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Fairbanks Daily News-Miner from Fairbanks, Alaska • Page 3

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Fairbanks, Alaska
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3
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Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, Friday, April 17, 1964-3 Liberal Credit Proposal to Alaskan Fishermen Approved from Page the payroll, Owen Johnson is the local contractor. "We are scrounging for pilings for the very temporary barge terminal and will probably start building this on Monday." He estimated six to seven days for the job. A steam rig pile driver was floated onto the beach on a barge Wednesday night. This will be used for the ferry work starting today. Actually, the Chilkat ferry from Cordova can dock at Valdez now the Operation; He's Okay PARIS (AP) Presidentj A member of the hospital Charles de Gaulle was reported staff who refused to be identi- De Gaulle Undergoes utar fpnm i Damages Revealed fied told The Associated Press to have undergone an operation for a urinary tract disorder today, but one official said "there is no reason for anxiety." The semi-official French News Agency reported that the president underwent surgery this morning.

It said the operation i gai: this morning, was on the urinary tract and' lasted a bit more than onei that the room was occupied by the 73-year-old president. The operation was performed, this staff member said, by Abouiker and another urologist. He said the operation itself be- main problem is at high and dry Cordova but the aim is to I There was no immediate offi- make the facility higher here. da! con fj rrna ti on of this report. "We intend to rebuild every- Tne agency said that De thing of a public works na- was taken to the Cochin said McNamara.

This Hospital about 9 p.m I includes hospitals, schools, utili-! short i after nis na tjonwidei ties. Both schools the high and grade are condemned. The engineer estimated about 60 per cent of the city's sewage system is useable now. But cracks in the frozen earth, shattering utilities, are mapped in every block of the community. Water is being chlorinated and sanitary engineer i Igoe of the State Health Department, who came here from Fairbanks, said there has been no sickness.

Mrs. Harris in Coma One casualty of the and strain, however, has been! senior resident Margaret Harris, 91. She went into a coma Wednesday and was taken to the hospital at Glennallen. Igoe said Valdez now contains 120 men, 76 women and 35 children. Normally its popu- radio television address had been broadcast.

The address had been record' Jean Bryar Nears End Of Climb WASHINGTON (AP)-PreIim- inary estimates indicate about 515 million will be needed to re-' pair Army and Air Force facill ties in the Anchorage area damaged by the Alaskan earthquake These structures were built to heavy earth shocks, a Pentagon announcement noted and said "the losses are believed slight compared to the' damage to nonmilitary structures in the area." Original total cost of the Anchorage facilities involved was million. The Pentagon said a special team of Army Engineer experts and civilian technicians is in to study the effects of ed earlier On the television I MT.WASHINGTON, N.H. (AP) I the earthquake on military screens, he appeared as vigor-IT" wa almost like spring to- ous as ever, and his voice was firm. Cochin Hospital, in the southern part of the city on the Left Bank, specializes in the treatment of urinary diseases. The agency said that the operation was not of an urgent nature.

i The independent Radio embourg said the operation was day as a team of sled dogs pulled across the summit of Mt. Washington and began a treacherous descent from the highest peak in the Northeast. The temperature was 30 degrees. Only a light wind swept the bleak expanse of snow-covered crags above the timberline. structures.

The hope is to develop improved engineering and con- 'struction practices so the buildings can withstand shocks better. Results of the studies will be made available to the engineering profession and the construction industry. The special team includes rep- For Mrs. Jean Bryar of Ceni Datives of the Corps of Enter Harbor and Bill Anaruck, an gineers, the National Academy House Subcommittee i I (Rejects Outright Grant WASHINGTON (AP)--A House Fisheries subcommittee approved Thursday a proposal for liberal credit to Alaska fishermen. The group took action after rejecting a suggestion of outright federal grants.

Undersecretary of the Interior James K. Carr pro- i posed the loans to enable fishermen who lost their boats i the March 27 earthquake and seismic waves to rent boats for the coming fish-j ing season The committee added the! committee disaster-loan provision to a ate-passed bill to authorize $5 billion in grants to states for research and development. The full House Merchant Marine and Fisheries committee is expected to act on the amended measure next Tuesday. Presents 3 Programs The university Film Group As Carr explained the propo- in pres ent three programs in sal, repayment of a loan would conjunction with the Festival of be waived unless a fisherman Arts These programs are open first made a return from the publ nd no cha ge I chartered boat sufficient to coy- wjn be pmafe a Fllm Gl er his expenses, including 1 spokesman said ness taxes, and a "reasonable" sa ar I The first program will be Donald McKernan, director of Saturda at 2 and 4 Pm REAL BOOST FOR VALDEZ Civic leaders Jim Bedingfield, Biil Pettit and Mayor Bruce The agency said plainclothes police and two Elysee Palace policemen were guarding a room in a section of the Cochin Hospital that is headed by Dr. Prof.

Abouiker, a specialist in i welcome contrast to the gale winds and bitter cold that ma- entering firms. i rooned them on the mountain for two nights. When they tried to drive the dog team on a descent Thursday, the wind nearly blasted them from the carriage road that leads across an exposed northern shoulder of the moun- itain. Quickly, they cut the nine dogs tconiimjca prom page i) from their harness and fought the weather urinarv troubles. lation is about 1,200.

Some officials who a seen all communities struck by the Good Friday upheaval are yR MEET now concluding Valdez took worst beating of all in terms oil loss of life and relative loss of (opens at 8:30 p.m. in the Gold property iRoom. At 9:30 p.m. a cocktail, Yet nowhere is the morale (party will be held at Jim Scott's I TM TM TM sts( 75 TM 1( higher, or the work being and A te mperature dertaken more vigorously. Saturday's schedule ry on the summit Federal Electric Booster I with an executive was 14 degrees.

Even in spring, Robber Says He Needed Cash for Ex-Wife, Children BURIEN, Wash, iff) King County sheriff's detectives said today a 33-year-old man named Jack Smart has admitted holding up a grocery store at Burien Thursday night. They quoted him as saying needed money to send to his ex-wife and their three small Thursday to Keith Perkins (right), who flew from International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. headquarters in New York City to pre- sent the city with checks for $35,000 contributed by ITT, its Federal Electric subsidiary and the DEW line. Total donations from ITT and its employes for Valdez have reached $51,000. i Stall Photo the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, said his statistics indicate that the income of an Alaska fisherman averages about $3,100 the Schaible Lecture Hall at the University of Alaska.

It will feature experimental films outlining some major trends Borough Assembly Picks a year. He said a "reasonable" in lm experimentation in the salary, therefore, would 40 ears ably be in the range of $3.000 to A lecture entitled "The Art 54,000 a year. the Cinema" will be deliver- Monday at 8 p.m. in the Schaible Lecture Hall by Wil- Iiam stern Excerpts frorn four films will illustrate his talk. The mterest Rate The interest rate, under the.

(Confiitued from 1) Funding could be accomplishing Taylor ruled 64-7 was never ed with a 1 per cent sales tax, cretion of the Secretary of the Interior, and would be included in other regulations which Carr submitted. he said, but he asked for 2 Taylor expressed some cent so the surplus could be put into education. A 2 per cent tax would bring about a $2 a in th Yukon Room Washington. check Travelers, followed by a gen- Anaruck ati i is routine weather for Mt. I children, and to obtain treat- urn the re lar Al i Ian i an imtnoH cern about ordinance 64-6, setting a 2 per cent boroughwide sales tax.

He said, "We've had it for some time now and no amendments have been offered for it." It was decided to ad- and films are "Life of an American Fireman," "The Lonely ent school district tax or abolish said could ready by the time Vil1 "Potemkin," and "Olym- it." If the borough bill was enacted by Con-! pla a new tax ordinance, it would gress. i Tne program will be two have to take it before the public i Urging spaej in fi' ms shown on Tuesday and in 3 fjpnprfll plpfHnn 1 i i I A T-9rt i-nA 0 in a general election. Wescott suggested a short million revenue, Schleppegrell I form ordinance which would explained, and the amount put into education would lower the education millage rate. Schleppegrell said even if Carr said Alaska fishermen lost at least 208 vessels and had another 85 damaged. He said the Wednesday at 5:30 and 8 p.m.

in the Schaible Lecture Hall. The main feature will be "Last ment for a rare throat an immediate work ses-jthe assembly passed the bill it ment on to iasn out soine thoughts I immediately, money might have a gen- the employes and management era meeting at 9 am Dr Me- weather than bad) Smart said he left 0 tn matter, of International Telephone KinIey: stat cha rman or Sen a an he has seen in his ears i Alaska, 10 days ago. Chairman Telegraph Corp. and its vv a eri an Stevens, as an ex ert handler of Deputy sheriffs said Smart -i t- i rinoc Ono nf the Incf i cli use the current school district salmon runs begin about May 1 Year at Marienbad," and a tax by reference for the oor-jh Alaska waters and accompanying it will be ough needs. If it needed to be (until about Sept.

1. changed, he said, it could Carr estimated that possibly a done later. maximum of 100 boats could be I An opinion poll of the assem-1 located on the west coast i to be borrowed to take overjbly showed unanimous agree-1 charter to Alaska fishermen at Adventures of April 1 kindled local determin- state chairman for Gov. will speak. At noon there will be a buffet luncheon in thel i mates a summit.

ation to stay and rebuild A further uplift came 0 i Room, day when Maj. Robert Reed of Committee reports will be Elmendorf AFB arranged a C- reaci 123 to fly ITT and Federal Electric officials Keith Perkins of New York City, E. Phil Greene of Paramus, N.J. and Anaruck and Mrs. Bryar, the women's North American sled rewa wnen me convention re- dog racing champion, ascended convenes at 1 p.m.

Election of the mountain Wednesday over officers will take place at 4 i the eight-mile carriage road that the conv ention re- dogs. One of the huskies was lost called and said his service sta- an hour before he joined (ion had been robbed and his partner killed, and then hung up and went across the street to the grocery store. He forced a clerk, James English, to put a paper bag, and head- p.m. with dismissal at 5 p.m. eatis 6,238 foot peak Chairman Jack Schleppegrell! some of the functions until reve- said in preface to discussion on the ordinance that he introduced the bill to derive revenue until the borough could obtain some income from property tax.

He mentioned shared taxes, such as tobacco tax, but said these are insufficient to nue begins coming in. He asked, as a primary consideration, whether the assembly favored a sales tax at all. Assemblyman Terry Miller expressed the opinion that a ment for a short form an average cost per boat of sales tax was necessary atiSchooI. this time, but perhaps in the. ance and Schleppegrell was instructed to draft it.

The next regular borough assembly meeting was announced for April 23 at 8 p.m. in the senior cafeteria at Lathrop High about 510,000 for one fishing sea- son. The department has available, he said, about $7 million in itsj regular fisheries loan which would be released i Skinner Files for Demo Seat After a cocktail hour at Bill Towsley of the Fairbanks here will be a convention was DEW line office to Valdez. banquet at 8:30 p.m eal i presented Mayors Th conver will recon- needed. Woodford with an additional i vene at again if neces- They triumphantly planted an check for $35,000.

Altogether, sary- Scott said I Alaskan flag on the summit and the DEW line. Federal (spent the past two nights in trie and ITT contribution rf a television network building marked for Valdez will total! a V.QII (manned by a crew of two. $51,000. and is expected to goj JuNEAU (AP) State Selec-j Ananicfc came to New Hamp- hioher tive Service Director Dan Ma- shire a few days ago with Mrs Bryar's husband, Keith, three uunu U1C future a borough net income ed for the door. 5 ax be cons dered North The'sled He captured there by A I said his personal research rD ciarenc ANCHORAGE some merit in the idea, that, as it turned out they wh ffied i Assemblywoman Sylvia Ring State Highway said today Alaska's draft geologist Ralph Migliaccio.

who I call for the month of May will supplied the initial disaster da- here, says the quake and submarine landslide broke the dock in two. Warehouses flipped forward and are now believed to be upside down at the bay bottom off the end of this glacial moraine. The men, women and children times winner of the world sled Rescuers Recover jf he Body of Second north of Fifth Street, provided geologic and soil tests indicate "ere is no slide hazard in that 4 Winer in The business core bounded I by Fifth and Eighth Avenues an and A streets would be TOCKMARKET cuers late Thursday night recovered the body of the second min stad suggested this would be an illegal tax since a law for- ba.de a political subdivision in; this state from enacting an in- jcome tax. When the presiding officer questioned this, Ed Orbeok, i president of the Construction $105,333 Grant To Planning stores and commercial and of-i fice buildings. Genera orers Union who were staggering around the a ain toda in at tve tra din f- dock during the fantastic double Steels rallied late the day.

NEW YORK, April 17 (AP)-The stock market closed higher er crushed to death in a cave-in Wrapped around this retail! said Taylor's own father nad i authored the bill. Taylor look- WASHINGTON (AP)--A $105,333 grant to the Alaska State De-i partment of Economic Develop- i ment and Planning was an-' i pending legislation for disaster) i 1 loans for boat charter. rl of Clear has Appearing before a special i'" ed declaration of candi- meeting of the fisheries subcom-1 dac TM re for tne Democratic mittee, Carr became the i nomination for state represen- 1 Johnson administration official I tative from the sprawling 15th to support Alaskan pleas for fed-1 "wilderness" election district. I eral grants to assist the private! Skinner, a pilot, is seeking jportion of the Alaska seat currently occupied (to recover from the effects Rep. Grant Pearson, who the earthquake.

has filed for Sen. John B. Coghill's seat for the Nenana area. The giant district takes in from Nenana- homes CIear to Aniak on the Kusk homes which Riyer Yukon He said loans might be feasi- TM i and sad "He Administration Thursday. had Wednesday in Idaho's be.offices, ap.rtmentJ^V^ many thmgs zinc mine.

buildings, and accessory OU consulting me!" The body of Barney McCoy, and service establishments. 48, of Wallace, Idaho, had beenj Destroyed buildings would located at midmorning and removed, Assemblywoman a of the Star mine stalled recovery efforts. i The body of his companion, onslaught are also believed tot Dow Jon es closing stock averages: 30 industrials, 827.33, Peck, 41, also from the be'at the bottom. 1 68 2 a's, 197.07, up 0.37; 15 utilities, 140.00, up 0.49; area, was brought to only three bodies have been re-1 stocks, 288.06, up 0.64. covered.

day, but debris in the deep shaft I building owners would have an ei-- opportunity to relocate i The U.S. Coast and Geodetic's ABC Vend large and scientifically ate ship "The Surveyor" today stands off this devastated port, Unied taking soundings in the calm waters as part of the ef-JAicoa fort to determine what exactly Am did happen to the earth and the( sea on that dreadful day. Am Bd Par 38 Am Can Am Cyan 633, i Am El Pw 'il 1 i Am MFdy 19 iArr Mel Cl 43Vi i Am Mot 16'i Gas Am Smelf I Am Std Am Tel Tel Ut Am Tob 3SH Ampex Cp I6 i Anaconda 43Vit Armco Slf Armour 51 VB Atchison 281. Atl Refln 55 Atlas Cp 2'a Avco Corp 22'? Bald Lima T33i Bait Oti Beat Fds 54 3 it Must Change Viet Nam Rules NEW YORK (AP) Richard M. Nixon says morale cannot be strong in South Viet Nam when the Communist guerrillas are allowed to retreat without harassment into "sanctuary" of North Viet Nam or Laos.

"What is needed now is strong American support and a change JEph'steeV Boeing 46 in the rules, the former vice Border. 75 president said in a speech to the osw New York Chamber of Com-i TMTMit merce Thursday. i I Burroughs Plans Second Decade of Service WASHINGTON (AP) tice William 0. Douglas has Sl' ended a quarter century on the Jew pl -a Supreme Court with a vow 0 serve another decade and set a longevity record for the high tribunal. "I have no plans for retirement." Douglas told newsmen Thursday in his office.

"If I keep my health, I will serve 10 more years and beat the record crane co a of Justice Stephen Field." lcS Cities Sv 69Va Coca Cola Cola Pal 7 Colo Ir 13J.4 Colum Gas 29''3 Coml CretJ Com I So 3SV: Con Edis Sli'-rs Container 33 Conf Bdk 55'1 Cont Can Cruc Stl 34Vi Cudahy Pk 8V'a Curtlss Wr 19 Curtijj Wr A Decca Rec 46 Oecre 45 Den R6w Dr Pepper 34 Doug Alrc Dow Chem oj Pont 262 East Air 40'-B East Kod El Paso NG Erie Lack Evans Pd JWi "irestone 40 Ford Mot 57'A Fore Dalr Freept Sul rreuh Cp VjVi Gamble Sk 34 3 i Gen Dynam Gen Slec Gen Fds Gen Instru 13H Gen Mills Gen Motors 22 Tel El 3iVs Gen Tire 2S Ga Pac CD te 3 Gillette mi Gtrnbcl Glen Aid 14Va Goodrich Goodyear 43 G1 No Ry C-t Sog Greyhound Gulf Oil Holly Sug Homestk Idaho Pw J3 Ideal Cem 27 III Cent 53 3 Int Bus Men SiVs Int Harv Int Nick inl Paper 33V; Int Tel Tel Johns Man Jones 77 Kaiser Al 4144 Kenneco't S2V? Kerr MCGee 36li Kresge SS Lehman 30 LOF Glass Lib MCNL iSSi Ligg 4 MY S3 Litton Ind 70 Lock Airc Lorillard 49 Magnavox 3 Marath Oil Martin May Str 82Vi Maytag McKess Merck 1115 Mpls Hon Monn MM Monsan Ch 74 Mont Pw 37V: Mont ward Murray Cp 30 Nat Bis: Cash Rec; 70''3 Nat Dairy Nat Distill 2BVa Nat Gyps 4B3ij Newberry NY Central 37 No Am Av Nor Pac 5314 NvAt Airlin 95Vs Olln Math Otis Elev Outb Mar Owens ill GI 98 Pac Am Cp a Pac El 3Pi Param PFct 57Va Parke Penn Dlx Penney JC 52 Pa RR 3178 Peps) Cola Pfizer 47'A PJie)ps itVi Philip Mor Phill Pet Polaroid 162 P.roct Pub Sv Colo Pug S3 P4L Pullman RCA .1414 Rayonler 39'-'2 Raytheon roia Repub Av Repub Stl Rex Drug 44 Reyn Met 42'. 2 Rey Tob Richfld Oil Royal Out 42 3 i Safeway St 62 SI Jos Lead St Reg Pap 34 Schenley Scherlng Scott Pap Sears Roeb io 3 Sei-vel V'a Shell Oil JPi Sinclair Skelly Oil 77'a Soconv Sou Cal Ed 311., Scutrm Co M'i Sou Pac 3SL1 Sou Ry Sperry Rd 17 Std Brand 77'1 Std Oil Cal Std Oil Ind 7P. 3 i Std Oil Std Oil Oh Sterl Drug Stew War Studebaker 8 Sunray DX Sunsh Mn 14V 0 Swift 4 Tektronix 17'-i Tenn Gas Texaco 78 Tox Sul Tex Ins Textron Thlokol Them RW Tidesvat Oil Tlmk Transamer SC 1 Tri Cont Twent Cen 23'i Un Carbide 127Vi Un Oil Cal 7914 Un Pac iKt Unif Air Lit 60 Unit Airc 48 United Cn Unit Prult 21'1 US Gypsum US Plywd 74''i US Rub US Smelt US Steel Univ Match Utah PSL Vanad Cp 15 Varian As 12'i Vendo Co. 17 3 .4 25 Warn Pic Wash Wat 49 Wn Bancorp Wn Un Tel 36 Westg A Bi Westg SI 34'i Weyerhaeuser 4Vi Wheel Stl Wcolivm 85 Wrigley Xerox Cp Yngst Sh 8, 49'A Approx final total 6.030,005. i the surface about five hours after the shaft caved in following structures or have them re- moved as part of the continue to investigate the sales tax.

Assemblyman Bob Wescott had the tax Imoney to get new boats IV to The money, plus $52,667 in lo- homes he said Brook Range. California, Tex- funds, will finance a year of as, and Montana are the only comprehensive planning A Suggestion (states larger than the immense He suggested that district. will include: -Assessment of the impact of I rai approve grants in the March 27 earthquake on the tl the I state's economy. --Identification and description of the alternatives which ex- povided revenue-producing, self-liquida- larea. an earth slippage in the tunnel ting public facilities.

The con- suiting firm said these would more than pay the 25 per cent l' oca sflare cos l3ljt ures were disputed by local of fi- (continued from Page l) Saturday in Carpenters Hall. event is open to the public I at $1 per person and SI.50 per I family. Spring Recital Mrs. Esther Hart presents her piano students in recital dais. The $50.8 million cost would include the expense of buying land and buildings, demolition, I construction of the parking lots, 'improvements to streets and Former Viet 1 Nam Overlord Collapses SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)--Ngo Dinh Can's trial for murder and extortion was interrupted today when the brother of South Viet Nam's late President Ngo Dinh Diem col- i amount of the charter hire to enable the fishermen to return to their fishing and thus a Employed for the past two years at Clear, Skinner, 34, is a former University of Alaska student, who spent several tion.

--Preparation of preliminary projections of the development potential of the state for the periods 1964-1970, and 1970-1980. In these projections, URA said, will be given to the alternatives which exist to the ing recovery from the disaster, Reps Herbert C. Conner, D- trom p. 9 and formulation of a plan for ac- anci Inhn Dinppll I an P. In ut ect to collect the scientific data Mich objected to the idea of: a come up with a icture noting that Congress pro-j of the ical and economic no such relief for east and sna keup of Alaska.

lapsed just before being brought state in directing its develop- into court. ment, with special emphasis on he would favor. gulf coast fishermen who 1 he A ncnora stu dy alone in- boats in hurricanes. volved 40 professional geologists After a two-hour subcommit- working far into the even tee recess, Carr returned with(i wnile some of them mov- what he called a "soft wan ing from their own homes de proposal and which Bonner said stroyed in the quake land and administrative costs. A doctor said the 53-year-old! the effects of impending and) Authority for the disaster loan The planners estimated i former overlord of central Viet could be reduced to $45.36 mil- Nam suffered a heart attack, lion in net costs through the sale and ordered him back to the at million.

der treatment for diabetes. at 2 p.m., Saturday, at the Odd Fellows Hall, First Avenue. All parents and friends ai ly invited to attend. i Or. Kcssei Speak.

Secretary Speaks to Demos The Mid-Acres Garden Club will hold a special meeting at 8 p.m. today in the North Pole School mobile unit. The program will be by Brina Kessel on birth. The public is invited. for charter hire of boats and two years.

Time to Push Rampart' probable technological changes. Results of the work will be presented in the form of reports, maps and other graphic mate-) Carr said the department is rial. considering making the 1 a 1 available only to fishermen who I lost their boats, who agree to an (acceptable program for re- placing them as quickly as pos! sible, and who give assurance of intention to remain in the fishing business. The boat-replacement The Army Corps of Engineers, the area an "ideal labor- i- -4. i for scientific study," sent would be limited nine experts to how engi Ineering and construction techniques could be improved to protect bridges, buildings and other structures.

The Universities of Hawaii, Tokyo and Alaska dispatched a team to study the quake effects. The group plans to set up a seismic measuring station in down- jtown Anchorage and use mobile P. ro i seismic rigs to record the "This is the time to push With earthquake debts piled.power is a long way in the loans; from the Small earthS movements other Swimming Again Dam in a discreet on an already heavy tax and quoted several authori-(Business Administration. The University of Alaska way," said Edward A. Merdes he said, Alaska must broaden (ties to that effect.

He said by Alaska Airlines Allied Artist Pac Northern Airlines Industrials Rails Utilities Pound swimming pool returned to its regular schedule Thursday after being closed since April 3 for cleaning and maintenance. Rummage Sale to the Democratic Club Wednes-jits tax base. Rampart, Paskvanjthe year 2000 the country will day night. Merdes is secretary continued, would undoubtedly of Yukon Power for America, (Inc. Merdes spoke in preface to bring about that broader tax base.

The state must and will pros! Thomas J. Paskvan whom he per and if "Alaska loses Its The Corps of the North Boost- introduced to Democratic Club businessmen it will be a mor- Eagle's Hall. 827.33 197.07 140.00 Committee will meet in the 1 Chamber of Commerce this not only need Rampart power, but several other dams will also be needed to fulfill the power need. He estimated a population growth in Alaska to 1 million er Club will hold a rummage members as "the soul behind jtal blow to this state." He people within 15 years if Ram- sale at 10 a.m. Saturday in (Rampart, and Mr.

Rampart I said Rampart would provide the' I himself. i needed incentive for continued SUter City Paskvan spoke on two ques- business investment, itions: Does Alaska need Ram-i Pasfcvan said the i City Steering part and does the United States need Rampart? To both these electric ruuiiu unainuer or Canadian Exchange .9254 (free) (evening at 8. questions his answer was an emphatic "yes." need of the United States has doubled every decade since 'the first electric light was turned on." He said low-cost atomic part goes through. He said he thought the chances for Rampart legislation has been enhanced and the need will be more apparent. But he urged all his listeners to use their personal influence to advance this legislation.

areas. The U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey brought in more personnel, two ocean survey ships and additional tide gauges to study Seeking Re-election jthe quake impact on harbors land tides. Rep. Forbes Baker JUNEAU (AP) Secretary of State Hugh J.

Wade says he has received declarations of candidacy from two members of the House of Representatives seeking re-election. Filing for re-election to the House from District 8 was Other groups have come to determine the effect of the quake on steel buildings, wooden buildings, cement structures and how to strengthen such construction against damage in future quakes. A team of engineers for the Mike Gravel. D-Anchorage. Fil- National Board of Fire Under- ing for re-election to the House wr i te rs came to learn how com- District 16 was Rep.

munities could keep losses low Forbes L. Baker, R-Fairbanks. Jin such disasters..

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About Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Archive

Pages Available:
146,771
Years Available:
1930-1977