Skip Navigation
The Missouri Honor Medal Missouri School of Journalism
University of Missouri
 
MU Home
  Real-World Experience
Journalism A to Z Index
KOMU Columbia Missourian Vox Magazine Adelante! KBIA Public Radio Global Journalist MOJO Ad Missouri Digital News



About the J-School A Brief History
Centennial Timeline
Connections
The Journalist's Creed
Media Outlets
Mission
Missouri Honor Medal
Calendar
Career Center
Contact Us
Faculty and Staff Convergence
Radio-Television
Journalism Studies
Magazine Journalism
Photojournalism
Print and Digital News
Strategic Communication
Doctoral Faculty
Graduate Faculty
Adjunct Faculty
Endowed Chairs
RJI
Professors Emeriti
Show All Faculty
Show All Staff
Show Everyone
Giving to the J-School
J-School Home
News Releases
RJI
School Tours
 

Anne Garrels, an NPR Senior Foreign Correspondent, to Accept Missouri Honor Medal and Host Master Class

Links

Columbia, Mo. (Feb. 23, 2009) -- Anne Garrels, a senior foreign correspondent for NPR, will visit the Missouri School of Journalism on Thursday, Feb. 26, to teach a master class and accept the Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism, which the School awarded Garrels in 2004. The medal, first given in 1930, is one of journalism's most prestigious awards.

Anne Garrels Anne Garrels

Garrels' master class, "Asking Directions, When You Don't Know Where You Are Going" will be streamed live at http://journalism.missouri.edu/anne-garrels/ from 11 to 11:50 a.m., as she speaks to students in the Fred W. Smith Forum at the Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI). Her talk also will be featured on the plasma screens inside RJI.

Garrels will receive her honor medal during a journalism faculty luncheon at the School. Her citation reads "in recognition of her selfless courage on behalf of her listeners, her incisive coverage of war and other major world events, her unflinching commitment to serve the public and safeguard the role of journalism in democratic societies."

Garrels will host an informal question-and-answer session from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. in Keller Auditorium in the Geology building.

Garrels was one of 16 U.S. journalists to remain in Baghdad during the initial phase of the war, earning her international recognition in 2003. As U.S.-led forces advanced on Baghdad, Garrels remained to share the stories of the local scene on the streets and interview those she encountered. Garrels published a memoir in 2003 titled "Naked in Baghdad," which chronicles her experiences there. Garrels' coverage in Iraq did not permit her to personally accept the Missouri Honor Medal in 2004.

After arriving in a Saddam Hussein-governed Iraq in 2002, Garrels led NPR's coverage there until 2008. She traveled the country working independently and as an embedded journalist with U.S. forces, documenting the sectarian violence.

Since Sept. 11, Garrels also has reported from Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East. Before covering the Middle East, Garrels covered the former Soviet Union earning her an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for her coverage of topics ranging from social and economic challenges to military and cultural developments.

Garrels' sound reporting is most notable for the human face she puts on conflict. With her combined experience in the field and her understanding of the policy debates in Washington, D.C., Garrels has won numerous awards, including the George Polk Award, the 2004 Corporation for Public Broadcasting's Edward R. Murrow Award and the Courage in Journalism Award from the International Women's Media Foundation.

Garrels most recently has focused her attention on Russia, producing stories on the changes taking place in the industrial city of Chelyabinsk. Her reports can be heard on NPR's All Things Considered, Morning Edition, Weekend Edition Saturday, Weekend Edition Sunday and Day to Day.

Related


Wayne M. Brasler Dirck Halstead Frances L. Lewine Paula Madison
Russ Mitchell Oh Yeon Ho Mary Beth Price William C. Price Ruth Reichl
Nine Media Leaders to Receive Prestigious Journalism Award Nine outstanding leaders in the field of journalism will receive one of the industry's highest awards, the prestigious Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism, presented annually by the Missouri School of Journalism. The 2007 medalists will be honored Tuesday, Oct. 9, on the campus of the University of Missouri-Columbia. [More]
Eight Journalism Leaders to Receive Preeminent Journalism Award Eight outstanding journalists and a leading journalism organization will receive one of the industry's highest awards: the prestigious Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism. The School has awarded the medal annually since 1930. Tom Brokaw, Christiane Amanpour of CNN, Sir Winston Churchill, Carol Loomis of Fortune magazine and Gordon Parks are among the distinguished journalists, advertising and public relations practitioners, business people, institutions and media organizations who have been recipients of this influential award. [More]
Clifford G. Christians Bill Kovach Tom Rosenstiel Chuck Curtis
Reza Karen Brown Dunlap Zubeida Jaffer John Seigenthaler
2005 Honor Medal Winners Missouri School of Journalism Presents 2005 Honor Medals The Missouri School of Journalism will present the 2005 Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism to five individuals and one news organization in newspaper journalism, photojournalism, broadcast news and advertising. The School has awarded the Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism annually since 1930. More than 435 distinguished journalists, advertising and public relations practitioners, business people, institutions and media organizations have been recipients of this prestigious award. [More]
The J-School Arch Stone Lions  
Revised: 11 June 2009. Copyright © 2009 The Curators of the University of Missouri  |  Contact the J-School