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5 results for We the People of North Carolina Vol. 14 Issue 11, April 1957
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Record #:
30711
Author(s):
Abstract:
There are ten counties that rank the highest among the North Carolina's counties with the amount of money collected and amount of money they pay in taxes over what they get back. These include Mecklenburg, Guilford, Forsyth, Wake, Buncombe, Durham, Gaston, New Hanover, Cumberland and Alamance. The least productive counties, as far as tax input, include Jones, Gates, Avery, Currituck, Pamlico, Graham, Tyrrell, Camden, Hyde, and Clay.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 14 Issue 11, April 1957, p10-16, 21, il, map
Record #:
30712
Author(s):
Abstract:
In proposals to raise the salary of all state employees, including teachers, North Carolina's Governor Hodges has provided places where the finances can be used for the increase. Hodges proposes that funds to meet the new budget items can come from previously recommended funds for capital improvements, the Highway Fund, and interest from tax investments.
Record #:
30713
Author(s):
Abstract:
Employees of the P.H. Hanes Knitting Company, in an election at the company's knitting and sewing plant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, voted against the TWUA, AFL-CIO as their bargaining representative.
Record #:
30714
Author(s):
Abstract:
In the cooperative wildlife management areas of western North Carolina, trout fishermen are in for more fishing days, more stream mileage, and more fish this year. Under new regulations, the season will be open from April to August, and more fish then ever have been stocked in streams, public waters, and wildlife refuges.
Record #:
30715
Author(s):
Abstract:
As the United States economy enters crucial stages dealing with a $71.8 billion budget, departments and agencies are looking to prevent and propose cuts to the budget. Along with the approval of the $2 billion school aid bill, the submission of the expenditure control bill is gaining ground in Congress.
Subject(s):