Annual UND Hagerty Lecture Series feature two journalists at separate events in Grand Forks and Bismarck

Lectureship series was established through an endowment to benefit the Communication Program This year, for the first time, the University of North Dakota will present two lectures – in Grand Forks and another in Bismarck -- as part of its annual Hagerty Lecture Series. The Grand Forks lecture, on M...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dodds, David L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UND Scholarly Commons 2015
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Online Access:https://commons.und.edu/news-archive/965
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Summary:Lectureship series was established through an endowment to benefit the Communication Program This year, for the first time, the University of North Dakota will present two lectures – in Grand Forks and another in Bismarck -- as part of its annual Hagerty Lecture Series. The Grand Forks lecture, on March 24, will feature David Bjerklie, a UND graduate who writes about science for children. He will focus on responding to the profound questions about science that children ask at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 24, in the Community Room of the Grand Forks Herald, 305 Second Avenue North in downtown Grand Forks. Enter through the alley door. The Bismarck event will feature Alexander Panetta, Washington, D.C., correspondent for the Canadian Press. He'll discuss Canadian approaches to issues arising along the international border at 4:30 p.m., Tuesday, April 21, at the North Dakota Heritage Center on the capitol grounds. David Bjerklie: Bjerklie grew up in Minot, N.D., and studied biology and anthropology at UND. As a lab and field assistant, he studied spotted sandpipers on a small island in a large lake in Minnesota. He has written on a wide range of science, medicine, technology and environment topics for Time Inc., since 1984, serving as a science reporter at Time magazine, a writer at Time books and editor at Time for Kids. He is the author of children's books on butterflies, agriculture and environmental justice. In 1989-90, he spent a year as a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 2014, he attended the 65th annual Lindau Nobel Laureate meeting in Germany and spent three weeks in Antarctica as a National Science Foundation Media fellow. Some of his recent stories for Time for Kids have been on wind sculpture, the global explosion of jellyfish and the mathematics of juggling. He has also written chapters in recent Time books on the search for life in the universe, the use of DNA in the courtroom, artificial intelligence, the nature of collaborative genius and current research in ...