...Wrangel Island, north of Siberia in the 1920s. And Howard Rock (Larry Merculief), whose reporting and editorials in the Tundra Times helped stop the planned detonation of nuclear bombs in Alaska. And Corrine Green (Missy Williams), the first black...
...Home opened in Sitka. In 1952, radio station KJNO-AM signed on the air in Juneau. In 1962, the first edition of The Tundra Times rolled off the presses. In 1969, Gov. Keith Miller expressed his support for the planned nuclear blast on Amchitka...
...demonstrating that there is, indeed, a rich non-White history in the state. A.J. McClanahan, former publisher of The Tundra Times (Alaska's only statewide Native weekly) and now historian for Cook Inlet Region Inc., has done a commendable...
...a collection of 23 interviews with elders of the Cook Inlet region. She also served as publisher and president of The Tundra Times, Alaska's only statewide Native weekly newspaper, before moving to CIRI as the corporation's historian in 1998...
...Inupiat artist Howard Rock, born in Point Hope, north of Wales. Today Rock is known as an activist and founder of the Tundra Times, but then he was studying art at the University of Washington and living with the Lopps in Seattle. Kittredge died...
...Home opened at Sitka. In 1952, radio station KJNO-AM signed on the air in Juneau. In 1962, the first edition of The Tundra Times rolled off the presses. In 1969, Gov. Keith Miller expressed his support for the planned nuclear blast on Amchitka...
...a collection of 23 interviews with elders of the Cook Inlet region. She also served as publisher and president of The Tundra Times, Alaska's only statewide Native weekly newspaper, before moving to CIRI as the corporation's historian in 1998...
...Yup'ik ceremonial traditions. Posthumous awards are being presented in honor of: Howard Rock, longtime publisher of The Tundra Times. Peter Kalifornsky, Dena'ina Athabascan, for his dedication to writing and educating for future generations...
...Home opened at Sitka. In 1952, radio station KJNO-AM signed on the air in Juneau. In 1962, the first edition of The Tundra Times rolled off the presses. In 1969, Gov. Keith Miller expressed his support for the planned nuclear blast on Amchitka...
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