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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1961)
o o o Medford Tribune PAGES 1 to 12 MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1981 SECTION C ,4 - r Jr 'r'yfX '-" V , ( - v i afatilwMtiffl i- iwiimiiii rm-1 in win- mMmmmmA .... x saw-' .tsly HITCHHIKER The somewhat disconsolate kiuy cat, aDove, will proDaoly imnK twice before he jumps in the back of another beer truck. After inadvertantly closing the doors on kilty at either Cave Junction or the Dardanelle in Gold Hill, McDonald Candy company driver John Murphy found the feline stowaway when he went to unload the truck at Medford. Bill Herring, humane officer for the Southern Oregon Humane Society is shown with McDonald Candy company secretary Mrs. John Soderland as Herring prepared to move the animal to comfortable quarters at the Humane Society, with the hope that the owner will call for him. One of the functions of the Humane Society is to see that lost or stray animals are fed and cared for. University of Georgia Negro Students Find Going Easier Atlanta - IUPD - Two Negro students who became the first members of their race to at tend the 175-year-old Univer sity of Georgia said this week that fellow students "warmed up" considerably during their initial week. Newsmen, to avoid adding to the tensions caused by ad mission of the Negro students, agreed not to interview them during their first week on campus. They were contacted when they returned to their homes in Atlanta for the week end. "Everything went along very much according to sched ule," 18-year-old Charlayne Hunter reported. "It was just like going to school anywhere else." Hamilton Holmes, 19, the oilier Negro student, said he was encouraged by events of the past week. "Everything went off without a hitch," he said. By Court Order The two students were ad mitted to the school under federal court order. Their presence touched off rioting, however, and they were sus pended for their "own protec tion." The federal judge who first ordered them admitted later suggested the rioting could have been averted by state authorities and ordered them readmitted. They went back to classes and were accepted without incident. Miss Hunter said some of the girls in her dormitory who had been friendly before the rioting were "a little cold" when she returned. But she said this merely confirmed "my first intuition . . . the ones that I thought liked me at first still seemed to be friendly." Th Negro coed said plain clothcsmen still accompany her to her first class but "I make it on my own after that. "Once a white girl walked with me and occasionally someone speaks when I pass. Usually I'm so surprised that it's hard for me to cough up a up a hello." Didn't Feel Slighted She said she didn't feel .slighted because most of her fellow students didn't speak. "Mosl of them are hurrying to class and aren't talking to anyone. I don't expect them to stop and say a special hello to inc. The more routine things become the better I'll like it." Holmes said "things are get ting better day by day. It's something you can feel. There ore more smiles and more helios on the campus every day." The former high school foot ball star refused to try to fore cast what might happen from now on. "1 hope for the best . . . and I'm trying to keep from an ticipating anything. When I'm there I concentrate on just three thinus. zoology, psy chology and physics." he said. Life Becomes Pattern The pre-mcd student said many classmates have gone out of their way to "make me feci at home. They slop me and ask me how I'm getting along or how I like the school. You can tell they're trying to malic me comfortable." Holmes said the rioting hadn't made him change his mind about wanting to enter the university. "A lot of peo ple think some organization like the NAACP asked us to do this. But that isn't the eae. We decided ancP later we asked for help. We wanted this. Now I'm willing to see it throush. to o Miss Hunter, a journalism student, said her campus life already has shaken down into a pattern. She said she arises about 7:30 a.m., makes coffee in her room and leaves for her first class, psychology, at about fifteen minutes to nine. Class lasts until 9:50 a.m. and she usually spends another hour catching up on lessons she missed. She then walks across campus for her history class, and from history goes to journalism class. Oregon Supreme Court Rules on Juvenile Code Salem-IUPH-The Oregon Su preme Court held Wednesday that the stale's new juvenile code does not abolish a dis tinction between a delinquent child and one that is depend ent. In a Multnomah county case in which Orvil Dean Harmon was charged with contributing to the delin quency of a minor. Circuit Court ruled that former law defining such children and repealed by the code in 1959 made the law unconstitu tional. The decision written by Justice Kenneth O'Connell disagreed. Ci r c u 1 1 Judge Charles W. Redding was re versed and the case remand ed for further proceedings. O'Connell said the code de fines children within the jur isdiction of Juvenile Court as delinquent in one paragraph and as dependent in another paragraph and there is no conflict. Dissenting Opinion Justice George Rossman wrote a dissenting opinion. He was joined by Chief Jus lice William McAllister and Justice Harold Warner. Ross- man said the present law makes it impossible for a court to say whether a child who runs away from home should be classed as a delin quent or as a dependent. Other decisions included: Louis C. Thomas vs. Alfred Foglio; appeal from Clacka mas County; opinion by Jus tice O'Connell; Judge Ralph M. Holman reversed; action to recover S18.542 under the employers liability act for in juries in a log loading acci dent, motion to set aside re versed and new trial ordered. "Then I have lunch . . . usually with Hamilton," she said, "and then it's back lo the room and study until bed time." Miss Hunter, formerly a student at Wayne Slate uni versity in Detroit, said only a few girls have visited her in her room - "but this isn't unusual. Every one studies hard and they know that I have a lot of catching up to do. They don't want lo inter rupt me." But the Negro coed conced ed things were considerably different Ulan Detroit where "I had loads of friends." She said she was encour aged, however, because the other students "seem lo be warming up more every day." Bolh she and Holmes had their first exams this week -Holmes in zoology and Miss Hunter in journalism. They said they thought they did very well. Hundreds of Letters The two sludents said they have received hundreds of let ters of encouragement from throughout the world. "I hope lo answer each one indi vidually," Miss Hunter said, "but it's going to take for ever." Miss Hunter, a jazz lover who also admires "way out there" paintings, said she had a "few apprehensions" about returning to the school after the rioting but wasn't really frightened." She said she had been as sured that there would be a sufficient number of people there lo protect her "and I took courage from this." The coed, daughter of a Methodist Army chaplain, was converted to the Roman Catholic faith in 1959. She said she carried a rosary in her pocket when she returned and "when the going got tense I said a few prayers." ENDS TRAINING Marine Pvt. Thomas E. Bur ncltc, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray mond B. Burnette, route 1, Talent, recently completed re cruit training at the Marine base. San Diego, Calif. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS LOOK FOR THl HAPPY umt DOG TOPS IN QUALITY! LOW IN PRICE c h i r "i v IIIOIHIl MI MM t o r UtTs w!Ta9 " "Tfor$ I C Kraft's 24 OUNCE Xtef 3 MINUTE MJ Soflin 400 ch l ( Mayonnaise M Quick Oats if Facial Tissue I 1.1 . II 40 OZ. 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