. Commercial fisheries review. Fisheries; Fish trade. The report is a 435-page study of the long-range position of the domestic tuna industry. It was made at the re- quest of the six Pacific Coast senators as a result of legislation introduced in Congress in 1952 to increase tariffs on imported tuna products. In addition to the senior authors, 36 other fishery specialists contributed special sections to the report. Copies are available upon request from the Pub- lications Unit, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington 25, D. C. NEW APPOINTMENTS IN BRANCH OF GAME FISH AND HATCHERIES: The pro
. Commercial fisheries review. Fisheries; Fish trade. The report is a 435-page study of the long-range position of the domestic tuna industry. It was made at the re- quest of the six Pacific Coast senators as a result of legislation introduced in Congress in 1952 to increase tariffs on imported tuna products. In addition to the senior authors, 36 other fishery specialists contributed special sections to the report. Copies are available upon request from the Pub- lications Unit, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington 25, D. C. NEW APPOINTMENTS IN BRANCH OF GAME FISH AND HATCHERIES: The promotion of Abrann V. Tunison to Chief of the Service's Branch of Game Fish and Hatcheries was announced by the Secretary of the Interior on October 5. He succeeds Dr. O. Lloyd Meehean who was appointed recently as Assistant to the Director in charge of technical staff services. William Hagen, Jr., succeeds Tuni- son as Assistant Chief of the Branch of. Abram V. Tunison Game Fish and Hatcheries. He has been chief of the section of salmon propagation since May 1950. Tunison joined the Fish and Wildlife Service on September 1, 1944, as a fish- ery management ^^ technician assign -^ffK^'^tk- ed to the Cort- land, N. Y., sta- tion. InDecem- ber 1945 he was transferred to the headquarters office and pro- moted to the po- sition of Assist- ant Chief of Game Fish and Hatcheries. Prior to his Federal service Tunison was employed by the New York State Con- servation Department at Cortland, N. Y., from July 1932 to September 1944. Hagen has been with the Fish and Wildlife Service since 1937 when he was appointed as a fishery biologist. He served at various fish hatcheries throughout the country. In 1941 he was transferred to the Leavenworth, Wash., station during the start of the Grand Coulee salnnon salvage project. The following year he became regional bi- ologist in the Portland, Oreg., regional office. In July 1945 he was promoted to the position of regional supervisor of fish culture.
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Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1900, booksubjectfisheries, booksubjectfishtrade