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HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath FallsQr. j Sunday, November 13, 1960
i
OTI Student Undergoes
Surgery After Accident
A 20-year-old OTI student, Bart
Fermoy Owsley, underwent more
than an hour of surgery at Klam-
ath Valley Hospital Friday after
noon after receiving severe head
lacerations in a two-car crash
north of Chiloquin.
The accident occurred at the
Kirk Junction on Highway 97,
13 miles north of Chiloquin. State
police officers said Owsley's car
struck one driven by Ralph Al
len Greenleaf, 61, Everett, Wash.
Both vehicles were northbound.
The police report said that
Greenleaf was making a right
turn to Kirk. Owsley's car skid
ded on the rain-slicked pave
ment, struck the Greenleaf car,
slid across the road and tumbled
into the ditch.
There was speculation that the
impact of the crash may have
caused Owsley's head to pitch for
ward into the windshield. Neither
Greenleaf nor his wife, who was a
passenger, were Injured.
Investigation is continuing.
Has Operation
ROME (UPI) - U.S. Ambas
sador James D. Zellerbach today
left a Rome clinic where he un
derwent an operation for appen
dicitis Oct. 28. He will conva
lesce at his residence, the Villa
Taverna.
ROCK 'N ROLL
DANCE
featuring IN PERSON
Capitol Recording Stars
THE
PILTDOWN
MEN
"Brontoiaurui Stomp"
"Bubbles In Tha Tor"
"McDonald's Cove"
"Plltdown Ridai Again"
(This 7 piect band it
tared one of tha bait)
eeeeNee4vw
Klamath Falls
AUDITORIUM
FRIDAY, NOV. 18
DANCING 9 . I :
$1.25 PER PERSON
A4eSeeWW
Coming Sat., Nov. 24
THI CHECKERS
KF Man Wins
Recognition
In Prop Wash
A Klamath Falls man won rec
ognition in a recent Issue of Prop
Wash printed at the Naval Air
Station, Whidbey Island, Oak Har
bor, Wash.
He is John Fabianek, AQ2-P1
22, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Fabianek, 4944 Homedale Road.
The article credits him with
graduation from recruit training
at NTC San Diego In late 19571
with highest academic rating in
his class when he was also named
outstanding recruit in his com
pany.
He graduated seventh In a class
of more than 100 at Norman,
Okla., and was first in his class
when he completed training at
Memphis, ' Tenn.
Fabianek is presently serving
as scoutmaster for a scout troop
that has made distinguished
marks and has been recommend'
ed for the Navy Enlisted Scienti
fic Education Program.
Klamath FaMa, Oregon
Serving Southern Oregon
and Northern California
Published dally (except Sat.) and Sunday
by
Southern Oregon Publishing Company
Main ar t-.spianaaa
Phone TUxedo 44111
W. B. SWEET LAND, Publisher
Entered at second class matter at the
post office at Klamath Fails, Oregon,
on August 30, 1906, under act of Con
gress March & 1879. Second-class post
igt paid at Klamath Falls, Oregon,
snu at aoaitionai mailing offices,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Carrier
1 Month t 1.7
Months $10.50
1 Year 121.00
Mall In Advanca
1 Month S 1.71
4 Months .110.00
1 Year .$18.00
Carrier and Dealers
Weekday & Sunday, copy 10c
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL j
. ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION
Subscribers not receiving delivery of
their Herald and News, please phone
Otna Carpenter, Circulation Manager.
TUxado 4-1111 before ? r.M.
TOY
CLOSEOUT
50 off
UP
TO
XC Green Stamps Even ot Sale Prices
KC Paint & Floor Covering
520 Klamath Avenue
Hi ''r 4n - i F-i
THE OWL
HOOTS
V
SPEECH CLASS is a sophomore speech requirement for half a year. It is felt by ad
ministrators and educators that speech is a necessary tool for all students. Here,
Diane Bailey explains a point in demonstration speech. Advanced speech is also offered.
Ww'eei
THE SNACK BAR proves to be a very popular place in the KUHS cafeteria. Here,
some students are shown as they move through the line at the bar. Students number
ing 600 to 700 go through the snack bar each day.
Artists Invited To Show Work
All artists living in the area of
Roseburg, south to Mount Shasta
land from the coast to Klamath
i Falls are invited to submit their
work for exhibition in the first
! annual area exhibition to be spon
sored by the Rogue Valley Art
Association.
The exhibit committee ' an
nounced Dec. 6 through Dec. 23
as dates for the competition. The
show will be held in the Rogue
Gallery, 220 West Main Street,
Medford.
the juried exhibit, which will
include all media, offers nominal
cash awards. The three panel
jury will be selected from the
Oregon Art Alliance in conven
tion in Medford this month. The
alliance, composed of gallery, mu
seum and art association heads
Make Your Home Happier
With a New Appliance!
alee Your Turkey In This
iVewFRIGIDAIRE IdBaM;
91
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Not Jutt 1, but 2 Revolution,
ery new See-Level ovens with
exclusive, Glide-Up Door
1
Looks Built-in,
But Isn't...
Glorify ony kitchen without
rcmodoling . . . just slide a
FLAIR into the place of
your old range.
Cook Without
Stooping
Ovem are at See-Level! All con
trols are eye-high! Surfoce units
ore on a hand-high Roll-to-you
Cooking Top.
Many Other Features
Cook-Master Automatic Oven
Control
"Spotter-Free" Radiant Wall
Broiler Grill
Automatic Hcot-Mindcr Sur
face Unit and Automatic
Meat Tender
Speed-Heat Unit for "Fost
Start" hooting!
Vcrn Owens'
Cascade Home Furnishings
412 Main
Ph. TU 4-8365
throughout Oregon will announce
the committee of selection in the
near future.
Final date for submitting work
is tin,, if.
Mothcrs-Iii-Lnw
Not AH Terrible
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: You seem
to have an awful lot to say
against mothers-in-law. You prob
ably drew a
groceries and I can name a long
list of other things. But what did
he think marriage with a ready
made family was going to be
pill. I hope like?
you'll print the (P.S. It's no cheaper when you
other side. make vnur own!)
My son mar- No woman should have to ac-
ried an empty count for every penny and beg
headed little for a few dollars to spend as
nothing who she chooses. This Is a matter of
doesn't know personal dlcnitv. Tell the iruv he
anything about keeping house, has a lot to be thankful for and
cooking or rearing children, when to quit bcllynchln
an appliance breaks it just sits
By A. L. GEISS
A brief history of Oregon Tech.
nical Institute may be of interest
to newcomers in the Klamath
Basin and others may enjoy think
ing back over the period since its
inception.
Oregon Tech evolved from a vo
cational trade school to a unique
status in Oregon's System of.
Higher Education during the first
13 years of its existence. It be
gan operating as Oregon Voca
tional School in 1947 with 31 stu
dents, almost all of whom were
veterans. In December of 1948,
the name was changed to Oregon
Technical Institute. By 1955, its
attendance had passed the 1,000
mark. Of these, 75 per cent were
non-veteran, recent high school
graduates.
During the first 13 years, the
responsibility for direction and
control was vested in the State
Board of Education. On July 1,
1960, the institute was transferred
into the State System of Higher
Education.
During the years 1945 and 1946,
war veterans were being d i s-
charged from foreign duty and
returning home. Their demands
for vocational rehabilitation train
ing were greater than the ability
ot Oregon s post-high school edu
cational institutions to offer such
services. It was in this setting
that the state legislature took cer
tain action preliminary to estab
lishing Oregon Technical Institute.
In early 1946, the facilities of
the Marine Recuperational Bar
racks at Klamath Falls became
available from the federal govern
ment. After investigating the feas
ibility of its use for educational
purposes, the State Emergency
Board in October 1946 granted
$75,000 to the State Board of Edu
cation for the purpose of convert
ing the barracks facilities for use
as a state vocational school,
On the 822-acre site, there were
more than 80 buildings which
were readily converted into class
rooms, laboratories, and housing
facilities. A gymnasium, bowling
alley, and swimming pool were
complementary attributes to the
campus setting.
The fust classes were opened
on July 14, 1947, with 31 students
enrolled in three courses: auto
braces are expensive, and so arc body and fender, auto mechanics
For Information contact Mrs,
Margaret Knoll, 2323 White Ave
nue, this city, telephone' TU
2-3292, or Jack Teeters, chair
man, First Annual Area Compe
liliion 1960, 2198 Crestbrook Road,
Medford.
$1,700 instrument that Is used for
making precise horizontal and
vertical measurements. This piece
of equipment is used in U.S. Geo
logical and U.S. Coast and Geo
detic surveys in making precision
measurements.
Fred Foulon reports that Joe
Sanders, a 1959 surveying gradu
ate, visited his department last
week. . Sanders works for Dean,
Stewart, Stinchfield, Hall and Sto-;
ver, general engineers and land
surveyors of Sacramento. He is,
chief of one of the company's 20
crews and is considered one of
the best curb and gutter men
that they have in their employ.
Dr. Dan Fullmer and Dr. How
ard Akers of the General Ex-;
tension Division of the State Sys
tem of Higher Education were
on our campus last Monday to
discuss which OTI courses should
be offered in the extension cen
ters of the state. It will be Ore
gon Tech's responsibility as
member of the State System of
Higher Education to make its
courses available to the people
of Oregon through extension
courses. Oregon Tech'j technical
institute type training will serve
the industrial and business areas
of Oregon with a type of train
ing which has not previously been
available to them.
j9j HVJt 72
ttAPIt 20
GCMJN1
?134.3S-51-S3l
73- 77-78
CANCII
JUNE D
,14-19-26-31
8-76-80-81
uo
1$ jULru
5- - 9-22
4-27-7
STAR GAZEBO
Br CLAY K POLLAN
Your Dai Activity Gwdt
reordma to th Start.
To develop message for Monday,
reod words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
JMoy
3 F,n
A Just
5 Aspects
6 FavoraDit
7 5l.ni
Day
9 For
10 f
1 I Find
12Chk
13 8.
MANo
l5Voo
16 Advice
17Le
IS Prepared
19Fols
20 Aipng
21 Hidden
22 Conlocfs
23 Yourself
24 With
25 Perionol
26 To
27 Top
28 Atlolrt
29 Forces
JOTodaV
(9) Good
31 Poy
3? Ope role
33 For
.14 You
3b Don't
36 Seem
37 Under
38 To
39 Pursue
40 And
4) Bring
42 Siones
43 Etlorti
44 To
45 You
46 Unusual
47 Finoncial
48 The.r
49 Inroodf
61 CHonget
62 Det.m
63 On
64 Nothing
65 Exciting
66 Will
67 No
68 Pressure
69 Todoy
70 Wilts
71 Let
72 People
73 Through
74 Happen
75 Loved
76 Shore
77 Helping
76 Associate!
79 Ones
KOemo
OCT. 24
NOV. 22
I2-16-40J9
H5-S269
50 Partnerships 80 Ot
51 To
52 Hear
53 P'Oht
54 Your
55 Strengthen
56 8v
57 Being
58T.es
59 Heort'i
60 Headstrong
)Advtree
SI Expenses
82 Things
83 And
S4Your
85 Romance
. S6 Succeed
87 Cash
88 S.mmer
89 Woit
90 Awhile
4fTN 1114
tfjNcutril
UUA
jEPT. 21
OCT'. 23
J- 8-I0.2V
a.
1AGITTAS.IUS
NOV 2J
MC 22
5-17-54-57T-
PU-I-BV-88.H,
6
CAXICOIU.
:c. 23 e f
in! 20 V,i
4- 7-2CA44
lM-66-74
AOUAWU!
JAN. 21 j.-
M3-44-35-58J
7fL7t70 aJ,
20)i.
3-1 8-30-33 M
149-63-84-87
strong College. W. M. Douglass
will represent OTI at Dunsmuir,
McCloud, Weed, Yreka, Etna,
Fort Jones and Happy Camp, and
Eugene Larsen at Davis, Weed
and Mount Shasta. I
"Tech Talks" next Tuesday,
Nov. 15, at 5: 10 p.m., will fca.
ture a panel discussion on Hit'',
subject "Problems Confronting-,
Youth."
Starts TODAY!
and cooking. By April 1, 1948,
less than 10 months later, more
than 500 students in daily atten
dance were enrolled in 30 differ
ent courses.
Oregon Technical Institute de
veloped during a period character
ized by change. The economy of
Oregon changed from primarily
agricultural to basically industri'
al. The transfer of the institute
into the System of Higher Educa
Four students were dismissed
trom Oregon lecn a week ago
for drinking on the campus. This
might seem like harsh treatment
considering the age in which we
live. Dr. Purvine made a speech
at the student assembly last i ue.v
day which was very well received
in which he stated that it is not
good when students who need the
type of training that we offer at
Oregon Technical Institute are
kept home by their parents by
adverse stones about our campus
life.
"The legislature has passed
laws," he stated, "that require
students as well as other per
sons to participate in no activi
ties that cause problems for oth
er persons. There is no reason,
he stated further, "why OTI
should lose good students because
parents hesitate to send their chil
dren here."
We believe that Oregon Tech
has this year one of the finest
student bodies to date, and we
think that the reception of Dr.
Purvine's speech bears out that
fact.
R. L. Smith, dean of students,
will make high school visitations
next week at Cottage Grove,
Marshfield, Myrtle Point, Co-
quille, North Bend, Reedsport,
Newport and Toledo. Frank
there. Her vacuum cleaner isn't
working, her toaster cord is
frayed and she has borrowed my
iron every Tuesday for three
months.
Dear Ann: My boy friend gave
me a bracelet for my birthday.
He said it was gold. My wrist
turns green every time I wear that
bracelet. My girl friend says good
Her whole house looks like Fib- jewelry doesn't turn the skin
lion was the eventual result of'Stanko, dean of men, will visit
ber McGees closet. I ve seen her nreen. and
kids with the some jam on their; gave me a
considered study ot its proper
place In serving both the needs of
Oregon's high school graduates
and the manpower needs of Ore
gon's businesses and industries.
The Engineering Department
has received and is using in its
or false? MARIETTA
Dear Marietta: False, Your
body chemistry may well be to
(aces for two days straight. When
I try to tell her how to do tilings
she runs to my son and says
im Dinting in. Am t.'OlH-blame. Some .people, because of
EK SIDE an abundance of certain acids
Dear Other: Well, yes. However In the system, get green marks
wcii inieniionea ine criticism, It's from a variety of metals which
unwelcome and this constitutes touch the skin.
uU"lnl Dear Ann Landers: I have to
Of course It's difficult for a write this letter or flip my lid
mother to sit by and watch all I bnilerl over when I read the
that my boy friend training program a theodolite.
cheap present. True
schools at Scio, Jefferson, Fall
City, Valselz, Sherwood, Yamhill,
Carlton, Sheridan, Willamina, Clo
verdale, Nestucca and Taft.
Northern California schools are
going to be visited by represen
tatives from Oregon Tech, Chico
State, College of the Siskiyous,
University of California and Arm-
I
73 lirgtfts
I GM I III ,7hw IMPTl
I tur rin inn nun 111 mimiSsTll
I riMiTV enml llUi'MlK V I
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ML) " I 111 JKfHmL
"WSJ
ftUrnuuv m
omFoon z IT
Mar f
i Murder,
I ; ir twm WZ vii 1 1 : rT-" i
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XOLOd ty oe mxe Fp:jM I I
this, but under the circumstances
the best thing you can do Is to
leave her alone.
(P.S. I hate to spoil your the-
attacks on you by lazy women
who don't want to pick up after
their husbands. May I have a few
inches of newspaper space to say
ory. but my own mother-in-law snmelhinff in hehalf of tlinsn nf
is a gem. Twenty-one yean and us who think you are right
not a single "suggestion.") that picking up alter a husband
is part of being a decent wife
Dear Ann Landers: When Jake. I've known women who knock
married me, I was a widow with!themselves out for organizations.
four children. I told him he was Thev run to nicotines, snend
taking on a big load but he said hours on the telephone, bake like
he knew It and didn't care. He, crazy for church bazaars and
was wonderful to the kids and'haul tons of rummage in their
they were crazy about him. jcars. But when it comes to do-
Now, alter a year, he s begin- ing something extra for their own
ning to complain about the lugh.family, they scream like wound-
cost of the kids' shoes, hair-led elk.
cuts, the grocery bill and the dcn- A woman's basic satisfactions
tist's charges for braces. He should come from her home. If
thinks P.T.A. dues are a racket .these dames don't think so. whv
and I have to explain to him
w here every penny goes.
He makes $130 a week and
manages to save a little out of
every check, so it isn't as if we
are terribly hard up. We own this
did they
WIFE
marry? A REAL
Are you going steady? Making
marriage plans? If so. send for
Ann Landers' booklet, "Before
house and don t owe anybody any-j You Many Is It Love Or Sex?."
thing. What can I say to a manjencliising with your request 20
like this?-SPEECHLKSS cents in com and a larce. self-
Dear Speechless; Tell him that addressed, stamped envclone.
he married you with ers wide! (Ann Landers will be glad to
open so now he ran shut his .help ou with your problems.
mouth. iScnd them to her in care of this
Of rourse kids' shoes cost moo- newspaper enclosing a stamped.
ey. Ar adults' shoes free? And.sclf-addrcssrd envelope.)
I
e lira Might f -Pf
Cvv SHE STARTED J Sx-3f)
: y JSl l more than Just a ipfflfeT Y
efjrfjjtV Yc"'B fini yors(f m a whlrpool of wine, women '' N CA
Sjt fiV a"d wonderful fun as a Cigl kind of girl P t ' f S ' 'K
V'' wli trviT'V ' "" " see'wllil kind of American 7
- i ysfl ' meet in the Vienna Woods -Q)i wCi I W tiL
-' Wrv' -ami lost at first sight! J ' &$jtt "'(. jSJSjRX
TECHNICOLOR V&&Whty
ii ii ! in w i ii n n mill t. i mnnitmr fn tiki
LUntH bntVALItlf bAVIH v LAiiodUKI
Michael CURnZ
VITALE-RISSO-JEANSCArminati-
Starts TODAY!
A.