The University of Colorado Boulder鈥檚 celebrates its 25th anniversary this month, as well as the 20th anniversary of the Ted Scripps Environmental Journalism Fellowship. The center, established in 1992, has hosted the Ted Scripps Fellowships since the 1997-98 academic year.
For more than two decades, the program鈥攈oused within the College of Media, Communication and Information鈥攈as brought journalists, scientists, faculty and students together to discuss and report on issues crucial to our environment.
Events, which are free and open to the public, will celebrate the anniversary on Saturday, Aug. 26, beginning with two panels featuring journalists and environmental experts. will begin at 10 a.m., followed by the panel, at 1 p.m. Both panels will take place in the center on 兔子先生传媒文化作品鈥檚 central campus.
The inaugural Ackland Lecture in Journalism鈥攏amed in honor of CEJ founding Director Len Ackland鈥攚ill begin at 7 p.m. featuring , the Washington Post鈥檚 senior national affairs correspondent. Eilperin will deliver in the auditorium at the new .
The center also will celebrate the 100 journalists who have been awarded the Ted Scripps Environmental Journalism Fellowship, a rare opportunity for mid-career journalists to spend nine months studying and working on special projects with support from the center. The fellowship is funded by the Scripps Howard Foundation.
鈥淭heir work during and after the fellowship has yielded numerous impactful stories, more than a dozen books, a Pulitzer prize鈥攁nd even an entire investigative news network whose work has led to changes in multiple Colorado laws,鈥 said CEJ Director Tom Yulsman.
The new class of 2017-18 fellows joining the first 100 includes: Sadie Babits, who recently served as the news director at Colorado Public Radio; Jeff Burnside, most recently the senior investigative reporter for KOMO TV Seattle; Lindsay Fendt, a freelance reporter who joins the program after spending five years based in San Jos茅, Costa Rica, where she covered stories throughout Latin America; Jason Plautz, a Washington, D.C.-based journalist who has covered energy and environment policy for National Journal and E&E Publishing; and Lynette Wilson, who spent the last eight years covering human rights and social justice issues for the Episcopal News Service.
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Contact:
Tom Yulsman, Center for Environmental Journalism Director
Stephanie Cook, CMCI, 303-408-4439