April 21, 1976 SUSQUEHANNA TIMES - Page 9 Three months ago, In a very short time, Darvin Boyd few people had ever has gained the respect and support ® of thousands of people all over the 16th Congressional District. O n He has been shaking hands, nreet- wien tor 5 JOY), @ lot of peo think he should our next Congressman. ica and America’s political process. He has personally carried his mes- sage from factory floors to corporate boardrooms, from farmers’ fields to city streets. He has been cam- paigning long days and long nights since February 12th, the day he resigned his staff position in Harrisburg to devote full-time to taking his message to the voters of the district. He believes in the American political system. Torn and battered though it may sometimes appear, he believes it is still the best political system in the world. But to make it work, people must work. Especial- ly people in government. After he is elected, Darvin will work just as hard on the job as he did to earn the right to represent you in Congress. What kind of Congressman will Darvin Boyd be? Certainly, he will work hard. Everything about him - the way he was brought up, the way he has lived and actually challenged life, his youth, his energy, en- thusiasm, vigor and health - all proclaim a willingness to work, an eagerness to work, a tremendous capacity for work. : $Y HONORS 1974 - Citation by the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for “. . . standing leadership, dedication and expertise as an administrator and researcher as Executive Director of the House Committee on Health and Welfare . . ."” 1972 - Selected to appear in the 1972 edition of Outstanding Young Men of America. 1972 - Citation by the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for receiving the National Medal - Order of Civil Merit - from the Government of the Republic of Korea. 1972 - Citation from the Korean Minister of Agriculture and Forestry; Medal and Citation from the Korean Administrator of the Office of Rural Development; and Citations of Appreciation from the Governors of six of the nine provinces in the Republic of Korea. 1971 - Youngest person ever to receive the National Medal - Order of Civil Merit, and Citation, Republic of Korea. For *‘ . . . great achievement and meritor- ious service rendered in promoting the nation’s welfare by devoting yourself to the social development of our country.” 1970 - Letter of Appreciation and Plaque of Appreciation from the Korean Minister of Agriculture and Forestry. 1967 - Letter of Appreciation from the Korean Administrator of the Office of Rural Development. 1964 - Recipient of the 1964 Walter Riggin Award based upon four continuous years of outstanding citizenship, scholarship and athletic accomplishments at Delaware Valley College. 1964 - Recipient of the Joel Hillman Award for bringing the most favorable « recognition to Delaware Valley College during the academic year 1963-64. out-- As your Congressman, Darvin Boyd has promised to work for you - to the very limit of @ his capacities. He has promised to uphold the high private and public moral standards you have a right to expect from your elected officials. He has promised to serve you with enthusiasm and vigor. He has promised accessibility, integrity and candor. These are all promises he can and will keep. They are promises to each and every one of us here in the 16th Congressional District. They are not promises to political factions or pressure groups. Although he has led a life of public service for the past decade, Darvin Boyd has remained free of entanglements with special interest groups, in and out of politics. Darvin Boyd is the kind of man we need in Washington. If you've met him, you already know that. If you haven’t met him, we hope you'll take the time to read here about his work and accomplishments It’s a lot of reading. Because, although he’s a young man, there’s a lot to say about Darvin Boyd. He's accomplished a great deal. As your Congressman, he will accomplish even more. For the country. For mankind. For you. We hope you'll vote for Darvin Boyd in the Republican primary, Tuesday, April 27. Boyd for Congress Committee John R. Gibbel, Chairman EXPERIENCE 1975/76 - Associate Legislative Research Analyst for the Minority Caucus, Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Major efforts continued to achieve welfare reform in the Commonwealth. Research also conducted on many other issues and projects. 1973/74 - Executive Director, Committee on Health and Welfare, Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Responsible for research, legislative analysis and pro- gram evaluation aimed primarily at reforming the welfare system in Pennsylvania. 1966/72 - 4-H Program Director, the American-Korean Foundation, Inc.: Res- ponsible for the development of the rural youth program in the Republic of Korea. Administered a $535,000 vocational and leadership training program. 1966/72 - Used vacation, and leave time while working in Korea to travel widely. Visited 27 countries in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Europe. EDUCATION 1965/66 - Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania. Master of Public Administration degree - 1966. 1964 - Grassroots Ambassador of Friendship and Goodwill to the Republic of Korea in the International Farm Youth Exchange Program. (June to November) 1960/64 - Delaware Valley College of Science and Agriculture, Doylestown, Pennsylvania. B.S. - 1964. Completely financed undergraduate work with pro- ceeds from 4-H Club projects. 1960/64 - President of the college student body in senior year; vice-president in junior year. Class president as a freshman, sophomore and junior. Here are a few of your friends and neighbors who are supporting Darvin Boyd: CHESTER COUNTY: Dorothy B. Hertig, D. Jane Beiler, Joseph Beiler, Sara E. Brown, John Dmytryk, Charles Gable, Henrietta Hagel, John T. Kennedy, Thomas J. Lack, john McCausland, James H. McQueen, Raymond Means, Peggy E. Mimm, Beatrice I. Minker, Lester H. Moore, Richard Nagel, Terry Nagel, William F. Perreca, Dorothy Plank, Creston Shoemaker, Marvenia Shoemaker, Bill Whiteman; LANCASTER COUNTY: Abram E. Althouse, Arlene Althouse, Kathryn M. Bowers, Darlene D. Brown, Velma Brubaker, Nancy Cummings, Richard Cummings, Jonathan Forry, Henry H. Gibbel, James Gibbel, John R. Gibbel, James A. Gingrich, Robert E. Gregory, Julia Grove, William Grove, Jane Harriger, J. Charles Hart, Elvin J. Hess, Evelyn J. Hess, Velma Hess, Herbert Hoover, Willis M. Houck, Lester Hurst, Dorothy Jamison, Mary S. Klemmer, Eleanor Kreider, Jacob B. Kreider, James G. Kreider, J. Everett Kreider, Jacob Kurtz, Jr., Louise Kurtz, Tom Kurtz, Victor Longenecker, William Longenecker, Bob Lutz, Barbara McCaffrey, Edna Maddox, john R. Maddox, Joseph W. Martin, Mary E. Mellinger, Kenneth E. Miller, Elmer M. Murry, Marilyn Nye, Donald L. Ranck, Lorna Ravegum, Terry R. Scheetz, Russell S. Shirker, Rev. A. J. Simmons, John Skinner, Jr., Frank Slabach, Daniel Starry, Clarence Stauffer, Vivian Stauffer, G. Tomlinson Stradling, Ill, Donald Tennis, John W. Tennis, Dave Thomas, Richard E. Wanner, Dr. Charies E. Weaver, Dr. Gerald L. Weaver, Mary E. Weaver, Helen Weit, Leon Weit, Nelson Weit, Dr. Melvyn Wenger, Robert Wenger, Arlene Wilhelm, Terry Wilhelm, Helen Wivell, Clair L. Wolf, James H. Yerger, Roy |. Yerger, Barbara Young, Kenneth Young, Christian G. Zinn, Margaret Zinn; LEBANON COUNTY: Galen Boyd, Sara B. Clements, William F. Etchberger, Polly Gingrich, Marie Heckard, Clarence Krall, J. Willard La- moreaux, Mark L. Lenich, David M. Long, Lou Petry, Helen Petry, Rev. Harry T. Richwine, Aaron G. Whitman, George B. Wolff, Ed Wollyung, Nancy Wollyung. Paid for by: Boyd for Congress Committee John R. Gibbel, chairman Jacob B. Kreider, finance chairman people before politics Full lever 9F in Lancaster Co. Be sure to watch ‘People Before Politics’, a five-minute special on the Darvin Boyd candidacy, Monday, April 26, at 7:55 p.m. on WGAL-TV, Channel 8.