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VOL. 21, NO. 89_ KODIAK, ALASKA, OCTOBER 13, 1961 PRICE TEN CENTS on the waterfront Bartlett Heads Fisheries Study Fisheries and transportation problems will be aired at a meet ing here next Wednesday, Oct. 18, when Sen. E. L. (Bob) Bartlett, heading a Senate Subcommittee of the Commerce department, will ar rive in Kodiak. The meeting is open to the pub lic, and anyone interested is invited to participate. Other members of the committee coming here are Mr. Harry Huse, Mr. John M. McElroy and Mr. George A. Monick. The meeting will convene in the Courtroom in the post office build ing, beginning at 8 p. m. Meetings are being held through out Alaska by the committee com ing here. Hearings are also being held in the State of Washington and in Oregon and California. Tidelands Titles Under Discussion Tidelands may prove a knotty problem in Kodiak, according to City Manager Bill Poland. A bill from Hubbell & Waller for the balance owed the firm for an engineering survey on the tide lands was presented. The firm had been paid a total of $2,326.62 on a $9,997 bill. The Council voted to pay half of the $7,671 balance. It was impossible to make pro vision in the budget for payment of this account, according to Po land. Survey costs, he said, will be divided and borne by tidelands owners. This may take about a year or even more before tidelands ac quisition can be made, Poland stated it was impossible for residents facing tidelands to acquire the land. Certain improve ments which existed prior to 1957 are the only ones considered by the State. ASC Adds Ship Not all freight destined for Ko diak will arrive on the m/v Tata lina, which is scheduled in Kodiak Oct. 19, according to Lou Veerman, Alaska Steamship agent here. Veerman stated there was an overflow of cargo for the Tatalina trip this time. The added freight will be brought here via the m/v Tonsina leaving Seattle Oct. 14 and arriving here Oct. 21. The ship will call at Women’s Bay also. American Legion Service Officer Here For A Day Joseph M. Briones, American Legion Department Service Offi cer, was a visitor here Thursday. He was guest of honor at a dinner held at the 49 Room Thursday evening. The Department officer is on a tour of all the American Legion posts in Alaska. He has already visited Fairbanks, Nome, Anchor age, Seward, and Kenai Peninsula posts. From here he will go to Palmer, Glennallen, Valdez, Cor dova and Juneau. Briones was accompanied by Robert M. Potter, Veterans employ ment representative, U. S. Depart ment of Labor. Adm. G. Ricketts To Visit Kodiak Admiral Claude V. Ricketts, USN, who will become Vice Chief of Naval Operations on November 1, is scheduled to arrive at the Naval Station here, Monday, Oc tober 16. Admiral Ricketts’ visit is part of a 19-day trip to acquire first-hand information about naval and mili tary affairs in Alaska, Hawaii, and the Western Pacific. Prior to his selection as Vice Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Ricketts was Commander Second Fleet and Commander Strike Force, Atlantic. He is a designated naval aviator and saw action in the Pacific dur ing World War II. Among his var ious citations is a Letter of Com mendation for his distinguished service aboard the battleship USS WEST VIRGINIA during the at tack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941. ADM. C. RICKETTS Mirrored Reflections By SIG DIGREE Did you know that each rat in this town costs you $20 a year? We don’t mean any two-legged variety who might come to your mind, but the four-legged kind that come into town about this time of year. They seem to consult their calender, or what ever it is that rats get the word from to move into warmer places with winter just around the corner. What started this unpleasant train of thought was a visit from Harry E. Carter, District Sanitar ian, who has rats very much on his mind these days. He’d just as soon they be wiped out right now with out fattening up on garbage he sees around. He says some people are pretty careless about leaving gar bage can lids off—a great conven ience for the rats. * * * One could write endlessly about rats and the damage they do, what to do to control them, etc., etc., but here are a few terse statements made by Carter, which offer much Two Councilmen Sworn Into Office Two new coucilmen, Morris “Red” Burnham and Eldon Lester were sworn in Thursday evening at a meeting of the City Council. The two, newcomers to City politics, re place outgoing councilmen Fred Brechan and John “Blackie” Pat terson. The men were sworn in by City Clerk Doug Preston. Considerable discussion was evoked by a suggestion offered by City Manager Bill Poland that the City take advantage of funds avail able from the OEDP. This is part of the Federal Area Redevelop ment Act, which was enacted to aid election districts in economic de velopment. The question that arose was: What group is to serve in the ca pacity of a commission to be con tacted or study municipal needs that would come under provisions of the act? It was brought out by Poland that aid is not confined to municipal or other local bodies of governments, but to individuals or groups in private industry when that industry affects tlhe economic well-being of the community. He said it is not to be confused with WPA projects, but it provides cheap money at the going rate of interest the government pays—to expand services, provide employ ment, raise the economic standards in a community. The Council voted to endorse the recommendation of the Cham ber of Commerce to have the Civic Planning Commission also serve as an economic commission to ex plore the needs here and possible use of the funds. A letter from the Department of Highways of the State was read in (Continued On Page 4) Piano Team Opens Concert Season Here As Milton And Peggy Salkind Appear THE OPENING CONCERT OF THE 1961 MUSIC TRAILS series will feature Milton and Peggy Salkind, with their four hands at one piano. The concert opens at 8:15 p. m. Monday in the high school aud itorium. The opening concert of the season will be another first for Ko diak audiences, for it is the first presentation here of a four-hands-at one-piano. The visiting artists will open their program with the gay Marche Caracteristique of Shubert. Other numbers include Schubert’s Fan tasy in F minor, Op. 103, and Sonata in D major, K. 381 by Mozart. Other composers whose works are included on the program are De bussy, Robert Kurka, Bizet and Francis Poulenc. Small Boat Harbor Use Taxes Facilities Kodiak Airstrip Small Boat Harbor usage has out grown its present facilities City Manager Bill Poland told the Coun cil Thursday evening. Every berth in the harbor is taken, Poland stated. The big prob lem now, according to him, is the length of boats using the harbor. The harbor was designed for boats shorter in length. Due to the length of boats, additional cross wharf, planned for the harbor, cannot be added, he said. Proposals for additional facili ties are now being studied. Con struction of an outer bi’eakwater was mentioned as a possible solu tion, utilizing the water adjacent. Dog Bay was mentioned as another. A questionaire is being sent out food for thought: “Rats cause sick ness and death; rats destroy prop erty; rats and mice contaminate food; rats and mice breed rapidly —cause damage in a short time; rats chew electrical wiring and cause fires. He hit a sore spot wthen he hit the pocketbook with: ‘‘Each rat costs you about $20 per year.” * * * Carter went on to say he took a trip with the garbage truck around Kodiak and said he was surprised to find out that about a third of our citizens are somewhat negli (Continued on Page 4) to canneries and possible users as to number of boats, size, etc., to de termine additional facilities need ed. The State is expected to have $75,000 to $100,000 available for SBH use by June, 1962. Poland said the City is working on a method of preventing ice for mation in the harbor. Sitka Celebrates Alaska Purchase Historic Sitka will hold its annual celebration Tuesday and Wednes day, Oct. 17 and 18, in commemora tion of the day in 1867 when the U. S. purchased what is now the 49th State from Czarist Russia. Oct. 18 is Alaska Day. The two-day observance begins with a historical pageant “In This Place,” which describes the landing at Sitka of Baranof, and' depicts Alaskan history through the years to the attainment of statehood. Wednesdays activities will be climaxed with a Military Ball, with Gov. William Egan as guest of honor. IIINCKELS IN KETCHIKAN Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hinckel are in Ketchikan this week, attending the Alaska State Chamber of Com merce Convention being held there. Jack Hinckel is representing the Chamber of Commerce here as a delegate. Traffic Is Up Kodiak’s new municipal airstrip was described as proving a boon to business and the community gen erally with out-of-town planes us ing the strip in increasing numbers. Chuck Weir, chairman of the Air port Committee of the Chamber of Commerce, reporting to that group at the Thursday noon luncheon meeting in the Town Club, told the members that a close study is being made in an attempt to acquire ad ditional land adjacent to the air port, now belonging to ACS and soon to be turned over to the State. Acquiring the land, he said is go ing to take some time, at least a year. He said he feels the commit tee has the cooperation of the BLM and State officials in the lands de partment and that when the land is turned back to the state Kodiak will have a good chance of acquir ing it. Weir told the group of several visitors, some from Illinois, Den ver, Colorado, and elsewhere who have used the airstrip recently. He stated it will be necessary to re surface portions of it soon. City Manager Bill Poland spoke at length on the possibilities of utilizing funds from the Overall Economic Development Board. He said the federal funds were avail (Contiqued on Page 4)