Loading...
RSS feeds allow Web site content to be gathered via feed reader software. Click the subscribe link to obtain the feed URL for this page. The feed will update when new content appears on this page.
Sort By: Relevancy | Date | Type
Displaying items 73-84 of 2505
» View wsbtradio.com items only
    May 2, 2013 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  1. Motion detectors: Snap! Orlando looks at light

    When he was looking for photographers to feature in <strong>Snap! Orlando</strong> exhibits, Patrick Kahn came across the work of Vicki DaSilva.
    When he was looking for photographers to feature in Snap! Orlando exhibits, Patrick Kahn came across the work of Vicki DaSilva. Some were calling her work "light graffiti" because the Pennsylvania-based artist would photograph a scene by shooting at...

    Tags: Artists, Entertainment Events, Arts, Czech Republic, Arts and Culture

  2. May 3, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. New Edward Albee play postponed -- for the second time

    Even Pulitzer Prize-winning playwrights are prone to self-doubt. Edward Albee, the Tony Award-winning writer of 1962's “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” was supposed to see his newest work, “Laying an Egg,” debut off-...

    Tags: Entertainment Events, Lois Smith, Awards and Prizes, The New York Times, Arts and Culture

  4. May 3, 2013 |Story| Wrap
  5. In a Warming World, 'Cli-Fi' Is Here to Stay

    Reuters
    May 03 (TheWrap.com) - More than a year ago, I wrote a blog post here headlined "The Next Big Genre: 'Cli-Fi' -- Climate Fiction, in Which 'Mad Max' Meets 'The Road'" -- and now comes NPR and the Christian Science Monitor with two very good trend-...

    Tags: Fiction, Entertainment Events, Genres, George Clooney, Authors

  6. May 2, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  7. 'Vera Stark' looks back at lost stars

    The idea for &quot;By the Way, Meet Vera Stark," now in performances through June 2 at the Goodman Theatre, came to playwright Lynn Nottage the way so many of us discover so many slivers of old Hollywood. How? By happening upon a lesser-known title on the Turner Classic Movies cable network.
    The idea for "By the Way, Meet Vera Stark," now in performances through June 2 at the Goodman Theatre, came to playwright Lynn Nottage the way so many of us discover so many slivers of old Hollywood. How? By happening upon a lesser-known title on the...

    Tags: Human Interest, Entertainment Events, Goodman Theatre, Celebrities

  8. May 2, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. Everyman Theatre offers local premiere of gritty 'Topdog/Underdog'

    Booth, the younger of two brothers in Suzan-Lori Parks' cauterizing play &ldquo;Topdog/Underdog,&rdquo; being given a trenchant Baltimore premiere by Everyman Theatre, is determined to perfect the old con game, three-card monte.
    Booth, the younger of two brothers in Suzan-Lori Parks' cauterizing play “Topdog/Underdog,” being given a trenchant Baltimore premiere by Everyman Theatre, is determined to perfect the old con game, three-card monte. As he rehearses his spiel...

    Tags: Everyman Theatre, Entertainment Events, Abraham Lincoln, Arts and Culture

  10. May 2, 2013 |Story| South Bend Tribune
  11. The still noble newspaper reporter

    A recent survey ranked newspaper reporter as the worst career of 2013, just below meter reader and lumberjack, but you wouldn't guess it from the stories told by journalists who gathered in Bloomington to see six of their own inducted into the Indiana...

    Tags: Newspaper and Magazine, Entertainment Events, Freedom of the Press, Mark Twain, Apple Inc.

  12. Apr 29, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  13. Hunt Valley school teaches adults how to use fish forks and finger bowls

    <strong><span style=&quot;font-size: 10.0pt; font-family: 'Arial','sans-serif'; color: #002060;"><a href="http://www.baltimoresun.com/features/bal-scene,0,5904857.special"><img src="http://extras.baltimoresun.com/2012_images/scene/scene-link.gif" alt="Featured in Scene" border="0" height="30px" width="200px" ></a></span></strong>It took almost 56 years, but I've finally mastered my table manners, and in the process learned something about the curious and controversial history of the fork.
    It took almost 56 years, but I've finally mastered my table manners, and in the process learned something about the curious and controversial history of the fork. And all it took was two hours of bearing up under Carol Haislip's patrician gaze as she...

    Tags: Lifestyle and Leisure, Entertainment Events, Hunt Valley, Lindsay Lohan, Steaks

  14. May 1, 2013 |Story| Allentown Morning Call
  15. 'Next to Normal's' Valley premiere is at Civic

    Mental illness is not a topic frequently dealt with in Broadway musicals. When "Next To Normal" debuted on Broadway in 2009, it confronted serious issues, including bipolar disorder, suicide, depression and electroshock therapy, all in the framework of a...

    Tags: Mental Illness, Psychologists, Awards and Prizes, Allentown, Music Theater

  16. Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  17. Authors H-L

    div.article div.byline p.date {display:none;} Susan Hahn Susan Hahn was editor of TriQuarterly for 14 years. She is author of a recent novel, “The Six Granddaughters of Cecil Slaughter”; nine books of poetry, including “Self/Pity&...

    Tags: Television, Newspaper and Magazine, Periodicals, Journalism, Awards and Prizes

  18. Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  19. Authors M-Q

    div.article div.byline p.date {display:none;} Anthony Madrid Anthony Madrid lives in Chicago. His poems have appeared in Boston Review, Gulf Coast, The Iowa Review, Poetry and Web Conjunctions. His first book is “I Am Your Slave Now Do What I...

    Tags: Newspaper and Magazine, New York Observer, Awards and Prizes, Journalism, Elections

  20. Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Authors R-Z

    div.article div.byline p.date {display:none;} Nathan Rabin Nathan Rabin is the head writer for The A.V. Club. His books include “The Big Rewind” and “My Year of Flops.” He also collaborated on “Weird Al: The Book.”...

    Tags: Newspaper and Magazine, Periodicals, Awards and Prizes, Journalism, Goodman Theatre

  22. Apr 14, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. Writing in the dark: Reflections on the literary art of Roger Ebert

    Film critics are to filmmakers what Chicago is to New York: a little envious, a lot insecure, secretly fearful of second-class status. Hypersensitive to slights, real or imagined. Important — but not essential. The world would perish without movies;...

    Tags: Reviews, Entertainment Events, Literature, University of Chicago, Onions

< Previous1 2 3 4 5 6  7  8 9 10 11-209Next >
Original site for Pulitzer Prize Awards topic gallery.
Loading...
 
 

Date:

Credit:

User-submitted

Tags:

Rate:
Sending...

E-mail this photo

Error: malformed email address(es)
Both "from" and "recipient" email fields are required.

Recipient E-mail Addresses

(up to 3, separated by commas) Send me a copy.

From:

e-mail | buy this photo | link to photo
Pulitzer Prize Awards Photos
1938: Pulitzer Prize winner John McCutcheon remembers l...
(May 10, 2013)
1938
Tamberla Perry (Vera Stark) in Pulitzer Prize winner Ly...
(May 2, 2013)
'By the Way, Meet Vera Stark'
The South Florida Sun Sentinel won its first Pulitzer P...
(April 15, 2013)
Our first Pulitzer!