 "Eating Well to Save the Sound" by WSM editor Tim Steury was not only one
of the articles that earned the magazine a gold medal for writing in the 2007
CASE Circle of Excellence awards program, but it also shared third place
with Harvard, Yale, Brown, and others in the Best Articles of the Year
category-one of 24 winners in a field of 150 entries.
Washington State Magazine has won a gold medal in the
2007 Circle of Excellence awards program of the Council for
Advancement and Support of Education, an international organization
that promotes excellence in educational advancement through alumni
relations, communications, marketing, and fund raising.
WSM was one of 53 competitors in the category of
periodical staff writing for external audiences and, along with
Tufts Dental Medicine (Tufts University), was one of two
gold award winners. Silver and bronze medalists were Johns
Hopkins Magazine, Stanford Magazine, University of
Chicago Magazine, and Pitt Magazine (University of
Pittsburgh). WSM was bested only by the University of
Wisconsin's On Wisconsin, which won a Grand Gold, the
highest award in this category.
The award was granted for five articles culled from all four
issues of the magazine published in 2006.
According to the judges, "Washington State Magazine
featured a nice range of stories characterized by 'lovely' and
'lively' writing; we felt that the articles did a fine job of
fulfilling the magazine's mission to be 'the state's
magazine.' Singled out for praise was Cherie Winner's
eloquent profile of bird biologist Paul Johnsgard, an article that
would feel at home in Smithsonian or Audubon, and Tim
Steury's clear, detailed, and quirky look at local environmental
preservation, 'Eating Well to Save the Sound.' We also liked the
way Hannelore Sudermann put together the traditional 'alum does
good' article-this one about WSU grads involved in a school
district retooling to meet the needs of immigrants-in a way that
was compelling, instructive, and refreshingly unsaccharine."
"Eating Well to Save the Sound" also won a bronze award in the
competition's "Best Articles of the Year" category. Said the
judges, "A well-written scientific article of interest to the
general reader, it portrays the complexity of the oyster's
ecosystem and how human activities affect it. The article is a call
to action to save Puget Sound-an environmental message of general
importance today."
All five articles are listed below. Click on any title and read
at will.
"Bridging Two
Cultures," by Hannelore Sudermann, assistant
editor/senior writer (Spring 2006). Over the last decade, the
Bridgeport School District student body transformed from mostly
white to mostly migrant Hispanic. Low test scores and soaring
dropout rates plagued the district-but only for a short while.
This year, every student in the freshman class plans to
graduate.
"Eating
Well to Save the Sound," by Tim Steury, editor (Summer
2006). The Puget Sound region's 3.8 million population is
expected to increase to 5.2 million within the next 15 years. If
Puget Sound is to survive that growth, we must change our lives.
That, and eat more shellfish.
"Rare Bird," by
Cherie Winner, science writer (Fall 2006). Audubon himself
would have trouble keeping up with this dynamo. Artist, author,
and photographer Paul Johnsgard '55 gives us a glimpse into his
lifelong obsession with birds.
"An Equation for
Beauty," by Hannelore Sudermann (Winter 2006-07).
"He may be alone in his studio, but in his head he shares the
company of Euclid, Albrecht Dürer, and Galileo, translating
their ideas into color and form in paint."
"The Science
Shop," by Cherie Winner (Winter 2006-07). So what
made faculty member Peter Engels think he could make
Bose-Einstein condensate, a rare form of matter that could
someday make today's computers seem as inefficient as cutting
notches on a stick? First, he had experience: he got his
doctorate in one of the three German labs that had done it, and
then worked with one of the scientists who won the Nobel Prize
for discovering BEC. Second, he'd met George Henry and seen the
Instrument Shop.
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