Talkeetna murder trial concludes

Tue, August 7, 2007

Closing arguments were heard today in the murder trial of Michael Lawson, a 49-year old Anchorage man accused of killing a young Talkeetna woman in 2003.

Lori Townsend, APRN and Julia O’Malley, Anchorage Daily News

 
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Investigation and recovery underway following Sitka small plane crash

Tue, August 7, 2007

Investigators have confirmed, but are not releasing, the names of the four people on board the small aircraft that went down in a residential area of downtown Sitka yesterday. One day later, the emergency response effort has become a recovery operation.

Melissa Marconi-Wentzel, KCAW - Sitka

 
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Army releases identities of soldiers killed July 31

Tue, August 7, 2007

Army officials today released the identities of two Fort Richardson artillerymen killed last week in Iraq. Sergeant Bradley W. Marshall of Little Rock, Arkansas, and Specialist Daniel F. Reyes of San Diego died July 31st from wounds suffered from an indirect fire attack on Forward Operating Base Kalsu, Iraq. The Army delayed releasing their identities due to difficulty in reaching some next-of-kin. Eleven other paratroopers were injured in the incident, one seriously. The other 10 were treated and returned to duty.

The Associated Press

 
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Hubbard Glacier threatening salmon spawning in Situk River

Tue, August 7, 2007

hubbard2a.jpg

One of Southeast Alaska’s few advancing glaciers continues to threaten the river that produces most of Yakutat’s salmon. The Hubbard Glacier came within a few hundred feet of closing off nearby Russell Fjord this summer. That could have created a giant lake that would have overflowed into the Situk River. The ice has since retreated, but the threat remains. Engineers have considered tunnels, dams and diversion channels to protect the river, but they say none of the projects are feasible.

hubbard1.jpghubbard2.jpgsituk.jpgmap.pngadvance.png
Images provided by George Kalli, USACE; Ed Schoenfeld, CoastAlaska; US Geological Survey

Ed Schoenfeld, CoastAlaska - Juneau

 
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Search continues for missing man on Zarembo Island

Tue, August 7, 2007

A search for a man missing near Wrangell / Petersburg continues today. The Coast Guard says the search began over the weekend for Miguel Rodriguez, a 40-year-old man working for Triple T Tree Thinning in Sitka. He was on Zarembo Island with a crew contracted by the U.S. Forest Service. Lieutenant Heather Neely with the Juneau command center says her office got a call late Saturday night after some of Rodriguez’s co-workers found his fishing pole and wallet in Zarembo’s Roosevelt Harbor.

Steve Brown, KSTK - Wrangell

 
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Yukon’s Zelma Lake drains half away in just a month

Tue, August 7, 2007

In Canada, water is draining away in Old Crow at a catastrophic rate. A group of scientists is monitoring Zelma Lake on Old Crow flats. The lake has lost more than half its water in less than a month. Global warming effects are strongly suspected.

Cheryl Kawaja, CBC - Whitehorse, YT

 
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Two troublesome Fairbanks bears killed

Tue, August 7, 2007

Two young grizzlies that showed up on Chena Hot Springs Road last week were shot Sunday. Department of Fish and Game spokeswoman Cathie Harms says Alaska State Troopers were called after the yearling bears killed two goats at a family farm near Mile 4. The grizzlies were the 9th and 10th killed this summer in the Fairbanks area. Harms says that’s unusually high, and encourages people to take extra precautions with anything that can attract bears, from garbage to barbeques and livestock.

Dan Bross, KUAC - Fairbanks

 
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Sitka’s ‘Fortress of the Bear’ welcomes its first furry resident

Tue, August 7, 2007

A nonprofit bear habitat in Sitka has its first resident. The Alaska Department of Fish & Game recently sent a 60-pound orphaned brown bear cub to Fortress of the Bear, a week – to the day - after issuing the organization an educational permit.

Robert Woolsey, KCAW - Sitka

 
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Alaska News Nightly: August 7, 2007

Tue, August 7, 2007

A 2003 murder trial wraps up as the Sitka plane crash investigation begins and the search continues for a missing man on Zaremba Island. We also take a look at the continuing threat of Hubbard Glacier’s advance and observe a Yukon Territory lake that’s literally draining away. Plus, brown bears draw the long arm of the law in Fairbanks as well as tourists in Sitka. Those stories and more on tonight’s Alaska News Nightly, broadcast statewide on APRN stations.

Individual news stories are posted in the Alaska News category and you can subscribe to APRN’s news feeds via e-mail, podcast and RSS.
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Talk of Alaska: Subsistence Management

Tue, August 7, 2007

Since the 1990s the federal government has managed fish and game on more than half of Alaska’s lands. How can the impasse over subsistence management be resolved? Should the state regain that management or is it better left in the hands of federal supervisors? The Federal Subsistence Management Board is our topic.

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