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Our Contributors
While
wrapping up a screenplay about a 34-year-old athlete facing the end of
her career, Jon Weisman learned that 34-year-old former Stanford star
Paul Carey had retired as a professional baseball player and was managing
in the low minor leagues. Weisman, himself 34 and enduring a stretch
of $120-a-week paychecks at the time, wondered how Carey,
90, was coping. All of us had high expectations for success
in our 20s, says Weisman, 89. Im preoccupied with
how people, even after their careers become a bigger struggle than they
were prepared for, find peace of mind. Weisman, whose own bid for
career contentment has taken him from sportswriting for the Los Angeles
Daily News and Los Angeles Times to television scripts for
Disney and others, in April became associate writer/editor at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art. He and his wife, Dana, are expecting their
first child in September.
Brian
Smith is drawn to unusual assignments. So when he was asked to photograph
minor-league ballplayers at a historic Georgia ballpark (A
Season in Savannah"), he jumped. I wanted to give the photographs
a vintage feel, says Smith, who shot in black-and-white using four
different cameras, including one made in the 1930s. An Iowa native, Smith
earned his undergraduate degree at the University of MissouriColumbia.
During a 22-year career, his work has appeared in Sports Illustrated,ESPN
magazine and Business Week. He won a Pulitzer Prize for his photographs
from the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics while working for the Orange County
Register. He lives in Miami Beach with his wife, Fazia.
Covering
campus fires, floods and earthquakes was all in a days work
for Theresa Johnston (left) and Karen Bartholomew during their time with
the Stanford News Service in the 1980s and early 90s. So when we
asked Johnston, 83, to write about the Farms student firefighters,
she tapped out an e-mail to her friend and former colleague. Sure
enough, Karens help with the research was invaluable, Johnston
says. Thats not surprising: Bartholomew, 71, comes from a
family of firemen, and she fondly remembers visiting her father, a Stanford
firefighter from 1961 to 1976, during her student days. A board member
of the Stanford Historical Society and author of Century
at Stanford, she divides her time between Menlo Park and Boothbay
Harbor, Maine. Palo Alto-based Johnston, who wrote last issues cover
story on the Viennese Ball, is a freelance education writer and ardent
soccer mom.
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