The University of Nebraska at Lincoln has announced the winners of the 2016 Prairie Schooner Book Prizes in poetry and short fiction. Prairie Schooner is a quarterly literary journal founded in 1926 that is sponsored by the department of English at the University of Nebraska. Each winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize receives a $3,000 prize and will have their work published by the University of Nebraska Press.
Susan Gubernat, a member of the faculty in the English department at California State University, East Bay in Hayward, is the winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Poetry. She is being honored for her poetry collection The Zoo at Night. Gubernat holds a master of fine arts degree from the Writers’ Workshop at the University of Iowa.
Venita Blackburn, an instructor in the College of Integrative Sciences and Arts at Arizona State University, is the winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Short Fiction. Her manuscript is entitled Black Jesus and Other Superheroes. Blackburn is a native of Compton, California. She holds a master of fine arts degree from Arizona State University.
Although it was initially founded as school for women, the University of Montevallo has never had a woman president. Now the university has reached a historic milestone and selected selected Michelle R. Johnston to serve as its next president.
The women who are taking on new leadership roles with professional academic organizations are Yasmeen Shorish of James Madison University in Virginia, Elena Carbone of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, Shelley Lusetti of New Mexico State University, Oona Hathaway of Yale Law School, and Keisha Blain of Brown University.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is a national program run by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. Dr. Yelick, a computer scientist and longtime UC Berkeley faculty member, will become the laboratory's next director on July 1.
The selected candidate should have expertise and experience in theoretical models in labor and public economics as well as in microeconometrics and programming.