Hey, Pop, you fh'ink cigarefs are really dangerous?' w Revolution '63 (4) KraiBaME Negroes feel they need better jobs to live better lives GOP will put plenfy of pressure on Howell Appling fo stay in politics Howell Appling hasn't said that he wouldn't be a candidate to suc ceed himself in 1964. But he is ex pected to confirm the story which The Bulletin carried on page 1 Wed nesday sometime after the first of the year. He will confirm the story and announce that he will retire from politics when his term expires in 1964 unless the Republicans can put up some strong arguments to get him to change his mind. Appling has apparently been weighing the pros and cons of leav ing politics for some time. Rumbles have come over the mountain from time to time. Last summer in Bend, Appling said that ho really didn't know what he was going to do. Rumbles can continue in Salem for only so long before some report er gets on the scent. The result is a story usually predicting with some accuracy events which will later transpire. If Appling leaves politics it will leave a void in the Republican party. Most observers of the political scene had expected Appling to seek reelection as Secretary of State next year and then go for the gov ernorship in 1966 when Gov. Mark Hatfield ends his second and final term. Appling, appointed In 1959 by Gov. Hatfield as an unknown, has become a strong secretary of state and is considered by mnny to be the equal of Hatfield In the eyes of the Oregon voters. If Appling were to run for gov ernor in 196(5 he would probably be favored against almost any Democratic candidate on the present horizon even though the Democrats have a 50,000 plus voter registration Nuts to fair play Last week the Oregon School Activities Association booted the MacLarcn School for Boys athletic teams out of the OSAA and as a result, out of interscholastic ath letics. This is another one of the strange OSAA decisions and the list of strange decisions ove..' the years is long Indeed. There is some background to this action. For years, MacLaren tried to gain membership in the OSAA. Last year the OSAA let down Its bars and admitted MacLarcn to membership. The MacLarcn football team went through an undefeated season. There was no criticism of the way in which MacLaren players conduct ed themselves. In fact, referees were warm in their praise of the attitude of MacLaren teams. Then MacLaren officials peti tioned the OSAA for admittance to a conference. The OSAA made its decision following a vote of member schools In the area. The voters ob viously didn't want their teams com peting with youngsters from Mac Laren School. lead. If he doesn't choose to run, of course, the Republicans could face a long dought because after Hat field and Appling, they have a lot of guys named "Joe." The same could be said of the Democrats. The Democrats would have a better chance of electing "Joe" however, simply because of the siz able lead in voter registration. Because the Republicans have nobody else on the scene at present and because Appling now looks like a pretty sure thing in 1966, one could safely predict that leaders in the Republican camp will do all they can to persuade him to stay In pol itics. We hope he stays in politics because we think he is a fine admin istrator and a credit to Oregon. Suppose he steps down. What then? Well, we would predict that there would bo an awakening of activity in both political parties if there hasn't been already. The Democrats would awake quickly because without Appling around, there would be a pretty good chance that any one of several men could get elected. A shin-kicking contest involving such Demo cratic luminaries as Bob Thornton, Clarence Barton, Howard Morgan, Alfred Corbett and Robert Duncan would be fairly Interesting to watch. Or take the Republicans. This would be a zinger because after Hatfield and Appling, the second team gets pretty thin. We wouldn't even hazard a guess as to who the GOP candidates might be at this stage. For this reason, mainly, all kinds of pressure will be put on Ap pling to stay in the game. The result Is that after letting MacLaren play football for a year, the OSAA has banned them alto gether. Last spring when MacLaren Superintendent Amos Reed learned that his charges would be allowed to join the OSAA and piny competi tive football, he asked for "patience, understanding and fair play" from other schools. He obviously didn't get It. Students at MacLaren have every right to feel that such things as fair play and sportsmanship aren't really so on the "outside" at all. Quotable quotes This Is the first time that we were faced with a problem where there was criminal activity in the city of Los Angeles that was known to a law enforcement agency whore we were not permitted to participate. Police Chief William II. Parker criticizing the FBI for not bringing his department into the search for kidnaped Franf? Sinatra Jr. EDITOR'S NOTE: The Ne gro in America wants many things but hit list almost al ways is dominated by the word jobs. The following dis patch, fourth of five, is an as sessment of how far he has come, where he wants to go and what his problems are. By Al Kuettner UPI Staff Writer The Negro's pocketbook was very close to his freedom cry of 1963. His reasoning went like this: Give him a better job and he would get a better house, have a better car, be a better citi zen. Without higher wages, the Negro said in thousands of voices across the land, he sim ply was being prepared to take a hamburger purse into a plank steak restaurant. Despite the advances made by the American Negro in the past ten years, he still scram bles for jobs on the lower rung of the economic ladder. His pay is one-half that of white workers. He finds it difficult to advance, once he finds employ ment. And, once on the job, he is often aggressive and super sensitive, according to his own people. In street demonstrations, con gressional lobbies and in the August "March on Washing ton," the Negro during 1963 de manded as never before that the barriers against job oppor tunities be removed. Not Informed "The Negro is out of the mainstream of job gossip and this keeps him even from knowing about jobs the way white people do," says the Na tional Urban League in Mon tana. Mrs. Novella Boyd, a Negro In High Point, N.C., puts it an other way: "I pay the same as you for groceries, but I don't nuke the same amount of money." In a nationwide examination of the job situation, United Press International reporters in SO states spent days interview ing Negroes, business and in dustry executives and govern ment experts. The concensus was over whelming that: Negroes, except for a slim minority, are not in position to compete for the bulk of the job openings today. Trade schools and union apprenticeship programs still are inadequate to provide train ing for Negroes who have the incentive to improve their chances. Most of the jobs held by Negroes are menial, lower class blue collar or in fields in which they serve the Negro populace. The Negro has done best in federal government civil serv ice jobs and in plants that hold federal contracts containing non-discriminatory hiring pro visions. National Problem Job discrimination is more of a national problem than just about any phase of the racial conflict. "I don't like the way people react in the South but it's not as different here as I thought it would be," said Prince Myles Jr., a Negro who migrated to Omaha, Neb., from Mississippi. "The jobs available to Negroes are the jobs the whites wouldn't take." Warren Cochrane, an Atlanta Negro who has worked on job placement for 30 years, speaks candidly of the problem: "The Negro does not exist in this country as an industrial worker. Negroes cannot com pete with white job applicants. We have said to employers, 'you must go the second mile.' 1 Washington ;Merngo-roun Oppenheimer surprised by old critic, Dr. Teller By Drew Pearson WASHINGTON Dr. J. Rob ert Oppenheimer, the atomic scientist, got the surprise of his life during a recent White House reception when he saw his old foe and critic, Dr. Edward Tel ler, waiting to greet him. It was Teller who helped drive Oppenheimer out of the atomic energy program on the ground that he was a security risk. He was the most damaging witness at the long and dramatic hear ings conducted under Admiral Lewis Strauss, then AEC chair man, regarding the loyalty of the man who built the first atomic bomb. That testimony and the find ings of the commission began a long ordeal for Oppenheimer. He retired to Princeton, remain ed in obscurity, was considered by many dishonored and dis graced. But shortly before President Kennedy was killed, he moved to restore Oppcnheimer's good name. As a senator, Kennedy had been opposed to the witch hunt. He felt that the nation needed a gesture to help end the decade of hate and suspi cion. So, as one of his last acts, he nominated Oppenheimer for the highest nuclear honor in the nation, The Enrico Fermi Me dal. One of President Johnson's first acts was to present the award to Oppenheimer. Scientist friends of Oppen heimer at the White House re ception never dreamed Dr. Tel ler would be present. He was automatically invited as a pre vious Fermi Award winner and stood for a time at the end of the refreshment table munch ing hors d'oeuvres. Suddenly, seeing the news photographers unllmbering their cameras, he bolted toward Oppenheimer, el bowing his way through a knot of well wishers. Teller grabbed Oppenheimer's hand just as the flash bulbs started popping. The startled Oppenheimer stared in disbelief as the man who had helped drive him from government offered his con gratulations. Pay Raise For Congress It's beginning to look as II Congress' must notable ac complishment this year may be to raise the salaries of Its mem bers from $22,500 to $35,000 per year. This would seem a poor time for them to vote themselves a pay raise, as they wind up the lengthiest but least productive ession In history. Furthermore, their present pay may seem ample to most voters. However, it is less than most Congressmen could command in law, industry, or commerce, and their res ponsibilities are greater than men who are paid far more. This column must report. In all fairness, that Congressmen have special expenses, must maintain residences both at home and in Washington, shut tling constantly back and forth. Only three roundtrips a year are paid for by the taxpayers. Members of Congress are also expected to donate generously to charities, to entertain fre quently, and face the ever pressing need of financing the next campaign. The truth is that an honest Congressman has a tough time meeting his bills on $22,500 a year. Since most are honest, they are forced by their low pay to seek outside revenue from law firms and business investments. Not all are as spartan as Sen. Paul Douglas, D-lll., who has set a $2.50 limit on gifts he will accept or allow his staff to ac cept. On his few official trips abroad, he insists on traveling tourist class. He caused a flap in the state department, for instance, by demanding to stay in a modest hotel in Munich. The diplomats wanted him to stay In the best hotel, as be fitting his standing. But Doug las got his way. Few are as frugal as Sen. Clifford Case, R-N.J., who rides to work on a bus, eats in the cut-rate Senate cafeteria, and scrimps in order to make ends meet. He is forced to draw on his savings, accumulated from his former law practice, in order to stay in the Senate. Sen. Spessard Holland, D-Fla., was forced to sell his interests in several citrus groves, as he needed money to pay his Wash ington expenses. He sold the last of them three years ago. Others resort to moonlighting (usually lecturing or writing) in order to keep the wolf away from the door. Certainly, members of Con gress are entitled to a pay raise, but they should earn it first by finishing their congressional chores. TIME TO CONCENTRATE LAWRENCE. Kan. (UPI) -The University of Kansas de bate team will go to prison Sunday to debate inmates at the federal penitentiary at Lea venworth, Kan. "The Leavenworth group has some fine debaters," said Dr. Wil Linkugel, university debate coach. "They have plenty of time for research and no dis tractions." The debate question will be whether the federal government should guarantee all qualified high school graduates an op portunity to continue their education. This is hard because a man in business must have people who produce. Negroes do produce but it takes time and effort to train them." Negroes, representing 1 out of 10 of the 190 million inhabi tants of the United States, are far from battering down the barriers leading to good jobs. But progress is being made. At the Willow Run plant of Ford Motor Company, a Negro holds a key job at the end of the assembly line, putting the engine on the chassis. Hold Responsible Jobs The chief U.S. marshal In Washington, D.C., the detective chief in Cheyenne, Wyo., the attorney general of Massachu setts and a growing number of federal and state officials and elective officers are Negroes. In the Deep South, Negroes are appearing as clerks, check ers and office employes of de partment, grocery and other business firms. One of the most popular clerks in the Sears Roebuck toy department in At lanta is a Negro. In Delaware, the Dupont Company hires Negro girls for four hours a day, paying full salaries provided they attend secretarial school the other four hours. They get office jobs at the end of the course. When Appalachian Power Company at Roanoke, Va., au tomated elevators, the Negro operators were given clerical jobs. Passive interest In the Negro job problem turned into active work toward aleviating it in California where many employ ers now advertise for Negro workers. Two of the three San Francisco newspapers have Ne gro staff members. It is becom ing a sort of status symbol to have Negroes in sight in jobs in California. From Madison Avenue to Hol lywood, Negroes are breaking into slick paper advertisements and high budget television. Marion L. Sellers, a spokes man at Lockheed Aircraft Com pany in California, said "we would like to hire more Ne groes but not enough who are qualified show up at the em ployment window. It's disap pointing." After demonstrations and ne gotiations, Cambridge, Md., agreed to hire a Negro in the state employment office; Jack son, Miss., added five Negroes to the police force; Greensboro, N.C., added a number of Ne groes to downtown department stores; the largest department store in Dayton, Ohio, agreed to hire Negroes for Christmas work and to offer some perma nent employment, and in Phila delphia the city decided to let out no more municipal con tracts wherein discrimination is practiced. So-called "equal opportunity" firms report that more than 2,000 of the 31,000 job openings have gone to Negroes in recent months. But so far it's a drop in the bucket For the nation, fewer than 5 out of every 100 persons in the non-white labor force have professional or tech nical jobs. Some of the reasons why pro vide a look at the major prob lems for leaders who are at tempting to get the Negro into the mainstream of American life. Some firms are "afraid to be the first" to hire Negroes, says Floyd E. Lubert, personnel di rector of Western Electric at Kansas City, Mo., and a mem ber of the Chamber of Com merce Equal Employment Committee. Marion Woods, Negro consul tant to the state Department of Employment in California, con tends there are more Negro PHDs than plumbers in that state. His statement pointed up an other big complaint by Ne groes: That they are blocked out of anion apprenticeship pro grams. "You can get a PHD If you stay in school long enough but you need to get approval as an apprentice to be a plumber and we can't get that," Woods said. Negroes Losing Out Some of the best job openings for Negroes are turning up in the South, but Negroes by the hundreds are losing out be cause of inability to pass intel ligence and character tests. Employers report that many others, once hired, fail to stick at the job. One employer said several Negroes quit shortly after being hired, explaining they had merely been "testing" their chances to get into the firm. To bridge the gap facing what an Illinois report terms "the most disadvantaged work ers" in America, a number of plans are in the works. Whitney Young, president of the Urban League, wants a do mestic "Marshall Plan" that would finance the training of large numbers of Negroes and compensate industry for in-job training during the time they are less than fully productive. The league also is opening clearing houses to find more jobs for Negroes. Technical and trade schools are viewed as another major step. So are bi-racial commit tees, but they need to be groups with more than advisory status. "Many communities have made them ineffectual by giv ing them no power and in some instances not even the power of suggestion," said a white ad vertising executive in Ashe ville, N.C. I Capital Report i j LBJ has won but he hasn By A. Robert Smith Bulletin Correspondent WASHINGTON If there Is a honeymoon spirit on Capitol Hill toward President Lyndon B. Johnson, most of the Oregon congressional delegation is be having like a polite but deter mined maiden lady. The tall Texan in the White House has won their praise with his words but hasn't had much luck in getting them to consent to what they don't wish to do. In the House last week, three out of four of the Oregon con gressmen opposed the first ma jor bill to come up in that chamber with Johnson's en dorsement. It provided for a subsidy for cotton textile mills. In the Senate the previous week, the White House not only failed to line up Sen. Wayne Morse on the first bill but re ceived a Morsian scolding for its pains. That bill was designed to facilitate sale of wheat to Russia. The cotton bill had been held back in the House for weeks by Democratic leaders who feared it would be defeated. They mov ed quickly after Johnson took office, possibly to take advan tage of the honeymoon spirit, and put it through by a comfor table margin, 216 to 182. Rep. Robert B. Duncan, Med ford Democrat, was a vocal dissenter and the one the administration worked hardest to pull into line because Duncan is on the Agriculture Committee which handled the bill. Duncan claims he didn't get "the trei tment," as Johnson's special brand of persuasion is called, but Agriculture Secre tary Orville Freeman was dis patched to Capitol Hill to try to talk Duncan into supporting the controversial measure. "It was a lousy bill," snorted Duncan later. "I call it the Jesse James bill because it will hold us up for more money." Rep. Edith Green, Portland Democrat who voted against farm subsidy bills advanced by the Kennedy administration, agreed with Duncan. She and Rep. Walter Norblad, Stayton Republican, both voted against the cotton bill. Its only supporter from Ore gon was Rep. Al Ullman, Baker Democrat. The cotton bill carries a sub sidy estimated to cost $250 million a year. It provides that cotton brokers be paid 84 cents per pound for cotton they praise of Oregon lawmakers, 't always gotten their votes sell to domestic textile mills. They are already paid this sub sidy for cotton sold to foreign buyers. Purpose is to permit brokers to sell cotton to mills at the 24 cent world price rather than the 32 V4 cent level which cotton producers are guaranteed under the government's cotton price support program. "I do not come from a cotton producing area," Duncan told the House. "But In my district we have lots of people who wear shirts and who pay taxes." Duncan said he thought that a more satisfactory approach would be the Talmadge bill. It would pay farmers directly the difference between what is con sidered a fair market price and what they can get for it on the open market. It would also im pose production quotas in bales on the farmer rather than try to limit production through acre age allotments. Under the present system of acreage allotments, cotton pro duction is Intensified on each acre, resulting in a cotton sur plus today of 12 to 13 million bales, he argued. Duncan failed CALL OFF STRIKE DUBLIN (UPI) - Four wom en called off their 48-hour hun ger strike Wednesday night when one of them collapsed from exhaustion. They were protesting alleged failure of the city to provide them with living quarters after their homes were condemned as unsafe. The women had barricaded themselves In an army barracks. In an effort U get the Talmadge bill approved in place of the administration's bill. Duncan said cotton producers . are opposed to the Talmadge bill because It would involve direct payments to them from ' the government. "They like to preserve the Illusion of independence," ob served Duncan, but it is an illusion because they are de pendent on the government." The Talmadge bill reminds farmers of the old Brannon plan, and neither they nor the Ken nedy - Johnson administration wanted to head into an election year tryl. g to defend that innovation. Barbs The latest shock from a dry cell is the report that a boot " legger was running his business from prison. If money could really talk it couldn't afford to say much these days. With little kids running around the best thing to try on your piano now and then is furniture ( polish. Noted Names It's not too bad if bad fortune follows you all of your days, but never catches up with you. Answer to Previous Puzzle The Bulletin Thursday, December 12, 1963 An Independent Newspaper Robert W. Chandler, Editor Glenn Cushman, Gen. Manager Jack McDermott, Adv. Manatee Phil F. Brogan, Associate Editor Del Umlmin, Cire. Manager Loren E. Dyer, Mech. Supt. William A. 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