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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1956)
Tighter Enrollment Requirements Seen In State Colleges Portland 'UP) The time has come for Oregon to tighten up it college entrance require ments for state high school grad uates, the chancellor of the state system of higher education said today. Chancellor John R. Richards, In a speech to the City club here, said enrollment in state schools of higher learning had increased by 50 per cent since 1953. In seven years, he said, the popu lation of our public colleges will have doubled." Richards said: 'The time has coma when the board must deny admission to those Oregon high school graduates whose record and test scores and I empha size a combination of both in dicate that they are poor risks to complete at least two years of satisfactory study." Richards said that it was hoped that the Junior college system in Oregon could be used to help en rollment problems. "It is clear," he said, 'that not all high school graduates should contemplate four years of col lege, and some none at all. Many would be served by enrollment in a thirteenth and fourteenth year in their home communities or entry into a technical Insti tute." At present any high school graduate is eligible for entrance to a state-supported school. Richards said that from 1953 to the present enrollments in state schools had risen from 12, 000 to 18,000. He said that in 10 years. Oregon State college and the University of Oregon alone will have enrollments equal to those of the entire state system of today, Portland State college will have passed the 5.000 mark, and by 1970 we will be ap proaching the 30,000 mark." Richards said these figures, in general, were those on which budget requests to the 1957 Leg islature are based. Richards said the state should not try to exclude out-of-state students. He said this argument "ignores the fact that we al ready practice selective admis sion on the out-of-state student frlday, September 28, 1958 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN Wildlife Officials 'Can't Recommend' Snake Utilities Dams Washington (U.R) Two Ore gon state wildlife officials said today they could not "recom mend construction of two pro posed utilities dams on the mid dle Snake river. John I. Hodges, assistant state State Bar Favors Two More Judges Gearhart (U.R) The Ore gon State Bar late yesterday went on record as favoring two additional judges for the State Supreme Court. The Bar, in convention here, turned down a proposal that it set up a fund to repay clients for losses suffered through any wrongdoings by an attorney. Recommendations that the governor appoint the chief jus tice and that help be employed for the court in its work were buried by votes to refer the mat ters for more study. The chief justice post now rotates auto matically among all members. through requiring a nigher ad mission standard for him and a higher tuition for him." fisheries -director, and C. J. Campbell, chief of basin investi gations for the State Game com mission, said the dams could de stroy annual fish runs valued at $1 million. They testified at a Federal Power commission examiners hearing on a proposal by the Pa cific Northwest Power company Truck En Route To Medford in Mishap Cottage Grove (U.R) Two Portland men were injured yes terday when a refrigerator the blaze. A passing motorist caught fire a mile north of here. Luke Harrison, 42, owner of the truck, and Gerald K. Watson, 21, were en route to Medford when a truck tire blew out. The truck crossed the highway and went over a bank. Cottage Grove firemen were called to the scene and put out the blaze. A passing motorist the took the men to the hospital. Har rison was released after treat ment and Watson will remain in the hospital for the week end with serious burns. to build dams at the Pleasant Valley and . Mountain Sheep sites. "No runs of salmon and steel head have been maintained by passing fish up and down stream at structures of the heights pro posed for these dams and we know if no scheme for accom plishing this which carries a guarantee of success by any gov ernmental fisheries a g e n c y," Hodges said. He conceded that "extensive research" is underway on the problems but added: "The fish commission of Ore gon cannot in the light of its sta tutory responsibilities acquiesce in the destruction or impairment of a fisheries resource of the magnitude shown ..." i oped to support a $4 million Hodges said that although the catch, annual worth of fish affected by . Campbell said there was little the dam is SI million, the area chance that artificial hatching above the dams could be devel-1 could be substituted for allow- Southern Pacific Eyes Winter Schedule Portland (U.R) Southern Pa cific railroad currently is en gaged in a study of winter sched ules on Its various lines and an SP spokesman said here today there was a possibility some revisions to coincide with a win ter time slackening of passenger business would be made. The spokesman said, however, reports that the Shasta. Daylight passenger runs from Portland to San Francisco would be cur tailed to every-other-day service were "premature." He said a "continuing study of winter schedules" was being made and he emphasized it applied to all services and not to any one par ticular line. In the past, there has been no curtailment of service on the Shasta Daylight schedules. ing the fish runs to continue up the river. 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