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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1970)
PO RTL AN D/O BSE R VE R Nov. 12, 1970 News media hires 37 minority grads Bowling Top Keglers Minnie Brown Bombs 602 to pace Barnett Real Estate to a 3-0 win over Hudson gasoline. In Ladles Prem ier league, In terstate lanes the Barnett sharp shooters put In all together for a 3-0 sweep over Rivergate Personal to take over first place. Women 500 Series Minnie B row n...................... 602 Alezena De Delelevaux . . . 574 Viviane B arn ett...................... 567 Frances Clinton......................566 Viviane B arn ett...................... 563 Hazel P o lk ........................... 546 Ruth E astland...................... 537 Evelyn R aines.........................534 Elenora F ie ld e r......................521 Ann Holland.............................520 Women 200 game Alezena DeDelelevaux . . . . 216 Minnie Brown.............. 211-223 Elenora F ie ld e r......................203 Viviane B arn ett........... 201-203 Billie W est.............................. 201 Hazel P o lk ........................... 200 Men 555 Series Frank J a r r e l l ...................... 604 Bob Bedford........................ 583 Dee Johnson-Interstate . . . 583 Dee Johnson-T im ber...........583 Rick Washington..................... 579 Naymon Scarborough...........565 Men 225 game Rick Washington..................... 237 F rank J a r r e l l ...................... 234 Ernie H ill................................ 230 Mixed Tournament Results. Timber Lanes Booster Division, Doubles. Frances Clinton & Claudle Oli ver, in 4th place with 1064. BASKETBALL Blazers Blitz Bullets 135—131 for first win over es tablished team . This win was strictly a team effort. Barnett P e t r i e and Ellis were top s c o r e r s , but every Blazer played extremely well. The es tablishment can look for a lot of surprises when they come to Portland. W’hen a team can outscore the Central Division leader Balti more Bullets Score 46 points in a p e r i o d against the Atlantic Div. leader New York Knicks. They came to win as well as Play. Blazers home games, thru Nov. 18 Thurs. Nov. 12 . . . . Cleveland Sat. Nov. 1 4 .............. Cleveland Mon. Nov. 16 Doubleheader 6:30 p.m. Blazers vs. San Diego Seattle vs. Buffalo Tues. Nov. 1 7 ................ Buffalo Wed. Nov. 1 8 ................ Atlanta Columbia University and the Ford Foundation graduated 37 members of minority groups into jobs with news media around the country. E x e r c i s e s culminating the 10-week training program for 24 men and 13 women-31 blacks, 3 Mexican-Americans, 2 Puerto Ricans, and 1 Chinese-Ameri- can-took place at the New York headquarters of the Ford Foun dation which had endowed the program with $700,000 over the last three years. Of the graduates which re ceived certificates from Dean Elie W. Abel of the Graduate School of Journalism , 25 are entering journalism for the first tim e. The other 12 are beginning newsmen o r are going back to news-related jobs. Each of the students was assured of a job before classes started. ALL GO TO WHITE MEDIA Julian Bond, the Georgia leg islator who was a reporter and editor of the Atlanta Inquirer, a weekly, noted in the "com mencement address" that none of those completing this y ear’s program would be working tor black owned news media. Thirteen of the students will w o rk for newspapers; 24 for broadcast stations. In the 1968 and 1969 summer programs 56 minority group members were trained for journalism c aree rs, 40 in broadcasting and 16 in print. All went to work as news men. Ana Thorne, 23, KOMO-tv. Seattle, Washington. TO SLAY THE DRAGONS Bond exhorted the memt>ers of the class to seek out facts as their arm or in attacking the " d r a g o n s " of injustice in A m e r i c a n society. Through t h e i r efforts, he said, the masses may be organized to ef fect a change that will bring a "kind-hearted" administration to Washington. " Y o u r job," Bond told the class, "ought to help build the army through your reportage to help slay the dragon for all of us. It will not be done by dis missing blue-collar workers as simple racists because they voted for George Wallace; many voted for Robert Kennedy. "It will not be done by blacks who insist on working alone, be cause the power of blacks is too limited and their numbers too few. "It will not be done by the young people who are engaging in debates on the relatives rev is ionism of Ho Chi Mlnh while babies are starving in the stre ets. "But it might be done by you." Sending the young news train ees off to work with advice to be objective, Friendly told them an anecdote relayed to him recent love is hamburger ? for two W ith lettuce , onions and tomatoes AT MR. BURGER ■' union 8-shaver-43rd g. killingsworfh - 39rt,gmain Portland Vancouver ly by Bill D. Moyers, form er publisher of Newsday who has been touring the country to write a report that will fill an edition of H arper's magazine in the fall. On several occasions, Moyers ran into people who voiced hatred for some group (long hair students, cops, black acti v i s t s , etc.), only to conclude with an expression of hope that he would report what they are really like. To Buy or Sell Business Income Property Large or small Financing available to all new purchasers call DUN VINCENT, INC. 228.3181 333 S.W. Pork a C L/iSSlb'lE b aO V t I jll BEENG K E S L l TS w HEN ì l a CEU li\ THE PCKTLaNb C'bSEhVEK Get all your moneys worth in l . S. Bank’s new High Yield Passbook. U. S. Bank’s new High Yield Passbook Account is the passbook account that lets $300 earn all three higher interest rates. You could put $100 into 5% for 90 days, $150 into 51/2 % for a year and the rest into 5% % for two-year maturity—or any other way you want to divide it in amounts of $50 or more. The highest allowable annual commercial bank interest rates— compounded quarterly and insured by F.D.I.C. And you can make additional deposits of $50 or more any time. High Yield: another new way to get your money’s worth—at U. S. National Bank of Oregon.