Newspaper Page Text
Page 8
— Griffin Daily News Friday, October 3,1975
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Meterologists Dick Darby (1) and Harlan Davis check
over their equipment before their airplane enters
Hurricane Gladys. Eight scientists are aboard on the
flights, gathering data on Glayds. (UPI)
Robert Sheets (r) and flight engineer Alexander Ricci
watch an overhead radar scope as their C-130 turboprop
flies through hurricane Gladys. Sheets called Gladys “a
classic...it looks like it came right out of a textbook. (UPI)
W i
PM 4
sk ** -Ml ,/ T '
Bookmaker
objects to taxes
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) — A
man who calls himself a
bookmaker is suing the federal
government on grounds the
government has no right to
require him to pay taxes on his
monthly income.
James Herring, 44, filed suit
in federal court Thursday
challenging the government’s
right to require him to buy a
SSOO gambling stamp, and pay
a monthly tax on his income.
Herring says the laws require
him to admit that he has been
violating the state and federal
laws against bookmaking.
The suit says the tax laws
are “a violation of this
plaintiff’s rights and of others
similarly situated in that he is
required to pay a tax on a
business that is a criminal
offense under both state and
federal laws and he is required
to incriminate himself in
violation of his rights under
both the federal and state
bonstitution.”
Gladys up close
ABOARD NOAA 41C OVER THE
ATLANTIC (UPI) — Its wings flapping
like a giant bird, the four-engine C-130
turboprop dipped and bumped its way
through flashes of lightning toward the eye
of Hurricane Gladys, but eight weather
scientists did not seem apprehensive.
“This storm is a classic,” Dr. Robert C.
Sheets said enthusiastically over his inter
com. “What a beauty ... it looks like it
came right out of a textbook.”
The plane made it through Gladys’
raging storm wall and into the 15-mile eye
of the hurricane. Immediately, dozens of
instruments examined and dissected the
storm and recorded the data on two banks
of computers.
Sheets and seven other National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration
scientists who make up “Project Storm
fury” then began monitoring banks of
temperature probes, ice particle counters
and radar screens, and instruments that
Charts compete with a steak dinner as the pilot of NOAA
41C, Bob Sandquist, takes advantage of a break to eat
dinner. Flights into hurricanes cost about $1,500 an hour
but serve dual purposes — locating the storm and
gathering data for a possible seeding project (UPI)
1 TRADER'S BAZAAR il
™ This Sat & Sun. Hn
In
I WOODEN NICKEL EMPORIAM W
|| ANTIQUES & COLLECTABLES, ETC. D
Mil Featuring
||iU Allan Chapman With Fresh Load Os Antiques |A|
I I From The North. In
|l| All Going At Bargain Prices H
H 228-6252 ’ll
Or Travel Hwy. 195,
1 Mile Past Ken’s Pizza
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can even “fingerprint” the nucleus of a
raindrop.
During the 11-hour mission, which cost
$16,500, the converted Air Force cargo
plane made a total of nine trips through the
storm’s 140 mile-per-hour winds while the
sea raged uncontrollably 20,000 feet below.
On one trip, the plane slammed into a
blanket of ice and was tossed violently. A
cup of coffee carelessly left on a table was
lifted six feet into the air and crashed onto
the steel floor. Red lights were everywhere
on the instrument panel. “The
gyro’s gone loopy,” pilot Bob Sanquist
said.
Sanquist skillfully guided the plane into
a calm spot in the hurricane but the jolt
and the ice had disabled two of the
scientific instruments.
Undaunted, the scientists refocused
their attention on the digital counters,
• electronic graphs and radar screens. The
data was radioed back to the National
U. S POSTAL SERVICE
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
(Act of August 12. 1970: Section 3685 Title 39. United State* Code j
1. TITLE OF PUBLICATION 2 - DATE OF FILING
Griffin Daily News Oct. 1, 1975 j
3. FREQUENCY OF ISSUE 3A. ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION PRICE |
Sailyexcept Sundayi Jan.li July Thanksgiving! Dec. 2jj $32.13;
4. LOCATION OF KNOWN OFFICE OF PUBLICATION (Street, city, county. state and ZIP code) (Not printers)
323 East Solomon St. Griffin, Georgia 30223 :
5 LOCATION OF THE HE ADOUARTERS OR GENE RAL BUSINESS OFF ICES OF THE PUBLISHERS (Not printers)
323 East Solomon St. Griffin, Georgia 30223 ,
6 NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF PUBLISHER. EDITOR. AND MANAGING EDITOR
PUBLISHER (Name and address)
Quimby Melton, Jr. Rt. 2 Box 176 Griffin, Georgia 30223;
EDITOR (Name and addreaa)
Quimby Melton, Jr. Rt. 2 Box 176 Griffin, Georgia 30223;
MANAG yame3 T °£amar , ’ftnigKt, Jr. 333-B S. 12th. St. Griffin, Georgia 30223
7. OWNER (If owned by a corporation, its name and addreaa must be stated and also immediately thereunder the names and addresses of
stockholders owning or holding I percent or more of total amount of stock. If not owned by a corporation, the names and addresaea of the
individual owners must be given. If owned by a partnership or other unincorporated firm, its name and address, as well as that of each
individual must be given.)
NAME I ~ ADDRESS ,
News Corporation 323 K. SbTimon St. GriffTn, Ga. 30223 and 210
East Lanie- Ave. Fayetteville, Georgia
Q uimby Kelton, Jr. Rt. 2 Box 176 Griffin. Georgia 30223
May Wingfield Kelton ~j~Rt. 2 Box 176 Griffin, Goergia 30223
8. KNOWN BONDHOLDERS. MORTGAGEES. AND OTHER SECURITY HOLDERS OWNING OR HOLDING 1 PERCENT OR MORE OF
TOTAL AMOUNT OF BONDS, MORTGAGES OR OTHER SECURITIES (If there are none, so state)
1 NAME ADDRESS
L —
NONE Zj
9. FOR OPTIONAL COMPLETION BY PUBLISHERS MAILING AT THE REGULAR RATES (Section 132.121. Postal Service Manual)
39 U. S. C. 3626 provides in pertinent part No person who would hava been entitled to mail matter under former section 4359 of this title
shall mail such matter at the rates provided under this subsection unless he files annually with the Postal Service a written request for
permission to mail matter at such rates."
In accordance with the provisions of tha mwt I hereby request permission to mail the publication named in Item 1 at the reduced postage
rates presently authorized by 39 U. S. j
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I AVERAGE NO. COPIES I ACTUAL NUMBER OF COPIES OF~
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PRECEDING U MONTHSEST TQ FILING PAE£
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2. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
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SAMPLES. COMPLIMENTARY. AND OTHER FREE COPIES O O
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F. COPIES NOT DISTRIBUTED
1. OFFICE USE. LEFT OVER. UNACCOUNTED, SPOILED QZ JQQ
AFTER PRINTING
2. RETURNS FROM NEWS AGENTS
G. TOTAL (Sum of E A F—should net press run ahown in A) 11,553 11,
OF EDITOR. PU°LISHER, BUSINESS MANAGER,
1 certify that the statements made by me above are correct Si*
and complete. |r -r
Hurricane hunter turboprop passes over the eye of Gladys
as instruments in the craft record data from the
maelstrom 20,000 feet below. Weather men regularly fly
through tropical storms in C-130 aircraft to gather data.
(UPI)
Hurricane Center in Miami to help
forecasters pinpoint the strength, forward
speed, location and direction of Gladys.
By the time the plane — stripped of its
nose paint by the encounter with the ice —
landed in Miami, the hurricane center was
calling Gladys the western Atlantic’s most
intense hurricane in 15 years. None of the
19 crewmen aboard NOAA 41C doubted it.
Even though “Project Stormfury” was
designed to aid hurricane forecasters, its
main job was to study the storm and
determine whether it was suitable for
seeding.
CORRECTION
Ladies’
DRESS HOSE
p ° ir 39*
103 s ® ,th hh| si
•sOxsiy G ' mn ' Ga -
NOTICE
The Rev. I. L. Lowery
Will Be Guest Speaker At
Central Lake
Church Os God
October 24-25-26
And Not This Week October
3-4-5 As Previously
Scheduled.