Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News Monday, April 12,1976
Page 12
Social Security meet planned April 28 here
A public hearing on services
provided through Title XX of
the Social Security Act will be
held on April 28 at 7 p.m. at the
Griffin-Spalding public library,
on Memorial drive.
Title XX provides social
services such as day care,
foster care, protective services
to abused and neglected
children and adults and meals
to the elderly to low income
individuals and families. In
Georgia Title XX programs are
administered by the Georgia
Department of Human
Resources.
“Once a year every state in
the nation must submit a ser
vices plan to the federal govern
ment,” says Beaumont R.
Hagebak, “This plan is the
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result of public hearings such as
ours where civic groups, social
services professionals and any
Georgia citizen of voting age
can help decide which social
services are needed in the
community.”
The first of a series of public
hearings will be held on a
statewide basis this month. Its
purpose, is to inform citizens
about Title XX and programs in
the community, to identify
citizen needs, to obtain citizen
input on what services they
want funded by Title XX in their
community and to urge citizen
participation in the planning for
and attending of future public
meetings.
“We must remember that the
Department submits a budget
for the program year more than
a year ahead of time,” says Dr.
Hagebak. “Therefore citizen
input during 1976 should have a
significant effect on budget
planning for the 1977 program
About Town
IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE
The Citizens Improvement
League will meet Thursday at 8
p.m. at Mt. Zion Baptist Church
on East Taylor street. The Rev.
O. H. Stinson is president.
LUNCH’LEARN
A Lunch’ Learn program on
“Diet, You’ll Like It” will be
held Tuesday at the County
Extension conference room
from 12:15 to 12:45 p.m.
Everyone is invited to come and
bring lunch. The program is
sponsored by the Spalding
County Extension Service.
J.R. Carden
in hospital
Mr. John Robert Carden of
Griffin has been admitted to the
Veteran’s Administration
Hospital in Atlanta.
He is in the intensive care unit
of the hospital.
year. The information gathered
a public hearings will be
carefully considered and used
in the Department’s budget
request submitted to the
Governor in September of
1976.”
/ ORRSPTO
Orrs PTO will meet Tuesday
night at 7:30. The fourth
graders will be in charge of the
program. Installation of of
ficers will be held also.
BEAVERBROOK PTA
Beaverbrook PTA will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the
school cafetorium to elect of
ficers for the coming year. A
film on child abuse will be
shown also.
AUXILIARY BOARD
The Griffin-Spalding
Hospital’s quarterly board
luncheon will be held at the
hospital tomorrow beginning at
12:30.
COUNTY COMMISSION
The Spalding County Com
missioners will have their
regular monthly meeting
tomorrow at the courthouse
beginning at 9 a.m. It was
delayed one week this month
because the commissioners
were in Atlanta last week at
tending the Association County
Commissioners meeting.
CITY COMMISSION
Griffin City Commissioners
will have their regular second
Tuesday night meeting
tomorrow beginning at 7:30 at
the city hall auditorium.
FOURTH WARD PTA
Fifth and sixth graders will
present a bicentennial program
to the Fourth Ward PTA
tomorrow night at 7:30. New
officers also will be installed.
DAR
Pulaski Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution,
will meet Thursday at 3:30 p.m.
in the Memorial clubhouse. A
national defense and patriotic
program will be presented by
Mrs. John Goddard, Mrs. J. F.
Pridgen, Mrs. J. B. Manley and
Mrs. C. Robert Walker.
Students receiving DAR awards
will be guests..
EXCHANGE CLUB
Bob Dixon and Leonard
Lokey of Osmose Products will
speak to the Griffin Exchange
Club tomorrow at its noon
meeting at the Elks Club. Fred
Omundson is program chair
man.
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Club news roundup
Auxiliaries
The West Central Council on
Hospital Auxiliaries met in
LaGrange. The Griffin-Spalding
Hospital Auxiliary was
represented by the following
members, Mrs. Charles Clifton,
Mrs. Emmett Craddock, Mrs.
Harold Cranford, Mrs. Wallace
Grant, Mrs. Joe Huckaby, Mrs.
Carl Ridley, Mrs. Ivan Taylor
and Mrs. Edward Marti.
Roger Mendenhall, ad
ministrator of the Columbus
Medical Center, spoke on the
“Hospital Volunteer.” Reports
were heard from the auxiliaries
present and Mrs. Charles
Clifton in the absence of Mrs.
Lome Shewfelt, president of the
local auxiliary, due to illness,
reported on the activities of the
past year.
Ceres
The April meeting of the
Ceres Club was held at the home
of Mrs. Roy Gore, 162 Milner
avenue.
During the business portion of
the meeting, a revised Con
stitution was approved and the
Holiday Inn was selected as the
location for the Christmas
dinner party.
The club said farewell to Mrs.
Lloyd Nelson, Mrs. Denny
Davis and Mrs. Lanny
Bateman. Drs. Nelson, Davis
and Bateman have accepted
positions with other universities
and will leave Griffin during the
spring and summer.
The next meeting will be the
annual family picnic, May 22,
5:30 p.m. at the home of Dr. and
Mrs. Guy Woodruff.
After the meeting, refresh
ments were served by co
hostesses, Mrs. Roy Gore and
Mrs. Travis Reid. Twenty-one
members attended.
Alpha Tau
A1 Thrasher spoke’ about
conservation at the meeting of
Alpha Tau Chapter of Alpha
Delta Kappa.
He discussed some national
wildlife projects and the effects
of some government projects on
the wildlife of the country.
Miss Alma Hamil, president,
appointed the following
nominating committee: Miss
Carol Hickey, Miss Ann Un
derwood and Mrs. R. L. Ellison.
Miss Hickey, Miss Hamil,
Mrs. Jack Bailey and Miss Jo
Brandenburg attended the
annual ADK breakfast at GAE.
Kiwanianne
The Kiwanianne Club met at
Bonanza Sirloin Pit with the
president, Mrs. Ivan Taylor,
presiding.
The request to become a
patron of the Crimson Clover
Art Festival was accepted.
Mrs. Preston Newton was
welcomed as a new member.
Seventeen members and a
guest, little Miss Marcia Sims,
were present.
Charm ettes
The Les Charmettes Social
Club met at the home of Mrs.
Shirley Milner with the vice
president, Mrs. Cebell Wells,
presiding.
Plans were completed for
visiting the Spalding Con
valescent Home. A donation of
$25 was given to Mrs. Mary
Stinson to help finance her trip
to California to the National
School Board (NSB) con
vention.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess to members present
with Mrs. Leola Hill and Miss
Glenda Allen attending as
guests.
Woman’s
Mrs. A. C. Bennett, interna
tional affairs chairman,
presented the program at the
Spril meeting of the Griffin
Woman’s Club. The meeting
' was held at the Memorial
Clubhouse with the president,
Mrs. Barney Hawkins,
presiding.
Mrs. O. N. Mathis, music
chairman, arranged for two
students, Cynthia Jones and
Susan Caldwell, to play an
original composition,
“Carousel”.
Mrs. Doyle Tatum, arts
chairman, reported that the
Griffin High student, Terry
Eugene Johnson, sponsored by
Griffin Woman’s Club, had won
first place in the sixth district
and his painting will be entered
in state competition at
Callaway Gardens later this
month when the state con
vention meets there.
Mrs. H. E. Bedenbaugh won
first place in the ceramics
division and Mrs. W. M. Brooks
won first place in the metal
division. Both of these will be
entered in state competition.
The nominating committee
composed of Mrs. A. C. Bennett,
chairman; Mrs. A. H. Caldwell
and Mrs. Cecil Maddox,
reported that the new slate of
officers for 1976-1978 will be
Mrs. Barney Hawkins,
. president; Mrs. L. A. Jones,
first vice president; Mrs. W. J.
Proctor, second vice president;
Mrs. Marcus Jinks, recording
secretary; Mrs. A. H. Caldwell,
corresponding secretary; Mrs.
H. W. Barrow, treasurer; Mrs.
J. G. Woodroof, parlia
mentarian; and Mrs. T. E.
Henderson, historian.
The annual luncheon will be
I held at the Holiday Inn May 13
at 12:30.
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Fight
crime
In Georgia, 79 percent of persons
reported arrested for major crime in
1974 were under age 30, according to the
State Crime Commission Report. This
far outweighs that age group’s numbers
in the general population, yet many
young people have no idea of the far
reaching significance of establishing a
criminal record.
A person convicted of a crime in court
has a criminal record for he rest of his
life. The court-ordered punishment for
the crime often is small in comparison
to the effects of this record.
Many businesses require employees
to be bonded, and insurance companies
usually refuse to bond those with
criminal records. Civil service and
other government jobs are often dosed
to those convicted of crime.
A driver’s license may be refused on
the basis of a criminal record, and the
armed services usually will not award a
commission to anyone who has been
convicted of a crime. A convicted
criminal cannot be a lawyer, and a
convicted felon loses many rights,
including the right to vote, unless a
governor restores these rights.
The consequences of crime live on,
often as long as you do. Think of the
most important thing you have — your
life — before you act on the short-term
profit of crime.
This tip provided by ACT Against
Crime Together, statewide crime
prevention program of the Georgia
Bureau of Investigation in cooperation
with the Griffin Daily New§.
I DRY CLEANING I
I SPECIALS I
I MONDAY - TUESDAY- WEDNESDAY I
April 12-13-14
I A PANTS XIQQ I
< SWEATERS *I **
■ V PLAIN SKIRTS JL I
CASH & CARRY ONLY
■ (All garments moth-proofed)
I WOODWARD I
I CLEANERS I
COLLEGE AT BTH STREET
(ACROSS FROM BIG STAR)