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Our Contributors
Many
Stanford graduates leave the Farm never knowing that there were ROTC students
among them, but Josh Davis was aware of the officer-training program
early on. One of his drawmates was Army ROTC cadet Dave Kuhn, 95.
Even so, Daviss reporting for an article
about todays ROTC students caught him off guard. The cadets
called me sir, which I found amusing, says Davis, 96,
who lives in San Francisco. A double major in economics and modern thought
and literature, Davis has split his time since graduation writing and
filmmaking. He wrote, directed and produced a feature film titled West
Coast in 1998, but his most unusual storytelling adventure may be
his latest one. In December, he planned to write an article for Maxim
magazine about his experience at the World Arm Wrestling Championships
in Polandas a contestant. He was selected for the U.S. teamafter
he placed fourth (out of four competitors) in his weight class at the
U.S. Arm Wrestling Championships in Nevada last summer. I was pinned
in under one second, he says. It doesnt bode well.
Columbia
University journalism student Jocelyn Wiener first became interested
in Latin America as a high schooler in Los Altos. I knew a lot of
kids from Mexico and El Salvador, she explains. I saw how
they were marginalized by U.S. society. Then, at Stanford, the history
and Latin American studies major took a class on street children in El
Salvador. I decided I needed to go see for myself, says Wiener,
99. So she wenttwiceto conduct research on the different
levels of gang violence in two communities. After graduation, Wiener made
her third visit to El Salvador, on a Fulbright fellowship. When she came
back to the United States, she began working on a series of stories
about the street children she grew to know.
Shooting
ants in the desert was no picnic for
photographer Ed McCain. For starters, there was the blaring sun
and the fact that his subjects were fast-moving and uncooperative. But
the biggest challenge for McCainseen here from a bugs-eye
perspectivewas avoiding getting stung by the venomous critters.
(He succeeded.) A native of Independence, Mo.I met Harry Truman
when I was a kid44-year-old McCain is no stranger to desert
conditions, having lived in Tucson for 17 years. He started his own commercial
photography business in 1988, serving clients such as Sunset, Sports
Illustrated and Forbes, but says he still manages to get out
on the back roads to photograph what he enjoys most: the richly
varying scenes of the Southwestits landscapes and the people who
live within them.
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