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Small town succeeds where Chicago fails

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Behind it all, Delgado acknowledged, the boy was miserable because his mom no longer visited him or the family. "She doesn't come. Brandon's a little boy. He needs (her) in his life, but it doesn't happen."

Even without the turmoil in this boy's life, the step up from kindergarten to first grade can be a huge transition, Miller said. "There are a lot of changes. Let's give him some time. Let's try to start his mornings off as calm as possible."

Miller advised Delgado not to indulge Brandon — and not to get anxious or tearful herself when she says goodbye to him at the school bus. Ideally, Miller said, Brandon should have "a clean break" from home when he leaves for school.

For now, Miller suggested that they avoid the bus. If Delgado drove Brandon to school, Miller said she would be there waiting to greet him and walk him to class.

"Bring him in," she said. "I don't mind being there."

With the meeting wrapped up, Miller opened the door and Brandon hurtled in and hugged his grandmother by the waist.

"I want to go home," Brandon said desperately. Delgado fought back tears.

"Not today," she said. "You're OK."

Shoes and alarm clocks

In a cabinet behind his desk at nearby Nielson Elementary School, outreach worker Joe Pilger keeps a stash of plastic alarm clocks. He hands them out to truant kids who say they can't wake up in time for the school bus.

Pilger also shops for sneakers.

A parent recently approached Nielson's principal at an open house and confessed that her fourth-grade daughter owned only flip-flops, which are prohibited by the school's dress code.

So after Pilger saw the last kid onto the bus at the end of a recent school day, the former college football lineman and fifth-grade teacher headed for the Target store at the edge of town. He spent 10 minutes sorting through sneakers before selecting a pair of girl's size 3s for $21.69. He used the school's small "miscellaneous funds" account to make the purchase.

Last year, Galesburg outreach workers bought 76 pairs of shoes for Nielson students.

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