Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 112 Part 5.djvu/1030

 112 STAT. 3788 PROCLAMATION 7114—AUG. 5, 1998 Annex (continued) Sgetltm A. (con.> 9102.11.10 9102.11.25 9102.11.30 9102.11.45 9102.11.50 9102.11.65 9102.11.70 9102.11.95 9102.91.40 9102.91.80 9108.11.40 9108.11.80 Seetion B. Subchapter VI of chapter 99 la nodlfied aa provided in this aection. (1). Subheadinga 9906.29.24, 9906.29.40, 9906.38.22, 9906.52.08, 9906.54.01, 9906.SS.01, 9906.5S.02, 9906.56.01, 9906.59.03 and 9906.63.02 are deleted. (2). The 8i4>erior text preceding aubbeading 9906.38.03 which reads 'cateaical products and preparations o£ the chemical or allied industries (including those consisting of nixtures of natural products), not elsewhere specified or included; residual products of the cheoical or allied industries, not elsewhere specified or included:*, the svqperior. text imiediately preceding subheading 9906.38.03, and subheadings 9906.38.03 and 9906.38.04 are all deleted. (3). The following new suUieadlngs are inserted in numerical se^pience: IGeodi of Ntxieo,...:) "9W6.S4.10 Solution dy^ high tmacity slnili yam of viwoao rayan. the feragoing cartiflad by the laportar ta bo aolution dyad (provided for In autaheadiiw 5403.10.30) Free (NX) 9906.M.20 Other aetution dyad alngta yam of vlaeeaa rayon, untHlatad or Kith a twlat not axeaading 120 tuma/a, tho foroflolng cortlflod by tho laportar to bo aolutiondyod (provided for In atiAaading SMS.SD Proclamation 7114 of August 5, 1998 Designating Klondike Gold Rush International Historical Park By the President of the United States of America A Proclamation A century ago, the Klondike Gold Rush began a migration that forever changed Alaska and the Yukon Territory. More than 100,000 people headed north during 1897 and 1898, catapulting a little-known region from obscurity to the center of the world stage. While the Klondike was not the first or largest western gold rush, coming nearly 50 years after the 1848 gold discovery at Sutter's Mill, California, it is remembered for the sheer drama by which it was announced to the world and for its century-long influence on Alaska and the upper Yukon River basin. The United States and Canada have been engaged for 30 years in joint planning and cooperation to commemorate the Klondike Gold Rush and preserve historic structures and trails on both sides of the international boimdary. In 1976, the Government of the United States established Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park, consisting of a Se-

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