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Rick Bragg
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Dr. Bailey Thomson
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The University of Alabama journalism
department will present the seventh annual Clarence Cason Awards
for Nonfiction Writing on Thursday, March 18.
The 2004 winners are Rick Bragg, a best-selling author and Pulitzer
Prize winning journalist, and Dr. Bailey Thomson, a journalist and
educator. Thomson, a UA journalism professor, died of a heart attack
on Nov. 26, 2003. Accepting the award will be his widow, Kristi
Thomson, and daughter, Sarah, a sophomore at the University.
Bragg, a native of Piedmont, has worked as a reporter for the
Anniston Star, the Birmingham News and the St. Petersburg Times.
He also spent 10 years as a reporter and correspondent with the
New York Times. His books include “All Over but the Shoutin’,”
“Somebody Told Me,” “Ava’s Man” and
“I’m a Soldier, Too: The Jessica Lynch Story.”
Bragg was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1996.
Thomson, a native of Aliceville, worked as a reporter for the
Huntsville Times and the Tuscaloosa News, was chief editorial writer
for the Orlando Sentinel and served as editorial page and associate
editor for the Mobile Register. In 1999, he received an ASNE award
for Best Editorial Writing and was named Teacher of the Year by
the Society of Professional Journalists. He is the author of “Dixie’s
Broken Heart” and “Century of Controversy: The 1901
Alabama Constitution.”
Tickets for the banquet honoring Bragg and Thomson at the Four
Points Sheraton Hotel are $50 and include a reception and dinner.
The event will begin with a 6 p.m. reception, followed by the awards
program and Bragg’s address.
An informal session with Bragg and some of Thomson’s
close friends will take place on Friday, March 19, from 9:30 a.m.-noon
in 216 Reese Phifer Hall on campus. Topics for discussion will include
writing, reporting and other related subjects. Students and others
are welcome to attend. All former Cason winners have been invited,
and several have said they will participate in the session.
The journalism department in the College of Communication and
Information Sciences (C&IS) at UA established the Cason Award
in 1997 to honor exemplary nonfiction over a long career. Winners
must be distinguished writers over a lifetime and have a connection
to Alabama and the South. The awards carry a cash prize of $3,000.
Other Cason winners have been Diane McWhorter, literary journalist
Gay Talese, former New York Times editor Howell Raines, famed biologist
Edward O. Wilson, jazz critic and memoirist Albert Murray and Auburn
historian and social critic Wayne Flynt. McWhorter, Raines and Wilson
also earned Pulitzers for their work.
To order tickets, send name, address, phone number, e-mail
address and your check or money order by March 12 to Sheila Davis,
C&IS, Box 870172, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487. The cost is $50 per
ticket. For a ticket order form and more information, go to http://www.ccom.ua.edu:16080/Journalism/cason.html.
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