Page 2 Portland/Observer Thursday. August 30. 1973 WE SEE THE WORLD I THROUGH BLACK EYES usually , men one picrvnu h u m u one m u ta f r PWvrrY-sTmaw, n o w CWWZEPfVtUMT ue 0HMCTMM& S M C IA L I Bachelors Laundry RESIDENCES MS$I.2&327+. One Day Service X SAVE YOUR CLAIM TICKETSI a* 10 cleaning and pressing claim tickets good (or I 81b. load of cleaning and pressing. , , Hi BUDGET DRY CLEANERS EDITOR/PUBL1SHER 9. EDITORIAL FOCUS Labor Day 1973 Ten years later Ten years a g o M a rtin Luther K ing a n d others led th e "M a rc h o n W a sh in g to n fo r Jobs a n d F re e d o m ." In th a t ten ye a rs th e re h a ve b e e n m a n y changes. Three o f th e le a d e rs — King, W h itn e y Y oung a n d W a lte r R euther, a re no lo n g e r w ith us. John F. K ennedy, w h o sat in th e W h ite House, a n d his successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, a re d ea d. The era o f the mass d e m o n s tra tio n s fo r c iv il rig hts has a lm o st e nd ed . V o te r re g is tra tio n in th e South has b ro u g h t Black m ayo rs to Cities w h e re Blacks w e re o nce b e a te n a n d ja ile d in th e ir e ffo rt to register. The b ro th e r o f M e d g a r Evers, w h o w as m u rd e re d th a t sam e ye ar, is n ow m a y o r o f Fayette, M ississippi. The C iv il Rights B ill o f 1964 w as passed. Public a cc o m m o d a tio n s a re o pe n. It has b e co m e p o p u la r to a p p o in t Blacks to g o v e rn m e n ta l p ositions. But the past ten years h ave b ro u g h t little ch an ge to those w h o s till liv e in p o v e rty — closed o ut o f o p p o rtu n ity fo r e m p lo y m e n t a nd e d u c a tio n b e ­ cause o f th e ir race. Little has ch a n g e d fo r the reside n ts o f th e g he tto s w h o do not b e n e fit fro m th e fe d e ra l p ro g ra m s d e sig n e d to im p ro v e th e ir sta nd ard o f life . The past ten years h a ve b ro u g h t little ch a n g e to the p h ilo s o p h y a n d th e structure o f A m e ric a n society. It has b ro u g h t no "B ro th e rh o o d ", no a cce p ta n ce o f th e e q u a lity o f in d iv id u a ls , no rea l e q u a l o p p o rtu n ity fo r the b e n e fits o f A m e ric a n life . This ten years com es to a close w ith an a d m in is tra ­ tio n steeped in c o rru p tio n , w ith a fo re ig n p o lic y d e ­ sig n e d to p e rp e tu a te a gg re ssion on the p e o p le o f Southeast Asia, w ith a d om estic p o lic y d e te rm in e d to w ith d ra w fro m th e A m e ric a n p e o p le the fe w p ro gram s th a t h ave b ro u g h t e c o n o m ic security a nd s e lf-d e te rm in a tio n to the p o o r a nd to m in o ritie s . Study disproves Welfare myth W e a re o fte n to ld th a t W e lfa re re c ip ie n ts w o u ld ra th e r d ra w a "h a n d o u t" th a n w o rk a n d th a t if fin a n c ia l a id w e re w ith h e ld th e y w o u ld have to fin d a job. The im p lic a tio n th a t fin a n c ia l assis­ tance breeds laziness has bee n used to fig h t the u p g ra d in g o f w e lfa re standards a n d e s p e c ia lly th e e sta b lish m e n t o f a g u a ra n te e d incom e. A fo u r ye a r study co n d u cte d fo r th e O ffic e o f Econom ic O p p o rtu n ity by th e U n ive rsity o f W is­ consin re fu te s th a t th e o ry a n d show s th a t g iv in g cash to poor fa m ilie s does n o t re d u ce th e ir in c e n ­ tiv e to w o rk. Those re c e iv in g a cash inco m e w o rk e d as o fte n a n d e a rn e d as m uch as o thers w h o d id not re c e iv e th e subsidy. The study s h o w e d th a t Blacks re sp o n d e d to the cash subsidy by e a rn in g m o re m o n e y on th e ir jobs. The subsidy a p p a re n tly p ro v id e d th e e n c o u ra g e ­ m e n t to c o n tin u e w o rk in g , e ve n on lo w p a y in g jobs. Y o un g p e o p le a n d th e b e tte r-e d u c a te d p oo r used th e subsidy to ta ke tim e o ff w o rk to fin d b e tte r jobs, a n d so raised th e ir e c o n o m ic leve l. The o v e ra ll fin d in g o f th e study w as that the m o n e y d id n ot c h a n g e w o rk in c e n tiv e -- it just im p ro v e d th e sta nd ard o f liv in g . W ith o u t th e fe a r th a t a g u a ra n te e d a n n u a l in c o m e w o u ld cause a n im m e d ia te a n d w id e ­ spread rush to q u it w o rk a n d liv e on the g o v e rn ­ m e n t subsidy, m a yb e Congress can g e t on w ith the jo b o f p ro v id in g an e c o n o m ic base fo r a ll lo w - in c o m e fa m ilie s . Published every Thursday by Exie Publishing Company, 2201 North Killingsworth, Portland, Oregon 97217. Mailing address: P.O. Box 3137, Portland, Oregon 97208. Telephone: 283 2486. Subscriptions: $5.25 per year in the Tri-County area, $6.00 per year outside Portland. Second Class Postage Paid at Portland, Oregon The Portland Observer's official position is expressed only in it’s Publisher's Column (We See The World Through Black Eyes). Any other material throughout the paper is the opinion of the individual writer or submitter and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Portland Observer. ■ 1 M E M B ER Oregon S ’ Newspaper Publishers S i9 Association MEMBER NÊWA peh Attocialion ■ Founded TM5 member O R G A N IZ E D LABOR: O P P O R T U N IT Y FOR L E A D E R S H IP As a n o th e r Labor Day a p p ro a ch e s w e pause to h o n o r th e la b o re rs o f the U n ite d States — the m en a n d w o m e n w h o h a v e b u ilt the n a tio n . Ever since the shackles o f sla v e ry w e re b ro ke n Blacks h ave b e e n in v o lv e d in th e s tru g g le fo r h u m a n rig h ts th ro u g h la b o r o rg a n iz a tio n s . This s tr u g g le ta k e s p la c e to d a y in m a n y fo rm s — te a c h e r strikes, co nsu m e r boycotts, d e m a n d s fo r prison re fo rm , " w ild c a t" strikes a g a in st fa c to ry ro u tin e . D u rin g the 1930's, w h e n Black tra d e unionists h e lp e d o rg a n iz e m illio n s o f u n o rg a n iz e d w orkers, p ut an e nd to sw e a t-s h o p c o n d itio n s , a nd g a v e real d ig n ity to the in d u s tria l w o rk e r, o rg a n iz e d lab or e n jo y e d th e respect o f th e n a tio n . O rg a n iz e d lab or w as th e c h a m p io n o f the p e o p le a nd a ll segm ents o f th e p o p u la tio n c o u ld id e n tify w ith th e m o v e ­ m ent. Today o rg a n iz e d la b o r has to o o fte n b e co m e the so cial clubs o f the w h ite m id d le class. The c ra ft u n io n s a re la rg e ly closed to m in o ritie s by re s tric ­ tiv e m e m b e rs h ip re q u ire m e n ts a nd u n re a lis tic a p ­ p re n tic e s h ip p ro gram s. Rather than le a d the n a tio n in the quest o f e c o n o m ic security fo r a ll, the la b o r u n io n s h ave b e co m e a p ro te c tiv e so cie ty fo r th e m o re fo rtu n a te . W ith fe w e xce p tio n s, the u n io n s a re p re o c c u p ie d w ith w ag es a nd b e n e fits a n d o v e rlo o k the b ro a d e r social goals. The m o ra l le a d e rs h ip o f th e la b o r m o v e m e n t m ust be resto red by re tu rn in g its a tte n tio n to the needs o f the A m e ric a n p e o p le — q u a lity e d u c a ­ tio n fo r e v e ry c h ild , b e tte r h ou sin g, fu ll e m p lo y ­ m en t, a d e q u a te m e d ic a l care. The u n io n s must b ro a d e n th e ir ranks by a d m ittin g a ll o f th e w o rk in g p e o p le o f th e n a tio n , by fo rm u la tin g a gressive a p p re n tic e s h ip a nd tra in in g p ro gram s, a n d by u n itin g a ll o f th e ra c ia l a n d e th n ic fa c tio n s o f the la b o r fo rce . O n ly th e n w ill la b o r be an e ffe c tiv e v o ic e a g a in s t the d e h u m a n iz in g p ro fit m o tiv e o f b ig business. O n ly th e n w ill la b o r have a v o ic e in th e o p e ra tio n o f th e c o rp o ra tio n s th a t c o n tro l the e c o n o m ic a nd p o litic a l life o f this n a tio n . In O re g o n w e fin d fe w Black m e m b e rs in the la b o r u n io n s — th e resu lt o f years o f conscious a n d p u rp o s e fu l d is c rim in a tio n . The p ra c tic e o f e x c lu s io n is ille g a l -- but th e la w s a re n o t e n ­ fo rc e d . Black w o rk e rs a re b e c o m in g im p a tie n t. If a c tio n is not ta k e n to in c lu d e Blacks, th e w o rk sto pp ag e s a nd v io le n c e th a t has h it o th e r cities w ill soon be seen in Portland. What other Black Editors say T H E A T L A N T A INQ LTRO R Usually when one pictures welfare, one thinks of poverty stricken, needy people, many of them from minority races who cannot work to support themselves. Welfare, then, could be defined as a system where public funds are given to the poor. Some critics, many of them politicians who smell political profit in the issue, have attacked welfare because they say it encourages people not to work and it gives them something for nothing. Yet if one defines welfare as gifts of public money, then it is not only the poor who are receiving welfare. In fact, some of the most vehement critics of the welfare system are getting what amounts to free money gifts from the federal government, only no one dares call it welfare -- although that is what it is. Take the case of a congressman who, until recently, was paid as much as $250,000 a year by the government for not planting crops on his farm. Eventually the amount was reduced to $50,000 per farm. But this did not disturb the congressman, as he then divided his farm five ways and col­ lected the same $250,000. The congressman did not work to earn this money; indeed he had been paid not to work. President Nixon himself, who has often criticized what he characterizes as welfare chislers, has also been the recipient of a form of welfare. This welfare came in the form of federal funds spent to improve two of his four homes. The General Services Administration (GSA) states that the government paid a total of $1,283,274 to improve the Key Biscayne and San Clemente Nixon residences. Certainly the American people cannot complain about that portion of the money which was used for the security needs of the president. The $340,(XX) spent for a helicopter landing pad and the $128,708 spent on bulletproof windows seem reasonable amounts to pay to protect this nation's leader. But what of the monies disbursed for such non security improvements as landscaping and a sprinkler system ($76.000) and an electrical system ($184,174) for what is. after all, Mr. Nixon's personal property? Free gifts to the President at the taxpayers' expense? Why, then, the huge outcry about poor people using public funds to supply the necessities of life, when the President, who is hardly a poor man, receives thousands of dollars to water his lawn? Yet, President Nixon vetoed the child development bill which both houses of Congress passed, and he cut bark Model Cities and other poverty programs. Apparently he feels that the public funds are too limited to be thrown away on these humanitarian programs. He seemingly thinks that scarce public money is better spent continuing the bombing in Southeast Asia or servicing the private estates of Richard Nixon. The rationale seems to be: welfare is bad if spent on those who really need it; good if spent on the rich, who can always use sophisticated means to conceal or disguise the dole they have received. 72 20 N. Fessenden • I y &t$CAVN£ ■ I e . » t f 2 8 6 -2 2 9 6 | ROY BURNETT SAYS: D eal w ith the SALES LEADER! N o . 1 C h ry s le r P lym o u th D e a le r in th e N o rth w e s t! CW W TÍ CHECK US BEFORE YOU BUY! Th« poor are not the only on« on welfare 65 Valiant I dr. sedan ..................................................... S595 6 cyl, radio, heater, auto, power steering. Welfare system: poverty bv Representative G un Hawkins In 1969 the President's Commission on Poverty found that of the working poor, one of every four worked 35 hours a week or more for 50 to 52 weeks, but still re mained poor. The commission observed that the assertion “the poor are to blame for their cir cumstances and should be expected to lift themselves from poverty" is incorrect. The commission addition ally noted "the simple fact is that most poor people remain poor because access to in­ come through work is cur rently beyond their reach." Mindful of its obligation to all of its citizens, rich and poor alike, the federal gov ernment recognizes its re­ sponsibility to provide social welfare services to the poor of this nation as a bulwark against poverty, ignorance and disease. These welfare services are not perfect; however, they are inordinately controversial and greatly misunderstood. Perhaps the most pressing issue regarding welfare is the plight of the welfare recipient and the abusive nature of the attacks leveled against this helpless victim of the disease of poverty. Not surprisingly, myths about welfare sometimes be come substitutes for actual knowledge and cause the real facts to become obscured or distorted. Obviously we cannot dis cuss all of the factors con­ tributing to the myths sur rounding welfare, but some myths are so unfounded they beg for truth. Myth: Hard work is the answer to the welfare prob iem. Fact: Less than 1 percent of the nation's able bodied men are on welfare. In most states employable males are eligible for welfare only after they have received certifies tion that no suitable jobs are available for them. Seventy four percent of those on welfare are mothers and dependent children (70 per cent of whom are under 12). Myth: Most welfare re­ cipients are Blacks who have moved to northern cities just to get on welfare. Fact: About 55 percent of welfare recipients are white: 39 percent are Black; 6 per cent are American Indians and others. The average rural migrant hoping to find employment when he moves to the city lives in the city for five years before re­ questing welfare. Myth: Most welfare re­ cipients cheat the welfare system. Fact: The vast majority of welfare payments are made to persons legally entitled to them. Most studies of wel­ fare "fraud” (conducted by both state governments and the federal system) indicate that less than 1 percent of the welfare recipients are involved in fradulent con duct. Myth: Welfare recipients get more than those who work. Fact: $3,600 a year is the national average welfare bud get for a family of four. $4.275 is the official poverty level for a family of four. Obviously, the life of a welfare recipient is not easy, and is becoming more diffi cult with the continuing rise in the cost of living. There are some other interesting farts concerning the plight of the poor in this nation: • 25 percent of the Ameri ran population lives below the minimum decent stan dard. • 55 («Trent of the welfare rolls are made up of children. • 20 percent of the welfare rolls are made up of the blind, disabled, and the aged. • 2 years is the estimated time the average family re­ ceives assistance. • 60 percent of welfare mothers are: working, in training, waiting for training, or waiting for jobs, or wait ing for decent day care. Clearly, facts by them selves do not solve the problems of welfare. They do, however, allow us the opportunity of understanding the nature of ‘he welfare system and there.,/ thinking more intelligently about solu ons. Jobs for all: issue of basic significance by Vernon Jordan For the past several years national debate over domes tic issues has been largely confined to artificial, politi­ cally inspired issues such as busing, "law and order”, and quotas. Now that the demagogues have had their day, it is time to move on to a real issue of basic significance to many millions of people and to the future of this society jobs for all. If you read the official sta tistics that show unemploy­ m ent trending downward, or the glowing stories about the booming economy, or if you have a good job yourself, you might not know just how bad the situation really is. The government admits to an official unemployment rate of 4.8 percent of the labor force. That sounds small enough until you realize that it represents some 4.3 million people, many with families to support, who can't get a job. • The labor force is in reality split in two. There is the upper tier of workers with good jobs, good salaries, union membership and fringe benefits. Then, there is a lower tier of people who have no job, work part time when they really want full time employ ment, and those who do work full tim e but make below poverty wages. This lower tier of Ameri­ can workers is made up dis­ LABOR DAY SPECIALS proportionately of Rlack peo­ ple and other minorities, wo­ men, young people, and Viet nam veterans. The latest poverty figures tell the story very well. Last year about one million white people moved OUT of pov erty, but some 300,000 Black people became poor. In the past four years, more than 60,000 Blacks became poor. Black poverty has become something of a hush hush subject as emphasis is placed on the progress Black people have made in education, in obtaining better jobs, and in higher family income. But most of the economic progress has been confined to relatively few Blacks with the education and skills to take advantage of the waning discrimination in industry. W hat o u g h t to be of greater concern is that one out of three Black people is poor; that nearly half of all Black children are growing up in poor families; and that the typical Black family last year earned about $700 LESS than the government ac ceptable living standard. There are about 10 million people white and Black who work all year round for less than $5,000. A third of all Black full time workers make less than a living wage. And these are the lucky ones, the people with jobs. What about those who aren't lucky enough to find a job? 65 TR 2 dr I I I .................................................................. S695 Radio, heater, auto, power steering. 67 Valiant 4 dr. Redan .................................................... *995 6 cyl.. radio, heater, auto trans. 61 Dodge Land Cruiser I dr. sedan ............................ *.195 6 cyl., radio, heater. 3 speed. 69 Chrysler Newport 2 dr II I S I495 Radio, heater, auto, trans . (lower steering, a real buy. 69 Plymouth Road Runnrr ......................................... *1295 Radio, heater, 4 sp.. 383 engine, real sharp. 69 Dodge Comet I d r ..................................................... *1(195 Radio, heater, auto, power steering 69 Pontiac Tempest LeMans 2 dr. Coupe .............. *1195 Radio, heater, («iwer steering, auto, trans. 68 Huirk Wildcat I dr. sedan ..................................... (1395 Full power plus factory air conditioning. 70 Plymouth Fury III I dr H I ................................. »1 195 Radio, heater, auto, trans, power steering. ROY BURNETT CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH "P o rlla n d 't U n t i l A utom otive D e a le r" IMPERIALS — CHRYSLIRS P l YMOUTHS — VA LIA N TS— BARRACUDAS , 123 NW Broodwoy U led Corj 2 2 2 -1 8 9 3 / Exie Publishing Company 2 8 3 -2 4 8 6 Med you/ fljprmatùto ûktwt ‘foyuiremMt f a ¿afy w y / The government says there are 4.3 million of them. But Contract your printing to a minority firm that is only because the gov ernment counts only people actively looking for work who can't find it. The fact is that there are Photo Typesetting, G raphic Arts and P rinting millions of people who are not officially counted as being unem ployed because they N ew spapers - N ew sletters Posters Fliers - have given up looking for S tationery - Business Cards Program s work, or because they are Pam phlets — P ictorial D irectories. working part tim e, even though they may prefer to hold full time jobs. P rinting to m eet your needs. If you add th ese dis couraged job seekers and 2201 N orth K illin g s w o rth Portland, O regon underemployed workers to the officially unem ployed, AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER you'll find that there are actually about 10 million un employed people, over two million of them Black. Instead of the official rate of 4.8 percent unemployed, a more accurate picture shows THE PORTLAND OBSERVER 10 percent ol the labor force P.O. Box 3137 out of work, with a 20 P ortland, O reg on 97208 p e r c e n t r a te for Black Pl«ase a rra n g e to h ave the OBSERVER m a ile d to m y workers. hom e. .. This grim reality has been • $5.25 per year in the Tri County area. hidden behind doctored sta • $6.00 per year elsewhere. tistics, misleading rhetoric N a m e - about a supposedly booming economy, and other diver sionary issues. - But it is clear that the Address economy doesn't seem able to provide everyone with C ity — State & Zip work, and it is time this issue esme out into the open and the nation started a Apt. ( if a n y ) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ T e le p h n n e —i_ _ _ _ _ ^ _ ^ _ great debate on what should be its No. 1 priority a full employment policy. Use minority printers I