Two women have been appointed to lead regional campuses of the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The regional campuses are federally designated Alaska Native-serving institutions that are part of the university’s College of Rural and Community Development. They offer two-year degree programs, as well as ways for students to complete bachelor’s degrees through distance-delivered courses and programs from the University of Alaska system.
Wanda Wahl is the new director of the Bristol Bay Campus in Dillingham, Alaska. Wahl has served as interim director since May 2021 and first joined the staff there in 1985.
Whal is an enrolled tribal member of Curyung, the tribe on whose ancestral land the Bristol Bay Campus is located. The Bristol Bay campus serves 33 remote villages scattered over a 55,000-square-mile area, including Bristol Bay, the Alaska Peninsula, the Pribilof Islands, and the Aleutian Islands. Whal holds a bachelor’s degree in business from Linfield College in McMinnville, Oregon.
Minnie Naylor was named director of the University of Alaska Fairbanks Chukchi Campus in Kotzebue. Naylor has been on the university’s staff for nine years and most recently served as interim director of the Chukchi Campus.
Naylor grew up in Kotzebue. She holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in rural development from the Univerity of Alaska Fairbanks.
The three women named to provost positions are Nancy Marchand-Martella at the University of Northern Colorado, Lise Youngblade at Colorado State University, and Randi Storch at Western Oregon 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.