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Induction & Reception - January 17, 2013

Washington, DC The Newseum - "Home of the NABJ Hall of Fame" Tickets Now on Sale
The National Association of Black Journalists announces its selection of six journalists for induction into The National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame in a ceremony to be held at The Newseum in Washington, DC on January 17, 2013, during Inauguration Week Festivities. Annually, NABJ pays homage to legendary black journalists who have made outstanding contributions to the industry. Over the last 20 years, NABJ has inducted over 50 distinguished journalists into the association's Hall of Fame. The NABJ Hall of Fame inductees were named by Board of Directors based on the recommendation of the Hall of Fame Committee chaired by NABJ Founder Maureen Bunyan, Evening News Anchor WJLA-TV. "These six journalists have had barrier breaking careers which have allowed them to tell compelling stories about everyday acts, ordinary lives, and historic times," said NABJ President Gregory Lee. "The careers they've had and the battles they've fought as journalists are anything but ordinary. For all their achievements NABJ is pleased to present them with this most welldeserved honor."

The newest members are: Betty Winston Bay, Longtime Columnist, The Courier-Journal (Louisville, Ky.) Simeon Booker, First Black Reporter, The Washington Post and Washington Bureau Chief, Jet Magazine Alice Dunnigan, First Black Woman Credentialed to Cover The White House, The State Department, and Congress (posthumous) Sue Simmons, Longtime Anchorwoman, WNBC-TV Wendell Smith, Legendary Sportswriter, Helped Desegregate Baseball (posthumous) Cynthia Tucker, Pulitzer-Winning Columnist, The Atlanta Journal Constitution Click HERE to register. Betty Winston Bay For more than 25 years Betty Bay worked as a reporter, editor, and editorial page writer at The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky. She was the only African-American editorial writer and columnist on staff. The Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism alumna is well-regarded for her bold and insightful commentaries on race, equity and justice, and African-American history and culture.

Simeon Booker Simeon Booker made history as the first African-American staff reporter at The Washington Post after having completed a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard University. Booker who began his career at The Afro-American Newspapers would become best known for his incisive coverage of the Civil Rights movement for Jet Magazine. Aside from his coverage of this tumultuous time in history Booker was a brilliant political reporting on every American president from Dwight D. Eisenhower to George W. Bush.

Alice Dunnigan In the latter part of her life Alice Dunnigan wrote her autobiography "A Black Woman's Experience: From Schoolhouse to White House which chronicled her life growing up in Kentucky, where she began her career as a teacher. Later she would become a Washington correspondent for The Associated Negro Press where her specializing in politics led her to become the first African-American woman credentialed to cover The White House, the Congress, and the State Department. Dunnigan also famously covered Harry Trumans presidential campaign. Sue Simmons Sue Simmons is an iconic anchorwoman whose career took her from New Haven, to Baltimore, to Washington, DC before she headed home to her native New York where she would anchor the evening news at WNBC-TV, NBCs flagship station for 32 years. Simmons poise, sophistication, sense of humor, and quick wit made her a viewer favorite, and someone who a generation of black broadcasters has sought to emulate.

Wendell Smith Wendell Smith began his career as a sportswriter writing for the Pittsburgh Courier. Later his knowledge of baseball led him to be a scout for the Brooklyn Dodgers, and Smith helped convince Brooklyn Dodgers general manager Branch Rickey that Jackie Robinson should be the man to integrate baseball. Later he resumed his journalism career and covered the White Sox for theChicago Sun-Times. Smith has his own place in history as the first African-American member of BBWAA the Baseball Writers Association of America.

Cynthia Tucker Cynthia Tucker is a veteran newspaper reporter would go on to become a columnist and editorial page editor for The Atlanta-Journal Constitution. In 2007 she earned the Pulitzer Prize one of journalisms highest honors. In presenting the award the Board said of Tuckers work, "her courageous, clear-headed columns ... evince a strong sense of morality and persuasive knowledge of the community. Tucker who was also NABJ's Journalist of the Year in 2006 now draws on her extensive experience in the classroom. She is a Visiting Professor of Journalism and the Charlayne Hunter-Gault Distinguished Writer-in-Residence in the UGA Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Richard Prince- 2013 Ida B. Wells Award Recipient


NABJ is pleased to announce that Richard Prince, columnist for The Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, will receive the prestigious Ida B. Wells Award. The annual honor is given to a media executive or manager who has made outstanding efforts to make newsrooms and news coverage more accurately reflect the diversity of the communities they serve. Prince will be honored on January 17, 2013, at NABJs Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at the Newseum in Washington, D. C. The Ida B. Wells Award is named in honor of the distinguished journalist, fearless reporter and wife of one of America's earliest black publishers.

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