ISBN-10: 311097231X
ISBN-13: 9783110972313
PART A: REPORTAGE JOURNALISM
The university of Journalism at Columbia college has offered the Pulitzer Prize when you consider that 1917. these days there are prizes in 21 different types from the fields of journalism, literature and track. The Pulitzer Prize Archive provides the heritage of this award from its beginnings to the current: In components A to E the awarding of the prize in every one class is documented, commented and organized chronologically. half F covers the background of the prize biographically and bibliographically. half G offers the history to the choices.
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Additional info for National Reporting 1941-1986: From Labor Conflicts to the Challenger Disaster (Pulitzer Prize Archive, Volume 2)
Sample text
Claude Lewis, Philadelphia Inquirer', Dolph C. ) favoured Walter R. Hears of the Associated Press ahead of Marion Clark/Rudolph Maxa of the Washington Post 1 44 and Eleanor Rudolph of the Chicago Tribune. Walter R. Mears received the National Reporting award unchallenged "for his cover145 age of the 1976 Presidential campaign". It had never been the case that two journalists of the same newspaper were at the top of the jury's list in the National Reporting category before 1978. In this year the jury (Raymond H.
In 1958 the jury (Richard Clarke and Felix R. McKnight) made a clear vote in favour or Relman Morin of the Associated Press, and submitted this proposal to the Advisory Board. The National Reporting jury found that Morin, who had already won a Pulitzer 83 Prize for International Reporting in 1951, was "an outstanding reporter (and) rates the No. " This praise referred to Morin's "incisive eye-witness report of mob violence on September 23, 1957, during the integration crisis at 85 the Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas".
During the next few years there was a period of struggle and growth within the labor movement, and he gained his first experience in reporting labor news. Stark left the association in the summer of 1917 to work for the New York Evening Sun. After a few months, on October 1, 1917, he gave up this position to transfer once more to the staff of the New York Times, where he has remained ever since. The reporter covered various assignments until 1 923, when he began to specialize view. In in economic affairs, particularly labor news and 1933 he was sent to Washington, and since then most of his work was done in the Capital.
National Reporting 1941-1986: From Labor Conflicts to the Challenger Disaster (Pulitzer Prize Archive, Volume 2)
by Joseph
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