JIM CARMICHEL HONORED
BY POMA & NSSF
LAS VEGAS,
NEVADA - Feb. 2, 2008 - The
Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA) and the National Shooting Sports
Foundation (NSSF) honored veteran journalist Jim Carmichel during the State of
the Industry Dinner and Gala at the Shooting Hunting Outdoor Trade (SHOT) Show.
Carmichel of Jonesborough, Tenn.,
was presented with the prestigious POMA/NSSF Grits Gresham Shooting Sports
Communicator Award.
In honor of legendary outdoor communicator Grits Gresham,
POMA and the NSSF developed the award in 2005 to recognize communicators within
the firearms/shooting sports/Second Amendment arena who grasp the ideals,
foster the commitment, and display the talent Gresham has shown during his storied career.
Tom Gresham presented the award, a bronze of one of Grits Gresham's signature
hats, to Carmichel.
"Whether he's writing about shooting pigeons from the
roof of a court house with a pellet gun in his humor series, describing his
latest African safari, or detailing the esoteric fine points of precision rifle
shooting, Jim Carmichel has delighted two generations of American shooters and
hunters with solid information and entertainment about the shooting
sports," Gresham said when presenting the award. "It's fitting that Jim receive
this award, not only because he deserves it, but because he and Grits have been
friends, as well as contemporaries, for many years."
"To be honored by the Professional Outdoor Media Association
as a recipient of the POMA/NSSF Grits Gresham Shooting Sports Communicator
Award is the greatest recognition any gun writer could ever hope to achieve,"
Carmichel said. "Honestly, I am overwhelmed. Grits has been a treasured friend
for many years, so receiving the Gresham Award has all the greater personal and
sentimental meaning.
Carmichel's good friend and the 2007 Grits Gresham Award
recipient, J. Wayne Fears, expounded on Carmichel's impact on current and
future generations of communicators and sportsmen.
"He has been a great role model for shooting sports writers
and his books and magazine articles have set the communications bar high for
future journalists," Fears explained. "Jim has done much to pass along the
shooting heritage to a new generation."
As shooting editor of Outdoor Life magazine for over a quarter
century, Jim Carmichel's life is utterly absorbed with-and dedicated to-the
use, study and development of sporting firearms. From early childhood memories
of crawling under a bed to stare-for hours-at the pistol hidden under the
springs, to ownership of a comprehensive firearms test facility, Carmichel's
attentions seldom stray from the field of firearms.
"If I live for five-hundred years, there won't be enough
time for all the shooting and hunting I have planned," Carmichel admits.
Nominations for the award are garnered from all corners of
the shooting sports industry. Carmichel was unanimously selected as this year's
recipient by a panel representing NSSF, POMA and the Gresham family.
Nominees and recipients of the POMA/NSSF Grits Gresham
Shooting Sports Communicator Award are not required to be affiliated with any
communicators or industry organization. All shooting sports industry
professionals are encouraged to make nominations for the award through the POMA
Web site at: www.professionaloutdoormedia.org/grits_nom.htm
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About Jim Carmichel
Shooting Editor of OUTDOOR LIFE Magazine for over a quarter
century, Jim Carmichel's life is utterly absorbed with-and dedicated to-the
use, study and development of sporting firearms. From early childhood memories
of crawling under a bed to stare-for hours-at the pistol hidden under the
springs, to ownership of a comprehensive firearms test facility, Carmichel's
attentions seldom stray from the field of firearms. "If I live for five-hundred
years," Carmichel admits, "there won't be enough time for all the shooting and
hunting I have planned."
Even in his early teens, Carmichel learned to reload
ammunition, was building his own guns and even designed a high
performance-hunting cartridge. He paid his way through college making richly
carved and inlaid reproductions of "Kentucky" style long rifles and earned four
letters on the varsity rifle team, Captaining the team for two years.
During the 1960's young Carmichel began writing about guns
and shooting on a part-time basis but there was soon such a demand for his
writings, especially on the technical and do-it-yourself aspects of firearms,
that he became a full-time writer and was named Shooting Editor of OUTDOOR LIFE
in 1971.
Now in its 110th year of publication, OUTDOOR LIFE is read
by many thousands of outdoorsmen monthly, making Carmichel one of the most
followed firearms spokesmen of all time. He has hunted on six continents in
over twenty countries, including 29 African safaris. He also maintains an
active competitive shooting schedule and has won awards in small-bore and
big-bore rifle, silhouette, skeet and benchrest, most recently winning the Two
Gun Championship at the 2007 National Benchrest Championships.
In 1998 Carmichel was the first recipient of The Jack Slack
Award for journalistic excellence, a two-time winner of the Anschutz Gun
Writers Award, and in 1980 named Winchester's
Outdoorsman of the Year.
In addition to his duties at OUTDOOR LIFE, Carmichel served
twelve years as a member of the NRA Board of Directors, has authored five
books: The Modern Rifle, The Compleat Just Jim, Do-It-Yourself Gunsmithing, The
Woman's Guide to Handguns and Jim Carmichel's Book of the Rifle, and also
co-authored other books. Carmichel's successful cartridge designs include the
.22, 6mm and 6.5 Cheetas, the 6mm CBR, .260 Bobcat, 6.5 Leopard, and 6.5
Panther, which was commercially adopted as the .260 Remington.
Jim Carmichel and his wife Linda, a university professor who
is also a shooting champion, make their home in the scenic mountains of East Tennessee, only a short stroll from their shooting
range.
###
Grits Gresham and the Award's History
Grits Gresham, a long esteemed outdoor communicator, was
honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award by the National Shooting Sports
Foundation at the State of the Industry Gala, Feb. 9, 2006. Gresham
was recognized for his extraordinary achievements made in support of America's
hunting heritage and firearms freedoms.
"Year after year, Grits Gresham has brought his great
talent, his wisdom and his heart to bear in support and in defense of what all
of us so much value and believe in," said Doug Painter, president of NSSF,
in making the presentation.
Though Gresham modestly has said that no one knew who he was
until he appeared in a series of nationally aired Miller Lite television
commercials, Gresham has long been known to the outdoors community for his work
in wildlife management and for his contributions to television programming such
as the original "American Sportsman," magazines, books and other
aspects of communication on the outdoors.
In honor of Gresham's
lifetime achievements, Painter announced that NSSF and the Professional Outdoor
Media Association (POMA) would begin presenting the POMA/NSSF Grits Gresham
Communicator Award in 2007.
Grits Gresham passed away on Feb. 18, 2008 at the age of 85
Honorees
2007 Inaugural Honoree - J. Wayne Fears
2008 Honoree - Jim Carmichel
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Together, we can do great things!