Date: Wednesday, February 15, 2012. 5:30 PM.
Location: Oak East Lounge, Second Floor, Tresidder Union
Moderator: Gary Cavalli ‘71, Co-founder and Executive Director, Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl; author, Stanford Sports; former Stanford Daily Sports Editor Panelists: Helen Pickering ‘47, one of the first women editors of the Daily and editor-in-chief during World War II Felicity Barringer ‘72, New York Times national environmental correspondent and former United Nations Bureau Chief; Stanford Daily editor-in-chief whose lawsuit against the Palo Alto police went to the Supreme Court Rich Jaroslovsky ‘75, technology columnist at Bloomberg News/Businessweek and former managing editor of Wall Street Journal Online; Stanford Daily editor-in-chief after the Daily went independent from the University The Stanford Daily has been the voice of the student body and a mirror of the most important moments in Stanford history. Founded in 1892 as the Daily Palo Alto, the paper’s own story is in many ways as exciting and memorable as the university’s itself. From a bland mouthpiece for the administration, the Daily evolved over the years into an influential journal and champion of freedom of the press. Former Daily editors-in-chief, two of whom served during the most turbulent times in the newspaper’s history, will discuss the life and times of the Daily, its place in university and journalistic annals, their experience at the paper and how it helped shape their careers in the industry.
Location: Oak East Lounge, Second Floor, Tresidder Union
Moderator: Gary Cavalli ‘71, Co-founder and Executive Director, Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl; author, Stanford Sports; former Stanford Daily Sports Editor Panelists: Helen Pickering ‘47, one of the first women editors of the Daily and editor-in-chief during World War II Felicity Barringer ‘72, New York Times national environmental correspondent and former United Nations Bureau Chief; Stanford Daily editor-in-chief whose lawsuit against the Palo Alto police went to the Supreme Court Rich Jaroslovsky ‘75, technology columnist at Bloomberg News/Businessweek and former managing editor of Wall Street Journal Online; Stanford Daily editor-in-chief after the Daily went independent from the University The Stanford Daily has been the voice of the student body and a mirror of the most important moments in Stanford history. Founded in 1892 as the Daily Palo Alto, the paper’s own story is in many ways as exciting and memorable as the university’s itself. From a bland mouthpiece for the administration, the Daily evolved over the years into an influential journal and champion of freedom of the press. Former Daily editors-in-chief, two of whom served during the most turbulent times in the newspaper’s history, will discuss the life and times of the Daily, its place in university and journalistic annals, their experience at the paper and how it helped shape their careers in the industry.