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Postcards Home from China: Climbing the Great Wall

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Day One in China: Climb the Great Wall. A UAA economics class is in China to study globalization and to consider Alaska-China business opportunities. Read their stories in this special series of Postcards Home.

'I was forced to rush between classes on foot'

Kyle Ekstrand

Kyle Ekstrand once created a grade-threatening headache by inadvertently scheduling two classes a mile's walk apart. He and his fellow MIS student, Brian Smith, hope to prevent that hassle for other students with their UAA Maps capstone project.

A tree tour to pine for. Fir real.

Tree Tour

Spring has arrived in Anchorage! UAA's grounds team provides self-guided tree tours all year long, but there are few better times to enjoy our urban forest than in spring. Stop by and tour our officially recognized Tree Campus USA soon, home to the Alaska’s largest variety of tree species on public land.

After 40 years at 'Big Blue,' Randy Moulic came north to teach

Randy Moulic

Remember when a computer beat chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov in 1997? Randy Moulic was there. After 40 years at IBM, he now teaches electrical engineering and computer science at UAA,

Postcards Home from China: Globalization and business opportunities

postcards-from-china

Nine UAA economics students are headed to China as part of a summer class on globalization and business opportunities between China and Alaska. They'll share adventures, research and cultural visits to the Great Wall, the Forbidden City and the Terracotta Warriors.

Exploring ways to weave Arctic indigenous culture with commerce

2015-05-08-Chantae Kochuten

Chantae Kochuten grew up living a subsistence lifestyle in the Aleutians. Now, she's learned the global-scale importance of respecting indigenous lifestyles in a changing region.

M.F.A. grad shares how to 'Find the Good'

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Heather Lende has raised a family and built a career in Haines, Alaska, where she works as the local paper's obituary writer. The bestselling author will stop at the University Bookstore this Thursday on her national book tour, sharing life lessons from her latest work on life and death in a small town.

Slideshow: UAA Spring Commencement

Spring Commencement 2015

On Sunday, May 3, UAA saluted 1,353 college graduates with wafting strains of “Pomp and Circumstance” and green and gold confetti showering from the ceiling of the Alaska Airlines Center. View a slideshow of the festivities.

Professor helps Cup'ik children discover a passion for books

Kathryn Ohle

Dr. Kathryn Ohle recently won the Selkregg Award for promoting early literacy and language preservation by helping Cup'ik children and families access free online books that two UAA students from Chevak translated into their language from English.

The seedy, sudsy history of the 49th state

Doug Vandergraf

After transferring to D.C. 14 years ago, Doug Vandegraft stayed connected to Alaska through his personal project—a thoroughly-researched tale of the dark days and lighthearted weirdness behind the 135 oldest bars still currently operating across Alaska today.

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