Contact: Sarah Ray



802-443-5794

sray@middlebury.edu

Posted: March 24, 2003

"Is Vermont What America Really Wants to Be?":  Montpelier Associated Press bureau chief to give lecture on Vermont politics April 10

MIDDLEBURY,

VT - Montpelier Associated Press

Bureau Chief Chris Graff will give a talk titled “Is Vermont What

America Really Wants to Be? A Look at Politics in the Nation’s Quirkiest

State” on Thursday, April 10, at 8 p.m. The event, the annual Robert

W. van de Velde, Jr. ‘75 Memorial Lecture, will take place in Middlebury

College’s Dana Auditorium in Sunderland Language Center on College Street

(Route 125). The lecture is free and open to the public.

Graff’s lecture will

include a discussion of the history of Vermont’s transformation from the

most Republican state in the nation to the most Democratic, as well as

how Republican Jim Douglas’ election to Vermont governor and Democrat

Howard Dean’s campaign for presidency reflect the state’s political landscape.

Graff, a 1975 Middlebury

graduate, has worked for the Associated Press for 25 years and served

as bureau chief in Vermont since 1980. For the past 11 years, he has been

the host of “Vermont This Week,” a journalists’ roundtable discussion

that airs on Vermont Public Television. He has also produced, written

and hosted a number of other programs for public television, including

“Vermont’s Past Century” and “The Governors.”

Robert W. van de Velde,

Jr. was a member of the Middlebury class of 1975. The memorial lecture

was established in 1981 by his parents, R.W. and Barbara van de Velde;

his widow, Diana Mooney van de Velde; and other family members and friends.

The lecture series

provides an annual

talk on the confluence of public affairs-both foreign and domestic-and

journalism, particularly broadcast journalism. Previous speakers in the

series have included Frank Sesno of the class of 1977, Cecil Forster of

the class of 1964, Jeanne Meserve of the class of 1974, former Gov. of

Vermont Madeleine Kunin, Jane Bryant Quinn of the class of 1960, and Pulitzer

Prize-winner David Moats.

For more information,

contact Kathleen Knippler at knippler@middlebury.edu

or 802-443-5393 in the office of the secretary of Middlebury College.