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Our Contributors
TERRANCE
PITTS first ventured to Africa as a Stanford undergrad on a summer
volunteer program in Kenya. Since then, Pitts, 87, has studied the
region and traveled there frequently from his home in Baltimore. A recent
trip to Ghana inspired the bittersweet Return
Passage. As a writer, photographer and social activist,
my vision is to integrate my interest in human rights through words and
images, Pitts says. I am interested in learning how and what
the developing world can do to support Africas development and redress
wrongs committed during decades of colonization and now neocolonization.
Last year, he launched his first traveling exhibition, Reflections
from Durban, a documentary perspective on the 2001 U.N. World Conference
Against Racism.
A
journalist since junior high, when he asked his mom to type his school
newsletter with carbon paper, HARRY PRESS,
39, edited the Stanford Daily before embarking on a 25-year
career with San Francisco newspapers. In 1966, he returned to the Farm,
where he worked with the Stanford News Service, founded the Stanford
Observer and directed the Knight Fellowship for Journalists program.
Press became interested in War
Torn because author Denby Fawcett had been a Knight fellow under
his guidance. Breaking into the male-dominated field of war correspondence,
especially during Vietnam, was a huge challenge for women like Fawcett,
he says: They had to prove themselves many times over. But
as War Torn reveals, their contributions were essential. Many
had a different view of the war. They were less macho, more sensitive,
he observes. Press, now retired, continues to guide young journalists
through Friends of the Stanford Daily. He and his wife, Mildred, live
in Palo Alto.
When
DAVY LIU was an art student in Sarasota,
Fla., he spent summers sketching caricatures at nearby Disney World. That
was the start of a whirlwind cartooning career. Liu joined Disney full
time after graduation, animating Lion King, Beauty and the Beast
and other high-profile films, before working with Warner Brothers (Space
Jam) and creating digital animations for George Lucass Industrial
Light and Magic. As an illustrator for publications like Sports Illustrated,
Business Week and U.S. News & World Report, he likes
to make funky collages using cutouts from magazines and photos. I
enjoy creating shapes, says Liu, 33, now freelancing from his home
in Aliso Viejo, Calif. Then, within that shape, I can play with
all kinds of cool textures, or eyeballs, or my buddys bad teeth.
Overall, I get to have fun. To share in the laughs, check out Food
Fight.
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