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PAGE SIXTEEN
Gerfrude Warren Dedicates Life
[o Aiding Nation's Rural Youth
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON-—Miss Gertrude
Warren has dedicated her life to
the rural youth of America.
“Mother of the Four-H Club
movement,” she has helped groom
them to assume responsibilities of
citizenship and leadership.
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A farm girl from Lockport, In
upper New York state, Miss War
ren came to Washington 35 years
ago to direct the organization of
TFour-H clubs under the Exten
sion Service of the U. S. Depart
ment of Agriculture. One of the
world’s greatest youth movements,
the Four-H Clubs on the eve of
their annual Camp Meéting here
(June 18-25) boast an active
membership of more than two
million farm boys and girls and
more than 15 million alumni.
Miss Warren, due to retire soon
from her government job, says she
will continue te develop in rural
youth a “way of life built on self
help and the ability to work be
yond their simple daily tasks to
take their place in the life of the
nation.”
In addition so these interests,
Miss Warren has recently been
endowed with others closely
aligned. As newly-elected presi
dent of the Woman’s National
Tarm and Garden Association,
Inc., she will carry on its current
program of conservation, 4-H
scholarships, horticulture and
roadside improvements. The asso
ciation was founded in 1914 to
help farm women merchandise
their goods. This work is still
carried on in Maine, but in the
other 10 member states it has been
superceded by the other projects.
In recent years it has awarded
some SIO,OOO annually in scholar
ships to young farm people.
Miss Warren was teaching home
economics at Columbia University,
her alma mater, and working for
a doctorate when she was asked
to come to Washington. She helped
develop the 4-H citizenship oath,
the National 4-H Foundation and
National 4-H Club center here,
the International Farm youth Ex
change program and the one-year
4-H fellewships in the Department
of Agriculture. For her work in
this field she has received the De
partment’s superior service award.
She has traveled to every state
in the union many times over and
twice to the Caribbean area to
help start 4-H clubs. (4-H stands
for “A Head to clearer thinking,
a Heart to greater loyalty, Hands
to greater service and Health to
better living.”) The former gov
ernment of Latvia conferred the
Orde rof the Three Stars on her
for the help she gave in starting
similar groups in that little coun
try.
BULLETINS DO EXTRA JOB
SAN DIEGO, Calif. — (AP) —
The Chinese-language bulletins of
the American Cancer Society are
doing an extra job among this
city’s Chinese population.
In addition to teaching them
about cancer, the bulletins are
used by the Americanization
classes of the Chinese Community
Church to teach English. The more
advanced students in English help
newcomers translate the pamph
lets.
Tesmania was first seen by Eu
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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MARTHA WRIGHT: She still gets real tears in her eyes.
Fy affs JII l
ast outh Paciiic ' Confinues
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o Hold Show in Deepest Attection
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By WADE JONES
NEA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK—(NEA)—It makes
people laugh and it makes them
cry. It makes $1,000,000 a year.
Its hired hands love to work for
it,
Two of its greatest assets are a
beauteous lady who- washes her
hair 15 times a week and can milk
a cow, and a wealthy boss who ac
tually likes to pay taxes.
It's only three years old, but
already it ranks as a local insti
tution right along with Grant’s
Tomb and scotch on the rocks.
Its name is “South Pacific,” the
musical comedy about daffy Navy
nurses and daffier Seabees, heart
breaking love and bleak death,
and Bloody Mary and her grass
skirts. All on a Pacific isle in
World War 11.
After 1300 performances, 1700
people who have paid from SI.BO
to $6 each for seats are still on
hand and panting every time the
Majesty Theater’s curtain goes up.
* * %
How come the continued to-do
about this particular show?
Part of the answer you can get
by sidling throygh the cavelike
backstage gloom of the Majestic
and into the big be-mirrored
dressing room of an impish blonde
named Martha Wright.
She’s what’s known as the fe
male lead, which is one of the
flattest descriptions of all time.
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This is only the second Broadway
show she was ever in—and the
first successful one — but - she
prances and dances and sings and
romances around the stage like
she was born and raised on it.
She can also milk a cow. She
picked up that elusive art during
her farm girl days back in Wash
ington state. And she’s the hair
washer. She has a hair washing
scene in every performance —
eight a week including matinees—
and she has to wash it at home
every morning to remove the soap
she couldn’t get out during the
show.
Sounds like a lot of trouble to
go to just as a piece of business
for a song she sings, “I'm Gonna
Wash That Man Right Outa My
Hair”—until you've heard her do
the song. :
- % *
Miss Wright is sitting before a
mirrgr in her dressing room dab
bing blue-green stuff on her eye
lids with a brush, and she wears
vshat appears alarmingly to be a
big white bathtowel, and nothing
else.
“What makes this show great?”
she echoes. “Well, sir, I'll tell you
something.” She’s still looking in
the mirror and dabbing with the
brush. “There are two places in
this show where I still get real
tears in my eyes.
“When I've been in a show a
year (she succeeded Mary Martin
as Ensign Nellle Forbush a year
ago) and it can still make my eyes
g:t wet when I don’t want 'em to
, then there's something great
going on somewhere.”
Down a winding grenish cor
ridor, packed with ra?ged-looking
Seabees and singularly unragged
barelegged nurses, ie the dressing
room of 41-year-old George Brit
ton, Martha Wright's French
sweetheart in the play,
“Nope, I never shed an honest
tear in my life,” the husky Brit
ten brags boisterously. “But after
a few of the strong scenes in this
show I am afflicted with knots in
the stomach that I am convinced
were not caused by something I
ate.” ;
* * *
Up some steel stairs, also hap
pily peopled with those long
legged nurses, is the dressing
room of Myron McCormick, the
king Seabee, and one of the few
members of the cast who has been
with the show from the begin
ning.
“I been in this dressing room
longern’ I have in my apartment,”
he says. “I've had three apart
ments while I've had this one
dressing room. I feel more at home
here than I do at home.”
Back down in the wings, a black
cavern full of ropes and pulleys
and whisperings, Martha Wright,
in ragged dungarees, a tee shirt,
and heavy GI shoes, squats on her
heels and intently watches a bit
of action going on out on the
stage. v
It's Bloody Mary (Juanita
Hall), the incredibly gross, garish
old island native who makes sou
venir grass skirts and forces them
on the Seabees for SIOO apiece.
Juanita Hall is just back with the
show after a year’s absence, and
she’s singing the great “Bali Ha'i.”
“Look at her eyes,” Miss Wright
whispers. “Aren’t they tremen
dous and full of light? Look at the
way her face catchei the light.”
¥ ®
Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the
book and lyries and co-produced
the hit. It was based on James
Michener’s Pulitzer Prize book,
“Pales .of the South Pacific.”
Michener, it seems, had a Navy
job that ook him throughout the
Pacific islands and what he saw
and lived and learned, he put into
tales, some amusing, some deeply
romantic.
Hammerstein, the guy who
likes to pay income taxes because
he’s so proud of America’s schools
for his kids, is proud of the ter
rific change of pace of “South Pa
cific” —the jumps from tender
love to ribald Seabee humor, to
tragedy and high drama, to un
believable Bloody Mary.
“The change of pace is terrific.
The audience is in the death grip.
They’re caught, they’re helpless.
Thf:y can’t breathe, We never let
go.”
B
Will Attend
Approximately 75 North Georgia
Future Farmers of America will
attend the 1952 Boy’s Forestry
Camp at Hard Labor Creek State
Park near Rutledge June 16-21.
Representing 42 chapters in the
Northeast and Northwest Geor
gia vocational districts, these FFA
members were selected on their
record in forestry projects and
through forestry competitions.
Their activities at camp will in
clude instructions and demonstra
tions on forest fire protection, re
forstation and management, plus
a varied program .of recreation
and entertainment.
Principal speakers at the camp
will be H. J. Malsberger, Forester
and General Manager, Southern
Pulypwood Conservation Associa
tion; Harry Rossoll, Visual Infor
mation Specialist, U. S. Forest
Service; Guyton DeL.oach, Direc
tor of the Georgia Forestry Com
mission; and Ed Dodd, conserva
tionist and creator of the car
toon strip, “Mark Trail”. .
- Conducted by the Georgia For
estry Commission in cooperation
with the vocational agriculture
division, State Department of Ed
ucation, the camp is sponscred by
five Georgia concerns including
the Macon Kraft Company, the
Brunswick Pulp and Paper Com
pany, the Union Bag and Paper
Corporation, Gair Woodlands, Inc.,
and St. Mary’s Kraft Corporation,
all member mills of the Southern
Pulowood Conservation Associa
tion.
A similar camp was held last
June at Laura Walker State Park
near Waycross for 100 South Geor
gia Future Farmers.
These boys will study reforesta
tion, thinning, marketing, insects
and disease, harvesting, fire con
trol, and tree identification. De
monsirations which they will see
in¢lude fire control, use of land
tools and equipment, and opera-
A e B eDL
BEAUTY - PROTECTION
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AAMAMANE
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“breathe.” Keep windows dry,
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summer, Increase realty values. No ‘
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CEORGIA - CAROLINA
VENTILATED
AWNING COMPANY
Box 508 - Augusta |
In Athens Call 3379-J. |
tion of the bow saw. Emphasis at
the camp will be placed on “learn
ing by doing.”
Each of the following FFA
chapters will have from one to
four boys attonding the camp:
Cameeli Conyers Franklin, Ro
opville, Bowdon, Chambilee, ‘i‘uck
‘er, Hogansville, Yatesville, Mary
Person, Jackson, Greenville,
Woodbury, Concord-Molena, Wavy-~
erly Hall, Manchester, Villa Rica,
Armuchee, Buckanan, Canton,
}Dallas, University Demonstration
at Athens, Winder, Blue Ridge,
Ellijay, Hartwell, Elberton, Dah
lonega, Jasper, Dawsonville, Da
cula, Sugar Hill, Grayson, Logan
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY.
Monday Morni
onday Morning
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SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1952,
ville, Arnoldsville, Danielsviile,
ab G" CIQ’M 1
%fiomnlton, ,andnh, QW
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OLD LOCOMOTIVE QUypg
NANAIMO, Canada —(AP). A
locomotive which hauled coal {O,
70 years was presented o the eit,
and has been placed in pr,,g
Park. Coal mined in an o} pit
which closed down in 1899 pye
vided power for the engine’s ‘),__ t
journey,
e —————
Bob Kiphuth has been syl
ming coach at Yale Universi-:
since 1918,