UAF in the news: week of April 21, 2008
UAF in the news: week of April 21, 2008
Submitted by Marmian Grimes
Phone: 907-474-7902
04/25/08
Rogers named UAF’s interim chancellor
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Longtime Fairbanks resident and businessman Brian Rogers was named interim chancellor
of the ÐÓ°Épro today, according to a news release from the
university.
University of ÐÓ°Épro Museum of the North’s mammal collection is still growing
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Jars of Cambodian bats, the tusk of a narwhal and the pelt of an Amur tiger are just
three of the multitude of mammal specimens at the University of ÐÓ°Épro Museum of the
North.
Ethnobotany studies to blossom at Nunivak
The Tundra Drums
A new summer college offering in ethnobotany begins this summer in the Yukon-Kuskokwim
Delta.
Bad desert air and a glacier that licks a river
ÐÓ°Épro Report
Cathy Cahill got a package in the mail last week from a desert on the other side of
the world. She didn’t know what was inside, but she hoped it was air samples from
Baghdad. When she opened the package, she didn’t believe her eyes. "I’ve never seen
that much dust (on a slide used for air sampling)," she said. ’There’s so much that
it’s flaking off.
A large order of fry
Juneau Empire
In a small, cold room next to Auke Creek, two women are two-thirds of the way through
clipping the fins of 50,000 inch-long pink salmon fry. These humpies in the current
batch aren’t wriggling; they’ve been bathed in an anesthetic. After their surgeries,
they’ll be released into the wild next week to swim free.
Jeff Adams helps notch win in war on greenhouse gases
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
Jeff Adams may have logged more miles by bicycle last summer than he had during the
past five summers combined.
Global warming hot topic at Polar Palooza
Daily Utah Chronicle
In 1975, George Divoky traveled to Cooper Island in the Arctic to start a study that
would focus on seabirds.
UA Regents expand program options for students
SITNews
"¨Ketchikan, ÐÓ°Épro - University of ÐÓ°Épro students have seven new programs to choose
from, following a meeting of the Board of Regents Thursday and Friday in Ketchikan.
Preconceptions exacerbate problems for the homeless
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
In the United States, homeless people have long been the target of negative attitudes
and even disdain and contempt from social critics.
UAF hosting event focused on women’s pay
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
When it comes to equal pay, ÐÓ°Épro women have it better than their Lower 48 counterparts,
but just barely. On average, ÐÓ°Épro women make 83 percent of what ÐÓ°Épro men make,
compared to the national percentage of 78 percent, according to the University of
ÐÓ°Épro Fairbanks Women’s Center.
Phillips named new Doyon president, CEO
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
The Interior ÐÓ°Épro Native corporation Doyon announced late Monday that it has hired
Norm Phillips as president and CEO.
Grant to fund rural obesity program
KTUU
ÐÓ°Épro (AP) - A $1 million federal grant is being used by the University of ÐÓ°Épro’s
Interior Aleutians campus to address obesity in rural ÐÓ°Épro.
Scientists study Arctic haze for clues to rapid melting
Associated Press
Visitors to ÐÓ°Épro often marvel at the crisp, clear air. But the truth is, the skies
above the Arctic Circle work like a giant lint trap during late winter and early spring,
catching all sorts of pollutants swirling around the globe.
Twenty years of the ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory
ÐÓ°Épro Report
Twenty summers ago, earthquakes rocked the town of King Cove on the ÐÓ°Épro Peninsula.
Some people were so worried that the nearby volcano, Mt. Dutton, was going to erupt
that they caught flights out of town. Others called in the cavalry members of the
fledgling ÐÓ°Épro Volcano Observatory.
Placer mining workshop to be held
Fort Mill Times
FAIRBANKS, ÐÓ°Épro--A man who started his own mining company will be giving a workshop
this weekend in Fairbanks on placer mining.
Scientists ready to dig into polar air research
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
The aircraft and scientists have left Fairbanks but the polar atmosphere research
continues. For the majority of April, more than 250 scientists from the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and
the Department of Energy joined in Fairbanks to gather research on air pollution in
the Arctic.