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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Jim
Bettinger, director, Knight Fellowships Program
650-725-1189
Tammy Frisby, executive director, Bill Lane Center for the
Study of the North American West
650-387-8465
URLs: Risser Prize: http://knight.stanford.edu/risser/
Knight
Fellowships: http://knight.stanford.edu
Lane
Center: http://west.stanford.edu/
SYMPOSIUM
ON COLD WAR ENVIRONMENT ISSUES TO BE HELD AT STANFORD
A
panel of award-winning journalists will gather at Stanford this month in a symposium
to discuss the Cold WarÕs impact on the Western environment.
The
symposium will be presented in conjunction with the 2007 James V. Risser Prize
for Western Environmental Journalism. Judy Pasternak, of the Los Angeles Times,
won the prize and will participate in the symposium.
The
symposium is titled, ÒEnvironmental Fallout of the Cold War." Pasternak
won the Risser Prize for her series, ÒBlighted Homeland,Ó which revealed how
the U.S. government took uranium from Navajo land to build its nuclear arsenal
during the Cold War and then abandoned the Navajo people when they began to
die.
Pasternak
will be joined by Karen Dorn Steele, of the Spokane Spokesman-Review, who has
won numerous awards for her coverage of the nuclear West. Stanford History
Prof. Richard White will be the moderator.
The
symposium will begin at 4 p.m. in the Arrillaga Alumni Center. It is open to
the public, and will be followed by a reception.
The
prize is named for Risser, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and director
emeritus of the Knight Fellowships program. It is sponsored by the John S.
Knight Fellowships for Professional Journalists and the Bill Lane Center for
the Study of the North American West at Stanford.
PasternakÕs
four-part series, published in November 2006, was the result of two years of
reporting about how the mining of uranium had left behind wastes that sickened
generations of Navajos on Navajo Nation land in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.
One of the judges characterized the series as Ògreat writing, great history and
investigative work; overall, a great story that hasnÕt been told.Ó
Pasternak
has worked for the Los Angeles Times for 23 years. In recent years her work has
been honored by the Overseas Press Club, the James Aronson Award for
Social Justice Journalism and the Goldsmith Award for Investigative Reporting.
Dorn
Steele, a Knight Fellow at Stanford in the 1980s, has won numerous national
awards, including a William Stokes Award for reporting on secret radiation
releases from the Hanford nuclear reservation and a Best of the West award for
breaking the story of a congressionally mandated but long-delayed National
Cancer Institute study on nuclear fallout from Cold War bomb tests.
White
is the Margaret Byrne Professor of American History at Stanford. He is widely
regarded as one of the nationÕs leading scholars in
three related fields: the American West, Native American history and
environmental history. Professor White came to Stanford in 1998 and is the
author of five books, including ÒThe Middle Ground: Indians, Empires and
Republic in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815,Ó which was named a finalist for
the 1992 Pulitzer Prize.
The
Risser Prize was established in 2005 and is open to print, broadcast and online
journalists writing about environmental issues in western Canada, Mexico and
the United States.
The
prize was established in recognition of Risser's outstanding journalism career
and his leadership of the John S. Knight Fellowships for Professional
Journalists from 1985 until his retirement in 2000.
The
Knight Fellowships program annually brings 12 outstanding mid-career U.S.
journalists and as many as eight from other countries to study at Stanford in a
one-year program. More than 700 journalists have studied at Stanford under the
program since it began in 1966. James Bettinger is director of the program.
Dawn E. Garcia is deputy director.
The
Bill Lane Center for the Study of the North American West was established at
Stanford in 2002. In 2005 it was endowed by L. W. ÒBillÓ Lane Jr., Stanford, Ô42. The Bill Lane Center is an interdisciplinary institute dedicated to
promoting understanding of the North American WestÕs distinctive regional
identity and enriching the regionÕs social, economic, environmental, political,
and cultural vitality. Through
research programs, teaching, public events and conferences, the center brings
together scholars, journalists, public and private sector leaders, and public
intellectuals to address the central issues shaping the past, present and
future of Western places – from Canada to Mexico, from the Great Plains
to the Pacific Rim. Stanford history Professors David M. Kennedy and Richard
White are directors of the program, and Tammy Frisby is executive director.