Martha Mason receives WFUs Pro Humanitate AwardBy Sarah Mansell
Mason arrived on the Wake Forest campus in 1958 encased in an 800-pound iron lung, where she has spent most of her life since contracting polio at age 11. She wrote a memoir about her experiences in 2003 titled Breath: Life in the Rhythm of an Iron Lung. She wrote the book using a voice-activated computer. Provost Emeritus Ed Wilson and Assistant Professor of Communication Mary Dalton presented Mason with the award in August at her home in Lattimore, in Cleveland County, and aired a video of her acceptance during the ceremony. I had the pleasure of meeting Martha when she was a student, said Wilson during the Sept. 5 award presentation. She brought to her coursework a depth of insight well beyond her years, along with a talent for writing that the rest of the world is just coming to realize through her recently published memoir. The university held a reading from Masons memoir on campus in March. |
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