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Knight Center News Briefs Environmental documentaries Environmental journalists visit Great Lakes Environmental Journalism Training Institute returns to Michigan eja update Knight Center hosts green tailgate Names in the News Andy Balaskovitz, a journalism junior at MSU, is working as a designer at the State News. He will study English literature in Dublin, Ireland during the spring 2008 semester. He can be reached at balasko1@msu.edu or 231-557-4613. Molly Benningfield, B.A. ‘07Journalism MSU, is the editor of the Lowell Ledger in Lowell, Mich. She can be reached at benninf@msu.edu and 616-560-7229. Katie Coleman, M.A. 07, former EJ Magazine editor, is a development associate at the Environmental Law & Policy Center in Chicago. Sandra Combs, Jim Detjen and Cheryl Pell won the third place award for innovative outreach to scholastic journalism in the 2007 competition sponsored by the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication. The three MSU School of Journalism faculty members were recognized for a high school journalism workshop, Jim Detjen, director of MSU’s Knight Center for Environmental Journalism, lectured about global media coverage of climate change at the inaugural Salzburg Academy Program on Media and Global Change in Salzburg, Austria in July 2007. He taught 52 journalism students from five continents at the academy, which was held at the Schloss Leopoldskron, a palace where “The Sound of Music,” was filmed. He also lectured about the news media’s coverage of global climate change at the Knight Digital Media Center in Los Angeles in October 2007 and is serving as a judge for the John B. Oakes Award for Distinguished Environmental Journalism, which is administered by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Tom Elko, a 2007 graduate of the Knight Center’s Great Lakes Environmental Journalism Training Institute, recently took a job as an Internet programmer for Minneapolis-based television station KARE 11. He also recently accepted Kristin Espeland, a fellow at the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism’s first boot camp in Burlington, Vt. in 2006, is the first environmental reporter at Louisville’s Public Radio Partnership at WFPL, the National Public Radio station in Louisville, Ky. She can be reached at kespeland@wfpl.org and 502-814-6563. Brian Foley, M.A. ’05, is working in San Francisco for the Commonwealth Club of California, the nation’s oldest public forum organization. He is also freelancing for www.greenlivingideas.com. Previously he worked at the San Francisco Examiner as a reporter. He can be reached at 650-400-2213. Eric Freedman, a professor at Michigan State University, has co-edited a new book, “African Americans in Congress: A Documentary History,” with MSU alumnus Stephen Jones. The book was published by Congressional Quarterly Press. Summi Gambhir, M.A. ’08, is getting married in India on Dec. 21, 2007. Her fiancé, Amit Leekha, is a software engineer in Connecticut. Gambhir is the design editor of EJ Magazine. Madison Hall, M.A. ’07, is working on a Ph.D. in forestry at Michigan State University. She also works on the Boldness by Design Environmental Stewardship Team which is recommending ways to expand recycling at MSU. Chris Jackett, B.A. ’07, is working as a staff writer for the Novi News, a Gannett newspaper in Novi, Mich. He also coaches a youth soccer team and is working on a business certificate at Schoolcraft College in Livonia, Mich. He can be reached at chrisjackett@yahoo.com and 313-204-4343. Kristin V. Johnson, M.A. ’07, is working as a design editor at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. She designs news, sports and features pages for the Post-Intelligencer in addition to writing the What’s Online feature for the features department. She can be reached at kvkjohnson@gmail.com and 608-438-6932. Jeff Kart, a ‘93 graduate of MSU’s School of Journalism, won second prize in the 2007 Feinstone Environmental Award, a national honor for outstanding journalism. He won for a series of stories about the Tobico Marsh and the nearby Hartley landfill. The stories prompted the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality to take action to clean up the landfill, which had been contaminating the freshwater marsh. Kart covers the environment and politics for the Bay City Times in Bay City, Mich. Carol Navarro, B.A. ’07, and Mairin MacDonald, an MSU senior in journalism, won third prize in the outstanding student environmental reporting category in the national competition of the Society of Environmental Journalists. They were given their award at the SEJ national conference at Stanford University in September 2007 for an article they co-wrote in the Spring 2006 issue of EJ Magazine. Hannah Northey, M.A. ’07, is the environmental reporter for the Daily News-Record in Rosemary Parker, a fellow in the 2007 Great Lakes Environmental Journalism Training Institute, has been named the Michigan Farm Bureau’s Communicator of the Year in the print division. She is a reporter at the Kalamazoo Gazette in Kalamazoo, Mich. David Poulson, associate director of MSU’s Knight Center for Environmental Journalism, spoke on citizen journalism and the environment at the National Press Tyler Sipe, B.A. 05, is working as a photographer for the Traverse City Record-Eagle in Traverse City, Mich. Jessica (Hulett) VanderKolk, B.A. ‘04, is writing environmental, health and governmental stories for the Altoona Mirror in Altoona, Pa. She won third place for a feature story about an incumbent state senator’s last day in office in a competition sponsored by the Association for Capitol Reporters and Editors. Ashley Waldorf, a MSU senior in professional writing, is attending the Galapagos Academic Institute for Arts and Sciences in the Galapagos Islands of Ecuador. She is the founder and co-editor of Amplifx, a new monthly magazine for the MSU and Lansing area that will be launched in January 2008. The magazine’s title was coined to mean “amplification of the effects.” It will report about environmental, cultural and political issues on the local and global levels. She can be reached at waldorfa@msu.edu and 586-781-3123. Corrections The Spring 2007 EJ article “ Big Ten ‘mini cities’ create big impact” should have the following corrections: • The article should have defined a kilowatt-hour as the energy required to keep a standard 100-watt light bulb lit for approximately 10 hours. • The explanation at the bottom of the kilowatt-hour table should have read, “GSF stands for Gross Square Feet, which is the area inside campus buildings.” • The article should have stated, “On average, Big Ten universities consume approximately 18.47 kilowatt-hours of electricity per gross square foot (the area inside campus buildings) annually.” |
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