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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1963)
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON Man Lodged in Jail After Car Hits Tree Hatfield Says Oregon's Financial Troubles Largely Matter of Growth (Kditors Note: United P r e I a International asked (he gover nor to comment on the special session which begins next Mon day.) at (lie beginning of the 1959, 1961, and 1963 legislative ses sions I recommended basic tax reform. Warnings - had been given by previous Governors, of the reasons I have spent so much of my time trying to en list new industry from other parts of the country and encour aging the expansion of existing industries here. It was a matter of real re gret that my asking for a mid session election by the people on legislative revenue measures was turned down. Had the legis lature recessed for such an ex pression we would have had a better idea of the consent of the governed. Turned down were my proposals for a referendum the House and the Senate. The revenue bill, a hybrid of many minds, reached my desk 11 days after the legislature adjourned. But reading the temper of the session, which ended in confu sion after 141 days of the long est, most expensive session in Oregon history, it seemed to me better to try to live with what was produced than vetoing the proposals which would have meant an immediate reconven ing of the same decision mak ers. What is the situation now? First of all, Oregon's $1.2 bil lion budget has a governor in a fiscal strait jacket because two thirds of the budget is ear marked, removed from his con trol. This gives us then $404 million of general funds. But an attorney general's opinion indi cated that $135 million of that amount could not be touched through allotment control be cause it is for basic school sup port. What was left, without calling a special session, was precious little to trim without cutting so deeply that essential services either voted by the peo ple or created by preceding leg islatures would be seriously im paired. Why should these serv ices, in a limited area, be cut to the marrow while other agen cies are unscathed because they are. financed from untouchable If the legislature docs not wish ' A Medford man was arrested early Sunday for driving while under the influence of barbit urates after he lost control of his car and smashed into a tree sources? Voter Polled Newspapers have polled voters on what they meant when they said no to the legislative tax proposals. Some people will tell you, and this in my interpreta tion, that they want no new tax es from this session and if any are brought forward they, too, will be referred. Others say to cut this service or that service but not the one over here they consider important to them. I hope for a businesslike, statesmanlike session without the wrangling and personality conflicts of the regular session. me to apply the cuts, then let them proceed. But it is a job for surgeons, aware of the fact we are dealing with human be ings when we talk of education, welfare, state institutions. Government cannot give what it has not first taken from some one else, so goes a fundamental concept. But we must look be yond the crisis of the moment and think not for today alone but for tomorrow as well, or we shall be only piling up the head aches and heartaches for our successors. FINDS LOST EARRING NICASTRO, Italy (UPI) Mrs. Amalia Caffano, 34, killed one of her hens to make a chicken soup and found in its stomach an earring that her daughter Stefania, 5, lost a month ago. outside consultants, and indivi By. GOV. MARK HATFIELD Written for UPI dual legislators themselves that Oregon needed revision of its tax structure. The day of reck oning could be seen coming. It is in large measure a matter of population increase among non income producing age groups thousands more in elementary and secondary schools, thou sands more in our State Sys tem of Higher Education, and at the other end of the age brackets, more in need of wel 16 A at 310 Crater Lake Ave., accord ing to Medford Police. Lodged in Jackson County jail was Steve Arthur Lingrcn, 32, of 410 E. 12th St. Lingren was not injured in the mishap, min cers said. Lyle Kieth Fierling, 804 W. 12th St., told officers that his car was struck by an unidenti fied vehicle about 1 a.m. Sunday at N. Pacific Highway and Ta ble Rock Road. He was not in jured, officers said. Boy Escapes Injury When Hit by Car My recommendations for the forthcoming special session of the Oregon legislature will be presented, as required by the constitution, when the lawmak ers are assembled in the capi tal Nov. 11. But the background of the ex traordinary call is pertinent to "Oil To Burn" on the cigarette tax, income S&H Green Stamps MEDFORD FUEL CO. Phone 772-2111 . current discussions of what they should do when they get here. tax reform, and for the needed additional funds. What resulted was pitched warfare between un mree separate occasions, fare and medicare. This is one A Medford boy escaped wun out serious injuries after he was struck by a car Saturday aucr noon, according to city police. George Robert Berriman, 8, of 263 Mace Road, was taken to Rogue Valley Hospital, where he was treated for abrasions and then released. Officers said the youngster apparently ran in front of a car operated by Albert Peter Bcebe, 51, Central Point, about 5:15 p.m. Saturday in front of the boy's home. No citation was is sued, officers said. Small Worlds Around Us lynn W. Waticlni filter Trlut lyndlou, lin Bird's Life Requires : He Be Perfect Athlete Competition in the wild is so keen, especially among the birds, that every one you see is a perfect athlete otherwise they would cease to exist. Every day dangers are so many and frequent that any bird other than a near - perfect specimen would not last out a single week. There is no one looking out for them but them selves; they must depend on their own resources and abilities. We have flat chests, fallen arches, sag gin a shoulders, crippling coma and bunions, and vnriom other ailments. Wc depend on eyeglasses, wheel chairs, crutches, hearing aids, Birdies and false teeth, as well as dozens of other aids, all de signed to cover a weakness, or physical deficiency. The living bird must be en dowed with endurance, speed, and an alertness that must nev er be lessened for a single sec ond. He can never be a pro found sleeper. He must never Indulge in day - dreaming, even in the bright light of day, for danger and death can come at any time and from any direc tion. Never Lets Down Never in its entire life can a bird "let down its feathers" and relax; the bird that ceases to be ever alert becomes quick ly Inert. Be prepared to fly, or to hide, Is more than a slogan; it is an absolute necessity. The bird that flies past your window or flits away to the questionable safety of the near by bush has adjusted itself to its dangerous environment. It has, thus far, escaped the dan fcrs that make its life a pic carious balance between life and death. Remarkable that so many are able to make it. Most birds have survived because of their alertness. 1 They have learned to live in a mechanized world. In many instances they have even ad justed their feeding habits. As the forests have been cut down and the swamps drained, 1 birds have moved closer in and rearranged their lives. They i survive now in a world that hardly notices their presence, j Every living bird exercises a perfect mastery of its muscles in the method of locomotion. Their wings are like our arms, I varying in size and strength on tne individual needs of the par ticular species. Good Eyes Coupled with their remark able power of flight is highly de veloped eyesight. The eyes of birds must alter their plane o( vision quickly and surely, for a creature moving so rapidly must have instant re flexes, otherwise it would col lide with tree limbs, telephone wires or moving cars. If the time ever came when eye glasses were necessary, they wouldn't last out the day. Birds and humans have at least one thing in common. We are all bipeds. We walk up right, some of us with mechan ical ai !s. the bird without any help at all. With any of its facili ties lacking, it could never hope to see tomorrow's sunrise. LOG ENDS Quick Dtllviry MEDFORD FUEL CO. 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