Wall Street Journal Selects 2009 Robert L. Bartley Fellowships


NEW YORK, April 15, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Wall Street Journal awarded its 2009 Robert L. Bartley Fellowships, which are named in honor of the late Bob Bartley who guided editorial opinion at the Journal for nearly 30 years through 2002. He died in Dec. 2003.

This marks the fourth time the Journal has awarded the Bartley Fellowships. The fellows will work this summer as paid interns on the Journal's opinion pages in New York and overseas as well as at the Far Eastern Economic Review.

"These fellowships are awarded to young men and women whose views are broadly consistent with Bob's beliefs in economic and political liberty and who aspire to careers in journalism," said Paul A. Gigot, editor of the Journal's editorial page.

The 2009 Robert L. Bartley Fellows are:



 * Sudeep Doshi, of London, is a junior at Princeton, where he is
   studying at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International
   Affairs and is editor-in-chief of Business Today magazine. He has
   held internships at the Financial Times, the Sunday Times, the
   U.S. Department of Justice and the European Bank for Reconstruction
   and Development. He is co-editor of the Indian best seller, "A
   Poem for CRY" (Penguin, 2007), a collection of the favorite poems
   of Indian celebrities, compiled to benefit a children's charity.
   He will work at the Far Eastern Economic Review in Hong Kong,
   reporting to editor Hugo Restall.

 * Emily Esfahani-Smith, from North Caldwell, N.J., expects to
   graduate in June from Dartmouth College, where she is majoring
   in philosophy and is editor-in-chief of The Dartmouth Review.
   She has interned at the American Spectator, National Review and
   the New Criterion. She will work in New York this summer, reporting
   to Robert L. Pollock, editorial features editor.

 * David Feith, a 2008 Bartley Fellow, will be joining us for a
   return engagement this summer. From Bethesda, Md., David is a
   senior at Columbia College, majoring in history. He has worked
   as editor-in-chief of Columbia's The Current, a journal of
   politics, culture and Jewish affairs and written for the Columbia
   Spectator and National Review Online. He has also worked on Capitol
   Hill and at The American Magazine, published by the American
   Enterprise Institute. David will work in New York, reporting to
   James Freeman, assistant editor of the editorial page.

 * Eliza Gray, from Washington, D.C., is a 2008 graduate of Harvard
   College, where she majored in English and wrote for the Crimson.
   She has interned at Newsweek, the New York Daily News, The
   Atlantic.com and The European Voice in Brussels. She will be
   working for The Wall Street Journal Europe this summer in New York.

 * Jillian Melchior, from Cheyenne, Wyoming, will graduate this
   spring from Hillsdale College, where she is majoring in
   political science and works on the student newspaper.
   Jillian interned last summer on the editorial page of the
   Detroit News. In 2007 she was a National Journalism Center intern
   at the Heartland Institute, for which she continues to write. She
   is also a part-time copy editor at The Wall Street Journal
   Classroom Edition. She will work at The Wall Street Journal Asia
   in Hong Kong, reporting to editorial page editor Mary Kissel.

 * Julie Steinberg, of Boca Raton, Fla., is a senior at the University
   of Pennsylvania, where she is majoring in political science and
   comparative literature theory and is an editor and columnist at
   the Daily Pennsylvanian.  She is also editor-in-chief of the
   literary magazine Penn Review. She has interned at the State
   Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor and at
   the Middle East Forum in Philadelphia. She will work on the
   Journal's Leisure & Arts pages this summer, reporting to editor
   Eric Gibson.

About Mr. Bartley

During his tenure as editor and editor of the editorial page, Mr. Bartley was responsible for the editorials, op-ed articles and arts and cultural criticism in all Wall Street Journal enterprises. In his career, Mr. Bartley won a Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing (1980), a Gerald Loeb Award and a Citation for Excellence from the Overseas Press Club of America. He is author of a book on Reagan administration economic policy, "The Seven Fat Years: And How To Do It Again," published in 1992 by the Free Press. In December 2003, Mr. Bartley was the recipient of the presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, for his career in journalism and his backing for "free markets, individual liberty and the values necessary for a free society." That same month, he also received an award for "distinguished achievement in journalism" from the New York-based consumer education group, the American Council on Science and Health.

Mr. Bartley joined the Journal in 1962 and served as a staff reporter in the Chicago and Philadelphia bureaus before joining the editorial page staff in New York in 1964. He was appointed editor of the editorial page in 1972, editor of the Journal in 1979 and a vice president of Dow Jones in 1983.

About The Wall Street Journal

The Wall Street Journal, the flagship publication of Dow Jones & Company is the world's leading business publication. Founded in 1889, The Wall Street Journal has a print and online circulation of more than 2 million, reaching the nation's top business and political leaders, as well as investors across the country. Holding 33 Pulitzer Prizes for outstanding journalism, The Wall Street Journal provides readers with trusted information and knowledge to make better decisions. The Wall Street franchise has more than 700 journalists world-wide, part of the Dow Jones network of nearly 1,800 business and financial news staff. Other publications that are part of The Wall Street Journal franchise, with a global audience of 3.8 million, include The Wall Street Journal Asia and The Wall Street Journal Europe. The Wall Street Journal Online at WSJ.com is the largest paid subscription news site on the Web with 10.9 million users each month. In 2008, the Journal was ranked No. 1 in BtoB's Media Power 50 for the ninth consecutive year. The Wall Street Journal Radio Network services news and information to more than 350 radio stations in the U.S.

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