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People
By United Press International
11 "W I
Kennedy
Jonny Carson wins suit
LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) — Johnny Carson has won a
lawsuit charging unlawful use of his name and
photograph. The court awarded him one dollar and “other
goods and valuable consideration.”
Travel Unlimited Inc. and the National Bank of
Commerce of Lincoln were defendants in the suit filed in
1972 in connection with a tour advertised by the travel
agency which featured Carson’s name and photograph.
A judge in 1973 entered a partial dismissal order on the
grounds Nebraska, Carson’s home state, had no right-to
privacy law.
Attorneys for both sides agreed earlier this month,
however the unauthorized use of Carson’s name and
photograph violated U.S. codes. But, they also agreed the
violation was inadvertant and without malice.
Admits Ford fired him
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — Federal Aviation
Administrator Alexander Butterfield wouldn’t say it in so
many words, but virtually admitted Friday that President
Ford fired him.
Butterfield, in charge of White House security under
former President Richard Nixon, told the Senate Water*
gate Committee about the secret presidential taping sys
tem. Those tapes eventually led to Nixon’s resignation.
Butterfield said it would be “inappropriate to
comment” on whether Ford fired him. When asked if he
would deny that Ford fired him, however, he answered,
“No.”
Photographer on mission
WASHINGTON (UPI) — David Hume Kennedy, Presi
dent Ford’s personal photographer, is on a fact finding
mission to Vietnam.
The White House Friday said the 28-year old
photographer flew to Saigon with Army Chief of Staff Gen.
Fred Weyand. Officials said Kennedy wanted to make the
trip and suggested it to Ford.
Gov. Busbee to seek
in Georgia industry
By WILLIAM COTTERELL
ATLANTA (UPI) - With the
overtime 1975 General Assem
bly session and a brief fishing
vacation behind him, Gov.
George Busbee plans to concen
trate on recruiting foreign
investment in new industry for
Georgia next month.
“The big difference, as far as
trade and economy and so forth
are concerned, since my
becoming governor, is that in
the early years that I was in
the legislature, the whole
economic development program
was trying to attract industry
out of the North,” Busbee said.
“Those days are gone.
“What I’m now involved in,
along with the governors of the
other southeastern states, is
trying to attract trade and
industry from other countries,”
he said in an interview. “I’ve
been real active in this —every
day of the week, I meet with
some foreign visitors.”
Before he left for an
undisclosed coastal fishing spot
to relax after the legislative
session, Busbee contacted Lieu
tenant Governor Zell Miller and
told him to be ready to go
industry scouting in the late
spring and early summer.
During last year’s campaign,
Miller promised to act as
Georgia’s trade envoy, saying
the lieutenant governor’s call
ing card might make a more
dignified impression on foreign
investors than some lower-level
bureaucrat’s.
“He said, ‘You’d better get
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Carson
Butterfield
rested up like me, because
you’re going to be hitting the
road soon,”’ said Miller. He
said his initial travel plans are
only tentative, and “it’s going
to be to various sections of the
country, and also probably out
of the country.”
Miller said Busbee will later
announce exactly where and
when Georgia’s trade missions
will be.
During the legislative session,
Busbee met with a large
delegation of Japanese busi
nessmen and promised to visit
Japan personally to encourage
more trade with Georgia and
development of plants in the
state. Busbee’s picture tops a
magazine advertisement in
Arabic, urging Mideast busi
nessmen to check out Georgia’s
industrial potential when invest
ing their oil wealth.
Busbee said he met with the
Iranian ambassador and hopes
to meet the Shah of Iran to talk
business.
“They bought 30 C-130’s from
Lockheed, and we’re trying to
sell more planes,” he said.
Busbee said he has discussed
-“foreign trade, reverse invest
ment” with a Swedish prince,
the Turkish ambassador and
officials from Kuwait.
“I’ve also met with the
President, in order to get a
regional office of the State
Department located in Atlan
ta,” he said. “I hope to be
meeting with Mr. Kissinger and
the President again in the next
few months, on trade and
domestic matters.”
Georgia math prodigy among top five
SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) - A
teenage mathematics prodigy
studying under special courses
at Armstrong State College has
been ranked among the top five
mathematics students in North
America, the college said
Friday.
Philip N. Strenski, son of Dr.
and Mrs. Theodore Strenski,
scored among the top competi
tors in the William Lowell
Putnam mathematics competi
tion held last September.
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Strenski, who mastered seven
out of the 12 highly difficult
problems on the test, earned
the title “Putnam fellow” for
his score.
He is the first student from a
Georgia college or university to
be named a Putnam fellow and
is only the thrid fellow from a
college or university in the 14
states of the southeast region in
the 35-year history of the
competition.
Strenski takes mathematics
courses at Armstrong College
while attending Benedictine
High School here. The college
granted him permission to take
the advanced courses beginning
at the age of 14 under the
condition that he remain in
high school for his social and
psychological development and
not seek early admission to
college.
Each student in the competi
tion was given six hours to
solve the 12 mathematics
Page 5
problems, which are of the
highest order of difficulty,
requiring great cognitive pow
ers and intellectual originality
to be solved.
Nearly two-thirds of the finest
mathematics students in the
country who attempt the test
fail to solve even one of the
problems, according to an
Armstrong spokesman.
Strenski will be allowed to
take part in the Putnam
-’■Griffin Daily News Saturday, March 29,1975
competition for two more
years. The competition is held
Tourists bother him
TAIPEI (UPI) — Lee Kuang Huei, a former Japanese
army straggler who spent 31 years alone in the Indonesian
jungles, says he’s bothered by the daily busload of tourists
stopping to see him.
“It is really terrible that I have been billed as a tourist
attraction,” Huei said. “I hope people can leave me
alone.”
The Taiwanese aborigine returned to his home village in
eastern Taiwan last January after he was found on a
remote island in Indonesia. ______
on the individual campuses of
the competingstudents.