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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1961)
Theyll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo 8.. HOW ABOUT ONt NO.' TAKE ME-TAK6 MV FAMILV.' YtfOl EFORE f 0P vx, AuXE, AU. FOR ONE 4 ONE FCff ALL AMVYf HEPEI OjTWEY OO r y) I aM f VMrtnlMlM.wMa,WWni.r V T iC I ELECTION TWE COMMISM IS .THE SUBJECT OP AN INVES TIGATION NOW LISTEN ID HIM 7M UATLO HAT TO 1 mi teiin ' BOSTON) , iakeview Man ! Is In Korea LAKEVIEW-Army Pfe. Jamei L. Williams, son of Ray H. Wil liams, 820 North G. Street, Lake view, recently ai rived in Korea and is now serving with the First Cavalry Division. The First Cavalry Division is the only U.S. division presently manning a front line in Korea. A tank crewman in Company C of the division's Ninth Cavalry, Williams entered the Army last September and completed basic training at Fort Ord. The 20-year-old soldier is a 1958 graduate of Lakeview High School. 'DENNIS THE MENACE' I (HERALD AND NEW, Klattath Falls, Ore. Friday, January 20, lMt paok Kennedy Takes Oath With His Hand On Douay-Rheims Version Of Bible By JULES I.OH Associated Press Writer For the first time in history a president of the United States to-; day lakes the oath of office with, his hand on a Douay-Rheims ver lion of the Bible the "Catholic Bible," as some call it. How is it different from the King James version the "Prot estant Bible?" According to biblical scholars there is little difference in sub stance, though much in interpre tation. So close is the agreement on language the day may be near when there will be a common Bible. Scholars of the major faiths are at work on the project now. The main difference is arrange ment of certain writings Catholics regard as canonical and include in the Old Testament but which Protestants regard as apocrypha -not divinely inspired. These are books the Jews of Palestine rejected toward the end lof the first century A.D. on the grounds they did not conform to Mosaic law. J Christians did not recognize them as inspired until the fifth century, and after the Reforma tion Protestants again rejected Ihem. The Church of England, which produced the King James version, considered the books at least edifying. Four years after the "authorized" version appeared in 1611, Archbishop George Abbott of Canterbury threatened to send to jail for a year any publisher who failed to include the apocry phagrouped separately between Old and New Testaments. j The King James version was sn called because James VI, un happy with current translations, commissioned 47 scholars to make a new effort. The result, dedi cated "to the high and mighty Prince James," became known as the "authorized version" though it never was formally authorized leither by the English Church or Parliament. The Douay-Rheims version was the Roman Church's first author ized translation into English. The New Testament was published at the English College of Rheims in 1382 and the Old Testament at Douay, France, in 1609. Both Catholic and Protestant versions later were modernized several times, and the Bibles familiar to most persons today rarely are in the archaic idiom of the original works. The latest translation of the Bible will appear March 14. It is called "The New English Bible" and represents 13 years of work by scholars of the major Protestant churches of the British Isles. It is done in contemporary English, which also will be the style of the "Common Bible" be ing prepared by about 30 protes tant, Catholic and Jewish scholars under the leadership of Dr. W.F. BSP Sorority Sets Deadline LAKEVIEW Exemplar Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority mem bers have sent out a call to card players interested in another mar athon play of bridge or pinochle. Jan. 25 has been set as the deadline for sign-up for the new program to start Feb. 1 and to continue through July. Those in terested are asked to contact Mrs. Helen Porter, 123 South J Street, in Lakeview or to call WH 7-42.12. Proceeds will be used for com munity service by the sorority. llie previous marathon was starled in May of last year and finished in December. Six croups witn about 12 in each participal ed. Men and women both are eli gible and foursomes will be ar ranged if necessary. Running scores are kept by a captain and prizes are awarded at the grand playoff. Albright, emeritus professor of Semitic languages at Johns Hop kins University. The work has been under way for two years and will appear piecemeal in 30 paperback vol umes. The first is scheduled to! be ready next January and the last some time in 1966. Neither the Common Bible nor the New English Bible is a re-! vision. Both are new translations from ancient copies of the original manuscripts which long have disappeared. tiLiurus ptk 1-1' 12 potato ccirrr-: wsisai' xii" -iifeirncs p.i?o;.T, l zrar seuon with 1059 cw S'kxm ooMFvi.ttM cuwutive tvma tw iKi.-",?" xk?iub tx of.2!uro;j potato corarrzs, p.o. .box w, KiMi-nn, omaoii Cj-jUf. 1 , Oil OS XL2 12XL . - (CWICTS ILL iil TM.tl 7 Art 19 i;a im iiv) I. vritrl Hail Truck Tolil SyOraHasl U, j. 1 U. S. 2 0. 3. Cm1 HUH Ttl y Varlatyl Had. WM.Ua Ruaaala lttKrl Total ni5 tilt 712 9W 15W ;r. 2S2 4222 2SZ iiii U2 urn ass . iiyl uJk 1I502 221 37li t,i7l ''""tin 1U53 11008 19177 12M UU-WW 1997a-47 3J7 ' hi - V 3594 2"2 2i0 80S? MoT 304 10O32 9'4 371A 5b23 t226 53989 2i2i 5212. JjXL 52i!& 29708 .17535 XbSSt mi 9593 72it5 S3M7 sHil 511? 303 Hi 95- 2912 'I8j2 3519 2057 Wl JosI iIS2 " lewi 2?S2T SSs? 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So 1 WXKEO 7M C01D ' Goldberg Thinks Labor Disputes Similar To Family Disagreements Astoria Will Honor 7 Who Died In Sinkings ASTORIA. Ore. (AP)-A com- munily-wide memorial service for seven men lost in last week's marine disaster at the mouth ol the Columbia River will be held Jan. 29 in the high school audi torium. The program will be under the1 direction of service chaplains with ministers of various faiths partici-' patmg. Community leaders and families! of (lie deceased then will go aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Vocona, which will sail to t h e mouth of the Columbia for a me morial service. Wreaths will be placed in the water, one for each man lost. A memorial fund committee is 4-H NEWS RIM RUNNERS FORT ROCK "The Rim Run ners" is the name members of the Fort Rock- 4-H horsemanship club selected during an organiza- tional meeting recently. The club has six new mem' hers and two associate members, Total membership includes Teresa and Marilyn Ward, Joan Perry, Suallen and Wanda Zvir, Sandra Dollarhide, Linda Kittredge, Tom and Kenny Morehouse;, John Heil- meyer, Mike Mathis and Alan Parks. Suzanne Gillette and Judy Irwin are the associate. Mrs. Maurice Ward is club lead er and Teresa Ward, president discussing a suitable memorial for the lost men. A group of Warrenton fishermen also has collected money for the families of the victims. As a result of the disaster, the Astoria Chamber of Commerce has authorized a special invest! gation of Coast Guard problems here by its Military Alfans Com mittee. We want to make constructive recommendations regarding re placement of lost equipment and possible addition ot new equip ment and personnel to provide best possible and safest life sav ing and towing service here," said President A. M. Stramiello, of the chamber. The seven men five Coast Guardmen and two fishermen were killed when crashing seas sank two Coast Guard vessels and the disabled fishing boat they tried to rescue. UNDERAGE By I'nlted Presi International Arthur J. Goldberg, new labor secretary, believes union-management disputes are similar to mar ital spats. "No one would think of dissolv ing a marriage because of a few disagreement," Goldberg says. "The solution is (or both sides to be flexible and find some way of living together in harmony." This conciliatory, long-range ap proach to industrial relations il lustrates why the 52-year-old Goldberg is held in high regard by top management, labor and the intellectual community. He is not dogmatic, and scoffs at the class-warfare talk of some union chiefs as a remnant of a bygone age. Sen. Barrv Goldwater, R.Ariz.. an arch critic of some labor lead ers, once said that Goldberg was the only union spokesman he; could "talk to" on legislation without getting angry. Defend! Newspaper Guild The scholarly looking lawyer began fighting labor's legal bat- ties on behalf of the Chicago Newspaper Guild during a violent! strike in '.he late 1930s. His success in that and manv other conflicts including most! of the postwar steel negotiations I stamped him as one of the na tion's top labor lawyers. Insiders report that a staff of experts headed by Goldberg not jthe union's elected officers! worked out final details of the set- tlement of the 116-day steel strike in January, I960. Former CIO oresident Phil Murray, searching for an able,! anti-i,ommunist lawyer for the CIO and the Steelworkers, select ed Goldbere to become ccneial counsel of both organizations in 14. Goldberg promptly laid the strategy for exnellina Am. en Communist-dominated unions from the old CIO and played a ivital role in the AFL-CIO merger in lifts. In addition,, the trim, tweedy lookine Goldbere becamn a IaH. er in organized labor's legislative battles for improved minimum wage, jobless benefits and union reform laws. Helps Oust Teamsters He took a major role in ouster of the Teamsters Union from the AFL-CIO in 1957 after acting, in effect, as special prosecutor of Teamsters officials Dave Beck and Jimmy Iloffa. Born in near-poverty on Aug. 8, 1908. on Chicago's West Side, Goldberg was the youngest of eight children. He was graduated lrom high school at the age of 15 and admitted to the bar be- fore he was 21. He was graduated I from Northwestern Law School, summa cum laudc. For relaxation when he finds Hme to relax Goldberg likes legitimate theater, modern art and horse racing. The walls of his comfortable brick home are hung with can vases painted by his wife, the for. mer Dorothy Kurgans, a profes sional artist. In line with his view that nn irreconcilable gulf exists between management and labor, Goldberg said when he was appointed: "Virtually all Americans work for a living or seek to do so. In a very real sense, therefore, the Department of Labor is a depart ment of und for all Americans." SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (UPH- When recruiting Sgl. Donald Lembke received a mail applica tion to join the WACs sent in by Jane De War of Larkspur, Calif he quickly sent a follow-up letter and then went to Jane's home to! tell her of the wonders of Army life in the WACi. Despite his efforts, the recruit Ing campaign was a failure. Jane Is only nine years old. (3) (34) (40) (29t) (600 (44t) (25 (25) (241) (2) (22) (27) (46) (48) (42) (36) Ti- 9153 mit' 1712 45V41 4',:: V,- 9073 77 o 22501 20100 13 W 1?6 12.-.1U 130743 . 'le st k but aj ir.tluda Ttw shipments to r.&n-tablo stock outlsts . Cflrtiriad Kb insstln.: M.O. .'r.sh u.-,.-...t r-ytii'amar.L;. i:lvil ! Carlifiod and shipments r.3j l r.-pe-tj fro . r.u ineo-t.-UU. Hvy lois ronlain Mfh percntai-a U.i. 1 .md U.J. 2 pr-.i..5. IvcUirtta cirrdn?, r.-issin,;, flour M ail typos onhydratoil produetft Lois conHlJl Iowa.- larecnia.-c of L'.j. 1 ini J.l. 2 (jradjs oi- full to Mat 11.0. Trash uarkat roqulraowita . L Incluiaa diversion to llvaatcrk fyfd, fam usf, aoed use! for plantljif, within ar.a, otc. Under New Management! TINY'S TAVERN MERRILL - LAKEVIEW JUNCTION NOW BEING OPERATED BY MURIEL & ANDREE Open 9 A.M. to 1 A.M. Come Out & Get Acquainted Ninety one per cent of the proved reserves of crude oil and natural gas liquids of the United States Is held by seven states. ...it's time to have your eyes examined! For as soon as eyes begin to blur and burn, itch and twitch, strain and struggle, you can be sure they need help! Nagging headaches, neekaches and backaches may be caused by eyestrainl Follow the example of your friends and neighbors . . , see Dr. Nole Optometrists. e Complete Eye Examination No Appointment Needed e Convenient Credit We give Xtf Green Stamps COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. On. 0. J. Not.a ana .. . Peters 730 Main ttvK Guilty Plea Is Entered NEWPORT, Ore. (AP) - Jerry Wayne Gibson, 21, Lebanon, Mon day pleaded guilty to a charge of manslaughter in a fatal dance hall shooting and was sentenced to 15 years in the stale penitentiary Gibson originally was charged with first degree murder in the Nov. 18 death here of LawTence Bruce Ludahl, 18, Newport. The charge later was reduced to sec ond degree murder, and then was reduced once more Monday. The sentence was imposed by Circuit Judge Richard Anderson. Gibson was taken to the state prison later Monday. The fatal shooting w'as the cli max to .in arcument between Gibson and his estranged wife in a dance hall here. Tolice said that Ludahl, an acquaintance of Mrs. Gibson, stepped in and told Gib son to leave her alone. Gibson pulled a gun, police said, and Ludahl was fatally shot in the struggle that followed. rLUTONILM MISSING WASHINGTON (AP)-A small quantity of radioactive plutonium, which could be dangerous if in haled or swallowed, was reported missing Thursday from the Naval Research Laboratory. The laboratory said an inven tory disclosed the absence of the plutonium, which was sealed in an aluminum container about one half inch in diameter and one- euarter inch hiah. About three- fourths of a p-sfli ef plutonium is fevelved. There 1 ne raaiation atanaer umless the container U There are excellent reasons why the 1961 Cadillac so completely dominates the highways of America. The finest Cadillac in a long and distinguished history, it is a motor car which reflects an authority unchallenged by any rival. Stately . . . majestic . . . maskrjul . . . these are words which convey some small measure of the manner in which it takes command of the road and wins the unstinting acclaim of those who drive or ride in it. Your Cadillac dealer cordially invites you to enjoy a mem orable demonstration drive at your earliest convenience. Are Your Plons Under Way For Advertising in the Herald and News PROGRESS EDITION? VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED DICK B. MILLER COMPANY DEALER 710 KLAMATH AVE. "In the modern world the intelligence of public opinion is the one indispens able condition of social progress." Prei. Charles W. Eliot ef Harvard A Herald- and Newt advertising man will be glad to help you plan, layout and write your ad. Herald and News photographers are available to take picture! for Progress Edition ads at no additional charge. .301 Esplanade TU4-S.11 opened, the announcement said