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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1963)
FRIDAY, ' '"Everyone In southern Oreroa , Readi The MaU Tribune" Published Dally except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. NoruWI?tPhJ7aJll4! HERB GREY Advertleini Manaeer n n, 1TU,U Hi Mff ERIC W ALLEN JR,Mne Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CBIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. SporU Ed tor OLIVE STARCHER Women-e Edltoi DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mxr An Independent Newipepel ntered eecond dew matter it Alcaiora. -- March s 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall in Auvejice. Dally nd Sunday J jeartlf.OO uaiiy ana duiww- -Dally end Sunday 3 moa. jj.OO Sunday uniy vnw w -1 Single Copy (Mailed) JM By -nrricr Ana ngiw w .7'. Lully and Sunday 1 year WJ.00 uaiiy ana buiium; Bunnay tiniy i mw. --- Carrier and Vendora opy jp Official Paper of City ol Medford nrH.IPDer of Jackion County uniKD rren full Leaied Wire V. P. 1. TelepJmtoNewpluree iMEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Advertising Rprent'lvS:, NELSON ROBERTS A: ASSOC!. Alba ui'itn in i, " . cato. Detroit. Saa rranclico. Lot Angejva, bw"i - Denver. NATION A l I0ITOIIAI Memoor Calltornla Newapaper Publlihera Aiioclatlon Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from tne files of The Mail Tribun. 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 yean ago. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 25, 1951 (Sunday) The trial involving two grand jury indictment charging tor gery against a Medford man will not be heard tomorrow because of a defense motion for a change of venue. Optimistic reports on the pos sibility of reaching United Med ford Crusade's $101,000 goal have been Issued by UMC offic ials. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 25, 1943 (Monday) Medford Ministerial Associ- -!- nMn,nEla anhiwtllltnO' nf SUO- HUUU ,IUH3an o..-"""o day football game by Army mils i University of Oregon. Millard W. Grubb, Ashland nnst muster, d es alter iwo- month illness. 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 25, 1933 (Wednesday) 'Jackson county officials re port the county has no funds for the old age penslons unt" financial situation Improves. Carload of pork arrives in Medford for distribution to Jackson county residents who are on relief. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 25. 1923 (Thursday) Rawles Moore, district attor ney for Jackson county, resigns from office. County authorities receive re ports that suspects in Siskiyou railroad tunnnel robbery have been seen in New Mexico, Maine, and Toronto, Canada. 50 YEARS AGO Oct. 25, 1913 (Saturday) Bud Anderson, Medford, scheduled to meet Louis Rees, Los Angeles, in lightweight box ing match at Oakland; Ander son, in top condition, rated 10 to 6 favorite. Rudy Scholti, Medford, stars for Santa Clara freshman foot ball team In victory over Stan ford frosh. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or tan carreer ia superier; aeren sr eight fi eicellent; tle er an is flood. 1. Chimpanzees are monkeys; true or false? 2. Are the Cascade Mountains east or west of the Rockies? 3. Name the author of the novel "Hawaii." 4. Which two bodies of water are connected by the Erie Canal? S. Name the largest of these planets: Mercury, Venus, Mars Earth. 6. In which U. S. city was President James A. Garfield shot? 7. Is the Suei Canal a sea level or a lock canal? 8. Is the Tropic of Capricorn north or south of the Equator.' (. Apple trees do, or do not, grow in Normandy, Trance? 10. Name the Premier whom (he Communists ousted when they Installed their government Hi Hungary. Answers: 1. False (Anthropoid pes). 2. West. 3. James Mich ener. 4. Lake Erie and the Hod' ton River, i. Earth. (. Washing' ton, D.C. J. Sea-level. I. South, t. Dot It. Ferenc Nagy. 4. A vJamociation OCTOBER 25. 1M3 Tax Poll Results A newspaper poll, where respondents have to clip out a ballot, mark it, put it in an envelope and address it, put a stamp on it and mail it, is not a scientific way to ascertain public opinion. A scientific pollster will carefully study the Qfoa in hp nnpripH. splprl. a "samnle" bv nroven means, and will ask questions which have been prepared witn studious reflect opinion without A newsrjaDer noil. instrument for determining opinion. But, when enough people feel strongly enough about a certain topic, such a poll can be highly revealing. THE poll conducted this week by the Mail Tribune was revealing. As the returns came in during the early part of the week the trends were established almost immediately, and varied but little as further bundles of ballots were opened and counted. For this reason, as well as because of the intense interest made evident, we are convinced that the returns are a fairly accurate reflection of the varied attitudes toward the tax measure defeated Oct. 15. And. if this is true, there are some surprises in store for many people. THE election was a "tax revolt," all right But this poll (and others now being re ported around the state) would indicate that it was far from a mandate to slash the budget to the bone. If anything, it was a mandate to combine greater economy in government with a more equitable tax program. Most people apparently realize that the state can't get along on starvation-level income, and realize that some new taxation is imperative. Of the 917 who took to the poll, only 103 said there should be no new taxes of any kind. Only a little more than a third thought the budget was too large. , i rpHE largest single votes cast indicated that the tax bill was defeated because it was poorly written and unfair, and that Oregon needs a new tax program. , The largest single vote for what should be done now (more than a third) was to revise the tax program. And the largest votes for what kind of a tax should be enacted, if one is needed, were for a cigarette tax (well over one half of the total) and a sales tax This indicates a tax "revolt but it does not indicate a mandate for deep and indiscrim inate budget-cutting. THERE was, both in ments accompanying sentment both against Legislature. But this pression, although it is in many replies. Many respondents vent their spleen against their pet peeves, whether or not they were And many, of course, are simply, bitterly, irrevokably, and determinedly against, not only new taxes, but against the level of taxes they are already paying. Quite a few mentioned the level of federal taxes as a motivating factor. And a significant number mentioned the pres ent high level of property taxation. 4 THERE were a number of interesting comments mnrlp in rtntna offinmnnnvinff fho hollrtta One was that the retroactive feature of the measure, which would 1963 tax in a lump sum, people could possibly dig One respondent suggested, as new taxes, levies on "beer, liquor, motor scooters, bicycles, trailers, gasoline, and men and women who wear shorts and tights in public." Here are some other representative and some ". . . Stop the hiring of only professors with a doctor's degree . . ." "Stop creating new commissions . . ." ". . . Opposition to the tax measure was due to in flation In all its many forms . . ." "There are many Items could be mentioned, but it all sums up to more efficiency in spending. We know that the people will spend willingly when they get their money's worth." "I have heard more people say, 'If E. A. is for some thing, 1 will vote against it because I know he is wrong.' Tell him for me." ". . . We need a welfare system, a highway system and good schools because of our particular population and economic needs. So the only answer is to find new sources of revenue without unduly burdening the Individual tax payer. People should not be penalized for living in our state, which is what it Is beginning to amount to . . ." ". . . There seems to be a good deal of mis-use of state funds in this (public welfare) department. The state welfare program is the principal reason I voted against the tax measure." ". . . The people will vote a sales tax if they will specify it Is strictly for schools and then lower our other taxes. But the people don't trust the people running our state." "I am PROUD to live in America, to have been able to have the chance to vote and am willing to listen to any side of any story. Thank you again." SPHERE were a few evident misconceptions (many do not realize that Oregon doesn't tax liquor; it buys it, then sells it at a profit, and has raised the price several times recently). Some were also misinformed. But we are convinced that most people voted out of one of two convictions: That taxes are just plain too high, or that a new and fairer tax program is imperative. We are most grateful to the 917 readers who took time and trouble to respond to this poll. It will, we believe, be read with great interest by legislator andpublic officials. E. A. auempis 10 mane mem prejudice. then, is not a precision the trouble to respond (also over one half). the ballots and in com- them, considerable re the Governor and the was not a majority ex possible it was implicit took the opportunity to germane. require payment of all was more than most up. random comments, some isolated: "Man, It Looks Old-Fashioned Free Speech Is A Real Bargain By Arthur Hoppe LONDON Everybody's for free speech. Couldn't be more so. And in America everybody's got free speech. Except maybe the Communists or other disa greeable people like that. But there's no question we let any body who agrees with us say so freely. Now in England, it's a bit different. Being the home of free speech, the English are very, very proud that anybody in England can say wnat ne pleases. Where they can say it, as you know, is in Hyde Park. There's a place in the park called Speakers Corner where any body who wants can get up on his soapbox and say anything he wants. In order to see how this system works, the first thing I did in London was to hustle over to Hyde Park to listen to the free speeches. a Speakers' Corner turned out to be perhaps half an acre of as phalt which contained, when I arrived shortly before 11 a.m., a refreshment stand in which three ladies sat moodily, a bum sleeping on a bench and maybe a dozen pigeons. One of the ladies explained none of the speakers arrived before 11. Sure enough, at 11:02 the first speaker, a stocky, elderly man with an interesting face, showed up. What was interesting about his face was the fact that he had a heart tattooed on the end of his nose. Plus a heart on each cheek, a large daisy on his chin and a huge rose with trailing leaves across his forehead. While he was setting up his podium (a five gallon oil can), I asked what subject he was going to speak on. "Criminol ogy,' 'he said. "And I'm not like these amateur blokes who come down here and shoot their mouths off about things they don't know what for. I know In the Day's News By FRANK JtNKINS Speaking at Los Angeles the other night to the Council of: Profit Sharing Industries, Ore' gon's Governor Hatfield told his hearers that profit sharing by employers will help employee's morale and will improve their attitude toward free enterprise. Q UESTION: True or false? Answer: It all depends. IF THERE IS A PROFIT, the employees' morale will be improved and their attitude toward free enterprise will be much friendlier. If there is no profit, the em ployer will go broke and the employees will lose their jobs. That's about the long and the short of it. rpURNlNG to automation. Gov- Hatfield said he has no solu tion of the problem but believes that business leaders must pool together to solve it. He added: "I believe that within the NEXT DECADE the work week will be down to 25 hours." HAT about that? Let's put it this way: Wafer Flouridated for 51 Million Americans WASHINGTON (UPI) - More than SI million Americans were drinking fluoridated water as of 1962. the U.S. Public Health Service reported. Communities with controlled fluoridation numbered 2.317. with a population of nearly 44 million. More than 4,000 com munities had natural jnr con trolled fluoridation. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, Like A Real Hallowe'en" what I am talking about. I'm an expert. I spent 30 years of my life in prisons." And with that he proudly pro duced yellowed clippings prov ing he was a Mr. jacobus Van Dyn, 67, once one of the Al Capone mob. Plus a letter an nouncing he was still wanted for violation of parole if he ever set foot in New York. "See what I mean?" said Mr. Van Dyn, swelling his chest. "I got cre dentials." Mr. Van Dyn then got up on his oil can and gave me and the pigeons a free speech on criminality. Which, if I caught his drift, he was in favor of. After half an hour or so, two other speakers appeared. One, a bearded young man, addressed himself to the bum on the bench, advising him loudly to "repent for the day of judgment is at hand!" The bum rolled over, made a unrepentant ges ture and went back to sleep. The other, an elderly lady in a long green overcoat, wasn't exactly a speaker, she was a singer. She sang "The Rose of Tralee. This free song lnfur iated Mr. Van Dyn, who said free speech didn t include free singing. "All that woman's sing ing does," he said grumpily from his podium, "is interfere with the sex life of the pigeons." On my way out I noticed a large sign saying "the following acts are prohibited" in Hyde Park without written permis sion. Including: "Making a pub lice speech ,or address except in the public speaking area." Which just goes to show that even in England everybody be lieves in free speech. Within limits. Nonsense. I think it's perfect ly safe to let anybody say what he wants anywhere, anytime. For if there's one thing about a free speech, it's that hardly any body will buy it. A work week of 25 hours for fjve-day week will mean an average of five hours of work per day. The result of that will prob ably be a lot of MOONLIGHT ING. 11 1 ORE business news: According to a statistical note in the Wall Street Journal, the profit margin after taxes 1 of U. S. manufacturers rose to ! five cents per dollar of sales in the second quarter of 1963 from 1 4.2 cents in the first quarter and 4.7 cents in the correspond i ing quarter of 1962. It was the I highest since the second quar- l ter of 1959. fiUESTlON: vl Is that good news or bad news . I suppose it all depends on your point of view. If you in cline to the belief that profit is a sinful thing and ought to be done awav with, vou will regard it as bad news. Many politicians in these davs lean to the belief or at least PRETEND to that a good profit is wicked and shouldn t be permitted. I ET'S put it like this: " If you continue to make a profit, your business expands and you hire more people. These added people provide more cus tomers lor other businesses. If you don't make a profit, you go broke and your em ployees lose their jobs. If you go in the hole, you don't pay in come taxes and so other people have to PAY MORE TAXES tto make up the difference. And so on. It's i strangt world i we're living in, isn't sn't it?" OREGON Many Policy Differences Separate U.S., France, Though Old e- fa PHIL NtWJOM UPI rorelm Newi Analyst In the light of nearly two cen turies of close releations be tween the United States and France, it seems sad now that Paris feels it must explain that it is not anti-American. That there are frictions be tween the two, and that these frictions have been increasing for nearly a year there can be no denying. But from the French point of view they can be explained by saying they arise from policies which are not anti-American but instead are pro-French. ' And so any study of the dif ferences between the two first must settle on a definition of terms. Thus President De Gaulle can say that France is determined to be independent of both the United States and the Soviet Union. And his spokesmen at the same time can deny that De Gaulle aspires to leadership of a uura lorce. At any rate, in the last few days prominent Frenchmen have gone out of their way to deny that De Gaulle's policies either are anti-American or are leading France into isolation from its allies. une sucn spokesman was French Ambassador to the Unit ed States Herve Alphand who in a speech in San Francisco pointed out that France retains her firm commitment to de fense of the West. Another was French Foreien Minister Couve de Murville in an interview with the French publication, Notre Republique. He also declared mat m de fending the interests of the West, including those of Ger many, there likewise were no differences between the United States and France. The French foreign minister is reported anxious for a meet ing between De Gaulle and President Kennedy, perhaps as early as February. Strictly Personal By Sidney J. Harris (c) Field Enterprliei. Ine. "ORDINARY" PEOPLE A rather strange and rather wonderful paradox occurred to me the other day, while riding up 18 flights in a crowded ele vator. As I looked at the passen gers around me, it seemed sud denly plain that what we call the "extraordinary man" is re ally the ordinary man. By "extraordinary," I am not talking in terms of any special talent or prowess, but in terms of character, of rock-bottom decency, of the "niceness" that we immediately recognize as a sign of strength, not of weak ness. Such people are extremely rare, which is why we term them extraordinary. Yet I have the feeling that these few are the "ordinary" people, and we many are the "extraordinary ones even though in numbers we far outweigh them. What do I mean by this odd statement? To understand it, consider the common cold. For the human organism, a cold is an unusual thing, an abnormal thing, an "extra ordinary" thing, if you will. If a person were wholly himself all the time, it he were what he is meant to be, he would never have a cold. It is not a "normal" thing for men to have. Now, this abnormal condi tion is something that almost everyone has at one time or another. Only a handful of people never have a cold. This, of course, makes them , I J ri - ii l ii ivt-v.'. "Get lost, lady. X lost:" But regardless of whether the French position is anti American or simply pro French, there are in the ap proach to world affairs impor tant differences and in the op inion of many the gap between the two is widening. There is agreement that changing conditions warrant a revision of the NATO structure but total disagreement as to how it should be done. The French have suggested that other European nations might participate witn ner in an independent nuclear force ... Communications ... Letters to the Editor must bear th nam and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the ma ol pen nam or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view io clarification and condensation. Lallan submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper: in fact the contrary is often the cast). Biblical Interpretation To the Editor: In the Mail Tribune of October 21 there is a letter entitled "good neighbor" which cannot be passed up without comment. As a Chris tian pastor. I .deplore the type of Biblical interpretation rep resented in this article, and teel compelled to comment upon cer tain statements made therein. The writer states categorical ly: "God started segregation." From her letter, it appears that her statement is made on the basis of a thoroughly mistaken interpretation of Genesis 10 and 11. First, the story of the tower of Babel is neither a scientific nor a historically true account of the origin of different lan guages. This legend is, rather, the result of reflection upon such facts of experience as di versity of race and language which already existed at the time. The legendary nature of the narrative is best indicated in the false etymology of Gene sis 11:9, in which the name "Babe 1" (Babylonia bab-ili: "gate of God") is fancifully de rived from the Hebrew balal, "to mix", "to confuse" . Never theless, the religious content of the narrative has permanent validity for the Judaeo-Christian tradition, embodying the truth of the futility and emptiness of "extraordinary" when, in point of fact, they are ordin ary and we millions who get colds are abnormal. It is not a matter of numbers or statis tics, but of departures from a norm. It seems to me that the moral and psychic and emo tional norm for man is also not to have a "cold" that is, to be like those few individ uals who immediately im press us with the decency and largeness of spirit. The only thing extraordinary about them Is their ordinariness, which makes them so rare, valuable and respected. They are what we ought to be, are meant to be, and could be. They represent the natural man, somehow uncontaminated bv the infections that plague the rest of us, more or less fre quently. They show us what it is like not to have a cold in the head, and we know instinctively that they, and not we, represent the basic form for mankind. We struggle along with our self-created burdens, our van ities, our lusts, our pettiness, our piques and our resentments; and through all this, we think of ourselves as quite "ordinary'' people. Perhaps it is worth consider ing for a moment whether we are the extraordinary ones, snif fing and blowing through life and they are so ordinary, so much what man was designed for, as to seem freakishly re mote from us. Friendship which could include Britain if she were to forego her close ties with the United States. The suggestion was rejected by both Britain and West Germany. On the other hand, the U. S. proposal for a multi-nation nu clear naval force within NATO is far enough advanced that discussion of details may start soon. West Germany backs the U.S. plan. The French position is that a reyived Europe has outgrown the time when it was forced to rely upon the United States for human effort divorced from the acknowledgement of and obedi ence to God. With respect to the descend ants of Noah, any attempt to identify them with particular ra cial or cultural groups is fu tile. Even if one were to at tempt to use the geneological tables of Genesis 10, gross in consistencies remain which make any positive identification impossible. Further, the letter writer's attempt to explain the meaning of Hebrew names and their origin is badly confused. Ham does not mean "sun warmed". It may mean "hot", provided its root is Hebrew in origin. However, in the Psalms it is used as a poetic designa tion for Egypt, and might plau sibly be connected with the na tive Egyptian word for black, referring to the black soil of the Nile valley. Cush (not Crush) refers to the land and people of the southern Nile val ley. Its root meaning is not known. Canaan refers to the p r e-Israelitish inhabitants of Palestine. The entymology of the word is doubtful, but the sense "lowland" is favored. There is utterly no warrant for saying that it means "black man". Now Biblical commentaries are in general agreement that Genesis 9:25 is an attempt on the part of the Hebrews to jus tify their prejudice against the Egyptians and Canaanites. That they did so does not make it right for us. Christian conduct in this matter must always consider the fact that God sought to reconcile the world to Himself through Christ (2 Cor. 5:19-20). Segregation does not produce reconciliation. The Rev. Donald Krug P. O. Box 803, Central Point, Ore. Atheist, Go Home To the Editor: A few days ago, we received a letter from a missionary friend in the Phil ipines. A Filipino had asked, "Do you know that in the U.S. the Bible is not allowed to be read in your schools?" He grunted a feeble "Yes". She said, "I thought America was a Christian nation. You come here to tell us of the Bible, to read and study it and pattern our lives after Chris tian principles set forth in the Bible, and yet your Govern ment has more respect for the opinions of the non-Christian and atheists than the Chris tians and their Bible?" His head was bowed in shame, what could you say? It makes one wonder where the "New Frontier" is taking us. Are we to say goodbye to our government "of the people, by the people and for the peo ple"? Our country is in a dis mal state. The minority seems to be ruling instead of the majority, when one person can influence the Supreme Court to rule out the Bible in our schools. Now they are trying to rule out "In God We Trust" on our coins, the mention of God in our flag salute, do away with chaplains in our prisons and armed forces. No mention of God in our National Anthem and songs of our beloved Amer ica. Instead of "The land of the free, and home of the brave", are we to say "the land of the Reds and home of the slaves"? Unless we wake up and fall on our faces before God and send people to high places of authority who believe in God and the Bible and keep out pre cious liberty, we will have be come a heathen nation. GOD FORBID. History reads pages and books of what has happened to the nations what have placed the Bible in second place. The Bible is being neglected in the homes, therefore it should be read where and when ever it can. "Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my Path" (Psa. 119.105). It is the only book that can lead our nation out of the confusion it is in. Let all who do not believe in God and the Bible take a one-way ticket to their Commu nist brothers' homeland and stay there. No doubt many wouia oe giaa to pay for their ticket. Mrs. Ernest Santo, 204 Loner lane. Medford Remains help and guidance. The French resent U.S. ef forts which they believe are at tempting to force the West Ger mans to decide between Wash ington and Paris. They disagree with U.S. ef forts to keep lines open to Mos cow on the grounds that it gives the Soviets the initiative in the subjects to be discussed. They also disagree with what seems to be a U.S. tendency to side with Moscow in the Mos cow - Peking dispute. They be lieve a policy of strict neutral ity is called for. Good Neighbors To the Editor: Sunday last was Layman's Day in the church. Their theme was, "Your Neigh bor." It was based on the story' of the Good Samaritan as told in the New Testament. If Jesus were in Medford today He might tell the story after this wise. A Negro timber taller went down from Eagle Point to Med ford on a Sunday afternoon. He got into a crap game with soma fellows on Front st. He didn't know the dice were loaded. Afler a few games he was broke. They even took his new silk shiri. When he remonstrated the fel lows bundled him in their car and took him for a ride. Out in the country they beat him up-and dumped him in a barrow pit at the side of the road. There he lay all night, cold, sick and wounded. Earlv the following morning the chair man of the official board of a church was driving by and saw the poor fellow lying in the ditch. He stopped and looked at his watch. "Oh, me, oh my." he said to himself, "I have only 10 minutes to get to our breakfast meet at North's Chuck Wagon." And he hurried on to attend the business of the church. About mid-morning a minister passed that way. He saw the poor fellow in the ditch and stopped his car. Then he looked at his clean hands and his min isterial garb. He said, "You poor fellow, I wish I could help you, but I have an appointment with a young couple to counsel them about their wedding on the mor row." And he hurried on to at tend to his ministerial duties. About noon time a Japanese gardener came loping along in his old jalopy. He had been in terned during the war and after ward stayed on in the valley be cause he liked the nice friendly folks. The Jap jumped out and ran to see about the fellow in the ditch, who was moaning. "Wa ter, water." Running back to his car. he grabbed his canteen and first aid kit. He slipped his arm under the fellow's shoulder and gave him a drink of cool fresh water. Then by a little help from the victim he half carried and half dragged the big man to the seat of the Jalopy. Then he drove as fast as he dared to the hos pital. When he called for help a doctor and a nurse came out. The Jap said, "Please help my brother. He is sick and hurt. To morrow I bring money to pay for his knee." The doctor said to the nurse, "He calicd him my brother. Can we do any less?" Then they went to work to givo him the best care in their power. Now please pardon a personal reference. One day wc found in our mail an envelope addressed to us, with no return address. In the envelope we found two slips of paper, one a picture of Alex ander Hamilton, the other bear ing these words, "with best wishes from Mary Doe." Thank you Mary Doe, a good neighbor. And thank you SI T. for Com munications. L. G. Weaver 301 Haven St. Medford Truth Defended To the Editor: I am inclined to go along with Mr. Crum in his defense of Gen. Joseph V. St 11 well, in his article in Commun ications M-T, 10 16 63 How could anyone say Gen. Stilwell was "a foolish and violent old man"? One of Gen. Stilwell's finest, if not his greatest, quality was his truthfulness. Who of lis can dispute truth? Mr. Frank Crum, White City, is to be commended for defending these brave men, who dared to tell the truth ,G. Hallenbeck 1059 Morrow Road Medford. Who Will Support Thorn? To the Editor: Clifford .1. Young, Baptist minister of Ea.-t-side Church, would like for Med ford to get prepared to receive Negro families. If Medford docs, who will support these people ? Would Mr. Young like (or the whites to give up tVr jobs to them? There isn't enouch work here for the people who live I hers, why bring in more unem- ployed. Perhaps he would give up his work to a minister Mrs. H Dawsoa 3628 S. Pific Highwv Medford Q (6