First Trainees Enter WA/HY On-The-Job Training Several trainees have entered W.A.M.Y. On-The-Job Training Program in a variety of jobs, skills in which employees are being trained include electri cians, plumbing, practical nur sing and sa.espersou. The Training Coordinator, Clauae Williams, feels the pro gram 'is progressing satisfactor ily under present conditions, and especially so in view of certain restrict.ons placed on minimum wage requirements by the North Carolina State Supervisor o 2 On-The-Job Irainmg. The re sponse by emp.oyers has gener ally been good. Several employ ers are presently working with Mr. Williams for filling existing job vacancies and many others have expressed their desires to use the program to train new employees as soon as more work opens up and they begin to hire new people. Mr. Williams feels that one of his most diffi cult problems will be getting in contact with employees before they place new employees who would be eligible for training in their payroll. It is very import ant, according to Williams that employers contact hm before they hire a new employee in order that certain preliminary arrangements may be worked out. He explains that because the program is designed to pro mote the hiring of employees who are not normally in the labor market this training is primarily for employees who are not presently on an empolyer’s payroll. With a few exemtpions persons already employed are not eligible and this is why he would like to meet with the em ployer to work out arrangements VTQiimig Vn - L «g *-*- date the employee starts to work In order to meet as many em ployers as soon as possible, Mr. Williams has set up a schedule for visiting all counties in the W.A.M.Y. area. He will be at the W.A.M.Y. County Coordinator’s office from 8:00 a. m. to 10:00 a. m. as follows: 3 ROBERTS INSURANCE AGENCY Burnsville, N.C. invites you to see another exciting full-color adventure produced by NATIONAL OEOORAPHH I : I 1 ■ | 1 “Yankee Sails across Europe** CBS- TV CHANNEL 3 Saturday , April 8 r- Sponsored by ip- , 'M'•»(AS*JAi.T > g - - • THE YANCEY RECORD Telephone Mondays, Spruce Pine 785-4240 Tuesdays, Newland 732-4171 Wednesdays, Boone 284-3718 Thursdays, Burnsville 682-2610. Employers may call the near est W.A.M.Y. office anytime and leave their name and tele phone number for Mr. Williams to contact them. Althogu it is important that employers who have immediate requirements for new people to get in touch with Mr. Williams at the ear liest date possible, he will be glad to meet all other employ ers to explain the program and answer any questions they may have. Hospital Savings To Conduct Campaign During April, Hospital Savings Assoc'ation of Chapel H : ll will conduct a special campaign making famous Blue Cross and Blue Shield protection available to anyone under age 65, regard less of present health. Eligib’e persons age 65 (or who soon will be 65) may also apply for cover age to supp’ement Medicare. The program being offered carry the endorsement of the:; N. C. Hosp tal Association and the State Medical Society. Anyone who des : res add’tional. information about the programs avadable durng April may con tact the home office in Chaoel Hill, or any one of Hospital Saving’s other 14 offices. .... ,f 9At S’ WHY NOT IMPROVE YOURS ? Paint Yepr House Replace Your Roof Modernize Your Kitchen Or Other Rooms i I 1 Add A New Room Build A Guruge SEE US TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATES. / ; -t™ J. ; . r / B. B. PENLAND & SON CO. ______ Burnsville, N.C. Plans Underway To Construct Chapel At Deaf School A campaign is being launched to raise $200,000 to construct a chapel on the campus of the North Carolina School for the Deaf at Morganton where one student from Yancey County is enrolled. The Chapel for the Deaf, In corporated has been chartered as part of a movement sponsored by the Parents’ Association of the school, which will cany its appeal to the people of North Carolina. Fred W. Drum, Jr., of Newton, president of the association, said, “Thik’ is an ambitious project wh;ch will need broader support than we can expect from the more than $4,000 deaf people in the state.” The project has the support of the administration, staff, and students. The proposed chapel would be non-denominational and attend ance at all services would be purely voluntary, it was pointed out. It would serve as a place where all types of religious ser vices could be held not only for the over 500 students at the school but for all the deaf people in the state. There have always been Sun day school classes at the school and non-dencminational church - services, but none of the school facilities now be'ng used for that purpose were designed for aa atmosphere that instills rever ence. Presently Sunday school clas ses are taught by members of the teaching staff and church services are held by various THURSDDAY, MARCH 30, 1967 missionaries to the deaf who have had special training in commiurcating with the deaf. Now all types of religious ser vices are be ! ng held in the school buildings for the youneer child ren and in the auditorium at Main Building for older students The is also used for u visual aid room, movies, par ties, and other forms of enter tainment. brum said the Parents Asso ciation, feeing keenly the need tor a chanel, decided to initiate the appeal for public support be cause the school, as an educa tional iacility, is regarded as ineligible for a State appropria tion for religious purposes as might be received by a custod ial care institution. * Ben E. Hoffmeyer, superin tendent of me School for the Deaf, »»id “The concept that church and state should ue seoarate makes it desirable that funds'from pri vate sources be raised to build a chapel. The North Carouna School for the Deaf is a purely educational, state-supported in stitution which makes it ques tionable that the State could legally appropriate tax money for a religious facility. The Parents’ efforts, therefore, in raising this money are an ap propriate way to provide a re ligious facility for the School for the Deaf and for the deaf of North Carolina.” Drum pointed out that the School for the Deaf is a ten- month residential school and the teaching staff must, therefore, be responsible for the major part of the moral counseling and roigious education of the stud ents. The teachers are especially trained to provide instruction of this kind to students of all ages. “It is often quite difficult,” Drum said, “for the parents of these young people to communi cate abstract information to their deaf children.” The board of directors 1 named for the Chapel for the Deaf, Inc. includes Mrs. W. C. Smith, pre sident; Morris J. Barnwell, vice president; Mrs. Bill L. Sech rest, secretary; Mrs. Russell H. Watson, tresaurer; James M. Dixon,, Jr., Robert P. Wilson, Fred W. Drum, Jr., Arnold L. McGee, John A. Seats, Ben I. Greene, Leonard A. Parsons. Betty Crocker Homemaker Named M’ss Catherine Lynn Mavberry of Harry F. Harding H ! eh School Charlotte; has been chosen 1967 State Betty Cr-'cker Homemaker of Tomorrow for North Carolina. She will receive a $1,500 scholar sh:p from General Mills. Win ner over 15,281 senior girls In 422 of the state’s high schools enrol’ed for this year’s program. Miss Jennifer Jane Warren, Lenoir high school, Lenoir, was awarded second honors in the state and will receive a SSOO scholarshin.