Tag Archives: Pulitzer Prize

Samantha Power, American Ambassador To The U.N. In The Making, Retains Deep Irish Roots, Traits — And Contradictions

By David Monagan, Contributor

She won the Pulitzer Prize for her reporting on Bosnia; got bounced out of the Obama campaign in 2008 for calling the candidate-elect’s then rival Hilary Clinton a “monster,” but remained a darling of the left for her outspoken views on U.S. foreign policy, while appearing in Men’s Vogue as a sophisticate’s  ultimate redhead — beautiful, contrarian, and brainy. The headline facts about Samantha Power, awaiting Senate confirmation as the new American ambassador to the U.N., are fascinating enough, but so are the lesser known details of her background, particularly as they relate to her Irish connections and perhaps very Irish penchant for occasionally sweeping and at least once fearlessly righteous rhetoric. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

The Tiny News Startup That Crashed the Pulitzer Prizes

By Jeff Bercovici, Forbes Staff

On the 12th floor of a none-too-modern office building in downtown Brooklyn are the offices of the law firm Kornblau & Kornblau. Tucked away deep in this warren of dim rooms is the brain center of InsideClimate News, the newest member of the elite fraternity of Pulitzer Prize winners.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffbercovici/2013/04/16/the-tiny-news-startup-that-crashed-the-pulitzer-prizes/

Pulitzer Prize Fiction 2013: ‘Orphan Master’s Son’ By Adam Johnson

By The Huffington Post News Editors

“The Orphan Master’s Son” by Adam Johnson won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction 2013. The book, set in North Korea, is about a young man who rises to become a threat to the dictator Kim Jong-il, and then tries to get his wife and step children out of the country.

The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction is one of the most prestigious awards in American literature. Previous fiction winners have included Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner, Jennifer Egan and Philip Roth. Publishers submit works according to published guidelines; winners for the literary categories must be U.S. citizens, except for the History category, where the subject of the book must be U.S. History. 1,327 books were submitted by publishers this year.

The other fiction finalists this year were What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank by Nathan Englander, and Eowyn Ivey’s The Snow Child.

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From: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/15/pulitzer-prize-fiction-2013_n_3086514.html

EPIX Original Documentary Presents Expose of College Sports

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

EPIX Original Documentary Presents Expose of College Sports

Uncovering Shame in College Sports, “Schooled” Will Make Its World Premiere this Fall on EPIX and All Platforms

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Premium network EPIX announced it has secured exclusive rights to a new and timely original documentary examining the business of college football and basketball and the NCAA‘s treatment of its athletes. The expose is based on a controversial 2011 article by Pulitzer Prize winning civil rights scholar, Taylor Branch. Schooled: The Shame of College Sports will make its world premiere this Fall on the EPIX network and on all platforms including EPIX On Demand, EpixHD.com and EPIX apps on hundreds of devices including Xbox, PS3, Roku, iPads, iPhones and more.


Schooled,
based on Branch’s article “The Shame of College Sports”,is a hard-hitting examination weaving interviews, archival and behind-the-scenes footage to tell a story of how college sports became a billion dollar industry built on athletes who are deprived of numerous rights. Those interviewed include current and former college athletes, coaches, academic advisors, NCAA compliance officers and university administrators, including Emmy-winning Sportscaster Bob Costas, ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, Joe Nocera of The New York Times, Dave Zirin of The Nation, Sports Illustrated’s Frank Deford, George Dohrmann, BJ Schecter and Michael Rosenberg.

When first published in The Atlantic in October 2011, the article set off a firestorm of controversy and admiration. Sports Illustrated’s Frank Deford said Branch’s story “may well be the most important article ever written about college sports.” Branch, who also appears in the documentary, argues that decades of greed and self-interest have finally caught up with the NCAA and that the organization is poised to collapse under the weight of its own hypocrisy.

“Branch’s expose gives us an inside look at the injustice done to these dedicated young athletes and it sheds a new light on all college sports programs,” said Mark Greenberg, EPIX President and CEO. “EPIX is committed to bringing controversial stories like thisto our viewers.”

The documentary is directed by Ross Finkel, Jon Paley and Trevor Martin (directors of Ballplayer: Pelotero); executive produced by Bobby Valentine; produced by Andrew J. Muscato, Taylor Branch, and former college and NFL player Domonique Foxworth.

Says producer Andrew Muscato, “Over the past year and a half, we’ve assembled an unprecedented, comprehensive and

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Roger Ebert's Best Zingers

By John Johnson Roger Ebert loved good movies—here’s his top 10 —but those reviews aren’t nearly as fun as the ones for god-awful flicks. Some of the slams getting passed around in the wake of his death today: Deuce Bigalow, Male Gigolo: “Speaking in my official capacity as a Pulitzer Prize winner,… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Roger Ebert Has Died

Roger Ebert — film critic, TV host, Pulitzer Prize winner, arch-enemy yet best friend to Gene Siskel, and inspiration to an entire generation of movie writers, bloggers and lovers — has died. He was 70.

Ebert had been battling cancer for the past decade, and only yesterday announced his “leave of presence,” saying that he would be reducing his workload due to his health.

He passed away today, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Developing…

Talk to Senior Editor Scott Collura on Twitter at @ScottIGN, on IGN at scottcollura and on Facebook.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

HarperCollins Canada to Acquire Select Titles from Wiley Canada

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

HarperCollins Canada to Acquire Select Titles from Wiley Canada

TORONTO–(BUSINESS WIRE)– HarperCollins Canada today announced that it has acquired a select number of Wiley Canada‘s non-fiction backlist titles. The acquisition is effective immediately. The terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.

Among the titles purchased are such Canadian classics as the bestselling Mother of All series by Ann Douglas, Ken Dryden’s The Game, recognized as the best book ever written on hockey and one of Sports Illustrated’s best sports books of all time, Hockey Dad, by Bob McKenzie and several cookbooks by Anne Lindsay including Smart Cooking,Lighthearted Everyday Cooking, and her most recent Lighthearted at Home: The Very Best of Anne Lindsay.

“The acquisition of these titles will further strengthen our list of bestsellers in the health, sports, and how-to categories,” said Iris Tupholme, Vice President, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief. “We are excited to build on the success of these outstanding works and further develop the digital market for them. We are especially happy to welcome these respected authors to our Canadian publishing program.”

“We believe that HarperCollins Canada is well-positioned to provide the strategic focus required for these assets to achieve their full potential and continue to flourish,” said Mark Allin, Wiley’s Senior Vice President, Professional Development. “Wiley is reshaping its portfolio to support growth opportunities in global research, education and professional practice.” This is the fourth sale associated with Wiley’s planned consumer asset divestiture, which was first announced in March 2012. Those assets included consumer print and digital publishing programs in travel (including the well-known Frommer’s brand), culinary, general interest, pets, crafts, Webster’s New World, and CliffsNotes.

About HarperCollins Publishers

HarperCollinsCanada imprints include HarperCollins Publishers, Harper Perennial, Collins, HarperTrophyCanada HarperWeekend and Patrick Crean Editions. These imprints publish finest writers from Canada and around the world, including Kenneth Oppel, Emma Donoghue, Helen Humphreys, Charlotte Gray, Giller Prize‐winner Richard B. Wright and Pulitzer Prize‐winners Richard Ford and Marilynne Robinson. HarperCollins also publishes notable Canadian authors such as Amanda Lang, Jim Treliving and Lloyd Robertson, and such internationally acclaimed authors as Tim Flannery and Isabel Allende. HarperCollinsCanada publishes fiction, non-fiction, reference books and books for children. Consistently at the forefront of innovation and technological advancement HarperCollins is the first publisher to digitize its content and create a global digital warehouse to protect the rights of its authors, meet consumer demand and generate additional business opportunities. You can visit HarperCollins Publishers on the Internet at http://www.harpercollins.com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Fox News reporter faces Aurora judge over refusal to reveal sources

The FoxNews.com reporter who broke the exclusive story about a notebook that Colorado shooter James Holmes sent to his psychiatrist is in a courtroom this morning, facing contempt and possible jail time in a case experts say has chilling ramifications for the First Amendment.

Jana Winter is set to appear before Arapahoe County District Judge William Sylvester, who required her in response to a Holmes’ defense attorney request that she reveal the sources of her story. Attorneys for Fox News objected to the Winter subpoena. They declined to comment on the case in advance of the hearing.

The case is being monitored by First Amendment watchdogs and journalism advocates, who said Sylvester is sending an ominous message to the media – as well as the public – in asking Winter to reveal her sources.

“This is the classic reason to have shield laws,” said Gene Policinski, senior vice president and executive director of the First Amendment Center, based in Washington, D.C. “There must be protection for journalists to be free to report what they know, because that is how the public takes measure independently of how the courts operate.”

Sylvester issued a gag order to law enforcement authorities in the days following the July 20 attack, in which Holmes allegedly killed 12 and injured 70. Holmes’ attorneys claim Winter’s story, published on July 25 and picked up by media outlets around the world, has jeopardized his right to a fair trial.

However, Holmes’ attorneys have also said they would enter a guilty plea and avoid trial if prosecutors agreed not to seek the death penalty. Prosecutors have previously said they are not interested in accepting the plea deal, and are expected to address the issue on Monday, when Holmes is also set to appear.

Winter’s story cited unnamed law enforcement sources in describing the contents of the notebook Holmes sent to Dr. Lynne Fenton, a psychiatrist who saw Holmes while he was a neuroscience graduate student at the University of Colorado’s Boulder campus. Sylvester allowed Holmes’ lawyers to launch an investigation after the story ran in an attempt to uncover Winter’s sources, but none of the more than a dozen law enforcement officials who were called to testify admitted talking directly to the media. They were not asked to say if they had discussed the notebook with others.

Requiring the testimony of a reporter to learn who violated a gag order is rare – and almost never warranted – argued Gregg Leslie, legal defense director for the Arlington, Va.,-based Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

“In a case like this, you initially understand the judge’s interest in finding out who violated an order, but you don’t do that by making a journalist violate their promises of confidentiality,” said Leslie, who said concerns that leaks violate a defendant’s right to a fair trial are often “overblown, or fade quickly.”

Reporters have a tradition of protecting sources, even under the threat of jail. Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Judy Miller, currently a Fox News contributor but at the time with The New …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

One man's memoir of 9/11 becomes another's symphony

By hnn

Mohammed Fairouz has never been shy about using his musical platform to explore political and social issues. Nor is the young New York-based composer allergic to popular culture in its most colorful forms. So for his latest work, “Symphony No. 4, In the Shadow of No Towers,” which will make its world premiere Tuesday at Carnegie Hall, he is grappling with the aftermath of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, by adapting the 2004 graphic novel “In the Shadow of No Towers” by Art Spiegelman.

Mr. Fairouz, who is 27 and grew up in New York and London, said he was initially attracted both to the book’s structure and to its contemplative treatment of the events. “Graphic novels have a kind of architecture that is musical,” he said. “I thought the way that it dealt with the event and its aftermath wasn’t overly sentimental, but at the same time was respectful.”

But when he pitched the “No Towers” idea to Mr. Spiegelman, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and illustrator of “Maus” was hesitant. A previous effort by another composer to create a multimedia production had yielded mixed results, so the artist’s expectations were tempered. After hearing Mr. Fairouz’s completed symphony, though, he was moved….

Source:
WSJ

Source URL:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323419104578374523657992246.html?KEYWORDS=history

Date:
3-24-13

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Pulitzer winner Coll named Columbia j-school dean

Two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Steve Coll has been appointed the new dean of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.

Coll has reported for The Washington Post and The New Yorker.

Columbia President Lee Bollinger made the announcement Monday. He called Coll “one of the most experienced and respected journalists of his generation.”

Coll succeeds Nicholas Lemann on July 1. Lemann has been dean since 2003.

Coll won a Pulitzer in 1990, with David Vise, for a Post series about the Securities and Exchange Commission. In 2001, he won his second Pulitzer for general nonfiction.

Coll was the Post’s managing editor from 1998 to 2005, leading its transition to the Web.

Columbia administers the Pulitzer Prizes and its journalism graduate program is generally considered one of the best in the U.S.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Monster House Director to Helm Poltergeist Remake

The remake of 1982’s Poltergeist will be helmed by Gil Kenan, best known for his work on the ’06 family-friendly horror Monster House.

The MGM production will be produced by Sam Raimi, Nathan Kahane, and Roy LeePulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Lindsay-Abaire, a self-confessed Poltergeist obsessive, is reportedly still on board to pen the screenplay. “Well, you know there’s not too much I can say,” Lindsay-Abaire told Collider last year. “I will say that I handed in a second draft and people are incredibly excited about it…I will also say that there are very few people who are as obsessed with the original movie as I am, so I would try to write a script that I would want to see as a fan. I will say that.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

Original Iwo Jima monument could fetch up to $1.8M at NYC auction

A long-forgotten piece of America’s military history is going up for sale.

The original smaller statue of the iconic raising of the U.S. flag at Iwo Jima in 1945 is expected to fetch up to $1.8 million later this month at a New York auction dedicated to World War II artifacts.

That such a statue even exists is news to all but the most ardent history buffs.

Most Americans are familiar with the 32-foot-tall Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington, Va. Felix de Weldon’s 1954 bronze depicts five Marines and a Navy Corpsman raising the flag on Iwo Jima‘s Mount Suribachi as Allied forces struggled to capture the Japanese-held island.

Less well-known is the 12 1/2-foot-tall statue created soon after the event.

De Weldon, a young sculptor serving as an artist in the Navy, became instantly transfixed by an Associated Press image of the Feb. 19, 1945, flag planting, which would earn photographer Joe Rosenthal a Pulitzer Prize and resonate around the world.

“It’s an incredibly iconic image of bravery,” says Marci Reaven, vice president of historic exhibits at the New-York Historical Society. “It immediately captured Americans’ imaginations, their hopes for victory and their fears at a difficult time.”

De Weldon canceled a weekend leave to model a wax sculpture of the photo to present to the chiefs of staff. Congress soon called for construction of a large statue. But burdened with war debt, it could provide no financing and de Weldon agreed to fund it himself.

Completed in just three months, de Weldon’s cast stone monument was erected in Washington, D.C., in front of what is now the Federal Reserve Building on Constitution Avenue. It remained there until it was removed in 1947 to make room for a new building.

At about the same time, the government authorized a foundation for de Weldon to build a much larger flag-raising statue in bronze — the 32-foot Iwo Jima monument in Arlington.

The 12 1/2-foot version was returned to de Weldon, who covered it with a tarp behind his studio. It remained largely forgotten for more than four decades.

The story of how military historian and collector Rodney Hilton Brown came to own the statue is, like Rosenthal’s photograph, one for the history books.

In researching material for a biography on de Weldon, Brown learned about the old studio and amazingly found the monument still covered by the tarp. He purchased the 5-ton monument from de Weldon in 1990, paying with “a Stradivarius violin, a 1920s solid silver Newport yachting trophy and a lot of money.”

But years of neglect had taken their toll. The joints of the sculpture’s inner steel skeleton suffered extensive damage. Brown was told by a restoration house that it could build a brand-new monument for a quarter of the cost that it would take to restore it.

“They said, `You’re crazy.’ And I said, `You’re right, I’m crazy. I’m crazy for my Marine Corps. I’m crazy for my country,” Brown says. “This is the original first Iwo Jima from the last year of WWII and it’s going to get restored.”

Brown …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Watch: "Fireside Hangout" with Cecilia Muñoz on Immigration Reform

By <a href="/author-detail/199">Erin Lindsay</a>

This afternoon, Cecilia Muñoz, Director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, sat down with a group of immigration reform advocates and leaders from across the country to discuss President Obama's plan to fix our broken immigration system in a live Google+ Hangout. During the virtual roundtable discussion, participants asked questions about the President's vision on topics ranging from creating an earned path to citizenship, the DREAM Act, Startup visas for entrepreneurs, and the role of the faith community in the immigration reform debate. In case you missed the live event, check out the full video and learn more about the plan.

This “Fireside Hangout” was moderated by Jose Antonio Vargas, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and founder of Define American, and guests included America Ferrera, co-chair of Voto Latino's I'm Ready for Immigration Reform campaign, Jim Wallis, President and CEO of Sojourners, Cristina Jimenez, Managing Director of United We Dream and Shervin Pishevar, Managing Director at Menlo Ventures and co-founder of Start Up Visa Movement.

The hangout is part of an ongoing series of conversations with administration officials on Google+. In the weeks and months ahead, we’ll continue to host hangouts with White House staff on a range of second term priorities. Follow us on Google+ for updates from the Administration and opportunities to participate in online engagement events.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

Eugene Patterson, voice on civil rights, dies at 89

Eugene Patterson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning editor and columnist whose impassioned words helped draw national attention to the civil rights movement as it unfolded across the South, has died at 89.

Patterson, who helped fellow whites to understand the problems of racial discrimination, died Saturday evening in Florida after complications from prostate cancer, according to B.J. Phillips, a family spokeswoman.

Patterson was editor of the Atlanta Constitution from 1960 to 1968, winning a Pulitzer Prize in 1967 for editorial writing. His famous column of Sept, 16, 1963, about the Birmingham, Ala., church bombing that killed four girls — “A Flower for the Graves” — was considered so moving that he was asked by Walter Cronkite to read it nationally on the “CBS Evening News.”

“A Negro mother wept in the street Sunday morning in front of a Baptist Church in Birmingham,” Patterson began his column. “In her hand she held a shoe, one shoe, from the foot of her dead child. We hold that shoe with her.

“Every one of us in the white South holds that small shoe in his hand. … We who go on electing politicians who heat the kettles of hate. … (The bomber) feels right now that he has been a hero. He is only guilty of murder. He thinks he has pleased us. We of the white South who know better are the ones who must take a harsher judgment.”

“It was the high point of my life,” Patterson later said in a June 2006 interview from his home in St. Petersburg. “It was the only time I was absolutely sure I was right. They were not telling the truth to people and we tried to change that.”

Patterson also spoke of what he called his good fortune to work for the Atlanta newspaper and an “enlightened” leadership that encouraged his work.

“We were rather rare editors in the South at that time,” Patterson said of himself and Constitution Publisher Ralph McGill. Patterson worked under McGill, himself a Pulitzer winner in 1959, and then succeeded him at the helm of the Constitution four years later.

Editor Kevin G. Riley at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution called Patterson’s contributions to the newspaper, Atlanta and the field of journalism “enormous.”

“We benefit still from his work and legacy,” Riley told The Associated Press via email.

In 1968, Patterson joined The Washington Post and served for three years as its managing editor, playing a central role in the publication of the Pentagon Papers. After leaving the Post he spent a year teaching at Duke University.

He became editor of The St. Petersburg Times and its Washington publication, Congressional Quarterly, in 1972 and was later chief executive officer of The St. Petersburg Times Co. Under Patterson’s leadership, the Times won two Pulitzer Prizes and became known as one of the top newspapers in the country.

Times owner Nelson Poynter, who died in 1978, chose Patterson to ensure his controlling stock in the newspaper company was used to fund a school for journalists then called the Modern Media Insititute. It is now known as the Poynter Institute, which owns the Tampa Bay Times (formerly The St. Petersburg Times).

“A person — one person — had to be entrusted with fulfilling what Mr. Poynter intended,” said Roy Peter Clark, the school’s first faculty member. ” … He had to be totally trustworthy, so Mr. Poynter chose Mr. Patterson.”

Patterson retired from the Times and Poynter in 1988.

A collection of Patterson’s Atlanta Constitution columns was published in book form in 2002 as “The Changing South of Gene Patterson: Journalism and Civil Rights, 1960-1968.”

Hank Klibanoff, director of the journalism program at Emory University and co-author of a Pulitzer Prize-winning book on press coverage of the civil rights movement, said Patterson wrote with deep-seated conviction about the troubled era.

Klibanoff said that when black churches were burned in southwestern Georgia in 1962, Patterson was “deeply disturbed” and wrote a column tweaking white people who claim to be religious but support segregation. He called on whites to raise money to rebuild the churches, sparking an effort that raised $10,000.

“When he sat down to write, that conviction came out. And it came out in just a very, very powerfully written way,” Klibanoff said of Patterson.

Patterson was born in 1923 in Georgia and grew up on a small farm. School, fishing and literature were his only means of escape.

He graduated from the University of Georgia in 1943 and served in the Army in Europe during World War II. His first reporting job was at the Temple (Texas) Daily Telegram. He also had stints for United Press in Atlanta, New York and London during his journalism career.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Newspaper editor and columnist Patterson, 89, dies

Newspaper editor and columnist Eugene Patterson, who helped fellow Southern whites understand the civil rights movement, has died. He was 89.

Family spokeswoman B.J. Phillips says Patterson died peacefully Saturday evening surrounded by family and friends at his Florida home of complications from cancer.

Patterson was editor of the Atlanta Constitution when he won a Pulitzer Prize in 1967 for editorial writing. He wrote about the civil rights movement at a time when many Southern newspapers were reluctant to cover it.

Patterson also served as the managing editor of The Washington Post before coming to the St. Petersburg Times in 1972. Under his leadership, the Times won two Pulitzer Prizes and became known as one of the top newspapers in the country.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

From Ethiopia to Argentina: Day 1 of a 7-year walk

A two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter has taken the first steps of an unimaginably long walk — a journey from Ethiopia to Argentina expected to last seven years.

Paul Salopek departed an Ethiopian village Thursday to begin a planned 21,000-mile (34,000-kilometer) walk that will cross some 30 borders and scores of ethnic groups.

Salopek’s quest is to retrace humankind’s first migration from Africa across the world in a go-slow journey that will force him to immerse in many cultures.

The Ethiopia-to-Argentina walk — which took human ancestors some 50,000 years to make — is called Out of Eden and is sponsored by National Geographic, the Knight Foundation and the Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting. Salopek plans to write one major article a year and give periodic updates.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Vintage Predictions from the Vault – That Came True!

By David Leinweber, Contributor In the course of some year-end office tidying, I found a book from 1981, America What Went Wrong, by Donald Bartlett and James B. Steele. They’re Pulitzer Prize winning reporters for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Predictions from 22 years ago. How'd they do? This book was much more more interesting that the usual office […]
Source: Forbes Latest