 to  present).  In 1988,  he was a consultant  for  Cologon,  Inc. DBA
Alpine Glass Company,  a large  commercial and residential  glass company.  From
1979 to 1986, he was an Executive Vice President of Orion Capital Corporation, a
multiline  insurance  company and  President of EBI  Companies,  which was later
acquired by Orion Corporation. From 1974 to 1979 he served as the Vice President
and Marketing Manager of EBIC. Mr. Plestina has served in previous directorships
for Orion Capital Corporation,  EBI Companies,  Associated Oregon Industries and
Northwest Employer's Council.


<PAGE>


     DAVID H. DE WEESE was elected a director  of the Company in June 1997.  Mr.
de Weese is  currently a general  partner of Paul  Capital  Partners,  a private
equity  investment  firm.  He served  as  Chairman  of the  Board of  Directors,
President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of the SIGA  Pharmaceuticals,  Inc.,  a
developer of vaccines and antibiotics from November 1996 to April 1998. Prior to
joining  the  SIGA,  Mr. de Weese  served  as a  director  and a  consultant  to
Biovector  Therapeutics,  S.A., a developer of drug delivery technology based in
France,  and as an advisor to Paul Capital  Partners.  From 1993 to 1995, Mr. de
Weese  was   President,   Chief   Executive   Officer   and  a  Director  of  M6
Pharmaceuticals,  Inc., a biopharmaceutical  company.  From 1986 to 1992, Mr. de
Weese was the President,  Chief Executive  Officer,  a Director and a founder of
Cygnus Therapeutic  Systems (now Cygnus,  Inc.), a developer and manufacturer of
transdermal  drug  delivery  systems.  Prior to that,  Mr.  de Weese  co-founded
Medical Innovations Corporation,  a medical device business currently a division
of Ballard Medical Products,  Inc., and was Chairman of the Board, President and
Chief  Executive  Officer of Machine  Intelligence  Corporation,  a developer of
computer software and hardware.

     MICHAEL T.  SEMBER has served as a director of the  Company  since  October
1997.  Mr. Sember is Executive Vice  President,  Business  Development  for Elan
Corporation,  plc. Mr. Sember was with Marion Laboratories,  then Marion Merrell
Dow,  from  1973  to  1991.  Mr.  Sember  also  serves  as a  director  of  Elan
Pharmaceutical Research Corporation, Acorda Therapeutics, Inc., Iomed, Inc., and
as Chairman and CEO of Targon  Corporation,  a joint venture company of Elan and
Cytogen Corporation.


BIOJECT JV SUBSIDIARY INC. LIST OF DIRECTORS

     ROBERT  GONNELLI  was elected  Chairman of Bioject JV  Subsidiary,  Inc. in
October 1997. In May, 1998, Mr. Gonnelli was appointed the interim  president of
the Subsidiary,  while the Subsidiary actively seeks a full-time president.  Mr.
Gonnelli has served as President and CEO of PDN Investments since 1995 which was
established  to fund and  manage  startup  companies,  many of which  are in the
medical technology  industry.  Some of these include US Medical Labs, a clinical
blood laboratory,  MCS, a neurological  device company,  ProKool,  an orthopedic
company  specializing in sports injury products based on MCS's  technology,  and
DAC, a dental practice management company.  Previously Mr. Gonnelli was founder,
CEO and  President  of TSM,  Inc.,  a  leading  manufacturer  of  broadcast  and
videoconferencing  automation systems.  TSM, Inc. was sold in 1993. Mr. Gonnelli
has also been national sales manager of Canon  Broadcast,  a systems engineer at
the National Broadcasting Company and has authored three patents.

     JAMES C.  O'SHEA,  Director  of  Bioject  JV  Subsidiary,  Inc.  Please see
biography information in section "ELECTION OF DIRECTORS."

     TODD DAVIS,  Director of Bioject JV Subsidiary,  Inc. Mr. Davis was elected
Secretary/Treasurer  of the  Subsidiary  in October  1997. He is the Director of
Investments  and  Planning  at  Elan  Pharmaceuticals  Research  Corporation,  a
diversified  pharmaceutical  company headquartered in Dublin,  Ireland. Prior to
joining Elan,  Mr. Davis held various  sales and  marketing  positions at Abbott
Laboratories from 1990 to 1995.

BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  COMPOSITION,  COMPENSATION  AND  COMMITTEES.  The  Board of
Directors is currently composed of eight members,  one of whom is an employee of
the Company. Following the shareholder vote, the Board will be composed of eight
members, one of whom is an employee of the Company.

     All directors hold office for one year or until their  successors have been
elected and qualified. See Proposal #2 seeking shareholder approval to implement
a  classified  Board.  There  are no  family  relationships  between  any of the
directors or executive officers of the Company.


<PAGE>


     The Company pays its  directors no annual cash or per meeting  compensation
for  services.   Under  the  terms  of  the  1992  Stock  Incentive  Plan,  each
non-employee  director is  automatically  awarded an option to  purchase  17,500
shares of the  Company's  common stock  immediately  following the close of each
annual shareholders' meeting at an exercise price equal to the fair market value
on the date of the grant.  Such options are vested and exercisable  with respect
to  one-half  of the  shares  at six  months  from the  date of  grant  with the
remaining  shares  vested and  exercisable  six months  thereafter.  The options
expire eight years after grant unless previously  exercised or terminated due to
termination of service.

     There were nine  meetings of the Board of Directors  during the last fiscal
year. Except for Ms. Fey and Mr. Gouveia,  each of the incumbent directors being
nominated  for  re-election  attended at least 75% of all of the meetings of the
Board of Directors and committees on which they served.

     There are five standing  committees  of the Board of  Directors:  the Audit
Committee, Stock Option Committee,  Compensation Committee, Nominating Committee
and the Ad Hoc-Financing Committee. The Audit Committee meets with the Company's
independent accountants to review the scope and findings of the annual audit and
accounting policies and procedures of the Company which are then reported by the
committee  to  the  directors  of  the  Company.   The  Stock  Option  Committee
administers  the  1992  Stock  Incentive   Plan.  The   Compensation   Committee
administers  cash  compensation  for  the  executive  officers.  The  Nominating
Committee reviews and recommends to the full Board nominees for directors of the
Company to be submitted for election at the next annual  shareholders'  meeting.
The Ad Hoc-Financing Committee monitors the Company's cash reserves and develops
strategies for procuring additional capital. The Audit Committee met once during
fiscal  1998.  The  Stock  Option  Committee  took  action  by  written  consent
resolution four times. The Nominating Committee and Compensation  Committee each
met once during  fiscal 1998.  The Ad  Hoc-Financing  Committee met twice during
fiscal 1998.


EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS

     The following individuals comprise the executive officers of the Company:

                                                                   Year Elected
Name                   Age   Position                              Officer
- ---------------------  ---   --------------------------------      ----------
James C. O'Shea         53    Chairman, Chief Executive
                              Officer and President                    1995
Michael A. Temple       48    Vice President, Chief Financial
                              Officer and Secretary/Treasurer          1998
Peggy J. Miller         51    Former Vice President, Chief Financial
                              Officer and Secretary/Treasurer          1993
Richard R. Stout, M.D.  45    Vice President of Clinical Affairs
                              of Bioject Inc.                          1994
J. Michael Redmond      38    Vice President, Business
                              Development of Bioject Inc.              1996
Robert Gonnelli         43    Chairman and Interim President
                              of Bioject JV Subsidiary, Inc.           1997


BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION.

     JAMES C. O'SHEA.  Please see biographical  information in section "ELECTION
OF DIRECTORS."

     MICHAEL A. TEMPLE joined Bioject as Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
and Secretary/Treasurer in April 1998. From December 1996 until January 1998 Mr.
Temple was Chief  Financial  Officer for Graziano  Produce Co., Inc. a northwest
regional  processor  of  fresh-cut  produce  products.  From  October 1993 until
November 1996 he was Vice President of Finance and Chief  Financial  Officer for
Instromedix,  Inc., an Oregon-based  medical technology company that designs and
manufactures  transtelephonic  cardiac  event  monitors.  From  April 1989 until
September 1993 he was Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial  Officer for
the Yoshida Group, a  Portland-based  conglomerate  with business  activities in
manufacturing,  services  and real  estate  development.  Prior to  joining  the
Yoshida  Group,  Mr.  Temple was a  principal  in the  accounting  and  business
advisory services practice of Laventhol & Horwath,  a national public accounting
firm.


<PAGE>


     PEGGY J. MILLER formerly served Bioject as Chief  Financial  Officer,  Vice
President and Secretary/Treasurer, from February 1993 to April 1998.

     RICHARD R.  STOUT,  M.D.  joined the  Company in April 1994 as  Director of
Clinical and Regulatory  Affairs.  He was promoted to Vice President of Clinical
Affairs in December  1994.  From  1992-1993  he was the Director of Clinical and
Regulatory  Affairs at EndoVascular  Instruments,  Inc., a developer of surgical
devices and methods for  endarterectomy  and intraluminal  graft placement.  Dr.
Stout  acted as the  Manager of  Tachycardia  Clinical  Studies at  Telectronics
Pacing Systems from 1990-1992,  an international medical device company involved
in   manufacturing   and   distributing   cardiac   pacemakers  and  implantable
defibrillators. From 1987 to 1989, Dr. Stout was Director of Medical Programs at
Biotronic  Inc.,  also a manufacturer  and  distributor  of implantable  cardiac
pacemakers.

     J. MICHAEL  REDMOND  joined  Bioject in February 1996 as Vice  President of
Sales and Marketing.  He was appointed Vice President of Business Development in
February 1998. Mr. Redmond has fifteen years of experience in medical  marketing
and  product  sales.  Prior to  joining  Bioject  he was  Director  of  Business
Development  and  Director of Sales and  Marketing  for  Kollsman  Manufacturing
Company.  Kollsman is a private  label  developer  and  manufacturer  of medical
instrumentation.  He also held various sales and marketing positions with Abbott
Laboratories Diagnostic division.

     BOB GONNELLI.  Please see  biographical  information in section "BIOJECT JV
SUBSIDIARY INC. LIST OF DIRECTORS."

EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION.  The following  table sets forth the cash  compensation
paid by the Company to its Chief  Executive  Officer and to the other  executive
officers   having   salary  and  bonus   compensation   greater  than   $100,000
(collectively  the "named  executive  officers"),  for services  rendered to the
Company during the fiscal years ended March 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996.

                           Summary Compensation Table
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   Long-Term
                               Annual Compensation                 Compensation Awards
- -------------------            -------------------                 ----------------------------------
                               Fiscal                              Options               Other
Name and Principal Position(1) Year   Salary     Bonus   Other     Shares(2)  Other(3)   Compensation
- -------------------------     ------- -------    ------  -----     --------   -------    ------------
<S>                           <C>     <C>        <C>     <C>       <C>        <C>         <C>

James C. O'Shea                1998  $195,000      -   $5,930(5)   575,000(6)   $3,565   $      -
Chairman, Chief Executive      1997   195,000      -    5,225(5)    18,750(7)    3,017          -
Officer and President          1996   192,737(4)   -    4,117(5)   375,000(8)      -      146,996(9)

Peggy J. Miller                1998   105,000      -                62,500(10)   2,404          -
Former Vice President,         1997   105,000      -                 9,375(11)   1,983          -
Chief Financial Officer        1996   105,000      -                95,625(12)     -            -
and Secretary / Treasurer

J. Michael Redmond             1998   100,000      -    6,000(14)   62,500(15)   2,409          -
Vice President of              1997   100,000           6,000(14)   75,000(16)   1,616          -
Business Development           1996    14,231(13)       1,000(14)        -         -            -

</TABLE>
- ------------------------

(1) No other executive officers had salary and bonus  compensation  greater than
$100,000 in fiscal 1998.

(2) The Company has in effect one major  long-term  compensation  plan, the 1992
Stock Incentive  Plan,  through which all employees,  officers and  non-employee
consultants  of the Company may be awarded  incentive  and  non-statutory  stock
options,  stock bonuses,  stock  appreciation  rights and restricted stock under
terms and  performance  criteria as  determined  by a committee  of the Board of
Directors.  Non-employee  directors are also awarded options to purchase a fixed
number of shares on an annual basis.  The 1992 Stock Incentive Plan was approved
by the Company's  shareholders on November 20, 1992.  Amounts listed reflect the
number of options  granted in the respective  fiscal years,  the exercise prices
for which were greater  than or equal to the fair market value of the  Company's
common stock on the date of grant.


<PAGE>


(3) The Company has a 401(k) Retirement Benefit Plan for its employees including
its executive officers which provides for voluntary employer matches of employee
contributions  up  to  6%  of  salary  and  for  discretionary   profit  sharing
contributions to all employees.  Such employer contributions may be made in cash
or  common  stock.  In fiscal  1998,  the  Company  made all  employer  matching
contributions in shares of the Company's common stock based on fair market value
in the period of match.

(4) Mr. O'Shea was appointed  Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer on March 28,
1995 and commenced his salaried employment with the Company on April 10, 1995.

(5) Represents supplemental life and disability insurance premiums paid pursuant
to an employment  agreement with Mr.  O'Shea.  No other  executive  officers are
entitled to this benefit.

(6) In fiscal 1998, Mr. O'Shea was granted 575,000 option shares: 50,000 options
granted  on April 3, 1997 and  vesting  immediately  but not  exercisable  until
October 3, 1997;  25,000  options  granted on June 11, 1997 vesting on March 31,
1998 with 12,500 options immediately  exercisable and 12,500 options exercisable
on October 1, 1998; and 500,000 options granted on September 19, 1997, one-third
vesting and exercisable on September 19, 1998,  one-third on September 19, 1999,
and one-third on September 19, 2000.

(7) In fiscal 1997, Mr. O'Shea was granted 18,750  options  vesting  immediately
and exercisable on April 3, 1998.  These options replaced 25,000 options granted
in fiscal  1997 and were  repriced  in  fiscal  1998  with a 25%  forfeiture  of
options.

(8) In  connection  with his  employment,  Mr.  O'Shea  was  granted  options to
purchase  375,000  shares of common stock of which 112,500  option shares vested
immediately,  112,500  option  shares  vested  one-half  on April  10,  1996 and
one-half on April 10, 1997, and 150,000 option shares vesting  one-half on April
10, 1997 and one-half on April 10, 1998.  These options replaced 500,000 options
granted in fiscal 1996 and were repriced in fiscal 1998 with a 25% forfeiture of
options.

(9) In connection  with the  commencement  of Mr.  O'Shea's  employment with the
Company,  he was reimbursed his moving  expenses  including the costs of selling
his former  residence,  transportation  and storage of household goods,  certain
other  incidental  moving  expenses  and a gross-up for federal and state income
taxes incurred on these reimbursements.

(10) In fiscal 1998,  Ms. Miller was granted 62,500  options:  25,000 granted on
April 3, 1997 and vesting  immediately  and exercisable  October 3,1997;  12,500
options  granted on June 11, 1997  vesting on March 31, 1998 with 6,250  options
immediately  exercisable  and 6,250 options  exercisable on October 1, 1998; and
25,000 options granted on September 19, 1997,  one-fifth vesting and exercisable
each month beginning May 1, 1998 and ending September 1, 1998.

(11) In fiscal 1997,  Ms. Miller was granted 9,375 options  vesting  immediately
but not exercisable  until April 3, 1998.  These options replaced 12,500 options
granted in fiscal 1997 and were repriced in fiscal 1998 with a 25% forfeiture of
options.

(12) On January 26,  1996,  Ms.  Miller was granted  95,625  options with 75,938
vesting  immediately but not exercisable  until April 3, 1998,  9,375 vesting on
February 1, 1996 and becoming  exercisable on April 3, 1998, 937 vesting on July
31,  1996 and  becoming  exercisable  on April 3, 1998,  and 9,375  vesting  and
becoming  exercisable on April 3, 1998.  These options  replaced  75,000 options
granted in fiscal 1995,  5,000 options granted in fiscal 1994 and 90,000 options
granted  in  fiscal  1993 and  repriced  in  fiscals  1996  and 1998  with a 25%
forfeiture of options.

(13) Mr. Redmond commenced employment with the Company on February 8, 1996.

(14) Mr. Redmond receives an automobile allowance of $500 per month.


<PAGE>


(15) In fiscal 1998, Mr. Redmond was granted 62,500  options:  25,000 granted on
April 3, 1997 and vesting  immediately but not exercisable until October 3,1997;
12,500  options  granted on June 11,  1997  vesting on March 31, 1998 with 6,250
options  immediately  exercisable  and 6,250 options  exercisable  on October 1,
1998; and 25,000 options  granted on September 19, 1997,  one-third  vesting and
exercisable  on September  19,  1998,  one-third  on  September  19,  1999,  and
one-third on September 19, 2000.

(16) In connection with his  employment,  Mr. Redmond was granted 75,000 options
with one-third  vesting on each  anniversary of his employment with the Company,
with two-thirds  exercisable April 3, 1998 and one-third exercisable February 8,
1999.  These options  replaced  100,000  options granted in fiscal 1997 and were
repriced in fiscal 1998 with a 25% forfeiture of options.

GRANT OF STOCK  OPTIONS.  Shown below is  information on grants of stock options
pursuant to the Company's 1992 Stock Incentive Plan during the fiscal year ended
March 31, 1998 to the named executive  officers.  No stock  appreciation  rights
were granted during fiscal 1998.


                        OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                                 INDIVIDUAL GRANTS
                -------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        Potential Realizable
                              Percentage of                              Values at Assumed
                              Total Options                             Annual Rates of Stock
                               Granted to     Exercise or                Price Appreciation
                    Options    Employees      Base Price   Expiration    for Option Term (10)
Name                Granted   in Fiscal 1997  (per share)    Date         5%         10%
- ---------------     -------   --------------  -----------  ----------    --------   --------
<S>                 <C>            <C>        <C>          <C>           <C>         <C>

James C. O'Shea     50,000(1)       5          .75         04/02/04      11,045     29,731
                    25,000(2)       2          .625        03/31/05       6,361     14,824
                   500,000(3)      48          .6875       09/18/04     162,806    357,788


Peggy J. Miller     25,000(4)       2          .75         04/02/04       5,522     14,865
                    12,500(5)       1          .625        03/31/05       3,180      7,412
                    25,000(6)       2          .6875       09/18/04       8,140     17,889


J. Michael Redmond  25,000(7)       2          .75         04/02/04       5,522     14,865
                    12,500(8)       1          .625        03/31/05       3,180      7,412
                    25,000(9)       2          .6875       09/18/04       8,140     17,889

</TABLE>
- ---------------------

(1) These  options  vested  immediately  upon  grant and became  exercisable  on
October 3, 1997. The fair market value of the Company's common stock on the date
of grant was $0.69 per share.

(2)  12,500  became  vested  and  exercisable   immediately  and  12,500  become
exercisable  on October 1, 1998.  The fair market value of the Company's  common
stock on the date of grant was $0.625.

(3) Of this total,  166,666 become vested and exercisable on September 19, 1998,
166,667  become vested and  exercisable on September 19, 1999, and the remaining
balance of 166,667 become vested and exercisable on September 19, 2000. The fair
market value of the Company's common stock on the date of grant was $0.72.

(4) These  options  vested  immediately  upon  grant and became  exercisable  on
October 3, 1997. The fair market value of the Company's common stock on the date
of grant was $0.69 per share.

(5) These options vested on March 31, 1998, 6,250 became exercisable immediately
and 6,250 become  exercisable  on October 1, 1998.  The fair market value of the
Company's common stock on the date of grant was $0.625.

(6) Of this total,  one-fifth vest and are exercisable  each month beginning May
1, 1998 and ending  September 1, 1998.  The fair market  value of the  Company's
common stock on the date of grant was $0.72.


<PAGE>


(7) These  options  vested  immediately  upon  grant and became  exercisable  on
October 3, 1997. The fair market value of the Company's common stock on the date
of grant was $0.69 per share.

(8) These options vested on March 31, 1998, 6,250 became exercisable immediately
and 6,250 become  exercisable  on October 1, 1998.  The fair market value of the
Company's common stock on the date of grant was $0.625.

(9) Of this total,  8,333 become vested and  exercisable  on September 19, 1998,
8,333 become vested and  exercisable  on September  19, 1999,  and the remaining
balance of 8,334 become vested and  exercisable  on September 19, 2000. The fair
market value of the Company's common stock on the date of grant was $0.72.

(10) Potential  realizable value is based on the assumption that the stock price
of the common stock appreciates at the annual rate shown  (compounded  annually)
from  the date of grant  until  the end of the  applicable  option  term.  These
numbers are calculated based on the  requirements  promulgated by the Securities
and  Exchange  Commission  and do not reflect the  Company's  estimate of future
stock price performance.  The actual value, if any, which may be realized by any
officer  will vary based on  exercise  date and the market  price of the related
common stock when sold.

OPTION  EXERCISES AND FISCAL YEAR END VALUES.  Shown below is  information  with
respect to exercised  options and unexercised  options to purchase the company's
common  stock  granted  in fiscal  1998 and prior  years to the named  executive
officers  and  held by them at  March  31,  1998.  None of the  named  executive
officers  exercised any stock options during fiscal 1998. No stock  appreciation
rights were outstanding or exercised during fiscal 1998.

                 Aggregated Option Exercises in Last Fiscal Year
                        and Fiscal Year End Option Values

                       Number of Unexercised            Value of Unexercised
                       Options held at                  In-the-Money Options
                       March 31, 1998                   March 31, 1998(1)
                    ----------------------------    --------------------------

Name                Exercisable    Unexercisable    Exercisable   Unexercisable
- -------------       -----------    -------------    ------------  -------------

James C. O'Shea       62,500            906,250     $   48,438    $  712,500

Peggy J. Miller       31,250            136,250         24,219       104,531

J. Michael Redmond    31,250            106,250         24,219        82,031
- ---------------
(1) Based on the  difference  between the exercise  price and the average of the
bid and ask price on NASDAQ of the Company's  common stock on that date ($1.50).
The actual value,  if any,  which may be realized by any officer will vary based
on exercise date and the market price of the related common stock when sold.

REPORT ON REPRICING OF OPTIONS/SAR'S. Shown below is information with respect to
the  Company's  ten-year  history on the  repricing  of stock  options and stock
appreciation rights (SAR's) held by executive officers.


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         Ten-Year Option/SAR Repricings
                                                                                          Length of
                                                   Market Price  Exercise                 Original
                                    Number of      of Stock      Price                    Option Term
                                    Options/SAR's  at Time of    at Time of     New       Date of
                                    Repriced or    Repricing or  Repricing or   Exercise  Repricing or
Name                    Date        Amended        Amendment     Amendment      Price     Amendment
- -------------------    --------   -------------   ------------  ------------    --------  ------------
<S>                   <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>       <C>
James C. O'Shea       04/03/97(a)  112,500(1)      $ .6875        $2.69         $ .75     5 years
President and         04/03/97(a)  112,500(1)        .6875         3.50           .75     5 years
Chief Operating       04/03/97(a)  150,000(1)        .6875         4.50           .75     5 years
Officer               04/03/97(a)   18,750(1)        .6875         1.313          .75     6 years

Peggy J. Miller       04/03/97(a)   50,625(2)        .6875         1.25           .75     4 years
Former Vice President 04/03/97(a)    2,813(2)        .6875         1.25           .75     3.5 years
and Chief Financial   04/03/97(a)   42,188(2)        .6875         1.25           .75     5 years
Officer               04/03/97(a)    9,375(2)        .6875         1.313          .75     6 years
                      01/26/96(a)   67,500(2)       1.25           4.00          1.25     5 years
                      01/26/96(a)    3,750(2)       1.25           4.00          1.25     4.5 years
                      01/26/96(a)   56,250(2)       1.25           4.00          1.25     6 years

Michael Redmond       04/03/97(a)   75,000(3)        .6875         1.00           .75     6 years
Vice President of
Business Development

</TABLE>
- ----------------

(1) Replaces 150,000, 150,000, 200,000 and 25,000 options, respectively.

(2) Replaces 67,500,  3,750, 56,250,  12,500,  90,000, 5,000 and 75,000 options,
respectively.

(3) Replaces 100,000 options.

(a) These  options  were  repriced  based on the  Compensation  and Stock Option
Committees'  belief that the difference between the current fair market value of
the Company's  common stock and the option exercise prices before  repricing did
not meaningfully  align employees' and shareholders'  interests and,  therefore,
did not serve the  long-term  interests of the Company.  In order to be eligible
for this repricing, the named executive officers were required to forfeit 25% of
option shares previously granted.

     The  foregoing  report has been  furnished  by the  Compensation  and Stock
Option  Committees  consisting  of Ms. Fey and Messrs.  Herfindal,  Plestina and
Ruedy.

EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS.  The Company entered into an employment agreement with Mr.
O'Shea to serve as Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer.  His salary,  at March
31, 1998 was $195,000 per annum and is subject to annual adjustment by the Board
of Directors. His agreement continues until terminated.  In addition to his base
salary,  Mr.  O'Shea was granted a total of 500,000  incentive  stock options at
prices  ranging from $2.69 to $4.50 per share which vest  variously over a three
year period.  These options were replaced in April 1997 by 375,000 options at an
exercise  price of $0.75 per share.  He will  receive  100,000  shares of common
stock when the  Company  first  achieves  two  consecutive  quarters of positive
earnings per share. He received relocation expense reimbursements grossed-up for
withholding taxes and will receive annual payment of certain disability and life
insurance  policy premiums.  In the event he is terminated,  he will receive his
base salary for up to two years. If he becomes disabled, he will continue at 75%
of his then  current  salary  for not less  than six  months  and at 50% of such
salary for the successive six months. In the event of his death, his salary will
continue  for 60 days  following  the end of the month of his  death.  Under the
agreement,  he is permitted to participate in any net profit  sharing,  deferred
compensation  or other  programs.  In addition,  he is prohibited from competing
with the Company for three years following termination of the agreement.


<PAGE>


The Company has entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Temple to serve as
Vice President and Chief Financial  Officer.  In the event he is terminated,  he
will  receive  his base  salary for up to four  months.  His  salary,  currently
$110,000 per annum,  is subject to annual  adjustment by the Board of Directors.
His agreement continues until terminated.  In the event he is disabled,  he will
continue at 75% of his then current salary for not less than six months and then
at 50% of such salary  through the end of the current  term. In the event of his
death,  his salary will continue for 120 days  following the end of the month of
his death. Under the agreement, he is permitted to participate in any net profit
sharing,  deferred compensation or other programs. In addition, he is prohibited
from  competing  with the Company  for two years  following  termination  of the
agreement.

Ms.  Miller  resigned her position at the Company  effective  April 30, 1998. In
connection  with that  termination,  the  Company  agreed to continue to pay Ms.
Miller's  base  salary  for a  period  of two  months  beyond  the  date  of her
termination; to make her a lump-sum payment equal to four months base salary and
to pay Ms. Miller's  health and dental  insurance  premiums  through October 31,
1998. In addition,  the Company  extended the expiration  date of 130,000 vested
stock  options  held by Ms.  Miller  from April 30, 1999 to April 30,  2000.  In
consideration of Ms. Miller's  assistance in the transition of  responsibilities
to a new chief financial  officer,  the Company  exchanged 25,000 unvested stock
options held by Ms.  Miller for 25,000  identically  priced stock  options which
vest and are exercisable at the rate of 5,000 per month, beginning May 1, 1998.

     The Company has entered into an employment  agreement  with Mr.  Redmond to
serve as Vice President of Sales and  Marketing.  In the event he is terminated,
he will  receive his base salary for up to four  months.  His salary,  currently
$100,000  per  annum,  plus $500 per month car  allowance,  is subject to annual
adjustment by the Board of Directors.  His agreement continues until terminated.
In the event he is disabled,  he will continue at 75% of his then current salary
for not less than six months and then at 50% of such  salary  through the end of
the current  term.  In the event of his death,  his salary will  continue for 60
days  following the end of the month of his death.  Under the  agreement,  he is
permitted to participate in any net profit  sharing,  deferred  compensation  or
other  programs.  In addition,  he is prohibited from competing with the Company
for three years following termination of the agreement.

SEC FILINGS.  Section 16(a) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 requires the
Company's  officers,  directors and 10 percent  shareholders  to file reports of
ownership and changes in ownership with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission
(the "Commission"). Officers, directors and 10 percent shareholders are required
by Commission  regulations to furnish the Company with all Section 16(a) reports
they file.

     Based  solely on the  Company's  review of the copies of such  reports  the
Company  received and written  representations  from the Company's  officers and
directors,  the Company  believes that all required reports were timely filed in
fiscal 1998.

REPORT OF COMPENSATION AND STOCK OPTION COMMITTEES ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The Company has  maintained a philosophy of seeking to attract and retain a
key group of experienced  executives capable of successfully  completing product
development,  ramping up  manufacturing,  launching  marketing  and  sales,  and
providing strong financial management. Mindful of conserving cash resources, the
Company has provided a combination of annual cash  compensation and stock option
grants  which  emphasizes  lower cash  compensation  in exchange  for  potential
long-term gains through stock option  appreciation.  The Company believes such a
strategy  is in the best  interests  of the  shareholders  and  provides  proper
incentives to increase long-term  shareholder value. The Company's  Compensation
Committee is responsible for reviewing cash  compensation  paid to the Company's
executive  officers and makes  recommendations to the Stock Option Committee for
stock option and common stock grants.  The Stock Option Committee is responsible
for  administering  all stock option and common stock grants including awards to
the Company's executive officers.

     Overall, the Company's executive  compensation is composed of the following
key elements:


<PAGE>


     Base  Salary.  This is an  amount  of annual  cash  compensation  which the
Company  believes  is the  minimum  necessary  to attract  and retain  qualified
executives and is  administered on behalf of the Board of Directors by the Chief
Executive  Officer for all executive  officers  other than the C.E.O.  As can be
determined from the Summary Compensation Table preceding, under this policy only
three of the Company's four executive officers have cash compensation  exceeding
$100,000 per year. Until the Company achieves significant  revenues, it has been
the Board's policy to hold base salaries to at or below market, determined based
on the Company's  experience in recruiting key  executives,  relying  instead on
stock option incentives to attract and retain qualified executive  officers.  In
fiscal 1998, the Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer,  Mr. O'Shea,  was paid an
annual salary of $195,000. This remained unchanged until June 12, 1998, when Mr.
O'Shea's  salary was increased to $220,000 per year by the Board.  Mr.  O'Shea's
salary increase was determined based on a review of competitive  salaries by the
recruitment  consultants  engaged by the Company to assist it in identifying and
screening candidates for the position of President of Bioject JV Subsidiary Inc.
and is considered,  as being at or below market for the position. As part of Mr.
O'Shea's  compensation package, the Board agreed to pay premiums on certain life
and  disability  policies  owned by Mr.  O'Shea.  Payment of these  premiums  is
similar to  supplemental  policy  premiums  paid by the Company on behalf of its
former chief executive officer.

     Annual Incentives. As circumstances are appropriate, the Company has annual
incentive programs for individual  executives or for the executive officer group
as a whole.  These  programs  have  specific  performance  criteria  and  awards
determined based on Company  business goals for the period.  In fiscal 1998, the
Company  had an  incentive  program  under the 1992  Stock  Incentive  Plan with
respect to certain  executive  officers  whereby (i) up to a specified number of
stock  options  would be  automatically  granted  based on attainment of certain
sales and  operating  performance  targets and (ii) a specified  number of stock
options  were  available  for  award  at  the  discretion  of  the  Compensation
Committee.  After taking into account the Company's  performance in a variety of
areas,  no options  were  granted  relative  to  achieving  sales and  operating
performance  targets.  Based on non-financial  performance and the attainment of
the Elan  Pharmaceuticals  joint  venture,  the Stock Option  Committee  granted
one-half of the specified discretionary stock options. 

     The Company may also award cash, stock and option grants on a discretionary
basis to its executive  officers  where,  in the opinion of the Company's  Stock
Option Committee,  performance merited such compensation. With respect to fiscal
1998, Mr. O'Shea received a discretionary  stock option award which entitles him
to purchase 500,000 shares of the Company's common stock at $0.6875.  Such award
was made to Mr.  O'Shea for his  leadership  in  improving  financial  community
relations,   increasing  potential  strategic   partnership   opportunities  and
completing  the joint  venture  with Elan  Pharmaceuticals  for  developing  and
marketing the blood glucose monitor device.

     Long-Term Incentives. At present, the Company's primary long-term incentive
program is the 1992 Stock  Incentive  Plan which is available to all  employees,
executive  officers and  non-employee  consultants of the Company.  The Board of
Directors'  Stock  Option  Committee  grants all options  pursuant to this plan.
Generally,  executive  officers  upon  joining the  Company are granted  options
vesting over a three to four year period at current fair market value in amounts
which,  in the Stock  Option  Committee's  opinion,  are  consistent  with their
positions  and  responsibilities  with  the  Company.  In  addition,   based  on
individual  annual  performance  and  contribution to the long-term goals of the
Company,  executive  officers and other company employees may receive additional
stock option grants.  The amount and terms of such options are discretionary and
are determined  subjectively by the Stock Option  Committee  taking into account
Company and individual performance.  These options vest over varying periods and
are intended to focus executive officers on achieving the long-term goals of the
Company and to directly reward them for  corresponding  increases in shareholder
value.

     The Company also has a 401(k)  Retirement  Benefit  Plan for its  employees
including its executive  officers which provides for voluntary  employer matches
of  employee  contributions  up to 6% of  salary  and for  discretionary  profit
sharing  contributions  to all employees.  In fiscal 1998,  Mr. O'Shea  received
$3,565 (or 6,779 shares) of Company  common stock under the matching  provisions
of the 401(k) Plan.

     Due to the availability of operating loss  carryforwards,  the Compensation
and Stock Option Committees determined Mr. O'Shea's compensation package without
regard to the  limitations  of  deductibility  imposed by Internal  Revenue Code
Section 162(m).


<PAGE>


     The  Company  is  engaged  in a highly  competitive  industry.  In order to
succeed,  the  Company  believes  that it must be  able to  attract  and  retain
qualified  executives.  The Board of Directors believes that the above described
compensation structure will help the Company to achieve these objectives.

     The foregoing report has been furnished by the following directors: for the
Compensation Committee, John Ruedy, Grace K. Fey, and Eric T. Herfindal, and for
the Stock Option Committee, Grace K. Fey and Richard J. Plestina.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

     Executive  compensation is administered by two committees of the Board: the
Compensation Committee and the Stock Option Committee. Jim O'Shea, the Company's
Chairman,  President,  Chief Executive  Officer and a Director,  participated in
deliberations  concerning  executive  officer  compensation,  but abstained from
deliberations concerning his own compensation.


CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

     On January 12, 1995,  the Board of Directors  announced the  resignation of
the  Company's  Chairman  and  Chief  Executive  Officer,  Carl  E.  Wilcox.  In
consideration  for Mr.  Wilcox's long service to the Company,  the Board granted
Mr.  Wilcox  100,000  shares  of  common  stock  valued  at  $241,000  and  cash
compensation totaling $247,000. The Board also vested 200,000 previously granted
option shares at $4.00 per share and extended the expiration date to January 14,
1998.  The Board granted Mr.  Wilcox a special power of attorney to  exclusively
perform  all acts  necessary  to  obtain  extension  and/or  release  of the WAM
Partnership escrow shares. In addition, the Board agreed to pay up to $10,000 of
costs  associated  with such  extension  and/or  release.  On June 3, 1996,  the
British Columbia Securities  Commission informed the Company that release of the
escrow shares had been granted.  The Board also agreed to pay Mr. Wilcox $20,000
per year for two years under a covenant not-to-compete.  Mr. Wilcox continued to
serve as a Director of the Company until October 25, 1995.

     October  22,  1997,  Robert  Gonnelli  was  elected  Chairman of Bioject JV
Subsidiary  Inc.'s Board of  Directors.  From October 1997 through April 1998 he
received no fees for such services but will participate in any future Subsidiary
director  compensation  programs including any Subsidiary stock incentive plans.
Effective May 1, 1998, Mr. Gonnelli  became interim  president of the Subsidiary
and will receive compensation totaling $15,000 per month.

     Addition to his position on the Subsidiary  Board, Mr. Gonnelli serves as a
consultant  to the  Company  for which he received  monthly  consulting  fees of
$8,500 per month,  aggregating  to $50,500,  in fiscal 1998.  He was also issued
350,000  five  year  warrants  in  connection  with a private  placement  of the
Company's preferred stock completed with Elan International  Services,  Ltd. and
130,243  warrants  for his  services  related to  investor  relations  and sales
consulting.  In fiscal 1999,  in addition to his monthly fees through  April 30,
1998,  the Company has  committed  to issue  100,000  warrants  for his investor
relations and sales consulting services.

STOCK PERFORMANCE CHART

     The  following  chart  compares the yearly stock market  (U.S.)  percentage
change in the cumulative total stockholder  return on the Company's common stock
during the five fiscal  years ended  March 31,  1998 with the  cumulative  total
return on the NASDAQ  Stock  Market  (U.S.)  Index and the  Hambrecht  and Quist
Healthcare Index (exclusive of biotechnology companies).  The comparison assumes
$100 was invested on March 31, 1993, in the  Company's  common stock and in each
of the foregoing indices and assumes reinvestment of dividends.


<PAGE>


                 COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN
           AMONG BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC., NASDAQ STOCK INDEX
        AND HAMBRECHT AND QUIST HEALTH CARE FUND EXCLUDING BIOTECH INDEX

                       BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                     H&Q HEALTHCARE EXCLUDING BIOTECH INDEX
                         NASDAQ STOCK MARKET-U.S. INDEX
             [THE FOLLOWING DATA REPRESENTS PICTORIAL INFORMATION]
                                                                        H&Q
                     Bioject Medical           Nasdaq Stock           Healthcare
        DATES       Technologies, Inc.         Market-U.S.            Excluding
        -----       ------------------         -----------            ---------
        Mar-93          100.00                   100.00                 100.00
        Apr-93          102.94                    95.73                  85.96
        May-93          105.88                   101.45                  92.86
        Jun-93          141.18                   101.92                  90.27
        Jul-93          129.41                   102.04                  85.49
        Aug-93          114.71                   107.31                  84.95
        Sep-93          114.71                   110.51                  85.99
        Oct-93          117.65                   112.99                  93.87
        Nov-93          117.65                   109.62                  92.89
        Dec-93          117.65                   112.68                  96.14
        Jan-94          108.82                   116.10                 105.05
        Feb-94          102.94                   115.01                  96.87
        Mar-94          91.18                    107.94                  88.72
        Apr-94          70.59                    106.54                  86.66
        May-94          64.71                    106.80                  89.55
        Jun-94          54.40                    102.89                  85.92
        Jul-94          85.29                    105.00                  89.23
        Aug-94          88.24                    111.70                 101.61
        Sep-94          92.64                    111.41                 102.67
        Oct-94          72.05                    113.60                 100.00
        Nov-94          82.35                    109.83                  99.70
        Dec-94          70.59                    110.14                 102.16
        Jan-95          52.94                    110.76                 108.67
        Feb-95          54.40                    116.62                 111.18
        Mar-95          47.06                    120.07                 119.33
        Apr-95          47.06                    123.86                 117.81
        May-95          41.18                    127.05                 118.38
        Jun-95          35.29                    137.35                 122.58
        Jul-95          32.35                    147.44                 133.07
        Aug-95          50.00                    150.43                 141.18
        Sep-95          66.92                    153.89                 153.35
        Oct-95          50.00                    153.01                 156.04
        Nov-95          47.06                    156.60                 159.54
        Dec-95          44.12                    155.77                 170.09
        Jan-96          43.39                    156.54                 181.94
        Feb-96          38.24                    162.49                 181.94
        Mar-96          30.87                    163.03                 181.96
        Apr-96          30.87                    176.56                 178.47
        May-96          30.87                    184.67                 178.56
        Jun-96          33.08                    176.34                 171.02
        Jul-96          30.14                    160.64                 156.64
        Aug-96          25.74                    169.64                 166.87
        Sep-96          23.53                    182.61                 187.68
        Oct-96          16.16                    180.60                 177.91
        Nov-96          20.59                    191.76                 183.40
        Dec-96          16.16                    191.59                 188.84
        Jan-97          17.65                    205.21                 199.14
        Feb-97          18.38                    193.86                 195.87
        Mar-97          18.38                    181.21                 179.38
        Apr-97          12.49                    186.87                 183.36
        May-97          21.32                    208.06                 201.51
        Jun-97          16.16                    214.42                 214.75
        Jul-97          17.65                    237.05                 226.57
        Aug-97          16.16                    236.69                 215.22
        Sep-97          23.53                    250.70                 225.08
        Oct-97          33.08                    237.71                 213.96
        Nov-97          36.02                    238.90                 217.95
        Dec-97          30.14                    235.15                 225.05
        Jan-98          28.68                    242.55                 225.49
        Feb-98          30.87                    265.26                 246.34
        Mar-98          35.29                    275.03                 255.90


<PAGE>


                                   PROPOSAL #2
                              APPROVAL OF ARTICLES
                    OF AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

     The Board of Directors  unanimously proposes and recommends the approval of
Articles  of  Amendment  to  the  Company's   Articles  of  Incorporation   (the
"Amendment"),  which would amend two Articles of the Company's  current Articles
of Incorporation. Each amended provision is being voted on separately.

     If the shareholders  approve all the proposed changes, the Amendment would:
(a) fix the size of the  Board of  Directors,  with  changes  in the  number  of
directors  to be made only by the Board of  Directors,  provide for a classified
(i.e.,  staggered)  Board of  Directors,  and allow for the removal of directors
only for cause;  (b) require a vote of 75 percent of the  outstanding  shares to
change or repeal provision (a) listed above.  The Company's  current Articles of
Incorporation  do not include the above  director  provisions and do not include
any  super-majority  voting  requirements.  If  approved  by  shareholders,  the
provisions  listed  above may make certain  acquisitions  of the Company and the
removal of directors  more  difficult.  The  classified  Board of Directors will
provide  for a longer  commitment  to  service  by each  director.  The Board of
Directors has approved  changes to the Bylaws to conform them to the  provisions
contained  in the  Amendment.  Such  amendments  to the  Bylaws  are  subject to
shareholder approval of Proposal 2(a) and 2(b).

     A copy of the Amendment is attached as Exhibit A and the following  summary
is qualified by reference to the attached Amendment.

Vote Required

     Shareholders  will  vote on  each of the  proposed  changes  as a  separate
matter.  If a quorum is  present  at the annual  meeting  of  shareholders,  the
proposal will be adopted if it receives the affirmative  votes of the holders of
a majority of the shares present, or represented,  and entitled to vote upon the
proposal at the meeting. Shareholders may expressly abstain from voting upon the
proposal;  such  shares will have the effect of voting  against  the  Amendment.
Broker non-votes will have no effect on the required vote.

     If Proposal 2(a) is not  approved,  Proposal 2(b) will not be voted upon at
the meeting.  If Proposal  2(a) is approved,  but Proposal 2(b) is not approved,
only the  provisions  in Proposal  2(a) will be retained in the  Amendment.  The
Amendment,  including  each  provision  approved  by  shareholders,  will become
effective  when filed with  Oregon's  Secretary  of State,  which is expected to
occur as soon as practicable after the shareholder meeting.

Proposal  2(a):  Approval  of  Provisions  Setting  Size of Board of  Directors,
Classifying  the Board of Directors and Permitting  Directors to be Removed Only
for Cause

     Article X of the  proposed  Amendment  fixes the number of directors at not
less than six nor more than eleven,  provides for a staggered Board of Directors
and permits the  removal of  directors  only for  "cause."  For  purposes of the
Amendment, "cause" means that the director has: (i) committed an act of fraud or
embezzlement  against  the  Company;  (ii)  been  convicted  of,  or plead  nolo
contendere to, a crime involving moral turpitude; or (iii) failed to perform the
duties of a director,  and such failure  constitutes a breach of the  director's
duty or loyalty to the Company or provides an improper  personal  benefit to the
director.

     The Board will be divided into three classes.  As shown in Proposal #1, the
directors  will be  classified  alphabetically  except  for Mr.  O'Shea  who was
classified with the longest initial term and Mr. Gouveia who was classified with
the shortest initial term so that the nominating  committee would be composed of
one  director   from  each  class.   The  Board  chose  to  classify   directors
alphabetically in recognition of contributions  made by each director.  The term
of office of directors  of Class 1 would  expire at the first annual  meeting of
shareholders  after their  election,  that of Class 2 would expire at the second
annual  meeting  after their  election,  and that of Class 3 would expire at the
third annual meeting after their election.  Oregon law requires that the term of
any  director  elected  to fill a vacancy  must  expire at the next  shareholder
meeting.  The Board of Directors  currently  consists of eight members.  If this
provision is approved,  at subsequent  annual meetings,  only those directors in
the class of  directors  whose terms  expires at the time of the annual  meeting
will be considered for election at that annual meeting of shareholders.


<PAGE>


     The Board of  Directors is  authorized  to increase or decrease the size of
the Board of Directors  (within the range  described  above) by the  affirmative
vote  of  two-thirds  of the  directors.  Under  the  terms  of  the  Amendment,
shareholders  no longer  have the  ability  to  change  the size of the Board of
Directors. Without the unanimous consent of the directors then in office: (i) no
more than two additional directors may be added to the Board of Directors within
any 12-month period; and (ii) no person who is affiliated as an owner, director,
officer,  employee or consultant of a company or business deemed by the Board of
Directors to be competitive with that of the Company is eligible to serve on the
Board of Directors of the Company.

     By classifying  the Board of Directors,  limiting the ability to change the
size of the  Board  to the  Board of  Directors  and  allowing  for  removal  of
directors  only for cause,  it will become more difficult to change the Board of
Directors.  In addition,  including the  super-majority  voting provision in the
Amendment  as described  in Proposal  2(b) will make it more  difficult to amend
this provision.

     THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE  PROVISIONS  SETTING THE
SIZE OF THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS,  CLASSIFYING  THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS,  AND
PERMITTING THE REMOVAL OF DIRECTORS ONLY FOR CAUSE.

Proposal  2(b):  Approval  of a  Super-Majority  Vote for Future  Amendments  to
Certain Provisions in the Amendment

     Article XII of the proposed Amendment requires a super-majority shareholder
vote to amend the  provisions in the Articles of  Incorporation  relating to the
Board of Directors and to amend Article XII itself.

     Such amendments must be approved by: (i) the affirmative vote of 75 percent
of all the  outstanding  shares of the  Company  entitled to vote on the matter,
voting as a single class;  and (ii) if any shares of the Company are entitled to
vote on the  matter as a  separate  voting  group,  the  affirmative  vote of 75
percent  of such  shares  voting  separately.  Article  XII  increases  the vote
otherwise  required for the Company's  shareholders to approve such  amendments,
and  correspondingly  makes it more  difficult  for such changes to be effected,
even if desired by a majority of the Company's shareholders.

     If Proposal 2(a) is not approved, Proposal 2(b) will not be considered.

     THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A  VOTE  FOR  THE  APPROVAL  OF  THE
SUPER-MAJORITY  VOTE FOR FUTURE AMENDMENTS OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS IN THE ARTICLES
OF INCORPORATION.


                                  PROPOSAL #3
                     AMENDMENT TO 1992 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

     The 1992 Stock  Incentive  Plan (the "Plan") was  initially  adopted by the
Board on July 30, 1992 and was  approved by the  shareholders  of the Company at
the annual meeting held on November 20, 1992. The Plan was later amended in 1995
to increase the number of shares  available under the Plan and in 1996 to extend
the time  awards may be made under the Plan.  The Plan  authorized  the grant of
options to  purchase  up to  3,000,000  shares of the  Company's  common  stock.

     Management  believes that the ability to grant incentive options is crucial
to  its  continuing   ability  to  attract  and  retain   qualified   employees.
Historically,  the  Company has  preserved  its cash  reserves  by holding  base
salaries  to at, or below  market and  relying  on stock  option  incentives  to
recruit and retain qualified directors, officers and employees. On September 10,
1997, the Board approved,  subject to shareholder  approval,  an increase in the
number of shares of Common Stock  reserved  for issuance  pursuant to Awards (as
defined below) by 650,000 shares to 3,650,000 shares,  subject to adjustment for
changes in capitalization.  On July 28, 1998, after reviewing the proposed stock
option  issuances to employees in fiscal 1999,  the Board further  increased the
number of shares  reserved  for  issuance  under the Plan to  4,500,000  shares,
subject to adjustment for changes in  capitalization.  Shares  outstanding under
the Plan which  expire or are  otherwise  terminated  or not issued  pursuant to
Awards will become available for grants of new Awards under the Plan. As of June
30,  1998,  only 364 options  were  available to be granted to current or future
employees.  A stock option grant under the Plan to Jim O'Shea for 165,000 shares
with an exercise price of $0.6875 per share is subject to  shareholder  approval
of this proposal.  A summary  description of certain terms and provisions of the
amended Plan follows.


<PAGE>


AWARDS  AND  ELIGIBILITY.  The  Plan  provides  for  stock-based  awards  to (i)
employees  and  officers  of the  Company and its  subsidiaries,  (ii)  selected
non-employee agents,  consultants,  advisors and independent  contractors of the
Company or any parent or subsidiary,  and (iii) outside (non-employee) directors
of the  Company.  Awards  which  may be  granted  under the Plan  include  stock
options,  stock bonuses, stock appreciation rights, and specified sales of stock
(collectively,  "Awards").  The Stock Option Committee of the Board of Directors
(the  "Committee")  administers  the Plan and  determines  the key employees and
non-employee  advisors of the Company  and its  subsidiaries  who are to receive
Awards  under the Plan and the types,  amounts,  and terms of such  Awards.  The
Committee  currently  consists  of Ms.  Fey and Mr.  Plestina.  No Awards may be
granted under the Plan on or after July 29, 2002.

     At May 31, 1998,  a total of 31 persons were  eligible for Awards under the
Plan,  including each of the Company's executive  officers,  27 other employees,
and each of the Company's seven outside (non-employee)  directors. At that date,
these persons  represented the pool of individuals  considered to be eligible to
participate   in  the   Plan.   Outside   directors   may   receive   only   the
non-discretionary  options  described  under  "Election of  Directors  -Board of
Directors Composition, Compensation and Committees."

PURPOSES. The purpose of the Plan is to promote and advance the interests of the
Company and its  shareholders  by enabling the Company to attract,  retain,  and
reward key employees,  non-employee  advisors,  and directors.  The Plan is also
intended to  strengthen  the  commonality  of  interests  between the  Company's
shareholders  and  such  employees,  non-employee  advisors,  and  directors  by
offering  equity-based  incentive  Awards to promote a  proprietary  interest in
pursuing the  long-term  growth,  profitability,  and  financial  success of the
Company.

OPTIONS.  Options  granted under the Plan may be either  incentive stock options
meeting  the  requirements  of Section  422 of the  Internal  Revenue  Code (the
"Code") or nonqualified  options.  The Committee determines the number of shares
of Common Stock subject to options  granted,  the option price,  the term of the
option,  the time or times at which the option may be  exercised  and whether an
option is an incentive or  nonqualified  stock option.  Incentive stock options,
however,  may be exercisable not more than ten years from the date of grant. The
Plan  does not  limit the  maximum  term or  amount  of award  for  nonqualified
options.  The  exercise  price  per  share for  options  granted  under the Plan
generally  must be at least 100  percent  (for  incentive  stock  options) or 75
percent (for nonqualified options) of the fair market value of a share of Common
Stock on the date the option is granted.  The purchase  price for options may be
paid in cash or,  at the  discretion  of the  Committee,  in whole or in part in
shares of Common  Stock.  In the event  that the  employment  or  service of the
optionee with the Company or a parent or subsidiary  corporation  of the Company
terminates  for any reason other than for death or physical  disability,  vested
options may be exercised at any time prior to the earlier of the expiration date
of the option or the  expiration of 90 days after the date of such  termination.
In the  event of  termination  of  employment  due to death or  disability,  the
options may be exercised at any time prior to the earlier of the expiration date
of the option or the expiration of one year after the date of such termination.

STOCK  BONUSES.  The Committee may award Shares under the Plan as stock bonuses.
Shares awarded as a stock bonus shall be subject to such terms, conditions,  and
restrictions  as shall be  determined  by the  Committee,  all of which shall be
evidenced in a writing  signed by the  recipient  prior to  receiving  the bonus
Shares.

STOCK  SALES.   The   Committee  may  issue  Shares  under  the  Plan  for  such
consideration  (including  promissory  notes and  services) as determined by the
Committee,  provided  that in no event shall the  consideration  be less than 75
percent of the fair market value of the Shares at the time of  issuance.  Shares
so issued shall be subject to the terms,  conditions and restrictions determined
by  the  Committee.   The  restrictions  may  include  restrictions   concerning
transferability,  repurchase by the Company and forfeiture of the Shares issued,
together with such other restrictions as may be determined by the Committee.


<PAGE>


STOCK APPRECIATION  RIGHTS.  The Committee may grant stock  appreciation  rights
("SARs")  under the Plan. A recipient of SARs will  receive,  upon  exercise,  a
payment  (in cash or in shares of Common  Stock)  based on the  increase  in the
price of a share  of  Common  Stock  between  the date of grant  and the date of
exercise. SARs may be granted in connection with options or other Awards granted
under the Plan or may be granted as independent  Awards.  If a SAR is granted in
connection with an option,  the SAR shall be exercisable  only to the extent and
on the same conditions that the related option could be exercised. Upon exercise
of a SAR, any option or portion thereof to which the SAR relates terminates.  If
a SAR is granted in connection with an option,  upon exercise of the option, the
SAR or portion thereof to which the option relates terminates.

TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THE COMPANY AND ITS SUBSIDIARIES. To the extent participants
qualify for capital gains  treatment with respect to the sale of shares acquired
pursuant  to  exercise  of  an  incentive  stock  option,  the  Company  or  its
subsidiaries  will not be  entitled to any tax  deductions  in  connection  with
incentive stock options. In all other cases, the Company or its subsidiaries may
be entitled to receive a federal  income tax  deduction  at the same time and in
the same  amount as the  amount  which is taxable to  participants  as  ordinary
income  with  respect to Awards;  provided  such  amount when added to all other
compensation paid to a participant is reasonable and otherwise  deductible under
the  Code  and the  Company  complies  with  the tax  withholding  or  reporting
obligations, if any.

TAX CONSEQUENCES TO RECIPIENT.  Incentive Stock Options. Incentive stock options
under the Plan are  intended  to meet the  requirements  of  Section  422 of the
Internal  Revenue Code. No income results to a participant  upon the grant of an
incentive  stock  option  or upon the  issuance  of  shares  when the  option is
exercised.  The  difference  between the fair market  value of the stock at such
time and the  exercise  price,  however,  is included in income for  purposes of
calculating a participant's  alternative minimum tax. The amount realized on the
sale or taxable  exchange of such shares in excess of the exercise price will be
considered a capital  gain,  except that if such  disposition  occurs within one
year after  exercise of the option or two years  after grant of the option,  the
participant  will recognize  taxable  compensation  at ordinary income tax rates
measured  by the  lesser of (i) the fair  market  value on the date of  exercise
minus the  exercise  price or (ii) the amount  realized on the sale of the share
minus the exercise price.

Nonqualified  Options.  No  taxable  income  is  recognized  upon the grant of a
nonqualified option. In connection with the exercise of a nonqualified option, a
participant  will generally  realize  ordinary income measured by the difference
between the exercise  price and the fair market value of the shares  acquired on
the date of  exercise.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  an optionee  would not
recognize  income at the time such option is exercised if the sale of the option
shares would subject him or her to possible liability under Section 16(b) of the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934. In this case, the optionee generally would not
recognize  ordinary  income  until six  months  following  the date on which the
Option was granted.  The amount of ordinary income recognized will be the excess
of the fair market  value of the option  shares at that time over the price paid
for such shares.  An optionee may avoid this result by filing an election  under
Section  83(b) of the Code within  thirty days after  exercise of an Option.  If
such an election is filed,  the  optionee  will be taxed at the same time and in
the same  manner  as would a  holder  of an  Option  who is not  subject  to the
provisions of Section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

     Bonus  Shares and Stock  Sales.  Bonus  shares  awarded  under the Plan and
shares sold outright under the Plan,  which are transferable or not subject to a
substantial  risk of  forfeiture,  are taxable as ordinary  income  equal to the
excess of the fair market  value of the shares  received  (determined  as of the
date of  settlement)  over  the  amount,  if any,  paid  for the  shares  by the
participant.  In the case of shares that are not transferable and are subject to
a substantial  risk of forfeiture on the date of issuance,  the participant will
generally recognize ordinary income equal to the excess of the fair market value
of shares received  (determined as of the date on which the shares either become
transferable  or are not subject to a substantial  risk of forfeiture)  over the
amount,  if any, paid for the shares.  In this case, a participant  may elect to
recognize  income when the shares are received,  rather than upon the expiration
of the  transfer  restriction  or risk of  forfeiture,  and, in such event,  the
amount of ordinary  income will be determined as of the date of issuance  rather
than upon expiration of the applicable restriction.

     Stock  Appreciation  Rights.  The grant of a SAR to a participant  will not
cause the recognition of income by the participant.  Upon exercise of a SAR, the
participant  will realize ordinary income equal to the amount of cash payable to
the  participant  plus the fair  market  value of any shares of Common  Stock or
other property delivered to the participant.


CHANGES IN CAPITAL  STRUCTURE.  If the outstanding shares of Common Stock of the
Company are  hereafter  increased  or decreased or are changed into or exchanged
for a different  number or kind of shares or other  securities of the Company or
of  another  corporation  by reason of any  recapitalization,  reclassification,
stock split,  combination of shares or dividend payable in shares, the Committee
shall  make  appropriate  adjustments  (i) in the  number  and  kind  of  shares
available  for awards under the Plan;  and (ii) in the number and kind of shares
as to which  outstanding  options  and stock  appreciation  rights,  or portions
thereof  then  unexercised,  shall be  exercisable,  so that  the  participant's
proportionate  interest  before  and  after  the  occurrence  of  the  event  is
maintained.


<PAGE>


     The Board recommends a vote FOR the proposed  Amendment to the Plan. In the
event the Amendment is not approved by the shareholders, the Plan will remain in
effect as to the  3,000,000  shares of Common Stock  previously  authorized  for
issuance.


OTHER MATTERS TO BE ACTED UPON

     It is not known  whether  any other  matters  will come  before the Meeting
other  than as set out above  and in the  Notice of  Meeting.  However,  if such
should occur, the person named in the accompanying form of proxy intends to vote
in accordance  with his best judgment  exercising  discretionary  authority with
respect to  amendments  or  variations  on matters  identified  in the Notice of
Meeting  and other  matters  which may  properly  come  before the Meeting or an
adjournment thereof.


SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL AND NOMINATION PROCEDURES FOR THE MEETING

     Article  II of  the  Company's  Bylaws  provides  that  advance  notice  of
nominations  for the election of directors or proposals  for an amendment to the
Company's  Bylaws must be received by the Company  thirty (30) days prior to the
date of the shareholder  meeting at which the shareholder wishes to present such
nomination  or  proposal  or,  if less  than 40 days'  notice of the date of the
meeting  is given to  shareholders,  by the  close of  business  on the 10th day
following the date on which notice of the meeting was mailed to shareholders.

     Each notice of a nomination or proposal of a Bylaw  amendment must contain,
among other things,  (i) the name and address of the  shareholder who intends to
make the nomination or proposal; (ii) a representation that the shareholder is a
holder of record of common stock of the Company entitled to vote at such meeting
and  intends  to  appear in person or by proxy at the  meeting  to  present  the
nomination or proposal;  (iii) certain biographical  information concerning each
person to be  nominated  for  election  as a  director,  the number of shares of
common stock beneficially owned by such nominee,  and the consent of such person
to serve as a director if so elected;  (iv) a description of all arrangements or
understandings  between the shareholder and each nominee and any other person or
persons  (naming  such person or persons)  pursuant to which the  nomination  or
nominations  are to be  made  by the  shareholder;  (v)  the  provisions  of any
proposed Bylaw  amendment and any financial  interest of the  shareholder in the
proposal;  and (vi) such other information regarding each nominee or proposal as
would be  required to be included  in a proxy  statement  filed  pursuant to the
proxy rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission.


ANNUAL REPORT

     The Company's Annual Report to Shareholders for the fiscal year ended March
31, 1998 and the Company's  Form 10-K/A for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1998
(the  "10-K/A"),  accompanies  this proxy  statement.  On written  request,  the
Company  will  provide,  without  charge,  a copy of its  10-K/A  filed with the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission  (including a list briefly  describing  the
exhibits  thereto),  to any record holder or  beneficial  owner of the Company's
Common  Stock on July 24, 1998,  the record date for the 1998 Annual  Meeting of
Shareholders,  or to any person who subsequently becomes such a record holder or
beneficial owner.  Requests should be directed to the attention of the Secretary
of the  Company at the  address of the Company set forth in the Notice of Annual
Meeting of Shareholders immediately preceding this proxy statement.


INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

     Arthur Andersen LLP, independent public accountants, examined the financial
statements  of the  Company for fiscal  1998.  No change in  independent  public
accountants is contemplated for fiscal 1999. The Company expects representatives
of Arthur  Andersen LLP to be present at the 1998 annual meeting of shareholders
and to be available to respond to appropriate  questions from shareholders.  The
accountants will have the opportunity to make a statement at the meeting if they
desire to do so.


<PAGE>


PROPOSALS OF SHAREHOLDERS FOR THE 1999 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

     Proposals  of  shareholders  to be  presented  at the Meeting to be held in
September 1999 must be received at the Company's  executive  offices by April 4,
1999, in order to be included in the Company's proxy statement and form of proxy
concerning that meeting.

     DATED at Portland, Oregon, this 6th day of August, 1998.

               BY ORDER OF THE BOARD

               /S/ MICHAEL A. TEMPLE
               -----------------------
               Michael A. Temple
               Vice President, Chief Financial
               Officer and Secretary




                                   Exhibit A

                                    Form of

                              ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT

                                       OF

                        BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.


     Pursuant to ORS 60.431,  the undersigned  corporation  adopts the following
Articles of Amendment to its Articles of Incorporation:

     FIRST:  The name of the  corporation is Bioject Medical  Technologies  Inc.
(the "Corporation").

     SECOND: The Articles of Incorporation are hereby amended as follows:

     Article X is hereby deleted in its entirety and replaced with a new Article
X to read as follows:


                                    ARTICLE X

                                    Directors

Section 1. Number of Directors.

     The Board of  Directors  shall  consist  of not less than six nor more than
eleven,  the exact  number to be set herein.  Until  increased  or  decreased as
provided  herein,  the Board of Directors  shall consist of eight  members.  The
Board of Directors is  authorized  to increase or decrease the size of the Board
of Directors  (within the range specified  above) at any time by the affirmative
vote of  two-thirds  of the  directors  then in office.  Without  the  unanimous
consent of the directors then in office,  no more than two additional  directors
shall be added to the Board of  Directors in any  12-month  period.  Without the
unanimous  approval of the directors then in office, no person who is affiliated
as an owner, director,  officer, employee or consultant of a company or business
deemed by the Board of Directors to be competitive  with that of the Corporation
shall be eligible to serve on the Board of Directors of the Corporation.

Section 2. Classified Board.

     The Board shall be divided into three classes: Class I Directors,  Class II
Directors, and Class III Directors. Each such class of directors shall be nearly
equal in number of directors as possible.  Each director  shall serve for a term
ending at the third annual shareholders' meeting following the annual meeting at
which such director was elected;  provided,  however,  that the directors  first
elected as Class I Directors shall serve for a term ending at the annual meeting
to be held in the year following the first election of directors by classes, the
directors  first elected as Class II Directors  shall serve for a term ending at
the annual meeting to be held in the second year following the first election of
directors  by classes and the  directors  first  elected as Class III  directors
shall serve for a term ending at the annual meeting to be held in the third year
following  the first  election  of  directors  by classes.  Notwithstanding  the
foregoing,  each director shall serve until his or her successor shall have been
elected and qualified or until his or her earlier death, resignation or removal.

     At each annual election,  the directors chosen to succeed those whose terms
then expire shall be identified as being of the same class as the directors they
succeed,  unless, by reason of any intervening  changes in the authorized number
of directors,  the Board shall  designate one or more  directorships  whose term
then expire as  directorships  of another  class in order more nearly to achieve
equality in the number of directors  among the  classes.  When the Board fills a
vacancy  resulting  from the death,  resignation  or removal of a director,  the
director  chosen to fill that vacancy shall be of the same class as the director
he or she succeeds,  unless, by reason of any previous changes in the authorized
number of  directors,  the Board shall  designate the vacant  directorship  as a
directorship  of another  class in order more nearly to achieve  equality in the
number of directors among the classes.  The terms of any director elected by the
Board to fill a vacancy  will expire at the next  shareholders  meeting at which
directors are elected, despite the class such director has been elected to fill.


<PAGE>


     Notwithstanding the rule that the three classes shall be as nearly equal in
number of  directors as possible,  upon any change in the  authorized  number of
directors,  each  director then  continuing  to serve as such will  nevertheless
continue  as a director  of the class of which he or she is a member,  until the
expiration of his or her current term or his or her earlier  death,  resignation
or removal.

     Newly created  directorships  resulting  from any increase in the number of
directors  and any  vacancies  on the Board of Directors  resulting  from death,
resignation, removal or other cause shall be filled by the affirmative vote of a
majority  of the  remaining  directors  then in office,  even though less than a
quorum  of the Board of  Directors.  No  decrease  in the  number  of  directors
constituting  the Board of  Directors  shall  shorten the term of any  incumbent
director.

Section 3. Initial Directors as Classified.

     The directors of the Corporation  first elected to classes are eight (8) in
number and their names and class are:

NAME                  Class
- ------------------    -----
James C. O'Shea         3
John Ruedy, M.D.        3
William A. Gouveia      1
Grace Keeney Fey        2
Eric T. Herfindal       2
Richard J. Plestina     2
David H. de Weese       1
Michael T. Sember       3
- -------------            

Section 4. Removal of Directors

     Directors  may be removed only for cause.  For purposes of this  Amendment,
"cause"  shall mean that the  director  has:  (i)  committed  an act of fraud or
embezzlement  against the  Corporation;  (ii) been  convicted  of, or plead nolo
contendere to a crime  involving  moral  turpitude;  (iii) failed to perform the
director's  duties as a director  and such failure  constitutes  a breach of the
director's duty of loyalty to the  Corporation or provides an improper  personal
benefit to the director.


<PAGE>


     A new Article XII is hereby added and reads as follows:

                                   ARTICLE XII

                     SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL OF CERTAIN EVENTS

     Notwithstanding any provision of Articles of Incorporation,  as amended, or
Bylaws of the Corporation,  as amended,  and  notwithstanding the fact that some
lesser  percentage  may be allowed by law,  any  amendment,  change or repeal of
Articles X or XII, or any other amendment of the Articles of  Incorporation,  as
amended, which would have the effect of modifying or permitting circumvention of
the  provisions of Articles X or XII,  shall  require the following  shareholder
votes: (i) the affirmative votes of 75 percent of all outstanding  shares of the
Corporation  entitled to vote on the matter,  voting together as a single class;
and (ii) if any shares of the  Corporation are entitled to vote on the matter as
a separate  group,  the  affirmative  vote of 75 percent of such shares,  voting
separately.


     THIRD: The amendment does not provide for an exchange, reclassification, or
cancellation of issued shares.

     FOURTH:  The  foregoing  amendment was adopted by the Board of Directors of
the  Corporation on July 16, 1998 and by the  shareholders of the Corporation on
September 10, 1998 in accordance with the provisions of ORS 60.437.

     FIFTH: The number of shares of the corporation entitled to vote at the time
of such adoption was _______ shares of common stock,  692,694 shares of Series A
Convertible Preferred Stock and 134,333 shares of Series B Convertible Preferred
Stock, of which only the common stock was entitled to vote thereon.

     SIXTH:  The number of shares voting for and against such  amendment were as
follows:

     Class          No. of Shares Voted For        No. of Shares Voted Against

     Common


                                             Bioject Medical Technologies Inc.


Date: ______, 1998                           By:___________________________
                                                  James C. O'Shea
                                                  President





                        BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.
                       RESTATED 1992 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

Restated Effective April 15, 1998

1. Purpose.  The purpose of this Restated 1992 Stock Incentive Plan (the "Plan")
is to enable  Bioject  Medical  Technologies  Inc., an Oregon  corporation  (the
"Company"),  to attract  and  retain the  services  of (a)  selected  employees,
officers and directors of the Company or of any parent or subsidiary corporation
of the Company, and (b) selected nonemployee agents,  consultants,  advisers and
independent contractors of the Company or any parent or subsidiary.

2. Subject to the Plan. Subject to adjustment as provided below and in paragraph
11, up to 3,650,000  shares of Common Stock of the Company (the "Shares")  shall
be offered  and issued  under the Plan.  No more than  3,000,000  of such Shares
offered and issued  under the Plan may be offered and issued  pursuant to grants
under the Plan of  Incentive  Stock  Options as  defined  in Section  422 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code").  If an option or a stock
appreciation  right granted under the Plan expires,  terminates or is cancelled,
the unissued  Shares  subject to such option or stock  appreciation  right shall
again be  available  under the Plan.  If Shares sold or awarded as a bonus under
the Plan are forfeited to the Company or repurchased by the Company,  the number
of Shares forfeited or repurchased shall again be available under the Plan.

3. Effective Date and Duration of Plan.

     (a) Effective  Date.  The Plan shall become  effective  when adopted by the
Board of Directors  of the Company (the  "Board").  However,  no option  granted
under  the Plan  shall  become  exercisable  until the Plan is  approved  by the
affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the Common Stock of the Company
represented at a shareholder meeting at which a quorum is present,  and any such
awards under the Plan prior to such approval shall be conditioned on and subject
to such approval.  Subject to this  limitation,  options and stock  appreciation
rights  may be  granted  and  Shares may be awarded as bonuses or sold under the
Plan at any time after the effective date and before termination of the Plan.

     (b) Duration.  No options or stock appreciation rights may be granted under
the Plan, no stock  bonuses may be awarded under the Plan,  and no Shares may be
sold pursuant to paragraph 8 of the Plan on or after July 29, 2002. However, the
Plan shall continue in effect until all Shares  available for issuance under the
Plan have been issued and all restrictions on such Shares have lapsed. The Board
may suspend or terminate  the Plan at any time,  except with respect to options,
stock  appreciation  rights and Shares subject to restrictions  then outstanding
under the Plan.  Termination  shall not affect any  outstanding  options,  stock
appreciation  rights,  any  right of the  Company  to  repurchase  Shares or the
forfeitability of Shares issued under the Plan.

4. Administration.

     (a) The Plan shall be  administered  by a committee  appointed by the Board
consisting of not less than two directors (the "Committee"). The Committee shall
determine and designate  from time to time the  individuals to whom awards shall
be made,  the amount of the awards,  and the other terms and  conditions  of the
awards;  provided,  however, that only the Board may amend or terminate the Plan
as provided in  paragraphs 3 and 14. At any time when the officers and directors
of the Company are subject to Section  16(b) of the  Securities  Exchange Act of
1934 (the "Exchange Act"), the Committee shall consist solely of  "non-employee"
directors as such term is defined  from time to time in SEC Rule  16b-3(b)(3)(i)
or successor  rule. No member of the Committee  shall be eligible to receive any
award under the Plan while such  person  serves as a  Committee  member,  except
pursuant to paragraph 10.


<PAGE>


     (b) Subject to the  provisions of the Plan,  the Committee may from time to
time adopt and amend rules and  regulations  relating to  administration  of the
Plan,  advance  the lapse of any  waiting  period,  accelerate  any  vesting  or
exercise  date,  waive or modify any  restriction  applicable to Shares  (except
those  restrictions  imposed  by law) and make all other  determinations  in the
judgment of the Committee  necessary or desirable for the  administration of the
Plan.  The  interpretation  and  construction  of the provisions of the Plan and
related agreements by the Committee shall be final and conclusive. The Committee
may correct any defect or supply any omission or reconcile any  inconsistency in
the Plan or in any  related  agreement  in the manner and to the extent it shall
deem expedient to carry the Plan into effect, and it shall be the sole and final
judge of such expediency.

5. Types of Awards; Eligibility.  The Committee may, from time to time, take the
following actions under the Plan: (i) grant Incentive Stock Options, as provided
in  paragraph  6(b);  (ii) grant  options  other than  Incentive  Stock  Options
("Nonstatutory  Stock Options") as provided in paragraph 6(c); (iii) award stock
bonuses as provided in paragraph 7; (iv) sell Shares as provided in paragraph 8;
and (v) grant stock  appreciation  rights as provided in  paragraph  9. Any such
awards  may be made to  employees  (including  employees  who  are  officers  or
directors)  of the  Company or of any parent or  subsidiary  corporation  of the
Company,  and to other  individuals  described in paragraph 1 who the  Committee
believes have made or will make an important  contribution to the Company or its
parent or subsidiaries; provided, however, that only employees of the Company or
a parent or  subsidiary  shall be eligible to receive  Incentive  Stock  Options
under the Plan,  and,  provided  further,  that  directors who are not employees
shall receive  awards only pursuant to paragraph 10. The Committee  shall select
the  individuals to whom awards shall be made and shall specify the action taken
with respect to each  individual to whom an award is made under the Plan. At the
discretion of the Committee, an individual may be given an election to surrender
an award in exchange for the grant of a new award.

6. Option Grants

     (a) Grant. Each option granted under the Plan shall be evidenced by a stock
option agreement in such form as the Committee shall prescribe from time to time
in accordance  with the Plan.  With respect to each option grant,  the Committee
shall  determine the number of Shares  subject to the option,  the option price,
the  period  of the  option,  and the time or times at which the  option  may be
exercised and whether the option is an Incentive  Stock Option or a Nonstatutory
Stock Option.

     (b) Incentive Stock Options. Incentive Stock Options granted under the Plan
shall be subject to the following terms and conditions:

          (i) No employee may be granted  Incentive Stock Options under the Plan
     such that the  aggregate  fair market value,  on the date of grant,  of the
     Shares with respect to which  Incentive  Stock Options are  exercisable for
     the first time by that employee during any calendar year under the Plan and
     under any other  incentive stock option plan (within the meaning of Section
     422 of the Code) of the Company or of any parent or subsidiary  corporation
     of the Company exceeds $100,000.

          (ii) An  Incentive  Stock  Option may be granted  under the Plan to an
     employee possessing more than 10 percent of the total combined voting power
     of all  classes  of stock of the  Company  or of any  parent or  subsidiary
     corporation of the Company only if the option price is at least 110 percent
     of the fair market value, as described in paragraph 6(b)(iv), of the Shares
     subject  to the  option on the date it is  granted,  and the  option by its
     terms is not exercisable more than five years from the date of grant.

          (iii) Subject to paragraphs 6(b)(ii) and 6(d), Incentive Stock Options
     granted under the Plan shall continue in effect for the period fixed by the
     Committee,  except that no Incentive Stock Option shall be exercisable more
     than 10 years from the date of grant.


<PAGE>


          (iv) The option price per Share shall be  determined  by the Committee
     at the time of grant. Subject to paragraph 6(b)(ii), the option price shall
     not be less than 100 percent of the fair market value of the Shares covered
     by the Incentive  Stock Option at the date the option is granted.  The fair
     market value shall be deemed to be the average of the closing bid and asked
     prices for the Common  Stock of the  Company as  reported  on the  National
     Association of Securities  Dealers,  Inc. Automated Quotation System on the
     day preceding  the day the option is granted,  or if there has been no sale
     on that date, on the last preceding date on which a sale occurred,  or such
     other  reported  value  of the  Common  Stock  of the  Company  as shall be
     specified by the Committee.

          (v) The  Committee may at any time without the consent of the optionee
     convert an Incentive Stock Option into a Nonstatutory Stock Option.

     (c) Nonstatutory Stock Options. Nonstatutory Stock Options shall be subject
to the following additional terms and conditions:

          (i)  The  option  price  for  Nonstatutory   Stock  Options  shall  be
     determined by the Committee at the time of grant.  The option price may not
     be less than 75 percent of the fair market  value of the Shares  covered by
     the  Nonstatutory  Stock Option on the date of grant. The fair market value
     of the Shares  covered by a  Nonstatutory  Stock Option shall be determined
     pursuant to paragraph 6(b)(iv).

          (ii) Nonstatutory  Stock Options granted under the Plan shall continue
     in effect for the period fixed by the Committee.

     (d) Exercise of Options.  Except as provided in paragraphs  6(e) and (f) or
as  determined  by the  Committee,  no  option  granted  under  the  Plan may be
exercised  unless at the time of such exercise the optionee is employed by or in
the  service  of the  Company  or any parent or  subsidiary  corporation  of the
Company  and  shall  have  been  so  employed  or  have  provided  such  service
continuously  since the date such  option  was  granted.  Absence on leave or on
account of illness or disability under rules  established by the Committee shall
not, however,  be deemed an interruption of employment for purposes of the Plan.
Unless  otherwise  determined  by the  Committee,  vesting of options  shall not
continue  during an absence  on leave  (including  an  extended  illness)  or on
account of disability. Except as provided in paragraphs 6(f), 11 and 12, options
granted  under  the Plan may vest and be  exercised  from  time to time over the
period  stated in each  option  in such  amounts  and at such  times as shall be
prescribed  by the  Committee,  provided that options shall not be exercised for
fractional shares. Unless otherwise determined by the Committee, if the optionee
does not  exercise an option in any one year with  respect to the full number of
Shares to which the  optionee is entitled in that year,  the  optionee's  rights
shall be cumulative and the optionee may purchase those Shares in any subsequent
year during the term of the option.

     (e)  Restrictions  on Transfer.  Each option  granted under the Plan by its
terms  shall  be  nonassignable  and  nontransferable  by the  optionee,  either
voluntarily or by operation of law, except by will or by the laws of descent and
distribution  of the state or country of the optionee's  domicile at the time of
death,  and each option by its terms shall be exercisable  during the optionee's
lifetime only by the optionee;  provided, however, that, with the consent of the
Committee,  which consent may be withheld in its sole  discretion or conditioned
on such  requirements  as the Committee  shall deem  appropriate,  an officer or
director of the Company who is subject to Section  16(b) of the Exchange Act may
assign or transfer  without  consideration  all or any portion of a Nonstatutory
Stock Option  granted under the Plan to such  officer's or directors  spouse (or
former spouse) pursuant to a qualified  domestic  relations order. The holder of
any  Nonstatutory  Stock  Option  that has  been  transferred  pursuant  to this
paragraph 6(e) may be subject to treatment  under tax and  securities  laws with
respect to the transferred  option which differs from the treatment to which the
applicable  officer or director  was subject with respect to the option prior to
the transfer.

     (f) Termination of Employment or Service.

          (i) In the event the  employment  or  service of the  optionee  by the
     Company or a parent or subsidiary corporation of the Company terminates for
     any reason other than because of death or physical  disability,  the option
     may be exercised at any time prior to the expiration  date of the option or
     the  expiration  of three  months (one year in the case of officers and two
     years  in the  case of  directors)  after  the  date  of such  termination,
     whichever is the shorter period, but only if and to the extent the optionee
     was entitled to exercise the option at the date of such termination.


<PAGE>


          (ii) In the event of the  termination of the optionee's  employment or
     service  with the  Company  or a parent or  subsidiary  corporation  of the
     Company  because  the  optionee  becomes  disabled  (within  the meaning of
     Section  22(e)(3)  of the Code),  the option may be  exercised  at any time
     prior to the  expiration  date of the option or the  expiration of one year
     after the date of such  termination,  whichever is the shorter period,  but
     only if and to the extent the  optionee was entitled to exercise the option
     at the date of such termination.

          (iii) In the event of the death of an  optionee  while  employed by or
     providing  service to the Company or a parent or subsidiary  corporation of
     the  Company,  the  option  may be  exercised  at  any  time  prior  to the
     expiration  date of the option or the expiration of one year after the date
     of such  death,  whichever  is the shorter  period,  but only if and to the
     extent the  optionee  was  entitled to  exercise  the option on the date of
     death,  and only by the person or persons  to whom such  optionee's  rights
     under  the  option  shall  pass by the  optionee's  will or by the  laws of
     descent and distribution of the state or country of domicile at the time of
     death.

          (iv) The  Committee,  at the time or grant or at any time  thereafter,
     may extend the  three-month and one-year  expiration  periods any length of
     time not later than the  original  expiration  date of the option,  and may
     increase  the  portion of an option  that is  exercisable,  subject to such
     terms and conditions as the Committee may determine.

          (v) To the extent that the option of any  deceased  optionee or of any
     optionee whose employment or service terminates is not exercised within the
     applicable  period,  all further rights to purchase Shares pursuant to such
     option shall cease and terminate.

     (g) Purchase of Shares. Unless the Committee determines  otherwise,  Shares
may be acquired pursuant to an option only upon receipt by the Company of notice
in writing from the optionee of the optionee's intention to exercise, specifying
the number of Shares as to which the optionee desires to exercise the option and
the date on which the  optionee  desires to complete  the  transaction,  and, if
required  to  comply  with the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as  amended,  or state
securities  laws,  the  notice  shall  include a  representation  that it is the
optionee's present intention to acquire the Shares for investment and not with a
view to distribution.  The  certificates  representing the Shares shall bear any
legends required by the Committee. Unless the Committee determines otherwise, on
or before the date specified for  completion of the purchase of Shares  pursuant
to an option, the optionee must have paid the Company the full purchase price of
such Shares in cash (including, with the consent of the Committee, cash that may
be the  proceeds  of a loan  from the  Company),  or,  with the  consent  of the
Committee,  in whole or in part,  in Shares  valued  at fair  market  value,  as
determined  pursuant to  paragraph  6(b)(iv).  Unless the  Committee  determines
otherwise,  all payments made to the Company in connection  with the exercise of
an option must be made by a certified or cashier's bank check or by the transfer
of immediately  available  federal  funds.  No Shares shall be issued until full
payment  therefor has been made. With the consent of the Committee,  an optionee
may request the Company to apply  automatically  the Shares to be received  upon
the exercise of a portion of a stock option (even though stock certificates have
not yet been issued) to satisfy the purchase  price for  additional  portions of
the option.  Each  optionee who has exercised an option shall  immediately  upon
notification  of the amount  due,  if any,  pay to the  Company in cash  amounts
necessary to satisfy any  applicable  federal,  state and local tax  withholding
requirements. If additional withholding is or becomes required beyond any amount
deposited  before  delivery of the  certificates,  the  optionee  shall pay such
amount  to the  Company  on  demand.  If the  optionee  fails to pay the  amount
demanded, the Company or any parent or subsidiary corporation of the Company may
withhold that amount from other  amounts  payable to the optionee by the Company
or the parent or subsidiary corporation, including salary, subject to applicable
law. With the consent of the  Committee,  an optionee may deliver  Shares to the
Company to satisfy the withholding obligation.


<PAGE>


7.  Stock  Bonuses.  The  Committee  may  award  Shares  under the Plan as stock
bonuses.  Shares  awarded  as a stock  bonus  shall be  subject  to such  terms,
conditions,  and  restrictions  as shall be determined by the Committee,  all of
which shall be evidenced in a writing signed by the recipient prior to receiving
the bonus  Shares.  The  Committee  may not  require  the  recipient  to pay any
monetary  consideration  other than amounts necessary to satisfy tax withholding
requirements.  The  certificates  representing the Shares awarded shall bear any
legends  required by the  Committee.  The Company may require any recipient of a
stock  bonus to pay to the  Company in cash upon  demand  amounts  necessary  to
satisfy any applicable federal, state or local tax withholding requirements.  If
the  recipient  fails to pay the amount  demanded,  the Company or any parent or
subsidiary  corporation  of the  Company  may  withhold  that  amount from other
amounts  payable to the  recipient  by the  Company or the parent or  subsidiary
corporation,  including  salary,  subject to applicable law. With the consent of
the  Committee,  a recipient  may  deliver  Shares to the Company to satisfy the
withholding obligation.

8.  Stock  Sales.  The  Committee  may  issue  Shares  under  the  Plan for such
consideration  (including  promissory  notes and  services) as determined by the
Committee,  provided  that in no event shall the  consideration  be less than 75
percent  of the  fair  market  value  of the  Shares  at the  time of  issuance,
determined pursuant to paragraph 6(b)(iv).  Shares issued under this paragraph 8
shall be subject to the terms,  conditions  and  restrictions  determined by the
Committee. The restrictions may include restrictions concerning transferability,
repurchase  by the Company and  forfeiture of the Shares  issued,  together with
such other restrictions as may be determined by the Committee.  The certificates
representing  the Shares shall bear any legends  required by the Committee.  The
Company may require any purchaser of stock issued under this  paragraph 8 to pay
to the Company in cash upon demand  amounts  necessary to satisfy any applicable
federal, state or local tax withholding requirements.  If the purchaser fails to
pay the amount demanded,  the Company or any parent or subsidiary corporation of
the Company may withhold that amount from other amounts payable to the purchaser
by the  Company  or any  parent or  subsidiary  corporation,  including  salary,
subject to applicable  law. With the consent of the  Committee,  a purchaser may
deliver Shares to the Company to satisfy the withholding obligation.

9. Stock Appreciation Rights.

     (a) Grant. Stock  appreciation  rights may be granted under the Plan by the
Committee,  subject  to such  rules,  terms,  and  conditions  as the  Committee
prescribes.

     (b) Exercise.

          (i) A stock  appreciation  right shall be exercisable only at the time
     or times  established by the Committee.  If a stock  appreciation  right is
     granted in connection with an option, the stock appreciation right shall be
     exercisable  only to the extent and on the same conditions that the related
     option could be exercised. Upon exercise of a stock appreciation right, any
     option or portion  thereof to which the stock  appreciation  right  relates
     terminates.  If a stock appreciation right is granted in connection with an
     option,  upon  exercise  of the  option,  the stock  appreciation  right or
     portion thereof to which the option relates terminates.

          (ii) The Committee may withdraw any stock  appreciation  right granted
     under the Plan at any time and may impose any conditions  upon the exercise
     of a stock  appreciation  right or adopt rules and regulations from time to
     time  affecting the rights of holders of stock  appreciation  rights.  Such
     rules and regulations  may govern the right to exercise stock  appreciation
     rights granted before  adoption or amendment of such rules and  regulations
     as well as stock appreciation rights granted thereafter.


<PAGE>


          (iii) Each stock  appreciation  right shall  entitle the holder,  upon
     exercise,  to receive from the Company in exchange therefor an amount equal
     in value to the excess of the fair market  value on the date of exercise of
     one Share over its fair market  value on the date of grant (or, in the case
     of a stock  appreciation  right granted in connection  with an option,  the
     option  price per Share  under the  option to which the stock  appreciation
     right  relates),  multiplied  by the number of Shares  covered by the stock
     appreciation right or the option, or portion thereof,  that is surrendered.
     No stock  appreciation right shall be exercisable at a time that the amount
     determined under this subparagraph is negative. Payment by the Company upon
     exercise of a stock appreciation right may be made in Shares valued at fair
     market  value,  in cash,  or partly in Shares  and  partly in cash,  all as
     determined by the Committee.

          (iv) For  purposes of this  paragraph  9, the fair market value of the
     Shares shall be determined pursuant to paragraph  6(b)(iv),  on the trading
     day preceding the date the stock appreciation right is exercised.

          (v) No  fractional  Shares  shall be issued  upon  exercise of a stock
     appreciation right. In lieu thereof, cash may be paid in an amount equal to
     the value of the fraction or, if the Committee shall determine,  the number
     of Shares may be rounded downward to the next whole Share.

          (vi) Each  participant  who has exercised a stock  appreciation  right
     shall,  upon  notification  of the amount  due,  pay to the Company in cash
     amounts  necessary to satisfy any  applicable  federal,  state or local tax
     withholding  requirements.  If the  participant  fails  to pay  the  amount
     demanded,  the  Company  or any  parent or  subsidiary  corporation  of the
     Company  may  withhold  that  amount  from  other  amounts  payable  to the
     participant  by  the  Company  or any  parent  or  subsidiary  corporation,
     including  salary,  subject  to  applicable  law.  With the  consent of the
     Committee, a participant may satisfy this obligation,  in whole or in part,
     by having  the  Company  withhold  from any  Shares  to be issued  upon the
     exercise  that number of Shares that would satisfy the  withholding  amount
     due or by  delivering  Shares to the  Company  to satisfy  the  withholding
     amount.

          (vii) Upon the exercise of a stock  appreciation right for Shares, the
     number of Shares  reserved for issuance  under the Plan shall be reduced by
     the number of Shares  issued.  Cash payments of stock  appreciation  rights
     shall not reduce the number of Shares reserved for issuance under the Plan.

10. Option Grants to Non-Employee Directors.

     (a)  Automatic   Grants.   Immediately  after  the  close  of  each  annual
shareholder meeting (commencing with the 1993 annual meeting),  each person then
serving as a Non-Employee Director,  including any such person who is elected at
such meeting,  shall  automatically  be granted a  Nonstatutory  Stock Option to
purchase  17,500  Shares.  For  purposes  of  this  paragraph,  a  "Non-Employee
Director"  is a director of the Company who is not an employee of the Company or
of any parent or subsidiary corporation of the Company on the date the option is
granted.

     (b) Terms of Options.  The exercise  price for options  granted  under this
paragraph  10 shall be the fair market value of the Shares on the date of grant,
determined  pursuant  to  paragraph  6(b)(iv).  Each such  option  shall have an
eight-year term from the date of grant, unless earlier terminated as provided in
paragraph  6(f),  and shall vest and become  exercisable  with  respect to 8,750
shares six  months  after the date of grant,  with the  remaining  8,750  shares
vesting and becoming exercisable on the first anniversary of the date of grant.


<PAGE>


11. Changes in Capital  Structure.  If the outstanding shares of Common Stock of
the Company are  hereafter  increased  or decreased or changed into or exchanged
for a different  number or kind of shares or other  securities of the Company or
of  another  corporation  by reason of any  recapitalization,  reclassification,
stock split,  combination of shares or dividend payable in shares, the Committee
shall  make  appropriate  adjustments  (i) in the  number  and  kind  of  shares
available  for awards under the Plan;  and (ii) in the number and kind of shares
as to which  outstanding  options  and stock  appreciation  rights,  or portions
thereof  then  unexercised,  shall be  exercisable,  so that  the  participant's
proportionate  interest  before  and  after  the  occurrence  of  the  event  is
maintained,  provided  that this  paragraph  11 shall not apply with  respect to
transactions  referred to in paragraph  12. The  Committee may also require that
any  securities  issued in respect of or exchanged for Shares  issued  hereunder
that  are  subject  to   restrictions   be  subject  to  similar   restrictions.
Notwithstanding the foregoing,  the Committee shall have no obligation to effect
any adjustment that would or might result in the issuance of fractional  shares,
and any  fractional  shares  resulting from any adjustment may be disregarded or
provided for in any manner determined by the Committee. Any such adjustment made
by the Committee shall be conclusive.

12. Effect of Reorganization or Liquidation.

     (a)  Cash,  Stock or Other  Property  for  Stock.  Except  as  provided  in
paragraph 12(b), upon a merger, consolidation,  reorganization, plan of exchange
or liquidation  involving the Company,  as a result of which the shareholders of
the  Company  receive  cash,  stock  or other  property  in  exchange  for or in
connection  with their Common Stock (any such  transaction  to be referred to in
this paragraph 12 as an "Accelerating  Event"), any option or stock appreciation
right granted  hereunder shall terminate,  but the optionee shall have the right
during a 30-day  period  immediately  prior  to any such  Accelerating  Event to
exercise  his or her option or stock  appreciation  right,  in whole or in part,
without any limitation with respect to vesting or exercisability.

     (b) Stock for Stock.  If the  shareholders  of the Company  receive capital
stock of another  corporation  ("Exchange  Stock") in exchange  for their Common
Stock in any transaction involving a merger, consolidation,  reorganization,  or
plan of exchange,  all options granted hereunder shall be converted into options
to purchase shares of Exchange Stock and all stock  appreciation  rights granted
hereunder  shall be converted  into stock  appreciation  rights  measured by the
Exchange Stock,  unless the Committee,  in its sole discretion,  determines that
any or all such options or stock appreciation rights granted hereunder shall not
be converted,  but instead shall  terminate in accordance with the provisions of
paragraph  12(a).   The  amount  and  price  of  converted   options  and  stock
appreciation rights shall be determined by adjusting the amount and price of the
options or stock appreciation  rights granted hereunder to take into account the
relative values of the Exchange Stock and the Common Stock in the transaction.

     (c) The rights set forth in this paragraph 12 shall be transferable only to
the extent the related option or stock appreciation right is transferable.

13. Corporate Mergers, Acquisitions,  Etc. The Committee may also grant options,
grant stock  appreciation  rights,  award stock bonuses and sell stock under the
Plan having terms,  conditions and provisions  that vary from those specified in
the Plan;  provided that any such awards are granted in substitution  for, or in
connection with the assumption of, existing options,  stock appreciation rights,
stock  bonuses and stock sold or awarded by another  corporation  and assumed or
otherwise agreed to be provided for by the Company pursuant to or by reason of a
transaction involving a corporate merger, consolidation, acquisition of property
or stock,  separation,  reorganization  or liquidation to which the Company or a
parent or subsidiary corporation of the Company is a party.

14. Amendment of Plan. The Board may at any time, and from time to time,  modify
or amend the Plan in such respects as it shall deem advisable because of changes
in the law  while  the Plan is in  effect  or for any  other  reason.  Except as
provided in paragraphs  6(b)(v),  11, 12 and 13, however,  no change in an award
already  granted shall be made without the written consent of the holder of such
award.


<PAGE>


15. Approvals.  The obligations of the Company under the Plan are subject to the
approval of state and federal  authorities or agencies with  jurisdiction in the
matter.  The Company shall not be obligated to issue or deliver Shares under the
Plan if such  issuance or delivery  would  violate  applicable  state or federal
securities  laws, or if compliance  with such laws would,  in the opinion of the
Company,  be unduly  burdensome or require the disclosure of  information  which
would not be in the Company's best interests.

16. Employment and Service Rights.  Nothing in the Plan or any award pursuant to
the Plan shall (i) confer upon any  employee  any right to be  continued  in the
employment of the Company or any parent or subsidiary corporation of the Company
or shall  interfere  in any way with the right of the  Company  or any parent or
subsidiary  corporation  of the  Company by whom such  employee  is  employed to
terminate  such  employee's  employment  at any time,  for any  reason,  with or
without  cause,  or to increase  or decrease  such  employee's  compensation  or
benefits; or (ii) confer upon any person engaged by the Company or any parent or
subsidiary  corporation  of the  Company any right to be retained or employed by
the  Company  or the parent or  subsidiary  or to the  continuation,  extension,
renewal, or modification of any compensation,  contract,  or arrangement with or
by the Company or the parent or subsidiary.

17.  Rights as a  Shareholder.  The  recipient of any award under the Plan shall
have no rights as a  shareholder  with  respect to any Shares  until the date of
issue to the  recipient  of a stock  certificate  for  such  Shares.  Except  as
otherwise  expressly  provided  in the  Plan,  no  adjustment  shall be made for
dividends  or other  rights for which the record  date is prior to the date such
stock certificate is issued.

<PAGE>

                        BIOJECT MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                               September 10, 1998

           This Proxy is Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors


James C. O'Shea and Michael A.  Temple and each of them,  as proxies,  with full
power of substitution in each of them, are hereby authorized to represent and to
vote,  as  designated on the reverse of this proxy card, on all proposals and in
the  discretion of the proxies on such other matters as may properly come before
the annual meeting of  shareholders of Bioject  Medical  Technologies  Inc. (the
"Company")   to  be  held  on   September   10,  1998  or  any   adjournment(s),
postponement(s),  or other delay(s) thereof (the "Meeting"), all shares of stock
of the Company to which the  undersigned  is  entitled  to vote at the  Meeting.
Receipt of the Notice of Meeting and Proxy  Statement is hereby  acknowledged by
the undersigned.

                         (To be Signed on Reverse Side)

                                   [REVERSE]

Please date, sign and mail your proxy card back as soon as possible!

                         Annual Meeting of Shareholders
                       Bioject Medical Technologies Inc.

                               September 10, 1998

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

/X/ Please mark your votes as in this example.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE "FOR" THE
NOMINEES LISTED BELOW:

1.   Election  of the  following  nominee(s)  as  directors  to  serve  in  such
     capacities until their successors are duly elected and qualified.

      / / FOR ALL (Except  / / WITHHELD FOR ALL   Nominees: David H. de Weese
          as marked to                                      Grace Keeney Fey
          the contrary                                      William A. Gouveia
          below)                                            Eric T. Herfindal
                                                            James C. O'Shea
                                                            Richard J. Plestina
                                                            John Ruedy, M.D.
                                                            Michael T. Sember

2a.  To amend the Articles of Incorporation to provide for a classified Board of
     Directors;

     / /  FOR       / /   AGAINST   / / ABSTAIN

2b.  To amend the Articles of Incorporation to require a super-majority  vote to
     later amend certain provisions of the Articles of Incorporation.

     / /  FOR       / /   AGAINST   / / ABSTAIN

3.   To amend the 1992 Stock  Incentive  Plan to  increase  the number of shares
     available for issuance under the plan; and

     / /  FOR       / /   AGAINST   / / ABSTAIN

4.   To transact such other  business as may properly come before the Meeting or
     any adjournments thereof.

     / /  FOR       / /   AGAINST   / / ABSTAIN

UNLESS OTHERWISE DIRECTED,  THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" THE NOMINEES AND WILL
BE VOTED IN THE  DISCRETION OF THE PROXIES ON SUCH OTHER MATTERS AS MAY PROPERLY
COME BEFORE THE MEETING.

PLEASE SIGN, DATE, AND MAIL YOUR PROXY TODAY.


SIGNATURE: ______________________________   DATE: _________________________


SIGNATURE: ______________________________   DATE: _________________________
          (SIGNATURE, IF HELD JOINTLY)

NOTE: _____________________________________________________
      Capacity (Title of Authority, i.e., Executor, Trustee)




© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission