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TSU
to present reporter Rick Bragg with the Hall-Waters Southern Prize
April 4
For the second straight year, the Hall-Waters Southern Prize
at Troy State University will go to a writer with Alabama roots.
TSU will honor Rick Bragg, journalist for the New York Times
and winner of the 1996 Pulitzer for feature writing, on Friday, April 4, in a
ceremony scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m. at Sartain Hall on the TSU campus. The
general public as well as faculty, staff and students of TSU are invited to attend
the prize award ceremony.
The Hall-Waters Southern Prize is endowed by TSU alumnus Dr.
Wade Hall, an author and Professor Emeritus of English at Bellarmine College
in Louisville, Ky. Dr. Hall endowed the prize as a memorial to his parents, Wade
Hall, Sr. and Sarah Elizabeth Waters Hall. The award is presented annually to
a person who has made significant contributions to Southern heritage and culture
in history, literature or the arts.
The first Hall-Waters southern Prize was presented in 2002
to author Shirley Ann Grau, a former resident of Montgomery, whose 1964 novel “The
Keepers of the House” was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
Bragg, a native of Piedmont, worked for the Anniston Star,
Birmingham News, St. Petersburg Times and Los Angeles Times before joining the
staff of the New York Times. He attended Jacksonville State University from 1978-80
and was chosen as a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University. He is author of three
works of non-fiction, including the best-selling memoir “All Over But the
Shoutin’” and his latest book, “Ava’s Man.”
"We are pleased to award this year’s Hall-Waters Southern
Prize to an Alabama native whose reportage and excellent writing have contributed
significantly to the field of journalism,” Dr. Harold Kaylor, Chair of
the Department of English, said. “Rick Bragg’s marvelous storytelling,
albeit about real life, is in the tradition of the finest Southern authors.”
Later on the afternoon of April 4, Bragg will be the guest
of honor at the TSU Department of English’s annual Writing Festival. He
will make a presentation to high school and middle school students participating
in the festival beginning at 3 p.m. in Sartain Hall.
“The annual festival is designed to encourage students
to develop writing skills,” Dr. Kaylor said. Cash prizes will be awarded
to students in three age groups for poetry, critical essays and creative writings.
RICK BRAGG
Rick Bragg became a domestic correspondent in The New York
Times’ Atlanta office in October 1994. He joined The Times in January 1994
as a metropolitan reporter. He is the recipient of the American Society of Newspaper
Editors Distinguished Writing Award and more than 50 other national, regional
and state writing awards. He has had stories included in: Best Newspaper Writing
1991, Best of the Press 1988, and two journalism textbooks on good writing and
foreign reporting.
He has taught writing at Harvard University, the Poynter Institute
for Media Studies, Boston University of South Florida and other colleges. Rick
Bragg is single and lives in New Orleans.
ABOUT DR. WADE HALL AND THE
HALL-WATERS SOUTHERN PRIZE
Dr. Wade Hall, a graduate of Troy State University, is a native
of Union Springs. He has lived in Louisville, Ky., since 1962, and is Professor
Emeritus of English at Bellarmine College. He is the author of books, monographs,
articles, plays and reviews relating to Southern history and literature. His
most recent books include “Conecuh People: Words of Life from the Alabama
Black Belt” and “High Upon the Hill: A History of Bellarmine College.” He
is currently editing an anthology of 200 years of Kentucky writing for the University
Press of Kentucky.
Dr. Hall has funded an endowment at TSU to support the Hall-Waters
Southern Prize, awarded annually to a person who has made significant contributions
to Southern heritage and culture in history, literature or the arts.
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