Portland/O bservar
H atfield hits continuing w a r
7,5
S en a to r M a rk H a tfie ld
(R Ore.) issued the following
statement in W ash ing to n,
D.C. on A pril 12th:
"The course of U.S. actions
in Cambodia in recent days
brings bark memories of the
early stages of this country's
intervention in Vietnam.
I
fear the pattern of secret
co m m itm en ts and public
denials is being repeated.
I am profoundly worried
and concerned over the pre
sent tre n d of even ts in
Indochina.
My anxiety has
intensified since questioning
State Departm ent and I,e
fense Department officials
at a classified session of the
Foreign Operations Subcoin
mittee of the Appropriations
Committee.
We are achieving neither
peace nor honor in Indochina.
Developments in the past
days heighten the unpleasant
but unavoidable truth that
the U.S. is not out of Indo
china and that we are on the
verge of more, rather than
less, involvement in the con
tinuing Indochinese war.
The conflict in Cambodia is
basically a civil war
this
should be made clear to
everyone.
Cambodians are
fighting Cambodians, and yet
me side is being besieged by
U.S. bombs dropped from
U.S. planes flown by U.S.
pilots. Innocent civilians are
being killed by those bombs.
Our bombing, our m ilitary
aid, our airlift and sealift of
supplies, and even further
steps, such as supporting
another |>oesiblc South Viet
narnese invasion of Cam
bodia, all are seen as India
pensable for the survival of
the Ixin Nol government.
Yet, Congress and the Am eri
can public repeatedly are
told that the Administration
has no commitment' to that
government. Such hypocrisy
must halt.
No shred of constitutional
authority nor any legal justi
fication exists justifying our
military actions in support of
the Ixin Nol government.
U.S. efforts to insure ixin
Nol’s survival fly in the face
of clear Congresional direr
live spelling out that author
ized m ilitary and economic
aid shall not constitute a
commitment to the defense
of Cambodia.
Executive autocracy must
not be allowed to trample
the Constitution and the will
of Congress. W e are inter
vening in another civil war.
We are killing innocent peo
pie.
We are violating the
Constitution of the United
States. We are ignoring the
law of the land.
In the words of the prophet
Jermiah:
They say 'peace,
peace’, when there is no
peace.
L e t this be clear:
The
Administration should expect
no funds from Congress for
continuing this way while
boasting about peace."
7:30 p .m , Thursday, April
19, 1973 - Public Forum,
McCall Tax Relief Plan, at
the Washington High School
cafeteria. 531 S F 14th A m -
nue. Speaker is William E.
Bade. State Liason, School
District No. 1.
8:00 f
Thursday, April
19, 19
-
Public Forum,
McCall Tax Relief Plan at
the Jackson High School,
10625 S.W . 35th Avenue.
Speaker will be Representa
live M ary Rieke.
12:00 p.m., Friday, A pril 20,
1973
-
Public F o ru m ,
M cC all T a x R e lie f P lan.
Loaves and Fishes Center,
Trinity Presbyterian Church,
6437 S.W . Virginia. Speaker
is Mrs. M. Bernard Silver
man, Tax Chairman for the
Schools for the City.
7:30 p.m., Monday, April
23, 1973 - Public Forum,
McCall Tax Relief Plan at
the Adams High School Li
hrary, 5700 N .E. .'»9th Ave
nue. Speaker is Representa
live Howard Cherry.
7:30 p.m., Monday, A pril 23.
1973
-
Public F o ru m ,
McCall Tax Relief Plan at
Kellogg High School. 6909
S.E. Powell.
Speaker ia
Representative Earl Blumen
auer.
1:00 p.m., Wednesday, April
25. 1973 - Public Forum.
Democratic National Com
mittee Chairman Robert S.
Strauss said that of the 303
members of the Democratic
National Committee, .'16 are
Black.
Tw enty eight mem
bers were elected from their
States. Eight were among 28
new at large members of the
Committee recently added by
mandate of the 1972 Demo
cratic Convention.
Those
include:
• Former Ambassador F a tn
cia R. Harris, a Washington,
D. C. Attorney
• Mrs. M ary W idener of
Berkeley. California
• State Senator George L.
Brown of Denver, Colorado
• Mayor Richard G. Hatcher
of Gary, Indiana
• State Representative Or
chid Nee Jordan of Kansas
City, Missouri
• Mr. M attilyn F. Rochester
of Willingboro. N.J., an edu
cator
• New York attorney Percy
Sutton, Manhattan Borough
The Department of Reve
nue has installed a direct
toll free telephone line so
taxpayers may learn the ef
fe d on their tax liability of
the tax relief and a school
finance program that is on
the special election ballot
May I.
The toll free
1 800 462 0880.
number
BRADY
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10 cleaning and pressing claim tickets good for
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McCall Tax Relief Plan at
Borland State U n iv e r s ity ,
S m ith M em o ria l C e n te r.
Room .'138. Speaker is Presi
dent of the Senate, Jason
Roe.
7:30 p.m., Wednesday. April
25, 1973 - Public Forum,
McCall Tax Relief Plan at
the Roosevelt High School
cafeteria. 6941 N. Central
Avenue.
Speakers are the
P re sid en t of the Senate,
Jason Hoe. and State Senator
Bill Stevenson.
»
8:00 p.m., Wednesday, April
25, 1973 - Public Forum,
McCall Tax Relief Plan at
Madison High School Library,
2735 N .E. 82nd A ven ue.
Speaker is Representative
Lloyd Kinsey.
O
O
O o
7:30 p.m., Thursday, Aoril
26. 1973 - Public Forum.
McCall Tax Relief Plan at
the G rant High School new
cafeteria. 2245 N .E. 36th
Avenue. Speaker is Repre
tentative Lloyd Kinsey.
O o
O o
nue sharing money to sup
port local programs that are
being "shut down" by a ter
mination of federal funds.
“In a very real sense, these
senior programs are in the
same crunch that children's
services have found them
selves in.” he said.
"But
seniors are still the 'invisible'
ones at the local level, and
need all the help they can
get in obtaining their "fair
share" of money at the local
level."
McCoy, who is on leave as
Director of a Foster Grand
parent Program in Portland,
is a first term le g is la to r,
serving as Co-Chairman of
the Joint C o m m itte e on
Aging, and as a member of
the Joint Ways and Means
Committee.
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DR JEFFREY
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Page j
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S3®:
State Representative W il
liam "Bill" M cCoy, (Dem
Portland, was the keynote
speaker in Seattle at the
National Council on Aging
regional conference. Speak
ing before 400 persons. Me
Coy claimed that state gov
ernment needs to insist on
certain priorities for the use
of federal money at the local
lev el, even when those
amounts are earmarked for
elderly programs.
"W e’re
finding out that local people
often think of a social center
for seniors as the first order
of business, and the elderly
poor, who need home ser
vices. or transportation, are
often neglected," McCoy said.
In addition, McCoy called
for community assistance to
the elderly, who need reve-
Thursday. April 19. 1973
Stop spinning your whools-
SPECIAL!
Meetings e x p la in ta x plan
Schools for the City, an
independent group of citizens,
is sponsoring a series of
public forums in the Portland
metropolitan area during the
next two weeks.
The pur
pose of the public forums is
to discuss the impact of the
McCall tax program on the
Portland taxpayer and its
affect on Portland schools.
The tax relief school finance
measure will go before the
voters of Oregon on May 1st.
The following schedule is a
list of the public forums
scheduled by the Schools for
the City Organization.
Demos choose Blacks
President
• A ttorney M atthew Perry
of Columbia. South Carolina
Three Blacks are members
• Partial Plata«
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