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Who's Who
Boston
Globe columnist ALEX
BEAM jumped at the chance to profile
legendary Los Angeles Times editor and publisher Otis
Chandler, '50. And not just because Beam is fascinated with
the newspaper business. He is an aficionado of all things
California. "As is widely known, California-ism is passed
through the mother," jokes Beam, who was born in Oakland in
1954 and lived in Los Angeles in the glory years of
Chandler's Times. Beam, who interviewed Chandler in
Oxnard, Calif., found the retired publisher "just as
advertised&emdash;intelligent, brusque and as close to a
force of nature as you are likely to find." Beam lives in
Newton, Mass., with his wife and three sons, all of whom set
up house in Escondido Village in 1996-97 while Beam was a
Knight fellow in journalism.
Illustrator
TRISHA KRAUSS did her
time as a bohemian. She studied fine arts at Syracuse
University, then spent four years as a struggling artist in
Europe. In 1992, she moved to New York City and found work
as a photographer's assistant. By 1996 she was earning a
living as a full-time illustrator, working for ad agencies
and magazines like Shape, Health and
Parenting. When she takes an assignment, Krauss, 34,
draws on her own experiences to come up with an image. "With
every piece there's something in your own life that evokes a
visual," she says. "It might just be remembering a look on
someone's face." Her depiction
of a couple struggling with Alzheimer's disease appears in
this issue.
When
we asked MITCH LESLIE to
write about Lewis
Terman's "genius study", we expected him to delve into IQ
controversies. But we didn't expect him to report back that
the renowned psychologist was also a fierce eugenicist who
believed genes determine intelligence and moral character.
Leslie, a writer for Stanford's Medical Center News Bureau
and a contributor to Science and WebMD, first
encountered this seldom-discussed fact in Stephen Jay
Gould's 1981 book The Mismeasure of Man. "I was
shocked at first and found it hard to look past Terman's
failings," says Leslie, 37. "But it makes a more interesting
story."
Writer
CYNTHIA HAVEN seemed
ideal to tackle the many
lives of Dana Gioia, since she's worn so many hats
herself. A freelance literary critic for the San
Francisco Chronicle, Haven has covered poetry, opera and
theater for newspapers and magazines throughout the United
States and in Britain. While she was news director at the
School of Education, she co-authored two books on learning.
More recently, she has seen her own poetry published. "As a
journalist, I became convinced that someone needed to
describe the contemporary scene in language that would reach
the kind of audience that used to be interested in poetry
half a century ago," she says. "We are all shareholders in
poetry."
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