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Our Contributors
Felicity
Barringer never knew Daniel Pearl, but I was struck by the parallels
in our lives, she says. We both went from Stanford-based journalism
to report from distant places at historic moments. As a result,
says Barringer, whose story about
the slain Wall Street Journal reporter begins on page 72, I
wanted to claim kinship. When I saw how many people had the same impulse,
I decided to explore why. Barringer, 72, started her career
at the Stanford Daily and went on to work as a reporter and editor
at The Record in Hackensack, N.J., the Washington Post and
the New York Times. She joined the Times in 1986, in Moscow,
where she covered the beginning of the end of the Cold War, focusing on
Soviet dissidents, the Chernobyl disaster and the profound cultural changes
of the time. Since 1998, she has been the Times press correspondent,
which led her to cover Pearls kidnapping and murder in Pakistan.
Barringer is married to Phil Taubman, 70. They have two sons, Michael,
03, and Gregory, who heads to Princeton this fall.
The
dust jacket on the recently published book Freetown Ambush has
a picture of a cranial x-ray that shows a pudgy, cylindrical object lodged
an inch or two inside the skull. The object is a bullet, and the head
is ian stewarts. Shot while on a reporting assignment in Sierra
Leone in 1999, Stewart, now a Knight fellow at Stanford, was airlifted
to London and barely survived. He has undergone a slow and agonizing rehabilitation
since. He writes about the dangers journalists
like Daniel Pearl face, and the importance of their work, on page 74.
A Toronto native, Stewart earned his undergraduate degree at Queens University
in Kingston, Ontario, and a masters in journalism at Columbia. Reporting
first for United Press International and later for the Associated Press,
he has been posted in Hong Kong, India and Vietnam, in addition to West
Africa. In the mid-90s, based in Islamabad, Pakistan, he reported
on the emergence of a radical Islamic government in Afghanistan, backed
by Pakistani extremists and financed in part by a shadowy terror leader
named Osama bin Laden. Freetown Ambush, Stewarts account
of his experiences reporting in Africa, was published in Canada in February.
An American edition will be on shelves this fall.
Seth
Affoumado wanted a warm and fuzzy, loving-couple portrait
when he set out to photograph memory researchers Danielle Lapp and Jerome
Yesavage in their campus Eichler home. But they were hard to shoot
together, because their faces and personalities are so different and both
of them were tense, recalls Affoumado, 39, who lives in Daly City
with his wife, fine-art photographer Caroline Cory, and their toddler
son, Ezra. I warmed them up by asking Danielle for a house tour
and by talking trout and optics with Jerry, he says. Lapp and Yesavage
appearat easeon page 66.
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