View of first live satellite television broadcast in Alaska showing Apollo 11 lunar module, Eagle, on the moon. Photo taken in Anchorage, Alaska. Photograph type: 35 mm color slide. July 20, 1969. Photographer: William L. McNutt.
View of first live satellite television broadcast in Alaska of Apollo 11 lunar module and Neil Armstrong walking on the moon. Photo taken in Anchorage, Alaska. Photograph type: 35 mm color slide. July 20, 1969. Photographer: William L. McNutt.
View of first live satellite television broadcast in Alaska of Apollo 11 lunar module and Neil Armstrong walking on the moon. Photo taken in Anchorage, Alaska. Photograph type: 35 mm color slide. July 20, 1969. Photographer: William L. McNutt.
10 min, 2 sec film clip, color/sound. Ted Stevens gives an update on current work in the Senate to authorize development on Alaska's coastal plain; thanks long-time staffer Marie [Matsuno] Nash, who recently retired as director of Stevens's...
9 min, 3 sec. film clip, color/sound. Ted Stevens gives an update on current work in the Senate to authorize development on Alaska's coastal plain; thanks Janet Halverson; recognizes deployed U.S. military personnel; comments on regime change...
View of crew filming KFIA television show "Hi Jinks" in Anchorage, Alaska, with Frank Feeman at right. Sign reads: "Hi Jinks. Channel 2." 1954? Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size: 4 1/8" x 5".
Frank Feeman, host of KFIA television program "Hi Jinks," advertising for Piggly Wiggly Market in Anchorage, Alaska on his show. 1954? Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size: 7" x 5".
Title taken from verso. Frank Feeman with two children and large bottle of dimes during March of Dimes campaign on his KFIA (Channel 2) television program "Hi Jinks" in Anchorage, Alaska. 1954. Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size:...
Title taken from image. Outdoor portrait of girls in white gowns decorated with stars, and holding star wands and headdresses. Photographer's number 5.
Verso: “Outside the village Naatsilanei heard the sound of a woman crying. It was his wife!” From Fires on the Water, 1989, Naa Kahidi Theater [written by Dave Hunsaker]. Photo by Fred Andrews.