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Who's Who
"I
usually end up in a bad part of town," says
ANTONIN KRATOCHVIL,
"because people know I can make do." In three decades as a
photojournalist, the Czech native has been assigned to cover
some of the world's worst neighborhoods -- from Beirut to
the South Bronx -- and has returned with award-winning
pictures for Time, Mother Jones and
Smithsonian. We sent him to Newark, N.J., to make a
portrait of Cory
Booker, '91, MA '92, a city council member who is helping
turn around one of the nation's tougher cities. The
politician and the photographer hit the street and ended up
at a construction site. "He's fighting for the renewal of a
poor neighborhood," says Kratochvil, 52. "He projected a lot
of commitment, a lot of strength."
When
TIM GRIEVE sat down to
interview Professor William Damon for this issue's cover
story on child-rearing, he was trying to survive the
"terrible twos" with his son, Pete. Now Grieve, '86, and his
wife, Quincey, are gearing up for a second act: John
MacManus Grieve arrived on December 17, 1999. When he isn't
chasing Pete or cajoling Jack, Grieve practices law in
Sacramento and writes. But for the former Stanford
Daily editor and Sacramento Bee reporter, the
priorities are clear. "Just before Jack was born, we got a
note from one of Quincey's aunts, and what she wrote really
hit me: 'Raising your kids,' she said, 'is the only
important thing you will ever do.' "
As
an undergraduate at Wellesley College,
EMILY RICHMOND studied
Renaissance literature (one senior- seminar paper focused on
the influence of female anatomy in Spenser's Faerie
Queen) and did a senior thesis in fiction writing. She
stumbled into journalism after taking a summer seminar in
magazine writing at Radcliffe. "Something just clicked,"
says the 28-year-old native of Newton, Mass. "Telling true
stories was more compelling and ultimately more challenging
than writing fiction." Now a reporter for the Palo Alto
Daily News, Richmond, MA '97, got the true story
behind a convention for Silicon Valley singles. The
assignment tested her objectivity. "I was balancing between
leaning against the wall, smirking with the other reporters,
and looking for a nice Jewish guy I could bring home to
mom," she says.
After
serving as a fighter pilot in World War II,
WILLIAM COUGHLIN
returned to Stanford in 1946 and took over the
Daily's humor column, "Bull Session." One day, he got
a call from Herbert Hoover's campus secretary. "Mr. Hoover
asked me to tell you he very much enjoys your column," the
secretary said, and then added, "As a matter of fact, he
refers to you around here as the Daily's congenial
idiot." Coughlin, '44, MA '50, went on to write for the
United Press and L.A. Times and to serve as a
journalism professor at South Carolina's Francis Marion
University. In 1990, he won the Pulitzer prize for public
service as editor of the Washington (N.C.) Daily News.
Now living in Ireland, Coughlin spent more than a month
in Australia researching the article
on his late admirer.
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