Author turns down Grawemeyer Award in Education

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    LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The University of Louisville today announced that Greg Mortenson has decided to decline the university’s prestigious Grawemeyer Award in Education.

    Mortenson is author of “Three Cups of Tea” and “Stones Into Schools.” He was selected for the award based on his efforts to build schools and educate children, especially girls, in remote areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

    In declining the award, Mortenson called it “a great honor” to be selected for the prestigious award but said there are many other deserving individuals.

    “I wish to humbly decline the Grawemeyer Award as a way to acknowledge the dedication and sacrifice of all those who have gone before us and those who continue to promote peace through education,” Mortenson said.

    Mortenson had been scheduled to come to Louisville Sept. 23 to speak and accept the award. But in conversations with UofL Provost Shirley Willihnganz, Mortenson indicated that he no longer wished to accept the award.

    “We, like millions of others, have been inspired by Greg’s work and we share his commitment to education and to his belief that we can provide a more peaceful future for all our children through knowledge and friendship,” Willihnganz said.

    While the 2011 Grawemeyer Award in Education will not be given out this year, Willihnganz said the university will provide $50,000 in privately funded scholarships (unrelated to the Grawemeyer endowment) to students who decide to major in education and agree to teach in Louisville’s poorest schools.

    Five $100,000 Grawemeyer Awards are presented each year for outstanding works in music composition, ideas improving world order, psychology, education and religion. To learn more about the awards, go to grawemeyer.org/

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    Mark Hebert
    Following a 28-year career as a radio and television reporter, Mark Hebert joined the University of Louisville as the Director of Media Relations in 2009, serving as the main spokesperson. In 2015, Mark was named Director of Programming and Production. He’s now producing and hosting a radio show about “all things UofL”, overseeing the university’s video and TV productions and promoting UofL’s research operation. Mark is best known for his 22 years as the political and investigative reporter for WHAS-TV in Louisville where he won numerous awards for breaking stories, exposing corruption and objectively covering Kentucky politics. In 2014, Mark was inducted into the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame.