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Show EMPLOY MENT PICTURE TITLE 7 cont’d by Dick Hiett Monday, October Center was OPPORTUNITY local get at good more SUZO were jobs, there and time. cussions the Central City Action the location of the first EMPLOYMENT NIGHT in the valley. Several of our employers this 30th, what Over 125 to discuss the labor persons jobs, market attended. like dis= on, jobs for talking people. to the Saw JOHN JIRON and CECELIA American Oil representative. a how is Good carried ployers. We have just to were Also MARTY GARCIA and in the planning and the on how can we get TINA SALAZAR were involved actual recruitment of em- position open NOW for person the school one who ter or can at work $1.25 up to per ten hours hour. might be qualified, to Mrs. Murback, If per you refer week know them to Counselor, of the in any Cen- East High School. TERS. Quite a few calls this If you would like to this kind of work, at the Center, please last week. Talked DUEY BLACK, PATSY ible VISTA workers. Call and ed programs with guy one of the through It's great to see a a Aide. enroll- of Journalism here at family the Center. going back field the VISTA% about presently is He CIVISH. poss— as Neighborhood your in MIKE know don't You it with in was WHITAKER, QUINTANA and FRED BOONE University the at JEFrERSON VISTA, for GARNETT, JOHN to: FRED to KERMIT recruiter the BAKER, Talked Any others that have thought about ts to school. but can't make up their minds? The time 1S NOWeee. ings ment at.383 office Center for more or Bast 6th Se ~ THE EAST 322 HEAR AFTER SATURDAY AT ol LOVELY MISS 10:00 THAT! SOUTH YEARS 6 SANDRA OLD FLEMING AND LOVELY CENTRAL MISS CITY READ LONNIE BEAUTY $3 oA ic 3rd THROUGH 3 the Central City: she said CLAYBOURN: QUEENS ?3 STORIES? A.M. served lunch to the children, and read stories, took them to the she said. school, in did 1 home, "Nothing I fig- ured. .I‘d have-.-to college for." Huberta the said Mrs. as Board that Benns a Head at do I what "Mostly the helped and bathroom, teacher. go ‘to Randolph of of Education she was sure did a good job Start Aide, but that the children were Older in an elementary school and that a UniverSity student could help the teacher build reading readiness and word skills and that would take some college training. Chairman Rena Mitchell pointed out that the Title I. Committee under-— Stood the need for professional help, and that they didn't want all the Teacher Aides to be from that neighborhoods, there but should be room in the program for some. Mrs. Joan Hoppe (Head Start) agreed with the Chairman. She stated that —— 12:00 to change problem of the whole re- lationship between the middle-class "establishment" and the poor. Fred Civish said that for the schools to accomplish any of the things they want to do with Title I money, it was necessary to have a few people from community in the "We need schools to the schools. make human," these he said. "If there were a few people, a few people groups poor from working as Aides, the children would see them as an object..of. pride, .4and then the schools would have some relationship to the child's unity." life in the com- "You can't buy an understanding of poverty," Mx. Civash.. went om, “10 have middle-class white University students as Aides isn't going to give you people who understand the problems of the poor. The poor are the only people who understand the poor." Rena Mitchell related a personal experience of how middle-class teachers not poor When were the in interested and their problems. she and her sister in school, she said, a teacher had to get of money for costumes. "We told the teacher that," Rena said, "but she didnt care, and:said we'd get the duties of the reg- ular teachers very successfully and that one of the reasons Head Start was the formed Aides was to give experience to their knowledge as ers, "If Head Start mothis: to have any depth and meaning," she said, “it must have continuity into the elementary schools," Mr. Burton Thompson of Personnel for the 5d. of Ed. said. that. another reason the Board wanted to use ents as courage University Aides them was to studto en= become ° are and understand don't the Aides in Head Start did more than “take the children out to the bathroom.e" She said that the Aides had taken over some that some of the teachers depended on the Aides for Noon and the attitudes they have about working in schools in low-income areas. This brought up ‘the minority get them into the elementary schools. She _ said TIME 28TH OCTOBER SATURDAY, CHILDREN MACHINISTS, Sa STORY EACH open- information. Near AND few have developed. STATION field SERVICE contact your local employ=— interested, the are Action a but skilled HOTEL WORK, MAID and in and in If you slow, been has picture job The She the MARTIN discuss last week for BABY SITand have the time to do contact Benns was asked duties were as for Head Start, a MACHINIST, pays $425-$500 monthly. Should have some recent skills. A part-time (two days per month) job with the county has just begun. Saw LOLA HAMAKER, KATIE HUGHES, PEARL WILLIAMS, and FRANCES EVANS getting started repairing toys for children. Pays $1.50 per hour. Still some openings for both men and women over 60 years of age. EAST HIGH is still looking for qualified boys and girls -- 16 to 18 years old -— for their inschool N.¥.C. Program. This is a program where the young Mrs. what her an Aide teachers told them they costumes for a Christmas pageant or they would get "E" as a grade. Rena's family didn't have MS ig cond dh. never.ftorget Crymngd in <cront' or My whole gym class." Other of the Title I. Committee's recommend— ations discussed using neignborhood as Social Worker were: people Aides, anc paid pointed tutoring. out that It was paying student putting tutors poverty where the they pockets It was bright income would be monies belong of the <= in poor. also suggested if students from lowfamilies were paid Corre "ais the PAGE © FOUR |