The 14 months Eugene was in solitary confinement was not at any time in a prison camp, a fact considered by the military as meted out only to prisoners deserving the most severe treatment.
His family received no word about the young man. His sister recalls that late every afternoon as they were milking cows, the radio would announce the names of any prisoners of war which had been released. The young brothers and sisters would sit on the bales of straw and anxiously listen to the report... but never any mention of their brother.
Then, one day the announcer casually read off the name of Eugene Evers from Oregon. His sister said "it was like the 4th of July as they all hugged each other and cried, before racing to the house to inform their parents.
After getting home, one of Eugene's best buddies, who had also been to National 4-H Congress with him... Bill Headrick, asked a pointed question: "What did you do to occupy your mind during those 14 months all by yourself? Eugene Evers had a ready answer:
"I relived my trip to the Chicago 4-H Club Congress. I recalled all the experiences and discussions we had during that trip. Sometimes, in my mind's eye, I got as many as five or six people in on the discussions, talking all at once."
This is how Airman Eugene Evers kept his sanity... reliving his experiences and those discussions at 4-H Congress – over and over and over again.
We often hear delegates to Congress, to 4-H Conference, and other 4-H events describe their experience as "A Precious Lifetime Memory." More so than we realize. But national dairy winner Eugene Evers from Forest Grove, Oregon's story undoubtedly must be near the top of the list. In some ways it really may be the greatest 4-H story ever told.
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