John S. Knight Fellowships for Professional Journalists

U.S. Fellows Announced

U.S. Knight Journalism Fellows Named at Stanford

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 28, 2003

FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
James Bettinger or Dawn Garcia
650-723-4937

STANFORD — Twelve U.S. journalists have been awarded John S. Knight Fellowships at Stanford University for the 2003-04 academic year.

During their stay at Stanford, the Knight Fellows will pursue independent courses of study and participate in special seminars. The 2003-04 program marks the 38th year that Stanford has offered fellowships for professional journalists.

Financial support for the U.S. fellows comes primarily from an endowment provided by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

The program will also include a group of International Knight Fellows. They will be announced in May.

The Knight Fellowships program director is Prof. James R. Bettinger. Dawn E. Garcia is the deputy director.

Following are the 2003-04 U.S. Knight Fellows and their principal areas of study:

Gail Ablow, television documentary producer, New York; environmental science, policy and health

Barbara Brotman, columnist & writer, Chicago Tribune; religion and women

Sara Catania, staff writer, LA Weekly; mental illness and criminal law

Matt Crenson, national writer, Associated Press; non-archaeological investigations of human prehistory

Robert Hiaasen, features reporter, Baltimore Sun; fiction, screenwriting and narrative journalism

Kay Johnson, correspondent/Vietnam, Time; globalization’s impact on international law

Torsten Kjellstrand, photojournalist, Spokane Spokesman-Review; the renaissance on Native American reservations

Barbara Roessner, deputy managing editor, Hartford Courant; art and politics

Kelly Scott, Sunday Calendar editor, Los Angeles Times; how dramatic license in popular culture shapes our understanding of history

Lynne K. Varner, editorial writer & columnist, Seattle Times; evolving political dynamics between African Americans and Hispanics

Eric Weiner, Tokyo correspondent, National Public Radio; the clash of the modern world with ancient cultures and religions

Bonnie V. Winston, public safety team editor, Norfolk Virginian-Pilot; the impact of race, culture and religion on conflict and conflict resolution

The U.S. fellows were chosen by the Knight Fellowships Program Committee: Robert Boyd, national science writer, Knight-Ridder; Luis Fraga, Stanford associate professor of political science; William B. Gould IV, Stanford professor of law; Ardith Hilliard, executive editor, The Morning Call (Allentown, PA); Marion Lewenstein, Stanford professor of communication; Alex MacLeod, managing editor, Seattle Times; Diane Middlebrook, Stanford professor of English; Norman Naimark, Stanford professor of history and Sheila Stainback, anchor, Court TV.