Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 12, 1961, Image 2

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE.
O A SUNDAY. MARCH W. 1961
PRESHOT:
parai
CHOOL filS BILLS
SE
Hatfield Criticism
Of Legislative Pace
Draws Duncan Jibe
n DOUGLAS GRIPP
Salem-IUPD-House Speaker
Robert Duncan suggested fri
dav that Gov. Mark Hatfield
stop counting the number of
bills sent to him so far and
"chastising the legislature like
a bunch of children.
Thiran referred to a num
ber of instances recently
when Hatfield compared tne
bills on his desk to the num
ber sent to him last session
The governor sava the leg
islators are busy enough but
the session is in its third
month and he has yet to see
a major piece of legislation
on his desk.
in mils
Hatfield noted Friday that
the legislature has-sent mm
70 bills whereas in 1959 the
pnunt was 102 and not all
minor ones. His point is that
the 1961 session seems to De
dragging Its feet. '
Ducan said this isn't so,
and this year's pace is com
parable fo 1959. He added:
"We've got a responsibility
to the people as a co-equal
branch of government and
we're not going to abdicate
Bills Approved
By Legislature
Salem - (UPD - Measures ap
proved Friday:
By the Senate
SB37 State investment.
SB181 Annotation by cities,
EB231 Teachers.
SB288 Taxation.
SB364 Taxes.
SB378 Insurance companies.
HJR3 Encourages Oregon In
dustrial development.
HB1137 Fishing near tlshways.
HB1339 Judgments.
HB1350 Grants and gifts.
1IB1458 Fishing in Waverly
Lake.
By the House
HB1401 Collective bargaining
for firemen.
HB1422 School, districts.
HB1453 School fund.
HB1491 Fish.
HB2027 Liquor commission.
HB2048 Legislative counsel
budget. . .
11B1020 Uniform oommerclal
HB1144 Inspect posts and forest
Olscascs.
HB1147 Inmate transfers.
HB1351 Taxes.
HB13D9 Racing season.
HB1408 Motor carrier fees.
Hnifl42 Motor carriers.
SCIlll Hogrot over death of
Sen. Richard Neuberger (D-ore.l.
SCR 12 Sorrow over death of
James D. Olson.
that resnonsibility simply be
cause the governor is playing
a numbers game.
Senate President Harry
Boivin said the senate is com
ing along "just fine." He also
twitted Hatfield for getting
anxious. "After all, I'm closer
to it the legislature than he
is." he said.
Boivin said the senate is
"more selective this year in
sending bills to the governor,
He has a record for vetoes
and there is no sense in send
ing him bills of low quality."
"Our batting average this
year is going to look very.
very respectable," Boivin
said.
Both Boivin and Duncan
have cracked the whip over
key committees the past week
and point out that important
bills are ready to hit the floor
bills that have been thor
oughly considered.
Pros and Cons
Friday afternoon, big and
small businessmen told the
house tax committee about
the pros and cons of the bill
to repeal the property tax
on business inventories.
Big public utilities com
plained, that their taxes would
be heavier. But small busi
nessmen said repeal would be
a breath of fresh air.
Other highlights:
Alcohol A bill permitting
the liquor control commission
to decide the minimum food
business that liquor dispen
sers must do was approved
by the House Alcohol Controll
committee.
Signed by the governor:
SB110 Campaign financial re
ports. '
SBI20 Publication of facsimile
ballot.
SB176 Teachers.
SB1S0 Bonds, obllgaUons.
SB356 Columbia River gorge
Commission budget.
SB350 School districts.
HB1043 Withdrawal of oandl
docy. ' ,
HB1060 Ballots.
I1B1070 Campaign financial
reports.
HBU08 Elections.
11B1202 Lost, stolen or de
stroyed equipment.
HB1266 Liquor Control commis
sion budget.
HB128T State funds.
HB1424 Circuit court terms.
1IU1309 Initiative and referen
dum petitions.
HB2010. 2012. 2107. 20! B. an 10
3024, budgets for state board of
eugenics, marine noard. fair com
mission, state enalneer. hvdro.
electria commission and banking
Nixon Says He's
Not a Candidate
Sacramenlo-WPD-Richard M.
Nixon said Saturday he in
tends to devote much time
to providing leadership for the
Republican party but does not
intend to run for governor of
California In 1962.
Making his first political
speech since he lost the presi
dential election to President
Kennedy last November, Nix
on told 500 GOP state central
committee members that his
role in the next few years
will be that of "elder or sen
ior statesman."
He said that although he
is Joining a law firm in Los
Angeles next Monday, " in
tend to devote a substantial
part of my time providing
leadership to our party in
California and the nation."
Decision Known
The former vice president
made known his decision not
to run against Democratic
Gov. Edmund G. Brown in a
session with four Republican
legislators Friday night.
Nixon told them:
"I am not a candidate for
governor. I have no intention
to be one and I have no in
tention institute a draft for
governor."
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OFFICIAL PICTURE Shown above is the "official" photo
graph of President Kennedy that will be used by the chief
executive to fill requests that come in for black and white
pictures. It will be passed out to various government agencies
upon request. The official color photo of the President will
be issued in the near future. ., (UPI Telephoto)
Paar, Sullivan Plan
Television Debate
New York - (UPD Ed Sulli
van agreed Saturday to ap
pear on Jack Paar's TV show
to debate about their feud on
the assurance that the studio
audience will not be rigged
in Paar's favor.
Sullivan's acceptance follow
ed a few hours after Paar
made a special statement on
his own program promising
that he would not pack the
audience with pageboys and
sponsors if Sullivan appeared.
The great debate, which ap
parently will follow the lines
of the Kennedy-Nixon presi
dential debates, will, be held
Monday, Sullivan said, and
the major issue will be money,
Or to be more exact, how
much money should Paar and
Redmond Gets Job
Portland - (UPD - James F.
Redmond, who was one of the
top candidates to succeed J.
W. Edwards as Portland
school superintendent, has ac
cepted a position with a man
agement consultant firm in
Chicago.
Redmond, recently-resigned
school superintendent at New
Orleans, was one of eight can
didates for the Portland post,
before he joined Booz, Allen
& Hamilton of Chicago.
Mrs. Forrest E. Rieke, chair
man of the Portland School
board, was notified of Red
mond's decision in a telegram.
Sullivan pay their guest per
formers on their rival shows.
"Paar insists that Ameri
cans have the inalienable
right to work, for less," Sul
livan said. "I say Americans
have the inalienable right to
work for more.
Sullivan said that on the
assurance of an NBC-TV vice
president that "the audience
will not be rigged," he will
name his seconds (he called
them moderators) Sunday to
meet with Paar's seconds and
arrange more ground rules for
the debate which has a lot of
big name performers wonder
ing what side of the fence to
jump on.
Sullivan said Friday that he
would not agree with Paar in'
front of a studio audience be
cause "his audience is notor
ious. He plays his audience
like an organ." But this morn
ing, Sullivan after a night at
the theater and an attempt to
watch the Paar show (failed:
poor TV reception) issued a
formal statement.
"Relying on assurances
from NBC-TV that the debate
which I have proposed be
tween Jack Paar and me will
be conducted on a high level,
I will waive my insistence on
the elimination of Paar's stu
dio audience at the- video
taping of our debate on his
show next Monday. I'll have
to miss the Patterson - Jo
hannson fight, darnit," Sulli
van said in an aside.
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ifBli
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At The MEDFORD SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
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One Bill Would
Settle Private
School Aid Issue
Washington (UPD Senate
Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield predicted Saturday
Congress will resolve the aid-to-education
dispute by con
sidering the issue of loans to
parochial schools in a sepa
rate bill from President Ken-
nedy's school construction
bill.
The Montana Democrat,
like Kennedy a Catholic, said
the two-package approach
would let members of Con
gress "stand up and be count
ed" and clear the way for a
supreme court test on the le
gality of private school aid.
Backers of Kennedy's $2.3
billion measure providing fed
eral grants for school con
struction and increasing teach
ers' salaries fear that injec
tion of the private school aid
issue may doom the Presi
dent's bill.
Protestant and Jewish de
nominational spokesmen con
tended in senate testimony
Friday that loans to parochial
and other private schools
would definitely violate the
constitutional mandate for
separation of church and state.
Catholic spokesmen, differing
with Kennedy's view, have
urged inclusion of long-term,
low-interest loan aid in the
administration's package bill.
Will Do Best
Mansfield, until now, has
declined to say anything about
the private aid issue other
than that he will do his "best"
to support the President's
program.
But In an Interview with
United Press International
yesterday he gave this ap
praisal: "My guess is that we'll be
confronted with two educa
tion proposals - first, the
President's proposal and, sec
ond, a bill extending aid to
private schools in the form of
long-term, low-interest loans.
"Such loans possibly would
be applicable to those schools
on a construction basis or on
a pupil basis, or both,"
Mansfield added that "in
this way the congress will
have assumed the initiative
and carried out its responsibil
ity as a co-equal branch of
government. '
Gives Chanc
"It will also give members
a chance to stand up and be
counted," he concluded.
The Democratic leader said
that if a separate private loan
bill is passed and approved
by the President, he would as
sume that "a constitutional
test would follow."
Mansfield said tiiat such a
Supreme Court review would
"definitely settle" what he
considers to be a "real" con
stitutional question.
Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.),
chairman of the Senate Edu
cation subcommittee, is firm
ly opposed to attaching a pri
vate school loan program to
the administration bill. Sen.
Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa.), who
was drafting such an amend
ment, said he may save his
proposal for another bill.
Committee Polled
An informal poll of Morse's
subcommittee showed that
Clark's $305 million low in
terest loan amendment would
muster only three or four of
nine votes.'
Sen. Benjamin A. Smith, II
(D - Mass.), President Ken
nedy's successor in the Sen
ate, took a stand on the school
aid issue generally support
ing the chief executive.
"If an arrangement can be
made for federal loans to
parochial schools that does
not violate the Constitution,
I will support It," he said in
a statement.
"But this issue should not
be used to detent, once again,
general federal aid to educa
tion. We have waited many
years for such aid and we
need it very badly."
Express Support
New Jersey's two senators.
Republican Clifford P. Case
and Democrat Harrison A.
Williams Jr., both expressed
their support of long-term,
low-interest school construc
tion loans to parochial and
other private schools. Both
volcd for such an amendment
last year. In a Joint television
interview, they said they felt
such loans would be constitutional.
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217 I. Main, Madford
Linfield in Line
For Research Grant
Washington - HOT - Linfield
college at McMinnville is one
of 11 colleges and universities
that will receive grants from
the National Science Founda
tion next fall to finance inde
pendent research by superior
graduate students.
Linfield will receive $1,220
for research in physics.
Boardman Lease
Said 'Land-Grab'
Salem-fllPD-Rep. George Van
Hoomissen, (D-Portland), said
Friday the governor's propos
al to lease the Boardman
bombjng range in eastern Ore
gon to Boeing Airplane com
pany could result in "the big
gest land grab in the history
of the state."
He criticized Gov. Mark
Hatfield for what he described
as an attempt to "stampede
the legislature" into approv
ing bills completing the
Boardman lease.
Asked for his reaction to
the statements, the governor
replied: "No comment."
Subleased
Van Hoomissen, an attor
ney, said he has heard testi
mony that 96,000 acres of the
space age industrial park
could be subleased by Boeing
to farms and cattlemen in
Morrow county for "twice the
annual rental which Boeing
currently is offering to pay
the state." The proposed lease
would have Boeing pay the
state $60,000 a year.
The Joint Ways and Means
comimttee Friday morning
voted 7-6 to delay approval of
the enabling legislation for
three weeks in order for the
State Planning and Develop
ment department to get an
appraisal of the land involved.
Indications so far are that
Boeing intends to use the site
for testing rocket engines and
similar space age activities.
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