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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1961)
rum t-k HERALD AN NEWS. Klamath Falli, Ore. lunday, January I, 1N1 7 "DENNIS THE MENACE" ni Daddy, vny to i ask so maw questions ? S THE TO Private Get Final Phase Michael D. Casey and Floyd M. Joiner, Army privates, are receiv ing the final phase of six months active military training under the Reserve Forces Act program at Fort Bliss, Tex. The training is scheduled to end Jan. 27. During this final phase, the men are receiving training in the duties of a radar crewman. After completion of the train ing they are scheduled to spend the remainder of their military service with Battery C of the 249th Artillery, an Army National Guard unit in Klamath Falls, Casey and Joiner are 1960 grad uates of Klamath Union High School. Casey, IB, is the son of M.Sgt, and Mrs. Jack A. Casey Sr. Be fore going on active duty, he was employed by Vacuum Cleaner Sales and Service. Joiner, 18, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd L. Joiner, 1348 Kane Street. OWL HOOTS By AL GEISS ' ' Fred Foulon, engineering divi sion head, received a card recent ly from Floyd Brooks, a 1958 en gineering graduate currently em ployed as a party- chief on the Colorado River Project near Yuma. Brooks, who has a GS9 civil service rating, took the nec essary exams recently and ac quired his professional Oregon State Land Surveyors license. Fred also mentioned that the survey class is ready to start work on the new campus as soon as the enKineerlns firm sets the stakes for the seismographtc soundings which are to be made m the near future. The contract for the subsoil tests stipulates Jthat the detailed location of markeri stakes shall be done by the Ore gon Tech Surveying Department, Leroy Flsk tells an interesting success story about a mm iecn student who graduated in Decem ber, 1958. Clyde James, originally from Klamath Falls, went to Kais er Hospital in Oakland after grad ual inn where he worked 18 months as an intern. Upon com nletion of his internship he took examinations and acquired his California State Board License. He then went to Rogue Valley Memorial Hospital in Medford un til early this month when he was requested to return to Kaiser as supervisor ol we Hematology ue nartment. There are 14 techni clans responsible to him, some of whom have had 12 to is years Of technician experience. Med Tech has 10 new unex pected freshman students this term. All of the 30 stations In the freshman lab are full. A ma jority of the new students are transfers , from other colleges. Among them Is a 5-11, 250-pound student who was a suard at Fol- mm Prison. He was Influenced bv a convict to enter the medl eal technology profession. We un derstand that ho is interested in playing football for Oregon Tech next year. Mrs. Bernlce Andrews, dean of nirnni. is in a particularly jovial mood. Her son, whom she has not seen for three years, arrived yesterday with his wife and lit tle boy. He has been connected lth the National Security Agency in the U.S. Air Force in Wash ington, D.C. When asked If he k her far a visit, she said, "No, he to bome." He has a B.A. de gree and is planning to attend SOC to earn a degree in prepara tion for entering the teaching pro fession. The trip to Oregon has been tremendous experience for his wife and son, neither of whom hue nreviouslv been west , of Penn sylvania. "Farm animals are of mut interest to them." Mrs. An iatt. "but seeing deer especially thrilled them." O. K. McCart has Informed us that there are now IS students taking his correspondence course. As of early Friday morning a few over 700 students had com peted registration for winter term. Among th5 iww ttodents were a young mart ed couple from Beunos Aires. Argentina. The husband, Carlos Norberto Sober Jo. has enrolled Jin electronics, tu nlanft In return to his home after gradation where be says. that electronics Is a new science which needs developing. , ( Jv'-k ALL NEW 11 9&Q 3fi, BEIQW BMWS WST! pressure of 600,000 square inch. pounds per Chuck Jacob! reports that Ro land Ono who was, graduated from X-ray Technology last term went to Granada Hills in Los An geles area to see a radiologist and went to work for him the next day. "That means that X-ray graduates are still 100 per cent employed in the field in which they were trained," Chuck said Max Saunders received recent-1 ly a letter from Don Zifka who is .presently employed in tne Man Accounting Department at itysier. In part, his letter said: "I don't know how I 'lucked out' but just after going to work for Hystcr they had a Dig or sanitation change and I ended up where I am. By working in the internal auditing department of a company like this I really get to know 'what's what' very fast ... I have not had any trouble understanding anything' that has to do with accounting. The photography work for the new Oregon Technical Institute film will be completed early this term according to Mrs. Catherine Lake. The film will show the technical institute type of educa tion offered at Oregon Tech. The sound track should be completed and the film ready for distribu tion to high schools, radio and TV stations, and interested or ganizations by the end of the school year. Don Orrcll is the photographer and Arthur LeCours is doing the art work. Besides machinist majors, there are 200 students from other cur ricula in the machine shop this term according to Pete Ryser, machinist instructor. In order to handle this situation changes have been made in the machinist lab oratory operation. Students will be scheduled for two weeks on the bench fallowed by two weeks of practice In precision measure ment alter which they will pro ceed to the use of the lathe and other machine tools. "This ar rangement will permit us to hnn die 60 students where we could handle only 30 before," Pete stated, "and we feel it will also be an improvement in our in structional program." George Mnrostica informed us that during the holidays there has been moved into the machine shop a milling machine, a grinding machine, and a drill grinding machine, all war surplus which if new would cost about $7,000. Mentioning new equip ment, Auto Mechanics has a new Sioux one-horse grinder which they have had on order for more than a year. The new $12,000 universal tester was installed in Bud Phillips' metal shop recent ly. The machine docs all types of destructive testing of metals; that is, it will stretch it, bend it, or crush it and measure its strength of resistance. The ma chine is capable of exerting a Off the record: This writer would say that Ore gon Teen stall memrjors are about the same as would be ex pected of the average American. It seems that Howard Rowe, reg istrar; A. E. Smith, business manager; R. L. Smith, dean ol students, and George Crowe, man ager of auxiliary enterprises, de cided to quit smoking. Reports are that Howard, Al and George are doing OK but we are con fused about Bob. As we under stand it, he first started to stop smoking, then he upped it to ta pering off, then he started again but we don't know whether he started smoking or stopping again? Hal Rotrock, in his words, Is little bit sore all over," "a little shook up," "not feeling too hot." Hal turned his car over near Tulelake on the day after Christmas. Not anticipating the circumstances, he failed to have on his helmet and other protec tive gear. Besides the less im portant circumstance of totaling out his automobile, he acquired a badly bruised hip and a split ankle bone. Hal hopes to be back on the lob, on crutencs, . oi course, sometime tills week, Paul Anthony, 7 pounds' ounces, zero days old, arrived at the Frank and Barbara Zarkowski household on Jan. 2. Barbara is still with her mother in Portland but mother and son are doing well, Frank tells us. We put out a mimcogiv news and information bulletin for faculty members each week called the "Erratic." Art LeCours facetiously mentioned that if vye would change the name to Neu rotic" that our psychology pro fessor, Gene Stivers, could give us lots of information. This writer suggested that sometimes when news is scarce we might put out an Issue called the "Erratic Neu relic"; then Ray Garrison con tributed the prognostication that if we were to call It the Demo' cratic Erratic Neurotic" that we might get an increase In news reporting from the Democrats on the campus. 1 People Read SPOT ADS you are WHAT CAN YQU DO TO OPPOSE COMMUNISM? In one generation you have seen Communism strangle freedom in half the world. What will hap pen in the next generation? Khrushchev is telling the world, "Your grandchildren will grow up under communism." Do you believe that? "No" you say, " will never happen in America I" But are you sure? There Is One Sure Woy To Answer Communist lies . . Through Radio Free Europe Radio Free Europe is a privately supported organization that broadcasts from 28 transmitters to the 79 million people behind the iron Curtain. It tells the truth w here it hurts communism most : in Hungary, Poland, Czechoslo vakia. Bulgaria and Rumania. 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