Alaska Business Monthly

COPYRIGHT TV Trade Media, Inc.
COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from February 1989
Last Number: July 2023

Alaska Business Publishing Company, Inc.
ISSN 8756-4092




Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 14120

February 01, 1989

  • Chilkoot Lumber aims to light up Haines.

  • Promoting Hollywood north.

  • Over a barrel.

  • Flowline Alaska of Fairbanks.

  • March 01, 1989

  • Two bona fide fish tales of rapid growth.

  • April 01, 1989

  • Cargo transportation; changes in motion.

  • Jockeying jolts the visitor industry.

  • May 01, 1989

  • Small business soundness keeps the economy in tune.

  • High-flying Saucy Sisters Catering checks its altitude.

  • July 01, 1989

  • Directory of Alaska air carriers.

  • Exports from Alaska.

  • August 01, 1989

  • Hatchery designed for double duty.

  • Special delivery.

  • September 01, 1989

  • Howard Mackey's trip to the top.

  • October 01, 1989

  • Peratrovich, Nottingham & Drage: an engineering firm bent on growth.

  • Through a portal; the grounding of the tanker Exxon Valdez ushered in a new era for Alaska's oil industry.

  • The New Forty-Niners; the largest Alaskan-owned, Alaska-based companies.

  • Making tracks: the five fastest growing companies.

  • Peninsula Airways Inc.: 1988 revenue: $14.1 million; employees: 135; rank: 47.

  • Catching seafood dollars in Alaska.

  • General Communication Inc.: 1988 revenue: 42 million; employees: 150; rank: 17.

  • Seekins Ford Lincoln Mercury Inc.: 1988 revenues: $29.6 million; employees: 102; rank: 30.

  • South Coast Inc.: 1988 revenue: $26.2 million; employees: 150; rank: 33.

  • The Office Place: 1988 revenues: $20.9 million; employees: 190; rank: 37.

  • November 01, 1989

  • Huhndorf Inc.

  • Unalakleet Lodge.

  • Island Trader Transportation Co.

  • Tyonek village tours.

  • January 01, 1990

  • Earthquakes and other economy shakers.

  • Carl F. Brady.

  • Kenneth C. Eichner.

  • Pamela F. Oldow.

  • Lowell A. Wakefield.

  • Cultivating Alaska's shellfish industry.

  • February 01, 1990

  • Everybody loves a wookie.

  • Building ties with Taiwan.

  • Oil field foils.

  • Air cargo climbs.

  • Panhandle pilots see clear skies ahead.

  • Passing the buck.

  • Businesses bloom in Nome and Kotzebue.

  • March 01, 1990

  • Number grubbing when it counts.

  • Allure of the Railbelt Energy Fund.

  • Air Land Transport's John Snead.

  • Safety tips the scales.

  • Consequential Kodiak.

  • Silver Lining expands.

  • Unemployment insurance drop.

  • Wage rates rise.

  • Export license landed.