The Bulletin, Wednesday, " MR. AND MRS. Silver Lake coupe honored Special to The Bulletin FORT ROCK - Newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Everett Green of Silver Lake were honored recent ly at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Klerk. Guests for the social time were the board of supervisors of the Fort Rock - Silver Lake Soil Conservation District and their wives. A gift was presented to the honored guests following re freshments served by the hostess. The Greens were married re cently at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. Attendants for the couple were Fred Greenfield of Bend and Mrs. Hulda Holland of Colfax. The bride is the former Kathleen Frits of Colfax, Wash. The bride groom is work unit conservation ist for Uie SCD. Guests at the wedding included the bride's four daughters and Green's mother, Mrs. A 1 e t h a Green. . Looking for a car? Check Gas ification No. 100 for best results. IS" w e Agree ii -iiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiinininiii -"t.r ' : J -".. fl ffsjj 1 1 Westingkouse REF FROST-FREE 119 LB. FREEZER never needs defrosting. FROST. FREE COLD INJECTOR REFRIG ERATOR keeps food fresh longer. TWIN PORCELAIN CRISPERS hold almost e bushel of vegetables dewy-fresh. 13.S eu. ft. Capacity. KENCME July 31, 1963 13 EVERETT GREEN Temperatures High and low temperatures in the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. PDT today High Low Bend SO IS Baker 84 43 Brookings 78 47 Klamath Falls 83 40 Medford 87 48 North Bend 66 53 Pendleton 84 52 Portland 70 56 Redmond 83 38 Salem 73 52 The Dalles 79 59 Chicago 83 72 Los Angeles 80 63 New York 86 63 Phoenix 104 84 LOTS OF PRACTICE LONDON (UPD-Joanna Ainin, the 22-year-old daughter of Para mount Chief Nana Fosu Gyabour II of Ghana, has won a place in an exclusive London drama school, but Is not worried about stage fright. "My father practices polygamy and with so many brothers and sisters we have to compete to get any notice taken of us at all," she said Tuesday. ...you should join the SPAFs and enjoy the conven ience of never needing to defrost again! FROST-FREE 2-D00R RIGERAT0R FREEZER Many Other Frost-Free Models To Limited gains made by Negroes By Harry Ferguson UPI Staff Writer The urban Negro in the United States has made limited gains toward equality this year but still is far short of his goal. A survey by United Press In ternational of the nation's 25 larg est cities skows that it is improb able, if not impossible, that 1963 will be the year of decision in the Negro fight for absolute equal ity. The tempo of Negro demon strations in the first half of 1963 misled many persons into believ ing a major breakthrough had been achieved or was at hand. Between May 1 and July 19 there were demonstrations in 153 cities scattered through 30 states, most of them along the Eastern Seaboard. But when quiet was -e- stored, most of the gains were limited and some of them were only on paper. It appears 1963 will eo down in history as the year in which the Negro plowed and planted uie lieias ot equawy. It will take 10 years, pernaps longer, to reap the harvest. Negro leaders are not publicly claiming major victories. The UPI asked the Rev. Martin Lu ther King of the Southern Chris tian Leadership, James Farmer of the Congress of Racial Equal ity and Roy Wilkins of the Na tional Association for the Advance ment of Colored People to desig nate the city or town which Uiey felt was dealing with the prob lem in the best way. All declined to reply, inviting the conclusion that they were dissatisfied with conditions everywhere. Facts and fieures presented here represent conditions in the nation s 25 biggest cities and may not be valid in terms of all the Negroes in the nation. Here is a breakdown of how the urban Ne gro stood at the halfway mark of 1963: Housing: No . major Negro gains since the UPI conducted a survey a year ago. Everywhere the pattern is the same: Whites prefer not to live as nelghbcrs With Operating Standard Make Refrigerator Not Over I Yean Old Select From! jaaJIkiill HARDWARE & APPLIANCE with Negroes and if they can af ford it they move to the suburbs. Between 1950 and I960 the white population of Chicago declined by 601,223; the Negro population in creased by 320.372. There are many "pepper and salt" neigh borhoods where whites and Ne groes live together because they cannot afford to do anything else. In Atlanta the Negro population compromising about 40 per cent of the total lives on one-ruth to one-sixth of the residential land. Jn San Antonio, Tex,, there is a development containing 75 hous es selling for $22,000 and up. It advertises that it is the only in tegrated housing development in the nation. So far, no whites have chosen to live there. Public Officei The Negro does fairly well in appointive jobs, but not so good in elective offices. San Antonio, San Diego, Cincin nati, Memphis and New Orleans have no Negroes in elective jobs. The Negro fares best in New York where he has a president of Manhattan Borough, several city councilmen and a Congress man, Adam Clayton Powell. Public Accommodations: Much progress for the Negro has been made in this field. The bus prob lem has almost ceased to exist. There has been a quiet and or derly integration of swimming Get a New Refrigerator-Freezer That's ENTIRELY FROST-FREE! YOU'LL NEVER NEED TO DEFROST AGAIN ! li'z true! New frost-free electric Refrigerato Freezers simply do not form frost! There are no ice-jammed freezing compartments ... no stuck-tight ice trays . . . and best of all, no messy defrosting, ever again! You gain more food storage space ... no frost build-up on freezer walls to rob you of usable room. Your refrigerator-freezer will function more efficiently, too, in a frostless atmosphere which allows freer air circulation. in urban areas pools, parks and golf courses in most cities. But there has been no great Negro rush to use such facilities. There has been only a small and token integration of barber shops and beauty parlors, but the Negroes seem to prefer to take their patronage to busi nesses run by members of their own race. Hospitals: It is difficult to be definitive about how the Negro patient fares because too many cities have laws against indentlfy ing persons by race or color. The 10 denominational hospitals in Minneapolis say patients, doctors and nurses are completely inte grated. In Memphis one of the three large city hospitals is staffed entirely by Negroes and treats only Negroes. Job Opportunities: Negroes com plain labor unions, especially in the North, are discriminating against them. Labor leaders con cede there is some truth in it, and President George Meany of the AFL-CIO told Congress Uie other day it should pass a strong law to "mop up those areas of discrimination which still persist in our own ranks. Negro lead ers complained about the Elec tricians Union in Philadelphia, Cleveland and San Diego. Candid labor leaders say that most un ions have long lists of apprentice acif ic Power & Light Company of United States, but he's still applications and Negroes are not on them. Other job opportunities vary widely. All major depart ment stores in Washington have Negro clerks; only one major ! partment store In Houston docs so. Jail Treatment; St. Louis, Bos ton and Atlanta index prisoners by color, but no other cities do so. Negro prisoners are segregat ed in the jails of Atlanta, New Orleans, Houston and Cincinnati. Negro leaders voiced few com plaints about police departments but did criticize the activities of individual policemen in some cas es. Churches; The area in which there has been the least trouble. However, there has been no wide spread integration of worshippers because Negroes prefer to attend Negro churches in their own neigh borhoods. Public Hiring: Most of the 25 largest cities operate under Civil Service or fair employment ordi nances. There seems to be ten dency to keep the number of Ne groes on the public payroll in di rect ratio to the percentage of Negroes in the population. There is a heavy percentage of Negroes in such categories as laborers and garbage collectors. All cities re porting agree there are fewer Ne- goes in the white collar category than In the laborer dasit teat ion. Join Professional Opporfunltleii In tegration of the bar and medic 1 associations is complete in 16 cit ies. The other cities vary. In Dal las the medical society is inte grated but the bar association is not Negroes have their own law yers' association in Houston. In St. Louis they have their own medical forum. Vocational Schools: In most large cities the Negro is well oti. Houston gives vocational training in lour of the five Negro high schools. New Orleans has a voca tional Institution which is integrat ed, but the private vocational schools are segregated. Smith- Hughes School in Atlanta has 11 Negro students out of 4.618. Public Schools! In Uie nine years since Uie Supreme Court Now open to serve Central Oregon BEND CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC DR. B. G. Spurlock, Chiropractic Physician Laboratory X-Ray Physiotherapy 321 Greenwood Bend 382-5422 Society for trie Prevention of Accumulated Frost the SPAFs short of goal decision two patterns have devel oped. One is "segregation by area," meaning that many schools are predominantly Negro because they are located in Negro neigh borhoods. In Washington, 115 pub lic schools have more than 90 per cent Negro pupils. Nineteen have more than 90 per cent white stu dents. The other development Is that in the 23 largest cities the percentage of Negro pupils con sistenUy is larger than that of Negro teachers. BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP Welding A Repairing 1114 Roosevelt Ave. Bend Ph. 382-3762 LOOK FOR THIS TAG on the new frost-free refrigerator-freezers at your appliance dealer's today! Open Evenings and Sunday Ph. 382-5241 253 E. Greenwood