Page:1965 Moynihan Report.pdf/38

 {|cellspacing=0
 * + Fall Enrollment of Civilian Noninstitutional Population in College, by Color and Sex October 1963 (in thousands)
 * | Color and Sex
 * | Population, age 14–34, Oct. 1, 1963
 * | Number enrolled
 * | Percent of youth, age 14–34
 * Nonwhite
 * | 2,884
 * | 149
 * | 5.2
 * | 3,372
 * | 137
 * | 4.1
 * White
 * | 21,700
 * | 2,599
 * | 12.0
 * | 20,613
 * | 1,451
 * | 7.0
 * colspan=4 |
 * }
 * | 21,700
 * | 2,599
 * | 12.0
 * | 20,613
 * | 1,451
 * | 7.0
 * colspan=4 |
 * }
 * | 7.0
 * colspan=4 |
 * }
 * }

Dr, Thompson reports that 70 percent of all applications for the National Achievement Scholarship Program financed by the Ford Foundation for outstanding Negro high school graduates are girls, despite special efforts by high school principals to submit the names of boys.

The finalists for this new program for outstanding Negro students were recently announced, Based on an inspection of the names, only about 43 percent of ail the 639 finalists were male. (However, in the regular National Merit Scholarship program, males received 67 percent of the 1964 scholarship awards.)

Inevitably, these disparities have carried over to the area of employment and income.

In 1 out of 4 Negro families where the husband is present, is an earner, and someone else in the family works, the husband is not the principal earner. The comparable figure for whites is 18 percent.

Mote important, it is clear that Negro females have established a strong position for themselves in white collar and professional employment, precisely the areas of the economy which are growing most rapidly, and to which the highest prestige is accorded.

The President’s Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity, making a preliminary report on employment in 1964 of over 16,000 companies with nearly 5 million employees, revealed this pattern with dramatic emphasis.

In this work force, Negro males outnumber Negro females by a ratio of 4 to 1. Yet Negro males represent only 1.2 percent of all males in white collar occupations, while Negro females represent 3.1 percent of the total female white collar work force. Negro males represent 1.1 percent of all male professionals, whereas Negro females represent roughly 6 percent of all female professionals. Again, in technician occupations, Negro males represent 2.1 percent of all male technicians while Negro females represent roughly 10 percent of all female technicians, It would appear therefore that there are proportionately 4times as many Negro females in significant white collar jobs than Negro males.

Although it is evident that office and clerical jobs account for approximately 50 percent of all Negro female white collar