1 Sunday, January !0, 196 i HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Fall, Or. PAGE 5-A Sudan Answer to Previous Puzzla ACROSS 1 Sudan it the world's print i pal lource of Rum 7 U has toma 13 Mexican stale 14 Fancv 15 Marked with noiiowi 16 European blackbirds 17 Sick IS Asunder I prefix) 20 Craft 21 Stagger 23 Biblical pronoun 24 Skin affliction 25 Mistake 27 Pilot anew 30 By way oi 32 Ignited ; 33 Last i Kr.) ;34 Goddess of infatuation 35 Withdraw 39 Penetrate 43 Biblical name 44 Average (ab.) 46 Kemove 47 Wine (Ft.) 48 Roof finial 49 Naval (ab.) 50 "Lily maid of Aatolat" S3 Legislative bodv 56 Leasehold right 57 Kind of bullet 58 Compound ethers 59 Affirm DOWN 1 Peach (or 2 Vexer 3 Horn 4 Kind of fly 5 Anser 6 Tea chert ENCHAI 'NlgP'E E LjS 1m i-irTcnl " Vl Far-reaching and enduring ben- efits will result for the nation if Congress acts favorably on Pres ident Kennedy's request for $24, 500.000 to permit the Department of the Interior to start building an 886-mile federal extra-high-vol 11 Everlasting ipoei.p 12 Pauser 19 Noun suffix 22 Sweethearts 24 He present at 26 Get up 28 Guido'a note 29 Location 7 Mountain peak 31 Indonesian of 8 Poem 3S Venerate 9 Through 36 Roman officials 10 Regal residence 37 Occupant oo r aucei 40 Bridge holding 41 Click-beetle 42 Return 45 View 48 Congers 51 Follower 52 Nearer iScot.) 54 Bitter vetch Olal i Mindanao f5 Naval air station iah 1 2 13 14 15 16 I p 18 19 10 111 112 fg J L'"''j'19 ""J1o 21 2T1 123 JT" 24 25 26 pT2728 2T I 35 31 ""j 32 " 33 34 35 36 137 3tt '"JU 40 141 142 4? Fr I 50 "51 52 53 54T55 56 57 " 58 59 I I I I I I I I I I I 19 Qommiimh. QakndaA MONDAY "ELIZA AND TIIK LIMBER JACKS," 7:30 p.m., final try-outs, Fremont School Auditorium. ors especially needed. Ten- KLAMATH CIVIC THEATRE, 8 p.m., Regular meeting, Klam ath Auditorium dining room. Pub lic invited. REBEKAH SOCIAL CLL'B, 12:30 p.m.. dessert luncheon. Edith W'iard, 2705 Wiard. . MT, LAKI GARDEN CLL'B, 1:30 p.m., house plans exchange home o( Mrs. Ed Born. Speaker Rev. Quinn Hawley. JUNIPER GARDEN fLLB. 1 p.m., meeting, Lois McKendrce, 1393 Del Moro. PAINTING SESSIONS.'ll a.m. to 5 p.m., Klamath Art Gallery, 140 Riverside. Public invited. No charge. NEIGHBORS OF WOODCRAFT, 8 pm., meeting, Evans Blrlg.. 10th and Main. BETHEL NO. 51, Job's Daugh ters, 7:30 p.m., meeting, Henley Grange Hall. BETHEL NO. 61. Job s Daugh ters, 7:30 p.m.. parents night. Scottish Rite Temple. AAIW. 12 noon. Monday lunch, Vinema Hotel. Reservations. Mrs. Stan Ncitling. TU 2-5332. LLCII.LE O'NEILL PTA, 2: 15 p.m., meeting, school library. Speaker, child guidance. Star, 8 p.m.. stated meeting, Ma-1 sonic Temple. WEDNESDAY SOJOURNERS, 11:30 pm Founders Day, luncheon meeting Willard Hotel. Cards following. Newcomers invited. KLAMATH DISTRICT GAR DEN CLL'B, 10:30 a.m., cxecu live meeting. City Library. Y-NE-MA T W I R L E R S. 7:30 p.m., beginner square dance class, YMCA. Everyone invited. TUESDAY DEGREE OF HONOR. pm., executive meeting. Long. 4312 Crosby. 7:30 Edna ALOHA CHAPTER. Eastern East Germans Escape Guards BERLIN 't'PI' - Three East Germans evaded Communist bor der guards and escaped safely through barbed wire to West Ber lin before dawn today. West Ber lin police reported. The refugees were not identified. Another unidentified young man. believed to be a West Berliner was arrested (nr undetermined reasons Wednesday night by Red guards at a bordcr-trossinj point Embezzler To Be Freed SPRINGFIELD. III. (L'PD-Or- ville E. Hodge. 58, a prison disc jockey who once dreamed of being governor, dreamed today of free dom. The one-lime Illinois slate audi tor and playboy who stole $1.5 million of the people's money, will realize his dream to be free Jan 31 or shortly thereafter. Jan. 31 is Hodge's day lor pa role from Menard Slate Prison the Illinois Pardon and Parole Board announced Thursday. Hodge was convicted in 1956 for one of the largest embezzlement schemes in the history of state government. Througl an elaborate system involving phony stale war rants and padded expense counts. Hodge financed a free living way of life that made him one of the most popular men in Springfield. He threw hunting parties lor celebrities, gave lavish gifts friends and owned a luxurious home on Lake Springfield. His high living ended when Chi cago Daily News reporter George Thiem began digging into Hodge's accounts. Thiem broke the story, which later won a Pulitzer Prize, and Gov. William Stratton forced Hodge lo resign. Benefits Of West Coast htertie Outlined By Udall tagc West Coast transmission in- terlie linking the Pacific North-1 west and California, Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall said Friday. The President's budget, pre sented lo Congress Jan. 17. in- THE OWL HOOTS By AL GEISS A news release from Salem last week carried the announcement that the State Board of Higher' Education had requested $89,000 for Oregon Technical Institute fori land acquisition. The request was referred lo tne ways ana Means Committee of the Legisla ture at the suggestion of state rep resentative. Clarence Barton, who! is Speaker of the House. In-answer to some local inquiries, Dr. Purvine said that he had pre sented the need for additional campus space to the Board and State System officials several months ago. He said that the addi tional land area will be needed for future enrollment increases and for an outdoor laboratory for student surveying projects. The February issue of the Electronics World, a magazine which has a circulation of about one-quarter million, contains article titled "Single Sideband Simplified" by Robert Baird, head of the electronics depart ment at Oregon Tech. Bob was particularly pleased to get his article in a magazine of In.; stature. The publication, which is avail able at most local newsstand:-, may be of particular interest to amateur radio operators and persons interested in two-way communications. Single sideband transmission is the type of coir municalion used by astronauts Glenn and Carpenter in their space lo earth communications This article is written in such c way that the less mathematically inclined technicians can undc, stand how it works. Frank Stanko, director of place ment ervices. and aulo tune upl instructors Earl Buck and Lloyd Olson left Wednesday for an in dustrial visitation lour of the low er Willamette Valley area. Th trio will visit industrial concerns which emplov. or may be inter ested in employing. Oregon Tech graduates. These visits are one of the important methods which Oregon Tech uses lo keep abreast of the needs and modern advance mcnts in industry. Librarian Imngcne Ralston has a display of scrapbooks prepared by Bert McMahan of Klamath Falls. Three of the scrapbooks contain giant postcard pictures of scenes througlwut the United, States. Beneath the pictures are descriptive materials. The fourtn book contains clippings about for eign students and foreign visitors and autographs and messages written by foreign students in their home language. Mrs. Ral ston slates that students and in structors have been very inter ested in the display. Three faculty members re ceived interesting appointments this week. Electronics professor Paul Chitwood received word that he had been appointed recorder on one of the panels at the ton ference on College Teaching to be held at Oregon State University on Feb. 8 and 9. Engineering Tech instructor Gene Culver re ceived an invitation lo be a mem bcr of a four-man panel at the national meeting of the American Society for Engineering Lduca tion in Philadelphia in the spring. Engineering division head Fred Foulon was appointed to the county library board at the begin ning of 1963. He also retains his position on the city library board. Incidentally, he was honored witn This Is Your Life program at tle Linkville Kiwanis Club as an addendum to his year as presi dent of the club. Approximately 46 freshmen and sophomores from KUHS attended the first Oregon Technical Insti tute Explorer Post meeting in the campus theater on Thursday eve ning. Brief addresses were pre sented by Dr. Purvine; Dick Lamb, Modoc Area Scout Execu tive; and Professor Gene Stivers, who organized the Post and will continue as Post Committee Chairman. Don Theriault. admis sions counselor at OTl and advis er for the post' was master of ceremonies. The boys divided Into small interest groups and metl with the professors responsible for the special areas of interest. The Post Committee consists of Professors William Bradford medical technology; Earl Sweet metals division; Fred Foulon and David Hull, engineering division; O. K. McCart, diescl technology; R. Madsen, automotive division, and Tom Sutherland, electronics technology. According to Stivers, "This promises to be the most unique oroaram In Exploring ever pre sented in the state of Oregon and. possibly, in the entire United States. The institute is receiving national recognition (or this pro gram and is making its facilities and staff available lor the pur. uoses of vocational exploration. Stivers also informed us that the Circle K, a Kiwanis sponsored student organization on campus has arranged a donkey basket ball game to be played in the OTl evm at 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 4. It will be open to the public. eluded S21.5O0.O0O for the Bonne- ville Power Administration and 3,000,000 fur the Bureau of Rec lamation for launching the inter- lie program as part of a conser vation policy announced two1 years ago to assure more efficient use of the nation s electric energy resources. Secretary Udall said the Pres ident's request contemplates an all-federal 750.000-volt direct-cur rent transmission line from the Columbia River to Los Angeles and an all-federal 380-mile 500,000- volt alternating current connec tion from central Washington to the Calitornia-Oregin border. Ho pointed out that the construe tion program would continue for several years giving rise to many new jobs in on-site work and stimulating natiinal employment. Such power lines. Secretary Ldall added, would be the first heavy inter-connections between the two regions and would be de signed to carry electricity north ward from California as well as southward from the Pacific Coast Secrelary Udall stressed Ihe: importance of the federal proposal for a direct-current line noting that the United Stales lags be hind Sweden, Russia, and Eng land in direct-current technology, He also emphasized that the ad ministration's West Coast intertie program contemplates approval of legislation defining the pri mary marketing area of the Bon neville Power Administration and establishing specific rules for ex change of power between the Pa cific Northwest and California Legislative proposals similar to that passed by the Senate in the last session of Congress are be ing drafted by Sen. Henry M Jackson and Reps. Jack West land and Julia Butler Hansen, all three from the state of Washing- Ion. Secretary Udall said he would support similar legislation again this year which he described as being "carefully tailored" to take advantage of all the benefits of extra - high voltage intercon nections between the Pacific Northwest and California with out endangering the power sup ply of any region. Logging Truck Strikes Girl REDMOND IPI '-Nancy Rob erlson. 9. Redmond, was fatally injured when she was struck by a logging truck here Thursday She died about five minutes after being taken to a hospital. Police said Ihe girl, the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rob in iho I S sv-tor and led off into ert-n. was struck by a truck Communist East Berlin. 'driven by Vnghn Barrett of Bend 01 , .. I'm JIM - Yil I'm k:rk Our Daddy Says.. GET THE FACTS about a guaranteed educa tional plan. It's later than you think. JIM CRISMON First Nationol Bonk Bldg. Im: 2-3454 Xti: 4-4421 Great-Wast Ufa O-m "Your Futurt ii Mr Buhuh Tada" V4 to A and mere Coats-Suits-Dresses Off During Our Storewide January Huge Savings in Every Department Use Your Chorge Account Dorris Firm Bids High DORRIS Hie American Forest1 Products Corporation of Dorris was the high bidder for 12.100, 000 board feet of pine and fir timber in the East Shovel Creek Unit, Gooscncst District, Kenneth C. Duncan, of the Klamath Na tional Forest, announced at the! conclusion of the oral auction held al the new forest service office on Jan. 15, 1963. Species, volume in board feel. advertised prices and high bid rates were: Pondcrosa pine 900.000 board feet, advertised at $14.27 per M and bid at $34.50 per M; Sugar Pine nominal vol ume, advertised and bid at 30 44 per M; White and Red fir 10,- 500.000 board feet, advertised al $4 96 per M and bid al $10.00 per M; Douglas fir 700.000 bd. ft. advertised at $9 69 per M and bid at $1950 per M: Incense ce dar nominal volume, adver tised and bid at $2.96 per M; Lodgepolc pine nominal volume, advertised and bid at $4.96 per M. Secretary Udall underlined! these benefits from a Pacific Northwest-California federal in terne: 1. Tremendous savings in! plant investment because of sea sonal diversity in power demands of the two regions. By exchang ing off-peak power between Call fcrnia and the Pacific Northwest Secretary Udall estimated future plant investment savings of $180,- 000.000 with one major transmis sion line and $50,000,000 with two lines. 2. Sale in California of surplus northwest seasonal hydroelectric power where it can be used ex lensively as a substitute for high er-cost steam-generated electric power. Only a limited market for surplus power is available in the Pacific Northwest. 3. Firming up of between 200.- 000 and 400,000 kilowatts of the Northwest's surplus secondary power, for sale as firm power in that region by utilizing off-peak California steam power lo firm up the Northwest's hydroelectric ca pabilities during period of low stream flow. 4. Conservation of exhaustible resources such as coai, on. and gas during periods when sur plus northwest hydroelectric en ergy is available. Secretary Udall explained that the proposed intertie, at federal cost, would net the government s Bonneville Power Administration belwecn $6,000,000 and $15,000,000 per year. While the Bonneville Power Ad ministration cumulatively Is ahead of schedule in meeting its obligations to the United Slates Treasury. Secrelary Udall said that recent deficits have led BPA to plan a review of its rate struc ture during 1963. taking inlo ac count the likelihood of a Califor nia intertie. among other factors He said that BPTA. which still sells power at its original rale of $17.50 per kilowatt-year estab- shed in 1939, has not met its an nual scheduled repayment re quiromenls in each of the past five years, chiefly for lack of a market for its surplus seasonal power. Last vcar Congress voted . 000 for the Bonneville Power Ad ministration and the Bureau of Reclamation for preliminary en gineering recennaissance surveys, and economic analysis of a West Coast intertie and to undertake negotiations with both public and private utilities Interested in a co ordinated plan for power inter change between the Northwest and California. The House Appropriations Com mittee, in its report staled that "No actual ground survey is to be undertaken" and that "More specific negotiations and planning between the Federal Government and private and public utilities in the area affected must be accom plished if the Congress is to be assured that it is being presented with Hie most feasible and eco nomical plan for construction and use of intertie facilities." As a result of the committee's language Secretary Udall said the Bonneville Power Administration is canvassing tlte public and pri vate utilities of the West Coast to determine the extent of their possible participation in the use of portions of the proposed fed eral ties. The utilities have been asked to submit any proposals by Jan. 31, 1963. Secrelary Udall.ernment decision to seek funds said he considers the committee for federal transmission intertie request consistent with the gov- lines. CASH BONUS ON GAS PURCHASES Inquire or: Lewis Richfield Station Oregon Ave. & Biehn SMALL APPLIANCE REPAIRS Vacuum Cleaners Irani Misers Ceftae M.kere Pane Teetterc Heerere Electric Fry Pane WORK GUARANTEED REX APPLIANCE REPAIR CENTER 1.2 I. Main TU 4-3333 512 Main Free Parking at 5th & Klomoth New Shipment Just Arrived! YARDAGE Cafe & Kitchen Prints 100 cotton in attractive prints. 36 inch widths. 10 to 25 yd. lengths. Peg. 57c yard 31 DRAPERY MATERIAL ir decora 77 Luxurious new patterns in popular decorator colors. Values to 2.98 if on f'f C bolts. 48" widths, up ta I J yd, 25-yd. lengths. CLOSE-OUT! Floor Model Sewing Machines & Cabinets 25 to 50 OFF! 825 MAIN STREET "eerr, MARKET BASKET 1st of the Week SPECIALS aiffl 11111111 urn'-1 r-' - lain iLetVx-'m. h1 1 j1 ' y Folger's Mountain Grown, Flavorich (SIMRMS With purchase of 2 bags of Mother's Cookies at 49c ca. 2-lb. tin with 4 bagi 79c Banquet Frozen TV Your Choice Margarine Swifts Prem Frozen Pies Medium Size IVORY BARS Cottage Mb. pkg Luncheon Meat 12-oi. tin Banquet Creme ea. 39 Del Monte 46-ox. tin Pineapple-Grapefruit DRINK 3:69' Swift's Brookfield BUTTER Mb. pkg. 5t USDA Good In Wine Seuce C lb.. 69 3iP Marinated Steaks Ground Beef USDA "GOOD" LOCKER BEEF 45'b a 51 USDA Grade Good cut, wrap ped and quick frozen. No monoy down! No payment 'til March lit. Front Qtr. C lb Medford Red Delicious Apples KX Oregon Grown English Walnuts 31 Much ta aur ra fur, rfia CCA arc--m 0 f I a n Ii no! iterttnf at this time. Wh.n it do, start Marker Botkct Starai will ba a participant and will lllll many tarrtflc ban-ut-petnt ip.ci.il. Th.ia Sp.cialt all eiber Gracary Saaciali tram Than, ad .d tbru Wtd. Maatt and Praduca price foad Man. thn Wad. So. 6th & Shasta Way OPEN TODAY 10:00 te 7:00 en 'Til Midnight Weekdays AA-CI op