Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (Newspaper) - February 6, 1960, Fairbanks, Alaska CITY NEWS EV BRIEF Military Traffic Some 143 Army trucks will be using the highway between Eielson and Sourdough Feb 7 and 8 Motorists are warned to watch out for the traffic starting at midnight tonight Drivers should be especially cautious at Richardson house Mile 293 where refuel ing will be carried out Also j there will be a camp area Fort Greely where traffic will ft be heavy The trucks moving in connection with a cold weather Ice Racing Ice racing will begin here Sunday on the gravel pit Daily News men America's Farthest North Newspaper Member of The Associated Press FAIRBANKS SATURDAY FEBRUARY 6 Ten Pai No Sf ICE POOL Police City police today continued their investigation of a re- south of town where ported attack on a voung races were held last summer woman Thursday to attend Races will run Sun available The Coin Club Meet Fairbanks Coin t no de- that the neighborhood disclosed that no one had seen the attacker The woman told police a I man wearing a silk hose mask En Airliner Tragedy Report Engine Burst Aflame After Takeoff wiil meet p.m Monday 1 and carrying a gun had en- at the USD Dave Adler her Sne said he today A LA PAZ Bolivia Feb 6 UP The death toll in Bolivia's her eyes and raped worst aviation disaster reached Before leaving he took members only but ed persons are invited to at- tend he said the tape off and covered her head with a pillowcase 59 today as the lone survivor succumbed to injuries The woman said the Jemy Escobar two-year-old took place between 2 j Bolivian child was the only Forshaug Back and 3 p.m Thursday in found alive when Jens Forshaug of the j home on the east end of First I cuers reached the tion office has returned to i report was made to u Fairbanks after a month until nearly hours later while being Los Angeles He tne woman's husband taken to a hospital at to take an advanced returned home from work bamba course in his work and bowling Nine other children died in the crash of the flaming Measure OK'd House Action Awaited Would Legalize Ice Classics And Specified Ticket Sales Raffles And Other Activities If Is Approved JUNEAU Feb 6 springtime an fancy lightly turns to thoughts of how he would love to hold a winning ticket on a lottery Now the first step has been taken toward legalizing such romantic aspirations The state senate yesterday approved a to tion certain forms of lotteries and raffles including church and fraternal bingo games and i salmon derbies and dog sled races range from new automobiles and boats to dinners on the town State Sen Ralph Moody an Anchorage Democrat who heads the judiciary committee in the upper legislative ber said it was time to facts Let's have the tude to admit what's on going Moody senate majority leader helped sponsor the as a means of controlling non- profit and charitable gambling activities Unless such Miss Reed Here The traveling nurse at Tanana Miss Bar bara Reed is in Fairbanks for a few days on business She came to Alaska clever months ago Ladd Air Force Base Legislature At a By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Alaska winding up its second week today was about a ter of the way through Us projected maximum session of 60 days Most of the major items scheduled to come before the lawmakers in their second annual state session have been introduced and are being worked over in committees ICE One key sure came to the floor of the senate and was passed legalizing Alaska's traditional ice pools as well as bingo lotteries and raffles conducted by certain groups around the state Lloyd Aereo Bolivians airliner j Airline officials said seven Americans were among victims j Mountain Scene j The scene of the was high in the Andes 20 miles from Cochabamba I oi communications confusion following the Ml IV prevented newsmen Five Bills Approved By Senate JUNEAU Feb 6 state senate before moving on the controversial newsmen ANCHORAGE 6 yesterday gave quick from obtaining accurate Se 1 h unanimous approval to five mation immediately The vv pieces of minor legislation I i v u ifor a twin engine amphibian P The five S stm has tWQ Permit presiding superior court judges to appoint riage commissioners now named by U S District Court LADD ANSWERS FIRE fire believed to have started in the furnace room of a house at 923 23rd Ave yesterday noon brought under control by the Ladd AFB fire department The structure is owned by Loyd W Shaw Sr pastor of the United Pentecostal church who also runs a music business in his home there A Mrs Lick 916 23rd Ave across the street noticed smoke coming from the furnace room and reported it Two Ladd fire trucks responded The furnace room was completely burned Smoke and water damage red to the apartments There was no estimate of age Photo Service The big item covered by the I adopted he contended is Alaska's favorite m senate arguments the at- ing to pick the Biosphere of the prohibition would exact minute sometime ing the spring when the ice will break on the Tanana Search For the the Cuban Police Blamed for Shooting warnings were up this year that the new State j Department of Public Safety planned to enforce laws now on the books unless the legislature otherwise Upwards of people who make the Nenana Ice a habit would been affected have been made public The Americans were fied through the state ment Eliminate John C Manning his wife requirement Flora and son John Jr no- that the administrative to the Delta Western or of the Alaska court Co Jackson Miss tern be located at the same Fran Ellen Reynolds and place as the headquarters sons Jack Clifford the State Supreme and John Alvin vanished yesterday on j flight from King Salmon to Anchorage The plane a Grumman geon was piloted by Audet Name was not immediately The Civil Air Patrol in An- launched a search at I dawn Editor's This is the fifth in a series of articles by Charles R Hoyt a ber of Senator Bartlett's Washington staff HAVANA Feb S W The Smaller Pools impression developed today I So would or three other course it isn't likely the shooting smaller ice operations good taxi drivers would threw the of the salmon i derbies fur rendezvous and one put exposition into being what it is from trigger ri winter carnivals whose happy ties are supported by the sale Cuban guards and police of raffle tickets for prizes that Continuing silence at police era would return where everybody is turned into a law breaker Seaborn J Buckalew Jr another Democrat disagreed What the senate is doing now is walking on a crate of eggs and you can't do that without breaking some eggs Lid Opened Buckalew cast one of the two opposition votes against passage of the ing it opened the lid this is the start right here He predicted approval of the would lead eventually to open legalized gambling in the state The now goes to the house Buckalew said he ex- the people of Alaska Continued en t Col 1 don't dangle temptation Have you ever ridden in a Actually the system hero taxi cab in to be If you have it's an contributed to a belief the gunfire that n I marred Soviet First I ft forget it not Anastas I Mikoyan's itt h nave rider and not the driver vou would like I of the forget and if you a known you should try it and thence there is no place S Accepts Existence like Washington not The first thing about with lea ir ito i tO tne Stt riding in Washington just like Provide legal framework j notification t visit solely from official efforts to break UD an Anti- s street lights You're lucky if you can travel block without being i stepped by a red light No but Senators could afford except the conserv WASHINGTON Feb 6 accepts the Havana morning Nine More File As Lobbyists JUNEAU Feb 6 number of registered lobb ists at the 1960 legislative se sion has doubled since the la listing of representatives ficially following various bil at Juneau The lobbyists now numbe 18 with these John P Irvine representing the N a t i o n a Assn of Mutual Saving Banks Stanton W Allisor Portland Ore Title Trust Co of Alaska J Wakefield Port Wakefield Fisheries Jame D Fennel Juneau Veteran of Foreign Wars Josep Briones Juneau the Amer can Legion N C Banfield Juneau Juneau and Dougla Co Felix Toner Juneau Southeast Conference J Dood Auke Bay America Legion and Denton R Moore Naknek Alaska Fishing In dustry Inc There Wasn't A Dog In Sight DETROIT Feb 6 There wasn't a dog in sight when mailman Lome bigler 23 walked up on the porch of a house in ban Mount Clemens Friday But as was dropping the mail through a slot in the front door he be- came the victim of a sneak attack A terrier named Tinker was waiting inside the house for the mail carrier's gers to pop through the slot When they appeared Tinker grabbed hold with her teeth Winbigler was given a tet anus shot at a hospital and returned to his ing gloves mining claims from July 1 to 1 Sept 1 Prohibit unjust tion in employment because of age The latter measure was passed by the house last sion and now goes to the governor for his signature Caught Fire An airline spokesman said one of the plane's four en- gines had caught fire takeoff from a city IVb miles high in the flight here times that takes some doing It especially takes a lot The plane owned by doing if you are alone sav of Lake Hood baseball or football Corl had four hours hundreds of people are of fuel wnen it left King on the streets together ride in a metered Diario De La legislated in lieu of down the Senate employees erupted in a nearby i RQ Dd rt existence of Russian capable of launching i missiles but lacks sufficient i information 10 determine scheduled gress runs tne Soviet Exposition on Page 3 col 8 Fine ArDS mon yesterday morning they charge by the the drivers Andes of central Bolivia the flight takes about jnead minutes later the two and a half hours in intn a nf meted into a lagoon She'll Wait For Lover instead of just one Gives Advise The thing to do if you're alone is to stand next to a roup Then you frantically Two Killed as Fighter Plane Plunges into Home ration ofi at JUNEAU Feb 6 Helen Fischer yesterday introduced a asking Congress to in- crease the fiscal 1961 ation for the proposed study of the Rampart project The memorial notes the Corps of Engineers has asked whether any of them ars Renewed speculation about the progress of the Soviets efforts to build nuclear sub- marines followed an Oslo newspaper report yesterday bat three undersea vessels intermediate range siles with atomic warheads are patrolling the Arctic Ocean off Norway The Norwegian newspaper gave no source for the report Norwegian authorities declined comment and the United States i compassing gesture and when Ithe driver stops dart out in and take off It's DENVER Colo Feb 6 from the craft as Eisenhower included in the federal for for the said it had no nary study next year wave your arm in an Two airmen were killed lare began its plunge over sneaky you are as unpopular and spewed flames and near the flaming wreckage a skunk in a breeze with over two homes ALFRED Feb 6 W aero- iC hi w Sor who vowed to tor her Dorothy Lebohner 18 was in and returned from New York anything the Friday when their jet trainer crashed into a ily populated residential area east Denver His parachute had insufficient time to open and he smashed into a vard budget The total estimated cost for the proposed study is Wednesday night by police ter a brief rendezvous with her boy friend Officers found Dorothy feur can do it but drive One of the homes was va cant A housekeeper the only occupant ran from the othe as flames the struc ture The plane was Warren Sutton 21 of Chester that's the way the Tuesday night holding hands as they watched a movie Tides of I in a 42nd street theater Now that you're in one o New York probably never see Lowry Air Force Base for them again anyway so landing when it plunged into la vie English translation ja yard and skidded into the cookie rear of a brick home where Mi's Anne Marie Scheon 41 was working ir the basement She ran to safe CAMERA Lebohner 18 huddles and talks to Warren Sutton former Alfred University basketball player in West street police station after they were discovered in a Times Square movie house Miss Lebohner a freshman at the university where her father is treasurer had been dating the Negro athlete She was returned to her home at Alfred N Y as -a Wayward girl Prm A warrant charging her as a wayward girl was waiting her arrival Behind doors she responded to the charge as a youthful offender and was turned over to her parents Mr and Mrs Edward K Lebohner I'm going to marry the girl said before she left New York They may tear us apart day but they will not stop us We can wait for our day Sutton who met Dorothy last summer while waiting on tables in the Alfred sity dormitory also pledged his love despite parental op- position to the match I can wait he said I love her more than anything in life and I'll slave to make her happy I the seemingly thousands taxis you ignore the tered oaths of the driver anc give him your destination This you do as if you know where you're going even ii you don't The principle be- hind this is that the city is zoned and crossing one street can put you in another zone More money Partly cloudy tonight cloudy with occasional light snow tomorrow Low tonight plus 5 high tomorrow plus 20 High yesterday plus 17 low last night plus 12 Noon temperature plus 19 row sunrise set p.m The house was de The owner and his two children were away The crash victims were identified as Capt Elwood R Keeran 35 and Lt Jack D Cook 26 students at Lowry's fighter system school They were on a routine training flight Keeran is survived by his wife and three children aged months to 4 years and his parents Mr and Mrs James L Keeran of National City alif Cook's survivors include his wife and son and his Barents Mr and Mrs Arthur Cook of Roseville 111 Cause of the crash was not immediately determined Keeran died in the age of his plane Witnesses said they had seen Cook eject TRAGIC Melville Leathly of San co attempts to comfort Mrs Joyce Pearce on a downtown street immediately after her husband was seriously in- jured in an auto accident Her husband Jack was taken to the hospital with head injuries Henry Ingwerson Bulletin photographer took this dramatic picture Prest Safety Programs Needed in State SEATTLE Feb 6 Alaskan pointed out the need of safety programs in his state at a safety institute for small independent loggers at the Uni- versity of Washington School of Forestry Friday Robert president of the Alaska Loggers Assn one of four Alaskans at he session said it's a matter for us Insurance rates are so high in Alaska that they are one of our biggest expenses I like to take it easy on Sunday but that's difficult When you don't do nothing any day taking it it real hard