Jamie Foland
907-474-6807
7/19/2010

Three women and three men have been named the 2010 inductees to the Nanook Hall of Fame, University of Alaska Fairbanks athletic director Forrest Karr announced Saturday.

This year’s inductees are former athletic director John C. Gilmore, former vice chancellor of student affairs Harris Shelton, and former student-athletes Sigrid Aas, Mallory (Bergstrom) Larranaga, Melissa Mulloy-Mecozzi and Stuart Watkins.

“We’re grateful for the opportunity to celebrate the department’s rich history,” said Karr.

The induction ceremony will take place Sept. 25 at the Carol Brown Ballroom at the Wood Center. Tickets and pricing will become available in August.

Each inductee’s plaque will be added to the Hall of Fame display case at the Patty Center in time for the Nanooks’ volleyball match at 7 p.m. against Simon Fraser. Inductees will be in attendance at the match.

John Gilmore

John Gilmore


John C. Gilmore
John C. Gilmore served as Alaska’s athletics director from 1968-1982, making him the longest tenured athletics director in school history. He was originally hired as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences but quickly took over as director of physical education, recreation and athletics before becoming the athletics director.

When he arrived on campus, most athletic teams at Alaska were club teams and, aside from skiing, none competed in the NCAA. Gilmore led the transition into NCAA competition.

His firm belief in gender equality led to the expansion of women’s programs on campus, including the development of the women’s basketball team. His stance eventually led to the creation of the John C. Gilmore Award by the women’s swim team, which rewards the team member with the highest GPA during the season.

Gilmore also created the Arctic Swim Club to bring community swimmers young and old to campus to swim competitively. Before Gilmore, there was no age-group swimming at the Patty Center—a tradition continued today.

Harris Shelton

Harris Shelton

Harris Shelton


Harris Shelton served as vice chancellor of student affairs from 1974-1992. At the time, his office directly oversaw the athletic department and he took an active role in the everyday activities of the department.

Shelton defended the school’s athletic programs at a time of fiscal pressure. He took hockey off campus—first to the Big Dipper and later to the Carlson Center—at a time when its following was not near what it is today. Shelton also supported the hockey program’s move to the CCHA at a time when it was not guaranteed full membership in the name of expansion.

If not in the hockey team, Shelton’s impact can best be seen in the Student Recreation Center. He fully endorsed its construction to chancellor Patrick O’Rourke, and when the estimates came in millions of dollars over budget, Shelton lobbied in Juneau to raise the funds needed.

Mallory Larranaga

Mallory Larranaga


Mallory (Bergstrom) Larranaga
Mallory (Bergstrom) Larranaga played her record-setting volleyball career from 2001-2004. During that time, she amassed the Nanook career record for kills (1,363) and finished second in digs (1,269). She finished second in match kills (31) against Western Oregon in her senior season.

She finished fifth in GNAC history in career kills and points (1,543) and third in attack attempts (3,862). She set records in conference kills (1,110), points (1,250) and attack attempts (3,120). She is second in conference games played (277).

Larranaga was Alaska’s first volleyball All-American in 2003. She was a first team all-conference player in 2003 and 2004, a second team all-region player in 2004, and an AVCA selection in 2003 and 2004. She was named to the GNAC Academic Team in 2002 and 2004.

She is the first women’s volleyball player to be inducted into the Nanook Hall of Fame.

Melissa Mulloy-Mecozzi

Melissa Mulloy-Mecozzi

Melissa Mulloy-Mecozzi


Melissa Mulloy-Mecozzi was a four-time rifle All-American between 1997-2001. Her career at Alaska led to advanced competition on the Olympic level, where she finished 8th at the 2000 games in Sydney, Australia.

As a student, she was part of NCAA National Champion teams from 1999-2001. She was the USA Shooting National Champion in 2000, a UAF Female Scholar Athlete in 1999 and 2001, and the NCAA Alaska Woman of the Year in 2001.

Since college, she has continued shooting. She was a World Cup team member from 2000-2003, including a championship team in 2002. Her individual awards include the 2003 International Distinguished Award, silver medal at the 2003 Pan American Games and the 2004 Olympic Quota Place.

Mulloy-Mecozzi is the fifth rifle athlete to be inducted.

Stuart Watkins

Stuart Watkins

Stuart Watkins


Stuart Watkins was a four-time All-American shooter who attended the University of Alaska from 1960-1964. After a storied high school career, he joined the campus ranks and was named the first All-American in Alaska history in his freshman year.

Watkins followed by being named second team All-American in 1962 and first team in 1963 and 1964. He was a Collegiate National Champion in both small and large bore in 1963.

In 1969, Watkins was named National Air Rifle Champion and in 1971 he won a gold medal in the Pan-American Games.

Watkins has coached at the YMCA and high school levels, capped by a state championship in 1996 by Dimond High School’s (Anchorage) air rifle team. He is a life member of the National Rifle Association, National Education Association and the Military Marksmanship Association.

He is the sixth rifle athlete to be inducted.

Sigrid Aas

Sigrid Aas

Sigrid Aas

Sigrid Aas competed in cross-country skiing and running for Alaska from 2000-2004. In her senior season, she finished first at the NCAA Ski Championships in both the 15-kilometer classic and 5-kilometer freestyle events. She also led the team to its first CCSA Regional Championship.

As a runner, Aas placed third in the 5-kilometer and sprints at the 2003 USA National Championsips.

Aas was a five-time NCAA All-American and three-time GNAC Academic All-Star and the 2004 NCAA Woman of the Year. She graduated magna cum laude before moving back to her native Norway.

She is the first skier to be inducted into the Nanook Hall of Fame.

Posted by Marmian Grimes On July - 20 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Ned Rozell>
907-474-7468
7/02/2010

An ancient jawbone has led scientists to believe that polar bears survived a period thousands of years ago that was warmer than today.

Sandra Talbot of the USGS Alaska Science Center in Anchorage was one of 14 scientists who teamed to write a paper based on a polar bear jawbone found amid rocks on a frigid island of the Svalbard Archipelago. The scientists determined the bear was an adult male that lived and died somewhere between 130,000 to 110,000 years ago, and that bear was similar to polar bears today. Charlotte Lindqvist of the University at Buffalo in New York was the lead author on the paper, published in the March 2010 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

A polar bear near Barrow. Photo by Ned Rozell.

An Icelandic researcher in 2004 found a fossilized lower jawbone, in excellent condition and complete with a canine tooth, on a narrow spit of land on the far west edge of Norway’s Svalbard Archipelago. It was a stunning find because there aren’t many fossils of polar bears around. The largest bears in the world spend most of their lives on sea ice, so they often die there, and their remains either sink or get scavenged by something else.

With bone and tooth in hand, scientists got to work with the latest techniques for finding the age of formerly living creatures and determining their genetic backgrounds. The latter is the specialty of Sandra Talbot. She is a research wildlife geneticist who earned her doctorate degree at the University of Alaska Fairbanks by helping determine that the mitochondrial DNA of brown bears on Admiralty, Baranof and Chichagof islands of Southeast Alaska is more closely related to that of polar bears than to the DNA of other brown bears.

Talbot says the evidence of a polar bear from 130,000 years ago shows that the creatures somehow survived conditions warmer than they face today.

“This is verifying that the polar bear lived through at least one warming period,” Talbot says. “The Eemian was a very hot period, and polar bears survived it,” she says.

During the Eemian, about 125,000 years ago, the planet was warm enough that hippos lived where London is now. Polar bears, now adapted to eating seals that live only near sea ice, somehow made it through a few thousand years when there may not have been much sea ice, if any existed at all.

“It gives us hope that they survived that stage,” Talbot says. “It does make you think about refugia more.”

“Refugia” are places that polar bears may survive without ice. The Svalbard Archipelago may have been one of those places. Biologists today think polar bears would have a difficult time living on land, because other species like the grizzly bear could outcompete them.

The warm period of the Eemian might have come at a time when the polar bear wasn’t such an ice specialist, Talbot says.

“We can’t predict whether the polar bear is too far out (in its evolution towards a life on ice),” she says. “It’s interesting that there are a few examples of hybridization (between polar bears and brown bears). That’s something worth watching.”

And maybe polar bears have been trying to adapt to life on land, but one species has blocked that avenue of evolution. Polar bears that wander onto land, especially near a human settlement, tend to get shot. And humans — who didn’t wander out of Africa until about 45,000 years ago — weren’t present on the edge of the sea ice when polar bears first made it their home.

“We weren’t impacting them then the way we are now,” Talbot says.

Though the polar bear perhaps prospered through hot times in the past, what they have in store ahead may be their greatest challenge ever.

“We’re going into a very similar period of time, but it’s generally thought that this is going to be warmer than (the last great warm period),” Talbot says.

This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute.

Posted by Andrew Cassel On July - 2 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Cody Burgess

Cody Burgess has been named the Alaska Nanooks' new women's basketball head coach.

Jamie Foland

907-474-6807  
6/11/10

University of Alaska Fairbanks athletics director Forrest Karr announced Thursday that Cody Burgess has been named the next head coach for the Alaska Nanooks women’s basketball program. Burgess will take over as the 10th head coach in program history.

“Cody has the plan, passion and broad support necessary to provide the foundation that Nanooks women’s basketball has been missing,” said Karr. “She is an emerging leader that brings integrity, trust, stability and coaching ability to the job and I cannot imagine a better candidate for this position.”

A UAF alumna, Burgess was a power forward for the Nanooks from 2002-05. She has nine years of combined playing and coaching experience at a diverse range of college levels and hands-on knowledge of Fairbanks and UAF.

“This is an exciting time in my life to be coming back to coach at Alaska,” said Burgess. “My playing experience was positive and memorable. I hope to offer that same experience to the young women I will be coaching.”

After leaving UAF, Burgess spent one season as the girl’s basketball assistant coach for North Pole High School, helping guide the Patriots to a second place finish at the Alaska state championships in the 4A division.

This season she was an assistant coach at Moberly Area Community College. She helped guide the Lady Greyhounds to a 17-14 record. While Burgess’ main role was as the recruiting coordinator, her other responsibilities included developing practices, coordinating the competition schedule, website maintenance and media relations, fundraising and monitoring student-athletes’ academic progress.

Burgess also spent two seasons as an assistant coach at William Woods University. In 2008-09 Burgess helped lead the Owls to a 21-10 record, a tournament bid and a conference championship title. The season was a turnaround after a dismal 4-23 campaign in 2007-08.

“It’s obvious that Cody has learned a great deal during her postgraduate studies and coaching experiences,” said Karr. “More importantly, however, she conveys a wholesome, holistic view of intercollegiate athletics reflective of the view of education through athletics versus education for athletics. She has a vision, a commitment to make it happen and a willingness to keep learning and improving.”

During her time at UAF, she was selected Daktronics First Team All-West Region in 2005 and Second Team All-Great Northwest Athletic Conference in 2003 and 2005.  She led the GNAC in scoring during the 2003 and 2005 seasons and was a team captain as a senior in 2004-05. She holds career records in the GNAC for her scoring average in all games (19.3) and in league games (20.0), as well as the all-time records for free throws made (188) and attempted (225), which were set during the 2004-05 campaign.

Before playing at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, Burgess played two seasons at Wenatchee Valley College, where she was named First Team All-Northwest Athletic Association of Community Colleges in 2002, as well as team MVP.

“Cody was a junior college recruit who had a skeptical view of UAF and Alaska and then fell in love with both,” Karr said. “She leads by example and even recovered from a serious knee injury to earn First Team All-West Region in 2005. Cody knows the importance of in-state recruiting and she also has Pacific Northwest and Midwest recruiting connections. She has a unique background to be able to convince young women to come to UAF.”

Burgess holds a bachelor’s degree in natural resources management from UAF and a master’s degree in athletic administration from William Woods University.

“There is a lot of work ahead for all involved,” added Burgess, “but I am confident that I can lead the program in the right direction. I am blessed to have this opportunity and look forward to the journey ahead.”

JF/6-11-10/249-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On June - 12 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
5/14/10

Members of the University of Alaska Fairbanks Journalism Department have, for the second year in a row, claimed the Alaska Press Club’s prestigious Public Service Award.
The statewide journalism organization awarded the 2009 honor to the UAF journalism department’s coverage of the Alaska Stryker Brigade stationed in Iraq and to the Skagway News for its coverage of the high cost of medevac flights. UAF journalism student and 2010 graduate Molly Dischner worked at the Skagway News during the summer and wrote the medevac stories.
Members of the UAF journalism department accepted the awards at the Alaska Press Club’s annual awards banquet in Anchorage last weekend. UAF professor Brian O’Donoghue and his students won the 2008 public service award as well. The Public Service Award is one of a handful of Alaska Press Club awards that are open to all media outlets in the state.
UAF students, publications, websites and alumni won multiple awards, in addition to the Public Service Award. Judges in several categories praised the high quality of the work by the UAF journalism department.

Gary Cohn, the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who judged the Public Service Award said that the UAF journalism department is to be congratulated for its “creativity, determination and excellent work” in covering soldiers living and working in Iraq.

“We were not surprised to see so many fine entries from the UAF journalism school,” wrote Kelley Benham, a judge from the St. Petersburg Times.

ON THE WEB: Visit the College of Liberal Arts Facebook note for a full list of UAF-affiliated winners.

NOTE TO EDITORS: For the list of all Alaska Press Club award winners, visit http://www.alaskapressclub.org/images/uploads/apc_2010_winners.pdf.

AC/5-14-10/228-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 14 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
April 16, 2010

Tom Albanese

Photo courtesy of Tom Albanese
Tom Albanese is the keynote speaker for UAF's 88th commencement ceremony, where he will also be awarded an honorary doctor of science degree.

University of Alaska Fairbanks alumnus and Rio Tinto CEO Tom Albanese will give the keynote address at the University of Alaska Fairbanks commencement ceremony Sunday, May 16, 2010 at 1:30 p.m. at the Carlson Center in Fairbanks.

As CEO of London-based Rio Tinto, one of the largest mining companies in the world, Albanese is known for steering the company toward a philosophy of sustainability, from an environmental, social and economic standpoint. It’s a philosophy that has continued to grow throughout the mining industry.

Albanese holds a bachelor’s degree in mineral economics and a master’s degree in mining engineering, both from UAF.

Albanese began his career with Resource Associates of Alaska in 1981, a company that eventually became part of Rio Tinto. In 1993, Albanese was appointed as manager of Rio Tinto’s Greens Creek Mine in Southeast Alaska, which was shuttered due to poor economic performance. His work there led to the 1996 reopening of the mine, which today employs more than 300 people. He was named head of Rio Tinto’s global industrial minerals program in 2000 and CEO of Rio Tinto in 2007. He is the first American to hold the post.

UAF will award Albanese an honorary doctor of science degree during its 88th commencement ceremony. The university will also present honorary doctoral degrees to Yup’ik elder Kangrilnguq Paul John and arctic researcher Jerry Brown.

John, of Toksook Bay, has been active in cultural and political affairs for most of his life. He is one of the last living people to have received a traditional Yup’ik education, living as a boy and young man in a qasgiq, or communal men’s house. There he learned Yup’ik legends and oral history, knowledge he now shares with the generations that followed him. He and his wife, Martina, are credited with spearheading an effort to reintroduce Yup’ik dance in the 1960s, an effort that led to dance groups forming in communities throughout the region. He has been a member of the Toksook Bay Village Council since its founding in 1963. He has served as a member and leader of a host of government, tribal, nonprofit and community organizations. Throughout his life, he has worked to preserve and share Yup’ik language and culture, which has resulted in multiple partnerships with UAF and other educational institutions. John will receive an honorary doctor of humane letters degree.

Jerry Brown

Photo courtesy of Jerry Brown
Jerry Brown will receive an honorary doctor of science degree at UAF's 88th commencement ceremony.

Brown is among the most known arctic scientists in the United States. In more than 30 nomination letters, colleagues from a variety of disciplines highlight his collaborative and innovative approach to studying the Arctic. A soil and permafrost scientist by training, Brown is lauded for his interdisciplinary approach to research, which has included incorporating social sciences and indigenous knowledge into studies of the arctic regions. Brown holds a bachelor’s degree in agricultural research and a doctorate in arctic pedology and geology from Rutgers University. His career includes 24 years with the U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory and six years leading the arctic research and policy staff at the National Science Foundation. Since his retirement in 1991, he has been active in a variety of arctic science organizations, including the Barrow Arctic Science Consortium and the International Permafrost Association. He served as president of the latter for five years. Brown will receive an honorary doctor of science degree.

Honorary degree recipients are chosen for their lasting contributions to the state and nation and for significant achievements in their respective disciplines.

MG/4-16-10/200-10

Posted by Marmian Grimes On April - 16 - 2010 3 COMMENTS

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