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Ga. GOP Head Asks Carter To Support Nixon
Georgia's Republican Party
chairman, In the wake of Gov.
Jimmy Carter's apparently un
successful attempt to dump Sen.
George McGovern as the Dem
ocrat presidential nominee, has
Invited Carter to help carry Ge
orgia for President Nixon.
GOP Chairman Robert J.
(Bob) Shaw also raised the poss
ibility that Carter's abortive ef
fort to stop the McGovern drive
may have been deliberately des
igned to secure the Democrat
nomination for the South Dakota
senator.
The liberal senator Tuesday
won the California Democrat
primary and apparently assured
his nomination to head the De
mocrat ticket.
"Gov, Carter campaignedfor
four years throughout Georgia
as a working man's conserv
ative," Shaw declared, "But the
day he was Inaugurated he em
erged as a rich man's radical
and a liberal of the first magn
itude.
June Is
Dairy
Month
Governor Jimmy Carter In
ceremonies on the lawn of the
State Capitol, stood on the back
of a farm pick-up truck on June
1, and Issued a declaration de
claring that June is Dairy Month
In Georgia.
The Third Army Band played
and Governor Carter, himself
a peanut farmer and honorary
chairman of June Dairy Month
In Georgia Committee, com
mended dairy farmers and the
Industry, and under the hammer
of an auctioneer was high bidder
to purchase a young dairy calf
which he said would be placed
on the lawn of the Governor's
Mansion in Atlanta.
Also joihlng to pay tribute to
the dairy industry were Lt.
Governor Lester Maddox; Ge
orgia Commissioner of Agric
ulture, Tommy Irvin; Georgia
Farm Bureau President Em
mett Reynolds; and Dr. Charles
Ellington, Director of Georgia
Agricultural Extension Service.
Dairy Industry and farm pro
ducer representatives were
present for kick-off of activities
marking the beginning of June
Dairy Month in the State.
Lt. Governor Maddox, and
Georgia Commissioner of Agri
culture, Tommy Irvin likewise
were high bidders on young
dairy animals.
Gov. Carter said that milking
a cow used to be his job as a
young boy on the farm even
though he never did learn to like
milking a cow.
Lt. Gov. Maddox was seen
attempting to "tote" his calf
and commissioner Irvin wond
ered what the beef cows on his
farm would think of a dairy cow.
In the capitol activities, free
ice creajrf - and milk were dis
pensed to several hundred spec
tators.
GFBF President Reynolds
commended producers for their
efficiency in production which
assures consumers an adequate
supply of milk at the lowest cost
In history.
Modern sanitation techniques
In Georgia's dairy industry sees
milk brought from the cows to
the consumer never exposed to
the atmosphere.
While milk cow numbers in
Georgia have declined from an
estimated 325,000 cows in 1952
to fewer are resulting in an
all-time high milk production.
Capital inputs in Georgia's d
alry Industry are high. Dairy
men alone have about $450 mil
lion Invested in their farm op
erations. They contribute over
S7O million annually to
Georgia's economy. Over 30,
000 people in Georgia owe their
employment to the dairy in
dustry. Processor Investment
Is high.
Milk is nature's most nearly
perfect food, providing some
of all the dally vitamin and m
ineral requirements of man.
A glass of milk a day and two
peanut butter - jelly sandwiches
will supply the larger part of the
protein requirements for a per
son -all for a few cents a day.
This being June Dairy Month,
what about the cost of milk? In
1940 the average American fac
tory worker had to work 21.1
minutes to pay for a half gallon
of milk-today lt takes less than
half that amount of time.
"Let’s celebrate June Dairy
Month with a large glass of
cold milk,” Reynolds said.
"lf Gov. Carter is truly in
terested In ‘Stopping* Mc-
Govern, and the philosophy Mc-
Govern represents, he can do
so by helping carry Georgia
for President Nixon."
Shaw described President N
ixon asa‘‘constitutionalistwho,
more than any public figure in
this century, has dealt with the
problems facing this country
within a constitutional frame
work."
At the same time, he said
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TOW. JUNE 24,1972 super o MARKET — ■
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Gov. Carter’s “chameleonic
capacity for changing his pol
itics, to gain whatever adv
antage he is seeking at the
moment, creates some serious
questions concerning his cred
ibility.”
“I noted with some interest
the governor’s flip-flop from
conservative to liberal after
his inauguration,’’ Shaw dec
lared. "And I noted with some
amusement the attempt by the
governor’s senatorial app
ointee, David Gambrell to im
merse himself in the Conserv
ative tide sweeping this country
by serving as a spokesman for
George Wallace.
"But I was absolutely ast
ounded when Gov. Carter ann
ounced he was spearheading a
purported movement to wrest
the Democrat nomination away
from one of his liberal coll
eagues.
"Considering the convoluted
nature of his machinations thus
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| JOY I
far, I wonder if perhaps Gov.
Carter wasn’t deliberately
raising straw men for Mc-
Govern to knock down, thus s
olidifying liberal support for the
Democrat front-runner?
"And I wonder if perhaps an
aspiration to be the Democrat
vice presidential nominee was
his motivation?
"Gov. Carter in the past has
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shown no reluctance to alter his
politics to serve his own ends.
"I’m calling upon him today
to change his politics to serve
the needs and desires of Geor
gians by helping them elect a
truly conservative president--
Richard M, Nixon."
USDA CHOICE CHUCK _ _
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THE FORSYTH COUNTY NEWS - JUNE 22, 1972
Several On GJC
Dean’s List
GAINESVILLE Several s
tudents from Forsyth and Daw
son Counties have been named
to the spring quarter dean’s
list at Gainesville Junior Col
lege.
In order to qualify for this
honor, students must take a
minimum of two five quarter
hours courses and maintain a
3.5 grade point average, a sp-
jiirusDA choice cHucini||k
§ ROAST 1
fK MAXWELL HOUSE
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|SMM|
PAGE 5
okesman said.
Cumming students named to
the list are Alaine Barker Gl
over, Route 4; Daniel Edwfcfii
Glover , Route 4; Terry Lfch#
Mayfield, Route 7; and MeliWir
J. McGinnis, Route 3. M! 'l
Dawsonville students narhgd
to the list are Joseph EdWin
Bearden, Box 21; and Miclia&t
L. Henson, Route 2. *9<l^