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Members of the New York Daily News
Editorial Board (L-R) Heidi Evans, Errol Louis, Karen Zautyk, Bev
Weintraub, Editorial Page Editor Arthur Browne, Jay Maeder, Chairman &
Publisher Mortimer B. Zuckerman, Editor-in-Chief Martin Dunn and Michael
Aronson pose for a photograph after winning the Pulitzer Prize for
editorial writing in New York April 16, 2007. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo)
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NEW YORK, April 16 (Xinhua) -- The 2007 Pulitzer
prize winners were announced here on Monday, with the Wall Street Journal
getting a gold medal for public service for its coverage of backdated stock
options for business executives.
The Wall Street Journal was commended for its
"creative and comprehensive probe... that triggered investigations, the ouster
of top officials and widespread change of corporate America," the Pulitzer Board
said on its website. The paper also won a prize for international reporting.
The prize for breaking news reporting went to
Oregonian, Portland, for its "skillful and tenacious coverage" of a family
missing in the Oregon mountains, telling the tragic story both in print and
online.
The Pulitzer Board announced last November that a
full array of online materials, such as databases, interactive graphics, and
streaming video, may be submitted for consideration in nearly all of its
journalism categories.
Brett Blackledge, of Birmingham News in Alaska, won
the Pulitzer for investigative reporting. He was commended for his "exposure of
cronyism and corruption in the state's two-year college system."
The prize for explanatory reporting was awarded to
Kenneth R. Weiss, Usha Lee McFarling and Rick Loomis of Los Angeles Times for
their "richly portrayed reports on the world's distressed oceans."
Debbie Cenziper of Miami Herald won the Pulitzer for
local reporting for her reports on the Miami housing agency's waste, favoritism
and lack of oversight. Her reports led to dismissals, investigations and
prosecutions.
Charlie Savage, of Boston Globe, was awarded the
prize for national reporting for his "revelations that President (George W.)Bush
often used 'signing statements' to assert his controversial right to bypass
provisions of new laws."
Andrea Elliott of New York Times won the prize for
feature writing and Cynthia Tucker of Atlanta Journal-Constitution the prize for
commentary.
The Pulitzers for criticism, editorial writing, and
editorial cartooning was also announced by the Columbian School of Journalism,
which administers the prizes.
The prize for breaking news photography went to Oded
Balilty of The Associated Press for his "powerful photograph of a lone Jewish
woman defying Israeli security forces as they remove illegal settlers in the
West Bank."
Renee C. Byer of Sacramento Bee won the Pulitzer for
feature photography for her "intimate portrayal of a single mother and her young
son as he loses his battle with cancer."
The prize for fiction went to "The Road," written by
Cormac McCarthy; for drama, to "Rabbit Hole," by David Lindsay-Abaire; for
history, to "The Race Beat: The Press, the Civil Rights Struggle, and the
Awakening of a Nation," written by Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff.
Debby Applegate, author of "The Most Famous Man in
America: The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher," won the prize for biography or
autobiography. Natasha Trethewey's "Native Guard" was awarded the prize for
poetry.
Lawrence Wright, winner of the prize for general
non-fiction, was commended for "The Looming Tower, Al-Qaida and the Road to
9/11."
Ornette Coleman took the music prize for "Sound
Grammar."
The Pulitzer Prize is regarded as the highest
national honor in print journalism, literary achievements, and musical
composition in the United States. It is administered by Columbia University in
New York City.
Prizes are awarded annually in 21 categories. Winners
of the prize for public service get a gold medal and those in the other 20
categories receive a certificate and a 10,000 U.S. dollars award.
The prize was established by Joseph Pulitzer, a
Hungarian-American journalist and newspaper publisher. The first Pulitzer Prizes
were awarded in 1917.
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New York Times reporter Andrea Elliott receives a congratulatory hug from a colleague after winning the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing in New York April 16, 2007. Elliott won for a series on an Imam at a New York mosque striving to serve his faithful. Elliott's husband and fellow reporter, Tim Golden, and her parents are on the right. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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Related:
2 U.S. local newspapers win Pulitzer
Prize
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Devon Fisher, 8, Cavel Fisher Clay, 33,
(C) and Alexis Fisher, 14, (R) wait in a hostile line for buses to the
Houston Astrodome in a photo published September 1, 2005 and released
April 17, 2006 by the Pulitzer Prize Committee. The photograph taken by
Michael Ainsworth of the Dallas Morning News was part of a collection of
photos by the staff that won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news
photography.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, April 17 (Xinhua) -- Two local newspapers won
the Pulitzer Prize for public service Monday for their brave and detailed
coverage of Hurricane Katrina which hit the U.S. Gulf Coast regions in August
2005.
They are The Times-Picayune of New Orleans,
Louisiana, and The Sun Herald of Gulfport, Mississippi.
The Times-Picayune also won the Pulitzer in breaking
news reporting for its Katrina coverage. Full story
Iranian photographer receives Pulitzer
for 1980 photo
BEIJING, Dec. 11 (Xinhuanet)-- Iranian
photographer Jahangir Razmi will claim the Pulitzer Prize for a "mysterious"
spot news photography -- for 1980.
The photograph of an Iranian firing squad won the
prize, but the photographer remained anonymous for 26 years over fears for his
safety.
It was not until last weekend that Razmi, now 58 and
still living in Iran, was identified in an article in The Wall Street Journal.
"There is no more reason to hide," Razmi said. Full story