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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Nieman Foundation Announces Twelve American Fellows
Twelve American journalists have been appointed to the 62nd class of
Nieman Fellows at Harvard University. They will be joined by
approximately 12 international journalists to be named later this month.
Established in 1938, the Nieman program is the oldest mid-career
fellowship program for journalists in the world. The fellowships are
awarded to working journalists of particular accomplishment and promise
for an academic year of study in any part of the University. More than
1,000 American and international journalists have studied at Harvard as
Nieman Fellows. The new fellows and their areas of interest are:
Carol Eisenberg, health policy reporter, Newsday,
Long Island, N.Y.; the market transformation of American health care and
its effects.
Bill Krueger, investigative reporter, The News &
Observer, Raleigh, N.C.; economic, medical, and social issues of aging.
Mary Kay Magistad, China correspondent, National Public
Radio; how societies devastated by violent conflict heal and rebuild.
Patrick J. McDonnell, staff writer, Los Angeles
Times; history, economics, and social aspects of immigration and
assimilation.
David Molpus, workplace correspondent, based in Chapel Hill,
N.C. National Public Radio; contemporary workplace issues. Funding is
provided by the Stark Fellowship Fund in honor of Louis Stark, a pioneer in
the field of labor reporting.
Jim Morrill, chief political writer, The Charlotte
Observer; politics and history of race and ethnicity.
Lori Olszewski, education writer, San Francisco
Chronicle; African, Mexican, and Asian history and culture, and child
development.
Deborah Schoch, staff writer, environment, Orange County
edition, Los Angeles Times; conservation biology, environmental
economics, urban planning, and public policy. Funding for the
environmental fellowship is provided by the V. Kann Rasmussen
Foundation.
Stephen Smith, health writer, The Miami Herald;
economic, political, historical, and philosophical issues of health care.
Thrity Umrigar, feature writer, Akron Beacon Journal;
identity and community; race, ethnicity, gender, and class.
Michael Paul Williams, columnist/reporter, Richmond
Times-Dispatch; African-American studies.
Jerry Zremski, Washington correspondent, The Buffalo
News; how government policy affects the nation's economy and
the older industrial areas.
The selection committee included William Hilliard, editor (retired),
The Oregonian, Portland; James Honan, lecturer on education,
Harvard Graduate School of Education; Angelyn Konugres, principal
associate in obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology, Harvard
Medical School; Bill Kovach, committee chair and Nieman Foundation
Curator; and Terry Tang, editorial writer, The New York Times, and
Nieman Fellow '93. Robert Stavins, Albert Pratt Professor of
Business and Government and chair, Environment and Natural Resources
Program, Kennedy School of Government, assisted with the selection of
the environmental fellow.
Copyright
1999 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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