The AGIA gasline bill ready for a vote in the state house . Meanwhile 3 dead whales wash up in Lower Cook Inlet. Plus a Russian ham radio team heads out to set up an outpost in the Aleutians. And GCI lays fiber optic cable to connect 5 towns in southeast. Those stories and more on tonight's Alaska News Nightly, broadcast statewide on APRN stations.Individual news stories are posted in the Alaska News category and you can subscribe to APRN's news feeds via e-mail, podcast and RSS.Download audioGasline bill ready for House voteDave Donaldson, APRN - JuneauThe House tomorrow will take up – and vote on -- the bill authorizing a natural gas pipeline from the North Slope to North American markets.Southeast troll on target for ChinookJoe Viechnicki, KFSK - PetersburgSoutheast’s commercial troll fishing fleet looks to be right on target for it’s king salmon catch from a five-day opening early this month.Dead whales turn up in Cook InletEmily Schwing, KBBI - HomerAt least three dead whales turned up in the Lower Cook Inlet area over the weekend. Scientists with the North Gulf Oceanic Society (NGOS) were unavailable for official comment, but they did confirm the whales had been killed by transient killer whales within the last few days.Stategic energy summit concludes in FairbanksDan Bross, KUAC - FairbanksLocal, state and federal officials participated in a 2-day Strategic Energy summit in Fairbanks over the weekend. The focus of the meetings was a synthetic fuel project being pursued by the Fairbanks North Star Borough. The proposed facility would turn local coal, and potentially biomass, into a synthetic diesel for heating, transportation and electricity generation.Search for entangled Humpback underway in Icy StraitJohn Ryan, KTOO - JuneauRangers and entanglement specialists from Glacier Bay National Park are out on Icy Strait looking for a humpback whale tangled in a fishing net.Alaska Railroad Freight Shed to be restored as historical landmarkLen Anderson, KSKA - AnchorageThe Oscar Anderson House, Kimball's store, the Anchorage Hotel, and the Fourth Avenue Theater are some downtown survivors of the city's past. Soon a new, old timer will join their ranks--the Alaska Railroad Freight Shed.Fairbanks home sales remain strongDan Bross, KUAC - FairbanksFairbanks area home sales remain strong despite the national real estate downturn. Statistics released by the Greater Fairbanks Board of Realtors show only a modest dip in sales during the first and second quarters of this year. More than 4-hundred homes sold in the Fairbanks area during the first 2 quarters.Russian ham radio team heads to the AleutiansAnne Hillman, KIAL - UnalaskaA team of Russians are setting up an amateur radio outpost on an uninhabited Aleutian Island.GCI lays cable to connect 5 towns in southeastJoe Viechnicki, KFSK - PetersburgMariners in Southern Southeast will see a barge laying fiber optic cable between Ketchikan and Wrangell this week. It’s part of GCI's $30 million project to connect five southeast towns to the company’s cable link with the lower 48.Dipnetting on the Kenai reached its peak over the weekendEmily Schwing, KBBI - HomerDipnetters lined the shores of the Kenia River this weekend as the subsistence fishery peaked.