-v ~22 > , 5 ta < i _ £ -w w CAITLIN KLEIBOER/Daily Charles Eisendrath, the director of Wallace House, the headquarters for the Knight-Wallace Fellows, heads up the University program that gives journalists a year off to explore a particular field of study. News Break Wallace House takes in the nation's best journalists. By Doug Wenert | Magazine Editor Ik t seems natural. Take some of the best jour- nalists in the world, put them at the largest . research university in the world and let them study a subject that interests them. That's exactly M what the Knight-Wallace Fellows program has done ith 18 journalists at the University. A cousin of the Nieman Foundation for Journal- ism at Harvard University, which was started in 1937 to "promote and elevate the standards of journalism in the United States," the Knight-Wallace Fellows at Michigan was founded in 1972 and was initially funded by the National Endowment for the Humani- ties. Thirty-three years (and two Pulitzer Prizes) later, the program has held past to its roots: Find the best journalists in the world and help them grow. Each year, more than 100 applicants in America and 75 from overseas send in detailed applications hoping to gain one of the 18 fellowships. After the finalists are chosen, each comes in to meet with Charles Eisendrath, the director of the program since 1986 and a former fellow himself. During that meeting, Eisendrath asks the candidate, point-blank: "What do you want to do?" For Fara Warner, a freelance writer who has worked for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times in the past, the program was a chance to develop new ideas and become familiar with different types of writ- ing and research. "I'm not completely finished with that soul-search- ing, but this is the best way to do it - away from work and in an environment that is constantly engag- ing you in new ideas," she said in an e-mail. The final group is chosen by a committee which includes working journalists, University faculty mem- bers and a fellow. Each member gets a yearly $55,000 stipend, 12 months off from work and a chance to grow as journalists. During their stay, the fellows take up to four class- es at the University and participate in twice-weekly sherry hours with guest speakers either from the Uni- versity's faculty or the media at large. These gather- ings happen at Wallace House, the headquarters for the program. Located on Oxford Street, the spacious two-story structure was renovated in 1973 thanks to a gift from CBS newsman Mike Wallace - a Michigan alum who has become some sort of spiritual godfa- ther to the group. "The students and professors I have met have opened my eyes about so many things," Warner said. "It's won- derful to be able to sit in a class and talk and explore ideas without wondering how you are going to write the story about it or what's going to be on the test." The program also emphasizes traveling, including the fellows' annual venture to northern Michigan - "God's country." "It's just beautiful" says Eisendrath. The group has also traveled to Argentina and Tur- key to learn how the media works overseas. Because Eisendrath believes there's not much foreign news in American media, he think these trips are vital to the program. "If media wants to be interesting and get audiences and engage audiences, why on earth wouldn't you include the world?" Eisendrath asks. The Livingston Awards In addition to hosting the fellows each year, Wal- lace House is the headquarters for The Livingston Awards, which are, as Eisendrath described them, sort of a Pulitzer Prize for the young. Awarded each year to three journalists under 35, past winners include New York Times columnist Tom Friedman and David Rem- nick, the current editor of The New Yorker. When Eisendrath was presented with the idea of offering the award, his first thought was that "there are already too many journalism prizes." His mind quickly changed when he realized the prize could serve as the preeminent award for journalism excel- lence. The prize considers general reporting from all media, and more than 500 applications are accept- ed each year. The winners, chosen by a panel that includes, among others, Wallace and New York Times managing editor Jill Abramson, are decided during a media bash at the Yale Club in New York City. "All the razzle-dazzle takes place in New York because that's the best place for razzle-dazzle," Eisendrath says. At a time when journalism is looking for a new breed of leaders, with the departures of Tom Brokaw - who serves as a judge for the Livingston Awards - Peter Jennings, Ted Koppel and Dan Rather, the Wallace House is the place to find them. Eisendrath just has one requirement: "Brilliance. You figure out what that is." 16B - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 8, 2005