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Wififtiinfr tht vKm sf&Uaakd* MMu &u«na. Published every Friday at Kadiak, Alaska Yearly Subscription Rate J7.00 Second class mail privileges authorised at Kodiak. Alaska Send notices of tmdeliverable copies to: THE ISLAND PUBLISH INC, COMPANY Box 1207, Kodiak. Alaska Si* J. Digree, Editor and Publisher Betha Digree, Associate Editor Mechanical Department . John Salmine MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republica tioc of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited hi this paper and also the local news published herein. Reflections (continued from page 11 voted against the sales tax, etc , but let themselves be heard be fore the election, are also to be congratulated. The interest man ifest is what is needed here—only it needs to be more sustained. Their ideas should be conveyed to the City Council at Council meetings, through the press and through groups such as the Cham ber of Commerce. If they be lieved, and obviously they did, that Buskin Lake is the best source of water supply, they should come up with facts and figures to sustain their position. The main point we’re trying to put across is, Mice—don’t just crawl back in your hole and stay there until the next election. Re member this—you. City Hall and all of us are working for the same thing—making Kodiak a better place in which to live. A campaign spreading rapidly seeks to lower the retirement age to 60 and boost Social Security benefits to $200 a month, plus $100 for each dependent. The Sixty Now Incorporated, a group with a membership from across the nation, state as their belief that at a level of $300 per couple payable to those who re tire at 60, millions of those now working would promptly retire, making vacancies for many of the unemployed. Many in the group see in the program a step toward solving the impact of Automation. Sup porters of Sixty Now believe that a total work force would be trim med to a size industry could ab sorb if each worker were able to retire five years earlier. Under the new increases in So cial Security put into effect, the national average is still only about $80 a month, and two million are drawing the $40 minimum. The groups headquarters is at 2107 Ashland Avenue, Toledo, Ohio. We’re neither for or against this, but are a little skeptical about it sMving the unemploy ment problem. However, it may have merit and is worth looking into. * ft ft The University of Alaska has grown steadily in quality of edu cation and in enrollment over the past years, according to figures just released by the college. An interesting item: Of the enrolled students, 623 are men and 328 are women. 181 of the 623 men and 131 of the 328 women are married—quite a different story from our era of learning when the pursuit of education was confined to single bucks and gals. Have you entered Alaska’s Big Guessing Game? There are two main systems in this business of placing a guess. Most people play a hunf'h or a favorite anniversary dat<v norhnps tempering it slightly with a smat tering of the temperature that winter. Others have mathematical sys tems. Best known of these was an oldtimer by the name of Calhoun who lived in the Nenana area. He set up books like an accountant, keeping track of ice thickness at different points all winter. But he never won, although his edu cated guess came close. At any rate, past events show that even without a mathematical system, the average citizen prob ably has as good a chance of win ning the Ice Classic as anybody. Those hunches have paid off m the past. Charles R. Montjoy of Juneau won the entire pot in 1952, with just his name on a ticket. Montjoy had chosen May 12 because it was his sister’s birth day! • • • Did you Know? That the com mon cold causes an estimated an nual loss to the nation’s economy of more than $3 billion_That the common cold is responsible for an estimated 83 per cent of all illnesses between birth and age 18_That the common cold causes more than 20 million ill nesses per year in the pre-school age group alone. One thing we don’t have to ask you: Does it make you feel miser able? No, nod be. • • • Don’t hesitate to shiver when it’s cold. So says a doctor, who states that violent shivering can result in a three to fourfold in crease in body heat production, a “major defense” aaginst body cooling from cold exposure. He also said shivering is a more economical producer of heat than exercise because shivering involv es no external work function. Shiver away! * * « Confusing isn’t it? One calen dar consulted gave March 20 as the first day of Spring. Another said March 21. Noting the snow fall on both those days left con siderable doubt as to whether either was correct. Teacher Standard Made Tougher Juneau (fP). The state house of representatives yesterday passed a bill tightening educational re quirements for teachers employed by schools within the state. The bill was approved by a vote of 22-16. The measure would require that teachers employed after Septem ber 1, 1962, must have received at least a baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or univer sity or from a school whose cred its are approved by an accredited institution of higher education. Restriction would not be applic able to persons employed by state schools prior to Sept. 1st, nor would it apply to persons issued a temporary teaching certificate under emergency conditions. Alitak Bay Closure Extended The Department of Fish and Game has announced the extend ing of the closure of all king crab fishing in the Alitak Bay area. The closure, effective midnight April 1, 1962, is within a line from Cape Ikolik to the western tip of the Trinity Islands and from Cape Sitkinak to Cape Kaguyak to Two Headed Island to Knoll Point on Kodiak Island. The closure is proposed to re duce undue fatalities caused by the handling of soft shell and molting male king crab. Tax bill Sets Stiff Penalties Juneau UP). Legislation provid ing financial penalties for persons required to collect state income taxes and who fail to do so, or fail to pay the taxes over to the state, was okayed by the lower house yesterday . Under the provisions of the bill, such persons would be subject to a penalty equal to the amount of the tax evaded, not collected, or not accounted for and paid to the state, in addition to other pen alties provided by law. The senate also approved a bill granting the governor the right to extend complimentary hunting and fishing privilees to 20 distin guished vsitors each year.' Each complimentary license would be good for ten days. Governor Signs Three New Laws Juneau (/P). Three more bills were signed into law by Governor Egan Wednesday, including a measure apropriating $450,000 ad ditional for state support of schools within incorporated towns during the current fiscal year. Also signed was a bill appropri ating $69,000 for purchasing and equipping three department of fish and game patrol boats for use in Bristol Bay during the com ing season. The third bill signed apropriat ed $1,092.58 for reissue of stale date warrants. Hensel-Henley Win Judo Honors Dick Hensel, Dave Henley and Gary Woody took top honors in the Judo matches staged by the Kodiak Judo Club last night. Winner of the White and Green Belt Division was Dick Hensel. In the Brown Belt Division, Dave Henley scored first place. Hen sel also took first place in Open Competition with Gary Woody taking second place. The matches were refereed by Corky McFarland, Black Belt and the timekeeper was Frank Per kins, Black Belt. Huge Jap Crab Fleet Enroute Tokyo UP!. Two Japanese crab factory vessels left the Northern Japanese port of Hakodate yes terday for Alaska’s Bristol Bay to join 13 catcher ships already enroute. The Japanese fleet hopes to catch and process 130,000 cases of King Crab—each case to con tain 48 half-pound cans. Last years catch was 80,000 cases. The two factory ships which left Thursday were the 5,859-ton Dainichi Maru and the 5,386-ton Tokei Maru. The Photo of King crah Queen contestant Peggy Heglin is by Norman’s Photo Shop. “You Can’t Take It With You” APRIL 14 *!°° p> SCHOOL AUDITORIUM NEW ARRIVALS—Rear Admiral and Mrs. Fred E. Bakutis, USN (center), pose for their first picture in Alaska between Read Admiral and Mrs. H. H. Caldwell, USN, after arriving at Kodiak, Tuesday. Radm. Bakutis relieved Radm. Caldwell as Commander Alaskan Sea Frontier and Comdt. 17th Naval Dis trict in ceremonies here earlier today. Following the ceremony, the Caldwells departed for Quonset Point, R.I., where he will assume duties as Commander Fleet Air, Quonset. U.S. Navy Photo The Thrill That Cornea Once in a lifetime a vtxsra classic DISCOVERED BY THE 1 TALENT SCOUTS OF A MAIL COURSE IN UljH!.,wSCR6eN ACTIN6 Bow to Torture Your Wife _ Not €mouoh| LIGHT J