Newspapers / Wayne Community College Student … / Oct. 24, 1972, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page 2 The Wayne Communique October 24, 1972 SuHUHCfl "Jobs for young people are available in Europe” said Dr. F. X. Gordon, President of Princeton Research, at a Uni versity of Southern Californ ia interview yesterday. Just back from Europe he said “the 300 million people Common Market is booming. On tljye other hand, he stated, we for- see continued youth unemploy ment in the United States un til at least October of 1973. U.S. Corporations are still cutting back personnel and are not planning for replace ments. Although the improving U.S. economy will create some new jobs, more young people are entering the job seeking mar ket. In fact some 1,300,000 per year. 1973 high school and college graduates will face a long search. We have a program called Job Europe, he continued, and guaranteed salaried jobs in Switzerland, England and Bel gium, for some 2,000 young people 18 to 29 years of age. These are Summer, Fall,Win- ter and Spring jobs as gene ral help (trainees) in hotels, restaurants, supermarkets, department stores, steward and stewardess on trains, etc. Board and room are usually provided and friends can work together if they apply toge ther. Participants arrange their own bargain youth or stu dent fare transportation and The Wayne Communique The Wayne Communique is published monthly for the stu-:S S dents of Wayne Community College under the sponsorship g of the student Government Association. The Opinions ex- pressed here do not necessarily represent those of the jj:: Board of Directors, Staff, or Faculty of WCC. :g Si STAFF B f Editor % S: Asst. Editor Suzanne Turner g ® Layout Mgr Maria Stevens ^ Political Editor John Prevette •X; Sports Editor Dean Sauls i... i Business Mg Amelia Jackson g: Reporters Carl Gruber, Nova Rhodes, Amelia Jackson, S: Betti Watkins, Nancy Taylor, Lou Price Typists Betti Watkins, Nancy Taylor, Nova Rhodes g; photographers Craig Smith, Roy Pate, Cliffon Crobett J;:: Advisors ....Mrs. Cuthrell, Mrs. Warton, Mr. Bill Bennitt depart anytime to work 2 to 6 ed. months or longer. Over the past 12 years we have helped place more than 10,000 young people in Europe and England” Gordon conclud- For free information send a stamped self - addressed business size envelope to Jobs Europe, Box 44188, Panorama City, California 91412. POW-MIA’S NEED YOUR HELP! Most people have experien ced the pain of losing a loved one, or a friend, but have you ever stopped to reflect on the incredible mental torture of not knowing whether you had lost your husband, son, or fa ther. This is the fate now being maybe they gave you the right to vote because they thought you’d never use it. m experienced by the families of almost 1700 men who are Pri soners ofWarandMissing-in- Action in Southeast Asia. Can anyone imagine the problems a wife faces, whose husband was listed as dead for three years, then missing - in - ac tion, and finally prisoner of war? Or the torment of the parents in Ohio, who thought they buried their son six years ago, and now think that he might be alive? • Throughout history, men have given their lives in the service of their country, and their families had to be pre pared to accept the possibil ity of death, but never in his tory havf families had to face the day after day, year after year, torment that the MIA families are living with now, and will continue to live with, unless we see that their men are accounted for. Only after many people be came concerned and spoke out, did North Vietnam finally al low a few hundred men to write to their families. Now all A- merica must help to see that those families who have not yet heard will not spend the rest of their lives in the torturous anxiety of "not knowing”. The outrage against such in humanity must ring from the lips of all America, and echo throughout the world. Only then will Hanoi, who has al ready shown itself sensitive to world opinion, listen. It can’t be done without your help. A POW and MIA bracelet honors the man whose name is inscribed and includes the date he was lost. It should be worn with the vow that it will not be removed until the day the Red Cross is allowed into Hanoi and can assure his fam ily of his status and that he receives the humane treat ment due all men. Distributed by VIVA (Voi ces In Vital America) a non profit, non-political national student organization dedicated to the fact that progress and freedom can only be achieved and maintained by rational and responsible action. To cover the cost a donation of $2,50 for stainless steel or $3.00 for copper is request ed, Anyone wishing to pur chase a bracelet may contact Martha Pate, secretary in B building. UNICEF BUILDS FOR A MORE PEACEFUL WORLD In 1965, when UNICEF was awarded the Nobel prize for Peace, a member of the Nobel Committee remarked, "To create a peaceful world,we must begin with the children.” If children are to take an active part in building international cooperation, they must be better fed, healthy, and educated. The United Nations Children’s Fund is dedicated to removing the obstacles to growth faced by the one billion children now living in the developing countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. In every project UNICEF and its partner -- the developing country — share responsibility. Most of UNICEF’s assistance takes the form of needed equipment, while over one third of its aid supports the training of local teachers, health workers and other personnel. The assisted country makes substantial commit ments of its manpower and natural resources which more than match the value of UNICEF’s investment. On the average, the assisted nation spends $2.50 for every dollar UNICEF spends on its child care programs. Because of this sharing of responsibility and because UNI CEF selects pilot or demonstration projects which can serve as models for more extensive national efforts, UNICEF aid acts as a catalyst. It stimulates programs that countries can carry on for this own children. UNICEF’s international staff, located throughout the developing world, assists local ad ministrators in making the most effective use of UNICEF aid within the context of the country’s development plans, and co ordinates this aid with other agencies in international develop ment. For over 25 years, the funding for these programs has been entirely voluntary -- by governments and private organizations and individuals who support UNICEF. During most of those years, an important and growing source of UNICEF’s income has been the Trick or Treat collection on Halloween. The coins which are dopped into the familiar black and orange cartons by U.S. citizens add up to millions of dollars (almost $3,500,000 last year) for UNICEF’s world-wide child care efforts. Collecting for UNICEF rewards America’s own children with a sense of sharing, and helps to bring food and water, the relief of pain, the tools of learning, and the knowledge that others care to millions of youngsters in 111 countries of the develop ing world. -n^CK OF. TPEATlNlfS UMICBF HELPS ALL OV/6K THE VslOfZLC? MAKes VOD PBBL I evEM serrefz IM5H7E / CASItV C706S ^ « In 1972, 25 million young people will be able to vote for the first time. We have the right to choose who will govern us, and what their policies shall be. Twenty-five million votes can change the course of history. Or not change It. And that’s just too much power to throw away. Every person needs a good job. Every job needs a good person. S/6iea4d ^ ^HtaUca? By JOHN PREVETTE Miami hosted two political conventions as different as night and day. In July Senator George McGovern beat out the old political machine with his liberal youth machine. The media called it "New Politics,” and claimed that politics will never be the same as the "old cigar smoke filled rooms and behind the door deals” days. In truth, however, only the cigar smoke has been replaced with a new kind of "smoke.” McGovern swept the con vention and let his staff try to cover all of the campaign promises that could never be fulfilled. His staff had spread the Senator too thin and now was having trouble in keeping the party uni fied, The McGovern staff kept making mistakes and losing ground against Nixon. Even the minorities group that held the Senator so dear, started to lose its grip on the new programs that were dreamed up the night before they were announced. For the most part the platform that George McGovern started with is not even close to his present platform. His staff is so anti-Nixon that they overlook the needs of the American people just to take an opposite side to the President. The McGovern staff has led the American Liberal on a wild goose chase and has filled their heads with "visions of sugar plums.” On the other hand, Mr. Nixon’s convention a month later was also a sellout to the American people. It has been called the most aseptic political convention in United States history. The G.O. P. put together the best of Hollywood and Republican party leaders into one of the greatest epics of Modern Screen play. The lines were well-rehearsed; a script was made up indicating who would say what and when they would say it. There was no feeling of political competition with the Democrats, and the G.O. P. could care less that George McGovern was running. Nothing was spared to show the American people that Richard M. Nixon meant business for the next four years. Is it possible that there was no one who could think of the last four years of broken promises and an Increase in impersonal government dealings? The American public has been bamboozled by one major party and the wool pulled over its eyes by the other party. Who speaks for America? Listen.
Wayne Community College Student Newspaper
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Oct. 24, 1972, edition 1
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