PAIR OF PULITZERS
"Charting the Great Divide" Duke
Magazine, Sep.-Oct. 2001
Kevin Sack '81 now has some symmetry for his office bookcase:
another Pulitzer Prize, to go with the 2001 Pulitzer awarded to
him and other New York Times reporters for the fifteen-part series "How
Race Is Lived in America." Sack wrote the lead article and
later did a commissioned piece for Duke Magazine about the project.
This year, Sack, now in the Atlanta bureau of The Los Angeles Times,
has to share the National Reporting prize for 2003 with only one
other writer, Alan Miller--for their four-part series "The
Vertical Vision." The pair's winning work was the result of
their eight-month investigation of the AV-8 Harrier, nicknamed "The
Widow Maker," because of its history of failures that have
resulted in the deaths of forty-five pilots.
"
Anything that could go wrong with it did," Sack told his hometown
newspaper, the Jacksonville, Florida, Daily Record. "There
were mechanical problems related to the engine and the wing flaps
and a host of outrageous maintenance problems. And it was a complicated
plane; pilots talked about needing three hands to fly it."
Another team effort, which included the work of James O. Wilson
'74, a veteran photographer for The New York Times, was recognized
with a 2002 Pulitzer for Breaking News Photography. The Times was
cited for "its consistently outstanding photographic coverage
of the terrorist attack on New York City and its aftermath." It
was the first staff Pulitzer for photography in the newspaper's
history, according to Times editor Howell Raines, who recently
appointed Wilson picture editor, the photography desk's senior-most
position.
Wilson, who as an undergraduate was photo editor of The Chronicle,
was recently appointed to the Duke Magazine Editorial Advisory
Board. He has been with The Times since 1980. Over those years
he has taken on various photo-staff management roles and has covered,
among other themes, presidential campaigns and "the tragedy
of earthquakes, fires, and floods in distant lands," he says.
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