ALASKA'S NEWSPAPER

| Updated: 12:49 PM

ADN finds the news from all over Alaska and about Alaska from around the nation so you don't have to. Updated several times a day. (Some links may require registration.)

UPDATED: Troopers drop charge in 'meat for heat' case

Tanker mission to Nome: Economic or humanitarian motives first?

Unalaska police blotter: Drivers cope with the weather

Video: Palin sort of endorses Gingrich in S.C. primary

Video: Girdwood family tells of escape from cruise disaster

Haines-based heli-ski operators want GPS data kept secret

UAF museum gets fossil of prehistoric marine reptile

Energy markets turn focus to gas-hungry Asia

Fish and Game proposes aerial shooting of bears near Bethel

The snows of 2012: A roundup of community coverage

Sell Alaska? How a private-equity firm might refurbish the US for quick resale

Iditarod legend Delia, 82, finally says goodbye to Skwentna

Kenai Peninsula predator control debate returns to Board of Game

Alaska 'ocean ranching' threatens wild B.C. salmon, conservationists charge

Warming leaves some Hudson Bay polar bears starving

Unalaska storm coats seabirds in ice

Drones survey ice in Nome harbor before tanker's arrival

Unalaska police blotter: Disturbed by 'screams of enjoyment'

Trumpeter swans choose Yukon winter over flying south

Todd Palin endorses Gingrich for president

'Deadliest Catch' crewman charged with assault

Proposed state rules for care of outdoor dogs criticized

Alaska leads nation in toxic chemical releases

Heading out for a run at 33 below? Start with warm shoes

Hollywood is missing some good Alaska stories

Arctic ice melt-off is killing seal pups, study indicates

UAF professor predicts $5-plus gasoline in next decade

Otter released in Kachemak Bay after month in rehab

Honey buckets remain a sanitation concern in Bethel

Son of well-known Alaska miner killed in B.C. avalanche

March 25: Selling Tenakee Springs; from one "hot" governor to another; Defense Department meets its moose; coal stolen from food bank; Unalaska police blotter author; Kodiak battles snow

Today's News for the Last Frontier

A JOKE TOO HOT TOO TOUCH AGAIN (Political Ticker, CNN.com): Michigan's Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm - another governor sometimes labeled "hot" - said she won't apologize for her crack at last weekend's Gridiron Dinner in D.C. that Gov. Sarah Palin "really set back the cause of hot governors" with her vice-presidential campaign.

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TALES FROM THE UNALASKA POLICE BLOTTER ... (Unalaska Advertiser): "Theft - Caller reported his teenage son's iTouch had been stolen. ...The investigating officer determined that a teenage girl, who didn't like the teenage boy, had taken the iTouch and thrown it in the ocean." ALSO:

> Police blotter writing brings Unalaskan fame -- and possibly a book deal (KUCB)

DEFENSE DEPARTMENT MEETS ITS MOOSE (Sourdough Sentinel, Elmendorf AFB): Where do all the moose at Elmendorf and Fort Richardson come from? Where do they go? What are they doing? Base and state wildlife conservation agents are tagging military moose to try to get those questions answered.

SOUTHEAST TOWN ADVERTISES FOR FAMILIES TO FILL SCHOOL (Juneau Empire): In an effort to save their school, the residents of Tenakee Springs have launched an Internet marketing campaign. The item for sale: Tenakee Springs. "We are looking for a few good families," begins their Craigslist ad.

COAL STOLEN FROM FAIRBANKS FOOD BANK (Fairbanks Daily News-Miner): Thieves took a huge, free helping of fuel - not food - from the Fairbanks Community Food Bank over the weekend. Stealing someone's fuel in Alaska, especially when temperatures remain well below freezing, is perhaps akin to cattle rustling in the old West.

ON PENINSULA, RELIEF FROM HIGH ELECTRICITY RATES MIGHT BE TEMPORARY (Homer Tribune): After several months of jaw-dropping electric bills for Kenai Peninsula residents, rates will be coming down starting next month. Homer Electric Association announced this week that it would be adjusting its rates back to the pre-December state. Why the rollercoaster rates? Check the prices at the gas pump, HEA says. ALSO:

> Another rate hike for HEA members (Peninsula Clarion, December 2008)

A NAST-Y TAKE ON GOV. PALIN AND AGIA (Jim Geraghty, National Review): Joe McGinniss' Conde Nast Portfolio cover story on Gov. Palin, "Pipe Dreams," is almost too well-researched to be dismissed as a hit piece. Over six pages, McGinniss, who covered Alaska's oil boom in 1975, takes us deep into the world of the state's oil-and-gas industry, the challenging terrain, the murky politics and the Byzantine relationship between politics and big business. A reader who comes to the topic with no familiarity with the issue comes away more knowledgeable, and for that McGinniss deserves credit. But the article's argument doesn't always mesh with the details. ALSO:

> Transcript: CNN interviews McGinniss on Portfolio article

> Palin response to McGinniss piece

DRILLING THE ARCTIC: DOES INCREASING ENERGY INDEPENDENCE COME AT OUR PERIL? (Scientific American): Jeff Short, a former Alaskan and Pacific science director for the conservation group Oceana, testified before the U.S. House on the anniversary of the Exxon Valdez spill Tuesday. In an interview, he says the small potential payoff in new Arctic gas and oil finds is not worth the risk of offshore drilling there. ALSO:

> Alaskans speak out on offshore drilling (Alaska Public Radio Network)

FIRST, 2 FEET OF SNOW IN KODIAK; NEXT, FLOODS? (Kodiak Konfidential blog): "We have so much snow that this town was shut down [Tuesday]. I talked to several olde tymers and others born and raised here, and none of them ever saw that much snow in one storm. ... Um, speaking of the thaw, there's now a flood advisory for Kodiak."

Return to Alaska Newsreader through the day for new links.

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HIGHLIGHTS FROM RECENT NEWSREADERS:

Birthday girl among last to leave Redoubt before eruption (Fairbanks Daily News-Miner)

Redoubt responds to GOP in explosive interview (The Mudflats blog)

Dogs in deer attack loose again (Juneau Empire)

Struggle for power on doomed fishing boat (The Seattle Times)

Russia calls Old Believers home (The New York Times)

Sylvia Plath's son commits suicide in Fairbanks (The Times of London)

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