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Fairbanks Daily News Miner
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Fairbanks Daily News Miner

   Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (Newspaper) - June 14, 1965, Fairbanks, Alaska                                CITY NEWS EV BRIEF Melodrama Tryouts Tryouts for the Arctic Actors production of the annual Golden Days in the will be held at p.m. Thursday and Thursday the tryout will be on the third floor of Hangar Ft. and Friday's tryout will be at the in Civilians and military personnel interested in any aspect of the production are urged to Club Lists The Fairbanks Chamber of Commerce wishes that all fraternal and community clubs and organizations forward in writing the following to be kept on file at the rent meeting time and day of ing address and phone whether the meetings are open to the Operation Headstart The Operation Headstart a series of public will begin at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Schaible ture Dr. Arthur L. professor and director of the school of medicine at Loma Linda University in Southern will speak to Live with Oth Truett Good Condition Richard 0. 22, is re ported in good condition in St Joseph's Hospital Truet was a passenger in one car accident on the Steese Friday that took the life of the Charles Richard Culwell 29. Plumbers Vote Today Union plumbers in the banks area will vote at 3 p.m. today on a new offer made to them by the Mechanical Con- tractors The offer is the result of work done by Federal mediator Barry Daily LATE II O M I Per Copy Farthest North Daily Member of The Associated Press JUNE 14, 1965 250 TROOPS KILLED Twelve No. Deny Servitude In Pribilofs President of St. Paul's Council Tells Commission Going Much Better For in Past Five By DAVE GILBERT staff Writer ST. Pribilof Islands The Pribilof Islands investigating team scheduled another public meeting after receiving a denial are being held in as charged by the Tundra Times Alaska All women interested in ing the Centennial Commission are invited to join the Women's Volunteer Bureau by calling Mrs. Colleen Bucy at 456-7672. Nazarene Bible School Vacation Bible School began at the Totem Park Church of the three blocks south of College Road on wood at 9 a.m. Ages three through junior high are invited to ESSIE DALE dies here Garden Club The Fairbanks Garden Club will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Kenneth 415 Special CRL Meeting The Community Recreation League will meet at 8 p.m. day at the of Bev 2505 MUS Board Meeting The MUS board will meet at 8 p.m. tonight at 645 The meeting will replace the ed one of last Rebekah Lodge Golden North Rebekah Lodge will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Oddfellows Temple for ness and Meeting Essie Dies at 85 Mrs. Essie R. for many s prominent woman in Fairbanks and a member of the House of Rep in Territorial days died at her home last night al the age of 85. Mrs. Dale and her husband came to Fairbanks in the from Teton where she hat been county superintendent ol schools for eight Prior to that time she was principal ol a school in Wyo. Mrs. Dale received her cation in Kansas normal schools and at the University of In 1909 she married F. who died in Fairbanks in 1951. The couple had three Henri who died last year Inez Dale now living in Anchorage and Dorothy a school teacher Mrs. Dale served in the House of in 1949. Previous to that time she was the owner of two women's apparel shops in In 1952 she was dent of the Fairbanks Retail For years she was a member of the University of Alaska Board of She also serv ed on the Fairbanks Board under the late mayo Hjalmar and wa Democratic National Commit A sored commission headed by Secretary of State Hugh J. Wade listened intently at a lic hearing over the as president of the St. Paul Community is true we were in tude up to the years after the It is true there was tude in days there has been a mendous change since 1960 when C. Howard Baltzo took over as general manager of the have gone for the and they are still going for he There is no servitude on the Pribilof Islands Charges Made a weekly newspaper at had charged in a series of articles last year that the Aleuts of the Pribilofs were be- ing deprived of their The Local 1547 will for four meet at p.m. today in the Carpenters 315 Fifth Ave. Mrs. Dale was active in affairs and in educational work During the past several years she owned and operated a rea estate firm in Mrs. Dale's body is at the Alaskan Funeral June 14. Mostly with occasional showers night and with brief afternoon sunny Low tonight 40, high Tuesday 58, high yesterday 51, low last night 41. Temperature at 1 p.m. 52. Sunrise Tuesday sunset p.m. for a total of 21 hours 41 minutes sunlight with a gain of three Weather Elsewhere 69; 60; 35; 50; partly 41; partly 45. Goldwater Says Military Should Run Viet Nam WASHINGTON Barry the 1964 Republican candidate President for says Johnson should lei the military run the Vietnamese I think the President should start being the president and stop trying to be the let the military run the he said Sunday on television the gram. The former Arizona senator also said he doesn't believe clear weapons are necessary in Viet Nam and that he wouldn't our ground forces in large-scale were if he rights and held in as director of resource management programs for the Bureau of Commercial is manager of the islands and their fur seal re- sources under a U.S. treaty with Canada and Wade told Merculief the ple of the Pribilofs were being under antiquated wt he said a sponsored by Sen. E. L. would cure most Merculief did outline some of the things he said the of the Pribilofs needed to better their living Wages Too Low He said the wage while comparable to that at the ak naval is too be- cause of the short work year and the remoteness of the At the present the must exist the year around on wages earned during the sealing which lasts only about five If the Bureau of Commercial fisheries should ever stop plying the freight costs would rise and present wages simply wouldn't be Merculief Merculief also expressed con- on page 7, Col. 1) WHAT ARE THEY WATCHING? A look of curiosity and concern appears on the faces of this gallery of people from the Cushman Street something in the Chena River below There are no smiles so it couldn't have been a boat race or someone taking a For what they are see the photographs on page 7. Stall photo BATTLE Vietnamese Airborne Battalion Wiped Out Rangers Find Many Grim Relics as They Clear Up After Struggle for Dong U.S. Send Men Forward to Guard Airport South Viet Nam Vietnamese ers combing a rubber plantation just north of the tered town of Dong found the bodies of about 250 government troops the remains of the 7th borne a U.S. military spokesman Dong was reported but braced for more trouble from the Viet Cong. As the rangers moved through the Michelin ber plantation a few miles north of Dong they found an Life Should Get Sunnier This Week In Life get sunnier Fairbanks by This is what the man said today after an- nouncing that the clouds which have been drenching the area over the weekend should be- gin breaking sometime Precipitation on Sunday reached At some three-quarters of an inch of rain had already been The rough treatment forced tion of many sporting and cial Average temperature for the weekend indicated a daily high of about 15 degrees be- low normal and a nightly low of about five below normal for this time of The weatherman was opti mistic and conditions and temperatures should improve slowly but no through the Much of the nation suffer ed wet weather on the week end with even severe hai storm recorded in Southeast ern The town of Broadus suffered more than damages from it Shades of Ancient Greece Nothing Like It Ever Happened Lathrop Teacher Will Study Mandarin Chinese in Taiwan A Lathrop High School teach er has been selected to advanced Chinese in Taiwan under the National Defense Ed Act Language Develop nient James W. Harper of Manor has been se for the overseas course according to a release by the Chinese Institute at San cisco State Harper lias attended previous studying Chinese al San He is a ate of the University of He at Guadalajara in The course in Taiwan is one f three being offered by the this summer from June 5 through Aug. 19 in an effort o alleviate the present ge of Americans proficient in le use of Mandarin The other two courses are be- ng offered at San Francisco tate The course in Taiwan will be has traveled ana the University of built around local topics of con temporary particularly in the Chinese community in Tai Linguistic discussion ant language teaching be a part of the program the main emphasis will be placed on field visits and actual oral conversation with the JAMES W. HARPER to study WASHINGTON It's and art is out al over the White It's even upstaging the From the East Room to the South the mammoth tival of the Arts has taken over for musical in- paintings and photographs are in place and scores of performers are set to go on Nothing like it has ever at the White House or anywhere else for that You could bump into der huge sculpture on the or Helen Hayes preparing to serve as mistress of A threesome from the cast o Subject Was wa catching up on rehearsal tim they missed Sunday night to ge a Tony award for the best plaj of the the White House was stage for men and women of the arts at the invitation of Presi dent and Mrs. Mrs. opening the festival she called rich feas declared all of the warmly welcomed in this She gave a special salute to ARL Okayed For Barrow BARROW A new Arctic Re search Laboratory costing million will be constructed her and will be ready for occupancy late in 1967. Plans for the new building moved ahead here today after i was learned that President John son had approved the military appropriations I the million for the ARL director Max Brewer said that the final plans for the structure are now being ed by the Office of Naval Re- earch at D.C. would estimate that they ill be approved shortly and hat bids will be called in Sep ember or Brewer pointed out that for North America's most research station will ave to be shipped up by means that the als will arrive after breakup ext summer and that work lould get under way late in 966 and move forward fast in 967." Brewer said that the structure ill be in an shape which on 7, men and women who create all these wondrous things for our mind's pleasure and our soul's She said in her prepared re marks they had the gratitude of every American for the the meaning and the zest you are contributing to our would be nothing for the rest of us to support if a very few did not make the sonal sacrifices necessary for the arduous act of the First Lady The Johnsons returned from a weekend at their Texas ranch to take part in the events at the White House that ranged from dramatic performances and readings on the stage of the East Room to jazz and ture on the South The festival eased into its 12- hour schedule with breakfast coffee and cake in the State Dining Fleet Said Fishing of grim relics left be- lind by the Viet among them the wreckage of a U.S. Army helicopter and a U.S. Army man's identification U.S. authorities announced the request of the ese elements of the 173rd U.S. Airborne Brigade have moved to Phuoc Vinh to protect the airfield and aircraft Main Airfield Phuoc Vinh is the main field for the Dong Windy City Opens Arms To Spacemen CHICAGO James Divitt and Edward White the Gemini 4 came to Chicago today and were greeted by a tumultuous a native of said he felt and were just doing our The wives of the astronauts were handed large bouquets of iui me when they left the The U.S. paratroopers had been Plane which the party flew expected to move from there mtn Vice President Hubert into the Dong conflict i the Vietnamese commanders j were reluctant to ask for welcome talk at Interna making the official The Viet Cong mounted one is number of attacks and imore plaudits than es in various parts of Viet Nam two all the way from the 17th but to the southern tip of the were whisked to the Ninety American and front in open Ninety American and Jake front in open SEATTLE A Russian planes hammered Waves of cheers fishing fleet was reported today in North Viet Nam in a five deep rolled r. to be operating off the entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca in an area where they have never fished The Coast ries of separate along with Russian factory he Mikhail and four 150-foot catcher boats were lighted near the northwest tip Sen. Warren G. D- Twenty U.S. Air Force jet l was a kid in bombers escorted by 30 said never jets attacked the Ban Xom of a day like barracks 70 miles southwest of ne last few davs make me IT 1-1- i j. 1IT_ j ported destroyed and 10 heavily areas of the Ba Bon army responding to greetings Forty-two planes hit t h r e u. We are racks 60 miles north of the de- i U.S. notified The Associated i Heavy air strikes Press from Washington he ha asked both agencies to mak of th Magnuson said it was imper live to know how many Sovie oats are operating and wha of fish are being caugh so we can be intelligently in on what is happening The Canadian Department o also reported in Van the Soviet hip and four draggers o atcher were 12 to 50 miles off shore mostly off the west coast o Canadian fishermen in rea said the Russian fleet maj as many as 30 draggers The Russians were believed to e fishing for ocean perch with rags as deep as 600 They ad never been seen in the area except for ry Heavy Selling on Stock Market Sends It Down NEW YORK Heavy in the final half-hour stock market prices down oday to a loss that ranked close o that taken the day Kennedy was Eastern Air Lines and IBM fere down about 6 points chering 4, DuPont about General Motors 3 and Boeing 3. Kennecott and Douglas a couple of points raft sank Roebuck and Ford rere among the many 1-point American Telephone kept its oss to less than a Jersey just eased The market was higher at the start but eroded then ran into a wave of dis- selling at the The Dow Jones industrial at 3 p.m. was down 14.21 at 867.49. If ued to the close the loss would be the largest since Nov. 22 1963 when the Dow fell 21.16. Trading picked up as prices weakened further in the final half Volume for the day was mated at 5 million shares com- pared with 5.35 million on Here was the picture near the Losses of key stocks ran on 7, Cel. 7) heavy damage to The vice president his wife two sons flew in from before the plane Six Americans were killed carrying the Gemini 4 crew ar- over the but none to have died as the Crowds gathered along the 6nmy u r 4 expressway route to the city roui U.S. Army on La Salle Street near City on 7' on 7, Col. 1) Ready for First Game of Year With Trojans It's baseball time in Fairbanks once again and while the weatherman appears be turning a cold shoulder to he the of 1965 are planning a hot ion for the USC Trojans in night's Game time is 8 p.m. den Field when the nationally ranked take on the collegians from the University of Southern California in irst of a series which will reach i J climax in the June 21 night Sun In addition to opening against me of the stronger college earns in the the Fanners lave announced that a Pacific 2oast League Cecil is expected to be on nand as umpire in chief for the irst Ken 22: Justin 2b; Don Jim Daryl 3b- Fred joe Austin of Marty c: and John also a 1964 manager Red not released a has lineup that Tom a re- from 1964, will be on he Rod USC coach sted his starters as wife wanted to to frr MI I been in my Ions I it down to  

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