Programs, Correspondence, 1968, January-July (1968)

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- 60 - sider developing ways of reaching people with the least possible delay, and with the best possible means. The reasons for this are two¬ fold: 1) That there has been, and will continue to be, an increase in the population we are reaching. 2) The fact that each recipient bring with him a whole range of problems that are critical, even though what brought him to the agency in the first instance may be one kind of problem. In certain areas of the country, in what we have come to call Rural America, the poor are trapped in remote communities, with no facilities, sub¬ sisting with only the barest necessities of life. The•following excerpt from a rural Newsletter, "The Hawk," prepared weekly by people living in a remote Kentucky region of Appalachia, describes the plight of the children of that community. "True Story," was written by Martha Ann, a nine year old child. "Today, May 1st, is my birthday. I am nine years old. I go to school in the Head of