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CANCELLED - Newsweek Editor Mark Whitaker: "Choices in an Age of 24-7 News"
Mark Whitaker, editor of Newsweek magazine, will deliver the annual John S. Knight Lecture and symposium on the rapidly changing dynamics of the modern news media environment. The day after the lecture, Whitaker will take part in a discussion of the issues raised in his talk at 11 a.m. at the Bechtel Conference Center, Encina Hall. He will be joined by Katrina Heron, author and former editor of Wired magazine, and Tim Porter, who writes the journalism blog, First Draft. Jim Bettinger, director of the John S. Knight Fellowships for Professional Journalists, will moderate the discussion.

Under Mark Whitaker's leadership, Newsweek won the 2004 National Magazine Award for General Excellence, the industry's most prestigious award, for its coverage of the war in Iraq. Newsweek also won the General Excellence award in 2002 for the magazine's coverage of the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington. This year Newsweek won the award for a single-topic issue, "How He Did It," a special issue on the re-election of George W. Bush, published November 15.

Whitaker came to Newsweek in 1977 as a reporting intern in the San Francisco bureau, and later reported as a stringer and intern in Boston, Washington, London and Paris. He joined the magazine staff in 1981 and rose to a succession of more responsible positions: business editor from 1997 to 1991, assistant managing editor from 1991 to 1996 and managing editor from 1996 to 1998.

Since becoming editor in 1998, Whitaker has also redesigned the magazine to emphasize more in-depth reporting, diversify opinion columns and introduce new sections and series on personal service (Tip Sheet), health (Health for Life), technology (Next Frontiers) and business (Enterprise).

Katrina Heron is co-author of "Safe: How We Can Change the Rules of Engagement in a Newly Dangerous World," published earlier this year. She was a top editor at the New York Times Magazine, Vanity Fair and The New Yorker before moving to Wired magazine. She was editor-in-chief from 1997 through 2001, during a period that the magazine solidified its importance to information technology coverage. She was a Knight Fellow in 1995-96 and delivered the Knight Lecture in 2001.

Tim Porter is an editor and writer with an extensive background in print and web journalism. He is associate director of Tomorrow's Workforce, a newsroom development project, and author of First Draft, a blog on quality journalism and newsroom innovation. Formerly, he was an assistant managing editor with the San Francisco Examiner, editor of Examiner.com and editor of the Richmond Independent.

The Knight Fellowships program brings outstanding mid-career journalists, 12 from the U.S. and six to eight from other countries, to study at Stanford for an academic year. It has sponsored an annual lecture since 1988. Beginning last year it expanded the event to include a symposium the day following the lecture.
Date and Time:May 16, 2005.  7:30 PM.
Approximate duration of 1.5 hour(s).
Location:Hewlett Teaching Center, Lecture Hall   [Map]
URL:http://knight.stanford.edu/lectures/knight/2005/
Audience:Faculty/Staff
Alumni/Friends
General Public
Students
Category:Lectures/Readings
Conferences/Symposia
Sponsor:Knight Fellowships Program
Contact:723-4937
knight-info@lists.stanford.edu
Admission:Free
Open to the public
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Last Modified:May 16, 2005