|
|
Our Contributors
Former
Oakland Tribune photographer ROBERT STINNETT
recalls that instructions from his editors for shooting the 1982 Big Game
were pointed and unequivocal: dont leave early. The year before,
the photographer had missed the winning score, so I was in the end zone
shooting the Band and the Stanford cheerleaders, says Stinnett.
Then he noticed the Band behaving even more erratically than usual,
and a moment later Cal ball carrier Kevin Moen crossed the goal line,
made a celebratory leap and crashed into Stanford trombonist Gary Tyrrell.
Stinnett caught all of it on film. Those photos, accompanying And
the Band Played On, have become the standard archive of the
Play, and the Moen shot has been reprinted more than 100 times,
according to Stinnett. An aerial reconnaissance photographer for the Navy
in World War II (he flew with squadron leader George H. Bush), Stinnett
retired in 1986 after almost 40 years at the Tribune. He has since
focused on writing books; his latest is Day of Deceit: The Truth About
FDR and Pearl Harbor (Free Press, 1999).
Growing
up in Ohio, the daughter of two Ohio State graduates, JACKIE
KRENTZMAN learned a thing or two about football rivalries. But
her research for the story about the Play (And
the Band Played On) was an eye-opener. I now realize that
for my entire life I have labored under the misconception that the real
Big Game was Ohio State-Michigan, she says. A graduate of the University
of Michiganand full disclosure requires that we mention she earned
a masters degree in journalism at CalKrentzman is editorial
director of Diablo Custom Publishing in Walnut Creek, Calif. A former
newspaper reporter who covered both Stanford and Cal football and basketball,
Krentzman has written several articles for STANFORD,
including a history of Sunset magazine and profiles of Nike chairman
Phil Knight, MBA 62, and Esalen Institute founder Michael Murphy,
52.
JOE
HLEBICAs love affair with the ocean began at age 4 when his
parents gave him his first mask and fins. The Sacramento native studied
biology and journalism at the University of Oregon, then worked in Japan
for 12 years as a teacher, translator, writer and scuba instructor. Back
in the States, Hlebica taught literature at a high school in Red Bluff,
Calif., organizing a Steinbeck-focused field trip to Monterey. Today,
he writes for the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif.
The article on Stanfords
Hopkins Marine Station is a story Ive always wanted to
do, says Hlebica. Ive long had a fondness for Hopkins
and Monterey Bay. The assignment has, in fact, inspired him to write
a bookon maverick biologist Ed Ricketts, a friend of Steinbecks
who pioneered the study of marine ecology.
|