
Media
Press Releases
Letters to the Editor
OpEds
Address:
Harvard Medical School
401 Park Drive, 2nd Floor East
Boston, MA 02215
Tel: 617.384.8530
Fax: 617.384.8585
General Email Address
Directions
|
|

Media
For Immediate Release:
2004
Global Environmental Citizen Award Presentation to Bill
Moyers

NEW YORK, NY
(December 1, 2004)– The Center for Health and the Global
Environment at Harvard Medical School, the first medical school-based
center in the United States bringing scientific rigor to the
relationship between human health and the health of the global
environment, awards its 2004 Global Environmental Citizen Award
to Bill Moyers.
“ Bill Moyers is a talented journalist who has proven himself time and
again with resourceful, thought-provoking pieces focused on some of today’s
toughest environmental issues,” says Eric Chivian, MD, Director of the
Center for Health and the Global Environment, and a former co-recipient of the
Nobel Peace Prize. “His work on the environment successfully makes strong
connections between human health and the well being of the Earth’s ecosystems.”
Some of Moyers most important broadcasts tackling environmental
issues include: “America’s
First River,” an exploration of the legacy of the Hudson River seen through
both the lens of its ecology, natural history and beauty and its use as a dumping
ground for PCBs and other industrial wastes; “Earth on the Edge,” a
comprehensive environmental report outlining the impact of human activity on
five of the world’s ecosystems as well as changes in behavior necessary
to help restore them; and “Trade Secrets,” an investigative report
about the companies involved in the chemical revolution over the past 50 years,
the chemicals they produce, and the effects they have on our bodies.
Before retiring in November 2004, Moyers hosted and produced
the weekly PBS series “NOW
with Bill Moyers.” Since its launch in 2002, “NOW” has produced
nearly three dozen stories on topics ranging from global warming, destruction
of wetlands, wind power, genetically modified food, mountain top mining, and
the weakening of the Clean Air and Water Acts. “Bill Moyers has been instrumental
in highlighting how changes in the environment affect our health and our daily
lives,” says award ceremony host and Center for Health and the Global
Environment Board Member Meryl Streep.
“It is an honor to receive this award from the Center for Health and the
Global Environment at Harvard Medical School, says Moyers. “The work of
the Center not only plays a crucial role in bringing information to the public
about environmental change, but also reveals what is at stake for real people.
With awareness comes the power to reverse the trend,” he says.
Best known as a broadcast journalist, Moyers career also includes service as
the Deputy Director of the Peace Corps in the Kennedy administration and two
years as White House Press Secretary for President Lyndon B. Johnson. He left
the White House in 1967 to become the publisher of the New York daily Newsday,
eventually moving to CBS as a senior analyst for the Evening News and chief
correspondent for the acclaimed documentary series, CBS Reports. In 1986, he
co-founded Public Affairs Television, Inc. with his wife and partner Judith
Davidson where he produced the famous series “Joseph Campbell and the
Power of Myth.”
Moyers has received more than 30 Emmy Awards for his work during his 25 years
in broadcasting and was elected into the television Hall of Fame in 1995. He
was named as one of the 10 journalists who have had the most significant influence
on television news by a survey of critics published in Television Quarterly,
the official journal of The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
|