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

Location:
Fairbanks, Alaska
Issue Date:
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3
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CITY NEWS IX BKIW Health and safety The Fairbanks Health and Safety Council will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Health Center, 800 Airport Way. Mrs. Patsy Underwood will speak about the Alaska Homemaker Service. Voter transportation Free transportation to voter registration will be provided by a Wendell Kay volunteer, by calling 456-4246.

The volunteer will pick up and return home everyone asking for this service. Leo club The College Lions Club announces their sponsorship of a Leo Club for young people between the ages of 15-20 years. This will be the first Leo Club in the Fairbanks area and is designed to assist young people in the community service as well as afford them a social group for their own youth activities. Interested youths may attend an informational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at 3070 Totem Drive in College.

Mrs. Ostrum dies Mrs. Viola E. Ostrum, mother of Mrs. Russel Wood of Fairbanks, passed away July 29 at the Lutheran Nursing Home in Kane, Pa.

She was born in Sinnemahoning, March 25, 1884. Mrs. Ostrum was also survived by a daughter, Mrs. Hudson Dehaas of Erie, two sisters, one brother, eleven a i a great-grandchild. Monroe alums meet The Monroe High School Alumni Association will meet at 7 p.m.

Thursday in the Monroe High School library. Class race set The Fairbanks Outboard Assocation will sponsor a Class riverboat race to Nenana and back from the Graehl Landing on Aug. 9. The association will hold a meeting at 8 p.m. today to discuss the race at the Switzerland.

Anyone may enter the race. Factory-build boats may be of any size and motors up to 50 horsepower will be allowed. Crew size will be two men and an entry fee of $10 will be charged. Further information is available at 452-2088. Vital Statistics District Court Alfred K.

Wells, $75 for drunk in public. Earl Titus, one day for drunk in public. Earl Titus, 15 days for drunk in public. Lester R. Gossett, $25 for drunk In public.

Jonn P. Mcspadden, suspended Imposition of sentence for minor on premises. William Hit field, suspended imposition of sentence for drunk in public. Jeffrey L. Hoffman, suspended imposition of sentence for drunk In public.

Wine hell Nichoil. two days for drunk in public. Arrests Fairbanks police reported the following persons arrested between Monday morning and 7 a.m. today. The arrests and charges were: Alice Albert, drunk in public.

Daniel J. David, drunk In public. Terrence Drlggs, drunk in public. Harry O. Harvey, operating a motor vehicle improperly.

Dorothea John, drunk in public. Neil John, drunk in public. Nick Nlckoli.drunk In public. Jeanne H. Pwlow, operating a motor vehicle improperly.

Malby G. Ross, operating a motor vehicle improperly, no operator's license. Notices of intent to Wtd Barnes, Robert 29, and Moser, Mary 24. Watt. James 20, and Evans, Cynthia 17.

Borden, Gregory, 26, and Reese, Bonnie 19. Dlvorcei Granted Lake, L. from James t. CITY BUILDING PERMITS July 2 8- Harold StocK, 1712 Tamarack, foundation- Fairbanks Gas Turbine, 758 t' 1 0 gs turbine, Denny Breald, 124 Second, alteration, Rennetr, Folooa. 1822 Bridgewater, foundation, $30,000.

July 29-Bruce Baker, 101 Halnes, foundation. Eddy. Exhibit officials announced Superintendents For the 23 competitive exhibit divisions of the Alaska State Fair, opening here at the Tanana Valley Fairgrounds, Aug. 13-16, were announced today by Janet Baird, fair manager. "Division superintendents are all volunteers who give very generously or their time and talents to organize and supervise the largest display of individual entries ever assembled in the state of Alaska," said Mrs.

Baird. "The fair, quite literally, could not function without them." Named were: Division 1, 4-H Club Work, Mrs. Arlene Milan and Mrs. Pat Johnson, Division 2, Grains, Grasses Legumes, No superintendent; Division 3, Vegetables, Farmers Market, Mrs. Ann Byrd; Division 4, Livestock, Mark Worcester, Chris L.

Olson and Ace Metcalf; Divison 5, Poultry Rabbits, Mrs. Abigail Lundfelt; Division 6, Alaska Family Life Display, Mrs. Sam Harbo; Division 7, Culinary, Grange Bake-Off, Mrs. Richard Scott and Mrs. Richard Hall; Division 8, Home Preservation, Mrs.

C.E. Thacker (Grange Bake-Off, Buck Hazen). Division 9, Clothing, Mrs. Irene Christie and Mrs. Joyce Gibson; Division 10, Weaving, Mrs.

Lydia Fohn Hansen; Division 11, Flower Show Wild Flowers, Mrs. Alice Wisel and Mrs. Shirley Bouletle; Division 12, Creative Crafts, Mrs. Helen Simpkin and Mrs. Ardena Morway; Division 13, Fine Arts, Mrs.

Margaret' Boyd; Division 14, Native Arts, Mrs. Georgianna Lincoln and Emma Widmark; Division 15, Hobby, Mrs. Pat Clark; Division 16, Mushrooms, Miss Ann a i i i 1 7 Homemakers Club Booths, Tienna Schermerhorn; Division 18, 4-H Demonstrations, Mrs. Sally Burris; Division 19, Knitting and Crocheting, Mrs. Charles May; Division 20, Education, Mrs.

Charmaine Smith; Division 21, Needlework, Mrs. Corraine Pirie; Division 22, Photography, Nancy Soignier and Al McNeil; Division 23, Berries, June Siegrist. All non-perishable entries should be entered Wednesday, August 12, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Deadline for perishable entires is 12 noon, Thursday, Aug.

13. Judging will follow Thursday afternoon immediately after closing of en tries. Further information on fair exhibits may be obtained by contacting any of the division superintendents or calling the fair office. Fairbanks Daily Ntws-Miner, Tittldty, AufuM NarodicK. 402 Lignite, pump house 'condition.

$4000i J- 1209 20th, HrHt dlQfllng- A Rootlns, 1100 We" moS J. McCauley, 1 1 33 Park Drive, house. BOKO CERTIFICATES Ty R. Diwton Road, dwelling, MO R. ow Rlcnardson Hlonway, Jonn A.

Puckett, 3 Mlki LOOP, iimilion Mueller UA's new arts dean POSEIDON FIRED FROM SUB-With a Soviet spy ship standing by to observe, the nuclear submarine James Madison fired the first submerged launching of the Navy's new multiple-warhead Poseidon missile 30 miles east of Cape Kennedy, Fla. A U.S. destroyer kept the Russian ship 3,000 yards away. After the launch the Soviet trawler made a futile attempt to retrieve parts of the sub's launch tube and in making the attempt almost collided with a U.S. Navy support ship.

(APWirephotol ByPATMONOHAGN UA Newsservice Dean Walter J. Mueller is a practical man as well as an academician. "There is a friction point between the academic and the practical realms," he asserts, "at which the struggle of creativity takes place. That's an exciting, but difficult, place to be." Mueller assumed the post of dean of the University of Alaska College of Arts and Letters last week, returning to an academic career which he left 27 years ago. In the interim, he has devoted himself to government service in the Department of State, handling practical matters of "peacekeeping." Certainly, his life has been spent meeting the challenge of uniting the practical and the theoretical.

After receiving his B.A. and M.A. in German from Wesleyan i i in Connecticut, Mueller went to Germany, where he studied at the Universities of Heildelberg and Jena. Returning to the United States, he earned his Ph.D. in German and French i a a Germanic philolosy at New York's Cornell University in 1938.

Several years of teaching and scholastic research followed, to be interrupted by World War II, Mueller entered the U.S. Army serving in the infantry and in intelligence. This enforced departure from academic work determined the direction of the next quarter-century of Mueller's life, for he is only now resuming his full-time university career. a a appointments have included positions as director of the Berlin Document Center, biographic officer for Germany and. U.S.

General in New Brunswick, Canada. During these years, he has traveled and lectured extensively abroad on political and cultural subjects, and has maintained close ties with the university community as well. He served as diplomat-in-residence and visiting professor of International Relations in 1965 at Knox College. For the past four years he has been dean of the Center for Area and Country Studies at the Foreign Service Institute of the Department of State. It is no surprise to find a man of a a varied background espousing the cause i i "Knowledge is one, and not a a i he a i "even though administrative reasons often demand the departmental structure.

division! between studies are plywood walls, nothing more." "When I look out my window and see that panorama," he maintains, "what I see brings to mind more than just, for instance, the laws of physics. To look at that landsccape, I must take into account aesthetics, as well as geography, history, and many other fields. WALTER J. MUELLER U. S.

sources feel Soviets lost dogfight to Israelis Defense to seek mistrial LOS ANGELES (AP) Defense attorneys in the Sharon Tate murder trial say they'll ask again for a mistrial today because President Nixon said defendant Charles M. Manson is "guilty, directly or indirectly, of eight murders without reason." One of the lawyers, Paul Fitzgerald, said of Nixon's comments: "We know this is unprecedented in the history of jurisprudence. Seldom if ever has a president taken an interest in a state murder trial." "I am shocked and bewildered," Fitzgerald said. "If the President of the United States is going to say this, then the ball game is over." Nixon issued a statement later in Washington saying that he didn't intend to speculate about Manson's guilt or innocence. "The defendants should be presumed to be innocent at this stage of their trial," he said.

Nixon's original remarks, made to newsmen at Denver, reached the courthouse at lunch recess Monday. When court resumed, all attorneys approached the bench for a conference with Superior Court Judge Charles Older. Court sources said Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek, made a motion for a mistrial on the basis of prejudicial publicity. He was joined by attorneys Daye Shinn and Ronald Hughes. The motion, Fitzgerald said iater, was "denied without prejudice," meaning it could be renewed at a later date.

"The judge was alarmed," said Fitzgerald, "and the judge's main concern was to verify what the President had said. The judge said he wasn't sure that the President had said that." He said the judge-who had no public comment--indicated U.S. officials admit bomb runs at Cambodian request SAIGON (AP) American officials in Saigon admitted today that U.S. planes are bombing in Cambodia in response to requests from Cambodian authorities. "We are responding to anyone's request for interdiction missions in the area of Cambodia," one official said.

Informed sources disclosed that as many as 50 American fighter-bombers, each carrying about eight tons of bombs and rockets, are taking part each day in raids on Cambodian territory. The U.S. Command repeated its earlier statement that U.S. air attacks in Cambodia are directed at "enemy troops or material which could threaten U.S. and other free world lives in South Vietnam." But other officials gave the impression that American planes are also attacking Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops that threaten Cambodian forces.

"If the Cambodians say there is an enemy troop concentration or supply area at a given point," said one source, "and U.S. bombers go in to interdict, this seems well within President Nixon's ground rules." "We sometimes get a peripheral or side benefit," said another official. "If it happens to be enemy troops, we're not going to complain. But officially it's interdiction." The Cambodian deputy commander in the Kiri Rom area southwest of Phnom Penh told newsmen Monday that U.S. Air Force Phantoms were supporting his troops by regularly bombing enemy forces in his area, which is miles west of any known enemy supply to South Vietnam.

Cambodian commanders in Man dies as ship burns near Kodiak the Siem Reap-Angkor area, at the other end of Cambodia from Vietnam, reported last weekend that U.S. and Thai planes from Thailand were hitting the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese in that area. American air attacks in support of Cambodian forces also were reported at Skoun, an important road junction 40 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, and at Kompong Thorn, the largest town in central Cambodia 80 miles north of Phnom Penh. The Cambodian military spokesman in Phnom Penh reported today that government troops after three days of heavy street fighting had driven a large Communist force out of Kompong Thorn. But he reversed a previous announcement that Skoun had been retaken and said the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese continued to hold that town.

The Phnom Penh government sent reinforcements to join the fight for Skoun. A battalion commander there reported major elements of the enemy force had begun moving westward toward Kompong Chhnang. he would rather rule on the matter after studying the President's statement. Fitzgerald said the defense fears the jury, although sequestered, may be "tainted" by the comments, and possibly the judge as well. He said that although the jury doesn't read newspapers or see television accounts of the case, "there are many possible HOUSE SESSION (Continued from Page 1) executive session will entail discussion of just how the committee will proceed on its consideration of the claims act.

Pollock, who has publicly urged Haley to use the Senate bill as a "matrix" and to commence drafting without further hearings, will interrupt his gubernatorial campaign long enough to attend the Wednesday session where he will presumably present his case more forcefully. Hickel, who presented the Nixon Adminstration's version of a settlement bill to both Interior committees more than a year ago, remained in the background while the Senate considered the legislation. But he is known to oppose at least three major provisions in the Senate bill: --That the $500 million federal contribution be dispersed over a period of 12 years rather than the 20 contained in the Interior Department package. -That an additional sum up to $500 million in the form of an over-riding two per cent royalty, be paid mostly from state oil and mineral revenues. -That the Arctic Slope Native A i a i be granted sub-surface rights to an additional 500,000 acres of land in addition to the total of 10 million acres granted to Native villages in fee simple.

The Interior Department proposal contained no provision for revenue sharing and included no sub-surface rights whatsoever. Whether Hickel's objections to the Senate version spring from philosophical beliefs or a conviction that the House will simply not act favorably upon so generous a package could not be determined at this time. I observers here, however, believe that Haley shares many of the secretary's doubts. leaks." Among them, he said, are visits from jurors' spouses on weekends and the chance a juror might glance at a newsstand headline while riding to and from court. Nixon's remarks in Denver came as he arrived for a conference on law enforcement.

"Here is a man who was Juilty, directly or indirectly, of aight murders without reason." A I (AP)-Bits and pieces of evidence have convinced some U.S. sources that Soviet fliers lost an aerial battle to Israeli airmen when four MIGa jets were downed over the Suez Canal area last week. Neither Israel nor the United States has confirmed reports that Russians were piloting the four warplanes. If the reports are true, it would be the first known occasion in which the Israeli air force tangled directly with Soviet pilots in combat. American sources said they understood the MIGs were flown more aggressively than has been the case when Egyptians were known to be in the cockpits.

And they said one pilot who bailed out from his stricken MIG was shown to be a blond Hickel has thus felt constrained to enter the conflict far more directly than at any time previously. He and Aspinall spent the past weekend together at the Saranac Lake estate of Mrs. Merriweather Post, a New York philanthropist. Upon his return Monday, the secretary requested a meeting with Haley. The two spent more than an hour together in the Florida Democrat's office Monday afternoon.

The apparent urgency with which Hickel has injected himself into the House proceedings has led some observers to suggest that Pollock, distracted by his tight primary battle with Gov. Keith Miller, has been less than effective in prosecuting the land claims matter with the Interior committee on which he sits. This is vehemently denied by the congressman's staff. "Congressman Pollock's position on the legislation is well known," John Katz, his legislative assistant told me in response to the complaints from Hickel's aide. "His amendments to the Senate bill have already been submitted to Chairman A i a a i a memorandum explaining his views.

He has made known his availability to both the chairman and Haley for all executive and mark-up sessions." Katz also said he doubted additional hearings would be held. "We've already had two sets of executive sessions in response to requests from Congressman Pollock, and it would seem puzzling why additional hearings had to be held at this time," he said. Further hearings would cast a long shadow over the prospects for any claims settlement to emerge from the current session of Congress. The House is scheduled to adjourn for three weeks on Aug. 13.

KODIAK, Alaska (AP) One man was killed and a 186-foot, which had been handling salmon in Alaska waters. ol Inltltult, 130,000. July nll Yinkovl'n Road, dwtiilm. W.OOO. an explosion and fire Monday aboard the Francisca near Kukak Bay between the Alaska Peninsula and Kodiak Island.

Officials identified the dead man as John Tomco, age unknown, an employe of Lewis Refrigeration Co. of Woodinville, Wash. He was killed when an explosion of undetermined origin ripped the ship's compressor room and spread and ammonia vapors throughout the vessel. Mel Vega of Seattle, an agent for Dlllingham Foods of Seattle, identified Tomco. The Seattle firm operated the freezer ship, Dallay, with saving the lives of the other 36 men aboard the vessel.

The Rosemary, which was nearby when the explosion occurred, took the survivors aboard until a Coast Guard vessel arrived. The crew was evacuated to Kodiak. Tomco was believed to have been on watch in the engine room at the time of the blast. Vega said Dick Van Dyke, a crewman, donned in ammonia mask in an effort to save Tomco but was driven back by the fire. A marine surveyor crew was scheduled to Investigate the explosion and Inspect the Francisca later Tuesday.

Erwin takes seat Veterans of Foreign Wars on Supreme Court credit memorial participants ANCHORAGE (AP)- Robert C. Erwin, an Anchorage attorney, was swom in as an associate justice on the Alaska supreme court Monday. Erwin, 35, fills the vacancy left by the elevation of George Boney to the post of Supreme Court Chief Justice. The swearing-in ceremony was at the federal courthouse in Anchorage. Erwin, a lifelong Democrat, is the youngest member of the high court and the second member of his party to win appointment to the Alaska court system during recent Republican administrations.

The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 10029 and auxiliary Post 3629 and auxiliary and American Legion Post 11 have commended participants in Saturday's memorial dedication. VFW commander Paul Neivar said groups who participated in helping fund the memorial dedicated to Fairbanks area veterans at Wien Park deserved special recognition. Those participating included Masons No. 162, Amaranth, The Bethel V.D.I.O.J.B., Elks No. 1551, Pioneers Igloo No.

4, Fire Department, Moose, First National Bank, Borealis Kiwanis Club, Chapel of Chimes, Fairbanks Plumbing, Meyers Real Estate, Fairbanks Realty, Birch Hill Cemetery Works. Army participants included Lt. Col. Orland Moore, representing the Ft. Wainwright commander; color guard members S.Sgt.

Charles J. Funck, guard, S.Sft. James CranfkHd, Spec. 5 Michael Smith, and Spec. 4 George Brown; Spec.

4 Bob Adomo, echo bugler; and Pfc. Samuel Jacobs, bugler; and members of the Company Infantry ceremonial rifle squad led by 1st Lt. Dennis Hitzeman. Stroecker urges land office here Now is the time to extract i political candidates to set up a state land office in Fairbanks, W.G. Stroecker told the Chamber of Commerce board of directors yesterday.

He said also that the Bureau of Land Management should bring back to Fairbanks and three adjudicators which were assigned to this office prior to a move to Anchorage. Stroecker said there are 12,000 claims which will have to be adjudicated as soon as the land freeze is lifted and that while the individual records are now in Fairbanks, adjudication will be done in Anchorage under the present setup. This means, he said, that as each claim is adjudicated the record for that particular claim will have to be sent to Anchorage. He said the chamber should take action on this and that Secretary of the Interior "Wally Hickelistheboss." State Sen. John Butrovich noted that the legislature had appropriated money to pave the general aircraft area at Fairbanks International Airport, but asked "where is the paving? This is one summer we need all the employment we can get." Manager Wally Baer gave a situation report on the Alaska Railroad spur from existing tracks to the airport.

He said the necessary paper work had been completed and sent to John Manley, general manager of the ARR. A local firm has been engaged for survey work. 'The rails will reach the airport by this fall," he said. Cherished right going to vote WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate appears near a showdown vote on whether to revoke a congressman's cherished prerogative to announce defense contracts awarded to firms in his district. When a congressman makes such an announcement, argues Sen.

John J. Williams, it leaves the impression of influence peddling. Williams's amendment, attached to the $19.2 billion military procurement bill, would require all defense contract awards to be announced first by the Pentagon, Under present practice, the Defense Department gives advance notice to the representative or senator who makes the announcement--whether or not he had anything to do with the contract. when his helmet fell off. Many Russians are blond.

Arabs have black hair. Other reports indicate monitored radio conversations in Russian came from MIGs fighting with Israeli warplanes over Egypt last week. The U.S. officials did not say where they got their information. But obviously they consider it accurate.

The Israelis, it is believed, are likely to avoid any public boats of victories over Russians for fear the Soviets would be stung into a bigger and more direct battle role. The United States is anxious to tamp down the already explosive Mideast Crisis, especially since there is movement toward a truce along the Israeli-Egyptian front. Prospects of the truce are pegged to a U.S. cease-fire plan which prompted Israel's right- wing Gahal party to quit Prime Minister Golda Meir's coalition government early today. The walkout effectively toppled the coalition government formed more than three years ago.

Sources said they were confident at least two of the MIGs in last week's battle were piloted by Russians, and possibly all four were Soviet-flown. Professionals said they would not be surprised at Russian defeats in aerial combat with the Israelis because the Israelis are battle veterans while the Soviet air force has not fought since World War II. The Russians were understood to have sent about 100 pilots to Egypt, some of them specifical- ly for training the Egyptian air force and the others to fly combat patrols, apparently designed to protect surface-to-air misile sites and bases where Russian advisories and hardware are located. Unification survey set A questionalre prepared by the Unification Study Committee has been sent to approximately 120 Fairbanks city and borough residents. Selwyn Carrol, chairman, aid the questionnaire "is being mailed to various individuals, civic organizations and businoan in an attempt to determine local opinions on unification." The committee was created by resolutions of the Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly, Fairbanks City Council and North Pole City Council and charged to study all legislation and other available information relevant to unification of local governments into one single unit of home-rule government.

The Juneau-Douglas city and borough governments have been unified, and Anchorage is taking steps toward unification. Sitka also is studying the question. Carrol said that initially it was hoped to have a recommendation by October, but it now appears a recommendation will not be forthcoming until after the first of the year. TOCKMARKET NEW YORK (AP)-The New York Stock Market has closed slightly higher in light trading. The Dow Jones closing stock avenges: 30 industrial 725.90 up 2.94; 20 transportation 130.26 up 1.41; 15 utilities 103.66 down 0.73:65 stocks 227.88 up 0.83.

NEWYORK(AP) Evans Pd -Tuesday's select- Fairch 20 cdNew YorkSlock Firestne 43 V. Exchange closing FMC Co 'A prices: Food Fair 13 7 A-- 'A Close Chg. For 'A Admiral 7 Freep Sul Allied Ch 'A Frueh Cp Allied Sir 227A- 'A OAC Cp 18 Allis Cha! 'A Gam Sko Alcoa 'A Gen Dyn 20 7 A Am Hess 7 A Gen Elec 'A Am Airlin Gen Fds 'A Gen Mills 26 7 'A Am Can Gen Mot Am CySg V. Tel El 24 7 -A Am Cyan 'A Gen Tire x7 AMet Cl Ga Pac Am Mtrs 6 'A Gillette Am Smelt 'A Glen Aid I Am Std Goodrch 23'A Am TIT Goodyr Ampcx 15 Gt WnUn If A- 'A Anacond 24 Green Gt 7 A- ArmcoStl20'A Greyhnd 14 -'A Armour Gulf OU 'A Armst Ck 27 Hecla All Rich 5W-1 Hew Pack 2t Atlas Corp 'A Holly Sug 'A Avon Pd 'A Komestk 23 'A Beat Fds 21'A-- Honywl Beech Air PA Idaho Pw 2S'A- 'A Bell How Ideal Bas 11 Bendii 22U-- 'A 111 Cent IS 1 Beth Stl 'A IBM Boeing 13 Int Han- 22'A-- 'A Boise Cas 49'i- A Int Nick Brist My 52 7 A- 'A Int Pap 3fA- Brit Pet Int TtT 'A Brunswk 14 'A Jewel Co 41 -1 Bucy Er 'A Jone Lau Sudd Co 7'A Kaiser 28 7 'A Burl Ind 39 'A Kencott 43 Burl Nor 'A Kerr Burghs 'A Kraftco 3A Case Jl Kresge 40 Castle Ck 20 7 A Libby Vt Celap Cp 58 Litton 'A Cerro Cp Lockhd t'A- 'A Cert-td 15'A- 'A Lone WA- 'A Cessna A 'A Lone '4 CF1 Stl 'A LVO 'A Macy 28'A Chrysler 'A Mad Fd 'A Cities Svc 'A Magvox 30 Coca Cola Marathn 26 'A 'A Marcor 'A Martin 14'A Colu Gas McDon 15'A- 'A Minn Comsat 3S'A Mobil 'A Con Edis If A- 'A Monsan 33 7 A- Con Food 'A Mont Cont Air Mont Pw 'A Cont Can 'A Ml Fuel 'A Cont Oil tPA- 'A Mt StaTT 21 'A Cont 34 Nwst Air 'A Cowles Nwt Bane 31'A Crow Col 'A Occident 15'A Olln Cp 15'A Dart Ind WA- 'A Omark 12 Were Co Oulbd 15'A- DenR Or Ow 4 I Dillon Co 14'A- A Disney 1K 7 Jj iiul i aim 1 1:21 Dresa Ind 'A JJ, duPont AltLin 'A Kodak 't Eaton Ya 2i'A 1 A TM ElPaao 1C Penney 'A Tenneco 19 'A Pepsi Texaco 28 7 A PhelPS 'A Tex Sul IS'A-- 'A Phil Mor 3M Tex Ins 'A Phil Pet 'A Textron Polarid 60 fhiokol TA Procter 'A Timken 2S 'A Pub Col 'A Todd Shp 23 Pullman 'A TWA RCA 'A Trans Am 14 'A RepubStlJS'A-'A Tri Cnt Roy Out 'A TRW if A-- Safeway 28'A- "A Twent Cnt 'A 24 'A UAL St Rg 33 'A Un Carb 'A Sa Fe Ind 'A Un Elec IT 7 Schenly 7 A- Un Cal Schring 7 A Un PacCp S3 7 SCM 12 7 'A Un Pac Scott 'A Uniryal 'A Scars 'A Unit Cp Shell US Gyp 52 US Ind 13 Sou Co 'A US Ply Sou Pac 'A US Sn.lt Sou Ry 47 I 'A US Stl 31 Sperry 2V -r- 'A Lam iB'A-- A Std Brnds40 Was Wat A Std Cal 3 A Wstn Air A Std Ind Wn nc Std Pack 'A UB 1 JJ Stauff 30 Wyrh'sr Studwth 44 A-- 1 i 9C74 WOOlWth swill Xerox 71 7 Teledyn 'A 01 Stock Sales: 8,310,000. Fairbanks intarest stocks providtd by the local offic.

ol FosMr ft Marshall Alaska Statt Bank Building. KingRescS'A AlkaInstl2'A A i Alaska SI Bk 47 Parker Drill a Aloha Air 1 Rocket Resit 14 Asaraera OU 11 Rown Rown Drill 11 Baxter Lab Slboney 1 Benguet5'A Sonics 4 Cnd Soth Pet Telex 11 Earth Resources 1 'UN Canso a WsUteifetetU Hom.OaGl* We.1 Dekalla 4 Home Oil Home Oil 14 Vi Wilson Wts 3 4 Xtra Kent Fr Ch 'Not Final NEW YORK (AP-SOOt nonMnOW metal prkti Tuesday: Sold (3545 troy ounce. Ntw York; SWu 1.74 pa( troy txinct.Nm York. British Petrol Industrials m.N Transportation I9t.li Utilities 1I3.H POUMl Cawkan tictanit.

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About Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Archive

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