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Alaska: Alaska Fairbanks History

The three M’s doesn’t refer to a famous manufacturing company in Minnesota. It alludes to three teams who most likely will be battling for first place this season in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association — Michigan, Michigan State and Miami (Ohio).
John Buccigross has a, um, conversation with new owner-in-waiting Jim Balsillie and he gives his first impressions of Week 1.
More than 50 Alaska Natives carried signs and walked the sidewalks through an early-morning drizzle Saturday in downtown Anchorage, protesting Board of Game proposals that would radically overhaul the popular Nelchina caribou hunt.
Over the past decade, Anchorage has become more ethnically diverse than many larger cities Outside. In a series of occasional stories, we're looking at what the changes mean to Alaska's largest city.
OCT. 12, 1930: Pilot Ralph Wien, two priests killed in Kotzebue crash
A businessman with a penchant for restoring historic structures may save the old armory on U.S. 301. John Reeves of Fairbanks Gold Company, a mining company in Alaska, saw the building was for sale as he was driving through town.
One more road game and then the Fairbanks Ice Dogs will finally make an appearance in front of their hometown fans.
Fairbanks has hosted traveling art exhibits before, but never anything like Artrain. The collection of contemporary Native artwork doesn’t just travel around the country, it brings its own museum along for the ride.
In 1986, Frank Ostanik’s father told him the family was moving back to the Fairbanks area after a three-year stay in Nebraska. “The first thing I asked my dad was ‘Can I go to Eielson and play football?’
VANCOUVER, British Columbia----Teryl Resources Corp. is pleased to announce that six new geophysical targets have been located on the Fish Creek property, near the Fort Knox Mine, in the Fairbanks Mining Division, Alaska.

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