Thank you very much. It is my pleasure to introduce a number of great winners to the Pulitzer Prizes tonight. Let me take a moment to recognize one of my predecessors both as the chair of the Tampa Bay Times company and of the Pulitzer Prize, andy barnes is with us. [applause] our purpose here this evening is to say happy birthday to the Pulitzer Prizes. They turn 100 years old this year, which is older than anybody in this room, i believe. [laughter] this is a great tribute to a robust and resilient american institution. So, lets also say thank you to Joseph Pulitzer who created these prizes. It is a very hard thing to win a pulitzer. It is hard even to become one of the finalists. Hundreds and hundreds of entries arrive in new york each year for prizes given in journalism, literature, and the arts. Volunteer juries of experts spend days winnowing down the entries. The Board Members read every finalists entry and vote on a winner. It is with great pleasure then to present to you these
In their lives and in their hearts, and their historical consciousness which, as he put it, may prove to be more deadly than that iron curtain of which we speak so much. Baldwin used a refrain about distancing between whites and blacks, between whites and of themselves, and between the stories within which people claim to be living. As the celebratory marches arrived in the center of montgomery, baldwin noticed that the Confederate Flag was flying from the capitol dome, and that the federalize Alabama National guard ordered to protect the marchers, as he put it, ward little Confederate Flags on their jackets. On all along the road, rogue baldwin, quoting him, older black men and women would undo into her unspeakable repression. And the white section of town, baldwin saw businessmen, as he puts it, on balconies, jeering, their mates in backdoors standing silent. And he describes, quote beige colored woman standing on the streets, a bit nervous who suddenly steps off the curb and joins t