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Tollway study pushed
ATLANTA (UPI) — Tollway
Administrator Frank Harscher
told the State Transportation
Board Thursday plans for the
West Georgia Tollway will be
completed in time for the 1975
legislature to act on it.
Harscher told a joint meeting
of the board and the Tollway
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Authority that an analysis of the
energy crisis impact on the toll
way route will be finished by
Oct. 1. He said location and
preliminary engineering reports
will be ready a month later.
“We will be in a position to
make a recommendation to the
1975 session of the General As-
sembly,” Harscher said.
At a meeting Thursday, the
board also approved a new fea
sibility study for a proposed
Savannah toll road.
Gov. Jimmy Carter, a mem
ber of the authority, made the
motion which resulted in the
proposed Harry S Truman Park
way in Savannah being added
to the tollway system. Only $38,-
000 in funds was involved, how
ever, to update an old feasbili
ity study on the five-mile route
♦hot wnnld run north to south
Farmers getting less
MACON, Ga. (UPI) - The
president of the Georgia Farm
Bureau says while supermarket
meat prices are holding steady,
farmers are getting less for
their products.
H. Emmett Reynolds said
Thursday both farmers and
consumers are getting the
“short end of the stick,” citing
pork prices, which fell almost
30 per cent in the past two and
a half months.
Reynolds said pork prices
dropped from $42.65 per hun
dred weight in early February
to s3l in mid March and are
now down to S2B to S3O.
“This continuing downtrend in
prices paid to the farmer is not
being reflected in the grocery
store, and both the farmer and
consumer are coming out on the
ASNE directors named
ATLANTA (UPI) — Five per
sons were elected to three-year
terms on the board of directors
of the American Society of
Newspaper Editors Thursday,
and two editors were named to
one - year terms.
Elected to three - year terms
were John Hughes, Christian
Science Monitor; Robert P.
Clark, Louisville Courier Jour-
and serve downtown Savannah.
An earlier study indicated the
route would not generate enough
tolls to pay for itself.
The board, meanwhile, failed
a second time to name a new
chairman. Members decided to
retain Hugh Broome in the post
for another month. They decid
ed to wait until the vacancy
created by the resignation of
Lamar Plunkett is filled. Plun
kett resigned to take a Board of
Regents appointment.
short end of the stick,” he said.
The farmers’ only “salva
tion” is to liquidate their herds,
according to Reynolds.
“No one can stay in business
and continue to show a loss,”
he said. Farmers are being
forced to get out of the red
meat business and the consu
mer will share in the tragedy
right along with the producer.”
Reynolds said he asked the
U.S. Agriculture Department
for relief for the producers and
was told by a department offi
cial last month that prices
might be rising soon.
But he said as far as he
knew, the Agriculture Depart
ment had done “absolutely
nothing” about investigating
beef and pork pricing on retail
and wholesale levels.
nal and Times; James Clendi
nen, Tampa Tribune; Thomas
Winship; Boston Globe; and
Derick Daniels, Knight Newspa
pers.
Elected to one - year terms
wereCharlesßennett,Oklahoma
City Oklahoman and Times, and
Charles Rowe, Fredericksburg
Va., Free Lance-Star.
Peach crop worst in 17 years
ATLANTA (UPl)—State Agri
culture Commissioner Tommy
Irvin said Thursday that last
winter’s unusually warm weath
er put Georgia’s peach crop in
what appears to be its worst
shape in 17 years.
Irvin said his staff had found
up to 75 per cent of Georgia’s
peach trees still have not pro
duced foliage or peaches, where
as the peaches ordinarily are a
bout the size of a half dollar by
this time.
He said areas primarily af
fected were Fort Valley, Grif
fin, Woodbury and Barney.
Since most of the state’s
peach varieties require 800 or
more chilling hours, peach
More aggressive roles
PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -
A Georgia textile officials said
Thursday business and commun
ity leaders must play more ag
gressive roles to save freedom
in America from further erosion.
The outgoing president of the
Georgia Textile Manufacturers
Association (GTMA), A. J.
Strickland 111, told the group’s
annual meeting here that “pro-
Marietta man arrested
MIAMI (UPI)-A Marietta,
Ga. man was among three per
sons arrested here in a $2.5 mil
lion counterfeit stock case, the
FBI announced Thursday.
The arrests and recovery of
the counterfeit stock certificates
followed a four-month investiga
tion involving several cities.
Kenneth Whitaker, special
agent in charge at the Miami
FBI office, said agents arrested
Edward Thomas Carroll, 48, of
Marietta, Daniel Arreola, 55, of
growers had voiced worries that
their crops might suffer due to
the warm winter.
“It certainly seems at this
point that their worries were
more justified,” Irvin said.
“Growers and horticulturists
are reporting that only about 25
per cent of last year’s crop is
likely to come in.”
He said the added expenses
for pesticides, fertilizers, labor
and energy shortages made the
picture even gloomier.
Irvin said the earlier varieties
of peaches, primarily the eating
king, require fewer chilling
hours and are in a little better
shape.
fit has become a dirty word.”
Strickland, president of Strick
land Cotton Mills in Valdosta,
Ga., said “Young people have
almost a negative business at
titude.”
“There is a universal confi
dence gap, with students show
ing distrust of churches, the
government and free enter
prise,” he said.
San Francisco, and Albert San
ti, 50, of Salt Lake City.
The three men were charged
with violating U. S. statutes
againstinterstate transportation
of counterfeit goods. Whitaker
said further arrests may be
made.
The counterfeit certificates
were made in Salt Lake City,
Whitaker said, and the investi
gation involved connections in
San Francisco, Chicago, Atlanta
and Miami.
— Griffin Daily News Friday, April 19,1974
Page 5
Deans differ
CLEBURN, Tex. (UPI) -
Jack David Dean placed the
following ad in the Cleburn
Times-Review.
“I will not be responsible for
any debts other than my own.”
In the same “personal”
column appeared an ad from
Dianna Kay Dean:
“Jack David Dean has never
been responsible for his own
debts, much less mine.”
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