Julia O'Malley
Featured
The things that happen: Two boys and cancer
Writer Julia O'Malley and photographer Marc Lester spent a year following teenage best friends Steve Vue and Mitchell Xayapraseuth after both were diagnosed with rare childhood cancers. This is the story of their treatment and how they and their families explained what happened to them.
Julia O'Malley
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JULIA O'MALLEY
O'Malley: A city sends love, but the Sengs still suffer
When Miriam Aarons learned about the killing of an elderly couple and the sexual assault of their great-granddaughter, she got a sick feeling in her stomach. Her response was to help set up a fundraiser for the family that gave like-minded Alaskans a way to help out.
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JULIA O'MALLEY
Julia O'Malley: Missed Connections: Where near-romances end up
Here's my latest guilty pleasure: reading the "Missed Connections" section of Anchorage Craiglist.
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JULIA O'MALLEY
At graduation time, the aloha spreads across cultures
Draping a graduate's neck with bands of candy and flowers has become as expected in many Anchorage families as watching a graduate fling a mortarboard cap into the air.
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JULIA O'MALLEY
Julia O'Malley: 10 years later, mother still searches for son
Barbara Klita left me one message, then another. When I didn't respond right away, she called a third time. When I answered, she introduced herself and told me I should write about her son. Her son is missing in Taiwan, she said. Maybe I remember him? His name is Fred Frontier. He grew up here.
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JULIA O'MALLEY
Would you pay for a whiff of Alaskan Springtime?
How did P&G, an enormous company with boat-loads of research and development funds, get the idea to name a fragrance that smells like grandma hugs after a season in Alaska that smells, literally, like crap?
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JULIA O'MALLEY
Julia O'Malley: A Spenard corner that won't clean up
Spenard has been cleaning up its act for a decade, but at Spenard Road and Benson Boulevard, the bad old days hang on. Hard-drinking homeless people leaning on the bench at the bus stop or snoozing in the weedy brush between parking lots. Somewhere between 12 and 20 regulars tend to congregate there...
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JULIA O'MALLEY
Julia O'Malley: The network of a bowl of soup
The new soup kitchen at the corner of Cordova Street and Third Avenue is one of the most visible indicators of how the evangelical community in Anchorage has come of age, becoming more collaborative, organized and sophisticated.
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JULIA O'MALLEY
Julia O'Malley: Outside outrage blazes, but Alaskans always forgive Don Young
It used to be that our lone congressman, Don Young, who avoids talking to media, could be himself while visiting small-town Alaska. Off the road system, word didn't travel far. He was free to do what he customarily does: open his mouth before engaging his brain.
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JULIA O'MALLEY
O'Malley: Nick Moe and the possible
People have a tendency to talk down to Nick Moe, 26, who is a week into a two-week write-in campaign to oust Ernie Hall. He might not win, but he's not the newbie he once was. He's probably worth paying attention to.
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LIVING
O'Malley: Downtown woes have two ingredients: People and booze
Which story about intoxicated people behaving badly at night in downtown Anchorage do I tell you first? I have a notebook full of them. Pick any street that intersects with Fourth Avenue.





