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Topic: Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting


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In the News (Tue 1 Dec 09)

  
 Pulitzer Prize - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Reporting - For a distinguished example of reporting on national affairs.
Many authors and journalists claim to be nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, when in fact they are merely unsuccessful entrants who did nothing more than pay the entry fee.
The prize was established by Joseph Pulitzer, a Hungarian-American journalist and newspaper publisher in the late 19th century.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Pulitzer_Prize   (786 words)

  
 Columbia News ::: Journalist/Author Amanda Bennett Named to Pulitzer Prize Board
No stranger to the Pulitzers, in 1997 Bennett shared the Prize for national reporting with her Journal colleagues, and in 2001 during her tenure at The Oregonian, that paper won a Pulitzer for public service.
This year's Pulitzer Prizes were announced on April 8 and will be presented to winners on May 30, 2002, at 1:30 p.m.
A cum laude graduate of Harvard College, she held numerous posts at the paper, including auto industry reporter in Detroit in the late 70s and early 80s, Pentagon and State Department reporter, Beijing correspondent, management editor/reporter, national economics correspondent and, finally, chief of the Atlanta bureau until 1998, when she moved to The Oregonian.
www.columbia.edu /cu/news/02/05/amandaBennett_pulitzer.html   (238 words)

  
 News
Adams, a reporter with The Wall Street Journal's Washington Bureau, was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for two previous investigative projects.
Adams is the fourth Pulitzer Prize-winning alumnus of the school to be honored with a Schwartz Award.
Previous recipients include Pulitzer winners Robert L. Bartley, editor of The Wall Street Journal; Lauren Soth, Des Moines Register editorial writer; and Tom Knudson, who has received two Pulitzers as a reporter for The Des Moines Register and The Sacramento Bee.
www.iastate.edu /news/releases/2000/sep/schwartz.html   (330 words)

  
 Barton Gellman '82 Press Release
Gellman was one of the eight journalists on The Washington Post's national reporting team that won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for coverage on September 11 and the subsequent war on terrorism.
Barton Gellman '82, national correspondent for The Washington Post and Ferris Professor of Journalism at the Council for the Humanities at Princeton University, will present a public lecture titled, "The War on Terror Before September 11: What Were Clinton and Bush Doing?" on Tuesday, April 23, at 4:30 p.m.
He is a special projects reporter in the New York bureau of the Post who recently completed a series of articles on the efforts of the government in the war against terrorism prior to September 11.
www.wws.princeton.edu /events/pressreleases/gellman.html   (248 words)

  
 CJR - Pulitzer Prize-winning exposes and their sometimes dubious consequences
In his 1989 Pulitzer Prize series on redlining for The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, reporter Bill Dedman was able, through extensive database reporting and help from university researchers, to show that banks were routinely discriminating against middle-class black applicants for housing loans.
In addition, patients suing physicians had to run their cases by a panel of doctors before bringing them into court.
Lending institutions used to be allowed to report data on loans that were approved or turned down in a way that made it difficult to see whether they were merely being financially prudent or discriminating on grounds of the applicant's race or the color of a neighborhood.
archives.cjr.org /year/95/2/pulitzers.asp   (4201 words)

  
 Anthony Lewis Speaks at Commencement 2003
Three years later Lewis won his first Pulitzer Prize for national reporting for a series of articles on the dismissal of a Navy employee as a security risk–dismissal without telling the employee the sources or nature of the charges against him.
18, 2003--Anthony Lewis--a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner for national reporting and a distinguished civil rights activist--will present Oberlin College’s 2003 Commencement address Monday, May 26 on Tappan Square.
Lewis was awarded the Pulitzer in 1955 and 1963 for reporting he did, respectively, at the Washington Daily News and the Washington bureau of The New York Times.
www.oberlin.edu /newserv/03apr/anthony_lewis_release.html   (364 words)

  
 Plain Talk-Schools Pulitzer-prize winning journalist to lecture at USD about liberties 03/26/04
In 1955 he won a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting for a series of articles on the dismissal of a Navy employee as a security risk-dismissal without telling the employee the sources or nature of the changes against him.
He won a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the Supreme Court in 1963.
Two time Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Anthony Lewis will be on the campus of The University of South Dakota on March 29, to deliver a lecture entitled "Civil Liberties in a Post-9/11 America." The lecture will be held in Slagle Auditorium at 7 p.m.
www.vermillionsd.net /stories/032604/sch_0326040060.html   (586 words)

  
 Peace Corps Online October 23, 2003 - Gerald R. Ford Journalism Prizes: Who is Russell Carollo and why does the Peace Corps believe he will provide "a misleading picture" of volunteer safety and security?
In 1998 Russell Carollo and Jeff Nesmith were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for their series on "Mismanagement in the Military Health Care System" that appeared in the Dayton Daily News.
In 1998 he received the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for a series on military medicine.
Last month, shortly before Kwee was scheduled to undergo a compentency examination as part of his probation, he surrendered his California license.
peacecorpsonline.org /messages/messages/2629/2016987.html   (2180 words)

  
 Pulitzer Prizes
(1924-) shared the 1974 Pulitzer Prize for Local General Spot News Reporting with fellow U of I alumnus Arthur M. Petacque for uncovering new evidence that led to the reopening of efforts to solve the 1966 murder case of Illinois Sen. Charles Percy’s daughter.
(1944-) shared the 1995 Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Journalism for his work on a family’s struggle with poverty, illiteracy, crime, and drug abuse in Washington, D.C. Dash became a U of I faculty member in 1998 and is a Swanlund Chair and professor of journalism and Afro-American Studies.
(1932-) won the 1978 Pulitzer Prize in Music for his piece, Deja Vu for Percussion Quartet and Orchestra, which was commissioned and premiered by the New York Philharmonic.
www.publications.uiuc.edu /info/pulitzer.html   (802 words)

  
 Paul Sann Journalism, Letters, Writings
    Pulitzer, grandson of the publisher who established the prizes, protested last week over the Advisory Board's action in bypassing the four-to-one vote of the jury international reporting and naming John Hughes of the Christian Science Monitor as the winner in favor of Harrison E. Salisbury of the New York Times.
    Even though the rules permit it, I believe that the Pulitzer Prizes are tainted to a very serious degree any time that the Advisory Board elects to cast aside all of the recommendations of a particular jury and bring forth a winning entry which the editors on that jury have not passed upon.
Hughes was awarded the prize for his dispatches from Indonesia; Salisbury filed the first stories from inside North Vietnam.
www.paulsann.org /reportingpriz.htm   (941 words)

  
 Andrew Stuttaford on Walter Duranty & Pulitzer on National Review Online
But then, more relevantly, the Pulitzer's representative notes that Duranty's prize was awarded "for a specific set of stories in 1931," in other words, before the famine struck with its full, horrific, force.
But, unlike Khrushchev, Duranty, a Pulitzer Prize winner, no less, was keeping count — in the autumn of 1933 he is recorded as having told the British Embassy that ten million had died.
And if that is not enough to make the Pulitzer Board to reconsider withdrawing an award that disgraces both the name of Joseph Pulitzer and his prize, it is up to the New York Times to insist that it does so.
www.nationalreview.com /stuttaford/stuttaford050703.asp   (1147 words)

  
 The Sidney Hillman Foundation
For her work, she has received several awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting and the George Polk Award for Economics Reporting, both in 2004 for "The Wal-Mart Effect." Cleeland holds a B.A. in Journalism from the University of Arizona.
He won a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting and the George Polk Award for Economics Reporting for "The Wal-Mart Effect." Marshall holds a B.A. in Political Science from Stanford University.
In 2002 and 2003, Barstow reported extensively on workplace safety in America, leading a team of journalists that produced two series for The Times and an hour-long documentary for the PBS program "Frontline." The two series, "Dangerous Business" and "When Workers Die'' won the Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2004.
www.hillmanfoundation.org /2004winners.html   (2554 words)

  
 Pulitzer Prize Winner to Speak at Silver Spring Library
Maraniss also wrote the best selling "First in His Class: A Biography of Bill Clinton," as well as "Tell Newt to Shut Up." He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1993 for National Reporting at the Washington Post.
Pulitzer Prize winner David Maraniss, author of "When Pride Mattered: A Life of Vince Lombardi," will be featured as part of the Silver Spring Library's Speaker Series on November 30, at 8 p.m.
The program will be held in the Meeting Room of the library, which is located at 8901 Colesville Road.
www.montgomerycountymd.gov /mc/news/press/99-408.html   (128 words)

  
 The Lukas Prize Project Winners
Her book, A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, was awarded the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction and the 2003 National Book Critics Circle Award for general nonfiction.
The prize jurors noted: "At the heart of Robert Harms' extraordinary book is an extraordinary document: the journal of Robert Durand, who served as First Lieutenant on the French slave ship the Diligent during its voyage to West Africa, to Martinique, and thence back home to France in 1731-32.
With crack reporting and gripping narrative, she offers a glimpse not at attention-getting injustice (like sleeping lawyers or other "bad apples"), but at the justice system's chronic disservice to ordinary Americans.
www.jrn.columbia.edu /events/lukas/winners/index.asp   (4108 words)

  
 Faculty - Thomas Torok
He performed the data analyses for the paper’s investigation of safety practices at railroad grade crossings, which won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 2005; and for an investigation of occupational safety, which won the Pulitzer Public Service Award in 2004.
Before joining The Times, Torok was at The Philadelphia Inquirer for 18 years, where he participated in three computer-reliant projects that were finalists for the Pulitzer Public Service Award in 2000, 1999 and 1995.
He also developed numerous data sets and applications that were used for the paper’s coverage of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, which won the Pulitzer Public Service Award in 2002.
www.jrn.columbia.edu /faculty/torok.asp   (342 words)

  
 Alumnus Bogdanich wins Pulitzer Prize (Apr 7, 2005)
Walt Bogdanich, a reporter and editor for The New York Times and a 1975 political science graduate from UW-Madison, has won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for national reporting.
Bogdanich was honored by Pulitzer judges for his heavily documented series "Death on the Tracks," which revealed the corporate cover-up of responsibility for fatal accidents at railway crossings.
While he was in Madison, Bogdanich also took classes in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication.
www.news.wisc.edu /10994.html   (266 words)

  
 Michigan State University Newsroom - Pulitzer Prize winner to deliver 2004 Siebert Lecture
He won the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for national reporting for coverage of the 1976 presidential campaign and election.
He is the author of “Deadlines Past: Forty Years of Presidential Campaigning, A Reporter's Story” and the co-author of “The News Business” and “The New News Business,” with former NBC anchor John Chancellor.
The MSU School of Journalism established the Siebert Lecture series in 1968 in honor of Frederick S. Siebert, director of the School of Journalism from 1957 to 1960 and dean of the College of Communication Arts and Sciences from 1960 to 1967.
newsroom.msu.edu /site/indexer/2216/content.htm   (393 words)

  
 Faculty: James V. Risser
A practicing attorney before he turned to journalism, Risser has twice won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting, in 1976 and 1979.
He is a member of the Pulitzer Prize Board, the Society of Professional Journalists, Investigative Reporters and Editors, Gridiron Club of Washington, and the Editorial Advisory Board of the Reuter Foundation of London.
He won the Raymond Clapper Memorial Award for Washington reporting in 1976 and 1978 as well as the Thomas L. Stokes Award for environmental reporting in 1971 and 1978.
communication.stanford.edu /faculty/risser.html   (175 words)

  
 Bill Eaton, Humphrey Program at Maryland University of Maryland
He won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1970 with the Chicago Daily News, where he spent 11 years before joining the Times.
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist William J. Eaton served as the curator of the Hubert Humphrey Fellows program for eight years until his retirement in May 2002.
Eaton, a past president of the National Press Club, retired from active journalism in October 1994 as congressional correspondent for the Los Angeles Times Washington Bureau.
www.journalism.umd.edu /Humphrey/eaton.html   (120 words)

  
 Interview: A Conversation With William Dietrich
In 1987-88 he was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University and in 1990 he was part of a four-person team which won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting on the Exxon Valdez oil spill.
A 1994 fellowship to Antarctica from the National Science Foundation and a nasty surprise in the form of cancer (he has fully recovered) prompted the author to take a stab at a lifelong goal of writing a novel by producing the World War II bio-terrorism thriller Ice Reich (1998).
In terms of journalism career advancement, I don't think the Pulitzer is that big a springboard for many reporters: the industry keeps it in perspective.
www.writerswrite.com /journal/apr04/dietrich.htm   (4013 words)

  
 UT Journalism: Pulitzer Prizes: Eileen Welsome
Eileen Welsome received the Pulitzer Prize in 1994 in national reporting while a reporter for The Albuquerque Tribune.
For more information on the Pulitzer Prize, winners and their work, visit the official Pulitzer Prizes web site sponsored by the Columbia Journalism Review.
She was awarded the prize for her stories that reported on the government’s testing of toxicity conducted on unwilling and unknowing Americans during the Cold War.
journalism.utexas.edu /awards/pprize/ewel.html   (156 words)

  
 Pulitzer Prize Winner Named to Dickinson College, Army War College Chair
On the Post staff, he covered the Pentagon, the 1984 presidential election and, as deputy national editor for two years, supervised reporters responsible for defense, diplomacy and other national security beats.
Pulitzer Prize Winner Named to Dickinson College, Army War College Chair
Atkinson will bring scholarship in history as well as a wealth of experience gained from covering defense issues for the Washington Post.
www.collegenews.org /x3075.xml   (653 words)

  
 UPI Archives: 1963 story of JFK death - (United Press International)
From the UPI Archives -- Merriman Smith received the 1964 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for his coverage of the Nov. 22, 1963, assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
Aboard Air Force One on which I had made so many trips as a press association reporter covering President Kennedy, all of the shades of the larger main cabin were drawn and the interior was hot and dimly lighted.
The White House had room for only two pool reporters on the return flight and these posts were filled by Roberts and me, although at the moment we could find no empty seats.
www.washingtontimes.com /upi-breaking/20041122-105835-6311r.htm   (2786 words)

  
 The New York Times > Business > Media & Advertising > Pulitzer Prizes for Journalism
The New York Times received the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting, for a series by Walt Bogdanich, "Death on the Tracks," which documented how the nation's politically connected railroads failed to take responsibility for fatal accidents, and disclosed the unusually close ties between the railroad industry and its regulators.
Two Prizes of $10,000 each: Awarded to Kim Murphy of the Los Angeles Times for her eloquent, wide ranging coverage of Russia’s struggle to cope with terrorism, improve the economy and make democracy work.
he 89th annual Pulitzer Prizes were announced on Monday.
www.nytimes.com /ref/business/media/04pulitzer-list.html   (630 words)

  
 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting
The Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, awarded since 1948.
New York Times, for his distinguished national correspondence, including both news dispatches and interpretive reporting, an outstanding example of which was his five-part analysis of the effect of President Eisenhower's illness on the functioning of the Executive Branch of the Federal Government
New York Times, for his distinguished reporting of the proceedings of the United States Supreme Court during the year, with particular emphasis on the coverage of the decision in the reapportionment case and its consequences in many of the States of the Union
www.nndb.com /honors/507/000079270   (1481 words)

  
 Company News On Call
He led the team of Journal reporters that won a 1997 Pulitzer Prize for a series chronicling the development and effects of new AIDS therapies.
Michael Bishop of the University of California-San Francisco were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1989 for research that led to the isolation of many cellular genes that normally control growth and development and are frequently mutated in human cancer.
Waldholz is one of the leading biotechnology reporters in the United States, and currently oversees health and science coverage for the Wall Street Journal.
www.prnewswire.com /cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=105&STORY=/www/story/02-13-2002/0001668480   (326 words)

  
 Northern Star Alumni - Telescope 2003
The Pacemaker is considered the Pulitzer Prize for collegiate newspapers.
After graduating, she worked as a reporter for the Daily Herald, and then for the Chicago Sun-Times, where she spent 10 years before joining the Seattle Times in 1995.
She was the editor for "The Widow-Maker," a series of stories by Times reporters Alan Miller and Kevin Sack about safety problems with the Marines' vertical-lift Harrier aircraft.
www.star.niu.edu /alumni/telescope.03.html   (2093 words)

  
 Page One
Flournoy previously worked as an investigative reporter for the Dallas Morning News for 22 years, where he won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1986 – the first Pulitzer Prize ever awarded to that newspaper.
Pulitzer Prize winner to become first mass communication Ph.D. Pulitzer Prize winner was the first person to receive a doctoral degree from LSU’s Manship School of Mass Communication.
He won the 1986 Pulitzer with fellow reporter George Rodrigue for an investigation into subsidized housing in East Texas, which uncovered patterns of racial discrimination and segregation in public housing across the United States and led to significant reforms.
www.lsu.edu /lsutoday/030808/pageone.html   (1846 words)

  
 Western Knight Center for Specialized Journalism - Eric Nalder
At the Seattle Times, he received the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for a series of stories about corruption and waste in the federal government's Indian housing program, and the 1990 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for series of stories about oil tankers.
The Brock Adams investigation was also a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in the Public Service category in 1992.
Eric Nalder is an investigative reporter at the San Jose Mercury News, and the winner of two Pulitzer Prizes and numerous other journalism awards.
www.wkconline.org /index.php/seminars/speakerpage?sid=275   (433 words)

  
 DrudgeReportArchives.com © 2005
_ Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting: The (Toledo, Ohio) Blade.
_ Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning: Matt Davies of The Journal News of White Plains, N.Y. _ Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography: David Leeson and Cheryl Diaz Meyer of The Dallas Morning News.
The New York Times won the Pulitzer Prize for public service Monday for the work of David Barstow and Lowell Bergman examining death and injury among American workers.
www.drudgereportarchives.com /data/2004/04/05/20040405_192607_flash2.htm   (314 words)

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