William Raspberry, a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist, has been a
journalist for almost five decades. He grew up in the racially
segregated South during the civil rights era. He is a native of
Okolona, Miss. "We had two of everything there," as he as described it
to The Washington Post, "one for whites and one for blacks." Raspberry
began his journalism career in 1956 with a summer job at the
Indianapolis Recorder. In 1962, he started at The Washington Post,
where he has been a teletype operator, reporter, copy editor, assistant
city editor and one of the paper's most respected columnists. For his
coverage of the 1965 Watts riot in Los Angeles, he won the Capital
Press Club's "Journalist of the Year" award. In 1994, Raspberry won the
Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Commentary. That same year, the
National Association of Black Journalists honored him with a Lifetime
Achievement Award. He graduated from Indiana Central College and
graduated with a B.S. in history in 1960 and been awarded honorary
doctorates from more than a dozen universities. He has taught
journalism at Howard University and, with his wife Sondra, at Trinity
College. He is now the Knight Chair in Communications and Journalism at
Duke University and continues to write his nationally syndicated
Washington Post column. It is carried by 220 newspapers. Fifty of his
columns are collected in his book, "Looking Back at Us."