'The time to fight is now, au revoirf 'jjflluTfcJil U'jsoa1 utfTili'iifrlvrtrjrtMfttf VTf t A' fcath fiU" jfcj J7Zi . -...yi .-'XJY wars fxartv ''fc-s:-;??v? P&rW . More race ros on Me voy, uness action is speeded up A new factor 'has entered the picture in relations between the white and Negro races in this coun try, a factor which is not limited to the South and which promises new and bitter conflict in the West and North unless action toward integra tion of facilities and opportunities is speeded up. I The factor is the attitude of the young Negro the student and his friend just out of school who feels his opportunities are too few and are coming too slowly. This is what caused trouble In Philadelphia only last week, trouble which was only ended, when Negroes were given a token number of jobs In previously all-white labor unions. This is what will cause trouble in Los Angeles within the next few weeks. I Fart of this is easy to under stand. -It is a factor which can be removed from contention quickly by people of good will. But another facet is enormously complicated, and apparently capable of no quick or easy solution. ! The first part of the two-way problem is Job opportunity. For far too many years the Ntgro has been the last person hired, and the first laid off of the job. Unemployment rates among the colored population of this country are double the rate among whites. This is due in part to the jobs available to Negroes; most of them find work opportuni ties only at the low end of the skill scale. In part it is due to ingrained, although perhaps unspoken, preju dice among employers. And in part St is due to the attitude of labor unions, which have frozen Negroes out of almost all the skilled trades. But this is the easy part of the prob Jem. A determination to solve it, pius . puduc and government pres sure where necessary, can help im measurably. The second bone of contention Is what amounts to housing and school segregation in large North ern, Western, and Eastern cities, seg regation which is almost as complete . as that which exists in the South. There is no doubt much of this segregation is due to the unwilling ness of the white population to co operate in ending the situation. But a considerable part of it, most of it, la due to the lower economic status of the colored population, a status which forces its members into sub standard housing in what amounts to a series of colored ghettos. The normal American pattern of placing a child in the school nearest his home, when that school has space available, finishes off the job. ' Either of these is difficult enough. Together they approach impossibility of solution, at .least quick solution. The housing situa tion cannot be helped without rais ing the econdmic status of Negroes, as well as improving the state of mind of those residing in now all white neighborhoods. The school situation cannot be helped without massive transportation of young sters around major cities, a job which is both difficult and expen sive. It's apparent a considerable number of Americans are bothered about the problems. In spite of the outbursts of the Ku Klux Klan and the White Citizens Councils, a sub stantial number of moderate South erners are working to straighten out that region's mess. And In spite of the Black Muslims and their out pourings of racial hatred, there Is evidence a great many Negroes are pleased with the progress to date. But that progress has come too slowly to please the younger mem bers of the colored race, as is evi denced by the makeup of the crowds in Birmingham, in Philadelphia, in Washington, D. C. It had better be speeded up. Perhaps we shouldn't worry A few davs aco. In this cn we discussed the opinions of two men about the treatment received by tourists visiting the Central Ore gon area. The editorial prompted the following comment from the Eugene Register-Guard: p I Nice People The Bulletin, over In Bend, puts its readers through some self-examination a it questions If Bend people are suffi ciently friendly to tourists. The charge was made that too many Bend people who deal with the public are rude or. at least cool. It may be some comfort to Bend people to know that on this side of the mountains visitors to Bend usually re member tradespeople there are uncom monly friendly and helpful. Most of us wish our own citiiens who deal witJi tourists would be as consistently co operative. Perhaps we shouldn't worry, if the opinion of the Eugene editor is general enough. Not necessary at all ' The Oregon Supreme Court. In an opinion written by Justice Ken neth J. O'Connell, has removed a stigma from Grant county. Until the Supreme Court decision, Grant county stood characterized by the state's Tax Court as a place where killing a man, and defending your self from the resulting criminal charges, was considered "ordinary and necessary." ! The Tax Court decision was the 'outgrowth of the celebrated "high Oregonians put forth some hasty peace feelers to Ohio Congressman 3 JFK miscalculated civil rights pressures -now has emergency By A. Robert Smith Bulletin Correspondent WASHINGTON Ever since Rep. Mike Kirwan, D-Ohio, took out after Oregon public works projects last summer following Sen. Wayne Morse's attack on Kirwan's pet project for a nation al aquarium, Oregonians have been puzzling over how they might get back Into Kirwan's good graces. They considered this of some Importance because the powerful veteran congressman from Youngstown, Ohio, is virtually In charge of doling out millions of federal dollars annually through his high ranking position on the House Appropriation Committee. An Ohio colleague of Kirwan suggested' arranging to have an Oregon college give him an honor ary degree. Another suggestion was to have Oregonians make some noteworthy contributions to the Democratic congressional campaign committee, over which Kirwan proudly presides. But Sen. Morse hopefully has made a peace offering to Kirwan that Is much more direct and to the point by defending a budget appropriation for Kirwan's aquar ium from attack by another Ohlo ian with whom Kirwan has long feuded, Sen. Frank Lauschc, D Ohio. It occurred during Senate con sideration of the Interior appro priations bill which contained ' $310,000 for preliminary designs and planning of the aquarium to be located on the banks of the Potomac In the nation's capital. Sen. Lausche got up and moved to delete this amount for what he ' called "a fishpond" that will even tually cost $10 million. When the roll was called, Lausche's amend ment was defeated 58-22. In explaining his vote In behalf of the aquarium money, Morse recalled his opposition last year and said: "But the Senate over ruled those who opposed It, and the committee on appropriations this year, passing upon the sub ject, fulfilled its responsibility and appropriated the funds necessary to accomplish the will of Congress and of the President. So once the question has been decided sub stantially, I felt that we must go ahead and build the aquarium, al though I think it is a mistake to locate It In Washington." The only move to cut back Ore gon money this year came In Kir wan's committee report In March on that same Interior money bill when he suggested a review of the O&C forestland formula by which 18 western Oregon counties get 75 per cent of timber receipts and the federal treasury gets 25 per cent. During hearings on the bill, Kirwan had declared that this rhinloii. Merry-go-round Radioactive levels are hearing subject noon" shooting near John Day a few years ago. The decision was ap pealed, resulting in the ruling by the Supreme Court. Bringing legal action against another, O'Connell wrote, is an "ordinary and necessary" thing to do, resulting in a legitimate tax de duction. But shooting, that's another matter altogether: not "ordinary and necessary," and not a tax deduction. By Drew Pearson WASHINGTON A congres sional hearing will be held this week of vital interest to mothers all over the nation. It will deal with the question of radioactive levels in the United States and whether they have become too dangerous. The hearing will be held before the Joint Atomic Energy Commit ' tee of Congress with Dr. Paul Tompkins of the Atomic Energy Commission as the chief witness. Behind the hearing is the fact that more and more radioactivity is filling the atmosphere as a re sult of Russian and American testing. And, like the national debt limit which was increased by Congress last week, the radioac . tlve levels of the natlona will have to be Increased. At the present writing no wit nesses are scheduled to testify ;.agalfjst rattling the radioactive level. All the witnesses will be pro-government experts who will testify that' there is no danger from pumping a little more radio activity into the bloodstream of the nation. Tragic Court Trial In Knoxville, Tenn., last week,' U.S. District Judge Robert L. Taylor heard a very significant damage suit brought by two wi dows of atomic workers in the Union Carbide Plant at Oak Ridge. Tenn., together with one worker suffering from leukemia. Mr3. Wilson Beckham and Mrs. Howard Pierce were suing for $500,000 damages on the ground that their husbands had develop ed cancer from being exposed to too much radioactivity. H. T. Ma honey, who Joined them in the suit, testified that he was first ex posed to radiation in 1957, suffer ed from headaches, and in 1959 his illness was diagnosed as leu kemia. He has not worked since. During the course of the' trial, Dr. Irwin N. Sax, formerly with the Atomic Energy Commission, now employed with the New York Public Health Service, testified that the rate of lymphatic disease among employees of the K-25 plant at Oak Ridge is as high or higher than among the Japanese after the first A-bombs were drop ped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. One person who turned up at the trial, though not a plaintiff, was Olin G. Smith, a broken hulk of a man who had been subjected to radioactivity while making metal shapes of U 235. Today he cannot be subjected to daylight, must be covered up wherever he goes. These are some of the pathetic penalties the American people have had to suffer as a result of letting the atomic genie out of the bottle. President Kennedy ex pressed doubt at a recent press conference as to whether It could ever be put back again. Sugar Shortage? Department of Agriculture ex perts have Riven a detailed re port to the White House that there is no need for alarm over a sugar shortage. Secretary of Agricul ture Freeman also reported that the upward price spiral in sugar has reached a turning point and he expects- a steady downward slide. Actually, we have 500,000 more tons of sugar available now than at this time last year. However, to stop the price squeeze Free man has purchased one million additional tons of foreign sugar from Australia, Argentina. India, Mexico, and other countries, un der the "Global Quota" of the 1962 sugar act. Freeman also has temporarily lifted acreage restrictions on cane and sugar beet production in the United States. This will help to stabilize the market until the cane and sugar beet harvests In Oc tober. Big candy and soft drink makers have been yelling the loudest about higher sugar prices, but they actually provoked the price boom by a wave of buying to boost their inventories, thus causing speculative buying by oth er industrial sugar users. Another problem is the fact that in the past we could always de pend upon the three-million-ton yearly quota of sugar from Cuba to balance our domestic supply and keep prices down. We can't depend upon this anymore. Note Congress will probably amend the sugar act to further increase foreign Imports. Ireland gets set for visit by Kennedy DUBLIN (UPI) Irish officials this month will show President Kennedy proof that one of his an cestors was caught, tried, and jailed by the British as a rebel. Civic officials in New Ross, the County Wexford home of the Ken nedys, said Sunday they have the document: a page from the Wex ford County jail records. The President will visit New Ross on his June 26-29 tour of Ireland. His grandfather came from New Ross to the United States, and many distant relatives still live there. The Kennedy who got in trou ble with the British, according to the records, was James Kennedy of Dunganstown, a nephew of the President's grandfather. He served nearly three months at hard labor in 1888 for "resist ing and obstructing the sheriff." Ireland at that time was ruled by the British and the Land War, a period of civil disturbance and anti-British agitation, was in progress. Tlie jail record Is preserved in the Kennedy ancestral cottage in Dunganstown, a part of New Ross. James Kennedy, then 21, was a son of John Kennedy, whose brother Patrick was the Presi dent's grandfather. James, who played a prominent part in re sisting the British landlords in the New Ross area, died In 1937 at the age of 80. His nephew, also named James, lives a short distance from the Kennedy cottage. The Bulletin Monday, June 3, 1963 An Independent Newspaper .Abort W. Chsndlor, Cditor Jack MeOormott, Adv. Meniger Phil F. Brogon, Aiwclilt Editor Lou W. Mover. Clrc Msnoger Loron E. Dyer, Mooh. Sop't. William A. Votes, Managing Ed. rnierad u Sm CUM Mailer. JaJ-uanr a. HIT. it pnt unn it be-d iTea . IM IIIM KMlJeUB. In formula "should be changed" to reduce the counties' share. This declaration alarmed the Oregon congressional delegation and OtC county officials. They recognized they might have dif ficulty withstanding a strong at tack on this formula because na tional forest timber cutting re turns only 25 per cent to the local counties and many congressmen who are accustomed to this prac tice would vote to reduce the O&C counties' share accordingly. Along with Kirwan's suggestion was a reduction of $540,000 in the amount requested by the Bureau of Land Management for forestry management work on the O&C forests, plus a suggestion that this amount be taken out of the counties' share. Rep. Robert B. Duncan, D-Ore., after discussing the O&C issue with county and Interior Depart ment officials, concluded that the counties had too much at stake to risk a fight on the floor of either House or Senate over this relatively modest sum. Interior officials indicated they might be able to absorb the cut so that it wouldn't hurt the counties at all So they let It ride this year. And now that Wayne Morse has helped save the money for the aquarium, perhaps there will be no problem about funds for Ore gon projects in the future. . Racial trouble erupts in north Florida city GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI)-A Negro man was shot, a white man was beaten, bottles were thrown and a car was smashed Sunday ' night in a four-hour, eruption of racial violence in this north Flori da city, the home of the Univer sity of Florida. Large bands of whites and Ne groes formed and nearly clashed in the downtown section during the trouble, which started when Negroes attempted to buy tickets to a segregated theater. City officials promised strict control over more theater demon strations expected today. In the midst of the trouble, the city commission held an emergen cy meeting and set up a blractal committee of eight whites and four Negroes to work toward a peaceful solution to racial prob lems. . "The law will be enforced," vowed Mayor-Commissioner By ron Winn. Officials in Tallahassee and Day tona Beach, where theater picket ing already is under way, also looked to police control and coop eration by officials of both races to keep down trouble. There was hear violence last week in Talla hassee. In the Negro section of Gaines ville, a crowd of close to 1,000 Negroes gathered as word of the downtown trouble spread. The Ne groes pounced on a stalled car carrying three white men, wrecked the car and beat one of the men. It was here, witnesses said, that a Negro pulled out a pistol and shot another Negro, Joseph Sim mons, either accidentally while aiming at the car or because Simmons was trying to help the white men. Police said they were investigating. Simmons was treated for a ' wound in the forearm and re leased from a hospital. Mormons plan Moroni statue at '64 fair NEW YORK (UPI) - The pavil ion of the Church of the Latter Days Saints at the 1964 New York World's Fair will be topped with a gilded replica of the statue of the angel Moroni, a revered Mormon prophet, it was announced today. The SVt foot statue will be made of fiberglas instead of hammered copper such as the figure atop the Salt Lake Temple in Utah which was made 71 years ago. The same 40-inch plaster model from which sculptor Cyrus Dallin made the temple statue will be used as the model for the fair statue. The theme of the Mormon exhi bit at the fair will be "Man's Search for Happiness." The church believes the angel Moroni lived on this continent more than 1,500 years ago. The figure atop the Utah temple is 12 and one-half feet high and stands clothed in angelic robes with a trumpet at Hs lips to herald the advent of the gospel of the church. HEADS TRUCE TEAM JERUSALEM, Israel (UP1 Gen. Odd Bull of Norway ar rived Sunday in Jerusalem to take ever his duties as chief of the Imted Nations truce team supervising the uneasy Israeli Arab borders. He rtDlami nn By Lylo C. Wilson UPI Staff Writer President Kennedy miscalculat ed the civil rights pressures by so wide a margin that he finds himself now confronting a danger ous and frightening emergency. The emergency is both danger ous and frightening because it threatens civil disorder, riotous mobs in city streets. Civil disorder is spreading in the South. There is the solemn threat of it ' in Northern cities. The capital, itself, has been put on notice by Negro spokesmen that racial con ditions must change in Washing ton to prevent a race riot. Kennedy's miscalculation was political. The 1960 Democratic presidential platform carried to extraordinary extremes the prom ise of legislative and administra tive action in behalf of civil rights. Negroes applauded the platform and voted for Kennedy. He probably would have lost some big states and the presidency without their support. Rights Issue Dolsyod Kennedy decided to postpone civil rights legislation during his first two White House years to avoid arousing Southern members of Congress. Their angry reaction would have delayed and perhaps killed much of Kennedy's other legislative proposals. Meantime, the President moved fairly hard and fast with administrative measures in behalf of civil rights, with special emphasis on the right to vote. The Kennedy administration's '. biggest play for the Negroes, however, was in the field of emotional propaganda. Some Ne groes were named to relatively high federal office. Negro leaders were welcome socially at the White House. The President mr ttr i-imr i dropped in unexpectedly one day on a group of young Negro college women who were having lunch. News stories and news pictures kept the nation informed of the President's attention to Negroes. This political play seemed to be working well until this year when it suddenly fell apart. Negro lead ers who had accepted Kennedy's early civil rights strategy as a political necessity for him, sud denly became disenchanted. Even the President's best friends began to tell him. His anxious telephone calls to Mrs. Martin Luther King Jr. on those occasions when her husband was jailed in the South were effective for a time. But just the other day, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr, was telling a California audience that the President had not done enough to outlaw segregation, -r. StiJI Helping Mtredith The Kennedy administration continues to support with armed men the ambition of James H. Meredith to study at the Univer sity of Mississippi. But Meredith is on record now that Kennedy is not doing enough. Atty. Gen. Rob ert Kennedy peculiarly has iden tified himself with civil rights. Ne groes with whom he met a few days ago to discuss the situation were unimpressed. They pronounc ed RFK naive and lacking in un derstanding of the race situation. It is proposed that President Kennedy personally integrate the University of Alabama by taking a Negro by the hand and leading him through the process of regis tration. The end result of the political situation: Kennedy evidently will move hard and fast now for civil rights legislation. The frightening question is this: Is it already too late to prevent riots in the streets? Committee makes plans for mammoth Goldwater rally WASHINGTON (UPI) The na-' tional Draft Goldwater Committee today announced plans for a mammoth July 4 rally in the na tion's capital aimed at convincing Sen. Barry Goldwater to run for president. The committee said groups from almost every state had an nounced they would attend the rally oh behalf of the Arizona Re publican and It would be "a truly national declaration of popular sentiment." Sens. John G. Tower, R-Tex., Rep. John Ashbrook, R-Ohio, and Gov. Paul Fannin of Arizona were listed as speakers for the affair, which will be held in the National Guard Armory. Actors Walter Brennan, Chill Wills, William Lundigan and Ef rem Zimbalist Jr. will provide entertainment, according to Peter O'Donnell Jr., chairman of the committee. "The purpose of the rally is to Byrnes sounds Cuba warning NEWBERRY. S. C. (UPI) -James F. Byrnes, former U. S. secretary of state, said Sunday the presence of Russians in Cuba may make Latin America repub lics doubt this country's ability to protect them from Communist enroachment. "They will be subverted one by one until all of South America is lost and the Communist goal of isolating the U. S. has been at tained," the former South Carolina governor said at commencement exercises at Newberry College. Byrnes said he hoped President Kennedy "will take whatever steps Vacation is coming for the kids, are necessary to force withdrawal but Mom will keep right on doing of all Soviet offensive weapons her homework, and combat troops from Cuba." He said the President can act with Liv happily enough to make assurance that Americans will worth-while and you're more support any action he takes. Iiley to forgot what it costs. demonstrate growing public sup port for the nomination of Sena tor Goldwater as Republican can didate for president in 1964," the committee said. "The rally will also serve as a formal kick-off for the commit tee's campaign to secure millions of signatures, petitioning Senator Goldwater to seek the Republican nomination." In another development in the presidential sweepstakes Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., said he hoped that Gov. William Scranton of Pennsylvania would accept the call if he were asked to run for president or vice president. Scott, appearing on a bi-month-, ly television program with Sen. Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., described Scranton as "one of the ablest Republicans we have." "If he's ever called for higher duty, it would be my hope that he would feel impelled to accept it," Scott added. However, lie said there was no movement afoot in Pennsylvania to generate interest in Scranton as a nation al figure. Barbs If you don't want to be sailing on a sea of trouble, throw out your anger. Grandparents enjoy it when a flock of grandchildren rush in for a visit and also when they go homo. 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