2025 Events
2025 Free Events at UAF
A FREE family-friendly lecture on "Discussing The Impertinent Question," a new book by Alaskan author Dan O'Neill. The interview will be led by Dermot Cole,
veteran Alaska newspaper columnist and author.
Date: August 11, Monday at 7pm
Location: Schaible Auditorium (200 Usibelli Engineering Building)
Free parking, lecture will be livestreamed and recorded.
2025 UAF LEGACY LECTURE
Honoring Distinguished Alumni
An Evening with Tim Doran
Monday, June 2, 2025 at 7pm
BP Design Theater (401 Usibelli Engineering Building)
Lecture will be livestreamed. Reception to follow.
Tim Doran graduated from UAF with a Master of Arts in Teaching in 1984 and, in 1990, an Education Specialist Certificate. Throughout his life and career, he has worn many hats. Upon graduating from Le Moyne University, Tim became the Executive Director of Project Equity Northwest, developing relationships among churches, businesses, and minority group agencies. Next, he served as the Executive Director of the Jesuit Volunteer Corps in Portland, Oregon, and under those auspices, came to Alaska and spent the next two years in Kaltag. In the late ’70s, he was a program developer for the Diocese of Fairbanks. He spent the early ’80s as the administrator/superintendent for St. Mary’s Catholic High School in St. Mary’s. The Bering Strait School District was his next stop. He was a teacher in St Michael and a principal in Teller and Unalakleet. In 1990, Tim arrived in Fairbanks, where he continues to make his mark on this community. He worked at the °Ä˛ĘÍĽżâ as a graduate faculty instructor in the Educational Leadership Program. From 1992-2014, Tim was the Principal of Denali Elementary School, where in addition to being responsible for 400 students and a staff of 51, he promoted and supported initiatives that included the Denali Science Camp, the Athabascan Fiddles-in Residence, and the Denali Literacy Academy. In 1998, he was named the Alaska Distinguished Principal by the Alaska Association of Elementary School Principals. For the 2002/2003 school year, he was selected as the Elementary Principal of the Year by the Fairbanks Principals Association, and in 2011, the National Association of Elementary School Principals honored him as a National Distinguished Principal. Following retirement, Tim joined the Peace Corps, serving in Palau. He has volunteered with the University of Alaska Museum of the North as a docent for ten years, and he has been a member of the Fairbanks North Star Borough School Board since 2017, serving three consecutive terms. To quote Fairbanks journalist Dermot Cole, Doran is one of the best Fairbanks school board members of all time, an even-tempered leader with experience, knowledge, and good judgment. He is a retired principal who has spent his career doing all he can to improve education. He is one of those rare individuals who knows how to get people of different points of view to work together.
Mondays at 7PM. These events will take place at the BP Design Theater, located in JUB 401 in the JUB building on °Ä˛ĘÍĽżâ Campus, located at The Fairbanks Tall Timber Lecture Series is made possible by a generous contribution from Explore Fairbanks.
All presentations are in-person, webcasted and recorded to be posted to here within two weeks of the live event.
The Fairbanks Tall Timber Series was created to honor those who have served the Fairbanks
community well. Join veteran newsman Robert Hannon either in person or via Zoom as
he interviews these stalwart members of our community.

6/9
Anne Hanley began writing and producing plays in her parents’ basement at the age
of seven. In third grade, she won a plastic Madonna for a poem she wrote and has been
writing ever since. Anne’s first job in Fairbanks was as an anchorwoman for Scope
Nightly News on KTVF-TV. When the station sent her to cover stories in Shishmaref
and McGrath, she got to experience Alaska Native culture firsthand, a life-changing
experience. Even before moving to Alaska, she was intrigued by the story of Louis
Shotridge, a Tlingit caught between his traditional upbringing and the science of
anthropology. In 1994, the University of Alaska Anchorage produced her play, Shotridge.
Her fictional but true-to-life drama, The Winter Bear, about Athabascan leader Sidney
Huntington, toured over 50 Alaskan communities. She just finished Coming Home, a Readers
Theatre piece about the life and poetry of Mary TallMountain, a Koyukon writer adopted
out of her village as a child in 1924. Anne served three terms on the Alaska Humanities
Forum Board and was the first playwright to be named Alaska Writer Laureate.

6/16
Before moving to Fairbanks on one of the coldest days in January 2005, Margo lived
outside of Washington, DC, for 25 years, working as an arts administrator, teacher,
and artist. Maker of sculptural box constructions and artist books, she quickly joined
the Fairbanks creative community, first as an artist and teacher and, in 2011, as
a founder of the Northwoods Book Arts Guild. Her special interest in collaboration
found a home in the Guild, where she is a catalyst in organizing projects that foster
communal learning and creative collaboration. Other projects, notably UAF’s In A Time
Of Change (ITOC), also fed her belief in the value of creative collaboration. Her
most personal collaborations, however, were with her late husband, writer Frank Soos,
whose texts often accompanied her work in exhibitions. Together, they published Double
Moon: Constructions and Conversations. Margo has received awards from the Rasmuson
Foundation and the Alaska State Council on the Arts. She was an Artist in Residence
in Denali National Park and on Beaver Creek as part of the Bureau of Land Management’s
Wild and Scenic Rivers Program. In 2014, she received an Interior Alaska Mayors' Award;
in 2015, she received the Governor’s Individual Artist Award.

6/23
Mary Ann Borchert graduated from high school in the suburbs of Chicago. She earned
her B.S. in biology from Denison University, Granvill, Ohio, and an M.S. in biology
from The Ohio State University. Seeking a change from the Midwest, she moved to Eugene,
Oregon, where she worked on a Ph.D. in marine biology at the University of Oregon.
After four wonderful years in Oregon, she was hired to run the Electron Microscope
Lab at UAF in 1971. She moved from teaching and research to administration and worked
in the Graduate School until retiring from UAF in 1994. Along the way, she earned
an M.S. in Engineering and Science Management from UAF. Since retirement, she has
been privileged to work with others to start Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI),
Raven Landing Senior Community, and Aging at Home Fairbanks. Over the years, she
has served on the boards of many other organizations. Mary Ann is grateful for the
many ways to remain active and be of service to the Fairbanks community.

6/30
Randy Zarnke was born and raised in Wausau, Wisconsin. He had an idyllic childhood,
during which he participated in several team sports and loved to hunt and fish. He
received a BSc from the University of Wisconsin—LaCrosse and an MSc and PhD from the
University of Wisconsin—Madison. In 1978 he moved to Fairbanks to work at the Alaska
Department of Fish and Game. Over the next 24 years, he studied wildlife diseases
and parasites. Shortly after arriving in Fairbanks, Zarnke began playing recreational
hockey, which became his favorite sport. In 2004, Zarnke helped form the Fairbanks
Hockey Hall of Fame and has served as its president ever since. In 2006, he organized
a community-wide celebration of the sport, known as Hockey Week in Fairbanks. Randy
is an avid hunter, fisherman, and trapper. He has also served as president of the
Alaska Trappers Association for most of the past twenty years, during which time the
group has grown in size and statewide involvement. He is most proud of an oral history
project he began in 1997. The project now includes more than 200 interviews with hunters,
pilots, trappers, guides, fishermen, and wildlife biologists. He considers it the
most important thing he has done.

7/7
Mike Thomas feels like he is from Fairbanks, but in reality, he was born in Long Beach,
California, as Louis Michael Thomas. He moved to Oregon with his parents and became
a business owner at the age of 20. At the time, he was the youngest Chevron dealer
in the nation. He heard Alaska’s streets were paved with gold, so he joined the black
gold rush in 1976. He made it to Fairbanks by way of Anchorage in 1977 with his wife
Francie and, one month later, baby boy Troy. He purchased Mike’s Chevron on College
Road that same year. Sadly, it was on the wrong side of the street. So, in 1984, the
building was lifted off the foundation and marched down College Road to its present
location. In the meantime, Mike made friends and built his business, family, and chosen
community. He became active in Fairbanks Curling Lions, where the New Year’s Eve tradition,
“Sparktacular,” was started in 1989. Francie and Mike enjoy traveling, but Fairbanks
is their home.

7/14
Brian Patrick O’Donoghue is a well-traveled scribe. After earning undergraduate (UC
Santa Cruz) and graduate degrees (NYU), he chased breaking news for east-coast weeklies
in Baltimore, DC, and Manhattan before a want ad in the early 1980s lured him North
to a career as a reporter for the Frontiersman in Wasilla. O’Donoghue embraced Alaska
through numerous field assignments and career moves, notably covering 10 sessions
of the Alaska State Legislature in Juneau for outlets ranging from the Fairbanks Daily-News-Miner
and Anchorage Daily News to Alaska’s top TV stations. His books My Lead Dog was a
Lesbian (Random House), and Honest Dogs (Epicenter Press) recount O’Donoghue’s struggles
competing in the stormy 1991 Iditarod and 1998 Yukon Quest. In retrospect, those marathon
adventures were straightforward compared to his second career, teaching journalism
at UA. For nearly two decades, O’Donoghue taught students the finer arts of investigative
reporting through a project examining the innocence claims of Marvin Roberts, Eugene
Vent, George Frese, and Kevin Pease, four young men serving long prison sentences
for the 1997 murder of a young teenager, John Hartman. O’Donoghue’s latest book, The
Fairbanks Four: Murder, Injustice and the Birth of a Movement (Sourcebooks, April
2025), tells the story behind the Alaska Law Department’s shameless bid to conceal
past errors. O’Donoghue and his wife of 30 years, Kate Ripley, have three adult children.

7/21
John Manthei’s preferred habitat is in the woods or on the water, while his preferred
activity is making things, and he has been doing just that for over 70 years. There
was a brief interlude during his college days and a couple of years after when he
dabbled in botany, and even that couldn’t keep John out of the woods. His need to
make things led him to a career in cabinet and furniture making and construction.
He also became a dog musher, lived in the bush, and built dog sleds. Along the way,
John enjoyed helping others make things, so teaching became another passion. John
was one of the founding members of The Folk School of Fairbanks, which offers a variety
of programs and classes. He loves to share his knowledge of making things from materials
he has harvested from the woods and show others how to enjoy the fun.

7/28
Stan Justice is a Colorado native and former mountaineer whose adventurous spirit
has led him through some of the most breathtaking landscapes in Alaska. With a background
in competitive running and a passion for exploration, Stan has always sought out challenges
in the wilderness and on trails. Currently, he dedicates his time to enhancing recreational
trails in Fairbanks, AK, by doing maintenance and trail construction and advocating
for trails. His commitment to preserving the natural beauty of his home state is evident
in his active involvement with local organizations that promote trail maintenance,
environmental conservation, and community engagement. In 2024, he helped found Fairbanks
Trails Inc., a 501c3 nonprofit. When he is not working on trails, Stan enjoys sharing
dancing with the love of his life Barb Lorz.

8/4
Nicky Eiseman was a 20-year-old natural science student when she arrived in Fairbanks
in the summer of 1974. She quickly recognized Fairbanks as home—a community full of
endless opportunities, inspiring mentors, and instant access to the natural world.
She enjoyed a wide variety of jobs during her first ten years, teaching Outdoor Education
at UAF, planting seedlings at Anne’s Greenhouse, running the offset press at Interior
Graphics and Copy, supporting 300 workers in the field as an expediter for Resource
Associates, and working for Jack O’Brien at the Goldstream Store back when it was
the only phone in the valley. While disparate in nature, all of these jobs provided
layers of connection and gave Nicky an ever-deepening commitment to the broader Fairbanks
community. Nicky joined the crew in the Berry Room at the Noel Wien Library in 1985
and began her next chapter as a storyteller, children’s entertainer, school librarian,
and, eventually, classroom teacher. Along the way, she got a few degrees from UAF,
raised a few kids, and donated a few organs. Raised in a tradition that valued social
justice, she leaped into the fray on more than one occasion. Now retired, she gets
to spend more time on Alaska’s rivers and trails, building community, stepping in
to help where help is needed, and working to inspire more involvement in our local
political process.
Tuesdays at 7PM. Healthy Living lectures are made possible by Foundation Health Partners and take place
in the BP Design Theater, located in JUB 401 in the JUB building on °Ä˛ĘÍĽżâ Campus, located at .
All lectures are in-person, webcasted and recorded to be posted here within two weeks
of the live event.
Ron Martino, MD
Karen Miller, RPh, Director of Denali Pharmacy
Jane LeBlond, D, BCPS, BCCP
Abe Tsigonis, MD
Dr. Stephen Heffington, MD, Chief Medical Director
Kari Burrell, Chief Strategy Officer
Chris Gay, MD
Romel Wrenn, MD
Heart Attacks and Aging: Know the Signs, Protect Your Life
Sriharsha Gowtham, MD
How to Starve Cancer
Scott Luper, ND
The 30 Minute Health Transformation: Tips & Benefits for a Daily Exercise Routine
Stewart Kerr, MD, Orthopedist
AI for Healthcare in Alaska: Where Are We and Where Are We Heading?
Arghya Kusum Das, PhD, Assistant Professor of Computer Science
Wednesdays at 7PM. Discover Alaska is offered in cooperation with the UAF college
of Indigenous Studies. These events will take place at the BP Design Theater, located in JUB 401 in the JUB building on °Ä˛ĘÍĽżâ Campus, located at
All lectures are in-person, webcasted and recorded to be posted to here within two weeks of the live event.
Kevin M. Illingworth, JD, Prof. of Tribal Governance
Teisha Simmons, MA, Interim Dean of College of Indigenous Studies
Jordan P. Lewis, PhD, MSW, Director of Research for College of Indigenous Studies and the Center
for One Health Research
Diane McEachern, PhD, LCSW, MSW, Head of UAF Rural Human Services
Claudia Ihl, PhD, Assoc. Prof. of Biology
Tia Tidwell, MA, Asst. Prof. of Alaska Native Studies
A Changing Landscape: Community Development in Alaska
Charlene Stern, PhD, Vice Chancellor for Rural, Community and Native Ed
Northern Dene Astronomy
Chris Cannon, PhD, Assoc. Prof. of Indigenous Studies
Indigenizing and Decolonizing Research
Jessica Black, PhD, Associate Vice Chancellor for Rural, Community and Native Education
A special screening of Uksuum Cauyai: Drums of Winter
Leonard Kamerling, Professor and Curator of Film Emeritus at the UA Museum of the North will present
a special screening of his acclaimed documentary on Yup'ik dance followed by a discussion.
Dance was at the heart of Yup’ik spiritual and social life. It was the bridge between
a person’s own power and the greater powers of the unseen world. At the heart of dance
was the drum in which the cadence of the universe could be heard.
Location: Schaible Auditorium (200 Usibelli Engineering Building)
Thursdays at the UAF Georgeson Botanical Garden
The first band begins at 6pm, the second at 7:30pm.
Music in the Garden does not cancel due to weather. In case of unhealthy conditions such as smoke, Music in the Garden will be moved to the Regents' Great Hall in the Fine Arts Complex, °Ä˛ĘÍĽżâ Campus. When raining, Music in the Garden will take place under the covered Rotary pavilion in the garden. Please call Summer Sessions at 907-474-7021 to check.
Parking is limited, attendees are encouraged to use a FREE shuttle that departs from the Nenana Parking Lot, located across from the Patty Center, beginning at 5:30 p.m.
5/22 |
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6pm- Steve Brown and the Bailers |
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7:30pm- Fireweed Fiddle |
5/29 |
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6pm- Carl Addington |
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7:30pm- Badger Street Jazz Band |
6/5 |
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6pm- Headbolt Heaters |
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7:30pm- Marc Brown and the Blues Crew |
6/12 |
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6pm- UAF Music Academy |
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7:30pm- South Cushman Social Club |
6/19 |
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6pm- Mount Pleasant Baptist Church Choir and Praise Dancers |
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7:30pm- Clarence Pate Project featuring Willie Blackburn |
6/26 |
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6pm- Cold Steel Drums |
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7:30pm- WT and the Effingtones |
7/3 |
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6pm- Analemma |
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7:30pm- Identity Crisis |
7/10 |
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6pm- Dejavou |
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7:30pm- Sourdough Rizers |
7/17 |
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6pm- Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival: John Unzicker, Classical Guitar |
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7:30pm- Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival: Ron Drotos, Piano Cabaret |
7/24 |
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6pm- Ryan Bowers and the Brain Trust |
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7:30pm- Almost a Minyan |
7/31 |
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6pm- Red Hackle Pipe Band |
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7:30pm- Ice Jam |
8/7 |
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6pm- Diamond Fuller |
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7:30pm- Fairbanks Community Jazz Band |
8/14 |
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6pm- Susan Grace |
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7:30pm- ET Barnette String Band |
Healthy Children is offered in cooperation with the Fairbanks Children's Museum, Fairbanks
North Star Borough Public Libraries and Foundation Health Partners. These events will
take place at the Noel Wien Public Library.
All lectures are in-person, webcasted and recorded to be posted to here within two weeks of the live event.
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4/10/25 They can’t express themselves, they’re helpless and when they cry, it can be stressful for parents and caregivers alike. Grandparents will have the opportunity to refresh their skills, as research and best practices have changed in recent decades. |
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11/19/24 What you say or don't say to your teen matters. |
Please Stay Tuned for future Healthy Children Dates