Preview - School of Continuing and Professional Studies - New York ...
Preview - School of Continuing and Professional Studies - New York ...
Preview - School of Continuing and Professional Studies - New York ...
You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles
YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.
Worldly Perspectives<br />
With Clyde Haberman<br />
In this popular <strong>and</strong> c<strong>and</strong>id series that cuts to the<br />
heart <strong>of</strong> world affairs, Clyde Haberman, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City<br />
columnist for The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Times <strong>and</strong> veteran foreign<br />
correspondent, talks with renowned journalists. Avoiding<br />
sound bites <strong>and</strong> the clichés <strong>of</strong> studio-bound pundits,<br />
Haberman’s more leisurely approach consistently yields<br />
thoughtful conversation <strong>and</strong> insightful observations<br />
from many corners <strong>of</strong> the world.<br />
Clyde Haberman<br />
MICHAEL KIMMELMAN<br />
Chief Architecture Critic, The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Times<br />
Michael Kimmelman has been the chief architecture critic for The <strong>New</strong><br />
<strong>York</strong> Times since July 2011, <strong>and</strong> has written on issues <strong>of</strong> public housing,<br />
public space, community development, <strong>and</strong> social responsibility. He was<br />
the paper’s longtime chief art critic <strong>and</strong>, in 2007, created the Abroad<br />
column, covering culture, political <strong>and</strong> social affairs across Europe <strong>and</strong><br />
elsewhere. From Fall 2007 to Summer 2011, he was based in Berlin<br />
covering, among other subjects, the crackdown on cultural freedom in<br />
Vladimir Putin’s Russia, life in Gaza under Hamas, Négritude in France,<br />
Czech humor in the context <strong>of</strong> political protest, <strong>and</strong> Holocaust education<br />
for a new generation <strong>of</strong> Germans. A finalist for The Pulitzer Prize in 2000,<br />
he also contributes regularly to The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Review <strong>of</strong> Books.<br />
DAVID E. SANGER<br />
Chief Washington Correspondent, The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Times<br />
In David E. Sanger’s 25-year career at The Times, he has reported<br />
from <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, Tokyo, <strong>and</strong> Washington, covering a variety <strong>of</strong> issues<br />
surrounding foreign policy, globalization, nuclear proliferation, <strong>and</strong><br />
Asian affairs. Twice he has been a member <strong>of</strong> Times reporting teams<br />
that won The Pulitzer Prize, first for an article exploring the causes <strong>of</strong><br />
the space shuttle Challenger disaster, <strong>and</strong> then for an article about the<br />
Clinton administration’s struggles to control exports to China. He was<br />
correspondent <strong>and</strong> then bureau chief in Tokyo for six years. He was<br />
named a senior writer in March 1999, <strong>and</strong> White House correspondent<br />
later that year. He was named Chief Washington Correspondent in<br />
October 2006.<br />
CELIA DUGGER<br />
Deputy Science Editor, The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Times<br />
Celia W. Dugger became deputy science editor in September 2011.<br />
Previously, she was co-bureau chief in Johannesburg for The Times. She<br />
joined The Times as a metro reporter in March 1991 <strong>and</strong> served as co-chief<br />
<strong>of</strong> the <strong>New</strong> Delhi bureau from 1998 to 2002. From 2002 to 2003, she was<br />
an Edward R. Murrow Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. From<br />
2003 to 2008, Dugger served as a foreign correspondent covering global<br />
poverty. Dugger was the co-recipient <strong>of</strong> the 2009 George Polk Award for<br />
Foreign Reporting for coverage <strong>of</strong> the violence in Zimbabwe surrounding<br />
the disputed re-election <strong>of</strong> the authoritarian president. In addition, she was<br />
the co-recipient <strong>of</strong> an Overseas Press Club Award <strong>and</strong> she won the Robert<br />
F. Kennedy Journalism Award for international reporting in 2005.<br />
Wednesday<br />
February 16<br />
6.30–7.45 p.m.<br />
Wednesday<br />
March 21<br />
6.30–7.45 p.m.<br />
Thursday<br />
April 5<br />
6.30–7.45 p.m.<br />
scps.nyu.edu/cga [9]