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Our Contributors
Frank
Tremaine became an instant war correspondent early one Sunday morning
by looking out of his window. What he saw was a plume of smoke rising
from Pearl Harbor. Tremaine, 36, who managed United Presss
Honolulu bureau at the time, also claims the distinction of being the
only correspondent who covered his first war story stark naked. (Who
needed pajamas in balmy Hawaii? he quips.) Suddenly, his responsibilities
mushroomed. He directed UPs coverage of Americas island-hopping
campaigns across the Pacific until the
Japanese surrender, then became the news agencys first postwar
manager in Tokyo. In 1952, after covering the Korean War, he was transferred
to UP headquarters in New York, where he filled a variety of executive
positions until his retirement in 1980 as senior vice president of United
Press International. He and his wife, Kay, live in Christmas Cove, Maine,
and Savannah, Ga.
When
Uma Sanghvi signed on to photograph the work of a Stanford medical
team in Papua New Guinea last summer,
she expected the conditions would be challenging. She had no idea. The
worst part was the mosquitoes, says Sanghvi, who accompanied the
medics to the remote villages on foot and in dugout canoes, always lugging
20 or more pounds of camera equipment. Every inch of my skin was
covered with bites. I couldnt sleep because it was so hot, and I
would lie there awake trying not to scratch. We were all exhausted from
lack of sleep. A human biology major at Stanford, Sanghvi knew virtually
nothing about cameras when she enrolled in a photography course her junior
year. Something clicked. I just fell in love with it, she
says. The following summer she earned an undergraduate research grant
to produce a photographic study of rural India. After graduating in 1999,
Sanghvi worked for America Online in San Diego, shooting images for its
city site, and with Marin County photographer Catherine Karnow. This fall,
Sanghvi began an MFA program in photojournalism at Ohio University.
Christopher
Vaughan started following Robert Sapolskys research a dozen
years ago as a writer for Science News magazine. He does
such fascinating work at all levels, from cell behavior to animal behavior,
and uncovers lessons about how we should live our lives every day,
says Vaughan, whose profile of
Sapolsky is featured here. But Vaughan is just as intrigued by the Stanford
neurobiologists sense of adventure and his communication skills.
He does what scientists used to be famous forgoing out and
being Wild Man of the Wilderness, doing great science and then writing
about it in a captivating way. Vaughan, 40, worked with Stanford
researcher William Dement as co-author of The Promise of Sleep (Delacorte,
1999). He lives in Menlo Park with his wife, Laurie, and their two children.
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