Mr. Jenner. Do you have capabilities in that area?
Mrs. Cunningham. Sir?
Mr. Jenner. Do you have capabilities in the area of inquiry into personality—when I said "capabilities"—first, do you have any training in that area? You necessarily have some experience, I am sure—formal training, let me put it that way.
Mrs. Cunningham. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. I'm going to get into your overall training in a little bit.
Mrs. Cunningham. I hesitate to say this, because the pressures are with us in the Texas Employment Commission, to do a limited job on the vocational employment thing, because that is our emphasis and that is as right, but I have to say that I think a life is a unit and that you can't take a slice out of it and look at it alone and be very effective, nor that a human being can cut away from all his past, nor his associates, nor the other things that are affecting him and so I try to approach an individual, when time permits and when it seems like it might be effective in his vocational life, to get some information about other parts of his life.
Mr. Jenner. All right. Now, I got you off on this because I asked you what the "B" in the circle meant—may we go back to that?
Mrs. Cunningham. I thought I had answered completely.
Mr. Jenner. I think you have, but as I say, I got you off on it when we reached that point—I interrupted you.
Mrs. Cunningham. The entries on the application form, E-13 (Cunningham Exhibit No. 1) below "do not write below this line"—none are in my handwriting and they are not counseling records. They are referral placement records.