Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, March 31,1977
Page 6
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Music Club officers
Mrs. Jack Pllkenton, president of the Griffin sponsored Pike Music Club; Mrs. Jerry
Savage, president of the Griffin Music Club; and Mrs. John Mostiler, president of the
Georgia Federation of Music Clubs, with trophies presented at the State convention.
Music Club nets three first places
The Griffin Music Club was
awarded three first place
trophies at the Georgia
Federation of Music Clubs’ 57th
convention at North Georgia
College in Dahlonega.
Mrs. John Mostiler of Griffin,
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then Georgia president presided
over the 3-day event.
The Griffin chapter was
awarded first place trophies in
the areas of achievement
records, state honor roll and
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extention, and one second place
award for opera.
The extension trophy was
awarded for efforts in
federating a new senior club,
the Pike Music Club.
Mrs. Mostiler was honored by
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the Griffin Music Club with a
life membership in GFMC. The
presentation was made by
Griffin club president, Mrs.
Jerry Savage, during the
business session.
Mrs. Mostiler also received
the past president’s trophy.
Other Griffinites who
attended the convention were:
Gene Love, scholarship
auditioning chairman, Harold
Cartee, sacred music
chairman; and Mrs. Jim
Goolsby.
iTj
At fault?
Franz van Rejsen, head of the
Dutch Civil Aviation
Authority’s team investigating
the collision between a KLM
Royal Dutch Airlines jumbo jet
and a Pan Am 747 in the Canary
Islands, said the control tower
had not authorized the Dutch
plane, piloted by Capt, Z.A.
Vedhuizen van Zanten, above,
to take off. Van Zanten and 248
persons aboard his aircraft
were killed in the collision.
(AP)
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of our
dear son and brother,
Ronald L. Hambrick, who
passed away three years
ago on March 31, 1974.
Dear Ronnie: Our loss was
Heaven's gain.
Three years have passed,
how long it seems.
Still in our hearts your
sweet face beams.
We send you our love and
want to say how thankful
we are, how proud too.
To have had such a won-i
derful son and brother as
you.
And while you rest in
peaceful sleep.
Your wonderful memory
we will always keep.
Sadly missed, greatly
loved and remembered
always:
Mother & Daddy - Mr. &
Mrs. Homer Hambrick
Sister ■ Mrs. Eloise Morris
Brothers: Jack, Leon, Billy
and Donald Hambrick.
States squabble over federal monies
ATLANTA (AP) - Charges
that southern states have
spurred the Sun Belt’s economic
boom by grabbing an unfair
share of federal funds from
northern states are false, says a
Federal Reserve Bank econo
mist.
“Public opinion seems to be
that the Southeast’s phenomen
al economic growth in the past
15 years is the result of larger
than-average flow of federal
dollars into the area,” William
D. Toal says in the April issue of
the Monthly Review of the
Federal Reserve Bank of At
lanta.
“But data show that when
federal expenditures are di-
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Senoia, Ga. Zebulon, Ga.
vided by each state’s popu
lation, only one of the 6th (Fed
eral Reserve) District states
receives, on a per capita basis,
above the national average.”
The 6th District includes
Georgia, Alabama, Florida and
parts of Tennessee, Mississippi
and Louisiana.
Toal agreed with northern
critics that the southeastern
states receive more federal
funds than their residents pay in
federal taxes, but he said this
was the result of lower income
in the South.
“This is merely the byproduct
of lower per capita income in
these states,” he said. “This
situation results in lower-than-
national per capita tax pay
ments.”
Rep. Michael Harrington, Il-
Mass., and other critics have
said northeastemers receive
less federal money than they
pay in taxes while south
easterners pay less in taxes and
receive more federal funds.
“We’re just looking for more
balance in the way the federal
government places its con
tracts, locates its defense bases,
dispenses its wealth,” said
Harrington, who spearheaded
the formation of a coalition
among northeastern states to
lobby Washington for more
federal money.
Says Toal: “The popular con-
clusion that political power has
drawn disproportionately large
sums of federal dollars into the
6th District is incorrect. The
Sun Belt’s economic boom, es
pecially in this district, is in
stead a result of natural forces
at work — the abundance of re
sources and the growth of re
gional markets.”
The Sun Belt receives more
federal money than it pays in
federal taxes, he said, but “in
each of the past four fiscal
years, the average resident of
each district state except Mis
sissippi received an amount
well below the national average
of federal expenditures.”