|
|
Who's Who
While
researching his story
on the booming college-consultant industry,
JEFF BRAZIL couldn't
help wondering whether his own children might someday take
advantage of such services. "It's the kind of thing everyone
could benefit from," says Brazil, who has two sons and two
daughters. "Thankfully, we don't have to think too much
about it for a while -- we've got to get them through
elementary school first." Brazil, 38, got to know Stanford
as a cub reporter working for the now-defunct Peninsula
Times Tribune of Palo Alto. In 1993 he won a Pulitzer
Prize for an investigative series he co-wrote for the
Orlando Sentinel exposing corruption and abuses in a
sheriff's squad. He joined the Los Angeles Times in
1993 and in 1998 became city editor of its Orange County
bureau.
As
editor of the Stanford Daily during the height of the
anti-war movement, PHIL
TAUBMAN, '70, felt pressure from both sides. "The
radical students thought we were cowards, somehow allied
with the campus administration. The University felt we were
unfair, too sympathetic to the radicals." Taubman says the
stress of running the newspaper "made me wary" of a career
in journalism. But he went on to Time, Esquire and,
for the last 20 years, the New York Times, where he
ran the Moscow bureau and now coordinates national security
and foreign commentary for the editorial page. A University
trustee from 1978 to 1982, Taubman came back to campus in
September to drop off his son, Michael, for freshman
year. He lives in Manhattan with his wife, Felicity
Barringer, '72 (a Times reporter), and their younger
son, Gregory.
RAY
ISLE's stint at Larry
McMurtry's bookshop in Washington, D.C., didn't lure him
into the rare-book business. It led him, instead, into the
wine industry. "There's an allure to specialized, esoteric
knowledge that's common to both pursuits," says Isle, 36,
who earned degrees at Rice and Boston University before
arriving at Stanford in 1993 as a Stegner fellow in creative
writing. The first remarkable bottle of wine he ever had was
a gift from a socialite whose Jaguar had broken down outside
McMurtry's bookstore. "I let her use the phone, and two days
later she came rushing in and gave me a bottle of white
burgundy." These days, Isle works in New York City for a
wine importer but escapes to his home state of Texas
whenever possible.
BARBARA
RIES was one of a handful of photographers at
USA Today when the paper started in 1982. "In those
days we were really flying by the seat of our pants," she
says of the staff in Arlington, Va. "We covered everything:
wars, protests, droughts. We just jumped on a plane and
went." Among her memorable assignments: documenting the
conflicts in Nicaragua and El Salvador and making a portrait
of Jimmy Carter on a fishing trip in Georgia. She left
USA Today in 1990 to work as a freelance
photojournalist in Washington, D.C. Her work has appeared in
Time, Newsweek and Washingtonian. In 1997,
Ries, now 41, moved to San Rafael, Calif., with her two sons
and husband, John Ritter, a correspondent for USA
Today. Her portrait
of the Millmans and their college consultant appears in this
issue.
|