Photo showing Among guests at the Toastmistress council 7 conference held at Kitimat during the weekend were the foursome above. L/R; Veda Jaynes, Ketchikan, a contestant in the speech competition, Marcia Fish, Juneau, council chariman, Jan Adasiak, Juneau, winner of the competition, and Kathleen Hutchinson, Kitimat, runner up. Visitors taken on a tour of Kitimat works. Members of Kitimat's bukwala Toastmistress club were conference hosts and delegates came from clubs in Alaska and north Central British Columbia.
Current: 1960s - Service Organizations - Toastmasters
Scope and Content
Photo showing Among guests at the Toastmistress council 7 conference held at Kitimat during the weekend were the foursome above. L/R; Veda Jaynes, Ketchikan, a contestant in the speech competition, Marcia Fish, Juneau, council chariman, Jan Adasiak, Juneau, winner of the competition, and Kathleen Hutchinson, Kitimat, runner up. Visitors taken on a tour of Kitimat works. Members of Kitimat's bukwala Toastmistress club were conference hosts and delegates came from clubs in Alaska and north Central British Columbia.
Photo showing official opening of Kitimat Golf and Country Club, from left: Guy Kinnear, Ian Kennedy, Geoff Whitehead, Neil Angle, Percy E. Radley, Ralph Boyle
Northern Sentinel box #3 - (A)Historical
(1)Sports
(a)Kitimat Golf Club
Scope and Content
Photo showing official opening of Kitimat Golf and Country Club, from left: Guy Kinnear, Ian Kennedy, Geoff Whitehead, Neil Angle, Percy E. Radley, Ralph Boyle
Photograph of the Alcan maintenance men who check empty houses almost didn't find this one at 80 Starling Street on a route check, Harold Andruchow (left) and Per Johansen discovered the place practically buried in- ,guess what? Sentinel photographer Walter Suessmayor found them (above) trying to figure out where to attack. They dug through the wall showing curving from the roof and he got the second shot below.
Photograph of the Alcan maintenance men who check empty houses almost didn't find this one at 80 Starling Street on a route check, Harold Andruchow (left) and Per Johansen discovered the place practically buried in- ,guess what? Sentinel photographer Walter Suessmayor found them (above) trying to figure out where to attack. They dug through the wall showing curving from the roof and he got the second shot below.