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Anchorage native Owen S. Wozniak '97 and his family are also preparing for the Russian invasion. "We're asking immigrants from Afghanistan how to best protest yourself from Russian tanks and increasing the size of our dog sled team so we can out run the Russians," he says...

Author: By Alberta Laktonen, | Title: Better Dead Than Red? | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

...Wozniak is apprehenshive, primarily because he fears the economic repercussions for the res to the U.S. "Russia is probably interested in the secret untapped oil reserves that only Alaskans know about. These reserves, which could fuel the world for 20 years, have been kept a secret," says Wozniak, who also has an alternate theory. 'Zhirinovsky wants to take over the lucrative ulu production industry, nationalize it, and make Russia a super-power again,' Wozniak says...

Author: By Alberta Laktonen, | Title: Better Dead Than Red? | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

...Wozniak says he is truly concerned about his future. "I think that having to learn Russian will be bad news. I'm expecting to get conscripted and shipped North to work on the Arctic Land Bridge...

Author: By Alberta Laktonen, | Title: Better Dead Than Red? | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

...Wozniak's opinion, Alaska could best protect itself from being reclaimed by placing a big sign in the Pacific Ocean that says, "This way to Alaska," followed by an arrow pointing in the direction of California. But if Russia does take over Alaska, Wozniak says he thinks Russia should refund the $7.2 million originally paid for the land, with interest, as well as agree to fund the construction of a water pipeline to California...

Author: By Alberta Laktonen, | Title: Better Dead Than Red? | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

None of this would have been thinkable a decade ago. Apple founders Steven Jobs and Stephen Wozniak were riding high on the widespread acceptance of their best seller, the Apple IIe, when IBM launched its PC in 1981. While it was bulky, expensive ($2,600, vs. $1,395 for the Apple machine) and difficult to use, the PC was quickly adopted as the industry standard because IBM had a lock on the Big Business market. Apple eventually sold nearly 3 million of its IIe's, mainly for school and home use, but the company was largely shunned by corporations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Alliances Love at First Byte | 7/15/1991 | See Source »

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