Newspaper Page Text
Page 10
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, May 12,1977
-BBL
Loraine Colin and classmates look over Sandra Wages’ “Sprouting” project which was part
of the Spalding Junior High 111 science fair exhibits.
Nixon interview
Tonight they’ll discuss foreign affairs
By JAY SHARBUTT
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Pre
ceded by a televised news con
ference in which President Car
ter discusses his first official
trip overseas, Richard M. Nixon
tonight discusses foreign affairs
when he was president.
It’s the second of Nixon’s four
scheduled taped interview
programs with British TV per
sonality David Frost, who paid
him a reported $600,000 plus a
percentage of the profits for the
exclusive interviews.
Tonight’s show almost caused
officials at 137 network affil
iates an agonizing choice —
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take the live network “feed” of
Carter’s news session or pass it
for the national feed of the Nix
on-Frost show.
Carter originally scheduled
his news conference for 7:30
p.m. EDT tonight, which hap
pens to be the same time the
Nixon-Frost show is being
transmitted to 155 stations on a
special network hookup.
Fifteen of the stations are in
dependents, three are public TV
outlets and the rest are af
filiated with CBS, NBC or ABC,
which were to televise Carter’s
conference.
According to Robert Wold,
head of the firm transmitting
the Nixon shows from KTTV
here, most stations can receive
only one network feed at a time
unless they’re willing to pay for
a second hookup.
“And that can be quite ex
pensive,” he added.
But stations signed for Nix
on's show were spared the cost
of a second hookup or a decision
between a taped Nixon and a
live Carter when the President
rescheduled his news con
ference for 2:30 p.m. EDT to
day.
The change came Tuesday
after Frost called the White
House and mentioned his show
was on at the same time Carter
was to be on TV. However, both
the White House and a Frost
aide say Frost didn’t ask the
President to change the time of
the news conference.
The next scheduled Nixon-
Frost shows still are set for May
Great Britain
The name Great Britain has
been used since the union of
England and Scotland in 1707.
United Kingdom came into use
after the 1801 union of Great
Britain and Ireland. Now Queen
Elizabeth II is designated
queen of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ire
land.
Junior high science fair
Seventh grade students
participated in the Spalding
Junior High 111 science fair.
Participants are listed as
follows:
Debbie Acostra
Teresa Butler
Anna Carlson
Chris Cook
Joy Lynn Fields
Kenya Fortner
Ethan Hammond
Wendall Johnston
Mike Kimble
Todd Mcßride
Kathy Powell
Eugene Rivers
Michelle Sims
Becky Steel
Dana Stephens
Tanja Taylor
Lisa Weems
Kim Williamson
Susan Wood
Bruce Ballard
Steve Buckzo
Johnny Casteneda
Kitty Cooper
Scott Hall
Mark Holland
Donna McGuffey
Jane Raunikar
Celia Reid
19 and 25, says Marvin Minoff,
executive vice president of
Frost’s paradine Productions.
Frost last week said he’ll put
together a fifth program —
which will include Nixon’s re
sponse to the big question, why
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JEWELERS 110 N * HHI St-
-thtjtiMfypeoph- BINCK 4 Phone 227-4087
Beth Smith
Mark Williams
Kelly Mathews
Teresa Mabry
Bo Knight
Kim Berry
Mary Dee Calhoun
Wade Chambers
Winnie Darsey
Kim English
' Djuna Folds
Mack Garrison
Chuck Gray
Wanta HUI
Pat Home
Vickie Hyatt
Julie Jones
Ray Malcom
Jeff Morrow
Karla NeiU
Anne Omundson
Ellen Reynolds
Jennifer Reynolds
Kristie Smith
Jenny Stamps
Lisa Stewart
Sandra Wagers
Lorie Wiggins
Jon Windham
Misty Woltman
Jim Woodard
Keli Smith
Hal Fowler
he didn’t destroy the White
House Watergate tapes that
proved his undoing.
Minoff, in an interview this
week, said no national air date
is set for the fifth show, which 1
will be an hour in length.
Freddie Evans
Jerry Bertram
Mays Dowis
Cathy Snelling
Jeff Brown
Eddie Anderson
Jerry Bertram
Diletta Wiggins
Jeffery Daniel
Bob Easterling
Sandra Stahl
Cindy Steward
Teresa Oglesby
Tracy Vines
Merrill Thompson
Ginny Dunaway
Patricia Woodard
Cindy Buffington
Tony Stanley
Allen Heape
Brandy Brickies
Lisa Brandon
Rebecca Combs
David Phillips
Kim Campbell
Julie Windham
John Davis
Ken Smith
Pat Murphy
Lynne Johnson
Joni Nelin
Tina Reuther
Citizens
enjoy
picnic
Senior Citizens, sponsored by
the Griffin Utility Club, met at
the Girl Scout Camp in
Meansville where they enjoyed
a picnic overlooking the lake.
Forty-nine members were
present.
Outdoorsman
Fishing was a pastime
now it’s a business
ATHENS, Ga. (AP) - With
Ed Chambers, fishing used to be
a pastime—until the worm
turned. Now it’s a business.
He used to show horses, but
gave it up when it took too much
of his time. That was when he
started to making fishing
lures—as a hobby.
Chambers makes spinner bait
under the Hornet trademark.
He makes the lures by hand,
and they are so popular that
their manufacture is taking
time away from his hobby
fishing.
This year, Chambers will turn
out, one by one, between 1,500
and 2,000 lures. He could seU
many more, but he turns down
suggestions for production line
methods.
“I could machine-produce the
lures, but you just wouldn’t
have a real Hornet lure. Hand
production of lures is a dying
art—the all-powerful buck has
brought that about, and people
do not take the time that they
once took with such products.
“I’m trying to retain quality.
If it ever reaches the point that I
would have to sacrifice quality
in order to meet production
demands, I would not do it,” he
said.
Chambers is an expert on the
feeding habits of fish, and he
has definite ideas about what
attracts a fish.
“With spinner bait, the lure
imitates a small minnow,” he
said. “The sound of a spinner
often causes a fish to attack,
either out of hunger or of fear.”
A hand-turned wire attached
to a stainless steel hook forms
the general frame of a lure. The
body is made of lead, poured
from a bullet melting pot, with
carefully formed sides. The
joints are soldered by hand and
the body painted with colorful,
realistic patterns.
The lures then must he ad
justed so they move correctly
through the water.
Professional fishermen call
that “tuning” a lure, aligning it
so that only the parts which are
supposed to move do —and then
with only the proper motions.
Untuned lures may pull at an
angle away from the fisherman
as they are realed in, creating
an unnatural movement which
can be spotted by a lure-wary
fish.
Chambers experiments with
the designs for his lures. Talk
ing with other fishermen pro
vides him with new ideas — or
reasons to junk old ones.
“The great thing about fish
ing and fishermen is that you
cannot distinguish between the
college professor and the law
yer, the white collar worker and
the blue collar worker,” he said.
“You meet everyone from the
poorest to the richest and
they’re all out there with one
purpose, to catch a fish.”
Some friends had problems
with lures hanging on under
water limbs because of the con
cave shape of the body, so
Chambers designed a rounded
body that tends to slip off snags.
When some fishermen com
plained that certain paint
chipped off the lures, he in
vested in a new paint.
Color is vitally important in
lures, said Chambers.
Many Styles of
Wedding Invitations
Hensley’s Card and
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121 West Solomon St.
Phone 221-I2SS