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Fairbanks Daily News Miner
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Fairbanks Daily News Miner

   Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (Newspaper) - June 2, 1965, Fairbanks, Alaska                                CITY NEWS Club Lists The Fairbanks Chamber of Commerce wishes that all and community clubs and organizations forward in writing the following to be kept on file at the rent meeting time and day of ing and phone and whether the meetings are open to the University Women The Fairbanks branch of the AAUW will sponsor German and Spanish classes Classes will meet three times weekly from June 28 through July 23. For mation call Mrs. Mary Kay Barsdate or Mrs. Jean Gordon Catholic Women Ladies of the Catholic Church have been invited to breakfast with the Ft. Wainwright ladies following Sunday Mass. For reservations and tion call Mrs. Donna Rose at 452-3713 by Marian Society The Marian Society will meet at 8 p.m. Thursay in the ment of Catholic A work session will follow and all members are asked to bring items for the guilds and a pair of CAB Ruling Causes Turmoil With Airlines LATE Daily News North Daily Member of The Associated Press II O M I Kill TI OX Per Copy JUNE 2, 1965 No. 12S ASTRONAUTS READY Information Center The Information ter in the entrance to the U of A Museum will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. A ing tour of the campus is uled for every afternoon at 2 p.m. Native Association The Fairbanks Native will meet at 8 p.m. on June 8 at the Hospitality Prospective members may join at this Eagles Installation The Fraternal Order of gles and Auxiliary will hold an officer installation and ball at 8 p.m. Friday in the Eagles The public is Combat Toll Now at 401 In Viet Nam Crews Killed When Hit by Enemy South Viet Nam Communist antiaircraft fire shot down two U. S. Navy planes ing raids on North Viet Nam The five ican crewmen were listed as missing and presumed A rescue plane sent to reported there was no chance of survivors from either The two crashes raised the total of U.S. dead in combat in Viet Nam to 401 since December 1961. The two planes were both from the 7th Fleet carrier Mid- They were lost in an at- tack on a radar installation on the coast about 70 miles south of Plunges Into Sea An A4 Skyhawk with one pilot The aboard plunged into the sea Rebekah Lodge about a mile off the coast No Golden North RebeKah j parachute was observed Lodge will hold a plant sale A few minutes later second Stalemate Continues Striking Fairbanks area plumbers have voted to re- scind their the cal Contractors of has still taken no definite action to recall the Lee business Rr of the Plumbers and fitters Local 375 said that the union had voted to rescind their He said the con- tractors did not comply and union members are still waiting official action from the Padgett said that any ment should be made jointly by the union and the It was made clear by both parties that no union contract has been drawn up or is one seen in the immediate the Mechanical Contractors of Fairbanks their president Don C. Chandler have told the local that want a guarantee that will be no further strike or work stoppage until agreement is reached by both parties or before Dec. 31, ever is Chandler's letter June 2, 1065 Dear a meeting of the 10 a.m. Wednesday at plane a modified Al ical Contractors of 236 Feared Dead In Mine Disaster TOKYO A total of 236 men are feared dead in Japan's second worst postwar mine Rescue workers recovered 219 bodies from the Yamano on Kyushu where a gas explosion occurred nearly feet underground Police said hope was virtually er with four crewmen aboard i held June 1, 1965, the was hit and crashed about half lowing offer was unanimously a mile a military The Mechanical Con- spokesman It had been di- tractors collective bargaining verted to the area to search for I representative is anxious the plane downed at I there be no work stoppage There was no report of results of the raid on the radar It was the heaviest loss of American air crews since the raids on North Viet Nam began in In other strikes against North Viet Nam Five from the abandoned for 17 other miners j Midway reported knocking believed buried under piles down a span of a bridge aboul coal and Of the 552 miners 65 miles south of with carbon ing and other employes working in Four from the Mid- the pits when the explosion reported destroying two 316 Thirty-nine 1 battering the approach were most of them a concrete bridge and monoxide j aging a wooden bridge 55 miles south of Thanh Four destroyed a ferry landing and a barge and on Page 3, 5) A GOP Asks For Summit WASHINGTON Re- publicans called today for a free world conference on Viet Nam and announced they are sending a team of congressmen to find out what is wrong with the North Atlantic Treaty At the same House publicans declared they have moved to Implement 45 of the pledges made by the GOP The broadside of GOP policy plans and proposals came from the Republican ordinating Committee and from the House Republican policymakers avoided advocating the use of nuclear weapons in urging President Johnson to employ measures are to win the war in Viet The GOP Policy ing Committee said in a ment made available at a news conference that Johnson should call a conference of tions as will join in battling communism in Viet June 2. Considerable iness with occasional ers or possible thunder ers this afternoon through early Partly cloudy tonight with increasing high cloudiness Low night 40; high Thursday 64; low last night 39; high 54. Temperature at 11 a.m. Sunrise Thursday sunset p.m. for total of 20 hours and 45 minutes of sunlight and a gain of six Weather Elsewhere 71; 52; 26; partly 57; partly 58; partly 46. GOP ing this construction The offer of Local 375 to con- work pending negotiations offers no guarantee that the union will at its most rescind its offer to work and strike or stop an effort to assure a con- struction year without work the Mechanical Con- tractors of are prepared to resume vided that Local 375 will antee in writing that its bers will not strike or stop work until agreement is ed or before Dec. 31, 1965, whichever is and that any agreement finally reached will not contain provisions for retroactive pay or fringe Leaves for Talks BELGRADE dent Tito left Tuesday for talks with Communist leaders in Czechoslovakia and East many which are expected to center on the rift between cow and Dominican Junta Wants Elections Request Comes as Marines Leaving Caribbean Nation SANTO minican Republic The Dominican junta posed Tuesday night that elections supervised by the Organization of American States be held as soon as possible in this divided Caribbean The junta said all cratic parties recognized by the Central Electoral should be allowed to participate in the This presumably would include the Dominican party of exiled dent Juan Bosch in whose name the rebellion was launched April 25. Following the President's art that more U.S. Marines were being drawn from Santo helicopters began flying them to U.S. naval vessels Their departure reduces the U.S. contingent to Marines and paratroopers serving with Latin-American troops in the inter-American peace About other Marines and paratroops had been pulled out The rebel Col. Francisco Caamano told newsmen Sunday the er American forces the sooner the Dominican crisis would be Rebel forces captured three U.S. paratroopers Tuesday after they strayed into the rebel stronghold in downtown Santo Caamano personally released them 3V4 hours later to a commission of the United tions and the Caamano expressed hope his troops would receive a good treatment if they are The paratroopers were TAKES OATH Wallis C. Droz officially became City Manager of Fairbanks last night when he was sworn in by the deputy city Mrs. Helen O. the city manager is sworn in by the city but in this case Droz holds both who has been acting city manager Fishermen Call for Boycott of Goods From Japan as Controversy Continues SEATTLE A boycott i and spreading he of all goods shipped to the ed States by Japan for sale was Tuesday by the Congress of American W. G. president of the fied as 2nd Lt. Alvin R. Gelb of said Japanese have and nio Hernandez of San and Dennis Eppers of Wis. made a wrong turn and next thing we knew we were in the middle of what I thought were Dominican Gelb it turned out they We were treated Despite opposition to General Jose A. Mora from both the els and the he announced Tuesday night that he had won agreement from both sides on neutralization of the National Palace and collection of bage in rebel Carla Wins Costume Edged Out for MIAMI Fla. Dark-haired Carla Sullivan of Fairbanks nearly made it to the of the Miss U.S.A. pageant here Tuesday The attractive college student who holds the Miss Alaska title captivated the judges with her colorful Alaskan costume and she won the best state costume When the results were tallied by the panel of Carla placed 16th among the 80 girls Fifteen girls ad- to the and will compete Friday for the crown and the right to sent the United States in the Miss Universe contest in Carla was nudged out by only one position but not making it High to the did not point been a wonderful e x for me and everyone has been so she adding that she was tain that just as she learned more about her fellow cans and their respective they learned more about been inviting everyone to come to Alaska for the tennial in 1967 and I'll go on inviting everyone for it's going to be she Carla is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sullivan of view She is a more at the University of ka and a graduate of Monroe entered the disputed and we must assume they are taking Bristol Bay The CAF had threatened er to put the boycott into effect if Japanese fishing fleets started taking Alaska red salmon in the North Pacific from June 1 through June 20. These three weeks are ered by U.S. fishermen to be a critical time in the life cycle salmon spawned in streams j which enter Alaska's Bristol The fish are now beginning runs back to spawning around Bristol Bay after gling with Asiatic salmon on the high Saletic are ing with previously adopted but he declined to give details of the campaign will be on a starting on the West Coast trade and other interested will assist through the distribution of material and at- tention to details in their cular he The Japanese have admitted their fleets left for the North Pacific several days They their plans were not running counter to the treaty and would not endanger Bristol Bay salmon Rep. Thomas White Ready to Waltz In Wild Blue Yonder Preflight Countdown Begins Today With Propellent Loading Set Tonight For Space Rendezvous CAPE Fla. The man who will float alone in the heavens and his space buddy who will pilot him started the last day before flight today with good news and great Command pilot James A. McDivitt got a good and it looks like we're going to have a good We're Blastoff is scheduled for 9 a.m. EST. are McDivitt and fellow Air Force Maj. Edward H. White II the man who step out of the Gemini 4 craft and waltz in ness on their second orbit of the j There was the that these two rookie American i astronauts would get SEATTLE Anew enough to their booster rocket I air route pattern on their maneuvering early in effect today but it left bits to enable White to touch days of difficulties for booster during his weightless sengers and carriers alike in its j wake Nothing Holy I Flight plans had to be The space agency had Hundreds of earlier that they might get as gers were close as 20 feet to the tional charges had to be But mission director from many C. Kraft said that The changeover for the nothing holy about 20 ordered by the Civil Would the mission last Board in March to go into effect last that the decision would be That the CAB staved sometime after the first 24 its order five over hours of flight when the busy Memorial Day had a chance to Late yesterday all petitions for y tor reconsideration filed by the at the decay of It was a demonstration of flexibility of the flight i There was no hurry about Travelers and air line Kraft partly sald these were some of because wanted the astronauts to American World Airways er from the sent spare parts including a starter i cart which had to be intercepted at Ketchikan and returned to He said 11 The prospect for their Personnel in with a were 98-hour, 62-orbit flight were set to had to since January will receive for the dual Mrs. Finch is expected to be named as treasurer of the city but the cil delayed making the action cilman Jack Richardson and Mrs. Sylvia Ringstad are in the Stall Photo told Congress Tuesday that fishing boats had been spotted near the abstention line agreed upon in a treaty with Many Hit by Changeover In Service House Approves Haida WASHINGTON The House Interior Committee proved today a sill to permit the Tlingit and Haida Indians of Alaska to janize for disbursement of an anticipated award by the Court of The would recognize a central council and authorize of a roll of tribal including those In- dians who have left their native communities to reside outside Governor Must Rest For Few Days JUNEAU Gov. liam A. Egan was stricken with a bronchial infection lowing his whirlwind Irip to and Anchorage over the Memorial Day A spokesman for the nor said there was ty Egan had pneumonia and that he would remain in the governor's mansion here un- der Dr. Henry I. Akiyama is at- tending the 'The governor's condition is not the spokesman he was advised by his physician to keep quiet and to take it easy for a few Egan apparently felt ill when he arrived in Anchorage for the Alaska Methodist Uni- versity commencement He had left Juneau lier to speak at the High School then motored to The spokesman expressed hope Itie governor would be back to normal within few near the which is just south of the Aleutian Islands and slightly west of 175 degrees west The CAF announced a public education program to the case to the American This may include the tion of printed scientific public verbal and devices calculated to Saletic salmon must not low the course of depletion by Asiatic Bering on Page 3, col. 4) in glowing terms Tuesday by a j remain there over the weekend mission review panel of i The line had to a jet couldn't look from San Francisco foV said jend flights to Ketchikan and These men are as high a I Passenger loads then state of readiness as any crew were small as travelers thought have ever said Dr. Pacific Northern Airlines had Charles A. chief flight taken over the physician who has watched Alaska Airlines planned to on Pagt 3, Col. j on Page 3, Col. Harry O. Arend Given Federal Solicitor Post Harry 0. a 61-year-old Fairbanks attorney and former state Supreme Court has been appointed solicitor for the U.S. Department of Interior in He and his will move to Anchorage where Arend will begin work on June 17. As Arend will over- see the legal work of all the bureaus in the Department of the Bureau of Land Geological Fish and Wildlife and Alaska He will travel to June 21 to attend a con- ference for regional A former U.S. attorney in and a Justice in the Alaska Supreme Court for five I and foot the estimated at Arend has been in He indicated that an in- City Scratches lor Solution After Being Stung by Army It's been on off again The city manager also said with the city's request to have the city sold 27 bikes and 35 the U. S. Army spray impounded automobiles at an banks with an insecticide for mosquitoes this according to City j ager Wallis the project off Droz said he had met with Army officials late Friday j and had been informed that prohibit the Army spraying the city with from the In past the Army's operation has saved the city this This originally said they couldn't do it but after an exchange of ters said they Droz said that Elmendorf has instructed local brass that prohibit the military from using DDT in aerial Apparently this is the only type of insecticide currently Droz said the city will now have to do its own spraying auction on May 22. The city col- as a vate practice this since February other than DDT will probably be shouldn't too bad my is always saying she she was sweet U.  

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