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MEDIA CONTACT: Wendy
Leopold at (847) 491-4890 or at w-leopold@northwestern.edu
April 27, 2004
Medill to Award Medal of Courage
EVANSTON, Ill. --- A Newsday reporter and photographer team will
receive the 2003 Medill Medal for Courage in Journalism and three
graduates of the Medill School of Journalism will be inducted into
the school’s Hall of Achievement at a special ceremony Monday,
April 26, at Northwestern University.
Nan Robertson, former New York Times reporter, 1983 Pulitzer Prize winner and
Northwestern University Medill School of Journalism graduate, will present the
Medal for Courage. Free and open to the public, the event will take place at
4 p.m. in the McCormick Tribune Center Forum, 1870 Campus Drive, Evanston campus.
A reception will follow.
Newsday reporter Matthew McAllester and photographer Moises Saman were awarded
the first Medill Medal for Courage in Journalism for “Eight Days in an
Iraqi Prison.” In that piece, McAllester documented their 2003 imprisonment
by Iraqi officials at Abu Ghraib, a prison known as a site of torture and death.
McAllester detailed their living conditions and state of mind during the incarceration,
as well as their interaction with their captors and determination to accurately
depict modern-day Iraq. The Medill Medal is given to the individual or journalism
team working for a U.S.-based media outlet that best displays moral, ethical
or physical courage in the pursuit of a story.
“These correspondents made the risky decision to stay behind in Baghdad
after the war began and kept their wits about them sufficiently to write a vivid,
compelling account of their imprisonment,” one judge wrote of McAllester
and Saman.
Medill School alumni Christine Brennan, Richard Threlkeld and John Christensen
will be inducted into the Medill Hall of Achievement. Established in 1997, it
honors Medill alumni with distinctive careers that have positive impacts on their
fields. It currently has 105 members.
Brennan is a sports writer, author and sports analyst who reports on international
sports, women’s athletics and athletic issues. Her regular column in USA
Today makes her the most widely read female sports columnist in the nation. She
broke the judging scandal in the pairs figure skating at the 2002 Olympics. Her
column on the Augusta National Golf Club’s exclusion of women members prompted
national debate. A winner of many journalism awards, Brennan was named by Associated
Press in 2001 as one of the nation’s top 10 sports columnists.
Threlkeld, author of “Dispatches from the Former Evil Empire,” was
a CBS writer, reporter, anchor and bureau chief, before retiring in 1999. He
was a regular contributor to many CBS broadcasts, including the CBS Evening News
with Dan Rather and Sunday Morning. An experienced combat reporter, he covered
the Vietnam War and Persian Gulf war, as well as the U.S. invasions of Panama
and Grenada. The winner of numerous awards for broadcasting, he covered the assassination
of Robert F. Kennedy, the Patty Hearst kidnapping case and major political campaigns.
Christensen founded Christensen Advertising (chrisad), a California-based dental
practice marketing agency after completing a master’s degree in advertising
and marketing from Medill. He has directed advertising and public affairs for
the National Guard in the states of Washington and California and managed political
campaigns. He is the author of two books on dental and practice marketing.
For further information about the Medill Medal of Courage and Hall of Achievement
ceremony, call (847) 491-4278.
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