Ôªø 2008 Alicia Patterson Foundation Fellowship Winners
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43rd Annual Alicia Patterson
Journalism Fellowships Announced

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Nine journalists have been selected to receive American journalism’s oldest writing fellowship, an Alicia Patterson Foundation grant. Recipients spend their fellowship months traveling, researching, and writing articles on their projects for the APF REPORTER, a quarterly magazine published by the Foundation and available via Web site. Fellows’ articles and photo essays are reprinted in newspapers, magazines, and websites worldwide.

Fellows are paid $40,000 for a 12-month grant and $20,000 for a six-month grant.

The winners were selected through a highly competitive process of screening by two panels of judges, as well as submitting detailed proposals, examples of past work, and references. This year’s final judging was held in Washington, D.C. at the historic former home of publisher Cissy Patterson, who was Alicia Patterson’s aunt.

More than 255 reporters, editors, and photographers have won Alicia Patterson fellowships since the foundation was established in 1965 to honor the former publisher of Newsday.

The trustees of the foundation increased the yearly stipend by $5,000 this year. They also named one fellow in honor of Josephine Patterson Albright, who was a major benefactor of the foundation. The Josephine Patterson Albright fellow is Jon Lowenstein, a freelance photographer from Chicago, Ill.

The foundation’s fellows for 2008, and their research topics:

Adler_William_M.jpg
Photo by Frank Van Riper

William M. Adler
Freelance writer, Denver, CO

“The Life and Legacy of Joe Hill”

Bass_Carole.jpg
Photo by Frank Van Riper

Carole Bass
Freelance writer, New Haven, CT

“How Toxic Chemicals are Slowly Poisoning American Workers”

Fleischer_Jeff.jpg
Photo by Frank Van Riper

Jeff Fleischer
freelance writer, Deerfield, IL

“The Evacuation of Tuvalu”

Grossman_Daniel.jpg
Photo by Frank Van Riper

Daniel Grossman
Freelance writer/multimedia journalist

“Dispatches from Global Warming’s Hotspots”

Hanes_Stephanie.jpg
Photo by Frank Van Riper

Stephanie Hanes
Freelance writer, Potomac, MD

“The Challenges of American Aid in Africa”

Kenneally_Brenda_Ann.jpg
Photo by Frank Van Riper

Brenda Ann Kenneally
Freelance photographer, Brooklyn, NY

“Upstate Girls: What Became of Collar City?”

Lowenstein_Jon.jpg
Photo by Frank Van Riper

Jon Lowenstein
Freelance photographer, Chicago, IL

“Shadow Lives, USA”

Roumani_Rhonda.jpg

Rhonda Roumani
Freelance writer, Boston, MA

“Generation Jihad: The Struggle of a New Generation in the Arab World”

van_Houtryve_Tomas.jpg

Tomas van Houtryve
Freelance photographer, Paris, France

“The Changing Face of Communism”

Judges for the 43rd annual competition included:

Sandy Close, founder, New California Media

Dion Haynes, reporter, The Washington Post

Robert Keeler, editorial writer, Newsday

John Margolies, freelance photographer, author and APF Fellow 2003

Joel Millman, reporter, The Wall Street Journal and APF Fellow 1995

The Alicia Patterson Foundation fellowship program for journalists was established in 1965 in memory of Alicia Patterson, who was editor and publisher of Newsday for nearly twenty-three years before her death in 1963. One-year grants of $40,000 and six-month grants of $20,000 are awarded to working print journalists to pursue independent projects of significant interest and to write articles based on their investigations for the APF Reporter, a web magazine published quarterly by the Foundation at www.aliciapatterson.org.

For program information and applications for the 44th annual competition, contact:

Director
Alicia Patterson Foundation
1025 F St. NW, Suite 700
Washington, DC 20004.
Phone: (202) 393-5995

Application materials and instructions may be downloaded from our website at: www.aliciapatterson.org/APF_Application/APF_Application.html.

Applications must be postmarked by October 1, 2008.