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Editor’s Note: Media are invited
to attend the awards ceremony at 12:45 p.m., Friday, Jan. 31, at
the President’s Mansion and a reception following at the Hoole
Special Collections Library, both on The University of Alabama campus.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Winners of the second annual “To Kill
a Mockingbird” Essay Contest will be honored Friday, Jan.
31, at The University of Alabama.
High school students from throughout the state -- all winners of
the essay competition in their individual schools -- will visit
UA Friday for a tour and luncheon at the President’s Mansion,
followed by an awards ceremony.
The contest was created in honor of “To Kill a Mockingbird”
author Harper Lee’s induction into the Alabama Academy of
Honor in 2001 and is sponsored by the UA
Honors Program with the support of the Alabama State Department
of Education.
High school students from throughout the state were invited to
submit 300- to 500-word essays on Lee’s much-loved book. Essays
were to reflect the writer’s perception on how life has changed
in the South from the time period depicted in the book to the present.
The grand prizewinner, Haller Smith of Monroeville Academy, will
be awarded a $500 prize at the awards ceremony and a $500 donation
will be made to her school. The second place winner is Valerie Gribben
of LAMP Magnet School in Montgomery. She will receive a $200 prize.
All statewide winners will receive a $100 prize.
Contest winners will tour the UA President’s Mansion and
have lunch with UA interim President Barry Mason before the awards
ceremony at 12:45 p.m. at the mansion. A reception will follow the
awards ceremony at the W.
S. Hoole Special Collections Library in Mary Harmon Bryant Hall
on the UA campus.
Excerpts from the essays demonstrate that “To Kill a Mockingbird”
continues to resonate with today’s teenagers. Smith, the grand
prizewinner, wrote “Scout’s world was a small one; it
was confined to the tiny town of Maycomb, Alabama.
“ ... My world is a very different place. I live in a small
town where I feel safe, but every day on television I see more of
the horrible things that people do to each other ... People cram
everything they can into a day and always need more time. My world
is a wonderful but sometimes frightening place.”
Second place winner Gribben wrote, “It is a sad trade-off,
because most of my generation will never experience that bygone
feeling of complete childhood liberty under the protective eye of
their community.”
Other essayists’ comments included “Over the years,
I came to realize that our war with prejudice is never over, though
we have won many battles” and “The diversity now innate
throughout the South truly impresses me. In the past month I have
visited a Muslim mosque and have attended a Hindu wedding ... Nevertheless,
the South is not perfect. Bigotry still clouds our politics, and
segregation is not entirely behind us.”
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