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2017 ACCN: Annual Conference for College Newspapers @ Yale University on January 27-28, 2017

2017 ACCN: Annual Conference for College Newspapers @ Yale University on January 27-28, 2017

2017 ACCN: Annual Conference for College Newspapers @ on January 27-28, 2017

Friday 1/27 Speakers round-table discussion break-out workshops Max Abelson social event Mark Oppenheimer James Ford Saturday 1/28 keynote speaker Contact speaker panels [email protected] to learn more! networking lunch

2017 Theme: Diversity in Reporting How do student news organizations ensure a diversity of views are represented?

Discuss your passions with representatives from the best college newspapers in the country Linda Greenhouse Linda Greenhouse is Joseph Goldstein Lecturer in Law at Yale . a position she assumed in January 2009 following a 40-year career at . From 1978 until 2008, she was the newspaper’s Supreme Court correspondent and currently writes a biweekly op-ed column on law for the Times as a contributing writer. At Yale, she teaches courses related to the work of the Supreme Court and is a fellow of the Law School’s Information Society Project. Ms. Greenhouse received several major journalism awards while covering the Supreme Court, including the Pulitzer Prize (1998) and the Goldsmith Career Award for Excellence in Journalism from Harvard University’s Kennedy School (2004). In 2002, the American Political Science Association gave her its Carey McWilliams Award for “a major journalistic contribution to our understanding of politics.” In 2008, she received the annual award for constitutional com- mentary from the non-partisan Constitution Project. Her books include a biography of Justice Harry A. Blackmun, Becoming Justice Blackmun (2005), Before Roe v. Wade: Voices That Shaped the Abortion Debate Before the Supreme Court’s Ruling (with Reva B. Siegel, 2010, second ed. 2012), and The U.S. Supreme Court: A Very Short Introduction (2012). A new book, The Burger Court and the Rise of the Judicial Right (with Michael J. Graetz), was published last June. Ms. Greenhouse recently completed a six-year term as a member of the Harvard Univer- sity Board of Overseers. In 2002, along with the late Anthony Lewis, she was inducted as one of the only two non-lawyer honorary members of the American Law Institute, which awarded her its Henry J. Friendly Medal. She serves on the council of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the executive committee of the Phi Beta Kappa national Senate, and is presi- dent-elect of the American Philosophical Society, the country’s oldest learned society,which in 2005 awarded her its Henry Allen Moe Prize for writing in the humanities and jurisprudence. She is a graduate of Radcliffe College (Harvard) and earned a degree from Yale Law School, which she attended on a Ford Foundation fellowship. BIO