Training gets approval from Johnson WASHINGTON (UPD-Presi-dent Johnson today approved a bill establishing new programs to train unskilled youths and unschooled adults as part of the fight against unemploy ment. .Tli? President signed legisla tion amending the 1962 Man power Training Act to pour $527 million in new federal spending into new job training courses. Johnson also called an after noon meeting with two advisers whom the late President Ken nedy had appointed to study the financing of a program to de velop a supersonic jet transport plane. Scheduled to meet with John son were Eugene R. Black, for mer president of the World Bank, and Stanley Osborne, chairman of ihe board of Olin Mathieson Chemical Co. Working On Compromise Black and Osborne were named to study the plan calling for the government to put up 75 per cent and private indus try 25 per cent of the estimat ed f 1 billion needed to develop a prototype plane. The industry feels its 25 per cent share is too high and Black and Osborne were reported to. be working on a compromise. ' . ... The manpower legislation will set up. new. job training courses for jobless youths aged 17 through 19 and provide basic education for older workers ! whose inability to read and write makes retraining for jobs impossible. It also would give states an extra year to start paying part of the cost of retraining courses and extend the entire program, originally three years, through June 30, 1969. The 1962 act, first attempt by Congress to deal with growing joblessness due to automation and other basic economic changes, set a target of 400,000 trainees in three years. Offi cials believe the expanded, ex tended program will be able to handle 700,000 persons, about a quarter of them in the 17-22 age class. Lower Agt Limit The original manpower law limited youth training sharply and placed a lower age limit of 19 on' the trainees. But new attention on high school drop out and youth unemployment statistics persuaded sponsors to shift the emphasis. The 1962 law made no provi sion for teaching academic sub jects to trainees, but one of the first lessons of its application was that modern industry de mands literate workers. The new law would permit up to 20 ; weeks of training in basic edu cation in addition to the skill courses. . Up to 93.000 youths and adults a year will be benefitted by the new programs, which add $100 million annually to the federal state cost. New look due on bread labels SALEM (UPI) - Bread in Oregon will start the new year with a new look on labels. The balloon bread law passed by the 1963 legislature goes into etlect Jan. 1. It sets require- i ments for labels on bread and advertising . Kenneth Carl of the State Ag- j ricullure Department said all bakeries selling bread in Ore gon are affected. i He said most of the bakeries j have submitted their new labels ; for approval. j The law requires that the labe'r have the minimum net i weight and the weight size, such ' as standard loaf, standard large loaf, standard extra large loaf, balloon, balloon loaf or balloon bread. The minimum size of letters on the label also is set by the law. All lettering, except the , word "Balloon," must be mini-! mum of 316 of an inch if on the sides or top of a loaf and 1 s of an inch if on the ends or 1 an attached tag. i Four men who worked closely with Kennedy give views about him made naturally... so naturally it's better WASHINGTON (UPI) - "He was everything I would want to be, everything I'd want my son to be." The speaker was Defense Sec retary Robert S. McNamara and his subject was John F. Kennedy. McNamara, Secretary of Stale Dean Rusk. Treasury Sec retary Douglas Dillon and La bor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz four men who had worked closely with the late President Wednesday night reflected on the kind of man he '.vas and the kind of nation and world he left behind. They appeared on an hour-long television program (CBS Reports). To McNamara he was "an in tellectual, with a very rare tal ent for translating thought into action .... graceful under pres sure . . . witty, fun-loving, with a passion for excellence, lie was that under pressure ... in times of crisis." To Rusk, Kennedy was a man who realized that "domestic is sues can only defeat you in an election, but foreign policy is sues can incinerate the north ern hemisphere." He said that Kennedy had es tablished a personal relationship between himself and the ordi nary people of many countries. "Therefore, this assassination came as very deep shock and the reaction to this from all over the world was one of the very moving aspects of this re cent tragedy," he said. "I think the reaction of the rest of the world to the resili ence of our constitutional sys tem, the way in which we pulled ourselves together, the way in which partisan consider ations were temporarily put aside to give support to a new president, the way in which he picked up and immediately car ried on with the great stream of American policy . . . this was all very impressive and en couraging to people of other countries," Rusk said. To Wirtz, who was elevated to the top Labor Department spot by Kennedy after Secre tary Arthur J. Goldberg was named to the Supreme Court, it was the President's deep con cern over unemployment that remained in his memory. Wirtz raid . KewvHv Hid. not , want Americans to become ac ! customed to the steady 5 per cent unemployment figure which prevailed before and dur ing ins administration. He said Kennedy attempted to arouse the "satisfied" 95 per cent of the population to help the "un satisfied" S per cent. The labor secretary also spoke of the late President's often expressed concern over tne jomcss rate among tne na tion's Negroes. To Dillon, Kennedy was a man who kept on top of devel onments in nearlv every de- The Bulletin, Thursday, December 19, 1963 3 seek reversal of convictions PORTLAND (UPI) - Thief men found guilty of mail fraud and conspiracy in the sale of land in a Harney County sub division filed motions Wednes day asking that the convictions be set aside. partment of government. He said the President often called to inquire about an item he had read in a newspaper or maga zine, whether it was true and how it affected U.S. policy. U.S. District Judge John F. Kilkenny, who heard the case earlier this month in Pendleton, set a hearing for Monday mor ning here. 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