A10 THE SPOKESMAN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2022 COFFEE BREAK FLASHBACK Chamber goes meatless once a week in 1947 The Spokesman 100 Years Ago Nov. 2, 1922 — Prineville yard fea- tures a million bricks The brick yard recently established near Prineville Junction is working a large crew of men now and fire has just been put under a kiln of 1,000,000 bricks. This new institution bids fair to be one of the important supply centers of this part of the country, as we are in- formed that the quality of their output will be of the very best grade. 75 Years Ago Nov. 6, 1947 — Chamber cuts meat but doesn’t agree on why Meatless Tuesday is to be observed by Redmond Chamber of Commerce in the menus of its regular Tuesday luncheon, it was decided this week. But members weren’t in agreement as to why. In the discussion leading to formal action on the subject it was pointed out that the quickest way to save grain for shipment to Europe is to eat the ani- mals that are eating the grain. It’s no hardship on the general public to have to stop eating meat and poultry one day a week, it was argued, but why ask the cattlemen and poultrymen to foot the bill? The weak conditions of the turkey market was a factor brought into discussion. The group finally decided, how- ever, that as long as President Truman had issued the request, the thing to Redmond Historical Commission/ Spokesman files R. Roberts, right, poses with the winning pennant from an early 20th-century baseball tournament. do, as far as the chamber and its Tues- day meal is concerned, would be to go along with him. 50 Years Ago Nov. 8, 1972 — L.B. Day optimistic over Bend, Redmond grants The state director of Environmental Quality says he’s optimistic about sewer construction money, provided Bend and Redmond control new develop- ments. “As far as I am concerned all signals are still go,” DEQ director L.B. Day said in an Oct. 27 letter to Bend Mayor Richard Gervais. Copies went to Mayor Gerold Barrett of Redmond, county commissioner Joe Peden, Sen. Mark Hatfield and local newspapers. Day said he believed financial assis- tance could be found, but federal, state and local governments and individual citizens would all have to do their part. “It just doesn’t make sense,” he com- mented, “that the cities and county should allow unrestrained subdivision development without sewers such that even more state and federal assistance will be required.” Day said he was encouraged by the Bend City Commission’s Oct. 4 de- cision to require individual planning commission review of sewerage needs for major new development projects. He urged similar requirements by the county. The City of Redmond has since taken the same action. 25 Years Ago Nov. 5, 1997 — Suicide repeal re- jected Deschutes County voters agreed with a majority of Oregonians who decided Tuesday to keep the state’s controversial physician-assisted sui- cide law. Although outspent by opponents of 1994’s “Death With Dignity” initiative, supporters of doctor-assisted suicide won a major victory in Tuesday’s mail election. Three out of five votes were cast against Measure 51, which would have overturned the law. Sixty-one percent of voters in Deschutes County said no to Measure 51. The count was 22,826 no to 14,263 in support of it. Voter turnout was 57.5 percent in the county. The Catholic Church, one of the staunchest critics of 1994’s Measure 16, issued a statement calling Tues- day’s vote “a tragedy for all Ameri- cans.” “Most of all it is a tragedy for seri- ously ill patients, who deserve better care for their real needs, not an invita- tion to suicide,” said Cardinal Bernard Law, Chairman of the U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Committee for Pro-Life Ac- tivities. Oregon Right to Die, which cam- paigned against Measure 51, said Tuesday’s results represented a clear mandate for making assisted suicide legal. While supporters of the repeal effort focused on clinical issues, oppo- nents turned the debate into a ques- tion of personal choice. Measure 52, asking permission to use Oregon lottery revenue for school construction projects, was approved by a wide margin statewide, 73 per- cent to 27 percent. In Deschutes County, 74 percent of voters favored the one-time spending program. Puzzle solutions can be found in today’s classifieds. People in Redmond are being crushed by rising gas, food, and housing prices. As your City Councilor, and a local small business owner, I understand this skyrocketing cost of living is unsustainable for families and businesses alike. As your City Councilor today, and with your vote in November, I will continue to work to create more affordable housing and job opportunities in Redmond. www.catzwicker.com Paid for by Friends of Cat Zwicker Committee ID 22226