Big journalism names to lead Sunshine Week, March 11-17
BEN BRADLEE, TOM BROKAW AND JUDY WOODRUFF ARE HONORARY CHAIRS FOR
SUNSHINE WEEK 2007 OPEN GOVT. INITIATIVE Leading
journalists join nationwide effort against unwarranted secrecy; Will
participate in Sunshine Week programs March 11-17, 2007
WASHINGTON ─
Journalists Ben Bradlee, Tom Brokaw and Judy Woodruff are the honorary
chairs of Sunshine Week 2007, March 11-17.
Bradlee is former executive
editor and now vice president at large of The Washington Post. Brokaw is former
anchor and managing editor of NBC Nightly News and now a contributing reporter
and producer for NBC News documentaries. Woodruff is special correspondent for
the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer and anchor of Conversations with Judy Woodruff on
Bloomberg Television.
Sunshine Week (
www.sunshineweek.org) is an open government initiative
spearheaded by the American Society of Newspaper Editors (
www.asne.org). Entering its third year, the program encourages
newspapers, broadcasters, online content producers, schools, libraries, civic
groups and others to engage in discussions about the importance of protecting
public access to government information and meetings. It is supported by a grant
from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
As honorary chairs,
Bradlee, Brokaw and Woodruff will serve as spokespeople for Sunshine Week 2007
and support the initiative’s efforts to empower and educate people about their
right to know what government is doing, and why.
"Open government laws
are absolutely essential to getting the information officials might prefer to
see locked away in a safe," Bradlee said. "People may not think about Sunshine
Laws every day, but when you need them, you need them. When you're trying to get
information, you know that with these laws you're on the side of right. Sunshine
Week is a good opportunity for journalists, the public and government officials
to reinforce the importance of these laws and the foundations they're built on."
"If we present ourselves to the world as patrons of democracy, then we
must be vigilant stewards at home of the oxygen that it requires – access to
what our government is doing and the right to speak freely about it," Brokaw
said. "Those who comprised what I call the Greatest Generation fought valiantly
to preserve and protect those freedoms. It is up to us to ensure during Sunshine
Week and all year that their sacrifices were not for naught."
"Government decision making in the United States should be as transparent as
possible. Ours is a democratic system – of, by and for the people – and we ought
to know what's going on," Woodruff said. "While I don't think you can create a
blanket policy covering every situation, the default position should be for
disclosure, for openness. We're a stronger society because information – good
and bad – flows freely. Sunshine Week is a time to celebrate and protect that
strength."
About the Sunshine Week 2007 Honorary Chairs:
Ben Bradlee Following his graduation from Harvard
University, Bradlee joined the U.S. Navy and served in the South Pacific. Upon
his discharge in 1948, Bradlee was among a group of investors who started the
New Hampshire Sunday News in Manchester, but before the year was out, he'd
landed a job as a reporter for The Washington Post. In 1951, Bradlee moved to
Paris as press attaché for the American Embassy. A few years later, he joined
Newsweek magazine as a European correspondent, and returned to Washington in
1957 as a political correspondent.
Bradlee left Newsweek to become
managing editor of the Post in 1965 – four years after helping to broker the
deal for the newspaper to purchase the magazine. In 1968, he was promoted to
executive editor, a post he held until 1991 when he retired as editor and became
a vice president at large for the Post.
During his tenure at the helm
of the newspaper, Bradlee oversaw coverage of major news stories including The
Pentagon Papers and the Watergate scandal that led to President Nixon's
resignation. He also was the driving force behind the 1976 launch of the Style
section and The Washington Post Magazine the following year.
The
Washington Post earned 18 Pulitzer Prizes under Bradlee's leadership. Among his
many awards, in 1998, Bradlee received the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence
in Journalism from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass
Communication at Arizona State University. Bradlee received Marymount
University's Ethics Award in 2005, and in 2006, Bradlee was awarded an honorary
doctorate from Georgetown University.
In 1995, Bradlee published his
best-selling memoir, "A Good Life: Newspapering and Other Adventures."
Tom Brokaw After graduation from the University of South
Dakota, Brokaw began a journalism career at KMTV in Omaha in 1962, and by 1965
was anchoring the late evening news on WSB-TV in Atlanta, soon moving to KNBC-TV
in Los Angeles. He began his career with NBC News in 1966, serving as White
House correspondent from 1973-76. He then anchored the morning "Today" program
until 1981, when he was named anchor and managing editor of NBC Nightly News.
Since stepping down from the anchor post in 2004, Brokaw has produced
and reported several long-form documentaries, "Tom Brokaw Reports," for NBC.
Among the many stories he has covered, Brokaw was at the scene when
the Berlin Wall fell, he reported from Iraq and Afghanistan, was the first U.S.
newsman to interview former Russian President Mikhail Gorbachev, the first
network correspondent to report on human rights abuses in Tibet, and he anchored
the evening news from Normandy on the 60th anniversary of D-Day.
The
numerous awards bestowed on Brokaw include the Emmy, Peabody, Edward R. Murrow
Lifetime Achievement, Records of Achievement from the Foundation for the
National Archives, Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University, and the first George
Catlett Marshall Medal given to a journalist by the U.S. Army.
Brokaw's 1998 book "The Greatest Generation" was followed in 1999 by "The
Greatest Generation Speaks," a third book in 2001 titled "An Album of Memories,"
and in 2002 by Brokaw's fourth best-seller, "A Long Way From Home."
Judy Woodruff A graduate of Duke University, where she now
is a trustee emerita, Woodruff got her start in political reporting covering the
Georgia legislature for WAGA-TV, the CBS affiliate in Atlanta. She also anchored
the noon and evening news, later joining NBC News as a general assignment
reporter in Atlanta.
Woodruff was NBC News' White House correspondent
from 1977-82, and served one year as Chief Washington Correspondent for the
Today Show. She joined PBS in 1983, spending 10 years as Chief Washington
Correspondent for The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, and from 1984-90 anchored the
weekly documentary series, Frontline with Judy Woodruff. She moved to CNN in
1993 as anchor of Inside Politics and spent 12 years there as an anchor and
senior correspondent.
When she left CNN in 2005, Woodruff spent time
as a visiting fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and
Public Policy at Harvard University, and recently was a visiting professor at
Duke University’s Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy.
Now
working with PBS again, Woodruff is a special correspondent for the NewsHour
with Jim Lehrer and is working with MacNeil/Lehrer Productions on Generation
Next: Speak Up. Be Heard, which culls interviews with young people into an
hourlong documentary. In addition, she anchors the monthly Conversations with
Judy Woodruff, which airs on Bloomberg Television.
A founding co-chair
of the International Women's Media Foundation, Woodruff serves as a trustee of
The Freedom Forum and Global Rights: Partners for Justice. She is a member of
the Knight Foundation Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics, and is on the
board of the National Museum of American History.
Among the myriad
awards she has been presented, Woodruff is the recipient of several Emmy and
CableACE Awards, the Futrell Award from Duke University, and the Edward R.
Murrow Award.
In 1982, Woodruff wrote the book, "This is Judy Woodruff
at the White House."
About Sunshine Week: Sunshine Week is a
national initiative to open a dialogue about the importance of open government
and freedom of information. Participants include print, broadcast and online
news media, civic groups, libraries, non-profits, schools and others interested
in the public's right to know. Sunshine Week is led by ASNE and is funded by a
grant from Knight Foundation. For more information, see
www.sunshineweek.org.
About Knight Foundation:
The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation promotes excellence in journalism
worldwide and invests in the vitality of U.S. communities where the Knight
brothers owned newspapers. For more information about Knight Foundation, go to
www.knightfdn.org.