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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1958)
PAGE 2 A HERALD A0 NKWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORFGON SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1958 Air Searchers Plan Exercise The techniques of rescuing a lost or Injured person will be prac ticed by the Klamath Air Search and Rescue Unit in a simulated exercise September 14. The practice will include meth oris of air search, air-to-ground communication, and ground rescue Plans for the practice search to b. held at Chiloquin airfield were discussed at a KASKU meeting in the Klamath Falls Airport Cafe Wednesday night. Also planned for Sunday. September 14. is a picnic in Collier Slate Park for KAsRU members, their lamilies. and interested persons. W. E. Brown, KASRU secre tary, said organization of a moun tain rescue team also is being un dertaken as a KASRU function. It Is being organized by Lee McFar land of Klamath Falls, with oth tr members from Ashland and Grants Pass. During the practice air search at Chiloquin airfield. Rrown said, the mountain rescue team will make a practice climb on Mt. Thielsen. The practice air search will be gin at 10 a m. September 14, and the picnic will begin at 1 p.m., Brown said. -i5 r f if VERNICE HEL6ERG is new to the Klamath Falls school system bur not to the teach ing profession. A graduate of North Dakota State Teachers College, she took an M.A. at Colorado Stata College and has taught for 12 years In Montana and North Dakota. The mother of two children, Mrs. Hel berg will teach English at Klamath Union High School. L 4 $ y' f TO SAVINGS! Complete Lubrication for your car ONLY 99 Any moke or model. Buy a Coupon Book of 12 Lubes for only $1188 SAVE II $9.12! Hurry! Limited Time Only Offer expires Sept. 20th! DICK B. MILLER CO. OLDS-CADILLAC 7th end Klamath TU 4-4154 JOY MILLER is doing her first teaching in Oregon with the Klamath Falls school system this year. However, she has had nine years of teaching expe rience in California, Holder of a bachelor of education degree from San Francisco State College, she will teach at Pelican School. 1 4 irv NOLAN CHAMBERLIN comes to the Klamath Falls school system with four years' teaching experience in Arlington and Phoenix, Oregon, behind him. A graduate of the University of California, he holds an M.S. degree from the Uni versity of Oregon. He has served in the Air Force and also as a meteorologist for the Atomic Energy Com mission. Married, with three children, he will teach mathematics at Kamath Union High School. AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday Stnricti - 11 m.m. Miti aid Altamaftl Jr. High S906 gnulh th BAND CLASSES For Intermediate X Advanced Students START MONDAY . . . and now is the ideal time to trade in your present student instrument on a first line horn that will carry you clear through school, toas ter early for band and came in for a (re torttf see how much better you play on a top ojictf ity instrument. BEGINNING CLASSES will tfes fttf 3 15th, Ccfc in and ask njnjt igir 8sfJ iff? gram, Tq Lab.x bij! "DENNIS THE MENACE" r 'This is a sous about how much Cowbcv tfce's HOf?se LIKES HIM. JTS CALLED SANDPAPER KlSSeS." I'll, v' r 4 i mm CAROL BIGGS, a new mem ber of the Klamath . Falls school system, will teach the third grade at Mills School. Mrs. Biggs took her B.S. de gree at State Teachers Col lege, Superior, Wisconsin She has a total of eight years' teaching experience, in Wisconsin and Minnesota, and in Portland. JANICE OBERST comes to the Klamath Falls school sys tem this year after two years of teaching in Clarkston, Washington. Holder of a B.S. degree from the Uni versity of Idaho, Mrs. Oberst will teach the first grade at Fremont School. 4f r 1 ?Lr: JT - -t Basin Briefs To Texas Mrs. Bob Jones, Bonanza, left for Galveston. Tex as, recently, where she will join her husband who is stationed with the U.S. Coast Guard in that city. To I.akcport Mrs. Harry Fra zier of Langell Valley and her sis ter, Mrs. Amy Johnson, Lone Pine, California, left September 4 for Lakeport to attend the wed ding of their nephew, Teddy Smith and Judy Nobletl. Shower There will he a mis cellaneous shower in honor of Mary Anne Lcavitt, bride-elect of Frarjk L. Silva, t the parish hall in Langell Valley at 8 p.m. on Friday, September 12. All friends are invited. From Texas Mr. and Mrs. Al Maston and son, Danny, San Angeio, Texas, are visiting Mrs. Matson's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Noble, of Langell Valley. Coffee Hour Mrs. Harold Wil liams and Mrs. Homer Dixon are giving a coffee hour for the bene fit of the Bonanza Library Thurs day, September 11. from 9 a.m. until noon at the library. Every one is invited to attend. Ill Mrs. Inga Dusenhery, aunt of Agnar Jordanger of Bonanza, is in Klamath Valley Hospital re covering from surgery. Bonanza Home Extension Unit will meet at the Bonanza Park Tuesday, September 9, at 10.30 a.m Camp cookery will be demonstrat ed by Mrs. William Drew and Mrs. lesse Drew. All homemakers are welcome. Please bring one pound coifee can with lid and own ta ble service, including cup and glass. Home Mrs. Gladys Kilgore is convalescing at her home in Bo nanza after being in Klamath Val ley Hospital for several days. Date Changed The date for the first meeting of the Chiloquin PTA originally scheduled for Sep tember 8, has been changed to September IS at 7:30 p.m. at the Chiloquin Grade School. In cities measured by Media Records, Inc., newspapers' com bined run-of-paper color linage has increased from a little over 4H mil lion lines in 1951 to over 114 mil lion lines in 1957. ID Cards To Citizens Sparks Israel Dispute REVERSE REACTION 'and boarded it and pressed but- KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Hon. It took off in reverse anil By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International , Does the term "Jew'' designate a person's religion, race or nation alitv? This question currently is the subject of lively controversy among Jews, both in Israel and in the United States. The dispute in Israel was touched off by the government's decision to issue new identifica tion cards to all citizens. Each card shows, among other things, whether the bearer is Jewish or non-Jewish. The Ministry of In terior has instructed its clerks to let each citizen make the deter mination himself. In other words. any person who considers himself a Jew will be officially recorded as one. The ruling has produced sharp protests from some orthodox ran bis. They charge that the govern ment has abandoned the tradition al tests prescribed in Talmudic scriptures. According to these rules, a person is a Jew only if Hi he has been dedicated to tne faith of Judaism by the rite of circumcision; and (2) he has a Jewish mother. Few Jews would argue with the first test, which is a purely reli gious standard. But the second test signiiies that Jewishness also is a matter of race. And this idea is repug nant to many people (non-Jews as well as Jews' who remember how Hitler used it as an excuse for exterminating six million people. In the United States, the ques tion has become involved in a larger controversy between Zion tsts and non-Zionists over the re lationship of American Jews to the state of Israel. Zionists regard Israel as the "Jewish Homeland" to which all Jews owe the same loyalty and affection that a Scot feels for Scotland or a Frenchman for France. This concept of "Jewish nationalism has been heavily stressed in U. S. campaigns to raise funds for Israel. Non-Zionists believe Jewish na tionalism inevitably will revive the "Hitler myths" of a Jewish race, and will lead in time to a new wave of anti-Somltism. Under the leadership of Less- ing J. Rosenwald, former board chairman of Sears Roebuck & Co. non-Zionist organization called the American Council for Judaism is trying industriously to persuade American Jews that their com mon bond is not national, nor racial, but strictly religious. "Judaism is a religion of uni versal values, not a nationality," says the council. "What makes one a Jew is voluntary adherence to that religion." One immense difficulty stands in the way of general acceptance of a purely religious definition. There are millions of people who regard themselves as Jews but do not accept the religious teach ings of Judaism. These are the so-called "secular Jews" and they are numerous in Israel as well as in the United States. The influence of "secular Jews" on Israeli government policy is a matter of constant concern to some devout Jews who believe that the Jewish homeland should be completely dedicated to the religious precepts of Judaism, Ultra-orthodox Jews were hor rified, for example, when a Jeru salem hotel owner recently was granted a permit to build a swim ming pool to be used bv both sexes. , By ancient Jewish tra dition, women are "u n c 1 e a n" creatures who are not allowed to bathe in the same facilities used by men. They also are disturbed by the fact that municipally- owned trolleys and buses operate on the Sabbath in some Israeli cities. Other religious Jews feel that the extreme orthodox factions, by kicking up a fuss over swimming pools and trolleys, are hurting the case of Judaism. They believe it is time to de-emphasize "non essential" elements- such as the dietary laws and strict Sabbath observance, which are ignored by most modern Jews, and to con centrate on the "universal val ues" of faith, justice and ethical behavior that Judaism has con tributed to civilization. Then, they believe, the vast majority of Jews will be able to identify themselves, not with a nation or an ancestry, but with a religion. DETERMINED RECRUITERS CENTRAL CITY, Ky. (AP) - The U.S. Marines made a special effort to get Stephen Elsinger into the corps. He passed the written examination but a physical check up showed the 18-year-old had a serious lung disorder. He was sent home with advice that an opera tion was necessary. The operation was arranged by Elsinger needed five pints of blood. Marine recruit ers at Louisville, 200 miles away, soon had the situation well in hand. Five donated a pint each. Elsing er will be sworn in soon. Tony Hostetler brought his family here from Nashville, Tenn., and dropped into an appliance store to visit friends. Five-year-old son Tony Jr. slipped to the rear of the store, saw an electric golf cart, banged against two electric stoves, . two refrigerators and an air con ditioner before a brick wall halt ed it. Damage: About $1,200 to tha appliances; none to Tony and very little to the cart. DOORS OPEN 6I30 P. M. Feature Times: 7:25 & 9:55 ONE OF THE WEST'S MOST HISTORIC GUN BATTLES! BURT LANCASTER as Wyott Eorp KIRK DOUGLAS os Doc HolliJavc RHONDA FLEMING JO VAN FLEET JOHN IRELAND Technicolou TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY FIRST RUN! 1 STARTS TODAY! fa-UN I IMS Feature at 1 :00 3:15 5:30 - 7:45 - 10:00 DOORS OPEN 12:45 im m 'flMill So great together you'll wish they'd never part again! iff (7 1 ,rir in TECHNICOLOR B 8 3 ls lElf !in TECHNICOLOR EXTRA ADDtD: CARTOON - Knightly Knight Bugs" brOKT LaTE N ' Robert Mitchum Robert Wagner Richard Egan- MayBritt Lee Fhiups 126 No. 7, Ph. TU 4-5121 DOROTHY DUNCAN, a newcomer to the Klamath Falls school system this year, will teach at Conger school. Mrs. Duncan holds a B.S. de gree from Eastern Oregon College end taught twe yean in Pendleton. Women's Club Plsrn B'zesar BONANZA The Bonanza Wom en's Cluh set the date for the an mial hajaar and food sale for the lirst Saturday in December, from ID a ni. until 4 p rp , at their lao meetinc on September 2. The pre. ident, Dorothy Peterson, presided The doll, which members of tin club are dressinc. wiP he Give: iway at 4 o'clock on the dav the December bazaar. Clara Bolt I Hitchased a suitcase for the dol clothes. It was reported that the tras asket of the cluh is succonS ul protect. RefreshmSSrs re served h he hostesses. Vef-e Wjijams am Madeline Ketchutn to the tollow :ig members: Mae dale, V!d. lalry. .leanette Stewart Klorenc1 lorn, Birdie Burk. Janet Fern ind. Dorothy Peterson. Donn; h.xon and rne twist. Mrs. Annu v-'hne, Alturas. a ilm :W- you'" be glad there's I JfSf a sky big enough i? -W - ' KtW and a screen wide fT v I P 0 enough to hold it all! j? lk j Mrn iLTi esi -v TODAY! CONTINUOUS FROM 12:4S P. :OL'0R by DELUXE OnemaScOPE