[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 147 (2001), Part 9] [Senate] [Page 12911] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]IN MEMORY OF ROSEMARIE MAHER Mr. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I rise today to speak in remembrance of a wonderful Alaskan, Mrs. Rosemarie Maher, the President and Chief Operating Officer of the Doyon Native Regional Corp. based in Fairbanks, Alaska. On Monday, I attended the moving memorial service in Fairbanks in Rosemarie's Maher's honor, who tragically died quite suddenly last week at far too young an age--53. Along with my wife Nancy, I want to express my deepest sympathies to Rosemarie's husband, Terry J. Maher, their children: Malinda and husband Jim Holmes, Warren J. and wife Angela Westfall, and Kerry-Rose and Kevin Maher, and all other family members. I also want to express my condolences to the employees and all of the nearly 14,000 shareholders of Doyon Ltd. upon the death of a very dedicated and talented woman, who successfully advanced the causes of both Doyon members and of all Alaska Natives. Rosemarie Maher showed uncommon grace and perseverance during her three decade career working on behalf of Alaska Natives. For 21 years, she served as a member of the Doyon corporation's board of directors and assumed the role of daily leadership of the corporation under such difficult circumstances in winter 2000. Rosemarie Maher began her involvement in Alaska Native organizations and public service while still in her 20's. As a devoted wife and mother, she helped to steer development of several organizations, including the Interior Village Association and the Tanana Chiefs Conference. In 1979, she was first elected to the Doyon Ltd. Board of Directors. Seven years later, she was elected Chairman of the Board, a position she held until her appointment as President and Chief Executive Officer after the tragic plane-crash death in January 2000 of long-time Doyon President Morris Thompson. Mrs. Maher was born in a fish camp on the Nabesna River near her home of Northway along the Alaska Highway in Central Alaska. As a child she was raised as a traditional Athabascan Indian, but as a young teen she was educated at Sheldon Jackson School in Sitka and later at East High School in Anchorage. After graduating from high school, she trained at Alaska Business College and in 1969 moved to Fairbanks, working for several U.S. Government agencies. During the mid 1970s, Mrs. Maher moved back to Northway where she was elected President of the Northway Village Council and helped form the Upper Tanana Alcohol Program in the Tok area. She also played a key role in the incorporation of Greater Northway Inc., the non-profit organization formed to administer local infrastructure and economic development projects in the region. She was a shareholder of Northway Natives Inc., the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Village Corporation for Northway, serving as the first President of that organization. She also was President of Naabia Niign, a Northway Native subsidiary. From 1976 to 1984 she entered governmental public service as a member of the Alaska Gateway School District Board and was a director of the Northwest Regional Education Lab, a non-profit, federally and privately funded educational research organization based in Portland, Ore. She also was a member of the Teamsters Union, working summers in road construction and hazardous waste cleanup between 1992 and 2000. At the statewide level, Rosemarie served as Co-Chair of the Alaska Federation of Natives from 1997-2000 and was a member of the Alaska Board of Game. She also served as a member of the Governor's Commission on Local Governance and Empowerment and on the Governor's Highway and Natural Gas Policy Council. Rosemarie truly did commit her life to the success of Alaska Native corporations and to the betterment of her neighbors and of all Alaska Natives. Her death is a great loss, not just to Doyon and her Native culture, but to all who knew and loved her. Again our deepest sympathies to her family and friends. She will always be remembered with great fondness. ____________________