OCR Text |
Show Utah Welfare Group To March In S.L.C. "We're trying to get people to think about children," Bonnie Hartley, Vice President, Utah Welfare Rights Organization said regarding a planned welfare march in Salt Lake City. She said the Utah demonstration will be held March 25, the same day the national organization will be marching in Washington, D. C. "Most welfare recipients are young children. We strongly oppose the President's Family Assistance program," she advised. She getting continued saying that more programs are needed to help welfare youngsters and they don't need a law which forces mothers to accept work outside the home. The march will begin at the Salt Palace at 10:00 a.m. on March 25 and will proceed to Memory Grove for a Easter egg hunt. Utah Welfare Rights is in need of donations from merchants to enable all welfare children to have an enjoyable Easter. Persons interested in making such donations should call Mrs. Hartley at 521-052- 9. What We Are About goals of model cities 1. To reverse the cycle of blighting conditions in the Model Neighborhood and to improve the quality of man's existence in his community. 2. To attack the causes rather than merely the symptoms of by Kirk Terry Good are much Cities has Johnson is together secretarial stenogranhers in demand and Model one of the best. Pam a task force stenographer highly competent, serving in an important job - and she is pretty. She has been a student at the Skills Center for eight months and places an extreme importance on developing skills and talents to further secure the livelihood of her family. Receiving a basic education in secretarial and clerical skills in California, Mrs. Johnson enrolled at the Skills Center to further enhance her vocation. If ever she has to provide family income, she said, she ITS NEVER g 7. To accumulate over five-yea- Its never too late to be Companion of wind and rain , Lover of land and sea, maker of poetry. Its never too late to share others, in full aeeord, The sun of beauty near Seen shining through a tear. With Pam Johnson It s never too late to pray Nor place in the hands of hope The destiny And best It 467-941- elay. never too late to learn Life s lesson before you go. A new candle will burn On the day you return . . . s I know. a Pam is interested in 4. To make delivery of services obtaining full time employment and within the Model Neighborhood would be happy to receive any systemic and oriented to consumers information on available jobs. Please rather than agencies. if you know of full call 5. To reaffirm the rights and time secretarial work. dignity of the individual without of day, of human by frank Howard 1011 E. 8th South, City r services. TOO LATE - would be ready. "I would be interested in legal or creed and to to race, regard color, secretarial work," she said, but is appreciation for her services as a reverse the dehumanizing trend in maintaining a flexible base for stenographer and secretary. She said the delivery of modern city services. she enjoys working for Model Cities, employment. 6. To develop meaningful The Model Neighborhood indicative of the excellent work she citizen participation in government News, Model Cities Agency, and task does for the Agency and the decision-makinprocesses. force groups extend to Pam Johnson community. period data not presently To an 3. overall available, and to coordinate existing provide community development plan for data, so as to provide factual criteria the Model Neighborhood on the for the Model Neighborhood Board basis of integrated and interrelated in the planning processes. community problems. I TO A WONDERFUL FRIEND Look to the light With in and live In its continious glow. 6 For the greatest prayer, that you can give Is simply to President Requests Funds And Services be still and know. (Given to a Model Cities staff member by a friend. ) for Minority Businesses President Nixon on March 20 more loans available for minority urged Congress to take swift action business starts; approval of his in approving his request for request for a fiscal year 1973 budget additional funds and new legislation of $63.6 million for the Commerce that would provide more money and Department's Office of Minority increased services in support of Business Enterprise (OMBE), which would enable it to expand its minority businesses. "It is an astonishing fact," the funding of minority business into President said, "that although development organizations minorities comprise 17 percent of additional cities and increase its our population they own only 4 business assistance services; and peicent of our businesses and approval of other small business of 1 proposals the President said are produce only seven-tenth- s percent of the total business income currently pending in Congress. "We have found the right of the Nation. "The frustrations, lost potential direction to proceed with the and deprivations suffered by the President's minority enterprise L. Jenkins, OMBE entrepreneurs among these program," John " Americans," he stated, "and the cost director said, and with his restated h of its citizens commitment to the program, the to society of remaining underproductive, are continued support of Congress, and the valuable participation of the intolerable." In his message to Congress the private sector and other federal am confident we will President specifically asked approval agencies, of the MESBIC Act of 1971, which achieve the President's goal of would lower the risks of sponsoring providing equal opportunity for all Minority Enterprise Small Business Americans to share in our Investment Companies and make competitive enterprise system." one-sixt- I t Bs-- Your World Is As Big As You Make It. Today's Army wants to join you. Call your nearest Army Representative Sgt. Greg Hickenlooper 1 35 South State Street Salt Lake City, Utah -- Call collect - 524-402- 6. |