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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1963)
2 C THURSDAY, OCTOBEK 10, 1!63 MEUFOKD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON Variance Request By Pruitt Denied By Area Planners A JAPANESE GIFT-Two kimono-clad Japanese film ac tresses present Robert Moses, president of the New York A variance request by Howard to the commission meeting last night. Residents of the zoned Rountree, in making the mo Other members of the board maintenance of the road, speed Pruitt, Eric ave., Central Point, to operate livestock hauling operation in the North Central Point zoned area was denied by the Jackson county planning commission last night. The commission accepted the board of adjustment's recom mendation. Edd Rountree, Ashland, and G. I. Peoples, Gold Hill, board members, voted to deny the re quest and C. W. Duggan, Sams Valley, favored the variance. The three commissioners serve as the board of adjustment. The board reached its deci sion after a public hearing Mon day and a brief discussion prior tion to deny the request, said the business was opposed by res idents in the area, and that an opinion in August from the dis trict attorney's office found it in violation of the zoning ordi nance. Duggan charged that the haul ing of livestock is not foreign to the area no more so than the commercial harvesting and hauling of other agricultural produce. He felt that an at tempt to regulate livestock haul ing at this location would force the board into regulating the hauling of other harvested crops in the area. and residents said regulation of livestock hauling was not being considered, but rather it was opposition to a commercial en terprise in a farm - residential zoned area. The hauling busi ness was for livestock other than Pruitt's. It was pointed out that zon ing had been in effect in the area since 1959. Pruitt purchas ed the property for his livestock hauling operation in June, 1963. Lists Five Restrictions Lawyer Ron James for his cli ent, Pruitt, listed five restric tions that the hauling operation would abide by if the variance was approved. They included limit, removal of sign, no feed ing of customers' livestock, and use of buildings only to support his operation. The planning commission's recommendation will now be for warded to the county court. The commission meeting con sisted principally of a discus sion between them and residents of the South Talent Interim zoned area. It was noted that petitions are being circulated in the area by the South Talent Voters' association seeking an election on zoning. Last night's discussion dealt with answering questions and clarifying points in the present ordinance. World's Fair 1964-65, wltll a "Happi" coat on behalf of the area had presented petitions signed by 73 persons opposing the commercial operation in the farm-residential area. Japanese Exhibitors' Associa tion in New York. The "Happi" coat, or festival garment, came UNDER TEST HOUSTON (UPI) - What happens to old oil wells? One 8,200 - foot - deep shaft south of Houston, Tex., long past its pro ducing days, has been put to new use by Pan Geo Atlas cor poration. The company uses the "test well" to try out its oil-detecting and well-perforating pro ducts under actual field condi tions. from Japan's ancient capital of Kyoto. Its scarlet background is decorated with a stylized tiger design, and the ornamental Jap anese characters on the lapels spell the legend "Tiger on the Rock." The girls are Kumi Mizuno, left, and Yoko Tsukasa. (UPI) Students Promise Larger Boycott of Negroes' School PLAQUEMINE, La. (UPD Student leaders promised a larger boycott of a Negro high school today. Police braced for more of the racial outbreaks they broke up Wednesday with tear gas and electric cattle prods. A "fredom rally" was planned today in DuPont Annex, a Ne gro suburb. A small, determined group of Negro students organized a se ries of marches on a white high school Wednesday and were routed by police. The state district court judge was expected to rule today on whether to turn a restraining order banning demonstrations by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) into an in junction. CORE has maintained it is not participating in the current outbreaks., Negroes met in a run-down school building in a Negro sec tion just outside of town Wednesday night to discuss ways of gaining concessions on their demands for an end to racial segregation in Iberville Parish County. No Action During the meeting, a brick was thrown into the rear fen der of a sheriff's department patrol car. The car did not stop. Police stood by, but took no action, A Negro leader said Wednes day he filed a "police brutal ity" complaint with the FBI and asked Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy to intervene. Police Chief Dennis Songy ripnied any brutality on the pari or police, but he warned he would ' tear down Freedom Rock Baptist church if Negroes continued "to use it as a fort, The church was the rallying point for demonstrators Wednesday. About 75 students met there, then marched on the white Plaquemine High school. They apparently in tended to repeat Monday's sit ins on the school steps. The students set out for the school in groups of ten. The first group was met by police and an unidentified white coach. The coach physically blocked the Negroes' entry, but police had to use tear gas to disperse them. Two more groups marched on the school and were turned away by police tear gas grenades. Coach May Quit to Run for Senator NORMAN, Okla. (UPl)-Okla. homa football coach Bud Wilkin son has refused to confirm or deny a copyrighted newspaper story that he will retire Jan. 1 and seek the Republican nomi nation for the U.S. Senate. A Tulsa newspaper, the Trib une, said Wednesday it hud learned from "unimpeachable sources ' that Wilkinson, a Dem ocrat, would resign Jan. switch party affiliation and file for the U.S. Senate as a Repub lican in February. When asked about the report Wilkinson, 47, whose top-ranked sooners meet Texas in the Cot ton Bowl at Dallas Saturday said, "I think it is foolish to waste time in this manner, espe cially when we are gettina readv to play Texas. It is unfortunate this keeps coming up. "If 1 did reply it would be the same thing I have said all along," he said. "All I can say is no comment. It is ridicu lous to reply. I don't know who keeps putting these things out It's disturbing to the football team." Portland Man Sought In Death of Woman PORTLAND (UPI) - Detec tives here today were looking for Al Montgomery, 38, of Port land for questioning in connec tion with the death of g woman in a hotel room Oct 4. 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