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Vol 111, No. 266.
tens Girl Gops
aauty Crown
tTh University
carroll Magill Named
Queen; Cloria Epps
one Of 8 Top Beauties
By Jacolyn Bush
Wearing a demure gown
. plush-pink satin and a
gly radiant smile, lovely
aroll Magill, daughter of
v and Mrs. Dan Magill of
thens, Wa 8 crowned
qeen of the University of
corgia campus last night
the annual Pandora
ety R evue, which
ought together on the
qge of the Fine Arts Au
torium 36 of Georgia’s
ost beautiful co-eds.
Geven runners-up named by the
o 5 will submit photographs to
Varga, noted illustrator who
I rate them. The beautiful girls
L, won this distinction are Miss
ity Shipp, Atlanta, representing
{ Omega; Miss Grace Walton,
mi, representing Sigma Alpha
bilori; Miss Lucille Hauton, At
-1o last year's (ueen, représent
. Kappa Alpha Theta; Miss
v Sue Marting Piston, repre
tine Phi Epsilon. Pi; Miss
el Hamilton, Columbus, repre
ting the Red and Black; Miss
o Eppes, Athens, representing
e of Southern Gentlemen; and
L« Gladney Holder, Atlantal rep
kenting Lucy Cobb dormitory.
bli-page photographs off the
1t winners will appear in the
crsity vearbook, the Pandora.
\liss Magill, who was sponsored
phi Mu sorority, is an exqui
. blonde. Her dress, fashioned
ih sweetheart neckline and in
is of lace, with long, fitted
ovos, and her dainty bouquet of
nations, set off to perfection her
olv' gold hair and fair complex-
The elaborate crown was
cod on her head by Misses
roline and Harriett Smith of At
ta. twin sisters at the Univer
udees for this year's revue were
s Medora Field Perkersom, At
-1 author and editor; Dean
wert M. Strozier, of the Univer
v foculty: and Miss Clarissa
oot of the Wrigley Engraving
ympal Atlanta.
Ralvh Daniel, business manager
(Continued on Page Eight)
nosevelt Approval
.
t Anfi-Father
raffing Bill Seen
WASHINGTON — (AP) —Sen
and house conferees pressed
ead today for final action =on
islation they predicted would
imediately slow down or halt
firely the ilitary induction of
p-war fathers.
Mere is un outside chance the
use may act today on the meas
e worked out vesterday by the
mpromise group, with the sen
: ready to vote as soon as the
use clears the way.
Secause of the sudden unanimity
the conferees, after a two month
adlock, Chairman May (D.-Ky.)
the House Military Committee
edicted {inal approval of the
slation this week and said he
d 19 doubt the- President would
port,
May said a decision on whether
¢ house votes today or tomorrow
pends on _the speed with which
¢ conferees draft their formal
As approved by a joint commiit
legislation would strip the
¢ Manpower Commission of all
lisdiction over administration of
tclive Servee Aect, repeal the
(Continued on Page Two)
1
f Is Cleared For 1
y
sing Up Three ‘
dle Trade Schools ‘
TLANTA —(/P)— The ‘way ap
-0 had been cleared today
Stablishment of state trade
(s at Clarkesville, Milledges
"¢ 4nd at a south Georgia site
" selected after the State Board
cducation visits several cities
. W area next month,
.. ney General T. Grady Head
' vesterday that the Board has
"y to establish and operate
“tiree schools but said the ques-
L, © Not free from doubt.”
. Suggested that the Board's
MY “be mage more edrtain
~ COPer legislative enactment”
“Xpresged opinion that local
. Sthool units should be
. . 28ed to provide voeational
% in line with the intent
- legislature for a program
4 Y adminstered locally.
‘¢ Board’s last meeting es
“lMent of the schools as part
vere P2oded vocational training
e ... W4S aproved subject to
b &‘?‘»Mzu_\ General's rullng,
i, "¢ DBoard and Governor
Tm‘\p{"‘"“f asked.
{5 I.‘ “1 said it had assurances
€ g, . that funds for operat
re 3]‘;’&(}]‘&oo!s' eswm to ;:;
YUY anny would
e, -, , o TR
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Full Associated Press Service.
Reds Shell Outflanked
Gomel; Rabaul Totters
. Dream Girl
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Dozing beneath a pin-up picture
at Darwin, Australia, Capt. R. N,
Skipper of a B-24 bomber crew
is undoubtedly enjoying sweet
dreams.
REAL PERSON |
:’ BY DR. HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK|
‘ § Overcoming Bad Luck A Powerful
L ' Factor In Building Personality
-~ We are not responsible for our
heredity; much ‘of our environ
ment ‘we cannat control; but if it
is. true-that, a third factor enters
inte" the- building of personality—
the power to face life with an in
dividual rejoinder — then we are
responsible for ‘that. When such
acceptance involves self-condem
natién, an alibi almost inevitably
rushes to the rescue. A college
president. says that after long
‘dealing® with students, he is un
sure . whether the degree B. A.
stands” for Bachelor of Arts or for
Builder of Alibis.
On the lowest level this desire
to “escape blame expresses itself
lin.emphasis upon luck. Fortunate
people “get the breaks,” men Say;
personal failure is due mnot SO
much to mistake as to mischance.
That luck represents a real factor
in human experience is evident,
and he who does not expect ill
fortune as one of the ingredients
of life is trying to live in a fairy
land, but nothing : finer has ap
peared on earth than unlucky peo
ple who are real persons. :
B_iography is packed with illus
trations of ‘this. fact. Glenn Cun
ningham, who has run the fastest
mile’ on recdord, 'in four minutes,
four and four-tenths seconds, Was
crippled ~in boyhood in a school
house fire. " The ‘doctors said he
would mnever walk again. Then
they said that only a miracle could
enable 'him to walk. He was out
of luck. He began walking by
following a plow Aacross the fields,
leaning on it for support; and then
went on to tireless experimenta
tion to see what he could do with
’his legs, until he broke all records
for his race, Unlucky people who
Director 6. H. King
To Speak Before
Science Club Tonight
. “Research at the Coastal Plain
Expgriment Station” is the sub-
Jjeét George H. King, director of
the Coastal Plain Experiment Sta
fiio’rg- at Tifton and president of
Abraham Baldwin, ~ Agricultural
College, will speak on tonight at
8 'p. m. before the University of
Georgia Science Club.
" Before . the lecture, which will be
held in Room 502 of Dawson Hall,
a dinner honoring the speaker will
be served at 7 o’clock by students
of the Home Economics depart
ment.
Graduating from the Agricultur
al College at the University of
Georgia in 1924 and receiving his
Master Degree from the same
school in 1932, Director King took
advanced work at Cornell in 1932-
1933.
His early work was in vocational
teaching in the schools of the
state. After serving as dean at
Abraham Baldwin College in 1933,
he was elected president in 1934.
TFollowing the death of Director
Starr of the Experiment Station,
octaed adjoining the college, Mr.
King was elected director of the
Germans Capture Island Of Leros As
Weather Curlails Fighting In lfaly
By RICHARD McMURRAY
Associated Press War Editor
Russian siege guns bombarded outflanked Gomel
today and German broadcasts forecast a fresh Nazi
retreat from the Dnieper bend where they said a half
million Red troops were attacking violently.
Methodisis Receive
§ Bg¥
Activities Reporis
In Atlanfa Mgefing
ATLANTA —(/)— Twenty-three
chaplains and 14,467 men from the
North ' Georgia Mecthsdist Confer
ence are in the armed services,
Bishop Arthur J. Moore told the
annual meeting here. .
Eighty-two chaplains, he said,
have gone into the service from
the Atlanta Episcopal area em
bracing Georgia and Florida.
Other reports to the convention
yvesterday showed:
That 4,000 confessions of faith
were made during the year.
That world service and benevol
ences were far ahead of last year,
with large sums of money ex
pended for new buildings and pay
ment of debts.
That Wesleyan Guilds had in
creased to 1256 with a total mem
bership of 20,269, and that receipts
(Continued on Page Five.)
face mischance with a redeeming
personal response make a stimu
lating company.
. i :
In our day—one of the most dis
turbed, difficult, and fateful eras
in human history —the massed
weight of popular emphasis is
naturally given to the environ
mental conditions that potently
affect man’s fortunes and that in
particular excuse his failures. So
insistently are these dwelt upon
that many come to think of them
selves as their helpless victims.
‘ It is significant that our mod
ern novels commonly picture men
and women as the prey of fate.
%Human beings trapped by life,
fighting a losing battle against
the conspiracy of tragic mis
chances, and finally crushed and
mangled — how many novels are
shaped to that outline! As one
literary critic sums it up, the
common theme of a whole school
of writers is “the individual de
feated by the world, and made 2
sardonic jest of.” So one charac
ter exclaims, ‘“Tricked by Gad,
that's what I was, tricked by life
and made & fool of.”
There is a serious need that we
restore to its proportionate im
portance our power of personal
response. Its universal presence
is indicated by the universality
of self-blame. A mechanical auto
maton lacks any basis for self
condemnation. It is not respon
sible for anything it is or does.
All human beings, however, con
front the problem of self-accusa-~-
tion—conscience. But if self-blame
has validity, it can only be be
cause man possesses the power
(Continued on Page Five)
Stafe Highway (amp
At LaGrange Is
Abolished By Moore
ATLANTA — (A)'— The State
Highway Camp at LaGrange was
ordered closed today and its 46
convicts transferred to Tattnall
Penitentiary as a precautionary
measure following the escape Sun
day of eight prisoners from the
camp at Folkston.
The LaGrange camp Wwas de
seribed by Highway Director Ry
purn G. Clay as “the best Wwe
have from a physical standpoint.”
Other camps are expected to be
closed soon to prevent further es
capes.
* The Folkston camp was aban
doned yesterday, the third to be
closed in the past three weeks.
The camp at Cartersville was dis
banded after 14 convicts escaped
there and the Douglas camp Wwas
shut down following the breakout
of 11 prisoners.
J. B. Hatchett, secretary of the
Department of Corrections an
nounced meanwhile the recapture
of four of the Folkston fugitives.
He said Habersham County Sher
iff Pope Hill notified him he
caught the convicts yesterday af
ternoon and recovered an auto
mobile which, Hatchett said, they
had stolen in Patternson. :
__The mywumflm by
Athens, Ga., Wednesday, November 17, 1943,
[ The Germans struck heavily and
‘repatedly at the lower flank of the
‘great Kiev bulge, particularly in
the Fastov and Zhitomir sectors,
in actions which appeared aimed
‘at protecting . the withdrawal of
their divisions te the south.
For their part, the Russians in
the western Ukraine applied in=-
creased pressure from three sides
of the railway junction of Korosten
where lines from Kiev, Warsaw,
Leningrad and Odessa converge.
Weather, as well as the Germans
countered the Russian advances.
Around 6,000 Germans fell. Sixty
Ukrainian towns were captured.
Ten strongpoints shieldifg Gomel
were, reduced. The Germans “sus
tained tremendous losses in man
power and edquipment,” the Rus
sians said officially at midnight.:
Threatened Rumania was said 1o
have completed plans to evacuate
Bucharest, the capital, and the,
Morocco radio said all important
documents had been moved to the
hinterland. |
Germans Capture Leros .
The Germans finally captured
Leros, important Dodec¢anese island
in the Aegean. The Germans said
they captured 3,000 British and
5,000 Italian troops and 330 guns.
The islarid has a fine harbor
usable asva naval and submarine
base and also airfields.
The garrison capitulated last
night - after the Germans landed
(Continued on Page Six)
Dr. . §. Porter Is
Named By Baptist
¥
As Convention Head
ATLANTA —i(#)—Discussion of
matters affecting the Georgia Bap
tist Children’s Home and the Geor
gia. Baptist Hospital, and selection
of the time and place for the 1944
meeting marked the closing ses
sion of the State Baptist Conven
tion here today.
The work of the Christian Index,
the radio comm‘issiou, laymen’s
activities, the Georgia Baptist
Foundation and reports of the
committee on the separation of the
church and state and the social
service commission also were on
the agenda.
The report of the committee on
time. place and preacher for next
vear’s meeting followed election of
membership to various convention
boards. The convention will close
tonight with addresses by Dr.
Everett Gill, Jry and Dr. J, B.
Lawrence.
The Baptist leaders were told
last night by Dr. Pat M. Neff, twice
governor of Texas and now preési
dent of Baylor University, that
“religious liberty is America's dis
tinctive contribution to the scence
of government.”
“Religious ' liberty, the human
heritage of all men, is the right to
(Continued on Page Two)
Dr. Sanford I]rges
. .
Spiritual Unity
To Combat "Isms"
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — (AP) —
Predicting that ‘“post-war recov
ery will come the hard way,”
Chancellor S. V. Sanford of the
University of Georgia today urged
“a, national and spiritual unity” to
match the fanatacism ‘“‘of Fascism
with the superior devotions of a
free people.”
_ln an address before the Birm
nigham Kiwanis Club, the Georgia
educator said “Our slipshod and
individualistic democracy has had
its day.” :
“We must become firmly inte
grated as a people and organize
at once the entire forces of our
country,” he continued.
“The American people have been
astounded at the mumber of boys
in every section of the nation re
jected because of physical unfit
ness, and also at the large num
ber rejected for semi-illiteracy.
(Continued on Page Two:)
gy
M—
i eiinimcbtigh
W-E-A-T-H-E-R
e e
M
GEORGIA: Fair and contin
ued cold tonight, temperature
26 to 30 in interior and near
freezing on coast; heavy frost
in south poriion; fair and
warmer Thursday.
TEMPERATURE
Elghent ..co siis sein o 000
TOWERt ..o +.ic Giis ere:.2Do
MEEE .. e 50
Sfarwsal .. LU b 6 DOB
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours .. .... .00
Total since November 1 .... 1.7
Excess since November 1 ~ .64
Average November rainfall 2.61
Total since January 1 .. ..46.21
ESTABLISHED 1832
John Carlton Moseman
B . .
Is Missing In Action
Mrs. Euince Cook Moseman,
174 State street, received word
this week from the War Depart
ment ‘that her youngest son,
John Carlton Moseman, Seaman
1-¢, USNR, is missing, follow
ing action in performance of
his duty in the service of his
country.
Known in Athens_as “J. Carl,”
the young seaman entered the
service in 1942, volunteering at
the age of 25. He left New York
for ouverseas service in May,
1943. !
Mrs. Moseman's other chil
dren are Miss Frances Mose
man, Athens; Ralph, of Atlanta;
‘William and Roy, both in the
armed forces,
Defeat Is Seen On
Stbsities When
House Takes Yote
Administration Workers
Hope To Muster Enough
Votes To Sush?inl\:eto
WASIHNGTON. — (AP)
~— OQOutnumbered and out
maneuvered, supporters of
the administration’s food
subsidy program, conceded
privately today that they
are licked in the house, but
counted on mustering sut
ficient strength ‘to sustain
an anticipated veto.
The already hot argument over
the price rollback method of com
batfing inflation will boil to an
even hightr pitch when the house
begins two days of general debate
tomorrow on a double-barreled bill
to extend the life of the Commod
ity Credit Corporation and to out
law consumer subsidies. .
The battle over the subsidy
question ! drew representatives from
consumen and producer areas into
headlong , collision, with }i%h
groups maintainingg that the stand
talken bylthe other will release the
tide"xf E. rtime inflation.
2 d- to.the subsidy program
and determined to permit prices of
agriculture products to rise’ to
what they term ‘“their mnatural
level at the market place” were
nearly all of the Republicans plus
a substantial bloe of Democratic
lawmakers {rom farm states,
. On Other Side
On the other side were adminis
tration salwarts *and legislators
from districts in industrial and
urkban areas. They contend that
increased food prices will force
higher wages and shatter the
“hold-the-line” program.
This was the theme broadcast
(Continued on Page Two)
Poef Robert Pefer
- -
Tristam Coffin To
.
Lecture Here Friday
Robert Peter Tristam Coffin, dis
tinguished American poet and
Jiterature, will be presented by the
Univevrsity Lecture Series Friday
morning at 11 o'cloek in the aundi
torium of the Languages and Lit
erature building. Students and
guests are ihvited to hear this lec
ture.,
Mr. Coffin, who is professor of
English at Bowdoin College,
Maine, was the Rhodes scholar
from Maine to Trinity College,
Oxford. He has furthered the Ox
ford idea es honor work in Eng
lish literature by his summer lec
ture work, many published poems,
essays, biographies, and novels.
A Pulifzer Prize winner, Mr.
Coffin received that coveted award
in 1936 for his poetry, “Strange
Holiness.”
The guest speaker received in
1935 the Gold Medal as national
honor poet, and was awarded the
Giolden Rose of the New England
Poetry Society in 1936.
Howard M. Edwards
Dies Tuesday;
Services Thursday
Howarda M. Edwards, brother of
the late L. F. BEdwards of this
city died in Gainesville Tuesday
night at 10:30 o'clock following an
illness of several months., Mr.
Edwards was 85 years old.
Services are to be conducted
from the graveside in the idwards
family _cemetery in Oglethorpe
county Thursday afternoon at 2
o'clock. Officiating will be Dr. J.
C. Wilkinson, pastor of First
Baptist church. Bernstein Funernl
Home is in charge of arrange
ments. ;
Mr. Edwards is survived by
two daughters, Mrs. Pauline Ed
wards Cason, Evansville, 111., and
Miss Edith Mae Edwards, Wash
ington, D. C. ”
Mr. Edwards was a native oOf
Oglethorpe county and at the time
of his death resided at Cleveland,
Ga. He had many friends here
and throughout this section who
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Barbara, a cow which produéed $1,500 worth of milk for the University of Georgia in the past year,
is honored with a special® visit from University President Harmon W. Caldwell (left), Dean Paul
Chapman (right) of the College of Agriculture, and Dr. M. P. Jarnagin (center), veteran head of the
Animal Husbandry Department. Were it not for the fact that the University has pracically discon
tinued awarding honorary degrees, Barbara would probably be made a “Doctor of Production” at the
next commencement, . e e (
Funds For Liquor
Probe Are Voted
“Vicious Racketeering”
Is Charged Against
Industry By Senators
WASHING’I‘OI\E —() — Voted
SIO,OOO for an inyestigation of the
current liquor situation, ",afsmfi;l;a
subcommittee organized today to
determine where the old familiar
high-octane brands have gone and
when they'll be back.
The curfous formulae of some
of the new or victory model giggle
waters likewise will come under
senatorial scrutiny, '
Senator Kilgore (D-WiVa), 4c
cepting assignment on the five
man committee, expressed belief
that the distribution and salé of
whiskey has entered a ‘racketeer
ing phase.” Senater Himer Tpomas
whose home town, Medicine Park,
Okla., is as dfy as the Congres
sional Record, went further.
“It's already one of the most
vicious rackets ip America,” he
asserted, < B A
“Unless some changes are made
it will lead to another attempt at
national prohibition—on the theory
the people can get more and better
liquor under prohibition than they
can now.” : }
Thomas, who spoke as anp indi
vidual senator and not’'as a mem
ber of the investigating group,
said he had been reliably informea
that what little store-bought liquor
is now obtainable assays very low
in legitimate aged -in =-the - wood
whiskey.
~ He contended big’ distillers and
bottlers are proffering duration
model firewater under new brand
names at high prices sancticned
by OPA.
Chairman Van Nuys (D-Ind) was
(Continued on Page Six)
McGill Discusses
.
Warlime England
In Tuesday Address
BY MARGARET CHILDS
“Only the poor people in Eng
land are getting lend-lease food
from America,” Ralph McGill,
editor of the Atlanta Constitution,
told University of Georgia stu
dents and faculty members in an
address o the Henry W. Grady
Sehool of J‘ouynulism vesterday
}arl(:rnuun. Many parts of the
speech could not be quoted be
cause of wartime restrictions,
.- The poor slub children are on an
iavera,ge a ‘half inch taller and 10
peunds heavier than children of
the same age and financil level
were three years ago, MceGill quot
ed British statistics as saying.
~ The poor slum children are onan
ous,” the editor continued, and
'said the English are learning to
use their allowance of six ounces
sos meat per week very well as
flavoring. The government has set
‘up. surprisingly profitable “British
Restaurants” to enable the labor
ing class to supplement ration
coupons With a good, pointless
meal for 20 cents.
t McGill learned about conditions
'on a recent trip to England While
returning to this country he had
la 10-minute interview with Wins
ton Churchill.
| “Years Fall Off”
l When the Prime Minister rises
to speak, the Atlantan said, “the
years fall off of him, but in re
pose he looks like a very tired old
man, which is what he 8. 8
Distribution of a surplus of new
clothes is a problem under much
disucsion in a@% in
e s oy ‘on ol yx L
(Continued on Page 5;.,“3“ S
A.B.C. Paper—Single Copy, 3c—>sc¢ Sunday
Barbara, University Bred Cow,
Yields $1,500 Worth Of Milk
In Year; Sets Holstein Record
Seven-Gallon-A-Day Producer Eligible For
Honorary Degree, ""Doclor Of Production”
By The Associated Press e
If the University of Georgia had not practically dis- ;
continued awarding honorary degrees Barbara, a Hol-v@
stein cow, bred and owned by the institution, would inafi"ag
likelihood be made a Doctor of Production at the next
commencement. : ’*%
World Today
.By The Associated Press
RUSSIA: Soviet artillery
hammers outflanked Gomel
and .German broadcasts fore
cast new Nazi retreat from
Dniepepr Bend. Russians tight
en pressure from three sides
of raiiway junction of Koros
ten. A
AEGEAN SEA: Nazis cap
ture vital Dodecanese lesland of
Leros, winning victory likely
to ‘have effect on neutral Tur
key. llsland capitulates after
Nazis land reinforcements and
open up “overwhelming air
bombardment,” Cairo communi
que says. 4 -
i ey
ITALY: Bad weather slows
fighting as Americans regain
some lost ground north of
Venafro.
DIPLOMATIC: Hungarian
radio says hotel near Egyptian
Pyramids prepared for immi
nent meeting between Roose
velt, Churchill and Stalin,.
PAGIFIC: Washington naval
spokesman says heavy Jap sea
and air losses, plus Allied in
vasion of Bougainville, may
cause enemy to abandon base
at Rabaul. MacArthur spokes
man said Southwest Pacific
forces and material not suffi
cient for "large-scale Allied
offensive.
‘_______—.__,_.—_r—i
Emergency Aid (an
-
Be Given To 1
|
Toothache Sufferers 1
WASHINGTON —(P)— Are youl
where it's difficult to get aquick
dental treatment in an emergency.{
such as a roaring tooth-ache or a
broken plate, because the dentists
are so overworked?
You might get behind the local
or State Dental Association to,l
establish a central bureau where
you can learn through a telephonel
call which dentists are available. |
This bureau method already has
been started. Dr. Willard C. Cama
lier. chairman of the American
Dental ‘Association's War Service
Committee, said today it has the
endorsement of the committee,
which is seeking to spread it.
By agreement among the com
munity’s dentists, one or more of
them set aside several hours or
a whole day each week to treat
emergency cases. ; The system
works on a rotating basis so all
the dentists have a turn at it
Dr. Camalier said the system
has been operating two mouths in
{ (Continued on Page Five) .
LOCAL COTTON
1-INCH MIDDLING .. .. .. 20lae
15-16 INCH MIDDLING ... 20c
Barbara has just turned in her
record for a years work, showing
that she produced $1,500 worth of
milk for the Univergity and while
she is not the cow that jumped
over the moon her achievement in=
dicates it is not necessary to go
to the foot of the rainbow to find
the proverbial .pail of gold.
Barbara's recotd is @onsidered
so outstanding’s that, in honor to
her and in recognition of what
her kind of cow means to Geor
gia's economic life, she was paid
a special visit by University Pres
ident Harmon W. Caldwell, Dean
Paul W. Chapman of the College
of Agriculture, and Dr. M. P.
Jarnagin, veteran head of the anis
mal husbandry department., In
deed, if university presidents were.
in the habit of issuing proclama
tions no d%ubt President Caldwell
would proclaim “Barbara Day” on
the campus. ' o
The record of this cow is sueh
that it set Dr. Jarnagin agg.in_; 1o
reciting astronomiecal ‘figures con
cerning ' development of Georgia's
dairy industry. How much is Bar
bara worth? Well, it would take
$30,000 invested in geod bonds at
five percent to bring in $1,5600 an
nually. No wonder President Cald
well and Dean Chapman seé in
Barbara and her kind much of the
state’s future economic salvation..
Seven-Gallon Cow
While Barbara does not insist
upon it, her full name is “Ormsby
K. P. Barbara 1829598 She was
pred and raised by the University
—a real Georgia Cracker. Her rec=
ord of poduction of milk for 865
. (Continued on Page Five) .
. M
One-Campaign Plan
For Communily A
-
Unanimously Approved
Representatives of five local ors
ganizations taking part in tke
Athens Community and Wap F‘m
campaign for $36,000 fyestqpng
voted to recommend m
establishment of the
fund plan. : L
The organizations rearwent&%fii
a meeting held in Civic Hall ins
cluded the Y.M.C.A., Boy Seouts.
Y. WUC.A. Girl Scouts, and Salva
tion Army. They will recommend
to their boards of M'%};{%‘,‘QW
the community fund plan, holding
one campaign for all organizations
instead of five separate ‘‘drives’”
be adopted. S
Max Michael, chairman of the
campign which is now ending,
made a report to the MW&W
terday showing that $38,991.54 has
‘been contributed to date of which
$29,797.79 was in cash and $9,193.75
in pledges. A cash distribution was
‘made to all of the participating
organizations, including the s ‘
teen national war-time service
groups. I‘s
Mr. Michael announced today
that Goodyear Service Store and
‘bhecause of contrit ns 1w