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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1963)
They'll Do It Every Time By jimmy Hatlo " yASVERv SOU PROBABLV " ( VOU CAM KEEP THE DRAPES nice HOUSE-. 1 . f 6OT A VERY 6OO0 ) CLOSED 4ND YOU WOtfT MIND NOT THIS WHOLE KS N. BUV ON ACCOUNT OF V HAVING A NICE VIEW T f SEC7ION USED V , 010 YOLI VS6 INCINERATOR : , -r ' " ID BE A SWAMP, SAV &RICKSAT ) 7 PLANT THEY'RE -nJS tyPeAi WOULDN'T 1 atmn" BUILT IT ? to put up ) house is vewVowkj a house if) sJC i7 4VASN"r WE THE IV- tcraOSS THE 1 PPACTlCAL-NO Jj THEV GAVE IT TO sSar'": I ONE WHO WAS STREET l DOODADS OR VE.' AN APARTMENT pff AMXEOL'PIN V-r-, X I JioOERN STUFF K. IS MUCH MORE r les Listening to the A - '-lfXlSSr. SOUTHPAW COMPLIMEMTS -tVX rSZ trRS?Jk, on the house vaive JUST PUI?CHASEO,BE SECTION B PAGES 1 to 10 Medford Tribune MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1963 Special Session Ready To Tackle Financial Crisis By ZAN STARK SALEM (UPI) -The Oregon legislature will meet in special session at noon Monday Veter ans' Day to try to find the an swers to the $60 million fiscal headache created by voters at the Oct. 15 referendum election. It will be the 12th special ses sion in Oregon history, and the first since 1957. The session six years ago was called to reduce taxes because the state had built up a multi million dollar surplus. That surplus ran out this year, forcing the legislature to enact a tax package to raise an addi tional $60 million to finance a $404 million general fund budg etlargest in the state's history. Package Soundly Whipped A group headed by Albany publisher J. Francyl Howard was successful in its drive to get the tax measure referred. The tax bill was defeated 3'2 to 1 at the Oct. 15 election. In the wake of the defeat, Gov. Mark Hatfield junked 18 million in capital construction and salary hikes, trimmed 17 million from agency budgets, proposed nearly 11 million in basic school cuts, and asked the legislature to re-pass a one-shot speedup of withholding tax col lections to add $12 million to the biennium's income. Reductions in basic school, and adoption of the one-shot measure require legislative ac tion. Hatfield and legislative lead ers have indicated they believe the session could end in 10 days. But there is no guarantee it will. Many lawmakers have voiced dissatisfaction with the Hatfield austerity program, many appear opposed to the one-shot plan, there is no agreement on how much basic school should be cut, or whether governor or leg- LIVE AT THE HOTEL GRAND THIS WINTER Steam heated rooms TV in the lobby Free Phones Parking Area $50.00 per month HOTEL GRAND islators should make the detailed reductions. Sales Tax Suggested There is increasing agitation for a sales tax plan to be sub mitted to the voters. Past special sessions have run from one to 20 days. The ses sion six years ago, at which taxes were reduced, lasted 19 days. The 141-day regular session earlier this year was the longest in Oregon history. House and Senate Ways and Means Committee members be gan informal meetings here Thursday to gel a "running start" on budget review. Both the House and Senate members are slated to caucus Sunday night to organize and adopt rules. Senate President Ben Musa and House Speaker Clarence Barton have announced each chamber will operate with a skeleton staff during the special session. Airline Officials . Will Visit Plants MONTREAL (UPI) - Repre sentatives of 21 airlines will tour U.S. aircraft plants on the West Coast next week to get a first-hand look at the industry's progress in preparing for a su personic airliner. It will be the first time that so many airline executives have made such a joint study of plans for the proposed "SST" planes. The tour will include plants of Lockheed, Douglas and North American in the Los Angeles area, and Boeing at Seattle. It was organized by the Montreal based International Air Trans port Association which includes 92 airlines from some 70 coun tries. A spokesman said 37 persons from the association's Technical Committee would make the trip. They will be headed by Dr. R. R. Shaw, committee chairman and development manager of Australia's Qantas Airline. The group will visit Boeing Nov. 15. A GRAHAM FIRST BELMONT, N. C. (UPI) -Evangelist Billy Graham will deliver his first address on the campus of a Catholic college hp.'-e Nov. 18 when he speaks to students and faculty members I of Belmont Abey College. Council Fathers Favor Senate of Bishops in Rome VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Ecu-menical Council fathers from all parts of the world spoke up strongly Thursday in favor of the establishment of a "senate" of bishops in Rome to help the Pope govern the church. The proposal for an episcopal senate composed of representa tives chosen by national hierar chies was endorsed in council debate by bishops from France, South Africa, Ireland and Indo nesia. Asks Clear Declaration In another highlight of the debate, Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis, who said he was speaking for "several" U.S. bishops, called for a clear dec laration by the council that the Roman Curia has no independ ent existence in its own right but is solely an instrument of the Pope. Cardinal Ritter favored en larging the powers of bishops to run their own dioceses, as a pending council document would do, but he objected stren uously to the fact the document speaks of "granting" powers to bishops. He said it should speak rather of "restoring" powers which bishops have by divine right but have in the course of history tended to be restricted. Cardinal Ritter's views were seconded by Archbishop Piotr Kalwa of Lublin, Poland, speak ing on behalf of the entire Pol ish hierarchy. Says Body Necessary Archbishop Owen McCann of Capetown, speaking for all bish ops from South Africa and Northern Rhodesia, said it was "absolutely necessary" to set up a central body in Rome rep resenting all the bishops of the world. He said that many of the questions awaiting action by the Ecumenical Council could be turned over to this body, thus cutting down the duration of the council. Bishop Michael Browne of Galway, Ireland, speaking for a number of Irish bishops, also stressed the need for a senate of bishops which would outrank the Roman Curia and share with the Pope in the supreme government of the church. Archbishop Herculanus van Der Burgt, speaking for 30 In donesian bishops, said the epis copal senate "would be an in strument of sound decentraliza tion" and would provide for "genuine representation in Rome of all members of the church." Chapter on Platforms in Ike's Latest Book Is Timely Subject RV I.YI.E P. WII.SOV trnmnnifm nlntrnrme Tkaea AV.Ignnnratinn k. t .1 UFUtl-n4t I.. 1 L; ' : . .. - By LVLE C. WILSON United Press International Recommended to the voters for their serious consideration is chapter VIII of former Pres ident Eisenhower's just . pub lished account of his years in the White House. (Mandate For Chenge, Doubleday & Co.) The chapter title tells the story: "The Platform-Promises to Keep." It is a timely chap ter. A cancer in the tissue of American politics today is the malignant chicanery involved in the drafting of presidential campaign platforms. These ex. travagant statements of par ty purpose and policy tend more to obscure than to illumi nate what actually is the pro gram of the candidates and of the political parties. Moreover, the platform writ ers knowingly write into the platforms promises that cannot be redeemed. This dishonesty is a fraud upon the voters and a disgrace to the American way of life. To discover this situation to exist can be a shocker to an honest man, such as Ike. In chapter VIII, he re lates that soon after his in- Chemistry of Oregon's Coastal Waters Studied study by oceanog CORVALLIS - Oregon State University oceanographers are now studying the chemistry of Oregon's coastal ocean waters, the effects of Columbia River run-off on near-shore ocean wa ter, and water upwelling with a two-year $40,500 National Sci ence Foundation grant to the Department of Oceanography. The new chemical oceanog raphy study off Oregon's coast is directed by Dr. Kilho Park, assistant professor of oceanog raphy. A knowledge of the char acteristics of water masses is fundamental to almost all other studies of the waters of the sea, according to Park. Dr. Park noted that the unique features of the Oregon coastal area make it an interesting lo cation for raphers. Oregon has a long and rela tively unbroken coastline with the Columbia River as a major source of fresh water, a com plex pattern of water masses influenced by currents, coastal upwelling of water, and consid erable amounts of radioactive material coming into the ocean from the Hanford, Wash., Atom ic Energy Commission via the Columbia River. Chemical oceanography stud ies which add to the fundamen tal knowledge of the sea, Park noted, may someday aid applied programs of national defense, commercial fisheries and radio active waste disposal in the ocean. . auguration he met at the White House with Republican congres sional leaders. "In this first meeting," he continued, "I said first that it was my intention to redeem the pledges of the platform and of the campaign. To my astonish ment, I discovered that some of the men in the room could not seem to understand the seriousness with which I re garded our platform's provi sions, and were amazed by my uncompromising assertion that I was going to do my best to fulfill every promise to which I had been a party. "More than once I was to hear this view derided by prac tical politicians who laughed off platforms as traps to catch voters." So it was with a honest man on discovering late in lite that men who were otherwise hon orable were, also, crooked in their dealings with the Ameri can people. In the harsh lan guage of reality, these politi cians lie to the people to ob tain their votes. They get away with it because both major par ties and almost all politicians accept this crooked practice as normal and necessary. This dishonesty was in style long before Ike's 1952 campaign and it continues unabated. For example, both the Democratic and Republican platforms promised in 1960 to do some thing about Senate filibusters. President Kennedy himself made a campaign promise to obtain enactment of civil rights legislation early in his first White House year. More specif ically: On Sept. 1, 1960, candi date Kennedy issued a state ment which included this lan guage "We pledge action to obtain consideration of a civil rights bill by the Senate early next (1961) session that will im plement the pledges of the Democratic platform." It is fair and reasonable to believe that Kennedy meant that when he said it. It is equally fair and reasonable to report that he reneged on that promise 100 per cent. He re neged, apparently, because a civil rights bill before the Sen ate in the winter-spring of 1961 would have created civil war within the Democratic party. To renege was practical politics. With both parties pledged on filibusters you might think something would be done. You might, that is, unless you wer a practical politician. The voters can and probably will catch up someday with thess practitioners of deceit. ir Heater & Furnace i Repair . . i( Sales & Service JACK HALL 772-6181 ' 482-3950 IF YOU CAN REPAY $63.52 MONTHLY, YOU CAN QUALIFY FOR A $1,200 LOAN TO HELP YOU MOVE AHEAD! THt FUST STff in getting ahead is to get even. Do it by consolidating all your worrisome bills tnd debts with one large loan from us, YOU CAN SAVE MONEY in monthly payments by grouping your bills and having only one payment to make each month. Check the chart, see how much you need and how low your payments can be. Then see usl CASH YOU I 24 MONTHLY HCHVi PAYMENTS $ 300 $17.71 500 28.86 00 44.13 1,000 . 53.89 1,200 63.52 1,500 I 77.87 PHONE fOt AMOUNTS HOT SHOWN NATIONAL THRIFT CORPORATION Successors to Doug Gerow Finance and Oregon Fininci 45 South Central Avenue Medford, Oregon Jim Pierce, Mgr. ,' Phone 779-2321 : l i a' Stock from our Warehouse Must Be Sold t Once! ... W..H .he 1" our suppliers, ha-e drssric.11, reduced .11 pr.ee. Tw low! Read .his ad careful., . . . Compar .ere ,o Now is the time and BNi is tne P.a. SALES FLOOR -NEW STORE! 1103 NORTH RIVERSIDE, MEDFORD Wl sh - 1 iulpxrlnJr COMPACT-Only 28" Wide Big Door Storage 50 lb. Top Freezer Magna Seal Door Gaskets Choice of Colors SC50 Close Out-Only ABSOLUTE NO LIMIT NO RESERVE PUBLIC AUCTION SAWMILL. BOILERS, FORKLIFTS, FIRE PUMPS Voluntary SoU by Orrftr ol Board of Oirtcfen ELLINGSON TIMBER CO. $170,000.00 Evaluation 404 SO. 4th ST., KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Thuriday NOV. 21 PARTIAL INVENTORY SAWN It L MICHINEHY F;ir and Stowell Crrn(8 Riderless 3 BLK, Electric automatic ietworki; Diamond I ft. dbl. cut band hd. rig 200 H P. driw; Klamath 6"i54- edger; On mend &'60" edger; Rciaw preseott 7 It. 6 toll w 1959 w-th 150 H P. drkt: Trfmnur 20 It. under cut w25 HP, mtr : Mof Summer 45 w,'100 H P. mtr.; 40 Tranifar units, eonvevors K roll eases all wGear hd. motors. 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Application forms and addi tional information may be ob tained by writing the Forest Re search Laboratory, Oregon State University, P. O. Box 571, Corvallis. 3 Only, SC 60 Huge 12 cu. ft. capacity. Only 28" wide l Only, CT511 Large Two-Door Model, Automatic defrost 2 Only, CK70 14 cu. ft. 105 lb. Trua Freezer, Double Door Automatic With Trade 3 CYCLE DELUXE All Porcelain Inildt it Our Fully Automatic Operation Fill Selection Water Temperature Selection 4 Only, LW 355 Super Deluxe, all the latest Features 2 Only, LW 360 2 Speed Deluxe, All Porcelain, Fill Select., Best Buy in Town 4 Only, LW 375 Super Deluxe, 2 Speed, Silhouette Styling LW330 Close 0 Only 167 With Trade I folpoinir SPEED FLOW SYSTEM High Air Flow (or Falter, More Gentle Drying All Porcelain Drum Fully Automatic 110 W or 220 W 3 Only. 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