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Who's Who
"She's
surprising, refreshing, spunky," says
MARTHA BRANT. Spunky?
That's not how reporters usually describe U.S. diplomats,
but that's what Brant found when she interviewed Susan
Rice, the assistant secretary of state for African
affairs. Rice, '86, squeezed in her visit with Brant between
a meeting with a Kenyan delegation and some frantic
wordsmithing on a U.N. resolution on Sudan. "She's a major
multitasker," says Brant, who has been a Newsweek
correspondent since 1993. She covered Hillary Clinton in
1995 and 1996, then served as the magazine's Mexico City
bureau chief for two years before settling in Chicago as a
national correspondent. A native of Laguna Beach, Calif.,
Brant, 32, graduated from Yale in 1989 and picked up a
master's degree in Latin American studies from Stanford in
1993.
Growing
up in Pullman, Wash., PETER
BHATIA rooted against Stanford football in favor
of the hometown Pac-10 team. That all changed when he
arrived on the Farm in 1971. In his freshman year, the
Cardinal went to its second straight Rose Bowl, a game
Bhatia missed. He hasn't missed much Stanford action since.
A journalist who has worked in Dallas; York, Pa.; Sacramento
and Fresno, Calif., Bhatia, '75, has racked up a lot of
miles as a "long-suffering" season-ticket holder. Now
executive editor of the Oregonian, Bhatia serves on
the board of the Stanford Alumni Association. His essay
on Stanford's 28-year wait for a return trip to Pasadena
appears in this issue.
Illustrator
RICHARD DOWNS has a
simple procedure for coming up with ideas: he reads a
manuscript and waits. He didn't have to wait long after
reading Joel Smith's unflinching memoir
of a mental breakdown. "With depression, the person gets
trapped in his own head, and that was the seed of the idea,"
says Downs, whose work has appeared in Rolling Stone,
National Geographic and PC World. Downs, 41,
studied at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena,
Calif., where he developed a painterly style influenced by
German expressionist Max Beckmann. These days, he executes
his work almost entirely on a computer in his studio in
Nevada City, Calif., where he lives with his wife,
illustrator Gwyn Stramler, and their daughter, Jillian,
8.
As
a management consultant on international development,
ROBERT STRAUSS, MA '84,
MBA '84, has worked in more than 50 countries. He claims to
have "fallen over backward" into writing in 1995, when his
wife suggested he write about their five-month honeymoon in
Asia. His work has since appeared in the Los Angeles
Times, Saveur and Salon. While reporting on the
future entrepreneurs in the Mayfield
Fellows Program, Strauss, 44, says he was "amazed at how
capable and confident they seemed to be." Strauss, who lives
in San Francisco with his wife, Nina, and their daughter,
Allegra, 3, recently published his first book, How to
Have a Baby, online. It's at www.fatbrain.com/ematter.
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