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Show Jtto REcfoRli) Thursday Mahi'S, TREPAN Lake Powell and the big four ' nowHietheBig Two of Lake Powell is Big Four. Largemouth and crappie share the fishing spot light with the striped bass and the walleye. Monsters 1982 y Mger id Wayne Gustaveson, Utah DiviWildlife Resources, sion of as the father of the known booming striper population he introduce in Powell in helped 1974, is excited about 1982 overall I believe fishing prospects. Lake Powell is among the most versatile and productive fisheries in the UJS., says Gustaveson. His tips and predictions for 1982 include: striper that average six pounds; good summer and early fall striper fishing from Escalante to Wahweap; good tro phy fish in March and April, especially with night surface lures; good smaller stripers from May through August, especially from Good Hope Bay to White Canyon, Rincon to Bullfrog and Escalante to Rainbow trollin near main channels or casting crawjigs in shallows. September to December striper fishing should be fantastic, says Gustaveson. Limit remains two fish in possession. fishing in 1982 will Crappie continue to be good and there is The best March is through spring fishing May. no limit on catch. Professional bass fishermen proclaim . Powell one of the very best lakes, says Gustaveson, but one which requires techniques different than shallow Southern impoundments. Predictions are for two good spawns and good spring fishing. which were never Walleye, planted in Powell, are now being good number, after caught in being trapped when the Colorado was dammed in 1973. Walleye will be a good season fish, like the crappie. The best bet for hooking a walleye is to troll in the shade of steep canyon walls about one boat length from the wall, bumping the wall occasionally, says Gustaveson. He also suggests trying normal bass structure slowly, along the as walleye are bottom, Tbe lake record of light-sensiti- ve. could easily be broken soon. Limit is Utah and 6 in Arizona. 10 in Following is a consideration of the origins of the griffin, the second in a four-pa- rt short series about the possible origins of monsters. If youve ever read Alice in Wonderland, you know the griffin, a flying lion with the head and wings of an eagle. With a little a real bird, the imagination, lammergeier of Central Asia, could have inspired the myth of the griffin. The lammergeier, a bird of prey with a wing known as the is also span, bearded vulture, because of the tuft of bristles under its bill. To observers from below, the 10-fo- lammergeiers ot tawny-color- ed underside and its mane-lik- e beard could have evoked images of lions. Whats more, the range of the real bird matches the range of the mythical creature: North Africa, Central Asia and Southern Europe. TV 4. and kids Janet Wilcox Children today are media says Loretta Long, minded, known to millions of television as Susan on Sesame viewers We may argue about Street. the virtues of the information learned from television, but all of us must agree that learning is happening. Long spoke to the International Reading Association in 1981 and told the large audience that, We as adults must address ourselves to the feet that if we are going to be the primary influence in our childrens educational and emotional lives, we had better stop sending them off to watch TV instead of dealing with them. If we dont take heed, I can promise you that one day we may wake up to the Fonz find that Big Bird, Charlies Angels have and and socialized our kids for raised us, taught them what to say and how to say it, I wish all film and television BY producers, writers, and actors realized that they are, in fact, educators who possess one of the powerful teaching tools known to man. One cannot see the results of a show like Sesame Street and continue to believe that little kids dont learn from TV, concluded All of us who love chilLong. dren must see that their TV watching is superivsed and that we dont, by default, allow some TV character to become a better friend to our child than we most are! youre a new single-part-y telephone customer, no rent a youll longer telephone set from If Continental Telephone. Instead, youll own your own phone. Continental Telephone calls it Phownership. Recently the Utah Public Service Commission issued a ruling deregulating single-part- y telephone sets removing them from the list of equipment which Continental rents to customers at regulated rates. ONLY NEW CUSTOMERS The ruling only applies to new, single-part- y customers. It does not apply to existing customers, or to new party line customers. Deregulation was scheduled to happen regardless; the Federal Communications Commission has ordered it effective Jan. 1, 1983. But both Continental and you will benefit from it. Heres how: . Continental Telephone will benefit by being able to position itself for the more competitive marketplace of the future. And as more customers purchase their own telephone sets, cap- -' ital will be freed for Continental to invest in service expansion and improvement projects. BENEFITS FOR YOU But youll benefit even more. Youll be able to choose any style of telephone set in any avail- able color to match the decor of your home. Youll save on installation fees when you simply plug in your own phone into the modular jack in your home. Youll save the monthly rental fee youd otherwise pay to Continental for a telephone set If you move, disconnection and reconnection will be a simple matter; youll just unplug your phone from the old residence and plug it in at your new home. FREE KIT If youre already a telephone customer and your home doesnt have modular telephone jacks. Continental will give you absolutely free a modular conversion kit with siminstructions when you purchase a modular ple set telephone Stop in at your Continental Phone Fair. There are more than 20 kinds of phones ' to choose from. , Deregulation and Phownership: They mean a more competitive telephone industry and greater freedom of choice for you. Thats the shape of the future at Continental Telephone of the West. do-it-yours- elf Continental Telephone ot the West |