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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1963)
PAGE-SA HERALD AND Festival Vill MERRILL Mrs. Jack Fleck and Mrs. James Hammond are ci - chairmen of the Harvest Klower Show to be held during LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE Aria 7 8ACR0SS -r-J L-rwJj) KMJl Q , lOMtti 3NION3 '6 '313ADD010W 'S 'SnVHaAO ' "lOOd 'C 'S3A010 ONIX08 'I UMOa 3H01S 'U 'NI10IA '01 '3SIA "8 'ONIB I '3NOHdOUX '9 'NOMdV 'C ojy 'SMMSNY IP By AL GEISS If an institution had no alumni there would be little reason to have a Homecoming. Oregon Tech, of course, docs have alumni and many in which it takes great pride and it Is go ing to have a Homecoming next weekend. Homecoming, on the other band, often does not coin ride with the opportunities that alumni have to return to the campus. On Thursday an Oregon Tech grad returned to the campus for the first time since he gradu ated in 11)60. He was raised hi Toledo, Ore., and spent two years in the Navy prior to com ing to Oregon Tech. Immediate ly alter graduating, lie went to S a n d I a Corporation In Liver more, Calif., as a staff assist ant in an electronics engineer ing group. In March of l!Hi3 lie accepted a position as an appli cation engineer with Sonex, Inc., a company which manu facturers telemetering comx nents for the missile and space age industry. Actually, he was a trouble shooter for airborne telemetry systems. Ho visited Oregon Tech last week shortly after being promoted to West ern regional manager of Son ex, Inc., witii headquarters In Encino, Calif. The company's hcadquariers are in Philadel phia and the Western Region in cludes all of the territory west of the Mississippi River. Oregon Tech's Homecoming will begin next Friday evening at 6:30 with a serpentine to the bonfire site near tho new campus. A rally dance in (lie Student Union ballroom will fol low at 9 p.m. A booth or alu mni registration will be open throughout the evening In tlic Student Union. Saturday's events will begin with a 9:30 a.m. pa rado of floats and bands. Tho parade wll begin at Third and Klamath and proceed down Main Street to Modoc Kick). Guided tours of Uie new campus beginning at 11 a.m. will be open to the public. .The Oregon Tech Owls will meet the Oregon Collego Wolves In a 1:30 p.m. Homecoming foot ball game on Modoc Field. An innovation In this year's activi ties during Hie halftime at the game will be a parade of (lie (loots and Uie first announce ( pxurwj NEWS, Klamath Fall. Oregon Include Flower the 27th Annual Potato Festival. The following are rules apply ing 'o all contestants: all entries limited to a 20-inch space or THE OWL HOOTS ment of tine winning float and the winner In the queen contest. Alumni president Bill Glodowski will crown tho queen and pre sent the queen and her court to the audience. Considering the beautiful Indian summer weath er we are having and the fact that Uie game will be played in the afternoon and the added at traction of halftime activities, it might be an excellent opportuni ty for the not-too-ardent-fans-of-football to sec the Owls in ac tion. A highly rated local 18-piccc dance band, I lie Starlighters, will furnish the music for the Homecoming dance which will be held in lire campus gymna sium from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. The public Is invited. Oregon Tech's increasingly popular author of electronics articles, Bob Baird. head of elec tronics department, seems to have (lie unique ability to de velop relatively simple explana tions of highly complex schem atics. His recent article in a ra dio magazine discussed ampli tude modulation In radio broad cast waveforms. Last week he received a phone call from a long-time radio operator in cen tral Canada asking If Bub's statement was true and request ing some additional information. "All my life I have believed that this Just couldn't lie." tlic man said. The recent announcement of faculty and staff to special com mitters Included on Uie Library Committee, Jesse Crabtree, Gene Culver, l-croy Fisk. Rus sell Mad.sen, George Marosticn, O. K. Mcfart, D. B. Oirrll, J. F. Partlow, Marion L. Peter son, Imogens Ralston, and Carl Stolpo, with P. T. Meier as rhairnian: on the A c a d c m I c Standards Committee, .1 J. Boyle. P. T. Meier, II. O. Howe and Gene Stivers, with J. L. Churchill as chairman; and on Uie Faculty Welfare Com mittee Del Blake, Brooks Custer, Joim W. Googins, George Muroslica, Howard Morris, Thomas E. Sutherland, and Eu gene Wellmon. with R. C. De Hosier as chairman. Refinance Your Home V Lower Monthly Payments k Lower Interest Rates If Your Property Qualifies 30 yaan SiS litraratr. On nawar traa raiidtnlial rsatrtr railrictad artai includina and aomparabla ta, Marina, Lama Linda, Wait Park and aarri at Hal SpHnai. Na laan taat ar ctaiina. coin arhtr than tttta laa, Principal and Iniaratt SS.I4 par SI 000.00 par manth, ar S1U.S0 monthly an 120,000 laan, Cantact II ya would lika ta (1) Pttduct yaur month, ly paymanrti (2) Obtain additianal fandt tar invattmant ar athar purpaiei ar; (3) Rtfinance in cannactien with lata. BARNHISEL AGENCY 112 S. 8th St. Telephone TU 2-3461 Sunday, October 20, 1963 I Display less; the committee is not re sponsible for containers; entries must be in and registered before 10 a.m. Friday, Oct. 25. (Mer rill High gym); exhibits must be left in place until S p.m. Satur day, Oct. 26; put name and ad dress on bottom of container. Any adult desiring to exhibit any plant or arrangement may register their exhibits before 10 a.m. Friday, Oct, 23, at the Mer rill High gym. First and second place ribbons will be awarded. Please put names and ad dresses on bottom of containers. The committee is not respon sible for containers. Entries in the children's divi sion, age three Uirough t h e fifth grade and sixth graders to 18 years old may exhibit in four scenes, potato characters and arrangements using fresh fruits, flowers or vegetables. First place will receive a blue ribbon end a $2 cash prize. Sec ond place will he awarded a red ribbon and third place a white ribbon. Basin Briefs BONANZA MR. AND MRS. LARRY FRI AR of Sutter, Joan Hynos of Chico, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Glvan went to Portland to attend the wedding of the Givans son, Pat, to Kathleen McNicholas on Oct. 12. MR. AND MRS. JACK MUR RAY, former Langell Valley res idents now living at Los Angeles, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hitson Sr. NONDICE McFAIX. Bonanza senior, was chosen queen of the Klamath Basin Potato Festival. She is the first queen from here in 23 yeais. Mildred Tcarc Hall was the last queen. Princesses for Nondice will be Mary Anne Stevenson, 5, and Virginia Kea dy, 5. Mary Anne is the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Bud Steven son and Virginia is the daughter of Mr. and CUrs. George Keady. LEONARD PRESTON and Mike of Springfield spent a few days with his brothcr-in law, George Kcady, and family. BOB BRETT, Robin and John went to Eugene Oct. 13 to get Mrs. Brett, who had been visit ing her daughters, Mrs. Mark Dearborn and Mrs. Wayne Shanzhouser, in Portland. LKLAND PETTIGREW of Harbor, Ore., spent a few days in the valley. He was manager of (lie Langell Valley Irrigation District 17 years ago. MRS. MAE GALE, Mrs. Flor ence Horn, Mrs. Harry Frazier, Rhoda and Joe David, Mrs. Lloyd Gilt, Mrs. Lester Leavitt, and Mrs. Amy Johnson of Sac ramento were luncheon guests of Mrs. Bill Burnett on Oct. 11. MRS. EARL HITSON SR. and daughter, Mrs. Dick Smith, spent Friday at Malin with Mrs. Herman Vnwcll and family. MR. AND MRS. WARREN DICK and sons of Portland sienl the weekend in Langell Valley with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Kcysor. Shop Today 10 Till 7 At Store No. 2 South 6th & Shosra Woy OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT Monday thru Sat. All Grocery Speciols from last Thurs. ad good thru Wednesday! MARKET BASKET ttti and Pint So. 6th and Shalt Way TALENTED SEAMSTRESSES Smart garments, fashioned from wool will be modeled durinq the annual style show Sunday, Oct. 27, sponsored by the Women's Auxiliary to the National Wool Growers' Asociatioi and the American Wool Council. Judging will be on Saturday. The show and judgiiq session are scheduled for the city library. Left to right are Karen Dean, 13; Linda Tiylor, 17, and Carol Holzhouser, 16, all from the Henley District and Henley schools. no money down Tako up to 36 months to pay iVA 1 !l 9TH & PINE J 1 m m I iii ' i Airline TV from $99.00 Airline stereo from $99.00 to $450 Combined TVstereo froir $279.00 to $860 Visit Our Big Record Department, Now on FREE DELIVERY rnrr i n ! FREE normal installation I to $329 STORE OPEN FRIDAY Wool Outfits To Be Shown By Youthful Seamstresses Young fashionists. 13 through 21, will model garments made this year in the "Make It Your self With Wool" contest spon sored by the Auxiliary of the Na tional Wool Growers' Associa tion, the American Wool Council and local wool groups. The style show is scheduled for Sunday afternoon, Oct. 27, in the city library. The public is invited. Winners here will enter state competition later this fall. Priz es include a two-week trip to the Caribbean, a college scholarship and $35,000 in other prizes. Mrs. Harold Williams, Bonan za, is district chairman. M r s. John Seville, Lakeview, is co chairman. Assisting are Mrs. Earl Mack, Mrs. Bryant Wil liams, Mrs. John Taylor, Mrs. Homer Delamater, Klamath Falls; Mrs. R. C. Burleigh, Mer rill; Mrs. Leonard Will, Malin, and Tulelake, Mrs. Jack Lynch, Langell Valley. Among the models who will enter garments made of wool is Linda Taylor. 17, in her fourth year of competition, who will WARDS NATIONWIDE REPAIR SERVICE is lust . n a phone call away! frnma.rrrii i nnyji.TH si si'Nl H I r ' Main Floor, Records at Discount Prices NIGHTS 'TIL 9 display a skirt, coat and blouse ensemble in black and white, in the junior division. She has had both 4-H Club instruction and home economics at Henley High School where she is a senior. She won a sewing machine in 1961 state competition and a less er prize last year. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor. Karen Dean, an eighth grader, is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Dean. She is 13 and a sub- ORDERS CARS RETURNED WASHINGTON IUPH - The Interstate Commerce Commis sion Friday ordered the na tions's railroads to return box cars to eight Midwestern lines facing a shortage during the peak grain shipping season. The order, which takes effect Monday and expires Dec. 31, applies to cars owned by the Burlington, Santa Fe. North western Soo Line, Northern Pa cific, Milwaukee Road, Great Northern and Rock Island railroads. j LOW PRICES EVERY DAY, and ! even bigger values when we , 7, say "sale" STEREO WITH FMAM, BUILT-IN MULTIPLEX Hear 6-speaker stereo sound o Hear FM stereo broadcasts Price slashed from 249.95 Enjoy concert hall reality at an aston ishingly low price! Multiplex is built into fhe FM to receive thrilling stereocasts. Stereo records and AM radio are en hanced by the superb sound system. Veneer cabinet, mahogany finish. NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENTS TILL FEBRUARY WL ELEGANT TV CONSOLE, CLEAR 23-INCH" IMAGE Automatic picture contrast Full tone from 4 speakers Price slashed! Reg. 259.95 A fine performer! Picfo-Matic efecfronic "eye" automatically maintains best bal ance of brightness and contrast. Enjoy the luxury of hi-fi sound from 4 speakers! Hardwood veneer, rich mahogany finish. Walnut, maple or fruitwood, $10 more. 'Measured diagonally. satisfaction guaranteed or your money back! : WARDS SERVICE GUARANTEE . Within 90 days of purchase, Wards will replace or repair FREE any IV part found . .. defective in materials or workmanship. PM PHONE deb entrcnt in the contest and will model a scarlet wool flan nel jumper dress to be worn with white blouse, white gloves and red patent slippers. This is her first year in competition. She is a 4-H Club girl, has been taking lessons from the Singer Sewing Machine instructors, re cently won in the Young Style Maker.Contest. High school junior Carol Holz houser, IB, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Holzhouser, was a second place winner last year in the sub-deb division in district competition. She will model a smart suit in plaid, camel, blue and beige shades with raglan sleeves, three-button jacket, to be worn with beige fur pillbox and beige gloves. This is Carol's second year in school home economics sewing. 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