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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1961)
69 EH Lrfl - M HI HUkr. P ; By AL CE1SS There ii probably nothing that Ogives a technical institute teacher la greater satisfaction than seeing students he has taugnt make sue "cessful entries into the chosen areas of endeavor. These situa tions are increasingly numerous on the Oregon Tech campus, how ever, only a few can be men tioned in this column. There are certain characteris tics of teachers that contribute away and beyond their teaching ability to (he development of the student One important factor is -a genuine interest in the student. This writer remembers an oc casion In the depression days of the early 30s when with his mo- -torcycle loaded down with bag 'gage and heading for college, he Stopped by the home high school 'Sot a few minutes (or some last farewells. The principal came by and asked where he was going, ;upon ueuig Jiuuiuwu, no soiu, "What are you, going to do that for, you'll never amount to any ... l.i- jf 1 u. -..:.! thing." It was only a few months later that the president of the ; small college called him on the ;carpet After explaining in bold detail some of the facts of disci pline in college living, the presi dent dismissed him with the re- mark, "Keep on trying, G e 1 s s, sometimes tne coils mat are nara '.est to break make the best bora !es." : Brooks Custer, geology instruc tor, was pleased to receive a let-l . ter and some nickel bearing rocks from one of last year s gradu ates. The letter contained de tails about redundant earth up heavals, vertical fissures, vertical stratifications, and other terms which would gratify any teacher's '.ego. . Gun Ekdahl received a phone call from Chicago last week re questing one of his graduates jiuju unite jiiuvuuKis. lb seems almost trite to mention that he knows of 37 position openings for Jus graduates. Fred Foulon received a mes sage Wednesday evening request ing three engineering aids for combination chatnman, instru ment man and crew chief posi tions. The person who called is a Coinvord Editor's Note! In today's coin word explanations the reader will note that a portion of the usual script Is missing. This was an oversight on the part of the com pany supplying the puzzle. The available portion of the explana tion is being published here how ever accompanied by the correct answer, EXPLANATIONS ACROSS L The phrase "many uses" In the clue means that SALVAGE Is the choice. SALVAGE is that which is saved from a wreck, fire, etc., and could be a great variety of merchandise for which many uses couia te found. SELVAGE, East Berlin Girls Build Border 'No Man's Land' BERLIN ( API-East Germany put girls and women to work to day at turning sections of Berlin's East-West border Into a no man's land. Wester Berllners call it "the death atrip." The women joined thousands of laborers clearing ground and raz ing houses under the supervision of armed guards along the 25-mile sector border. The appearance of women suggested a manpower shortage In East Berlin. Female workers were sighted along the Teltow Canal opposite the American tone. A number of fugitives have escaped to freedom by swimming the waterway, Communist workers are striving to turn such areas in suburban sections of the border into zones bereft of cover to give Red guards a clear view of escapees. The rest of the border has long been marked by a similar dead tone. Despite the effort to seal the border ever tighter, East Ger mans continued to filter through to the West' Another 20 persons were, reported to have made II across by midnight. Elsewhere in East Germany, thousands of Communist agents were reported working to tighten security along the common border Willi West Germany. A private intelligence agency, Information Bureau West, Mid resident of the 836-mile border THE OWL HOOTS 1959 graduate who is a field en gineer for a firm constructing t transmission line between Salem and Madras. Incidentally, Allen: Stub, a Klamath Falls gradu ate in June, was hired this spring1 as chairman and In two weeks was promoted to crew chief. Chuck Jacob! received word that Sharon McCollum, a local girl, is employed in a three-man clinic of orthopedic sunfeons in Los Ange les. Their practice is limited to hands and feet. Sharon does all of the radiographic work. Jack Douglass, administrative1 dean, returned Monday from YMCA International Plenary Com mittee meeting held over the weekend in Montreal, Canada Jack is a member of the Inter national Committee and represents the Southern Oregon area. One area of '.lie committee's business! was to review the Christian1 Leadership Training Program car ried on overseas by the Y. "As far as the Communist countries are concerned, it looks like a big Job," Jack said. We noticed that Bob Baird (W7CSD), electronics division head, authored a two-page article in the national magazine. Ama teur Radio, for July. It was titled, "Ready Made Emergency Anten na." It told of using the steel water tower at Merrill as an an tenna to send and receive sig nals to distances several times greater than Is possible by auto antenna. Frank Stanko, dean of men, and Hiram Hunt, science chairman, attended a meeting of West Coast placement officers recently at the1 Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in Livermore, Caiif. Five technicians who were being relegated to en gineering positions were men tioned, according to the report. and Oregon Tech was specifically mentioned as "furnishing such high-type individuals." The ways that nuclear energy can be used in industry were emphasized. A nuclear laboratory, as well as a thrust propulsion laboratory, will be located on the new Oregon Tech campus. E. E. Storey moved well-drilling equipment onto the new campus last week to begin drilling two new hot water wells simultane ously. Puzzle the woven edge of piece goods, has one main use to prevent raveling. 6. A seemingly harmless DODO, a simple-minded person with out- A UNaU el Ih have been told to report the pres ence of anyone who slips into the three-mile-wide border zone with out official permission. The Communist regime contin ued its effort to depict escapees as victims forced or lured out of East Germany. The East German Foreign Min istry accused the United States of organized kUtaplng in evacuating seven refugees from the Stein stuecken enclave by U.S. Army helicopter Wednesday. Slcinstuecken is a hamlet lying a mile from West Berlin. Sur rounded by East German terri tory, it is part of West Berlin. The hamlet has become a symbol of Western rights in Berlin and was visited by Gen. Lucius D. Clay the day aflcj he took up his duties as President Kennedy's special representative in Berlin. Activity Hil ROME (AP) A government agency Days radioarvity over parts of Italy has increased 10 to 100 times since Soviet resumption of nuclear tests. But the agency says the Increases are still too small to be dangerous. PACK S-A HERALD AND They'll Do It Every Ax SEASON FLASH, THE PRESS PHOTOGGEI3 COVERS THE BALL BVRK AND TOTES ALL HIS EQUIPMENT"" ' "7 jj Outer Space Holds Greater Wealth Potential Than This Globe Earth NEW YORK (AP) The vast-j ness of space holds more poten tial wealth for mankind than the earth itself. That is the enthusi astic view of a great American industrialist whose career in com munications has spanned the tele graph key and the satellite. He is Gen. David Sarnoff, chair man of Radio Corp. of America, who Saturday observed the 55th anniversary of his entry into the electronics field. It was a modest entry, indeed, for the 15-year-old Russian immi grant. He got $5.50 a week job High Officials Get Death Jolt SEOUL, Korea (AP) - South Korea's revolutionary court today sentenced to death two former high officials of ousted President Syngman Rhee's government on charges of murdering unarmed student demonstrators denouncing election rigging last year. Condemned were Hong Chin-kl 144, former homer minister, and Kwak Yung-joo, 36, former chief bodyguard of the ousted presi dent. Tilda Grows TAIPEt, Formosa (AP) Ty phoon Tilda, roaring over the Pa cific toward Formosa, was report ed today to be growing in fury. The strength of the typhoon had increased from 90 to 135 m.p.h. The approach of the typhoon caused suspension Friday of joint military maneuvers of American and Chinese Nationalist troops in southern Formosa. Answers of-date ideas, could do so many foolish things or be such a "wet blanket" as to disrupt a party, A seemingly harmless DIDO, or prank, might cause some embar rassment but one such prank prob ably wouldn't be important enough! to break up the party. 7. "Songs rendered by a BARD" is the better choice, a BARD be ing a poet who may recite or sing lyrics. Not many cafes can af ford a BAND, and "music ren dered by a BAND" would be more appropriate than "songs rendered by a BAND." 8. Soap and water would clean a STEIN effectively. The ability of soap and water to clean a STAIN would be limited by the type of STAIN, and by the kind of material on which the STAIN was. But all STEINS may be washed in soap and water. 11, Children are most apt to be frightened by animals that REAR, as they sometimes do against the bars of the cage. In the zoo, a ROAR is rather expect ed and and hoped for by chil drenwhen they are watching the Hons, for instance. 13. If a man still feels SORE, or resentful about something. It would be duiicult to argue away the happenings that caused his bitterness. If a man feels SURE, even after much thought, it would still be possible to confront him with new facts that might make him change his mind. 14. A mother would be irked to Perpetual ieservea lors io i i j 63 acres, 10 developed For full Information without rjJfligJon TU4-4560 or TU 4-3)61 QivnecOby City of Klamath Falls NEWS, Igamath Falls, Ore. Time as messenger with the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co. of Amer ica in New York City. Sitting at his broad desk on the 53rd floor of the RCA Building, Sarnoff, 70, looked back over his career and into the future. 'Regardless of the great devel opments that have taken place during the last 55 years, ell those great as they are are small compared to what will be done in the next 55 years," he said in an interview. I feel we will look back and be amazed at the scope of our ignorance, not the vastness of our knowledge. "At one time we thought of space as emptiness. During my lifetime we have developed radio, television and aviation end have extracted nitrogen from the air. don't know how many other things in space can be translated into usefulness. I think applied research will follow and we will find more wealth in space than we have found beneath the surface of the ground." At this stage of his career, SarnotPs prime interest is devel opment of communications satel lites which will boost signals around the world and even to other planets. "We are very close to the achievement of global television as well as other forms of world wide communications," Sarnoff said. "I believe it will be realized in this decade through the use of relay satellites orbited in space. The challenges facing us in this area are no longer how; rather they are when, what type of hard- Explained find a TOY constantly under foot, when she s undoubtedly been de manding that all TOYS be put away. The clue is too restrictive with BOY; a mother would be irked to have either a BOY or a girl constantly in the way. EXPLANATIONS DOWN 5. The soapbox speaker is apt to use a lot of RANT, wild ex travagant speech, to stir up an audience. CANT, insincere, pious talk, would not be apt to rouse the passions of the audience as noisy RANT would. 12. Strong VOCAL protests. stridently insistent ones, would be reported in the press and would cause the politician to hurry home to cope with his critics and to make an answering statement quickly. LOCAL protests might be in the form of personal letters which the politician could handle without publicity, and without the need for hurrying home. 16. "Colorful" in the clue fa vors LAWN as the choice. Any DAWN even a stormy or gloomy one would be an interesting subject for a camera fan. "Col orful" is not an appropriate ad jeetive for FAWN, because FAWN is of a light yellowish brown color that blends with the landscape. But a LAWN would have to be colorful, with flower beds on its edge, foliage, beauti ful vista, etc., to command the photographer's interest. Otherwise it would be just a green expanse of little pictorial value. Care . . . Sunday Ptktober 1, IKi By Jimmy Hatlo fnEH COMES WORLD SERIES TIME" AND MY HOW HIS LOAD HAS BEEN SHIPTED ware, what form of control, what character of international traf fic?" What has been the most impor tant phase of his career? Broadly, the research and de velopment aspects of the business have given me the greatest stim ulus and satisfaction, he replied "This is a cross-fertilization of minds. 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J f I I MIACU 1 HAIR CREAM eV T.,1 DeilU 5 ';i';,'"r", lfV-' ,! 1 If wiitc 1 connie francis f U D oil DS ti " " v ' i-'wi t i NUTS record special i i '""I'.rjr3 7 3"rr. ' N 1 LOOK Mc 1 5.87 A .q V 2 fOCX VC&i f this! - 4j IpiMtox I y il I i- 11 5::':..;,,lv.-'-?'-,,, formentooi f II , - fcjJiMtHtultMtVMiMIUM'is O Enigmatic Mongolia Complefely Impendent Editor's Note Enigmatic Out er Mongolia raises many ques tions in international politics these days: Is the Mongolian People s Republic a pawn of the Soviet Union, of Red China, or both? Will the U.N. Security Council agree this week on its admission to the U.N.? What will be the re percussions if Nationalist China vetoes such admission? Here is a look at this controversial country, by one of the few reporters to visit it in recent years. The writer is Far Eastern correspondent of the Wall Street Journal, from which this article is condensed. ' By IGOR OGANESOFF Wall Street Journal Reporter ULAN BATOR, Mongolia (AP) Mongolians, from top Commu nist officials to the lowliest yak herdsmen, exhibit seemingly gen uine surprise when their indepen dence is questioned. They respond that their nation of 937,000 people and 23 million sheep, goats, cam els and yaks is completely sov ereign. Rivalry between Red China and the Soviet Union over which is to be the dominant influence possi bly allows Mongolia some inde pendence it would not otherwise enjoy, Boui China ana tne soviet Union, in order to avert an open tug of war over Mongolia, try to observe the niceties of dealing with an independent state. Partly as a result of this, Mongolia ap pears free to draft domestic poli cies of its own, though well within the framework of Marxist-Leninist doctrine. Mongolia, once a world power, in the 12th Century spawned con queror Genghis Khan and ruled an empire stretching from Shang hai to the Danube River. Mon golia now covers 606,9m sfiare miles, an area not quite three times the size of France. It is a landlocked nation 2,000 miles from Moscow and the most remote, hard-to-get-to land in the Red empire. Communism came in 1921 when Soviet troops, pursuing flee ing White Russian army units, helped local revolutionaries form a Red-style state. With its vast pasture lands, the country continues to rely on live stock-raising as the mainstay of its economy. But Mongolia, where winter temperatures sometimes dive to 50 degrees below zero, now boasts some of the trappings of an industrial state, thanks to aid from Red China and the Soviet Union. Mongolia follows a course of unswerving loyalty to Communist ideology, perhaps in part as a price to restrain the Chinese or: Soviets from seizing outright con trol. As for which of the two big powers plays a larger role here. Mongolia clearly favors the U.S.S.R. as a closer ally. Some recent developments how- ever, do suggest growing national sovereignty. Mongolia has opened diplomatic relations with nine states outside the Communist bloc in the past five years, bringing to 21 the - number of nations with which' it carries on diplomatic I dealings. No U.S. Western ally nor even neutral Switzerland is on the list yet. Mongolia technicians and super visors are replacing Soviet ex perts as fast as Mongolians can be trained, thus giving the coun try more control over its own af fairs. Mongolian officials Insist their Communist system is slightly dif ferent from the Soviet or Chinese way. It's noted, for example, that collectivization of agriculture here has meant livestock, and not land as in the Soviet Union Jfii China, with the inevitable result that dif ferent administrative setups have evolved id Mongolia. Despite penetration of Commu nist economic organization into al most all phases of rural and town life, there is an apparent attempt to preserve a distinct Mongolian identity. Relatively lew Soviets or other nationalities have settled among the Mongolians. But Mongolia clearly has rela tively little freedom of action in important foreign policy issues. Premier Tsedenbal, Moscow - trained and married to the daugh ter of a former mayor of Mos cow, needs no direct wire to the Kremlin to anticipate the official line Premier Tsedenbal is not above references to "American imperial ists," but his utterances are usual ly fairly mild. In general, little anti-U.S. propaganda appears in Mongolian newspapers, according to a non-Communist analyst who surveys the local press, There s no trace of Soviet-style lover-the-shoulder wariness about! being seen with an American. And Mongolians don't act like reg imented people; very few soldiers or militia are in evidence on the broad avenues of Ulan Bator. But in many ways Mongolian life fol lows the repressive patterns of other Communist countries. Religious worship is now illegal in Mongolia. By 1939 almost all the 1,818 temples and 747 Bud dhist lamasaries that existed be fore the revolution had been shut or converted to museums. By and large, Mongolians en thusiastically endorse the idea of opening diplomatic relations with the United States, though some seem piqued the United states has delayed recognition so long. "It would be good to have ties with the United States maybe we could learn and adopt some things from your system," mused a par ty worker, momentarily forgetting his Marxist upbringing. Engine Able To Reach Moon RENO, Nev. (AP) The Nova rocket engine now under develop ment will be able to put 140,000 pounds on the moon, a North American Aviation engineer said Thursday. George P. Sutton, manager! of long-range planning for Narth American's Rocketdyne division, told a scientific manpower confer ence that the Nova cluster of eight engines will be the free world's most powerful rocket pro pulsion when it is delivered to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in early 1963. "It will trail an exhaust flame 1,000 feet long," he said. "The torch will be seen for miles around."