130 103 12MB
English Pages 440 [444] Year 2004
THE PULITZER PRIZE ARCHIVE A History and Anthology of Award-winning Materials in Journalism, Letters, and Arts Series Editor: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Ruhr University, Bochum Federal Republic of Germany
PART F: DOCUMENTATION
Volume 18
K G - Saur München 2004
Complete Bibliographical Manual of Books about the Pulitzer Prizes 1935 - 2003 Monographs and Anthologies on the coveted Awards
by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
Κ • G • Saur München 2004
Gefördert durch Mittel der Stiftung Presse-Haus NRZ Essen
Bibliographic information published by Die Deutsche Bibliothek Die Deutsche Bibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data is available in the Internet at http://dnb.ddh.de.
Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rigths Strictly Reserved K.G. Säur Verlag GmbH , München 2004 Printed in Germany by Strauss Offsetdruck, Mörlenbach Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30188-X ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
ν
PREFACE
Many publications about the Pulitzer Prize have appeared during the decades of its existence since 1917. The majority of them were mere articles in newspapers and magazines which were often critical and highlighted the annual awards. In later years, however, brochures were published emphasizing the award system itself, finally followed by various kinds of books. The intention of the present volume is to compile all monographs and anthologies which refer to the Pulitzer Prize in their titles or subtitles and have been published in book form. On the other hand, all PhD dissertations had to be ignored which exist only as unpublished manuscripts but not in printed form. In addition, biographical works about Joseph Pulitzer himself, the founder of the prize system, are not included. The following detailed bibliography lays emphasis on 52 book publications dealing with the prizes themselves or on those with documentations of the prize-winning contributions. This volume is, first of all, a chronological compilation of books according to their year of publication. Then follow two separate indexes containing all works in alphabetical order, first according to the authors' or editors' names and, secondly, according to book titles. Thereby, several different forms of guidance are offered to the reader of the present work. All publications presented in this bibliography are documented in a uniform system: the record of each book starts with its complete title followed by some significant extracts of the original preface or introductory remarks in order to describe the intention of the book. Finally, the complete contents section of the original book is presented. Thus, the reader finds a detailed survey on the respective volume and can easily see what to expect from it. The basis of the bibliographic searches was a number of different bibliographies as well as the rich collections of the Library of Congress and of the Columbia University Library. We are thankful to Mrs. Ingrid Dickhut who helped to compile the material and also made the typography of this volume. We are also indebted to quite a number of librarians who enabled us to have access to all original editions of the books presented in this work. Bochum, FRG July, 2004
E.J.F./H.-D.F
This volume is dedicated to the memory of Joseph Pulitzer, 1 8 4 7 - 1 9 1 1 A hundred years ago, in 1904, he stipulated in his will the establishment of the prizes named after him, and in the same year he published his famous article, The College of Journalism, which postulated the importance of journalism education at university level
VII
CONTENTS
A: Chronological Order by Publication Dates
The Pulitzer Prize Plays 1918 - 1 9 3 4 by Kathryn Coe and William H. Cordell (1935)
1
Pulitzer Prize Cartoons The Men and Their Masterpieces öy Dick Spencer III (1953)
5
The Lines Are Drawn American life since the First World War as reflected in the Pulitzer Prize Cartoons by Gerald W. Johnson (1958)
11
The Pulitzer Prize Story News Stories, Editorials, Cartoons, and Pictures from the Pulitzer Prize Collection at Columbia University by John Hohenberg (1959)
17
The Pulitzer Prize Novels A Critical Backward Look by William J. Stuckey (1966)
27
A History of the Pulitzer Prize Plays by John L. Toohey (1967)
31
The Pulitzer Prizes A History of the Awards in Books, Drama, Music, and Journalism by John Hohenberg (1974)
35
Man of the World Herbert Bayard Swope: A Charmed Life of Pulitzer Prizes, Poker and Politics by Alfred Allan Lewis (1978)
41
VIII
Chronological Order
Voices of Change Southern Pulitzer Winners by Maurine Hoffman Beasley and Richard R. Harlow (1979)
47
Pulitzer Prize Editorials America's Best Editorial Writing, 1917 - 1979 by William D. Sloan (1980)
53
The Pulitzer Prize Story II Award-Winning News Stories, Columns, Editorials, Cartoons, and News Pictures, 1959 - 1980 by John Hohenberg (1980)
59
American Reporter at the International Political Stage Herbert Bayard Swope and his Pulitzer Prize-winning Articles from Germany in 1916 byErika J. Fischerand Heinz-D. Fischer (1982)
71
Moments The Pulitzer Prize Photographs - Updated Edition, 1942-1982 by Sheryle Leekley and John Leekley (1982)
77
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 1:1928 - 1 9 4 5 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Consequences of World War I to the End of World War II fay Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (1984)
81
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 2:1946 - 1 9 6 2 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the End of World War II to the Various Stations of the Cold War by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (1985) Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 3:1963 - 1 9 7 7 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Escalation of the Vietnam War to the East Asian Refugee Problems by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (1986) The Best of Pulitzer Prize News Writing by William D. Sloan, Valarie McCrary and Johanna Cleary (1986) The Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism -1917 - 1 9 8 5 A Guide to the Microfilm Edition byMary E. Morrison (1986)
91
101 ....
109
117
by Publication Dates
IX
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 1 International Reporting 1928 -1985: From the Activities of the League of Nations to present-day Global Problems by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1987)
121
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 1: 1987 by Kendall J. Wills (1987)
133
Julian Harris and the Columbus Enquirer-Sun The Consequences of Winning the Pulitzer Prize byGregory C. Lisby (1988)
139
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 2 National Reporting 1941 -1986: From Labor Conflicts to the Challenger Disaster by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1988)
143
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 2: 1988 by Kendall J. Wills (1988)
151
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 3 Local Reporting 1947 -1987: From a County Vote Fraude to a Corrupt City Council byHeinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1989)
157
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 3: 1989 by Kendall J. Wills (1989)
167
The New York Times Facing World War II Articles, Maps and Statistics from a Pulitzer Prize-winning Exhibit by Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer (1990)
173
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 4 Political Editorial 1916 -1988: From War-related Conflicts to Metropolitan Disputes by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer (1990)
181
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 4: 1990 by Kendall J. Wills (1990)
193
χ
Chronological Order
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 4:1978 - 1 9 8 9 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From Roarings in the Middle East to the Destroying of the Democratic Movement in China fay Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (1991)
199
The Pulitzer Prize The Inside Story of America's Most Prestigious Award by J. Douglas Bates (1991)
207
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 5 Social Commentary 1969 - 1 9 8 9 : From University Troubles to a California Earthquake by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1991)
211
Winning Pulitzers The Stories Behind Some of the Best News Coverage of Our Time by Karen Rothmyer (1991)
221
Medicine, Media and Morality Pulitzer Prize-Winning Writings on Health-Related Topics by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (1992)
227
Struggle for Press Freedom in Canada A case study from the Province of Alberta and the key role played by the Edmonton Journal in 1938 - Based on a Pulitzer Prize winning exhibit by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (1992)
237
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 6 Cultural Criticism 1969 - 1 9 9 0 : From Architectural Damages to Press Imperfections by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1992)
241
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 7 American History Awards 1917-1991: From Colonial Settlements to the Civil Rights Movement by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1994)
249
Sports Journalism at its Best Pulitzer Prize-Winning Articles, Cartoons, and Photographs by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (1995)
261
by Publication Dates
XI
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 8 Biography / Autobiography Awards 1917 -1992: From the lucky Discoverer of America to an unfortunate Vietnam Veteran by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer (1995)
269
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 9 General Nonfiction Awards 1962 -1993: From the Election of John F. Kennedy to a Retrospect of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address byHeinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer (1996)
281
The Pulitzer Diaries Inside America's Greatest Prize by John Hohenberg (1997)
289
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 10 Novel / Fiction Awards 1917 -1994: From Pearl S. Buck and Margaret Mitchell to Ernest Hemingway and John Updike by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1997)
297
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 11 Poetry / Verse Awards 1918 -1995: From Carl Sandburg and Robert Frost to Archibald MacLeish and Robert Penn Warren by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1997)
311
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 12 Drama / Comedy Awards 1917 -1996: From Eugene O'Neill and Tennessee Williams to Richard Rodgers and Edward Albee by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1998)
323
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 13 Editorial Cartoon Awards 1922 -1997: From Rollin Kirby and Edmund Duffy to Herbert Block and Paul Conrad by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (1999)
335
Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners by Elizabeth A. Brennan and Elizabeth C. Clarage (1999)
351
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 5:1990 - 1 9 9 9 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Reunification of Germany to the Impact of Aids in Africa by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (2000)
355
XII
Chronological Order
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 14 Press Photography Awards 1942 -1998: From Joe Rosenthal and Horst Faas to Moneta Sleet and Stan Grossfeld fcyHeinz-D.
Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (2000)
363
Written into History Pulitzer Prize Reporting of the Twentieth Century from The New York Times by Anthony Lewis (2001)
383
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 15 Musical Composition Awards 1943 -1999: From Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber to Gian-Carlo Menotti and Melinda Wagner by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer (2001)
387
Capture the Moments The Pulitzer Prize Photographs ö y C y m a Rubin and Eric Newton (2001)
399
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 16 Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners 1917 - 2000: Journalists, Writers and Composers on their W a y s to the Coveted Awards by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer (2002)
407
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 17 Complete Historical Handbook of the Pulitzer Prize System 1917 - 2000: Decision-Making Processes by Nominating Jurors and Board Members in all Award Categories by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer (2003)
411
XIII
C O N T E N T S
Β: Alphabetical Order by Autors / Editors
J. Douglas Bates The Pulitzer Prize The Inside Story of America's Most Prestigious Award Maurine Hoffman Beasley and Richard R. Harlow Voices of Change Southern Pulitzer Winners Elizabeth A. Brennan and Elizabeth C. Clarage Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners Kathryn Coe and William H. Cordell The Pulitzer Prize Plays 1918-1934
207
47 351 1
Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer American Reporter at the International Political Stage Herbert Bayard Swope and his Pulitzer Prize-winning Articles from Germany in 1916
71
Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer The New York Times Facing World War II Articles, Maps and Statistics from a Pulitzer Prize-winning Exhibit
173
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 1 International Reporting 1928 -1985: From the Activities of the League of Nations to present-day Global Problems
121
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 2 National Reporting 1941 -1986: From Labor Conflicts to the Challenger Disaster
143
XIV
Alphabetical Order
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 3 Local Reporting 1947 -1987: From a County Vote Fraude to a Corrupt City Council
157
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 4 Political Editorial 1916 -1988: From War-related Conflicts to Metropolitan Disputes
181
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 5 Social Commentary 1969 -1989: From University Troubles to a California Earthquake
211
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 6 Cultural Criticism 1969 -1990: From Architectural Damages to Press Imperfections
241
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 7 American History Awards 1917-1991: From Colonial Settlements to the Civil Rights Movement
249
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 8 Biography / Autobiography Awards 1917 -1992: From the lucky Discoverer of America to an unfortunate Vietnam Veteran
269
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 9 General Nonfiction Awards 1962 -1993: From the Election of John F. Kennedy to a Retrospect of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address . . . .
281
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 10 Novel / Fiction Awards 1917 - 1 9 9 4 : From Pearl S. Buck and Margaret Mitchell to Ernest Hemingway and John Updike
297
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 11 Poetry / Verse Awards 1918 - 1995: From Carl Sandburg and Robert Frost to Archibald MacLeish and Robert Penn Warren
311
by Authors / Editors
XV
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 12 Drama / Comedy Awards 1917 -1996: From Eugene O'Neill and Tennessee Williams to Richard Rodgers and Edward Albee
323
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 13 Editorial Cartoon Awards 1922 -1997: From Rollin Kirby and Edmund Duffy to Herbert Block and Paul Conrad
335
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 14 Press Photography Awards 1942 -1998: From Joe Rosenthal and Horst Faas to Moneta Sleet and Stan Grossfeld
363
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 15 Musical Composition Awards 1943 -1999: From Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber to Gian-Cario Menotti and Melinda Wagner
387
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 16 Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners 1917 - 2000: Journalists, Writers and Composers on their Ways to the Coveted Awards
407
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 17 Complete Historical Handbook of the Pulitzer Prize System 1917 - 2000: Decision-Making Processes by Nominating Jurors and Board Members in all Award Categories
411
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Medicine, Media and Morality Pulitzer Prize-Winning Writings on Health-Related Topics
227
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 1:1928 - 1 9 4 5 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Consequences of World War I to the End of World War II
81
XVI
Alphabetical Order
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 2:1946 - 1 9 6 2 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the End of World War II to the Various Stations of the Cold War . . .
91
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 3:1963 - 1 9 7 7 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Escalation of the Vietnam War to the East Asian Refugee Problems
101
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 4:1978 - 1 9 8 9 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From Roarings in the Middle East to the Destroying of the Democratic Movement in China
199
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 5:1990 - 1 9 9 9 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Reunification of Germany to the Impact of Aids in Africa
355
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Sports Journalism at its Best Pulitzer Prize-Winning Articles, Cartoons, and Photographs
261
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer Struggle for Press Freedom in Canada A case study from the Province of Alberta and the key role played by the Edmonton Journal in 1938 - Based on a Pulitzer Prize winning exhibit . .
237
John Hohenberg The Pulitzer Diaries Inside America's Greatest Prize
289
John Hohenberg The Pulitzer Prizes A History of the Awards in Books, Drama, Music, and Journalism
35
John Hohenberg The Pulitzer Prize Story News Stories, Editorials, Cartoons, and Pictures from the Pulitzer Prize Collection at Columbia University
17
by Authors / Editors
XVII
John Hohenberg The Pulitzer Prize Story II Award-Winning News Stories, Columns, Editorials, Cartoons, and News Pictures, 1959- 1980
59
Gerald W. Johnson The Lines Are Drawn American life since the First World War as reflected in the Pulitzer Prize Cartoons
11
Sheryle Leekley and John Leekley Moments The Pulitzer Prize Photographs - Updated Edition: 1942-1982 Alfred Allan Lewis Man of the World Herbert Bayard Swope: A Charmed Life of Pulitzer Prizes, Poker and Politics Anthony Lewis Written into History Pulitzer Prize Reporting of the Twentieth Century from The New York Times
383
Gregory C. Lisby Julian Harris and the Columbus Enquirer-Sun The Consequences of Winning the Pulitzer Prize
139
Mary E. Morrison The Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism - 1 9 1 7 - 1 9 8 5 A Guide to the Microfilm Edition
117
Karen Rothmyer Winning Pulitzers The Stories Behind Some of the Best News Coverage of Our Time
221
Cyma Rubin and Eric Newton Capture the Moments The Pulitzer Prize Photographs William D. Sloan Pulitzer Prize Editorials America's Best Editorial Writing, 1917 - 1979
399
53
XVIII
Alphabetical Order
William D. Sloan, Valarie McCrary and Johanna Cleary The Best of Pulitzer Prize News Writing
109
Dick Spencer III Pulitzer Prize Cartoons The Men and Their Masterpieces
5
William J. Stuckey The Pulitzer Prize Novels A Critical Backward Look
27
John L. Toohey A History of the Pulitzer Prize Plays
31
Kendall J. Wills The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 1:1987
133
Kendall J. Wills The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 2:1988
151
Kendall J. Wills The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 3:1989
167
Kendall J. Wills The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 4: 1990
193
XIX
CONTENTS
C: Alphabetical Order by Book Titles
A History of the Pulitzer Prize Plays by John L. Toohey
31
American Reporter at the International Political Stage Herbert Bayard Swope and his Pulitzer Prize-winning Articles from Germany in 1916 by Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer
71
Capture the Moments The Pulitzer Prize Photographs by Cyma Rubin and Eric Newton
399
Julian Harris and the Columbus Enquirer-Sun The Consequences of Winning the Pulitzer Prize iyGregory C. Lisby
139
Man of the World Herbert Bayard Swope: A Charmed Life of Pulitzer Prizes, Poker and Politics by Alfred Allan Lewis Medicine, Media and Morality Pulitzer Prize-Winning Writings on Health-Related Topics by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
41
227
Moments The Pulitzer Prize Photographs - Updated Edition: 1942-1982 bySheryle Leekley and John Leekley
77
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 1:1928 - 1 9 4 5 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Consequences of World War I to the End of World War II by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
81
XX
Alphabetical Order
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 2:1946 -1962 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the End of World War II to the Various Stations of the Cold War by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
91
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 3:1963 -1977 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Escalation of the Vietnam War to the East Asian Refugee Problems by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
101
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 4:1978 -1989 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From Roarings in the Middle East to the Destroying of the Democratic Movement in China by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
199
Outstanding International Press Reporting, Volume 5:1990 -1999 Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Reunification of Germany to the Impact of Aids in Africa by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
355
Pulitzer Prize Cartoons The Men and Their Masterpieces by Dick Spencer III Pulitzer Prize Editorials America's Best Editorial Writing, 1917 - 1979 by William D. Sloan
5
53
Sports Journalism at its Best Pulitzer Prize-Winning Articles, Cartoons, and Photographs by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
261
Struggle for Press Freedom in Canada A case study from the Province of Alberta and the key role played by the Edmonton Journal in 1938 - Based on a Pulitzer Prize winning exhibit by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
237
The Best of Pulitzer Prize News Writing by William D. Sloan, Valarie McCrary and Johanna Cleary
109
by Book Titles
XXI
The Lines Are Drawn American life since the First World War as reflected in the Pulitzer Prize Cartoons by Gerald W. Johnson
11
The New York Times Facing World War II Articles, Maps and Statistics from a Pulitzer Prize-winning Exhibit by Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer
173
The Pulitzer Diaries Inside America's Greatest Prize by John Hohenberg
289
The Pulitzer Prize The Inside Story of America's Most Prestigious Award by J. Douglas Bates
207
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 1 International Reporting 1928 -1985: From the Activities of the League of Nations to present-day Global Problems by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
121
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 2 National Reporting 1941 -1986: From Labor Conflicts to the Challenger Disaster by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
143
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 3 Local Reporting 1947 -1987: From a County Vote Fraude to a Corrupt City Council by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
157
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 4 Political Editorial 1916 -1988: From War-related Conflicts to Metropolitan Disputes by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
181
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 5 Social Commentary 1969 -1989: From University Troubles to a California Earthquake by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
211
XXII
Alphabetical Order
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 6 Cultural Criticism 1969 -1990: From Architectural Damages to Press Imperfections by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
241
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 7 American History Awards 1917 -1991: From Colonial Settlements to the Civil Rights Movement by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer
249
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 8 Biography / Autobiography Awards 1917 -1992: From the lucky Discoverer of America to an unfortunate Vietnam Veteran by Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer
269
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 9 General Nonfiction Awards 1962 -1993: From the Election of John F. Kennedy to a Retrospect of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
281
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 10 Novel / Fiction Awards 1917 - 1 9 9 4 : From Pearl S. Buck and Margaret Mitchell to Ernest Hemingway and John Updike by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
297
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 11 Poetry / Verse Awards 1918 -1995: From Carl Sandburg and Robert Frost to Archibald MacLeish and Robert Penn Warren by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
311
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 12 Drama / Comedy Awards 1917 -1996: From Eugene O'Neill and Tennessee Williams to Richard Rodgers and Edward Albee by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
323
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 13 Editorial Cartoon Awards 1922 -1997: From Rollin Kirby and Edmund Duffy to Herbert Block and Paul Conrad by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
335
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 14 Press Photography Awards 1942 -1998: From Joe Rosenthal and Horst Faas to Moneta Sleet and Stan Grossfeld by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
363
by Book Titles
XXIII
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 15 Musical Composition Awards 1943 -1999: From Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber to Gian-Carlo Menotti and Melinda Wagner by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
387
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 16 Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners 1917 - 2000: Journalists, Writers and Composers on their Ways to the Coveted Awards by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
407
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 17 Complete Historical Handbook of the Pulitzer Prize System 1917 - 2000: Decision-Making Processes by Nominating Jurors and Board Members in all Award Categories by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
411
The Pulitzer Prize Novels A Critical Backward Look by William J. Stuckey
27
The Pulitzer Prize Plays 1918 - 1 9 3 4 by Kathryn Coe and William H. Cordell
1
The Pulitzer Prize Story News Stories, Editorials, Cartoons, and Pictures from the Pulitzer Prize Collection at Columbia University by John Hohenberg
17
The Pulitzer Prize Story II Award-Winning News Stories, Columns, Editorials, Cartoons, and News Pictures, 1959 - 1980 by John Hohenberg
59
The Pulitzer Prizes A History of the Awards in Books, Drama, Music, and Journalism by John Hohenberg
35
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 1:1987 by Kendall J. Wills
133
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 2:1988 by Kendall J. Wills
151
XXIV
Alphabetical Order
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 3: 1989 fay Kendall J. Wills
167
The Pulitzer Prizes Volume 4:1990 /by Kendall J. Wills
193
The Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism -1917-1985 A Guide to the Microfilm Edition by Mary E. Morrison
117
Voices of Change Southern Pulitzer Winners by Maurine Hoffman Beasley and Richard R. Harlow
47
Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners by Elizabeth A. Brennan and Elizabeth C. Clarage
351
Winning Pulitzers The Stories Behind Some of the Best News Coverage of Our Time by Karen Rothmyer
221
Written into History Pulitzer Prize Reporting of the Twentieth Century from The New York Times by Anthony Lewis
383
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The Pulitzer Prize Plays 1918-1934
by Kathryn Coe and William H. Cordell
Random House New York 1935
COPYRIGHT, 1935, BY THE MODERN LIBRARY, INC. FIRST EDITION PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
FROM THE PREFACE
3
Joseph Pulitzer died 29 October, 1911. The bequests in his will, their individual variety and common purpose, have probably attracted more widespread attention in America than any bequests since the last testament of Cecil Rhodes. Several million dollars were left for the School of Journalism at Columbia University, other moneys for resident and travelling fellowships; then came the list of annual prizes—the best newspaper editorial, the best example of a reporter's work, the best American novel, the best book of the year on United States history, the best American biography; and finally, the matter with which we are concerned in this volume, the best American stage-play. Here is the original statement in the will: 8th. Annually, for the original American play, performed in New York,, which shall best represent the educational value and power of the stage in raising the standard of good morals, good taste and good manners, One thousand dollars ($1000). Under the powers of the Advisory Board of the School of Journalism at Columbia, this provision was in 1928 changed to read as follows: For the original American play, performed in New Yor\, which shall best represent the educational value and power of the stage, One thousand dollars. A second change was made in 1934, so that the provision now reads: For the original American play, performed in New Yori[, which shall best represent the educational value and power of the stage, preferably one dealing with American life, One thousand dollars. These two changes were salutary; the elision in 1928 of the phrase about good morals, etc. got rid of a metaphysical distinction and a hobble. The second change in 1934 was equally wise; it simply gave the Committee and then the final Court assistance in deciding between (let us say) two plays that might be of about equal artistic merit..
4
TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION
WILLIAM LYON PHELPS
WHY MARRY?
JESSE LYNCH WILLIAMS
BEYOND THE HORIZON
EUGENE O'NEILL
MISS LULU BETT
ZONA GALE
105
"ANNA CHRISTIE"
EUGENE O'NEILL
147
ICEBOUND
OWEN DAVIS
χ9Ι
HELL-BENT FER HEAVEN
HATCHER HUGHES
229
SIDNEY HOWARD
275
CRAIG'S WIFE
GEORGE KELLY
317
IN ABRAHAM'S BOSOM
PAUL GREEN
381
STRANGE INTERLUDE
EUGENE O'NEILL
427
STREET SCENE
ELMER RICE
541
THE GREEN PASTURES
MARC CONNELLY
599
ALISON'S HOUSE
SUSAN GLASPELL
649
OF THEE I SING
GEORGE S. KAUFMAN and
v
ü τ
53
THEY KNEW WHAT THEY WANTED
MORRIE RYSKIND
693
BOTH YOUR HOUSES
MAXWELL ANDERSON
745
MEN IN WHITE
SIDNEY KINGSLEY
795
BIBLIOGRAPHY
849
Pulitzer Prize Cartoons
The Men and Their Masterpieces
by Dick Spencer III
Iowa State College Press Ames, Iowa, 1953
6
second Edition, 1953
Copyright 1951 and 195} by The Iowa Slate College Press. All rights reserved. Composed and printed by The Iowa State College Press, Ames, Iowa. USA. Library of Congress Catalog Number: 53-5492
7
FROM THE PREFACE
may become lost. A civilization and its customs may be forgotten, but its art lives on to perpetuate its legends, and its history. Much of what we know about prehistoric man came from a study of his crude artistic efforts laboriously carved in stone. In later years, our own Sioux Indians possessed an annual historical record known as the Winter Count. This was the work of a tribal artist, wherein the outstanding event of the year was recorded in pictographs. T h e Winter Count, extending back more than two centuries, might have proved an invaluable record had the aborigines possessed any sense of historic values as we know them. Their feeling for history was trivial, however, and it is all too seldom that an event of more than passing interest emerges from the faded colors painted on the ancient buffalo hides. T h e Haida Indians of Alaska adorned their totem poles with symbolic figures which represented the communal life of the clan, or the individual events of one family. Who knows, perhaps the Pulitzer prizewinning cartoons of this era will be our totem for tomorrow. O n the following pages you have a time machine that takes you from the roaring twenties up to the present. You can see the cartoons that were chosen to represent the reflection of American thinking for each year on our totem. It is a brief span of history. On some of them the newsprint has scarcely begun to yellow, but already it is interesting to look at them in retrospect.
8
Since 1917, the prizes created by the will of the late Joseph Pulitzer have become the accolades for distinction in the fields of journalism, letters, and music. Prizes also are given for use in the study of art and travel, to broaden the points of view of prominent journalism students...
9
TABLE OF CONTENTS 1922
ROLLIN KIRBY
1923
No Award
1924
J A Y NORWOOD DARLING
1925
ROLLIN KIRBY
.
.
15
.
.
18
.
.
.
22
1926
DANIEL R . FITZPATRICK .
.
.
26
1927
NELSON HARDING
1928
NELSON HARDING
1929
.
.
.
.
.
.
30
.
.
.
.
34
ROLLIN KIRBY
.
.
36
1930
CHARLES R . MACAULEY .
.
.
38
1931
EDMUND D U F F Y
.
.
42
1932
JOHN T I N N E Y
.
.
46
1933
HAROLD M . T A L B U R T
.
.
50
1934
EDMUND D U F F Y
.
.
54
.
.
58
.
.
64
1935
Ross
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
MCCUTCHEON . .
.
.
.
LEWIS
1936
No Award
1937
CLARENCE D . BATCHELOR
1938
VAUGHN
SHOEMAKER
.
.
68
1939
CHARLES G . W E R N E R
.
.
72
1940
EDMUND D U F F Y
.
.
76
1941
JACOB BURCK
.
78
1942
H E R B E R T LAWRENCE
.
.
82
1943
J A Y NORWOOD DARLING
.
.
86
1944
CLIFFORD K . BERRYMAN
.
.
90
1945
B I L L MAULDIN
.
.
94
1946
BRUCE RUSSELL
.
.
98
1947
VAUGHN SHOEMAKER
.
.
102
1948
R U B E GOLDBERG
.
.
106
1949
L U T E PEASE
.
.
112
1950
JAMES T .
.
.
118
. .
.
.
.
.
.
. BLOCK
.
BERRYMAN
. .
. .
. .
. .
10
1951
REG MANNING
124
1952
FRED L . PACKER
130
1953
EDWARD D. KUEKES
134
11
The Lines Are Drawn American life since the First World War as reflected in the Pulitzer Prize Cartoons
by Gerald W. Johnson
J. B. Lippincott Company Philadelphia - New York 1958
Copyright © 1958 by Gerald W. Johnson First Edition Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 58-12275 Printed in the United States of America
13
FROM THE PREFACE
Τ
I η 1754 Benjamin Franklin published a picture in his I Pennsylvania Gazette. It was a crude woodcut depicting A . a serpent divided into segments bearing the initials of the British colonies from New England to Georgia, and it bore the caption, "Join Or Die." The occasion was the outbreak of the French and Indian War, confronting the colonies with a peril that they could overcome, as Franklin believed, only by united effort. Eleven years later a series of Parliamentary invasions of American liberty culminated in the Stamp Act. Again the colonies were confronted with a peril that they could overcome, as Franklin believed, only by united effort. Poor Richard then demonstrated his characteristic thrift; instead of having a new woodcut made, he dusted off the old one and reprinted it, with even greater effect. This is the basis of the myth that the American newspaper cartoon originated with Benjamin Franklin and dates back to 1754. It it true only in the sense that it is true that Leif Ericson discovered America in the year 1000; that is to say, it was an event without immediate consquence. Franklin's picture was a political cartoon, and it was published in an American newspaper, but it did not establish cartooning as an element of journalism. Nearly a hundred years were to pass before that eventuated, and it came about as a result of technical advances in engraving and printing; but it had effects extending far beyond the craft of the typographers. One of these effects was to transform the cartoonist from
14
an artist into a journalist—not completely, of course, but relatively. A great cartoonist is still an artist, but if it comes to that, so is a great reporter; a superb news story is as certainly literature as a superb cartoon is art. Journalism is characteristically sudden and swift; literature and art, as a rule, are slow and studied. When they become sudden and swift they take on the coloration of journalism. It is intellectual snobbery to assume that this implies degradation, but it does imply transformation. A journalist is to be judged fairly only by the standards of his own craft, and this is true whether he writes, or speaks into a microphone, or pushes a pencil over a drawing board. If his work meets the tests of good journalism it is not to be condemned because it may not meet those of graphic art or of literature. The history of the American political cartoon thus falls into two periods distinguished by a radical alteration in the status of the cartoonist—the period before and the period after the coming of photoengraving, the high-speed press, and other mechanical instruments of rapid reproduction. In the earlier period the cartoonist was an independent artist; in the second, beginning in the latter half of the nineteenth century, he became an organization man, charged with responsibility for only one element in a complex product that is the work of many men. Cartooning flourished, to be sure, before this transition, but as a weapon of independent propaganda, not as a part of journalism. T h e cartoonist of the early days offered his work, not to newspapers, but to commercial printers, to be published in the form of a broadside and distributed through dealers in prints. Seventy years after Franklin's death the celebrated lithographers, Currier and Ives, were still handling political cartoons in this way...
15
TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 1. ON THE ROAD TO MOSCOW. ROLLIN KIRBY, 1 9 2 2
25
2 . IN GOOD OLD U S A . JAY NORWOOD DARLING, 1 9 2 4
30
3 . NEWS FROM THE OUTSIDE WORLD. ROLLIN KIRBY, 1 9 2 5
....
36
4 . T H E LAWS OF MOSES AND THE LAWS OF TODAY D. R .
FITZPATRICK,
1926
42
5 . TOPPLING THE IDOL. NELSON HARDING, 1 9 2 7
48
6 . M A Y H I S SHADOW NEVER GROW LESS NELSON HARDING, 1 9 2 8
54
7. TAMMANY. ROLLIN KIRBY, 1 9 2 9
60
8 . PAYING FOR A DEAD HORSE. CHARLES R . MACAULEY, 1 9 3 0 . . . .
66
9 . AN OLD STRUGGLE STILL GOING O N . E D M U N D DUFFY, 1 9 3 1 . .
72
1 0 . A W I S E ECONOMIST ASKS A QUESTION JOHN T .
MCCUTCHEON,
1932
77
11. T H E LIGHT OF A S I A . H . M . TALBURT, 1 9 3 3 12. CALIFORNIA POINTS WITH PRIDE—I EDMUND DUFFY, 1 9 3 4
83 ..
13. SURE, I ' L L W O R K FOR BOTH SIDES-ROSS A . LEWIS, 1 9 3 5 14. COME ON IN, I ' L L TREAT YOU RICHT.
89 95
I USED TO KNOW YOUR
DADDY. C . D . BATCHELOR, 1 9 3 7
100
1 5 . T H E ROAD BACK.VAUGHN SHOEMAKER, 1 9 3 8
106
1 6 . NOMINATION FOR 1 9 3 8 . CHARLES G . WERNER, 1 9 3 9
112
1 7 . T H E OUTSTRETCHED HAND. EDMUND DUFFY, 1 9 4 0
117
18. I F I SHOULD D I E BEFORE I WAKE.JACOB BURCK, 1 9 4 1
123
19. BRITISH PLANE. HERBERT L . BLOCK, 1 9 4 2
129
2 0 . W H A T A PLACE FOR A WASTE PAPER SALVAGE CAMPAIGN JAY NORWOOD DARLING, 1 9 4 3
134
16 2 1 . B U T W H E R E IS T H E B O A T GOING?
Clifford K. Berryman, 1944
140
2 2 . F R E S H , SPIRITED A M E R I C A N TROOPS, FLUSHED W I T H VICTORY, ARE BRINGING IN THOUSANDS O F HUNGRY, RAGGED, BATTLEWEARY PRISONERS.
Bill Mauldin, 1945
2 3 . T I M E TO B R I D G E T H A T
145
GULCH
Bruce Alexander Russell, 1946
150
2 4 . S T I L L R A C I N G H I S SHADOW. VAUGHN SHOEMAKER, 1 9 4 7
156
25.
161
PEACE TODAY.
Reuben L. Goldberg, 1948
2 6 . W H O , ME? LUTE PEASE, 1949
167
2 7 . A L L S E T FOR A SUPER-SECRET SESSION IN W A S H I N G T O N
James Τ . Berryman, 1950 28.
HATS.
Reginald W. Manning, 1951
173 179
2 9 . YOUR EDITORS O U G H T T O H A V E M O R E SENSE T H A N T O P R I N T
Fred L. Packer, 1952
185
30. AFTERMATH. EDWARD D . KUEKES, 1955
190
3 1 . YOU W E R E A L W A Y S A GREAT FRIEND OF M I N E , J O S E P H
195
WHAT
I
SAYI
Herbert L. Block, 1954
3 2 . H O W W O U L D A N O T H E R MISTAKE H E L P ?
Daniel R. Fitzpatrick, 1955 3 3 . ACHILLES. ROBERT YORK, 1956
200 205
3 4 . W O N D E R W H Y M Y PARENTS D I D N ' T G I V E M E SALK SHOTS
Tom Little, 1957 35.
Bruce Shanks, 1958
THE
THINKER.
THE
THIRTY-FIVE
There were no awards in 1923, 1936.
210 215 221
The Pulitzer Prize Story News Stories, Editorials, Cartoons, and Pictures from the Pulitzer Prize Collection at Columbia University
by John Hohenberg
Columbia University Press New York - London 1959
COPYRIGHT ©
1 9 5 9 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS
0-231-08663-6 Fourth printing and Columbia Paperback edition 1971
ISBN:
PRINTED IN T H E UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
19
FROM THE PREFACE "What does it take to win a Pulitzer Prize?" "Where can I find some examples of the work of winners of the Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism?" These are the questions that have been asked of me most frequently since I became secretary of the Advisory Board on the Pulitzer Prizes five years ago. As to the first, I can't answer it. I wish I could. As to the second, Columbia University decided something should be done about it. This book is the result. A total of 251 Pulitzer Prizes for Journalism has been awarded from 1917 through 1958—41 gold medals for public service for newspapers and 210 cash prizes for individuals in varying amounts up to $1,000. (Most individual prizes have been $1,000, but for a time they were reduced to $500; moreover, some prizes have been shared.) Ninety-eight newspapers and 187 individuals, seven entire newspaper staffs, three wire services, three syndicates, and one group award for war correspondents have figured in the prizes. Twentynine news organizations or their staff members have been multiple winners. There have also been 13 special citations for journalism. With so large a selection to choose from, it became obvious from the first that not everyone could be represented; nor was it possible even to choose the best. Trying to pick the best of the Pulitzer Prizes would be like trying to select the best gold from the vaults at Fort Knox, Kentucky. It can't be done...
20
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
Foreword Introduction
I.
THE FACE OF THE AGE
13
How Two Cub Reporters Solved the Loeb-Leopold Case
14
GENERAL 1.
vii 1
ASSIGNMENT:
The "story of a story" that won a prize for Alvin H. Goldstein and James W. Mulroy
2.
The Mercurial Rise and Fall of the State of Jefferson Stanton Delaplane of the San Francisco Chronicle records the saga
18
of the mining camps
3.
Arthur Krock Interviews Truman and Is Upheld Eight Years Later The story that didn't win a Pulitzer Prize because its author was on
22
the Board
4.
Why They Insist On Being Canadians
29
Austin Wehrwein of the Milwaukee Journal interprets our northern neighbors
5.
A Lady from Alice, Texas, and the Duke of Duval County Mrs. Caro Brown of the Alice Echo covers the downfall of a oneman empire
33
6.
Metro, City of Tomorrow: What It Will Be Like George Beveridge of the Washington Evening Star asks its readers
36
to worry about their city
7.
The Boys Who Came to Dinner: Footnote to a Senate Inquiry Clark Möllenhoff of the Des Moines Register & Tribune breaks a secret meeting between Jimmy Hoffa and Bob Kennedy
11. A NEVER-ENDING
BATTLE:
THE FIGHT
AGAINST
GRAFT 8.
Assassins Mow Down a Fighting Ohio Editor How the Canton Daily News avenged the murder of Don R. Mellett, a crusader for decency and justice
39
21
9.
A Small Oregon Daily Battles Ballot Box Thefts and Murder
50
Robert W . Ruhl and the Medford Mail Tribune defeat a gang of corrupt officeholders
10.
Joseph Pulitzer II Demands Mine Reform in Illinois The St. Louis Post-Dispatch makes an issue out of the tragedy of Centralia No. 5
55
11.
Two Newspapers Expose a Scandal About the Press
60
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the Chicago Daily News find fiftyone newspapermen on the Illinois state payroll
12.
Alicia Patterson Challenges a Labor Racketeer
63
And "Big Bill" DeKoning goes to jail in a Newsday trotting track expose
13.
Chicago Daily News Unmasks a Thieving State Auditor
66
A reader's tip starts the Hodge case, revealing a $2,500,000 larceny
III.
TURMOIL
OVER DIXIE:
THE RACIAL
PROBLEM
69
14.
Hatred and Bigotry for Sale: The N.Y. World Arraigns the Klan Herbert Bayard Swope leads the opening attack on the Invisible Empire and its bedsheets
70
15.
Louis Isaac Jaffe Fathers Virginia's Anti-Lynch Law The editor of die Norfolk Virginian-Pilot persuades Governor Byrd to act
77
16.
Folliard and the Columbians: "Hate Comes with the Wind" They wanted to be forty times as bad as the Klan, but Atlanta would have none of them
79
17.
Two North Carolina Weeklies Take On the Ku Klux Klan The Whiteville News Reporter and the Tabor City Tribune end an era of fear and floggings
85
18.
An Editor Rebukes a Mob in the Autherine Lucy Case "If they could have gotten their hands on her, they would have killed her," writes Buford Boone
91
19.
Relman Morin Reports the Shame of Little Rock A mob forces the withdrawal of eight Negro students as the Associated Press man dictates the story
95
22 20.
"We Are Going to Have to Decide What Kind of People We Are" 101 Harry S. Ashmore and the Arkansas Gazette lead the fight for decency in Little Rock
IV.
IN DEFENSE CRIME
OF JUSTICE:
THE REPORTING
OF 107
21.
A 70-Year-Old Reporter Smashes the "Almost Perfect" Crime 108 A. B. Macdonald of the Kansas City Star cracks the Payne murder case in Amarillo, Texas
22.
"Crime on the Waterfront" Stings Easy-going New York 115 A New York Sun reporter lifts the curtain on a reign of violence in the city
23.
Mike Berger Reconstructs a Mass Murder in Jersey 118 A celebrated report of a shocking crime by a veteran of the New York Times
24.
How a Lifer Was Cleared and Restored to Freedom 128 A New York World-Telegram and Sun reporter proves Louis Hoffner innocent of murder
V.
WITH GALLANTRY AND DEVOTION: TWO WORLD WARS
REPORTING 132
25.
Herbert Bayard Swope Sees "The Ordeal on the Somme" 134 The New York World sends its top reporter to the battlefields of World War I
26.
A Dying Reporter Relates the Coming of War in Africa 138 Will Barber of the Chicago Tribune dictates his last story in an Ethiopian hospital
27.
Carlos P. Romulo Penetrates the Orient's Wall of Silence 142 On the eve of Pearl Harbor, a Filipino warns that a billion Orientals seek freedom
28.
When the Japanese Were Caught with Their Kimonos Down 148 Ira Wolfert of NANA watches the fifth Battle of the Solomons and writes his story
23 29.
The Man Who Couldn't Swim Survives a Torpedoed Warship 152 Larry Allen of the AP is rescued at sea and writes how H.M.S. Galatea went down
30.
Ernie Pyle Covers the Normandy Breakthrough "It is an unnerving thing to be bombed by your own planes"
31.
The Liberation of Paris: From Kisses to Bullets 162 Mark Watson of the Baltimore Sun tells of a great day during World War Π
32.
The End of World War II: The Last Raid—and Peace 167 Homer Bigart writes two classic stories for the New York Herald Tribune
Vi.
WHEN AMERICAN IRON CURTAIN
REPORTERS
PIERCED
157
THE 174
33.
What Joseph Stalin's Mother Thought of Her Boy 175 "I didn't want him to be anything but a priest," she tells H. R. Knickerbocker
34.
This is Russia—Uncensored: Freedom Is Just a Word 185 Edmund Stevens of the Christian Science Monitor quits the land behind the Iron Curtain
35.
Harrison Salisbury Reveals How Beria Sealed His Own Fate 188 The man who might have been a Soviet dictator hesitated and paid with his life
36.
Zhukov Greets the Hearst Team: "I Hope to Visit the U.S." 192 An exclusive interview with Russia's military hero of World War II before the Khrushchev purge
VII.
COLD WAR AND HOT: FROM KOREA TO HUNGARY
199
37.
Marguerite Higgins Sees the Marines Land at Inchon 201 She goes in with the fifth wave to cover the United Nations' comeback in Korea
38.
With the Marines in Korea: A Trial by Blood and Ice 205 Keyes Beech of the Chicago Daily News relates how they came out of Changjin Reservoir
24 39.
This, Too, Was War in Korea: A Home on Pork Chop Hill 209 Jim Lucas writes of life and death in "Our Town" and "His Town"
40.
"The Great Deception" Produces a Great Story 212 Don Whitehead writes the story of President-elect Eisenhower's secret trip to Korea
41.
The Des Moines Register Brings the Russians to Iowa's Tall Corn 224 Lauren K. Soth writes a simple invitation with enormous impact on a bi-polar world
42.
"A Fight to the Death": Russell Jones Covers Budapest 226 A United Press correspondent reports a hopeless battle for freedom
43.
Eisenhower and Dulles, As James Reston Saw Them 232 Two pieces for the Sunday side of the New York Times help him win a Pulitzer Prize
VIII.
NEW SUNS AND NEW MOONS: SPACE AND ATOM
THE 239
44.
The Birth of the Atomic Age: "A Fireball Lit the Desert" 240 How the first atomic bomb rocked the earth, as told by William L. Laurence, who saw it
45.
Homer Bigart at Hiroshima: "They Are Still Dying" 246 A month after the atom bomb blasted the city, people still couldn't believe it
46.
"I Saw the Atomic Bomb Dropped on Nagasaki" 251 Bill Laurence of the New York Times writes the first eye-witness story of the raid
47.
The New York Times Reports the Dawn of the Space Age 255 Sputnik I is fired at 18,000 miles an hour—part of a prize-winning staff file
48.
Walter Lippmann and Sputnik: A Warning for the U.S. 258 A distinguished editorial writer and columnist looks at America in the space age
25 IX.
THE LONELY
49.
A 21-Year-Old Reporter Sees the Ordeal of Floyd Collins 264 "Skeets" Miller of the Louisville Courier-Journal stirs the nation with his stories
50.
The Submarine Operation That Saved a Boy's Life 268 George Weiler of the Chicago Daily News tells how amateurs did the job in enemy waters
51.
A City Editor Proves He Has a Heart 274 Paul Schoenstein of the New York Journal-American leads an attempt to save a baby's life
52.
Death Over Grand Canyon: How 128 Persons Died 279 The Salt Lake Tribune local staff covers an air crash 400 miles away
53.
John Paulson and Staff Cover a Dakota Tornado 282 The editor of the Fargo (N.D.) Forum finds his basement is the safest spot
X.
STRUGGLE:
OF PEOPLE AND PLACES: HUMAN INTEREST
MAN AGAINST HIS FATE
GOLDEN
THREADS
263
OF 287
54.
"He Was Home, the Unknown": Kirke Simpson's Great Story 289 An Associated Press reporter writes a classic about die Unknown Soldier for the night wire
55.
Anne O'Hare McCormick Visits Vatican City 296 The New York Times's foreign speciahst writes a colorful account of the life of Pius XI
56.
Ernie Pyle Writes an Obit: The Death of Captain Waskow 299 A War correspondent turns aside from battle to record a soldier's tribute
57.
How They Raised the Flag on Mount Suribachi 302 The story of the greatest picture of World War II, as told by Joe Rosenthal, who took it
58.
Gandhi Spins the Thread of Indian History 304 Price Day of the Baltimore Sun obtains one of the last interviews with the Mahatma
26 59.
For Margaret Truman: Advice to a Bride 307 James Reston of the New York Times writes on the care and feeding of a husband
XI.
ON CIVIL LIBERTIES:
60.
William Allen White Writes to an Anxious Friend 311 The publisher of the Emporia Gazette explains a creed that alone can banish fear
61.
"Who Knows What Effect Such an Editorial Would Have?" 313 The Los Angeles Times fights a lawyers' attempt to limit its right of fair comment
62.
What It Took to Clear an Accused Professor 317 A reporter from the Seattle Times disproves charges of Communist activity
63.
The Navy Rights a Wrong Because a Reporter Persisted 320 Anthony Lewis and the Washington Daily News help clear Abraham Chasanow
64.
"We've Got to Shoot the Works in a Fight for Tolerance" 324 Hodding Carter, of Greenville, Miss., writes an editorial about a Nisei combat regiment
THE HUMAN BIGHTS ISSUE
310
APPENDIXES I. II. III. IV.
The Pulitzer Prizes: A Brief History Plan for the Award of the Pulitzer Prizes Pulitzer Prize Awards, 1917-1958 Members of the Pulitzer Prize Advisory Board
329 332 335 363
The Pulitzer Prize Novels
A Critical Backward Look
by William J. Stuckey
University of Oklahoma Press Norman, Oklahoma, 1966
L I B R A R Y OF CONGRESS C A T A L O C C A X D N U M B E R :
66-1029;
Copyright 1966 by the University of Oklahoma Press, Publishing Division of the University. Composed and printed at Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.A., by the University of Oklahoma Press. First edition, March, 1966; second printing, September, 1966.
29
from the Treface
account of the Pulitzer prize novel, I wrote to the grandson of Joseph Pulitzer explaining what I proposed to do and asking his assistance in obtaining permission to examine the records of the juries and the Advisory Board of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. In reply, Mr. Pulitzer advised me to write to Professor John Hohenberg, executive secretary of the Advisory Board, and also to Carl W . Ackerman, dean emeritus of the Graduate School of Journalism, which I did. Dean Ackerman answered that he could not permit anyone to examine his private files. Miss Frances M. Barry, administrative assistant to Edward Barrett, dean of the School, replied for Professor Hohenberg, who was on sabbatical leave. Miss Barry wrote that in Professor Hohenberges absence my letter had been referred to Dean Barrett, who was temporarily out of the country. Miss Barry said that on Dean Barrett's return, I might expect an answer to my request. No further word came, however, and after a time, I wrote Dean Barrett himself, repeating the request I had made earlier to Professor Hohenberg. When neither Dean Barrett nor Miss Barry replied to my second letter, it became apparent that if I were to find out anything about the administration of the Pulitzer novel prize, I would have to do so without the assistance of the Columbia authorities...
30
Ί'αβίε of Contents
Preface Chapter Chapter Chapter Chapter Chapter Chapter Chapter
page vii I Joseph Pulitzer and His Prizes 3 II The Establishment of the Tradition 26 III Consolidation of the Tradition 47 IV New Themes: Sex and Libertinism 68 V New Brands of Individualism 94 V I The Fortunes of War 122 VII World War II as Entertainment and Moral Issue 138 Chapter VIII Celebrities and Best Sellers 165 Chapter IX Continuation of the Great Tradition 181 Chapter X Conclusion 205 Index 218
A History of the Pulitzer Prize Plays
by John L. Toohey
Citadel Press New York 1967
32
First Edition Copyright © 1967 by John L. Toohey All rights reserved Published by Citadel Press, Inc. 222 Park Avenue South, New York, N.Y. 10003 Published simultaneously in Canada by George J. McLeod Limited 73 Bathurst St., Toronto 2B, Ont. Manufactured in the United States of America by The Haddon Craftsmen, Inc., Scranton, Pa. Designed by A. Christopher Simon Library of Congress catalog card number: 67-25654
33
FROM THE PREFACE A SEVENTEEN-YEAR-OLD HUNGARIAN IMMIGRANT named Joseph Pulitzer, barely able to speak English, / \ arrived in Boston in 1865, did a wartime stint with the Union Army, and then drifted out to St. A - Louis, where he began a newspaper career on a German-American paper. He eventually gained control of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the New York World, a tight-knit little journalistic empire that made him a multimillionaire. On April 10, 1903, Pulitzer signed an agreement with the trustees of New York's Columbia University to endow a School of Journalism, specifying that the income from $500,000 of the $2,000,000 that he was assigning to Columbia be allotted for "prizes or scholarships for the encouragement of public service, public morale, American literature and the advancement of education." Pulitzer's will, dated April 16, 1904, spelled out in greater detail the conditions under which the Pulitzer Prizes were to be awarded. The trustees of Columbia were to be ultimately responsible for bestowing the prizes, but they were to be guided by the recommendations of an Advisory Board. The trustees were to be allowed to veto, but not to substitute choices of their own. The members of the Advisory Board, on the other hand, while expected to consider the advice of special jurors in each field, were empowered to make whatever use they chose of those juries' findings; they could accept, change, or reject them. The thirteen-members of the Advisory Board were to include the President of Columbia and a dozen assorted editors and publishers, drawn from newspapers across the nation. These board members are the true men of power, for the trustees are primarily figureheads, and the jurors have no assurance that their recommendations will be accepted. The annual award of the Pulitzer Prize for drama is frequently a source of irritation and resentment among people who earn their living in the theatre, for they feel that this is essentially a prize given by amateurs to professionals. They often question the Advisory Board's taste; more seriously, they question its credentials. Why on earth should a random group of editors feel qualified to identify the best American play of the season, particularly when not all members of the group have always seen all of the eligible plays? The phrase "Pulitzer Prize Play," however, has for years had magical overtones for the man in the street, who could not care less about the behind-the-scenes decisions, however arbitrary, that have led to its bestowal. It would be misleading, in the light of the above, to suggest that a collection of the forty-two plays so far tapped for the Pulitzer Prize represents anything more than a fascinating cross-section of the past fifty years of the American theatre. This book is for the most part an index of public taste, although not all of the Pulitzer Prize plays were chosen for their popularity. Alison's House and In Abraham's Bosom set no box-offices afire. An equally fine anthology could be compiled of plays which did not win the Pulitzer: What Price Glory?, Mourning Becomes Electra, The Children's Hour, Of Mice and Men, The Show-Off, Watch on the Rhine, The Adding Machine, Awake and Sing, The Little Foxes, The Petrified Forest, Once in a Lifetime, The Glass Menagerie, Mary of Scotland, Winterset, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and quite a few others. Some of these were necessarily eliminated because only one play is chosen each season; Of Mice and Men, for instance, is off the list because Our Town is on it, and Mourning Becomes Electra was shouldered aside by the bumptious Of Thee I Sing. In an article published in Theatre Annual of 1944, Walter Prichard Eaton made the most lengthy and revealing statement ever attributed to a Pulitzer juror, most of whom have confined their public remarks to grumbling when their recommendations have been overridden by the Advisory Board. At any rate, here they are. For richer or for poorer, warts and all, they constitute the single most famous group of American plays written in the past fifty years: The Pulitzer Prize Plays, 1917-1967...
34
TABLE OF CONTENTS CONTENTS
V
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION
1916-17
No Award
1917-18
WHY MARRY?
1918-19
No Award
VI
vii
1 2 9 10
No Award
195
1944-45
HARVEY
196
1945-46
STATE
OF THE UNION
1919-20
BEYOND
1920-21
MISS LULU BETT
1921-22
ANNA
1922-23
ICEBOUND
1923-24
HELL BENT FER HEAVEN
1924-25
THEY KNEW WHAT THEY WANTED 40 CRAIG'S
1952-53
PICNIC
1953-54
THE TEAHOUSE
1925-26
THE HORIZON
1943-44
16
CHRISTIE
WIFE
IN ABRAHAM'S
1927-28
STRANGE
1928-29
STREET
1929-30
THE GREEN
BOSOM
SCENE
OF THEE ISING
1932-33
BOTH YOUR HOUSES
1933-34
MEN IN WHITE
112
1934-35
THE OLD MAID
122
1935-36
IDIOT'S
1936-37
YOU CAN'T
1938-39
DELIGHT
1942-43
No Award THE SHRIKE
IT
240 242
250 OF
THE A UGUST MOON CAT
ON A
266
1955-56
THE DIARY
OF
1956-57
LONG DA Y'S
1957-58
LOOK
276 JOURNEY
INTO NIGHT
284
HOMEWARD,
ANGEL
292
1958-59
J. B.
1959-60
FIORELLO!
300
306 HOME
1960-61
ALL
OUR TOWN
148
1961-62
HOW TO SUCCEED
ABE
THE TIME THERE
156
THE SKIN
1962-63
No Award
326
1963-64
No Award
327
BE
1964-65
THE
176
No Award
185 OF
OUR TEETH
REALLY 320
166
OF
SHALL
THE WAY
WITHOUT TRYING
LINCOLN
186
258
HOT
TIN ROOF
140
NO NIGHT 1941-42
1950-51 1951-52
220
230
WITH YOU
YOUR LIFE 1940-41
PACIFIC
106
130
IN ILLINOIS 1939-40
OF A SALESMAN
SOUTH
ANNE FRANK
94
TAKE
DEATH
76 88
212
1949-50
1954-55
68
HOUSE
210
STREETCAR
1948-49
60
PASTURES
ALISON'S
1937-38
34
54
INTERLUDE
1931-32
A
NAMED DESIRE
48
1930-31
No Award
1947-48
22 28
1926-27
1946-47
202
SUBJECT
WAS ROSES 1965-66
No Award
1966-67
A
328 333
DEUCATE
BALANCE INDEX
334 340
IN
314 BUSINESS
The Pulitzer Prizes A History of the Awards in Books, Drama, Music, and Journalism
by
John Hohenberg
Columbia University Press New York - London 1974
36
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Hohenberg, John. The Pulitzer Prizes; a history of the awards in books, drama, music, and journalism, based on the private files over six decades. Bibliography 1. Pulitzer prizes—History. 2. Columbia University. Graduate School of Journalism. I. Title. AS911.P8H83 001.4'4 74-8282 ISBN 0-231-03771-6 ISBN 0-231-03887-9 (pbk.)
Other Books by John Hohenberg Tbl Pulitzer Prize Story The Professional Journalist Foreign Correspondence: Tbe Great Reporters and Their Times The New Front Page Between Two Worlds: Policy, Press, and Public Opinion in Asian-American Relations Tbe News Media: A Journalist Looks at His Profession Free Press/Free People: Tbe Best Cause New Era in tbe Pacific: An Adventure in Public Diplomacy
Copyright Ο 1974 John Hohenberg Printed in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 S
37
From the Preface
On the fiftieth anniversary of the Pulitzer Prizes, Archibald MacLeish observed to a brilliant company of prize winners, judges, and members of the Pulitzer directorate that it was time to pause, Draw rein, draw breath, Cast a cold eye On life, on death . . . and take stock of the consequences. The poet, a winner of three Pulitzer awards himself, graciously invoked literary hyperbole to describe the role of Columbia University in the proceedings as "restful, unambiguous, and unembarrassed." Then with an all-embracing gesture, he turned to his fellow laureates, saying: "Whereas we, ladies and gentlemen—we who address you and a large proportion of you whom we address—are the consequences. We are Mr. Pulitzer's dream made flesh. . . . " It was a moment that Joseph Pulitzer would have appreciated, a moment that brought a reflective smile to his grandson, Joseph Pulitzer Jr., who was on the dais as the chairman of the Advisory Board on the Pulitzer Prizes. There have been other consequences: Professor Arthur Meier Schlesinger Jr., a Pulitzer Prize winner at the age of 28, was assured by an older laureate, Henry F. Pringle, that it was the "best label" anyone could have. Edward Albee, the dramatist, took an entirely opposite tack when he viewed his own award as a "declining honor" because it had not gone to his greatest play, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? And Shirley Ann Grau, the novelist, being far more concerned about her ailing six-month-old son than her writing, snapped at a telephone caller who congratulated her for winning a Pulitzer, "Don't be silly." Then she asked herself, "Could it really be true?" It
38 was. A far more practical reaction came from the diplomat, George F. Kennan, who promptly invested his prize money in a fine Swedish guitar—"for classical music," he took pains to explain. In a remote village-in Turkey, where Alfred Friendly of the Washington Post was vacationing, the townspeople wove him a wreath of native laurel and crowned him with it when they learned he had been honored. And in a steaming hotel room in Monrovia, Liberia, an Associated Press stringer greeted a visiting correspondent, Lynn Heinzerling, with a congratulatory cable and a toast in warm champagne. John Toland's Japanese wife, anxiously summoned to the telephone in Tokyo, was overwhelmed when the literary editor of Mainichi Shimbun exclaimed, "Omedeto gozaimasu," the most formal kind of congratulations, and confirmed that her husband had won a Pulitzer Prize. Professor David Brion Davis, besieged for an interview in Hyderabad, India, wasn't quite certain what it was he had won because the information was meager and vague, having been filtered from the BBC through an improbable network of his Indian students. But he granted the interview anyway. For Jean Stafford, the news of her prize wasn't real until she heard Walter Cronkite say it out loud, as she put it, on CBS News. Joseph P. Lash never had a chance to express doubts because his thoughtful editor, Evan Thomas, broke the news to him at home and brought him a bottle of champagne to help him celebrate. Professor Ernest Samuels' dean at Northwestern did even better, telephoning the prize winner to say, "Ernest, just throw away that letter I wrote you about next year's salary." His prospective pay increase, the dean announced, had been tripled. But for one of the most illustrious prize winners of all, Senator John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the award touched off a running battle with Drew Pearson to prove the authenticity of Profiles In Courage. It was weeks before the President of the United States-to-be forced a retraction from the columnist...
39
Table of Contents
An Introduction: 1. The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Prizes and Consequences
Grand Scheme, 1902-1916 The Germ of an Idea "To the Prizes I am Much Attached" The Will The Board Takes Over The Administration
1 9 9 11 IS 21 24
2. Prizes for a Brave New World, 1917-1923 1. The Beginning 2. Warriors and Peacemakers 3. The Emergence of Eugene O'Neill 4. The Novel: Whole or Wholesome? 5. History: The Aristocrats 6. Two Poets from Maine
28 28 34 43 55 61 68
3. Changing Times, Changing Awards, 1924-1933 1. Journalism: The Public Interest 2. The Embattled Novelists 3. Drama: Winners and Losers 4. History's Progressives 5. Poetry: From Frost to MacLeish
73 73 85 94 101 117
4. The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Laureates Face the Storm, 1934-1942 The Press During the New Deal Fiction: The Mid-Victoria Cross Drama: The Battle of Broadway History: The Prqfesnonals Take Over Poets Pleasant and Unpleasant The Prizes After Twenty-five Years
127 127 136 147 157 163 169
40 5. The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Prizes in War and Peace, 1943-1954 The Era of the Reporter The Troublesome Novel The Theater Looks Up History: The Broader View Poets: Modern and Not So Modern The First Music Prizes The Old Order Passes
177 177 197 205 213 220 223 229
6. A Change in Direction for the Prizes, 1955-1965 1. The New Board 2. The Press as Leader 3. New Novelists, New Arguments 4. The Drama's Time of Troubles 5. The Importance of Biography 6. Poetry and Music: Rewards of Fame
232 232 240 254 260 270 283
7. The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
290 290 296 318 324 331 341 345
Prizes: Present and Future, 1966-1974 After Fifty Years Press versus Government Modern Fiction and Its Problems The Tough Theater Historians, Biographers, and Journalists Poetry and Music: No Time for Tradition Facing the Future
An Acknowledgment
355
Appendixes 1. Members of the Advisory Board 2. Pulitzer Prize Awards
359 359 361
3. A Note on the Pulitzer Scholarships
378
4. Prizes Withheld: A Summary
379
Notes and Comment
381
Bibliography
395
Index
401
Man of the World Herbert Bayard Swope: A Charmed Life of Pulitzer Prizes, Poker and Politics
by Alfred Allan Lewis
The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc. Indianapolis - New York 1978
Copyright © 1978 by Herbert Bayard Swope, Jr., and Alfred Allan Lewis All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form Published by The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc. Indianapolis New York Designed by Gail Herzog Conwell Manufactured in the United States of America First printing
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Lewis, Alfred Allan. Man of the world. Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Swope, Herbert Bayard, 1882-1958. —United States—Biography. I. Title. PN4874.S796L4 070.5Ό924 [B] ISBN 0-672-5185^9
2. Journalists 76-45577
43
FROM THE PREFACE
There are those who are great men for all times. The nature of their achievements is seemingly eternal and colors our lives for generations after their deaths. There are also the ones who are great only within their own times: in a sense, this type is a measure of his time. His achievements become remarkable when viewed within a given era and a special place. The latter is also marked by the quality of the people he knew and the style in which he lived. He is one of the celebrities who give to an age its special glamour—the definitive shape, excitement, and tone that provide the substance of nostalgia. Such a man was Herbert Bayard Swope. Go to any library. Select at random the biography or autobiography of an important person who landed on the New York City shores at some point during the first half of the twentieth century. Run your finger down the index. You will almost surely come to the listing: Swope, Herbert Bayard. His fame was so widely broadcast that people all over the world knew the name. They might not have been precisely aware of who he was or what he had accomplished, but they knew the name. He was the epitome of the phrase "legend in his own lifetime." Characters in plays and novels were thinly disguised portraits of him. He gave rise to a stream of puns: "Where there's life, there's Swope." "Do not Swope until Swopen to." "Swope springs eternal." "The glory of the Swopen word." "Man cannot live on Swope alone." He was described as "the most charming extrovert in the Western world." In some promotion copy published in 1925, the New Yorker magazine promised that, among other things, it would answer the question "Is there a Herbert Bayard Swope?" Almost a quarter of a
44
century later it had progressed from question of existence to question of essence: it published a piece by E. J. Kahn, Jr., titled "What Is Herbert Bayard Swope?" Swope started his newspaper career as a reporter. It was soon generally agreed that he was the best reporter in town. In 1917 he won the first Pulitzer Prize ever awarded in journalism for his perceptive reportage in a series of articles collectively titled Inside the German Empire. That was the first time the word "inside" was ever used in the title of a book dealing with the internal affairs of a country. It was not long before there was a plethora of "Insides." As executive editor of the New York World, he turned a slumping newspaper into the liveliest daily in town. He left a legacy of journalistic style that lingers on to this day. He invented the Op Ed (opposite editorial) page—and its name—as a forum for airing the journalistic biases of a series of distinguished commentators. It is currently a prominent feature in the New York Times among many other papers across the country. Before Briton Haddon co-founded Time magazine with Henry Luce, he took a job on the World expressly to take notes on the workings of the paper and its editor. The best of the language known as "Timese" can be traced directly back to the Swope style. When Harold Ross started the New Yorker, he publicly stated that one of his goals was to capture in a weekly the quality found daily in the World. This adds up to quite an impressive journalistic heritage for one man to have left behind. And that was only part of the extraordinary "world" of Swope. Swope was one of the greatest conversationalists of his time. There were those who carped that sometimes he tended to be a monologist, but even they had to agree that listening to him was a fascinating experience. He was the quintessential dispenser of facts, trivia, and the opinions of his crowd, and that crowd included just about everybody worth knowing. Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter called Swope the "creator of statesmen." That included elder statesmen. Depending on where one sat in the grandstands, it appeared either that the public image of Bernard M. Baruch was shaped by Swope or that Baruch was the father figure who enabled Swope to live in the magnificent fashion in which he did by
45
helping him in the stock market. The relationship was probably based on an amalgam of both elements. In the '20s, '30s, and '40s, he and his equally remarkable wife, Margaret, were the most famous and very probably the best host and hostess on the Eastern seaboard. In their New York apartment and at weekend parties in their home, first at Great Neck and later at Sands Point, Long Island, the guests ranged from Noel Coward and Ethel Barrymore, through assorted Vanderbilts and Harrimans, to Winston Churchill and Albert Einstein. The two shifts of servants were part of social folklore. It was said that one could get anything from a hamburger to pheasant under glass at any hour of the day or night. What follows is the story of the remarkable Swopes—Herbert Bayard and his wife, Maggie—who created a life-style, at work or at play, in the years between the two World Wars, that can never be duplicated.
46
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction / ix Before the World / 1 The World / 23 After the World / 157 Bibliography / 291 Index / 297
47
Voices of Change Southern Pulitzer Winners
by
Maurine Hoffman Beasley and Richard R. Harlow
University Press of America McLean, Virginia 1979
Copyright© 1979 by Maurine Hoffman Beasley Richard R. Harlow All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 0-819.1-0771-9
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 79-52511 ΤΙ» body copy of thii book was t y p « « on the INCO, INC. RP-8080 microproceeor. (INCO, INC., 7916 Wettpark Drive. McLean, Virginia 22102.)
49
FROM
THE
PREFACE
··· While socially responsible journalism in the United States is dedicated to providing information of immediate utility, history provides what Carl L. Becker called the study of "the self consciousness of humanity." Both fields deal with reality - as perceived by the journalist in immediate reaction to events and by the historian from a vantage point of time and studied reflection. Each generation rewrites its own history based on current cultural values, yet the task of the historian remains, as Becker said, to keep history "in reasonable harmony with what actually happened." Journalism thus becomes the initial step in the writing of history, and both journalists and historians endeavor to find the truth that humanity needs to know to make sense of its world ... The history of Southern journalism illustrates this point. Professing to love their land and their culture, the vast majority of Southern journalists declined to speak up for racial justice and compliance with Federal law during the 1950s, '60s and '70s when civil rights struggles dominated the scene. Since the days of Pollard, the Southern press, with few exceptions, had endorsed the concept of white supremacy. Although the post-Civil War South produced distinguished editors - such as Henry W. Grady of the Atlanta Constitution - these individuals fastened their eyes on ecouomic recovery and overlooked the injustices of a rigid racial structure. Particularly falling prey to prejudice were most segments of the rural and small-town press. Although they preached enlightment in the fields of education and agriculture, they sought to "keep the Negro in his place." Thomas D. Clark, historian of the Southern country press stated, "Almost unanimously the country press declared the South a white man's country. The Negro was said not to be ready to participate in political affairs. He needed education, poise and experience before he could be prepared." Few recommendations, however, were given for this "preparation." Even those journalists who recognized the inherent fallacy of white supremacy in a democratic society were afraid to voice their views. "In the discussion of the race question, as in that of almost every other public issue, editors realized the limiting factor of their patrons' preconceived opinion," Clark said. "No doubt many papers would have expressed a far more progressive attitude had their publishers felt the public mind was conditioned for it." This reluctance to oppose prevailing views is reflected in the relatively small number of Southern journalists to win Pulitzer prizes, the nation's most coveted journalistic awards, for their stands on racial questions. A total of 45 Southern newspapers and individual journalists have won Pulitzer prizes in public service, reporting, and editorial writing from 1918, when the annual awards were begun, to 1978. Given by Columbia University, the prizes represent the best-known symbols of journalistic excellence in the United States.
50 Of t h e 45 p r i z e s , 18 were given f o r j o u r n a l i s t i c accomplishments involving r a c i a l i s s u e s . When the Ku Klux Klan spread i t s d o c t r i n e s of r a c i a l b i g o t r y i n t h e 1 9 2 0 ' s , the Memphis Commercial Appeal and the Columbus (Ga.) Enouirer-Sun (along with the New York World) won P u l i t z e r p r i z e s for e f f o r t s t o combat i t . Even though the Klan controlled the Georgia s t a t e government, J u l i a n LaRose H a r r i s of t h e Enauirer-Sun found t h e c o u r a g e i n 1925 t o b e r a t e t h e KKK s l o g a n , " I t ' s Great to Be a G e o r g i a n , " on h i s e d i t o r i a l page: " I s i t g r e a t t o be a c i t i z e n of a s t a t e which i s the proud parent of a cowardly hooded order founded and f o s t e r e d by men who have been proved l i a r s , drunkards, blackmailers, and murderers?.... Let each one answer as he w i l l , but the reply of the Enouirer-Sun i s n o . " H a r r i s ' s e d i t o r i a l policy helped .to d e f e a t the Klan, but i t "did l i t t l e t o make the Enouirer-Sun a f i n a n c i a l success," according to h i s t o r i a n s . As t h e 1920s drew t o a c l o s e , Grover Cleveland H a l l , e d i t o r of t h e Montgomery (Ala.) A d v e r t i s e r , and Louis Isaac J a f f e , e d i t o r of t h e Norfolk (Va.) V i r g i n i a n - P i l o t , won prizes f o r crusades a g a i n s t l y n c h i n g . N e a r l y two f u l l decades elapsed before more Southern j o u r n a l i s t s earned P u l i t z e r p r i z e s f o r challenging the s t a t u s quo of white supremacy. I n 19^6 H o d d i h g C a r t e r , e d i t o r of t h e 6 , 5 0 0 - c i r c u l a t i o n D e l t a Democrat-Times of G r e e n v i l l e , M i s s . , was honored f o r a a e r i e s of e d i t o r i a l s t h a t a t t a c k e d r a c i a l , r e l i g i o u s , and economic b i g o t r y . Two y e a r s l a t e r , V i r g i n i u s Dabney of the Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch received the p r i z e f o r e d i t o r i a l s t h a t questioned Southern a t t i t u d e s and opposed the s i n g l e - p a r t y system and p o l l tax used to deprive blacks of voting r i g h t s . I n t h e 1950s w i t h changing r a c i a l p a t t e r n s impelled by the U.S. Supreme Court, a t o t a l of s i x P u l i t z e r p r i z e s - the same number t h a t had been awarded in t h e previous 30 years - were given to Southern e d i t o r s who attempted to calm r a c i a l passions. Two North Carolina weeklies, the Whlteville Newa Reporter and the Tabor Cltv Tribune, fought a r e v i v a l of the Ku Klux Klan and won p u b l i c s e r v i c e awards. Since the papers, which had a combined c i r c u l a t i o n of leas than 10,000, faced l o s s of advertising and t h r e a t s a g a i n s t t h e i r e d i t o r s , t h e i r campaigns showed exceptional devotion to j o u r n a l i s t i c r e s p o n s i b i l i t y . Each was honored in 1953The n e x t y e a r t h e Supreme Court outlawed segregation in public s c h o o l s , u n l e a s h i n g a wave of f u r y a c r o s s t h e South as r a c i a l supremacists vowed not to obey court o r d e r s . When a mob threatened to harm A u t h e r i n e Lucy, t h e f i r s t b l a c k s t u d e n t t o be admitted to the U n i v e r s i t y of Alabama, Buford Boone, e d i t o r of the Tuscaloosa (Ala.) Newsr endeavored t o bring peace to h i s community. Boone received the e d i t o r i a l w r i t i n g p r i z e i n 1957. As the desegregation b a t t l e reached L i t t l e Rock, a mob backed by Governor Orval Faubus forced eight black s t u d e n t s to leave a white high school and caused P r e s i d e n t Eisenhower to order Army p a r a t r o o p e r s i n t o the c i t y to uphold the law. In the midst of t h e t u r m o i l , t h e A r k a n s a s G a z e t t e p r o v i d e d f a c t u a l coverage of the crisis. In e d i t o r i a l s i t s e d i t o r , Harry S. Ashmore, argued, " . . . s o o n e r or l a t e r we have got to make some adjustment of our l e g a l i n s t i t u t i o n s to comply with the p u b l i c p o l i c y of the United S t a t e s " Both Ashmore and the Gazette won P u l i t z e r p r i z e s in 1958. Ralph McGill, e d i t o r of the A t l a n t a C o n s t i t u t i o n , was honored in 1959 f o r e d i t o r i a l writing t h a t attacked p o l i t i c i a n s who advocated lawlessness in f i g h t i n g i n t e g r a t i o n .
51 In the following 11 years five more Southern journalists won for urging racial justice in tense community situations, while a sixth was recognized for a successful campaign to improve housing, primarily for blacks. The editorial writing award in 1960 went to Lenoir Chambers, editor of the Norfolk Virginia-Pilot, for his stand against closing Virginia schools to avoid desegregating them. In Mississippi two editors, Ira B. Harkey Jr. of the Pascagoula Chronicle and Hazel Brannon Smith of the Lexington Advertiser, defied local segregationists and spoke up for civil rights. Harkey, who urged admission of James Meredith, a black, to the University of Mississippi, met .violent opposition and sold his newspaper after winning a Pulitzer prize for editorial writing in 1963. The same award went to Smith in 1964 for exposing the bigotry of White Citizens' Councils and upholding the rights of blacks to equal treatment before the law. In 1967 Eugene C. Patterson, editor of the Atlanta Constitution, won for editorial writing attacking racism and political demagoguery, including the failure of the Georgia legislature to seat Julian Bond, a black. The Gainesville (Fla.) Sun produced two other Pulitzer prize winners for editorial writing: John R. Harrison, the publisher, who won in 1965 for a housing code campaign, and Horance G. Davis, an editorial writer, honored in 1971 for calling on the community to accept peaceful school desegregation. Of the 18 awards given for promoting racial change in the South, fully half went to representatives of the community press (newspapers with less than 35,000 circulation). These included the awards to the anti-Klan Columbus (Ga.) Enauirer-Sun and two North Carolina weeklies, the Whlteville News Reporter and the Tabor Citv Tribune; Buford Boone, Ira B. Harkey Jr. and Hazel Brannon Suiith, all of whom opposed violent segregationists; and the two winners from the Gainesville Sun. John R. Harrison and Horance G. Davis··· This book introduces seven Pulitzer-prize winners from the community press who recognized the inevitability of social change and found the courage to tell their readers the trutli at a crucial period in Southern history. Six won for their stands on issues involving black-white relations during the last quarter-century of civil rights struggle. A seventh, Caro Brown, of the Alisa (Tex.) Echo, is included because she reported on another aspect of Southern change - attempts to.free Mexican-American voters from political bosses. Brown won a Pulitzer prize in 1955 for reporting a complicated series of court inquiries into the affairs of George B. Parr, who controlled a bloc of Mexican-American voters...
52
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1
VOICES OF CHANGE
1
CHAPTER
W. HORACE CARTER
7
2
Tabor City (N.C.) Tribune
CHAPTER 3
CARO BROWN
31
Alice (Tex.) Echo
CHAPTER 4
BUFORD BOONE
49
Tuscaloosa (Ala.) News
CHAPTER 5
IRA B. HARKET, JR.
65
Pascagoula (Miss.) Chronicle
CHAPTER 6
HAZEL BRANNON SMITH
83
Lexington (Miss.) Advertiser
CHAPTER 7
JOHN R. HARRISON
97
Gainesville (Fla.) Sun
CHAPTER 8
HORANCE 6. DAVIS
115
Gainesville (Fla.) Sun
APPENDIX A
SOUTHERN PULITZER WINNERS
132
APPENDIX Β
SELECTED ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
137
NOTES
141
INDEX
143
53
Pulitzer Prize Editorials America's Best Editorial Writing, 1917-1979
by
William D. Sloan
Iowa State University Press Ames, Iowa 1980
54
© 1980 The Iowa State University Press All rights reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. First edition, 1980
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Main entry under title: Pulitzer prize editorials. 1. Editorials. 2. Pulitzer prizes. I. Sloan, William David, 1947PN4726.P8 081 80-11689 ISBN 0 - 8 1 3 8 - 1 4 9 0 - 1
55
FROM THE PREFACE
JOSEPH PULITZER'S chief concern in his New York World centered on its editorial page. It was to be expected, then, that his will establishing awards for journalism and letters included a prize for "the best editorial article written during the previous year." In setting out his plans for a journalism school at Columbia University, Pulitzer in 1902 had indicated strongly that he wished "the College to pay from the large income I am providing, a sum of in annual prizes to particular journalists or writers for various accomplishments. For instance, they might offer an annual prize of one thousand dollars for the best editorial." Since its inauguration in 1917, the Pulitzer Prize has become recognized as journalism's highest award for editorial writing. Yet, no collection of winning editorials exists except in the archives of the Pulitzer Prize administration at Columbia University. It is inaccessible to most people. Many newspapers do not have their winning editorials on file. Rarely have any of the editorials been reprinted or made available to journalists and students of editorial writing. This is an odd situation for what are usually considered ideal models of editorial writing. To remedy this problem is the purpose of this anthology. The original description of the editorial-writing award was as follows: "For distinguished editorial writing in a United States newspaper, published daily, Sunday, or at least once a week, during the year, the test of excellence being clearness of style, moral purpose, sound reasoning, and power to influence public opinion in the right direction." A number of rule changes and additions have been made since 1917. In 1928 the last phrase was changed to "power to influence public opinion in what the writer conceives to be the right direction." While Pulitzer had indicated a desire to have the award based on the best individual editorial during a year, the emphasis is now placed on "the whole volume of the writer's editorial work during the year." Until 1933, every award except one—Grover Cleveland Hall's in 1928—was based on an individual editorial. Since then the award has been given only three times for a single editorial, although during a number of years a particular editorial has been cited as exemplary of a writer's work.
56
When the award was based on individual editorials, there was little problem with limits on the number of editorials a writer could enter in the contest. However, when Don Murray of the Boston Herald submitted more than 100 for his 1954 exhibit, the Pulitzer personnel decided it was time for a crackdown. After that, exhibits were to include no more than 12 editorials, though in unusual circumstances more would be acceptable. In practice, the limit has not been strictly observed. Today, 20 editorials are considered the maximum. One other rule change has probably been of some practical interest to winners. In 1953 the original $500 prize was increased to $1,000.
57
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface T h e Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing
vii ix
1917 The Lusitania Anniversary Frank H. Simonds 1918 Vae Victis! and War Has Its Compensations Henry Watterson 1920 Law and the Jungle Harvey E. Newbranch 1922 The Unknown Soldier Frank M. O'Brien 1923 To an Anxious Friend William Allen White 1924 Who Made Coolidge? Frank Buxton 1925 The Plight of the South Robert Lathan 1926 The House of a Hundred Sorrows Edward M. Kingsbury 1927 We Submit F. Lauriston Bullard 1928 We Predict a Freeze Grover Cleveland Hall 1929 An Unspeakable Act of Savagery Louis Isaac Jaffe 1931 The Gentleman from Nebraska Charles S. Ryckman 1933 Too Much Government Henry J. Haskell 1934 Where is Our Money? Edwin P. Chase 1936 Bankrupt Felix Morley Censorship, You—and Us George B. Parker 1937 The Opposition John W.Owens 1938 Tenancy Problem Is National William Wesley Waymack 1939 My Country 'Tis of Thee... Ronald G. Callvert 1940 Europe's Emperor Bart Howard 1941 Toward Totalitarianism Reuben Maury 1942 The Urgent Need of Unity Geoffrey Parsons 1943 Statesmanship in the Legion Forrest W. Seymour
3 7 13 17 19 21 24 26 28 31 33 35 40 43 47 49 51 56 59 62 65 68 71
1944 How Germany Fooled the World and That Valley Falls Latin Teacher Henry J. Haskell 1945 Relations of Freedoms George W. Potter 1946 1947
Go For Broke Hodding Carter Apathetic and Pathetic William H. Grimes
74 79 82 84
58 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977
1978 1979
We Will Not Be Intimidated Virginius Dabney Imagine, One Billion }öhn Η. Crider Church Unity Herbert Elliston First Things First Carl M. Saunders Government by Treaty: What We Can Do About It William H. Fitzpatrick The Low Estate of Public Morals Louis LaCoss The Quality of Morality Vermont Connecticut Royster Still Wanted- A New Look—1 Don Murray An Instance of Costly Cause and Effect Which Detroiters Should Weigh Soberly Royce Howes If the Russians Want More Meat... Lauren K. Soth What a Price for Peace Buford Boone Reflections in a Hurricane's Eye Harry S. Ashmore A Church, A School— Ralph McGill The Year Virginia Closed the Schools Lenoir Chambers The Pastoral Letter William J. Dorvillier The John Birch Society: An Editorial Thomas M. Storke Perfectly Capable of Closing Ole Miss Ira B. Harkey, Jr. Arrest of Bombing Victim Is Grave Disservice Hazel Brannon Smith Memo to McKinney John R. Harrison The Containment of Ideas Robert Lasch Julian Bond Got Used, Too Eugene Patterson Our "Commitments" Open to Question John S. Knight An Appeal to Reason Paul Greenberg Lyndon Johnson's Presidency Philip Geyelin Do You, Governor Kirk? Horance G. Davis, Jr. Whitewash John Strohmeyer Our $213 Million Gift Horse Roger B. Linscott Mr. Cahill's Colleagues F. Gilman Spencer Where They Square Off and Washington, the Father or an Infamous Traitor? John Daniell Maurice Justice Is Blind—and Gagged Philip P. Kerby Conforte's Influence Foster Church Conforte Influence in Washoe County Is Shocking Norman F. Cardoza Reno's Reputation Warren L. Lerude A Good Decision on Libel Meg Greenfield Solzhenitsyn at Harvard Edwin M. Yoder
88 91 93 95 98 100 104 106 109 114 116 118 121 124 127 129 132 134 137 139 142 144 149 152 155 157 159 161 164 167 171 173 175 178 180
59
The Pulitzer Prize Story II Award-Winning News Stories, Columns, Editorials, Cartoons, and News Pictures, 1959 - 1980
by
John Hohenberg
Columbia University Press New York - Guildford 1980
60
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Main entry under title: The Pulitzer prize story II. Companion volume to the 1959 work: The Pulitzer prize story, edited by J. Hohenberg. Includes index. 1. American prose literature—20th century. 2. Caricatures and cartoons—United States. 3. Pulitzer prizes. I. Hohenberg, John. PS647.N4P8 070.4'31 80-16880 ISBN 0-231-04978-1
Columbia University Press New York Guildford, Surrey Copyright © 1980 John Hohenberg All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America
9 8 7 6 5 4 3
61
FROM THE PREFACE The Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism for 1959-1980, the years covered by this book, reflect one of the most difficult and dangerous eras in American history. It was the period of the nation's most disastrous foreign war, and of a thunderous social upheaval at home. More than that, it was marked by the assassination of one President, the involuntary retirement of a second, the disgrace and resignation of a third, and the unelected accession of a fourth. It was, in short, a time of trial and testing for America. Manifestly, in presenting the face of so troubled an age, the press in a very real sense had need of the Constitutional guarantees of its freedom to gather, process, and distribute the news to the people of the United States. But ironically, this was also the period in which pressures inside and outside government increased enormously to regulate newspapers by one means or another—or force them into unacceptable forms of self-regulation. That was the salient difference in the circumstances under which numerous Pulitzer Prizes were awarded in 1959-1980, as compared with the period from 1917-1958, which was illustrated in my earlier volume, The Pulitzer Prize Story. The press had not encountered such virulent hostility in this country since the passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts in 1798. The courts restricted press coverage of criminal trials by closing pretrial proceedings and, in some cases, even ejecting reporters from open court. The police, under court sanction, exercised an unprecedented authority to raid newsrooms without a search warrant to seek evidence of the commission of crimes. Reporters were sent to jail for indefinite periods because they remained faithful to the principle of protecting confidential
62
sources and refused to disclose their informants' identities under court order. At least one newspaper, the New York Times, was heavily fined for supporting that principle, and others were threatened by irate judges with similar treatment. In the Congress, the Senate passed and sent to the House a viciously restrictive bill that would, if it is finally enacted in the Senate-approved form, be the virtual equivalent of Britain's crippling Official Secrets Acts. As for the executive branch, four separate administrations raised the cry of national security to attempt to justify suppressing—even falsifying—the news or issuing misleading information. Going into the critical decade of the 1980s, both the Supreme Court and the Congress showed some willingness to ease these pressures. The high court finally ruled that press and public had a right to attend criminal trials and Congress drafted other remedial legislation. But in the absence of positive assurance that the First Amendment would not be further diluted in one way or another, the softening of such pressures could only be viewed as temporary. Under these circumstances, many of the larger and stronger newspapers felt obliged to widen the distance between themselves and the government. The position, strained though it was, also became policy for a number of the more courageous medium- and smaller-sized newspapers. The government thus came under intensive and rigorous scrutiny, regardless of whether it turned out to be Republican or Democratic. To some, this appeared to signal an excessive hostility to the governmental process on the part of the press as a whole. But that, certainly, was not the intention either of the proprietors or the principal editors, the leaders of the press. It was very far from what any of them considered to be a proper requirement for the press in a self-governing society.
63
What they did require, and what they did believe to be necessary, was a continued watchdog role for the press over both governmental and private business and societal activities. No matter how much the political leadership may have longed for a cheerleader press, in the image of American newspapers during World War Π, there was a general recognition among journalists that such a function in this unsettled era eventually would have proved fatal both to a free press and to any government it blindly supported...
64
TABLE OF CONTENTS Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction
I. ASSIGNMENT—AMERICA: NEWS
xiii xv 1
RIDING THE CREST OF THE 11
1.
Walter Mears of the AP Calls a Tight Presidential Election The "Human Typing Machine" picks Carter over Ford at the end of a close race
14
2.
The San Diego Tribune Covers the Nation's Worst Air Tragedy An alert staff responds when a mid-air crash kills 144 only 28 minutes before the first edition deadline
20
3.
A Tornado Strikes Xenia, Ohio, and the Xenia Gazette Tells the Story Its stricken staff, despite personal hardships, reports on 33 dead, 1,600 injured, and huge losses
4.
5.
Tom Fitzpatrick Joins 200 Rioters During Chicago's Four Days of Rage A Sun-Times reporter rims with the Weathermen mob in an antiwar battle with the city's police Two UPI Reporters Probe the Life and Death of Diana Oughton Lucinda Franks and Thomas Powers reconstruct the conversion of a rich girl to a terrorist who died in a bomb blast
U. THE ENDLESS BATTLE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS 6.
7.
28
32
42
Two Men Are Freed from Death Row Because Gene Miller Cared About Them An eight-and-a-half-year battle by the Miami Herald reporter ends in vindication for wrongfully convicted prisoners A Reporter Turns Ambulance Driver, Exposes "Misery Merchants" William Jones of the Chicago Tribune breaks up a police-linked ring that preyed on the poor
25
46
Chicago's 53
65 8. A Black and White Team Sees Famine Stalking Across Asia and Africa 56 William Mullen and Ovie Carter of the Chicago Tribune find millions who are threatened with hunger 9. A Black Woman Reporter Appeals for Better Race Relations Shirley Scott of the Hartford Times makes a contribution to the Gannett series, "The Road to Integration"
64
10. A. M. Rosenthal Visits Auschwitz and Writes a Memorable Story 69 The New York Times's correspondent in Poland recalls the horror of four million, mostly Jews, who died there
ΙΠ. DEMOCRACYS REPORTERS
WATCHDOGS:
INVESTIGATIVE 74
11. A New York News Reporter Uncovers a $1 Million Medicaid Fraud 76 William Sherman, posing as a Medicaid recipient, finds widespread abuses among doctors in New York City 12. The Reno Newspapers Attack A Brothel Keeper In Nevada 79 Three editorial writers combine forces to contain a clandestine political force in the city 13. The Anchorage News Examines a Union's Rising Power in Alaska 83 Local 959 of the Teamsters' Union is shown to be creating an empire with major political and economic interests 14. Two Philadelphia Reporters Assail Mistreatment Mentally ΠΙ Acel Moore and Wendell Rawls, Jr., of the Inquirer expose a pattern of crime and neglect at Farview Hospital
IV.
A CRUSADE TO SAVE OUR NATIONAL
of the
HERITAGE
89
95
15. The Louisville Courier-Journal Combats Kentucky Strip Mining 96 The newspaper forces the enactment of strict laws to save the beauty of the state's hill country
66 16. The Milwaukee Journal Fights Wisconsin's Water Pollution A series, "Pollution: The Spreading Menace," spurs the passage of stronger laws for cleaner water
101
17. The Christian Science Monitor Examines the National Parks The "crown jewels" of our land face new pressures and difficult decisions in the next generation
106
18. A Los Angeles Times Reporter Warns that Some of Our Dams Are in Danger 109 Gaylord Shaw shows that many aging dams threaten the lives and property of thousands of people
V. FOREIGN REPORTING:
THE EMPHASIS
SHIFTS
117
19. A Wall Street Journal Man Witnesses India's Conquest of Pakistan 122 Peter Kann records the collapse of the Pakistani army in his diary during the eastern war of 1971 20. Jack Anderson Discloses Secret Papers Revealing U.S. 'Tilt' Toward Pakistan 128 The Columnist quotes Kissinger: "I'm Getting Hell. . . from the President for not being tough enough on India" 21. Richard Ben Cramer Takes a Walk Through a Mideast No Man's Land 134 A young correspondent of the Philadelphia Inquirer finds an eerie stillness in occupied Lebanon 22. Max Frankel Covers Nixon's Opening to China for 8 WorkFilled Days 140 The New York Times's correspondent leaves with a feeling of the excitement of a Marco Polo and disturbed memories
VI. HEROISM AND DISCLOSURE: VIETNAM
THE PRESS
IN 144
23. The New York Times Makes History by Publishing the Pentagon Papers 151 The newspaper defeats a government effort in Supreme Court to suppress the secret origins of the Vietnam War
67 24.
Peter Amett Flies to Battle and Sees a U.S. Force Destroyed The Associated Press's war correspondent risks his life in Vietcong territory to join Americans under fire
169
25.
John S. Knight attacks Vietnam War and Warns of an American Defeat 174 The editor writes that Asians will seek their own destiny despite the United States military intervention
26.
Seymour Hersh Uncovers the Tragedy of the Army's Massacre at My Lai A free lancer, acting on a tip, tracks down eyewitnesses to the slaying of 109 civilians
181
27.
T h e Akron Beacon Journal's Staff Covers Kent State Killings The tragedy climaxes four days of rioting on the campus after Nixon orders a U.S. invasion of Cambodia
187
28.
Sydney Schanberg Sees Genocide as the Communists Seize Cambodia 193 The New York Times's correspondent stays behind to record the fall of Phnom Penh and is threatened with execution
VII. PRESIDENCY AND PRESS: A CLASH OF POWER
202
29.
Washington Post Exposes Watergate and Helps Topple a President 208 Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein disclose "cover-up" by Nixon White House of a "third-rate burglary"
30.
Mary McGrory Reflects on Watergate, History, and the English Language 228 The Washington Star's columnist sees the nation famished for civility and truth after the ordeal
31.
Meg Greenfield Appraises Ford: " H e Did a Hell of a J o b " The Washington Post's editorialist hails him for restoring civility to the Presidency
232
32.
William Safire Helps Toss Lance from Carter's White House The New York Times's conservative columnist attacks the Georgian'sfree-wheelingbanking routine
238
68 33. Merriman Smith Sees Assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas 245 The UPI's White House correspondent writes the story of a great and poignant national tragedy on Nov. 22, 1963
VIII.
CIVIL RIGHTS BATTLE STRAINS
THE NATION
34. Ralph McGill Leads the Fight for Civil Rights in the South The Atlanta Constitution's editor attacks bigots
256 261
who bombed a Jewish temple and a high school
35. Haynes Johnson Retraces the March from Selma to Montgomery, Ala. 267 The Washington Star's correspondent sees evidence
that the "old days" in the South are gone forever 36. The Los Angeles Times Reports the Five-Day Riots in Watts
272
An eyewitness tells of arsonists tossing Molotov cocktails into stores and shouting a slogan, "Burn, baby, burn"
37. Eugene Patterson Protests Two Outrages in the South
276
The Atlanta Constitution's editor criticizes a refusal to seat Julian Bond and the shooting of James Meredith
38. The Free Press Covers Detroit's Riot and Asks, "Why Did 43 People Die?" 280 The staff reports on the city's worst disaster then investigates troops, police and itself
39. The Globe Faces Blows and Bullets in Covering Boston's School Crisis 286 Anti-busing forces besiege newspaper over court order that brings many more blacks to South Boston classrooms
IX.
COLUMNISTS
AND CRITICS GAIN NEW INFLUENCE
40. Richard L. Strout of the Monitor Reports on 11 Presidents
292 294
The commentator watches Washington pass in review for 55 years and wins a Pulitzer Prize at 80
41. Red Smith Watches Muhammad Ali Beat Down a Gallant Joe Frazier 299 The New York Times's sports columnist salutes the comeback of a champion at Manila
69 42. David Broder Tolls a Requiem for Humphrey's Presidential Dream 302 The Washington Post's commentator concludes that the Senator's 25-year quest is over 43. Walter Kerr Sees Zero Mostel as a Great Natural Comic Force The New York Times's drama critic pays tribute to one of the world's funniest actors
307
44. Marquis Childs Ponders Man's Fate in a World Marred by Pollution 311 A St. Louis Post-Dispatch columnist reviews a film, "Can Man Survive?"—and can't help wondering 45. Russell Baker Finds Washington is Solemn but New York is Serious 314 The New York Times's resident humorist dissects the fine art of being funny in a daily paper
X.
THE PRESS EXAMINES
OUR LEGAL SYSTEM
318
46. The Philadelphia Inquirer Reveals Police Brutality on a Massive Scale 321 A pattern of violence against the legal rights of minorities is disclosed by an investigation 47. Newsday Follows the Heroin Trail from Turkey and France to the U.S. 326 A vast machine of illegal narcotics smugglers is exposed in a 13-country, 3-continent inquiry 48. The Wall Street Journal uncovers a $150 Million Salad Oil Fraud 332 Norman C. Miller follows the mystery of Allied Crude and the risky adventures of Tino DeAngelis 49. Howard James of the Monitor Sees a "Crisis in the Courts" The reporter finds miscarriages of justice on the bench in a nation-wide tour to assess our judicial problems
335
50.
340
St. Petersburg Times Exposes A Strange Cult in Florida Bette Orsini and Charles Stafford Reveal the Dark Side of Scientology's Work
The Los Angeles Times Protests Judicial Sanctions Against the Press 343 Philip F. Kerby writes an editorial about judges who claim the power of censorship over the news Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism, 1959-1980
349
Index
369
71
American Reporter at the International Political Stage Herbert Bayard Swope and his Pulitzer Prize-winning Articles from Germany in 1916
by Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer
Studienverlag Dr. N. Brockmeyer Bochum, Germany, 1982
CI Ρ-Kurztitelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek Fischer, Erika J.: American reporter at the international political stage: Herbert Bayard Swope and his Pulitzer Prize-winning articles from Germany in 1916 / by Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer.-Bochum: Studienverlag Brockmeyer, 1982. (Studies in international communication; Vol. 2) ISBN 3-88339-238-3 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich; Studien zur internationalen Kommunikation ISBN 3-88339-238-3 Alle Rechte vorbehalten © 1982 by Studienverlag Dr. N. Brockmeyer Querenburger Höhe 281, 4630 Bochum -1 Druck Thiebes GmbH & Co Kommanditgesellschaft Hagen Printed in Germany
73
From the Preface Η. B. S. - these three initials hold a stable place not only in the press history of the U.S.A., but also far beyond i t For Herbert Bayard Swope, whom they refer to, even to this d a y - n e a r l y a quarter century after his death - belongs to the most renowned and fascinating personages of international journalism. Being a myth already in his lifetime, Swope has developed certain professional standards for press reporting until the end of the twenties, which became guiding-principles for the future. Born as a son of an immigrant couple of German ancestry in S t Louis, Missouri, Swope advanced to one of the most profiled American journalists of the first half of our century during his about twenty-year-long activity for the New York daily paper The World. Although there are already several biographical compositions existent about Herbert Bayard Swope, none of these publications treats chiefly of the relation of this journalist to Germany, respectively to German problems. For that reason Part I of the book in hand wants to work out this aspect - inserted in numerous other questions - as a crucial point For this purpose not only the available secondary literature was brought up, but an additional use could be made of certain archival materials which have remained unnoticed or, at best, have been taken into account only peripherally so far. So it was not only the extremely comprehensive Herbert Bayard Swope Collection in the Mugar Memorial Library of Boston University, which has been made accessible for the authors, but also the Archives of the Pulitzer Prize Collection at the Graduate School of Journalism at the New York Columbia University, same as the Political Archives of the Foreign Office in Bonn, West Germany...
74
TABLE OF CONTENTS FOREWORD by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer PART I:
• • • • • • • • • •
HERBERT BAYARD SWOPE - HIS LIFEAND POSITION IN AMERICAN JOURNALISM by Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer Editorial Remarks HB S - THREE INITIALS AND A MYTH SOCIAL ANTECEDENTS AND EARLY JOURNALISTIC ATTEMPTS STARTING HIS CAREER ON THE NEW YORK WORLD REPORTING FROM GERMANY IN THE THIRD YEAR OF THE WAR FORMATION OF A SERIES OF ARTICLES ON GERMANY . . . REACTIONS ON THE SERIES OF ARTICLES AND ITS CONSEQUENCES RECIPIENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR REPORTING . . . . JOURNALISTIC ACTIVITIES IN WASHINGTON AND PARIS . . . WORKING FOR ANOTHER DECADE AT THE WORLD WANDERER BETWEEN JOURNALISM, POLITICS, AND BUSINESS
PART II: PRESS REPORTS FROM GERMANY DURING THE THIRD YEAR O F WORLD WAR I By Herbert Bayard Swope Editorial Remarks • INTRODUCTORY • U. S. AMBASSADOR RETURNS FROM GERMANY • BOELCKE, KNIGHT OF THE AIR • THE FOUR WAYS TOWARD PEACE • THE WAR'S OBJECTIVES AS GERMANY SEES THEM • PEACE WITH HONOR VS. A GERMAN PEACE • GERMAN HATRED OF AMERICA: ITS CAUSES • GERMANY AND THE AMERICAN PRESIDENT
5
11 12 13 14 17 26 30 36 44 52 56 65
77 78 81 85 93 101 107 Ill 115 119
75 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
THE MENACE OF THE U-BOAT LIBERALIZING GERMANY THE SPIRIT OF THE BELEAGUERED EMPIRE THE HOBGOBLIN OF GERMAN DUMPING BUSINESS BEHIND THE BATTLE LINE GERMANY'S PANTRY: F E E D I N G SEVENTY MILLIONS GERMANY'S BACKBONE: HER ARMY ON THE SOMME: ORDEAL BY BATTLE CAPTIVE BELGIUM AND NORTHERN FRANCE BLEEDING POLAND AND HER NEIGHBORS GERMANY'S BACK DOOR - AUSTRIA-HUNGARY TURKEY AND THE BALKAN CALDRON THE NEUTRALS AND HOW AMERICA MAKES THEM POSSIBLE BARRING THE SPIES FROM THE EMPIRE LUDENDORFF: THE MYSTERY MAN AMERICA THROUGH GERMAN EYES LEAVES FROM A REPORTER'S NOTE-BOOK
123 127 133 137 143 151 157 165 171 177 183 191 197 203 209 215 219
PART III: BASIC PROBLEMS AND PHILOSOPHY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISM by Herbert Bayard Swope Editorial Remarks • THE AIMS OF THE NEW YORK WORLD • JOURNALISM AS AN INSTRUMENT OF CIVILIZATION
231 232 233 237
Index
243
77
Moments The Pulitzer Prize Photographs Updated Edition: 1942-1982
by Sheryle Leekley and John Leekley
Crown Publishers, Inc. New York 1982
® 1978.1982 by John and Sheryle Leekley Foreword β 1978,1982 by Dan Rather All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission In writing from the-publisher. Inquiries should be addressed to Crown Publishers, Inc., One Park Avenue. New York, N.Y. 10016 Printed in the United States of America Published simultaneously in Canada by General Publishing Company Limited LOU REOA PRODUCTIONS
Book Design: Huguette Franco Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Leekley, Sheryle. Moments: the Pulitzer Prize photographs. Updated edition: 1942-1982 1. Photography, Journalistic—Awards. 2. Pulitzer prizes. I. Leekley, John. II. Title. TR820.L43 1982 779'.0973 82-18252 ISBN 0-517-54736-8 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 First Updated Edition
79
FROM THE PREFACE
The Pulitzer Prize represents the pinnacle of achievement in the field of American journalism. It is an annual award, endowed by newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911), in a bequest to Columbia University in New York City... The first award for photography was presented in 1942 and, except for 1946, has been given in each succeeding year. In 1968, the photography category was expanded to include feature photography, where photos are not primarily dependent on the time value of a news event, as they are in spot news. Instead, the value is in its penetrating coverage of important issues and subjects. The feature category, and increasingly since 1979 the spotnews category, is often composed of a series of pictures that tends to provide a more filmic, documentary approach. This contrasts with the earlier awards, almost all single photographs, which tended toward an elliptical shorthand in telling a story, where images function as symbols or moral statements. The Pulitzer Prize collection has great personal significance. The lasting impression in the minds of most Americans about many major events is often made by that year's Pulitzer Prize photograph. In fact, we mark our lifetimes by remembering what we were doing when we first saw those images.·. As we got to know the photographers better, our respect for them developed into a kind of awe . . . for their personal courage, dedication, and "heart." It was this passion that enabled them to capture the sense of their times in one fleeting moment...
80
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
6
Foreword
8
Pulitzer Prize Photographs
11
Reference Information
154
The camera seems to me, next to unassisted and weaponless consciousness, the central instrument of our time. James Agee Let Us Now Praise Famous
Men
Outstanding International Press Reporting Volume 1: 1928-1945
Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Consequences of World War I to the End of World War II
by
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
Walter de Gruyter Berlin · New York 1984
82
CIP-Kurztitelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek Outstanding international press reporting Pulitzer Prize winning articles in foreign correspondence / ed. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - Berlin; New York: de Gruyter NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 1.1928-1945: from the consequences of World War I to the end of World War II. - 1984. ISBN 3-11-008918-1 Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Outstanding international press reporting Bibliography: v. 1, p. Includes index. Contents: v. 1.1928-1945, from the consequences of World War I to the end of World War II. 1. World politics · 20th century · Addresses, essays, lectures. 2. Pulitzer prizes - Addresses, essays, lectures. 3. Journalists - United States - Addresses, essays, lectures. 4. Foreign news · United States · Addresses, essays, lectures. I. Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich, 1937D 445.088 1983 909.82 83-18962 ISBN 3-11-008918-1 (v. 1) Copyright © 1984 by Walter de Gruyter & Co., Berlin 30. All rights reserved, including those of translation into foreign languages. No part of this book may reproduced in any form - by photoprint, microfilm or any other means nor transmitted nor translated into a machine language without written permission from the publisher. - Typesetting: Kingsport Press, Kingsport, Tenn., USA. - Printing: Druckerei Gerike GmbH, Berlin. - Binding: Dieter Mikolai, Berlin. - Cover design: Lothar Hildebrand, Berlin. Printed in Germany.
83
FROM THE PREFACE The importance of those works awarded the Pulitzer prize cannot be overemphasized. The individual reporting is representative of brilliant stylistic proficiency, while the subject matter and the interpretation of these outstanding historical world occurrences are of timeless interest. Historians, journalists, politicians, sociologists, linguists, and writers will be able to appreciate the value of this constantly stimulating and informative reading matter. Even today the strength of its impact is great. The texts have been collected and are attended by the Pulitzer Archives at Columbia University, who provided access of these documents to the researcher. For the benefit of the general public the objective was to publish a selection of at least those most important parts which contain specific subject matter. The statement "a project like this one will not be easy to handle" was made by the late Professor Richard T. Baker, then administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes — a comment made almost a half decade ago when I submitted my preliminary thoughts on a comprehensive documentation of such a piece of work. This was confirmed. It is due to the Advisory Board on the Pulitzer Prizes that the preliminary studies for the edition could be started; they allowed unlimited use of the Pulitzer Prize Collection normally kept under lock and key and generously gave permission for an analysis of the confidential Jury Reports. The editor is particularly grateful for this extraordinary sign of trust. The problems and necessary research which arose during the revision were greater and more time-consuming than was expected. The fact that the first volume has been published is due to, in particular, the understanding support of a number of members of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, New York, as well as the Pulitzer Prize Office located in the same building. Professor W. Phillips Davison and the former associate dean Christopher G. Trump obtained the consent of the faculty members for this research project..
84
TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface
ν
Contents of Future Volumes
xiii
Introduction: The Pulitzer Prizes for International Reporting in the First Phase of Their Development, 1928-1945 by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
xix
Editorial Remarks
li
REPORTS ABOUT GERMANY IN 1916 The Situation and Several Upcoming Problems of the Country in the Third Year of the War
by Herbert B. Swope (The World, New York) Introductory Notes Germany Hopes for Peace and Prepares to Battle On The Germans' Pride and Its Impact on Foreign Policy Fortune of War Turns and Liberalism Is New Hope Trade and Unemployment as Central Factors Blockade Results and the Fight Against Famine Related Readings
3 4 5 10 15 20 24 29
REPORTS ABOUT SWITZERLAND IN 1928 Negotiations About a New Peace Concept and the Various Points of Dissent
by Paul S. Mowrer (The Chicago Daily News)
31
Introductory Notes Two Peace Concepts and Their Differences The U.S. Proposal and Its Chances The War Outlawry Pact and Its Difficulties Briand-Kellogg Pact Effects Hopes and Apprehensions The New Pact: A Chance and a Challenge Related Readings
32 33 35 37 39 41 45
85 REPORTS ABOUT FRANCE IN 1929 The Reparations Problem and the Struggle for Its Solution
by Leland Stowe (New York Herald-Tribune)
47
Introductory Notes Plans for a Reparations Organization and Its Task The Reparations Situation and the Role of Mr. Young Germany's Proposal and the Importance of France The New International Bank and Its Future Importance Final Agreement on a Contract and Its Consequences Related Readings
48 49 52 56 59 63 68
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1930 The Russian Economic System and the Situation of the Population
by Hubert R. Knickerbocker (New York Evening Post)
71
Introductory Notes The First Five-Year Plan and Its Postulates Russia's Fear and Her Decision for a Spurt The Government's Mistake and an Unexpected Event The Russian Inflation and Its Official Definition The Five-Year War and Its Victims Related Readings
72 73 77 81 84 89 94
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1931 The Soviet Policy and the Personal Impact of Stalin
by Walter Duranty ( The New York Times) Introductory Notes The System of Stalinism and Its Philosophy Soviet Opinion Monopoly and the Mass Media Soviet Censorship and Its Fruits Abroad The Red Army, Figures and Functions The Russian Empire and Its Ethnic Plurality Related Readings
95 96 97 100 101 104 106 108
REPORTS ABOUT GERMANY IN 1932 Germany Between Radicalism and the Hope for a Better Future
by Edgar A. Mowrer (The Chicago Daily News)
109
Introductory Notes Radical Movements and the German Psychosis
110 111
86 The Middle Class's Turn to Radicalism and Its Cause Reichstag Elections and Hitler's First Halt German Hopes and Needs Before Christmas The Optimism for the Following Year and Its Reasons Related Readings
113 116 117 118 121
REPORTS ABOUT GERMANY IN 1933 The Germans Under Fascist Rule and the Heralds of Destruction
by Frederick T. Birchall (The New York Times)
123
Introductory Notes Changes in German Policy and the Turn to Fascism Hitler's Internal Policy and a Lesson for the Future The Organized Anti-Semitism and Rumors Abroad A Letter of Dr. Goebbels and the Healthy German Arts The First Book Burnings and Their "Victims" Related Readings
124 125 127 130 133 136 139
REPORTS ABOUT THE UNITED STATES IN 1934 Centers of International Crises and the Ways They Might Develop
by Arthur Krock (The New York Times)
141
Introductory Notes The Russo-Japanese Problem and the Attitude to War The Conflicts of the East and America's Caution France's Tradition and Its Importance for Europe The U.S. Image in Latin America and Its Development Britain's Difficult Decision and America's Hope Related Readings
142 143 144 146 148 151 153
REPORTS ABOUT ETHIOPIA IN 1935 An Underdeveloped Country as It Faces the Menace of Imperialism
by William C. Barber (Chicago Daily Tribune)
155
Introductory Notes A People's National Pride versus Fascist Imperialism Africa's Last Free Country and Its Natural Defense Ethiopian Culture-Old Aged and Peculiar Addis Ababa-Poor and Epidemic Slavery in Ethiopia-Α Temptation and Its Fruits Related Readings
156 157 159 163 165 168 171
87 REPORTS ABOUT ITALY IN 1936 Italy Under the Mussolini Rule and the Reasons for Her Turn to Militarism
by Anne O'Hare McCormick (The New York Times)
173
Introductory Notes Changes in a Dictator and Their Causes Mussolini and Italy's Decision for the Military Way Italy's Militarism and the Effects of Sanctions The Worth of Pacts and Italy's "Training" War The New Italy: Hard, Simple, Militant Related Readings
174 175 178 180 182 186 189
REPORTS ABOUT THE UNITED STATES IN 1937 Problems Facing the President and Discussions About Their Solutions
by Arthur Krock ( The New York Times)
191
Introductory Notes The President's Philosophy and Its Practical Conditions Roosevelt's Main Problems and Their Important Traits A Monetary Dilemma and How the President Might Act Roosevelt's Dream and Why It Cannot Come True The President's Program and How It Might be Paid Related Readings
192 193 197 201 203 205 208
REPORTS ABOUT GERMANY IN 1938 Hitler's Sudetenland Campaign and Europe's Attempts to Avoid War
by Louis P. Lochner (The Associated Press)
211
Introductory Notes Dictator Shows Strength and Stresses Will to Peace The Nazis' New Demands and the Role of Chamberlain Hitler's Claims and the Last Chance for Peace Hitler's Yield for Sudetenland and His Conditions The Negotiations and the Advance of Hitler's Troops Related Readings
212 213 215 217 220 223 225
REPORTS ABOUT GERMANY IN 1939 The German Situation in the First Weeks of World War Π and the Nazi's Interior Policy
by Otto D. Tolischus (The New York Times)
227
Introductory Notes The First Weeks of War and the Situation in Cologne
228 227
88 Changes in Daily Life and the Importance of Russia The Blockade Strangle and Its Various Consequences The German Soul and the Nazi's Way of Ruling It The Effects of War Strain and Their Official Name Related Readings
231 233 236 239 242
REPORTS ABOUT FRANCE IN 1940 The Situation of France Under Nazi Occupation and the Mistakes Made by the Vichy Rule
by Percy J. Philip (The New York Times)
243
Introductory Notes The Nazis in France and Hope for a Victory by Spirit The Tactic of Laval and Its Consequences The Food Shortage and Its Various Causes The Test of the Vichy Rule and the Role of Monsieur Laval French Change Their Mind and Hope for Britain Related Readings
244 245 250 257 261 266 271
REPORTS ABOUT CHINA IN 1941 The Political Situation in Far East and the Special Importance of Free China
by Carlos P. Romulo (The Philippines Herald)
273
Introductory Notes The Situation in Far East and the Hope for America Free China's Capital and What It Symbolizes China's Will to Fight and the Chance for Appeasement China's Leader and His Political Ideas The Burma Road and Its Importance for China Related Readings
274 275 279 280 283 286 288
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOLOMONS IN 1942 The Pacific War Theatre and the American Plans and Operations
by Hanson W. Baldwin (The New York Times)
289
Introductory Notes The Solomon Battle and Its Tactical Necessities The Importance of Cooperation and Its Impediments Australia's Strategic Role and Its Consequences The U.S. Plane Superiority and Its Reasons War Technical Experiences and How They Are Used Related Readings
290 291 295 300 303 307 310
89 REPORTS ABOUT YUGOSLAVIA IN 1943 The Partisan Organization in Yugoslavia and Its Strikes Against the Germans
by Daniel de Luce (The Associated
Press)
Introductory Notes A Peoples Resistance and How It Works The Partisan War and Its Constellation Drug Tito and His Qualities Report from a Partisan Camp Aims and Structure of the Partisan Movement Related Readings
313 314 315 316 319 322 325 327
REPORTS ABOUT ENGLAND IN 1944 The Allies' Invasion Into France and the Important Contributions of Her Various Formations
by Mark S. Watson ( The Evening Sun, Baltimore)
329
Introductory Notes The Allies' Tactic and Its Main Elements Airborne Attacks and Increasing Nazi Opposition The Struggle for the Beaches and a Look at Russia The Pressure on Cherbourg and the Enemy's Distress The Need for La Haye and a Second Surprise Related Readings
330 331 334 337 339 340 342
REPORTS ABOUT JAPAN IN 1945 America's Fight Against Japan and the Consequent Way of Finishing It
Index
by Homer W. Bigart (New York Herald-Tribune)
345
Introductory Notes Sugar Loaf-The Battle and the Strategy The Bombing of 43,000 Civilians and Its Reasons Inspecting the Effects of the Atomic Bomb The End of War Theatre and the Actors' Final Scene A Study of Destruction After the Japanese Surrender Related Readings
346 347 349 353 354 357 362 363
91
Outstanding International Press Reporting Volume 2:1946-1962
Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the End of World War II to the Various Stations of the Cold War
by
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
Walter de Gruyter Berlin • New York 1985
92
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Outstanding international press reporting Includes bibliographies and index. Contents: v. 1. 1928-1945, from the consequences of World War I to the end of World War II - v. 2. 1946-1962, from the end of World War II to the various stations of the Cold War. 1. World politics-20th century-Addresses, essays, lectures. 2. Pulitzer prizes-Addresses, essays, lectures. 3. Journalists-United States-Addresses, essays, lectures. 4. Foreign news-United States-Addresses, essays, lectures. I. Fischer, Heinz Dietrich, 1937D 445.088 1984 909.82 83-18962 ISBN 3-11-008918-1 (v. 1) CiP-Kurztiteiaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek Outstanding international press reporting : Pulitzer Prize winning articles in foreign correspondence / ed. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - Berlin ; New York : de Gruyter NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 2. 1946-1962: from the end of World War II to the various stations of the Cold War.-1985. ISBN 3-11-009824-5 Copyright © 1985 by Walter de Gruyter & Co., Berlin 30. All rights reserved, including those of translation into foreign languages. No part of this book may reproduced in any form - by photoprint, microfilm or any other means nor transmitted nor translated into a machine language without written permission from the publisher. - Typesetting and printing: Wagner GmbH, Nördlingen. - Binding: Dieter Mikolai, Berlin. - Cover design: Lothar Hildebrand, Berlin. Printed in Germany.
93
FROM THE PREFACE About one year after publication of the first volume of this edition the second volume is now at hand. As in the case of its predecessor, much time had to be spent on documentation and research work for the realization of this tome. This was completed partly by extensive correspondence. Again it has to be gratefully mentioned that the sources of the Pulitzer Prize Collection at Columbia University, New York, had been made available as well as the confidential Jury Reports. These were most valuable for the classification and evaluation of the individual prize-winners and of their articles. Moreover, several archives and libraries had to be consulted in order to provide missing materials or to decide on contradictory source information. While the period of documentation could be easily defined for the first volume - the end of World War Π formed a distinct incision - , it proved somewhat difficult to define a final point for the book at hand. Finally, a pragmatic solution was decided upon. The entire post-war period up to the Cuban Crisis, which usually is regarded as the climax and the conclusion of the Cold War, have been chosen for documentation. The following years, which will be featured in the third volume, are essentially marked by the period before the Vietnam War, its course, and its lasting impact on world policies. As far as the selection and presentation of the prize-winning press materials are concerned, the same principles were applied in this volume as in the first volume of this edition. In order to make transparent these selective and editorial criteria also for those readers who have not at hand the preceding volume, the "Editorial Remarks" are reprinted in the present book. As most of the reprinted articles did not contain any context material for a further explanation of the issues involved this volume again contains various maps, diagrams, and other survey materials to supplement the on-the-spot reports and other contributions of the prize-winners. Thus, an element of diversity is added to the texts...
94
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
ν
Contents of Past Volumes Contents of Future Volumes
xiii xvii
Introduction: The Pulitzer Prizes for International Reporting in the Second Phase of Their Development, 1946-1962 by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
xxi
Editorial Remarks
lxv
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1946 The Post-War Situation and Some Typical Characteristics of the Country
by J. Brooks Atkinson (The New York Times) Introductory Notes The Byrnes Plan and How Moscow Views It America's Aims and Structure in the Soviet Press A System of Permanent Distrust and Its Purpose The Socialist Landscape and Its Climate Russo-American Relations and Their Future Outlook Related Readings
3 4 5 6 8 12 17 20
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1947 The Cultural Situation and How It Is Formed by the Party
by Paul W. Ward (The Sun, Baltimore)
21
Introductory Notes The Russian Sense of Humor and Some of Its Products The Idea of an Ethnic Plurality and Its Reality Religion in Soviet Russia and the Various Churches A 'Purge' in Arts and Its Consequences
22 23 25 29 33
95 'Socialist' Art and How It Is Produced Related Readings
36 40
REPORTS ABOUT INDIA IN 1948 The Country's Way to Sovereignty and the Cultural Impediments
by Price Day (The Sun, Baltimore,)
41
Introductory Notes Britain's Influence on India and Its Remainders Nehru as a Leader of Gentleness and Impatience Pakistan's Situation and Her Future Outlook The Cow and the Caste as Bars for Development Undernourishment and Overpopulation as Main Problems Related Readings
42 43 47 50 54 57 60
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1949 The Structure of the Government and the Way It Acts on the People
by Edmund W. Stevens (The Christian Science Monitor, Boston)
61
Introductory Notes The Supreme Soviet and What It Symbolizes Stalin's Secret Police and a Bitter Paradox The Order of Ascendency and the Favoured Candidates Bureaucracy and the Reversal of an Idea Trade Unions and Their Effects on Production Related Readings
62 63 66 68 70 73 75
REPORTS ABOUT KOREA IN 1950 America's Fight Against Communism and the Conquest of Seoul
by Marguerite Higgins (New York Herald-Tribune)
77
Introductory Notes Korean Resistance and the American Way of Breaking It Vignettes of Terror and the Liberation of Seoul Crowds Cheer and Liberators Inspect Conquered Area Works of Reconstruction and the Communist Practise The Victor's Ceremony and Further Casualties Related Readings
78 79 80 83 85 86 88
96 REPORTS ABOUT KOREA IN 1951 The Final Stage of the War and the Conditions for Peace
by John M. Hightower (The Associated Press)
91
Introductory Notes America's Educational Aim and Her Main Apprehension MacArthur's Policy and the Consequences at Home Plans for an Armistice and America's Precautions Negotiations for Peace and Communist Hospitality Early Negotiations for Peace and Their Main Issues Related Readings
92 93 95 97 98 101 102
REPORTS ABOUT CANADA IN 1952 The Country's Great Fortunes and How They are Exploited
by Austin C. Wehrwein (The Milwaukee Journal)
103
Introductory Notes Raw Materials Grow and Industry Expands The Canadian Stock Market and the Problem of Fraud Canada Starts on Seaway and America Missed the Boat Population Problems and How They Might be Solved A Province of Superlatives and Its Riches Related Readings
104 105 107 111 114 118 122
REPORTS ABOUT KOREA IN 1953 The Front and How the Soldiers Face It
by Jim G. Lucas (Scripps-Howard
Newspapers)
Introductory Notes 'Our Town'and Its Social Order A Basic Rule of War and Changes It Brings Along Nights of Terror and No End to be Seen Replacements Face Strange Country and 'Fear Future' Death-Bringing Planes and a Special Sort of a Bomb Related Readings
125 126 127 128 131 132 135 136
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1954 The Post-Stalin Era and Important Events Connected With His Death
by Harrison E. Salisbury (The New York Times)
137
97 Introductory Notes A New Regime and Tactical Political Changes The Death of Stalin and an Avoided Disaster Beria's Coup and Why It Brought Along His End Numerous Intrigues and a Toast to Justice The New Junta and How It Works Together Related Readings
138 139 146 152 158 163 169
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1955 Changes in the Leadership and Several Important Statements b y Its Members
by J. Kingsbury Smith (International News Service)
171
Introductory Notes Molotow Judges Chinese Conflict and Charges the U. S. Russia's View on Peace and Coexistence With America The Fall of Malenkov and Communist Democracy How Stalin Used to Relax and the Fall of His Brother Soviet Policy and the Role of the Journalists Related Readings
172 173 177 182 185 186 192
REPORTS ABOUT HUNGARY IN 1956 The Civil War and the Exposition of Communism
by Russell Jones ( United Press)
193
Introductory Notes The Ten-Day Revolution and Its Violent End A Ship named'Liberty'and Her Harbour Hope For Western Aid and Widespread Disappointment Masses Fight Fearlessly and Russia Now Sends Planes Hungarian 'Capitalism' and Why It Cannot be Extinguished Related Readings
194 195 197 198 201 203 204
REPORTS ABOUT YUGOSLAVIA IN 1957 Tito's Brand of Communism and Quarrels With Moscow
by Elie Abel (The New York Times)
207
Introductory Notes Yugoslavia's Illusion and How It Is Destroyed A Promised Credit and Its Political Implications Tito's Refusal to Changes and Rumors About a Meeting
208 209 211 213
98 Soviet Fulfills Promise and Opens a New Phase A Secret Meeting and Its Impact on the Future Related Readings
214 215 217
REPORTS ABOUT CUBA IN 1958 The Batista Rule and Rumors About Revolution
by Joseph G. Martin/Philip J. Santora (Daily News, New York)
219
Introductory Notes Batista's Reign of Terror and the Fight for Freedom Official Sadism and Its Various Exponents The Batista Coup and the Fruits of Temptation Cuba's Captive Press and How It Is Run The Dictator and His Counterpart Castro Related Readings
220 221 225 228 232 235 238
REPORTS ABOUT POLAND IN 1959 The Gomulka Government and the Structure of the Warsaw Pact
by Abraham M. Rosenthal (The New York Times)
239
Introductory Notes Gomulka's Move to Russia and the Polish Communism A Historic Event and Its Interpretation Poland's New Territory and How It Develops A Warsaw Pact Discussion and Its Premises Communist Diplomacy and Its Tactical Function Related Readings
240 241 243 245 247 250 251
REPORTS ABOUT THE CONGO IN 1960 A Period of Unrest and Lumumba's Struggle for Unity
by Lynn L. Heinzerling (The Associated Press)
253
Introductory Notes Lumumba's Aims and a Change of Direction Secessionist Movements and The Role of the U. N. Lumumba's Fight for Unity and Pressures From Without A Two-Hour Coup and Its Reported Details The Premier's Comeback and Several New Plans Related Readings
254 255 256 258 260 264 265
99 REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1961 Some Important Political Questions and How They Are Viewed in Communism
by Walter Lippmann (New York Herald-Tribune)
267
Introductory Notes Khrushchev Views Disarmament and Denies Neutrality The Inevitable Run of History and Its Social Changes The German Question and Three Ways of Answering It Communist Philosophy and the Only Real Alternative Two Important Talks and a New Political Philosophy Related Readings
268 269 271 273 277 279 281
REPORTS ABOUT CUBA IN 1962 The Escalation of a Global Crisis and How It Was Managed in Washington
by Harold V. Hendrix (The Miami News)
283
Introductory Notes Soviet Bases in Cuba and America's First Reactions The Cuban Challenge and Reactions in America Russia's Installment Effort and Her Technical Problems An Exhibition of Power and Reasons for an Invasion Early Intelligence and How It Was Handled Related Readings
284 285 287 289 290 294 296
Index
299
101
Outstanding International Press Reporting Volume 3:1963-1977
Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Escalation of the Vietnam War to the East Asian Refugee Problems
by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
Walter de Gruyter Berlin · New York 1986
102
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data (Revised for vol. 3) Outstanding international press reporting Includes bibliographies and indexes. Contents: v. 1. 1928-1945, from the consequences of World War I to the end of World War II v. 3. 1963-1977, from the escalation of the Vietnam War to the East Asian refugee problems. 1. World politics—20th century. 2. Pulitzer prizes. 3. Journalists—United States. 4. Foreign news—United States. I. Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich, 1937 D 445.088 1984 909.82 83-18962 ISBN 3-11-008918-1 (v. 1) CIP-Kurztiteiaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek Outstanding international press reporting : Pulitzer Prize winning articles in foreign correspondence / ed. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - Berlin ; New York : de Gruyter NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 3. 1963-1977: from the escalation of the Vietnam War to the East Asian refugee problems. - 1 9 8 6 . ISBN 3-11-009842-3 Copyright © 1986 by Walter de Gruyter & Co., Berlin 30. All rights reserved, including those of translation into foreign languages. No part of this book may reproduced in any form - by photoprint, microfilm or any other means nor transmitted nor translated into a machine language without written permission from the publisher. - Typesetting and printing: Wagner GmbH, Nördlingen. - Binding: Dieter Mikolai, Berlin. - Cover design: Lothar Hildebrand, Berlin. Printed in Germany.
103
FROM THE PREFACE Following the first two volumes of this edition, which have been published within the last two years, this third volume covers fifteen years, illustrating the development of the Pulitzer Prizes for International Reporting. The documentation and interpretation of the prize awarded journalistic texts fitting into this category now encompass fifty years altogether. This might possibly be considered to be rounded off artificially, but it can be justified in view of the contents, although chronological publications containing several volumes are often difficult to restrict to a certain period of time. I had to face such difficulties with this edition, too, but until now I have always been able to overcome them as regards contents. Whereas the first volume covered the whole period of time up to the end of World War Π and the second volume that of the Cold War, this third part deals with the time from the beginning of the Vietnam War until its aftermath. Although the annually prize-awarded journalistic texts, therefore, can not necessarily represent a systematically interdependent contents, they can, however, be relatively clearly grouped according to particular superior aspects. As far as the origin and the structure of the prize-awarded texts are concerned, some remarkable changes can be noticed, especially for the time covered in this volume: thoroughly investigated background stories increasingly replace a based-on-facts reporting. Now and then, these background stories are characterized by a critical and investigative journalism, as far as this seems to be possible under the partly aggravated circumstances abroad. And it is remarkable, too, that not only accredited, but also traveling correspondents are among the possible prize-winners. One of the editor's greatest and permanent problems with the preceding volumes was to reasonably choose five of the numerous prize-awarded texts written by the respective journalists. This difficulty was reduced, however, in the most recent documented period of time. The application rules for all categories of the Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism state that not more then ten texts from the entire year can be submitted by one author. For that reason, it is possible to present about one half of the prize-awarded texts written by each author...
104
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
v
Contents of Past Volumes Contents of Future Volumes
xiii xvi
Introduction: The Pulitzer Prizes for International Reporting in the Third Phase of Their Development, 1943-1967 by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
xix
Editorial Remarks
lxxi
REPORTS ABOUT VIETNAM IN 1963 Internal Quarrels and Their Impact on the Fratricidal War b y David Halberstam (The New York Times) Introductory Notes The Buddhist Crisis and Its Background A Coup d'Etat and Its Various Reasons The Coup's Development and Its Main Actors Saigon's New Junta and How It Faces the Vietcong A Decisive Phase and Expectations in the Generals Related Readings
3 4 5 11 14 21 25 31
REPORTS ABOUT EASTERN EUROPE IN 1964 The Turn Toward the West and Its Economic Reasons
by Joseph A. Livingston (Philadelphia Bulletin)
33
Introductory Notes Demands for Western Standards and Their Causes Scarcity and Its Role in Communist Philosophy Yugoslavia's Economy and Its Impact on Policy The Soviet Trade System and Why It Must Change The Need For a Dialogue and the Importance of Trade Related Readings
34 35 38 41 44 47 50
105
REPORTS ABOUT VIETNAM IN 1965 The War and Some of Its Typical Stories
by Peter G. Arnett (The Associated
Press)
Introductory Notes A War Movie and Its Real Intentions The Fate of a Flyer and His Brother's Goal Guerilla Warfare and the End of a U.S . Unit Vietcong Prison and Its Fence The Destruction of a Village and Its Reasons Related Readings
53 54 55 56 58 60 62 63
REPORTS ABOUT INDONESIA IN 1966 The Change of Government and How It Was Performed
by R. John Hughes (The Christian Science Monitor)
65
Introductory Notes A Student Revolt and Its Political Target The Fight Against the Establishment and Its Supporters Scenes of Upheaval and Sukarno's Reaction The Generals' Rule and Two Demands to Be Fulfilled Times For Changes and How They Are Prepared Related Readings
66 67 68 70 73 74 75
REPORTS ABOUT THE MIDDLE EAST IN 1967 The Six-Day War and Its World-Political Consequences
by Alfred Friendly (The Washington Post)
11
Introductory Notes Israel's Trouble and the U.S.A.'s Inability to Act An Unusual Plan and Its Various Backgrounds The Story of a Village and Some Theories Social Unity and Its Historic and Present Reasons A Favorable Position and the Fear of a Compromise Related Readings
78 79 82 83 85 87 90
REPORTS ABOUT VIETNAM IN 1968 The Fourth Year of the War and a Case of Atrocity
by William K. Tuohy (Los Angeles Times)
91
106 Introductory Notes A War of Attrition and No Prospect For an End The Creation of a Killer and Its Consequences Anti-Communist Strategy and the Organizations Needed A Victim of Justice and His Last Hopel08 Psychological Problems and How They Are Solved Related Readings
92 93 96 101 105 108 110
REPORTS ABOUT THE UNITED STATES IN 1969 The My Lai Massacre and the Futile Search For Its Reasons
by Seymour M. Hersh (Dispatch News Service)
111
Introductory Notes An Unexpected Order and Its Final Execution Examples of Obedience and the Suppression of Truth A Victim of Discipline and His Victims War Strains and the Production of Killers The Young Americans and the Logic of War Related Readings
112 113 116 119 122 124 127
REPORTS ABOUT SOUTH AFRICA IN 1970 The Apartheid System and the Misery of the Black People
by Jimmie L. Hoagland (The Washington Post)
129
Introductory Notes The Country's Rulers and Their Tribal Origin A System of Repression and Its Products The Soweto People and Their Socio-Cultural Structure Apartheid and the Economic Problems It Causes Separate Development and Its Political Functions Related Readings
130 131 138 142 145 148 153
REPORTS ABOUT PAKISTAN IN 1971 The Fratricidal War and the Problems Left After Its Settlement
by Peter R. Kann (The Wall Street Journal)
155
Introductory Notes A Fight For Independence and the Role of the U.S.A. Several Options For a Settlement and Their Chances An Absurd War and Why It Can't Be Finished Peacefully
156 157 162 168
107 Bangla Desh's New Rulers and Their Rhetoric Ability Substantial Problems and the Lack of Able Leaders Related Readings
172 175 180
REPORTS ABOUT RED CHINA IN 1972 The Unexpected Nixon Visit and Its Most Important Stations
by Max Frankel (The New York Times)
181
Introductory Notes Nixon's Arrival and a Modest Reception Ceremony An Unexpected Audience and Premier Chou's Formula Plans For Intensified Contacts and a Splendid-Show The End of the Visit and a Final Communique A Critical Issue and a Step For Its Settlement Related Readings
182 183 187 190 193 195 200
REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1973 Some Characteristic Traits of the Country and the Mentality of the People
by Hedrick L. Smith (The New York Times)
201
Introductory Notes A Dictator and His Posthumous Comeback Moscow's Satellites and Their Divergent Structures Striking Contrasts and Their Historical Backgrounds A Soviet Holiday and Its Specific Conditions The Story of a Dissident and Its Conclusions Related Readings
202 203 208 212 217 220 231
REPORTS ABOUT NORTH AFRICA IN 1974 The Famine Areas and Their Technical and Cultural Problems
by Ovie Carter / William C. Mullen (Chicago Tribune)
233
Introductory Notes A Famine Disaster and the Importance of Allah Mismanagement of Supplies and Its Various Reasons The Tuareg Tribe and Its Dispersion By Drought A Fertile Valley and Its Scourge Technical Needs and Hopes For America Related Readings
234 235 239 244 247 249 253
108 REPORTS ABOUT CAMBODIA IN 1975 The Communists' Take-Over and Some Accompanying Circumstances
by Sydney H. Schanberg (The New York Times)
255
Introductory Notes A Besieged City and Its Daily Routines The Food Shortage and Its Effect on the Children A War of Profit and a War of Death Phnom Penh's Liberation and Some Incisive Changes An Embassy Prison and the Life of Its Occupants Related Readings
256 257 259 262 265 272 275
REPORTS ABOUT GREAT BRITAIN IN 1976 The Struggle of the National Minorities and the Country's Economic Problems
by George F. Will (The Washington Post)
277
Introductory Notes Organized Terror and Ulster's Permanent Crisis British Socialism and Its Effects on the Economy Scottish Nationalism and Its Various Arguments A Softening Opposition and a Change of Direction Economic Problems and Their Basic Structures Related Readings
278 279 281 282 284 285 287
REPORTS ABOUT THAILAND IN 1977 The Boat People and the Trouble They Are Causing the Western World
Index
by Henry Kamm (The New York Times)
289
Introductory Notes A Ship Called "Good Luck" and the Plight of Its Passengers The Refugees' Fate and How the Children Face It "Hospitable" Thailand and the Outlook of Its Guests An American Aid Program and Its Unintentional Effects A Mathematical Exercise and Its Backgrounds Related Readings
290 291 293 295 299 300 302 303
The Best of Pulitzer Prize News Writing
by William D. Sloan, Valarie McCrary and Johanna Cleary
Publishing Horizons Columbus, Ohio, 1986
Copyright 1986, PUBLISHING HORIZONS, INC. 2950 North High Street P.O. Box 02190 Columbus, Ohio 43202 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder. Printed in the United States. 1234 7654 Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Main entry under title: The Best of Pulitzer Prize news writing. 1. Journalism—United States. 2. Pulitzer prizes. I. Sloan, W. David (William David), 1947- . II. McCrary, Valarie, 1960- . III. Cleary, Johanna, 1961- . PN4726.B383 1986 071'.3 85-19410 ISBN 0-942280-14-8
111
From the Preface Why an anthology of news stories? The answer is simple. It is a truism that what one reads is reflected in how one writes. That concept is accepted in "literature"—"The way to learn to write," would-be authors are told, "is to read"—and aspiring novelists, poets, and essayists are encouraged to read good writing. What works in the literary genres is no less practicable in journalism. If a journalist wants to turn out ordinary writing, he or she should read ordinary news stories. If the goal is to produce superior writing, the journalist should read examples of superior news writing. There is the reason for this anthology. Few better sources of superior writing exist than those news stories which have won the Pulitzer Prize. The editors hope this volume of selected winners will provide a source of models of news writing for the journalist who wishes to be good. The first Pulitzer Prizes were awarded in 1917. For each of the first twelve years only one award for reporting was given. Since 1929 the categories have been increased, and more than two hundred reporters have been recognized with Pulitzer Prizes for "distinguished" reporting. Certainly the most prestigious awards in the field of journalism, the Pulitzers each year attract scores of entries from newspapers, ranging from weeklies to metropolitan dailies. To be selected for a Pulitzer instantly bestows professional distinction on a reporter. Most awards have been given for the reporting effort that went into stories, rather than for writing quality. To be sure, though, a multitude of winners have been marked by excellent writing style. Collected in this anthology are more than seventy of the articles that impress the editors as exemplars of superior writing. A few of these stories have appeared in other collections, either in part or in full. The editors of this anthology chose to reprint all selections in their entirety to do justice to the writing skills of the authors...
112
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface News Writing That Wins Prizes
xi xv
Parti NARRATIVE WRITING 1. The Unknown Soldier Is Laid to Rest
1
Kirke L. Simpson
2. A Lynch Mob's "Swift and Terrible" Retribution Royce
8
Brier
3. A Funeral Pyre in Germany
17
Frederick T. Birchall
4. An Emergency Appendectomy Under Enemy Waters George
5. American Soldiers Face Japanese Willing To Die Ira
22
Weiler
27
Wolfen
6. Nagasaki Annihilated
32
William L. Laurence
7. A Hate Organization
38
Edward T. Folliard
8. A Neighborhood in a Killer's Path Meyer
9. Marines in Korea: Suffering and Valor Keyes
54
Morin
11. The Integration of Central High Relman
51
Beech
10. Korean Village Collapses Under Communism Relman
42
Berger
57
Morin
12. The Death of an Opera Star
61
Sanche de Gramont
13. The Death of a Marine Column Peter
Arnett
14. The Death and Burial of Private Gibson John
65 68
Fetterman
15. A Fatal Journey Through the Brain Jon Franklin
73
113
16. A Cover-up of America's Worst Nuclear Accident Philadelphia Inquirer Staff 17. The Journey of an Illegal Alien JohnM. Crewdson 18. What Makes High Tech Fly Peter Rinearson 19. "I Lay Dying" Nan Robertson
82 87 95 105
Part II INVESTIGATIVE WRITING 20. A Monstrous, Medieval Prison Harold A. Littledale 21. Civil War in the Coal Fields John J. LearyJr. 22. Justice Hugo Black and the KKK Ray Sprigle 23. Rent Gougers in Welfare City Ed May 24. The Truth Behind Batista Joseph Martin and Phil Santora 25. How To Help One's Family Vance Trimble 26. The Perils of Used-Car Buying Miriam Ottenberg 27. A Victim of Mistaken Identity John Frasca 28. The Innocent Freed Gene Miller 29. Behind the My Lai Massacre Seymour M. Hersh 30. "Profiteers of Human Suffering" William Jones 31. The End of the Line for the Mentally 111 Acel Moore and Wendell Rawls Jr. 32. A New Religion Sneaks into Town Charles Stafford
125 129 135 141 144 149 154 160 165 173 178 182 196
114
Part III PROFILE WRITING 33. A Portrait of a Pope Anne O'HareMcCormick 34. Stalin as Described by His Mother H. R. Knickerbocker 35. The Death of Captain Waskow Ernie Pyle 36. The Death of Sgt. Shorty Plotnick Harold V. Boyle 37. An Interview with Gandhi Price Day 38. An Interview with Khrushchev Walter Lippmann 39. The Two Faces of a Terrorist Lucinda Franks and Thomas Powers 40. "..Who Lived in the House that Bertha Built" Margo Huston 41. An Old Man's Dream Madeleine Blais
204 212 220 222 224 230 234 238 247
Part IV DESCRIPTIVE WRITING 42. The Biggest Shadow on Earth Magner White 43. On Top of the Bottom of the World Russell Owen 44. Veterans March in Color and Glory Detroit Free Press Staff 45. Addis Ababa Waits for War Will Barber 46. The Liberation of Paris MarkS. Watson 47. A "Cargo of Liquid Life" Jack S. McDowell 48. Hiroshima after the Bomb Homer Bigart 49. Town of War Jim Lucas 50. In the Trail of a Tornado Tom Lucier
264 267 273 295 300 304 309 314 316
115 51. A Numbing Visit to a Death Camp A. M. Rosenthal 52. An American City Put to Torch . Robert Richardson A Fatally Tangled Life 53. J. Anthony Lukas 54. Four Days of Rage Tom Fitzpatrick 55. A Destructive Force Broken Loose GaylordD. Shaw 56. A Land Frozen in Time Richard Ben Cramer 57. The Refugee Life of Death and Destitution Joel Brinkley 58. A Nation in the Grip of Fear John Darnton 59. The Aftermath of a Flood Dan Luzadder
318 321 323 334 337 340 344 349 353
PartV
ANALYTICAL WRITING 60. Why Germany Hated America in 1916 Herbert Bayard Swope 61. In Search of a Haven in a Foreign Land Lauren D. Lyman 62. Germany's First Blitzkrieg and the Collapse of Poland Otto Tolischus 63. Life Behind the Iron Curtain Paul W. Ward 64. Security, Loyalty, and Guilt by Suspicion Bert Andrews 65. An Ill-Conceived Plot To Take over Russia Harrison Ε. Salisbury 66. The Vietnam Nightmare Begins Malcolm W. Browne 67. Incompetent and Callous Justice Howard James 68. A Listless Life of Numbing Hunger William Mullen
359 365 370 372 377 381 389 398 411
116 69. The Preface to the Presidency Walter R. Mears 70. Images of War Thomas Friedman 71. How the Federal Bureaucracy Works SaulPett
The Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism 1917-1985 A Guide to the Microfilm Edition
by Mary E. Morrison
University Microfilms International Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1986
118
Editor: Mary Ε. Morrison Editorial Assistant: Terry Berzanskis Technical Support: Rose Demyan-Bruetsch, Kerri Lutz, Pat Deaton, Elaine Mack
© 1986 University Microfilms Incorporated All Rights Reserved
ISBN: 0-8357-0709-1
For more information on this collection or any University Microfilm research collection, please write: University Microfilms International 300 North Zeeb Road Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106
Cover photo by Steve Kuzma. Typewriter courtesy of Mr. & Mrs. Lee Atkins.
119
From the Preface
Toward The End of
his life, Joseph Pulitzer, a nineteenth century newspaper publisher who changed the face of American journalism through his ownership and management of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the New York World, formulated a section of his will that would establish a School of Journalism at Columbia University. In the process, he also provided for an annual prize competition to reward the best in journalism and literature Pulitzer died in 1911. Because the will stipulated that the School of Journalism had to be in operation for three years before the first Pulitzer Prizes could be awarded, it was in 1917 that the first winners were announced (for work done in 1916). Since that time a remarkable number of major events in the twentieth century have received their first push into the history books with the Pulitzer Committee's acknowledgement of the superb journalism that recorded them. Reports on the capture of Leopold and Loeb, Byrd's adventures in Antarctica, Hitler's rise to power, dropping the atom bomb on Nagasaki, the integration of Little Rock's Central High School, and the dilemma of Baby Jane Doe are as compelling to read today as when they first appeared in the headlines. Thorough coverage is given to the World Wars, Korea and Vietnam, as well as to revolts and uprisings in such diverse places as Hungary, Detroit, Ethiopia, Watts and Indonesia. The entire spectrum of human malfeasance and skulduggery is exposed, from individual swindlers such as Charles Ponzi to the wholesale corruption and subversion of institutions from city halls to labor unions to Watergate. The U.S. fascination with the Soviet Union is explored in depth with a vast array of reports beginning in the early thirties and continuing to the present. Finally, thought-provoking editorials and columns, searing photographs and piercing cartoons all echo the heartbeat of the American consciousness for the last sixty-eight years...
120
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
i
The Microfilm Collection
ii
How To Use The Guide
ii
Reel Number Index
1
Year of Award Index
23
News Organization Index
45
Author Index
65
Prize Category Index
89
Subject Index
109
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 1
International Reporting 1928 - 1985: From the Activities of the League of Nations to present-day Global Problems
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G - Saur München • London • New York • Oxford · Paris 1987
CIP-Kurztitelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek The Pulitzer prize archive: a history and anthology of award-winning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. München ; London ; New York ; Oxford ; Paris : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Pt. A. Reportage journalism. Vol. 1. International reporting 1928 - 1985 : from the activities of the League of Nations to present-day global problems / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1987 ISBN 3-598-30171-5
© 1987 by K. G. Saur Verlag KG Alle Rechte vorbehalten • All Rights Strictly Reserved Jede Art der Vervielfältigung ohne Erlaubnis des Verlages ist unzulässig. Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Mainz Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30171-5 (Vol. 1) ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
123
FROM THE PREFACE A few years ago Michael I. Sovern, President of Columbia University, explained that the history of the Pulitzer Prizes "records two-thirds of a century of outstanding achievement in American journalism, letters and music. It is a history of courage... It is a history of creativity... And it is a history of those who write our history - journalists covering breaking stories, creative artists whose visions affected the way all of us see, commentators and scholars seeking meaning in the effluent of time. Joseph Pulitzer, reporter, editor, publisher and founder of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia, was first and foremost a journalist. But his horizons, like those of all good journalists, extended far beyond his own profession and when he decided to link a system of prizes to a university, he did so in the express hope that this would encourage "public service, public morals, American literature and the advancement of education.' All these things, I am convinced, the Pulitzer Prizes have done." The national and international prestige the Pulitzer Prizes have had for nearly seven decades supports this judgment. For some decades the prize system lived on its reputation and for a time the awarding procedures and the honored journalistic texts were not revealed - with the exception of the books awarded the Pulitzer Prize: they were available to everybody. It was not until the end of the 1950s that John Hohenberg, Secretary of the Advisory Board on the Pulitzer Prizes from 1954 to 1976, made some of the relevant texts available. His privileged position guaranteed him access to the materials and predestined him to tackle such a task. Hohenberg started to publish these materials in an edition of selected and awarded contributions ("The Pulitzer Prize Story," New York 1959, 375pp.). A description of the development of the whole prize awarding system ("The Pulitzer Prizes," New York - London 1974, 434 pp.), was followed by a continuation of the first edition ("The Pulitzer Prize Story II," New York 1980, 375 pp.).
124 Although John Hohenberg tried to give a survey of the Pulitzer Prize system, none of the volumes he published meet the requirements of a systematic documentation because the publications are selective, with only a relatively small number of the prize-winners" texts being presented. Hohenberg, in fact, seems to present only those texts which appeared interesting or important to himself without giving any selection criteria to justify his choice. Thus Hohenberg*s publications - in spite of their undoubted importance-only call attention to some of the. prize-winning texts. Often it remains unclear whether the texts or the stories they referred to were of importance. Unlike Hohenberg's unsystematic and eclectic procedure, the new series "The Pulitzer Prize Archive" is based on a systematic principle of edition: each volume of the series focuses on only one of the great Pulitzer Prize categories? these are analysed chronologically and documented...
125
TABLE OF CONTENTS
V
PREFACE INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
Χ Ν Π
Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR INTERNATIONAL REPORTING
XVII
SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA
Ι 2
FROM GENEVA (SWITZERLAND) IN 1928 By Paul S. Mowrer, The Chicago Daily
3 News
VITAL NATIONAL INTERESTS MAY CAUSE AN INTERNATIONAL DRAMA FROM PARIS (FRANCE) IN 1929 By Lei and Stowe, New lork Berald-Tribune
Τ
GERMAN REPARATION ANNUITIES TO BELGIUM ARE ACCEPTED FROM NOVGOROD (SOVIET UNION) IN 1930 By Hubert R. Knickerbocker, New lork Evening
8 17
Poet
FORD SEEMS TO FIT IN THE SOVIET FIVE-YEAR-PLAN SCHEDULE FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1931 By Walter Duranty, The New York Times
18 25
SOCIALISM IS NUMBER ONE IN THE SOVIET UNION PROGRAM FROM BERLIN (GERMANY) IN 1932 By Edgar A. Mowrer, The Chicago
4
26 31
Daily
News
HITLER SEES HIS CHANCE TO BECOME THE NATION'S DICTATOR . FROM BERLIN (GERMANY) IN 1933 By Frederick T. Blrchall, The New lork
32 35
Times
AN INCENDIARY FIRE WRECKS THE GERMAN REICHSTAG BUILDING
36
126 FROM WASHINGTON, D.C. (UNITED STATES) IN 1954 By Arthur Krock, The New lork Timea TRADE BANS WAR IN THE EYES OF THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WINNER FROM ADDIS ABABA (ETHIOPIA) IN 1935 By Wilfred C. Barber, Chicago Daily
45
FROM LIEGE (BELGIUM) IN 1936 By Anne O'Hare McCormick, The New lork
46 W
Times
PEACE FACES INSTABILITY ON THE GERMAN-BELGIAN FRONTIER . FROM WASHINGTON, D.C. (UNITED STATES) IN 1937 By Arthur Krock, The New lork Times PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT INTENDS TO SHIELD AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
50 53 54 63
Press
HERMANN GÖRING IS STILL NUMBER TWO IN THE THIRD REICH .. FROM BERLIN (GERMANY) IN 1939 By Otto D. Tolischus, The New lork
42
Tribune
THE COUNTRY IS TRYING HARD TO BUY U.S. AND JAPANESE WEAPONS
FROM BERLIN (GERMANY) IN 1938 By Louis P. Lochner, The Associated
41
64 67
Times
ADOLF HITLER TRIES TO 'DEAL' POLAND A BLOW WITH RUSSIA .
68
FROM VARIOUS PARTS OF THE WORLD IN 1940 By Numerous Journalists, All American Newspapers SOME OF THE FUTURE HIGHLIGHTS OF AMERICAN FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS FROM RANGOON (BURMA) IN 1941 By Carlos P. Romulo, The Philippines
75
Herald
POLITICAL LEADERS TEND TO SHOW A PRO-JAPANESE ATTITUDE .
FROM THE SOLOMONS (PACIFIC) IN 1942 By Hanson W. Baldwin, The New lork Times U.S. NAVAL SUPERIORITY MUST BE THE GOAL IN THE REGION ..
76
EX 82
127 FROM TUNIS (TUNESIA) IN 1943 By Ernest T. Pyle, Scripps-Boward
87 newspapers
WAR SEEMS TO HAVE ITS OWN PECULIAR SOUNDS ON THE FRONT . FROM LONDON (ENGLAND) IN 1944 By Harold V. Boyle, The Associated
Press
DURING WARTIME THE CAPITAL'S BLACK MARKETS ARE BOOMING . FROM BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA) IN 1945 By Arnaldo Cortesi, The New York Times
FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1946 By Eddy L. K. Gil more, The Associated
Press
FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1947 By Paul W. Ward, The Sun
104 107
A GREAT MANY RUSSIANS TRY TO MIGRATE TO THE UNITED STATES FROM DELHI (INDIA) IN 1948 By Price Day, The Sun
108 1«
THE COUNTRY SEES ITSELF AS THE CHAMPION OF ENTIRE ASIA .
114 121
Science
Monitor
A WESTERN ATMOSPHERE PREVAILS IΝ RUSS IA 1 S 'FORBIDDEN ZONE'
122 127
Press
PARALLEL THIRTY-EIGHT HAS BECOME A BLOOD-RED LINE NOW .. FROM SEOUL (KOREA) IN 1951 By John M. Hightower, The Associated
100 103
STALIN DEMANDS COUNTER-PROPAGANDA AGAINST 'WARMONGERS' .
FROM SEOUL (KOREA) IN 1950 By Rel man G. Mori η, The Associated
92 99
FREEDOM SEEMS TO RUN OUT UNDER WAR 'SECURITY 1
FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1949 By Edmund W. Stevens, The Christian
88
128 "3
Press
GENERAL MACARTHUR TRIES TO TAKE OVER U.S. POLICY IN WARZONE
134
128 FROM OTTAWA (CANADA) IN 1952 By Austin C. Wehrwein, The Milwaukee
137 Journal
THE COUNTRY'S LIBERAL PARTY PREFERS A RULE'
'BUSINESSMAN'S
FROM HEARTBREAK RIDGE (KOREA) IN 1953 By Jim G. Lucas, Scripps-Howard Newspapers
143
NINE MEN FIGHT FOR THEIR LIFES RETURNING FROM A PATROL . FROM YAKUTSK (SOVIET UNION) IN 1954 By Harrison E. Salisbury, The Hew York
147
Service
FROM BUDAPEST (HUNGARY) IN 1956 By Russell Jones, United Press
158 I65
RUSSIAN DIVISIONS ARE CRUSHING DOWN THE PEOPLE'S REVOLT FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1957 By James B. Reston, The Sew York Times
166 I69
THE COUNTRY IS WARNED U.S. WILL DEFEND TURKEY. IF ATTACKED FROM HAVANNA (CUBA) IN 1958 By Joseph G. Martin and Philip J. Santora, New York Daily News POLITICIANS GATHER PERSONAL PROFIT FROM CONSTRUCTION GRAFT
170 175
176 181
Times
NIXON AND GOMULKA TALKS ARE SAID TO IMPROVE RELATIONS .. FROM LEOPOLDVILLE (CONGO) IN 1960 By Lynn L. Heinzerling, The Associated
148 157
Sews
A JOURNALIST'S CONCLUSIONS AFTER HIS STAY IN THE KREMLIN
FROM WARSAW (POLAND) IN 1959 By Abraham M. Rosenthal, The New York
144
Times
M.V.D. IS THE UNDOUBTED MASTER IN SIBERIA'S PRISON CAMPS FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1955 By William R. Hearst, Jr., International
138
182 M
Press
A PRESENCE OF U.N. TROOPS MEANS A RISK OF LIVES NOW
188
129 FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1961 By W a l t e r L i p p m a n n , New
York
191
Berald-Tribune
AN INTERVIEW WITH KHRUSHCHEV ON WORLD POLITICAL ISSUES . FROM MIAMI, FLA, (UNITED STATES) IN 1962 By Harold V. H e n d r i x , The Miami
197
Sews
LATIN AMERICAN GUERRILLA FORCES ARE PROVIDED WIΤΗ WEAPONS FROM SAIGON (VIETNAM) IN 1963 Press
A BUDDHIST-LED PROVISIONAL REGIME CONTROLS THE COUNTRY
.
FROM PARIS (FRANCE) IN 1964 Bulletin
WESTERN EUROPE SEES A STRONG PULL OF THE U.S. DOLLAR ... FROM SAIGON (VIETNAM) IN 1965
210 215
Peter G. A r n e t t , The Associated
Press
U.S. MILITARY LEADERS FIND THEMSELVES ON THE WRONG TRACK
Christian
216 221
FROM JAKARTA (INDONESIA) IN 1966 Science
Monitor
THE COUNTRY FINDS ITSELF RUMBLING WITH TORMENT AND UPHEAVAL
Washington
222 225
FROM JERUSALEM (ISRAEL) IN 1967 By A l f r e d F r i e n d l y , The
204 209
By Joseph A. L i v i n g s t o n , Philadelphia
By R. John H u g h e s , The
198 203
By M a l c o l m W. B r o w n e , The Associated
By
192
Post
WESTERN POWERS ARE GIVEN THREE WEEKS TO OPEN AQABA GULF
226
FROM HUE (VIETNAM) IN 1968 By W i l l i a m K. T u o h y , Los Angeles
Times
U.S. MARINES ARE IN NEED OF HELP IN THE WARZONE FROM WASHINGTON, D.C, (UNITED STATES) IN 1969 By
Seymour M. H e r s h , Dispatch
Hews
230 235
Service
AMERICANS WITNESSED U.S. BUTCHERY OF VIETNAMESE CIVILIANS
236
130 FROM PRETORIA (SOUTH AFRICA) IN 1970 By Jimmie L. Hoagland, The Washington
241 Post
NONWHITES HAVE NO CHANCE LEFT IN THE APARTHEID SYSTEM .. FROM DACCA (BANGLA DESH) IN 1971 By Peter R. Kann, The Wall Street
249 Journal
WAR IS NO SOLUTION FOR ONE O F THE WORLD'S NATURAL VICTIMS FROM PEKING (CHINA) IN 1972 By Max Frankel, The mew York
250 257
Times
NIXON'S VISIT HELPS TO IMPROVE BILATERAL RELATIONS FROM MOSCOW (SOVIET UNION) IN 1973 By Hedrick L. Smith, The Sew York Times
258 263
EXPENSIVE CARS ARE LEONID I. BREZHNEV'S GREATEST WEAKNESS FROM LUDHIANA (INDIA) IN 1974 By William C. Mullen, Chioago
242
264 271
Tribune
CLIMATE CHANGES ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR SEVERE FOOD SHORTAGES FROM PHNOM PENH (CAMBODIA) IN 1975 By Sydney H. Schanberg, The Sew York
277 Times
FIVE YEARS AFTER SIHANOUK THE COUNTRY SUFFERS FROM MISERY FROM NOWHERE (WORLDWIDE) IN 1976 By Nobody, No Newspaper or News Agency
278 283
REPORT O F THE INTERNATIONAL REPORTING JURY OF MARCH 4, 1977 FROM KUALA LUMPUR (MALAYSIA) IN 1977 By Henry Kamm, The New York Times
— , . . . —
SOUTHEAST ASIA'S COASTS ARE CLOSED FOR DESPERATE REFUGEES FROM CAIRO (EGYPT) IN 1978 By Richard B. Cramer, The Philadelphia
272
284 285
286 291
Inquirer
SOMETHING MUST BE WRONG WITH A HUNDRED PERCENT DEMOCRACY
292
131 FROM ARANYAPRATHET (THAILAND) IN 1979 By Joel Brinkley, The Courier-Journal
299
FOR NUMEROUS PEOPLE THE NATION'S TRAGEDY IS A BONANZA .. FROM GUATEMALA CITY (GUATEMALA) IN 1980 By Shirley Christian, The Miami Herald
303
U.S. HELP IS OUT OF SIGHT WHILE THE COUNTRY IS BOILING . FROM WARSAW (POLAND) IN 1981 By John Darnton, The Sew lork
300
304 309
Times
KEY DECISIONS ARE LAID TO THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE ARMY FROM BEIRUT (LEBANON) IN 1982 By Loren Jenkins, The Washington
310 315
Poet
MOSLEM QUARTERS ARE NOW OCCUPIED BY MILITARY FORCES FROM AMMAN (JORDAN) IN 1983 By Karen E. House, The Wall Street
316 321
Journal
POLITICAL PROBLEMS IN THE REGION ARE FAR FROM BEING SOLVED FROM ADDIS ABABA (ETHIOPIA) IN 1984 By Josh Friedman, Neweday
325
A DESPERATE CONTINENT FACES DEATH OF STARVATION FROM MANILA (THE PHILIPPINES) IN 1985 By Pete Carey/Katherine Ellison/Lewis M. Simons, San Mercury News
322
326 333 Joee
THE POVERTY-STRICKEN COUNTRY FACES A CAPITAL FLIGHT
334
WINNERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL REPORTING AWARD, 1986 - 2000 - SPACE FOR NOTES -
342
INDEX
345
The Pulitzer Prizes
Volume 1: 1987
by Kendall J. Wills
Simon & Schuster New York 1987
Copyright © 1987 by Kendall J . Wills All rights reserved including che right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form Simon and Schuster/Touchstone Books Published by Simon & Schuster Inc. Simon jc Schuster building Rockefeller Center 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10020 SIMON A N D SCHUSTER, tOtlCMSTONE and colopkohs ite itgisttted kridetoatks of Simon it Schustef- Inc. Designed by tionni Leon Manufactured in the United States of America 10 10
9 9
8
8
7
6
5
4
7
6
5
4
3
ISSN 0896-2197 ISBN 0-671-65956-1 0-671-64466-1 Pbk.
3
2
1 Pbk.
135
FROM THE PREFACE Featured in these pages are the latest members of journalism's most exclusive, yet unofficial, club—that special group of people who share the honor of having their names forever linked with the phrase "Pulitzer Prize winner." As American journalism's most prestigious awards, the Pulitzer Prizes have been synonymous with the best in the business for nearly 70 years. Until now, though, the year's award-winning articles, photographs and editorial cartoons have never been collected in a single publication. It is my hope that this volume, in addition to paying tribute to the winners, will become a long-term record of some of the best journalism of the year and expand the audience of any individual contribution beyond its usual circulation to national readership. Editors and reporters can find practical lessons in these articles, and aspiring journalists may study them and learn from the reporting and writing techniques. Those outside the journalism profession will discover that the Pulitzer-winning selections are a good read and remain timely even as the stories continue to unfold. Since the earliest of times, mankind has had a passion to record the events of the day. Yet what constitutes "news," and the methods of gathering it, continue to change. Today, history is recorded instantly in words and photographic images, and the meaning and consequences of each day's events are given immediate analysis. Journalists are already researching, reporting and writing articles that will be chosen as the outstanding Pulitzer Prize-winning works next year. Modern journalism is also, by nature, ephemeral. Today's headlines are quickly discarded as tomorrow's news steals our attention. This volume offers an opportunity to step back, briefly, to note some of the major events of our time and to celebrate outstanding achievement in one of the oldest professions.
136
Although this is the first complete collection of the 1987 Pulitzer Prizes in journalism, the book represents neither a beginning nor an end. The Pulitzer Prizes, established by a grant from Joseph Pulitzer and administered by Columbia University, were first awarded in 1 9 1 7 , and the Pulitzer Prize Board has conferred hundreds of awards since then. This collection of photographs, editorial cartoons and writings is the first in what will be a series of annual anthologies. Only the journalism categories are included in the anthology, because many of the Pulitzer Prizes in the arts and literature categories are printed elsewhere. The pieces published here are reproduced in their entirety and represent a solid sample of each winner's work—a sample that should satisfy even readers with the most hearty appetite for journalism... I have not tried to critique the winning works; that is left to the reader. Each chapter is introduced by the winner's description of the story behind the story—or the story behind the photos or cartoons, as the case may be. These accounts provide fascinating background to some of the most important journalism of the year and give insight into how the journalists turned their work into prize winners. The winning selections are followed by biographical sketches of the contributors, who, after all, the book is really about.
137
TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION PULITZER PRIZE BOARD MEMBERS SPECIAL CITATION TO JOSEPH PULITZER JR.
ιι 17 19
ONE
"Flying High—Pilots on Drugs" 1987 Winner in the Public Service Category The Pittsburgh Press Andrew Schneider, Matthew Brelis
21
TWO
"The Goodyear War" 63 1987 Winner in the General News Reporting Category Akron Beacon Journal Staff
THREE
"Evidence of Innocence" 121 1987 Winner in the Investigative Reporting Category The Philadelphia Inquirer John Woestendiek "Disorder in the Court" 167 1987 Winner in the Investigative Reporting Category The Philadelphia Inquirer H. G. Bissinger, Daniel R. Biddle, Fredric N . Tulsky
FOUR
FIVE
"Bloom County" 237 1987 Winner in the Editorial Cartooning Category The Washington Post Berke Breathed "The Contra Connection" 1987 Winner in the National Reporting Category The Miami Herald Staff" "The Challenger Explosion" 1987 Winner in the National Reporting Category The New York Times Staff
247
281
138
SIX
"Censored in South Africa" 329 1987 Winner in the International Reporting Category Los Angeles Times Michael Parks
SEVEN
"People Power in the Philippines" 377 1987 Winner in the Spot News Photography Category San Francisco Examiner Kim Komenich
EIGHT
"Shattered Dreams" 385 1987 Winner in the Feature Photography Category The Des Moines Register David Peterson
NINE
TEN
ELEVEN
TWELVE
THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN
"Sunrise on the Border" 1987 Winner in the Editorial Writing Category The Tribune of San Diego Jonathan Freedman
39 1
"Critic's Choice" 1987 Winner in the Criticism Category Los Angeles Times Richard Eder
4"
"Political Prescriptions" 1987 Winner in the Commentary Category The Washington Post Charles Krauthammer
429
"Mediterranean Patrol" 1987 Winner in the Feature Writing Category The Philadelphia Inquirer Steve Twomey
441
"Altered Fates" 465 1987 Winner in the Explanatory Journalism Category Chicago Tribune Jeff Lyon, Peter Gorner "The Fall of the House of Bingham" 54 τ 1987 Winner in the Specialized Journalism Category The New York Times Alex S. Jones
ABOUT THE WINNERS
373
Julian Harris and the Columbus Enquirer-Sun The Consequences of Winning the Pulitzer Prize
by Gregory C. Lisby
University of South Carolina Press Columbia, S.C., 1988
An AEJMC Publication JOURNALISM MONOGRAPHS is one of six publications of the Association for Education in Journalism and Maas Communication: Journalism Quarterly (Founded in 1924); Journalism Educator (founded in 1946); Journalism Abstracts (founded in 1963); Journalism Monographs (founded in 1966); Journalism Directory (founded in 1983); and aejmc News, the organization's newsletter. JOURNALISM MONOGRAPHS was supported for its first two years by a gift from the University of Texas, and until 1979 by the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism. Most editions of JOURNALISM MONOGRAPHS are still in print and may be ordered from the Association. Microform and photocopies are also available through University Microfilms International, 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Please indicate series number, author and title when ordering single copies. Monographs appearing here are regularly abstracted and indexed in Historical Abstracts, America: History and Life and Resources in Education.
(aejmc) Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication 16?1 College Street u n v e r w y ot South Q n t t n e C O u n t e . SC SM0»0851 (803) 777 m »
Jennifer McGffl Executive Director
Judy Hall Subscription Manager Subscription Information
Address changes must reach the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication 30 days prior to the actual change of address to insure proper delivery. Copies undelivered because of address change will not be replaced. Other claims for undelivered copies must be made within four months of publication. You must give old address and zip code as well as new address on changes. Subscriptions are nonrefundable. Subscription Rates: US individual $20; US institution $25; Foreign individual $25; and Foreign institution $30 (air mafl surcharge, $15). Single issues, $5 (air mail surcharge $3). POSTMASTER: Send address correction form to AEJMC, 1621 College St, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208-0251. JOURNALISM MONOGRAPHS is published serially by AEJMC in Columbia, SC 29208-0251. Copyright 1988 by the Association for Education in Journalism and Maas Communication. ISSN 0022-5525
141
FROM THE PREFACE
The Columbus (Georgia) Enquirer-Sun was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1926 for the most disinterested and meritorious public service rendered in its brave and energetic fight against the Ku Klux Klan, against the enactment of a [l]aw barring the teaching of evolution, against dishonest and incompetent public officials and for justice to the Negro and against lynching. It was the first small city daily to be so honored, the award a result of "a Southern man returning to his sunny native soil to try o u t . . . his metropolitan newspaper experience." Newspaperman Julian LaRose Harris, in the opinion of his wife and colleague, was "responsible for a glorious episode in the history of the modern press in America." Others referred to him as the William Allen White of the South, ' 'a voice crying in the wildreness," and "one of the two or three most useful Georgians living."' Journalist Francis Paul wrote in a national periodical that "if there were more editors like Julian Harris in Georgia, and in the nation at large, the journalistic profession would be a more worthy one." In Columbus, however, Harris and his newspaper were "both dearly beloved and terribly hated."... While other researchers have examined the specific elements of the campaigns for which the Enquirer-Sun won the Pulitzer Prize, no one has chronicled the consequences of that honor. Such is the intent of this monograph. Most of the material contained herein was obtained from the Julian and Julia Collier Harris Papers, housed in the Special Collections Division of the Robert W. Woodruff Library for Advanced Studies at Emory University in Atlanta; the Pulitzer Prize files, housed in the Columbia University Library system (Journalism Building) at Columbia University in New York City; the newspaper library of the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer in Columbus, Georgia; and from interviews with survivors of the events chronicled herein...
142
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
1
Columbus During the 1920s
2
Harris and the Enquirer-Sun
4
An 'Intolerable' Situation
5
Pulitzer Prize Recognition
8
Southern Sensitivities Offended
11
Worsening Financial Problems
15
The Harrises Assessed
18
Conclusions
20
NOTES
21
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 2
National Reporting 1941 - 1 9 8 6 : From Labor Conflicts to the Challenger Disaster
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München • London · New York · Paris 1988
CIP-Titelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of award-winning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. München ; London ; New York; Paris : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Pt. A. Reportage journalism. Vol. 2. National reporting 1941 - 1 9 8 6 : from labor conflicts to the Challenger disaster / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 8 8 ISBN 3-598-30172-3
Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K. G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co KG, München 1988 (A member of the international Butterworths Group, London) Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Mainz Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30172-3 (Vol. 2) ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
145
FROM THE PREFACE
Whereas the first volume of this series, which was published in 1987, documented and analyzed the Pulitzer Frizes in the International Reporting category, this book is devoted to the National Reporting category. While several texts have been awarded a general reporting award, a category introduced in 1917 and could be characterized as "national" Prize, none of these hybrids are considered here, because the editors tried to avoid their own definition of the awards. Therefore the true history of the National Reporting category doesn't begin until 1942 when the category "Telegraphic Reporting (National)" was established. This category must be considered as the direct predecessor of the National Reporting category. As in the case of the previous book, very much time was devoted to careful investigation, to ensure that the material is complete. The entries included here, prize winning texts and biographical notes can be found at the Pulitzer Prize office at Columbia University. Initially materials were incomplete; and required correspondence with archives, libraries and newspapers in the United States to establish facts and figures. Entries in published sources were incomplete for the purposes of this volume. Brief biographies of Pulitzer Prize-winners were difficult to locate. Often, even basic information had to be researched in press archives, or by contacting the authors or their relatives..
146
TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE
Ν
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
—
XV
Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR NATIONAL REPORTING
XV
SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA
Ι 2
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1941 By Louis Stark, The New York Times
3
LABOR AND THE AMERICAN DEFENSE INDUSTRY FROM NOWHERE (NATIONWIDE) IN 1942 By Nobody, No Newspaper or News Agency
9
TELEGRAPHIC REPORTING (NATIONAL) JURY REPORT OF MARCH 15, 1943 FROM CHICAGO (ILLINOIS) IN 1943 By Dewey L. Fleming, The Baltimore
4
10 N
Sun
REPUBLICANS FOR INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION
12
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1944 By James B. Reston, The New lork Times
Π
EAST AND WEST AGAINST AGGRESSION
18
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1 9 4 5 By Edward A. Harris, St. Louis-Post Dispatch THE OIL AND THE DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN FROM ATLANTA (GEORGIA) IN 1946 By Edward Τ. Folliard, The Washington ORGANIZED NAZISM
27 28 33
Post
IN GEORGIA
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1947 By Nat S. Finney, The Minneapolis Tribune SECRECY RULES UNDER TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION
34 39
40
147 FROM PHILADELPHIA BY
CHARLES RACE
P.
ISSUE
(PENNSYLVANIA) IN 1948
TRUSSELL,
THE
REMAINS
PROBLEM
A
NEW
YORK
«
TIMES 46
FROM SEATTLE (WASHINGTON) IN 1949 BY
EDWIN IN
0.
GUTHMAN,
CHARGE
OF
THE
53
SEATTLE
COMMUNIST
TIMES
ACTIVITIES
54
FROM NOWHERE (NATIONWIDE) IN 1950 BY
NOBODY,
NO
MEMBERS OF IN S P R I N G ,
NEWSPAPER
OR
NEWS
THE ADVISORY 1951
59 AGENCY
BOARD
ON
THE
PULITZER
60
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1951 BY
ANTHONY TRUMAN
LEVIERO, AND
THE
MACARTHUR
NEW
YORK
TIMES
ON
WAKE
ISLAND
DON
WHITEHEAD,
PRESIDENT
THE
ELECT
ASSOCIATED
EISENHOWER
Η PRESS
IN
KOREA
72
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1953 BY
RICHARD
WILSON,
RED
RINGS
SPY
THE
IN
DEE
THE
MOINES
WHITE
ANTHONY
LEWIS,
THE
ANOTHER
COMMUNIST-IN-CHARGE
HOUSE
84
WASHINGTON
DAILY
CHARLES
L.
SECRETARY
BARTLETT, OF
AIR
AND
CHATTANOOGA SPECIAL
90
IN 1 9 5 5
DAILY
JAMES
B.
PRESIDENT
RESTON,
THE
NEW
EISENHOWER'S
YORK BAD
PARTNER
RELMAN
G.
MORIN,
A
OF
RACE
CASE
THE
HEALTH
AND
ASSOCIATED
VIOLENCE
96
101
TIMES 102
FROM LITTLE ROCK (ARKANSAS) IN 1957 BY
95
TIMES
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1956 BY
89
NEWS
REHABILITATED
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) BY
83
REGISTER
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1954 BY
6I 62
FROM NEW YORK (NEW YORK) IN 1952 BY
PRIZES
109 PRESS 110
148 FROM IMMOKALEE (FLORIDA) IN 1958 BY
HOWARD
V.
MIGRANTS
SMITH, IN
A
THE
MIAMI
DESPERATE
117
SEWS
SITUATION
118
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1959 BY
VANCE
TRIMBLE,
FAMILY
TIES
SORIPPS-ROWARD
ON
CAPITOL
123
NEWSPAPERS
HILL
124
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1960 BY
EDWARD A
R.
CONY,
QUESTION
OF
THE
WALL
STREET
BUSINESS
129
JOURNAL
ETHICS
130
FROM KNOXVILLE (TENNESSEE) IN 1961 BY
N A T H A N G. TENNESSEAN
CALDWEL1/GENE
CONSPIRACY
IN
THE
S.
COAL
139
GRAHAM,
THE
NASHVILLE
INDUSTRY
140
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1962 BY
ANTHONY U.S.
LEWIS,
SUPREME
THE
NEW
COURT
LORK
UNDER
155
TIMES
FIRE
156
FROM DALLAS (TEXAS) IN 1963 BY
MERRIMAN
SMITH,
PRESIDENT
JOHN
UNITED F.
I6I
PRESS
KENNEDY'S
INTERNATIONAL ASSASSINATION
162
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1964 BY
LOUIS THE
M.
KOHLMEIER,
PRIVATE
WEALTH
THE OF
WALL
STREET
PRESIDENT
I^I
JOURNAL
JOHNSON
172
179
FROM SELMA (ALABAMA) IN 1965 BY
HAYNES AN
JOHNSON,
ALABAMA
TOWN
THE
WASHINGTON
FACES
RACIAL
EVENING
STAR
PROBLEMS
180
FROM FREEPORT (THE BAHAMAS) IN 1966 BY
M O N R O E W. K A R M I N / S T A N L E Y W . GRAND
BAHAMA
ISLAND
PENN,
ATTRACTS
ΙΒ9 THE
U.S.
WALL
STREET
GAMBLERS
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1967 BY
NATHAN
K.
KOTZ,
INVESTIGATING
MINNEAPOLIS
THE
MEAT
JOURNAL 190
203
TRIBUNE INDUSTRY
204
149 211
FROM MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARK (COLORADO) IN 1968 BY
ROBERT THE
CAHN,
THE
CHRISTIAN
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1969
219
WILLIAM
J.
EATON,
PREJUDICED
ARE
BURSTING
MONITOR 212
A
PARKS
SCIENCE
PEOPLE
BY
NATIONAL
CHICAGO
JUDGE
IS
WITH
DAILY
TURNED
HEWS
DOWN
220
22
FROM DWIGHT (ILLINOIS) IN 1970 BY
LUCINDA THE
FRANKS/THOMAS
MAKING
OF
A
POWERS,
FEMALE
UNITED
FREES
TERRORIST
228
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1971 BY
JACK
ANDERSON,
TENSIONS
BELL-MCCLURE
IN W A S H I N G T O N ' S
?
INTERNATIONAL
237
SYNDICATE FOREIGN
RELATIONS
238
FROM ST, LOUIS (MISSOURI) IN 1972 BY
ROBERT A
S.
BOYD/CLARK
SENATOR'S
HISTORY
HOYT, OF
KNIGHT
NEWSPAPERS
PSYCHIATRIC
THERAPY
242
FROM NEW YORK (NEW YORK) IN 1973 BY
JAMES
R.
PAYING
POLK,
FOR
THE
WASHINGTON
PRESIDENT
STAR-SEWS
NIXON'S
CAMPAIGN
254
2
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1974 BY
D O N A L D L. B A R L E T T / J A M E S B. S T E E L E , UPPER
INCOME
TAXPAYERS
AND
TAX
THE PHILADELPHIA
RETURNS
&3
INQUIRER 264
FROM NEW ORLEANS (LOUISIANA) IN 1975 BY
JAMES
V.
CORRUPT
RISSER, GRAIN
THE
SHIP
DES
MOINES
INSPECTORS
REGISTER ACCUSED
270
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1976 BY
MALTER
R.
MEARS,
CARTER
OR
FORD
THE
FOR
ASSOCIATED
U.S.
PRESIDENT
278
FROM JOHNSTOWN (PENNSYLVANIA) IN 1977 BY
GAYLORD DAM
D.
SHAW,
INSPECTIONS
LOS
ANGELES
DIDN'T
PREVENT
2Η
PRESS
2
ES
TIMES A
CATASTROPHE
286
150 FROM DENVER (COLORADO) IN 1978 By James V. Risser, The Des Moines.
291 Register
HEAVY IRRIGATION THREATENS WATER SUPPLY
292
FROM CLEARWATER (FLORIDA) IN 1979 By Charles Stafford/Bette S. Orsini, St. Petersburg
299 Times
SCIENTOLOGY'S WHEELINGS AND DEALINGS FROM WHY (ARIZONA) IN 1980 By John M. Crewdson, The New lork
300 307
Times
POVERTY MAKES THEM ILLEGAL ALIENS FROM NIXON (NEVADA) IN 1981 By Rick Atkinson, The Kansas
308 319
City
Times
INDIANS DEMAND THEIR WATER RIGHTS
320
FROM BOSTON (MASSACHUSETTS) IN 1982 By Christina Robb, The Boston Globe
331
AGAINST THE NUCLEAR ARMS RACE
332
FROM EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE (CALIFORNIA) IN 1983 By John N. Wilford, The Sew lork Times
335
SPACE SHUTTLE COLUMBIA RETURNS SAFELY FROM DES MOINES (IOWA) IN 1984 By Tom Knudson, The Des Moines
336 SAI
Register
THE MOST DANGEROUS JOB OF FARMING FROM DALLAS (TEXAS) IN 1985 By J. Craig Flournoy/George P. Rodrigue, Dallas
342 3« Morning
RACIAL SEGREGATION AND HOUSING DISCRIMINATION FROM HOUSTON (TEXAS) IN 1986 ····· By Richard Witkin, The New York Times CHALLENGER EXPLOSION REMAINS UNSOLVED
Hews 352 369 370
WINNERS OF THE NATIONAL REPORTING AWARD, 1987 - 2001 - SPACE FOR NOTES -
374
INDEX
377
151
The Pulitzer Prizes
Volume 2: 1988
by Kendall J. Wills
Simon & Schuster New York 1988
152
TOUCHSTONE Simon & Schuster Building Rockefeller Center 1 2 3 0 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10020 Copyright © 1988 by Kendall J . Wills All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form T O U C H S T O N E and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster Inc. Designed by Bonni Leon Manufactured in the United States of America 10
9
8
10
9
8
7
6 7
6
5
4 5
3 4
3
2 2
ι ι
Pbk.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 88-641507 I S B N 0 - 6 7 1 - 6 7 2 5 5-x I S B N 0-671-67202-9 Pbk.
153
FROM THE PREFACE The winners in the fourteen Pulitzer Prize journalism categories presented here are striking in their powerful reflection of the human condition. While each of the works is dramatic in its own right, the news articles, photographs and editorial cartoons tell a collective tale that is more significant than a simple assemblage of unrelated stories. To be sure, this volume contains some of the year's biggest stories — t h e stock-market crash, the PTL scandal, the "crack" cocaine menace and others that will be remembered years from now as among the most important issues of the day. But there are also lesser-known dramas presented by some of the country's best journalists. Although some of these stories have not yet received much attention outside the circulation areas of the newspapers in which they were printed, they are equally compelling chapters in our nation's history and deserving of our attention. The special value of this volume of The Pulitzer Prizes is the presentation, for the first time, of all the 1988 prizewinning works under one cover. This anthology includes fresh stories from around the country, told by some of the most seasoned as well as by some of the best emerging storytellers... Again this year, each chapter is introduced by the winners' descriptions of the background to the news events and the "inside stories" of how they turned the works into prizewinners. These essays are as compelling and instructive as the articles, photos and cartoons that follow. Despite the widespread interest in the Pulitzer Prizes and the significant publicity that surrounds almost everything related to them, I've discovered much confusion about how the works are nominated and who selects the winners. I think it's worthwhile, therefore, to describe briefly the selection process.
154
Anyone can submit an entry from a daily or weekly publication to the Pulitzer Prize Committee; all entries must reach the committee at the Columbia University campus by February ι for works published the previous year. The Pulitzer Prize Committee, composed of 1 7 members (listed on page 17), selects five jurors—journalists from newspapers across the country—in each of the 14 categories to review the entries. These 70 jurors serve one-year terms. After evaluating the entries, the jurors choose three finalists, which are nominated and presented to the Pulitzer Committee. The committee then reviews the nominations and may add to the lists presented to it. Committee members serve overlapping terms of three years. As vacancies occur, the committee chooses replacements. In the spring, the Pulitzer Committee selects the winners and awards them $ 3 , 0 0 0 from the endowment established by Joseph Pulitzer, the late newspaper publisher who envisioned the awards. The first awards were conferred in 1 9 1 7 , six years after his death. During the last 7 1 years, the selection process has successfully drawn attention to a treasury of outstanding achievement by American journalists. The winners have truly earned the respect that comes with being "the best in the business."
155
TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION PULITZER PRIZE BOARD MEMBERS ONE
TWO
"The PTL Scandal"
II
17 19
1988 Winner in the Public Service Category The Charlotte Observer Staff "A Death in the Family" 71 1988 Winner in the General News Reporting Category The Alabama Journal Staff "When Furloughed Murderers Strike Again" 116 1988 Winner in the General News Reporting Category Laurence Eagle-Tribune Staff
THREE
"The Spoils of Power" 153 1988 Winner in the Investigative Reporting Category Chicago Tribune Dean Baquet, Ann Marie Lipinski, William Gaines
FOUR
"Rebellious Genes" 211 1988 Winner in the Editorial Cartooning Category The Atlanta Constitution and The Charlotte Observer Doug Marlette
FIVE
"The Pentagon's Secret Cache" 1988 Winner in the National Reporting Category The Philadelphia Inquirer Tim Weiner
223
SIX
"Bitter Politics in the Middle East" 259 1988 Winner in the International Reporting Category The New York Times Thomas L. Friedman
SEVEN
"The Rescue of Baby Jessica" 305 1988 Winner in the Spot News Photography Category
156 The Odessa American Scott Shaw
EIGHT
"The Graveyard"
311
1988 Winner in the Feature Photography Category The Miami Herald Michel duCille
NINE
"Florida's Shame"
315
1988 Winner in the Editorial Writing Category The Orlando Sentinel Jane Healy
TEN
ELEVEN
"Child of the Television A g e " 1988 Winner in the Criticism Category The Washington Post Tom Shales
341
"Dave Barry's Quirky 'Yuk System' "
377
1988 Winner in the Commentary Category The Miami Herald Dave Barry
TWELVE
THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN
" A I D S in the Heartland" 1988 Winner in the Feature Writing Category St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch Jacqui Banaszynski
401
"Scandals and Scares on Wall Street" 461 1988 Winner in the Explanatory Journalism Category The Wall Street Journal Daniel Hertzberg, James B. Stewart "Lax Laboratories"
497
1988 Winner in the Specialized Journalism Category The Wall Street Journal Walt Bogdanich
ABOUT THE WINNERS
545
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 3
Local Reporting 1947 -1987: From a County Vote Fraude to a Corrupt City Council
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München · London · New York • Paris 1989
CIP-Titelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; London ; New York ; Paris: Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 3 : Pt. A, Reportage journalism. Local reporting 1947 1987 : from a county vote fraude to a corrupt city council / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 8 9 ISBN 3-598-30173-1
© 1989 by K. G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München (Mitglied der internationalen Butterworth-Gruppe, London) Alle Rechte vorbehalten • All Rights Strictly Reserved Jede Art der Vervielfältigung ohne Erlaubnis des Verlages ist unzulässig. Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Mainz Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30173-1 (Vol. 3) ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
159
FROM THE PREFACE
The Pulitzer Prize Archive series, the first part of which is dedicated to the documentation and interpretation
of Pulitzer
Prize articles from the area of reportage journalism, is now being continued with the publication of a third volume. Whereas the first volume
(1987) covered the area of International Reporting
and the second volume
(1988) dealt with the sphere of National
Reporting, this third volume covers the field of Local Reporting. Even before this third category of Pulitzer Prize awards was established, press articles on local issues had still often been distinguished with awards. This occurred,, however, within the general reporting category - a sort of melting pot which incorporated all entries which did not fall into more specific categories. A specific local reporting category specifically was first introduced in the late forties, when the already-mentioned general reporting category was divided
in order to better distinguish
between different areas. The Pulitzer Prize entry forms of 1947/48 were the first to mention a category devoted exclusively to local reporting. Since 1953, both categories, which to some extent included local reporting, ran parallel to one another. These were the categories Reporting, Edition Time and Reporting, No Edition Time. In 1964 these were renamed Local General Spot Newa Reporting and Local Investigative Specialized Reporting. Since 1985, still running parallel, these two categories have been called General News Reporting and Investigative Reporting. This third volume pays particular attention to the area of investigative reporting by primarily presenting texts or categories of texts which are less the result of reporting on current events under deadline pressure, and more those involving a high level of thorough and detailed journalistic investigation. Although the term "investigative reporting" was first recognized during the seventies, this method of investigation had already been employed for a long time previously. This was of course reflected in numerous Pulitzer Prizes from the forties onwards, whereby winning
160 articles were praised for their qualities of "exposure", "disclosure" or "uncovering". By concentrating on the documentation of investigative journalism within the sphere of reports on local issues, Volume 3 in the Pulitzer Prize Archive series does not in any way suggest the inferiority of other prize categories for reporting on local issues. For editorial reasons, a decision between the two main genres of local reporting had to be made. Thus this publication contains many texts - sensational in their day - which still impress today's reader with their original fire. Often, these local reporters were hindered or personally threatened during the course of their investigations. Many doors were closed to them once their investigative intentions became clear...
161
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
Ν
INTRODUCTION
χν
By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR LOCAL REPORTING
XV
S E L E C T I O N S FROM AWARD-WINNING E N T R I E S
Ι
REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA FROM M C R A E (GEORGIA) IN 1947 By George E. Goodwin, The Atlanta
2 3
Journal
APPARENT FRAUD IN THE ELECTION PROCESS FOR A GOVERNOR
..
FROM NEW YORK (NEW YORK) IN 1 9 4 8 By Malcolm M. Johnson, The Sun, New York
"
TERROR AND THE GRIP OF ORGANIZED CRIME IN A SEAPORT FROM CAMDEN
I?
Times
SLAUGHTER OF CITY RESIDENTS BY A FRANTIC WAR VETERAN FROM SAN FRANCISCO By
12
(NEW JERSEY) IN 1949
By Meyer Berger, The New York
(CALIFORNIA)
Edward S. Montgomery, San
...
Francisco
(CALIFORNIA)
Examiner 30 33
IN 1 9 5 1
By George de Carvalho, San Francisco
18 29
IN 1950
INTERNAL REVENUE OFFICE SUSPECTED OF EXTORTING TAX PAYERS FROM SAN FRANCISCO
4
Chronicle
RANSOM PAYMENTS BY IMMIGRANTS FOR RELATIVES IN RED CHINA FROM QUEENS (NEW YORK) IN 1952 By Edward J. Mowery, New Jork World-Telegram
and
The
34
Sun
RE-EXAMINATION O F A CITIZEN'S INCONGRUOUS CONVICTION
...
38
162 FROM TOPEKA (KANSAS) IN 1953 By Alvin S. McCoy, The Kansas
« City
Star
STATE PURCHASE CONNECTED WITH FEES AND POL ITICAL INFLUENCE FROM AUSTIN (TEXAS) IN 1954 By Röland K. Towery, The Cuero
W Record
ABUSES ON THE ADMINISTRATION OF A STATE VETERANS LAND PROGRAM FROM NORTH ADAMS (MASSACHUSETTS) By Arthur J. Daley, The New York
44
IN 1955 Times
SS
A FAMOUS BOXER AWAITING HEAVYWEIGHT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP . FROM SEATTLE (WASHINGTON) IN 1956 By William G. Lambert/Wallace L. Turner, The
50
56 59
Oregonian
ILLEGAL ENTERPRISES BETWEEN GAMBLERS AND UNION OFFICIALS
60
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1957 By George Beveridge, The Evening Star, Washington, D.C. NEED FOR NEW POLITICAL APPARATUS REVEALED BY GROWING CITIES
66
FROM SCRANTON (PENNSYLVANIA) IN 1958 By John H. Brislin, The Soranton Tribune NO APPEAL FOR LABOR LEADERS BEING SENTENCED TO PRISON .. FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1959 — By Miriam Ottenberg, The Evening Star, Washington, D.C. UNSCRUPULOUS CAR DEALERS' TRICKS IN CHEATING CUSTOMERS . FROM BUFFALO (NEW YORK) IN 1960 By Edgar May, Buffalo Evening News DISTRESSING PROBLEMS OF STATE PUBLIC WELFARE PROGRAMS .. FROM CHICAGO (ILLINOIS) IN 1961 ···· By George W. Bliss, Chicago Tribune CITY SANITARY DISTRICT LOADED WITH POLITICAL FAVORITES .
74 77 78 83 84 09 90
163 FROM PECOS (TEXAS) IN 1962 By Oscar 0. Griffin Jr., The Pecos
95 Independent
FRAUD IN INTERSTATE COMMERCE BY FORGED SECURITIES
96
FROM PHILADELPHIA (PENNSYLVANIA) IN 1963 By Albert V . Gaudiosi/James v . Magee/Frederick A. Meyer, The Philadelphia Bulletin
99
UNLAWFUL GAMBLING FOUND OUT BY UNDERCOVER AGENTS
100
FROM PASADENA (TEXAS) IN 1964 By Gene Goltz, The Houston Post
105
PERSONAL PROFITS GATHERED BY MAYOR AND OTHER NOTABLES
..
FROM BARTOW (FLORIDA) IN 1965 By John A. Frasca, The Tampa Tribune
111
TRUE PERPRETATION OF ROBBERIES FINALLY CLEARED UP
112
FROM SARASOTA (FLORIDA) IN 1966 By Gene Miller, The Miami Eerald
IN
WOMAN IMPRISONED FOR TWO MURDERS CAN BE PROVED INNOCENT FROM NEW YORK (NEW YORK) IN 1967 By J. Anthony Lukas, The New lork
106
118 ISI
Times
LAST PHASE IN THE LIFE OF A DRUG-ADDICTED YOUNG WOMAN .. FROM ST. LOUIS (MISSOURI) IN 1968 By Albert L. Delugach/Denny Walsh, St·, Louis
1« Globe-Democrat
CRIMINAL AGREEMENTS UPON AN EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PROGRAM ... FROM MONTGOMERY (ALABAMA) IN 1969 By Harold E. Martin, The Montgomery
132
146 I*9
Advertiser
DRUG EXPERIMENTS ON PRISONERS FOR PHARMACEUTICAL CONCERNS
150
FROM CHICAGO (ILLINOIS) IN 1970 By William H. Jones, Chicago Tribune MISTREATMENT OF PATIENTS IN PRIVATE AMBULANCE BUSINESS
155 .
156
164 FROM SOMERVILLE (MASSACHUSETTS) IN 1971 By
S t e p h e n A.
Kurkjian/Timothy
Lei a n d / G e r a r d
Ann DeSantis/Ellen S. Zack, The Boston
M.
Globe
O'Neill/
COLLUSION BETWEEN PUBLIC OFFICIALS AND FAVORED COMPANIES FROM BOYS TOWN (NEBRASKA) IN 1972 By
Douglas Douglas
169
R. B r o w n / W e s l e y R. I v e r s e n / H . M i c h a e l D. S m i t h / P a u l N. W i l l i a m s , West Omaha
Rood/ Sun
LUCRATIVE INCOME OF A WELL-KNOWN CHILD-CARE HOME
170
FROM QUEENS (NEW YORK) IN 1973 By
William
S h e r m a n , Daily
News,
ISI New
York
FEDERAL SYSTEM OF MEDICAL CARE ABUSED BY PHYSICIANS .... FROM INDIANAPOLIS (INDIANA) IN 1974 By
Cady/ Star
FROM CHICAGO (ILLINOIS) IN 1975 Tribune
B. C r a w f o r d / Zekman,
ROTTEN CITIES RESULTING FROM A FEDERAL HOUSING PROGRAM . FROM WAYMART (PENNSYLVANIA) IN 1976 By
Acel
Moore/Wendell
Inquirer
L.
Rawls
J r . , The
207
FROM STAMFORD (CONNECTICUT) IN 1977 By Anthony R. Dolan, The Advocate, Stamford
224 229
FROM POTTSVILLE (PENNSYLVANIA) IN 1978 G. J a s p i n ,
208 223
GRAFTS FOR CITY POLICE TO PROTECT GAMBLING SYNDICATES ..
G i l b e r t M. G a u l / E l l i o t
200
Philadelphia
UNNATURAL CAUSES OF DEATH AT A PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL
By
190 199
G e o r g e W. B l i s s / J a m e s A . B r a n e g a n / W i l l i a m W i l l i a m C. G a i n e s / C h a r l e s N e u b a u e r / P a m e l a
Chicago
182 "9
W i l l i a m E. A n d e r s o n / H a r l e y R. B i e r c e / R i c h a r d E. G e r a l d W. C l a r k / M y r t a P u l l i a m , The Indianapolis
BRIBABLE POLICEMEN INVOLVED IN CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES
By
162
"Pottsville
Republican
BANKRUPTCY OF A COAL COMPANY WELL-PLANNED BY MAGNATES ..
230
165 FROM BOSTON (MASSACHUSETTS) IN 1979 By Nils J. A. Bruzelius/Alexander Β. Hawes Jr./Stephen A. Kurkjian/Robert M. Porterfield/Joan Vennochi , The Boston Globe INEFFICIENCY W I T H I N U N I O N - D O M I N A T E D AUTHORITY
TRANSPORTATION
FROM TUCSON (ARIZONA) IN 1980 By Clark Hal las/Robert B. Lowe, The Arizona
FROM SEATTLE (WASHINGTON)
238 245
Daily
Star
IMPROPER USE OF UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC R E C R U I T I N G FUNDS
By Paul Henderson, The
...
IN 1981
Seattle
255 256
FROM WASHINGTON (DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) IN 1982 By Loretta Tofani, The Washington Post RAPES AND VIOLENT SEXUAL ASSAULTS
267
IN A COUNTY JAIL
FROM ATLANTA (GEORGIA) IN 1983 By Kenneth J. Cooper/Stan Grossfeld/Jonathan Kaufman/ Norman A. Lockman/Gary W. McMi11an/Kirk Scharfenberg/ David M. Wessel, The Boston Globe M O R E ECONOMIC O P P O R T U N I T I E S AND P O L I T I C A L POWER FOR BLACKS FROM ST. PETERSBURG
(FLORIDA)
By Lucy Morgan/Jack
Reed, St. Petersburg
IN 1984
(KENTUCKY)
268 283
284 289
Times
YOUNG GIRLS A B U S E D AS BAIT IN A DRUG INVESTIGATION
FROM LEXINGTON
246
Times
INNOCENT M A N WRONGLY CONVICTED O F A RAPE CASE
By Jeffrey A. Marx/Michael
237
IN 1985 M. York, Lexington
297 Herald-Leader
GENEROUS BENEFITS FROM BOOSTERS TO SPORTS STUDENTS FROM PHILADELPHIA (PENNSYLVANIA) IN 1986 By Daniel R. Biddle/Henry G. B i s s i n g e r / F r e d r i c The Philadelphia Inquirer
290
298 321
N. Tulsky,
CONNECTIONS BETWEEN LAWYERS AND JUDGES THEY HELP ELECT .
322
166 FROM CHICAGO (ILLINOIS)
IN 1987
By Dean Baquet/Wi11iam C. Gaines/Ann M. Chicago Tribune
...
347
Lipinski,
CITY C O U N C I L DOMINATED BY WASTE O F MONEY AND INTEREST
SELF348
WINNERS OF T H E LOCAL REPORTING AWARD, 1 9 8 8 - 2 0 0 1 - SPACE FOR NOTES INDEX
374 377
167
The Pulitzer Prizes
Volume 3: 1989
by Kendall J. Wills
Simon & Schuster New York 1989
168
TOUCHSTONE Simon &. Schuster Building Rockefeller Center 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10020 Copyright © 1989 by Kendall J. Wills All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. TOUCHSTONE and. colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster Inc. Designed by Bonni Leon Manufactured in the United States of America 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 . 3 2 1 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
(Pbk.)
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data The Pulitzer prizes 1989. "A touchstone book." r. Journalism—United States. 2. Pulitzer prizes. I. Wills, Kendall J. PN4726.P82 1989 071'.3 89-2x780 ISBN 0-671-68748-4 ISBN 0-671-68749-2 (pbk.)
169
FROM THE PREFACE As you begin reading each chapter in this book, pause a moment and briefly imagine the "thud" of a newspaper landing at your doorstep, bearing the latest news from around the world or from across town. The freshness of those daily reports is preserved here in the latest annual volume of The Pulitzer Prizes. This year's collection of prizewinning news stories, photographs and editorial cartoons presents some of the most important news of the day, covered by some of the country's best journalists. These are the articles, photographs and cartoons that were selected as the best of the year by the winners' peers—juries of fellow journalists, some of whom are themselves former Pulitzer Prize winners. The final selections were made in March by 18 members of the Pulitzer Prize Board, composed of journalists and academicians. (A list of the board members is on page xvii.) The winning entries this year in the 14 Pulitzer Prize categories cover a broad range of writing styles and emotions. There is drama— ... There is humor— ... There is "watch dog" journalism at its best... There is great writing... There is thoughtful analysis · · · There is investigation... There is discovery coupled with a warning... There is writing that will educate... There are historic developments... Indeed, most of the stories in this book are ongoing. These articles are not destined to obscurity in the newspapers' "morgues," where old clips are filed. They form the basis of related stories that fill today's newspapers and that will shape the news of tomorrow. Finally, there is the story behind the story. As in past volumes, the winners here introduce their work by explaining how they go about
170
their craft. In the winners' own words, these essays offer the behindthe-scenes descriptions of the efforts that went into the works before they could appear in the newspapers. They describe false starts, setbacks at the hands of those who did not want the articles to be published and, finally, triumphs. These letters from the winners are as engaging as the winning works. Glenn Frankel, for instance, describes the difficulty of reporting as a neutral observer from the tension-filled Middle East. "Perhaps it was inevitable," he writes, "that in a conflict in which both sides routinely invoke history, morality and religion for their cause, no one would be allowed to remain neutral for very long and that the press itself would be quickly perceived as a combatant."... Clarence Page explains how his columns reflect an outlook shaped by an early encounter with racism. "I would be lying," he admits, "if I said that I was not profoundly influenced to this day by the bitter experience of being told at the age of six that I could not go to a nearby amusement park because 'little colored children ain't allowed in that park.' " . . . There's more. These Pulitzer Prize-winning articles, photographs and editorial cartoons, plus the reflections of the winners, provide a storehouse of stimulating reading about the issues at the top of this nation's agenda and on the front pages of American newspapers. It's worth saying again: The stories continue.
171
TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION PULITZER PRIZE BOARD MEMBERS ONE
x
xvj
"A People in Peril"
}
1989 Winner in che Public Service Category Anchorage Daily News Staff TWO
"Campaign for Bus Safety"
63
1989 Winner in the General News Reporting Category The Louisville Courier-Journal Staff
THREE
FOUR
FIVE
"The Color of Money" 97 1989 Winner in the Investigative Reporting Category The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Bill Dedman " A Cartoonist's Tickle and J a b " 1989 Winner in the Editorial Cartooning Category Chicago Sun-Times Jack Higgins
143
"The Great Tax Giveaway"
153
1989 Winner in the National Reporting Category The Philadelphia Inquirer Donald L. Barlett and James B. Sceele SIX
"The Palestinian Uprising"
229
1989 Winner in the International Reporting Category The Washington Post Glenn Frankel "Gorbachev's Grand Plan" 272 1989 Winner in the International Reporting Category The New York Times Bill Keller
172
SEVEN
"Rescue A t t e m p t "
313
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Spot News Photography Category St. Louis Post-Dispatch Ron Olshwanger
EIGHT
" A Class A c t "
317
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Feature Photography Category Detroit Free Press Manny Crisostomo
NINE
" C i t y Government's Folly and Fraud"
321
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Editorial Writing Category Chicago Tribune Lois W i l l e TEN
"Literary Heroes and 'Creative Writing' "
343
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Criticism Category The Raleigh News and Observer Michael Skube
ELEVEN
" T h e People's Republic of Chicago"
371
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Commentary Category Chicago Tribune Clarence Page
TWELVE
" B e i n g Black in South A f r i c a "
3 9 7
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Feature Writing Category The Philadelphia
Inquirer
David Zucchino
THIRTEEN
"Anatomy of an Air Crash"
433
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Explanatory Journalism Category The Dallas Morning News David Hanners, William Snyder, Karen Blessen
FOURTEEN
"Death in the Dark"
493
1 9 8 9 Winner in the Specialized Reporting Category The Orange County Register Edward Humes
ABOUT THE WINNERS ABOUT THE EDITOR
519 527
173
The New York Times Facing World War II Articles, Maps and Statistics from a Pulitzer Prize-winning Exhibit
by
Erika J. Fischer and Heinz-D. Fischer
Peter Lang Frankfurt am Main - Bern - New York - Paris 1990
174
CIP-Trtelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek Fischer, Erika J.: The New York Times' facing World War II: articles, maps and statistics from a Pulitzer Prize-winning exhibit / Erika J. Fischer; Heinz-D. Fischer. - Frankfurt am Main ; Bern ; New York; Paris : Lang, 1990 ISBN 3-8204-9706-4 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich:
Cover design by Marcia Zoladz, Rio de Janeiro
ISBN 3-8204-9706-4 ©Verlag Peter Lang GmbH, Frankfurt am Main 1990 Alle Rechte vorbehalten. Das Werk einschließlich aller seiner Teile ist urheberrechtlich geschützt. Jede Verwertung außerhalb der engen Grenzen des Urheberrechtsgesetzes ist ohne Zustimmung des Verlages unzulässig und strafbar. Das gilt insbesondere für Vervielfältigungen, Übersetzungen, Mikroverfilmungen und die Einspeicherung und Verarbeitung in elektronischen Systemen. Printed in Germany 1 2
4567
175 FROM THE PREFACE
Entering the Pulitzer Prize Archive at Columbia University, New York, one gets impressed not only by the rich collection of awarded works from journalism and literature but also by a wooden box, only marked with the logo
, indicating nothing more about its
content. The strange container, 21.88 inches long, 16.64 inches deep and 4.16 Inches high, is covered by a movable lid and kept together by a rather large belt. The content must be considered as one of the largest press-material entries, the Pulitzer Prize-juries ever received from a newspaper to be evaluated. The material - an imposing cross-section of descriptions and statistical data concerning the newspaper itself and a rich choice of foreign news and corresponding comments on international affairs - was The New lork Times ' entry to gain the Pulitzer Prize for "meritorious public service" in 1941.
However, it was not The Sew York Times but the St. Louis PostDispatch being honored in that award-category "for its successful campaign against the city smoke nuissance." Reporting and corresponding analysis on the dangers of pollution were preferred by the jury instead of the World War-orientated foreign news and comments of the New York paper. Nevertheless, the jury as well as the Advisory Board were deeply impressed by the carefully choosen and organized material, supporting The Neu iork Times' presentation.
In fact the material was considered that interesting and worthy, that both relevant committees took their - rarely used - right to honour applications beside the regular Pulitzer Prize categories by conferring "Special Awards and Citations." The New York Times' entry, receiving this special prize, not only consisted (as usual) of published press material.
The newspaper added rather compact background-information concerning the structure, composition and financial situation of the whole foreign correspondence system. So one of the leading US dailies confided to the Pulitzer Prize Committee and - as a consequence to the general public facts and data about its economic situation,
176 which normally is considered as a top secret matter for companyleaders' eyes only. The Pulitzer Prize Jury and the Advisory Board expressed their respect for the large impact of information, being typical for the background-material as well as for the "regular" New York Times ' publications in the entry, with a special award "for the public educational value of its foreign news reports, exemplified by its scope, by excellence of writing and presentation, illustration, and interpretation." This eulogy characterizes exactly the materials' content, but for a press-researcher it even means more. Five decades after presenting the entry, the material still seems that expressive, that the interested professional public should be enabled to have access to its content. Although the entry contains more detailed information on The New York Times ' inner structure than the newspapers' official history books, the material is not only "historically" relevant but also for scholarly purposes...
177 TABLE OF CONTENTS
FOREWORD
9
GENERAL STATEMENT
ON THE NEWSPAPER
11
0
STAFF AND FOREIGN NEWS SERVICE IN 1940
14
0
FOREIGN NEWS STAFF AND REGULAR CORRESPONDENTS
17
0
FOREIGN NEWS BUREAUS - CLERICAL STAFF
20
0
MAPS SHOWING SPECIAL FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS
21
DISPATCHES
FROM V A R I O U S
CORRESPONDENTS
25
0
GERMANS PREPARE MILITARY ATTACK by Otto D. Tolischus, Berlin
25
0
CONDUCT OF WAR FORCES ELECTION IN CANADA by Frederick T. Birchall, Ottawa
28
0
FINNS HALT DRIVE TO RELIEVE ENEMY by Karl I. N. Eskelund, Helsinki
33
0
NEW TERMS EXCEED PRE-WAR DEMANDS by Harold Callender, Stockholm
35
0
DANES 'CARRY ON' UNDER OCCUPATION by Sven Carstensen, Copenhagen
39
0
ITALY'S WAR ENTRY AFTER JUNE 10 SEEN by Herbert L. Matthews, Rome
42
0
BRITAIN WILL CARRY ON FIGHT by Raymond Daniell, London
45
0
REFUGEES JAM ROADS FROM PARIS by Percy J. Philip, Tours
50
0
JAPAN MAY ATTACK FRENCH INDO-CHINA by F. Tillman Durdin, Chungking
52
0
FRENCH STILL HIDE ARMY'S WEAKNESS by Gaston H. Archambault, Bordeaux
54
0
INSIDE PANAMA CANAL DEFENSE ZONE by Russell B. Porter, Quito
57
0
HONG KONG READY TO DEFEND ITSELF by Harold Callender, Hong Kong
60
178 0
FOREIGNERS IN MOSCOW PETITION FOR SIMPLE GOODS by George E. R. Gedye, Varna
64
Ο
NAZI MENACE MET IN SOUTH AMERICA by John W. White, Buenos Aires
68
0
JAPAN STAKES HER ALL ON TREATY WITH AXIS by Hugh Byas, Tokyo
71
0
STALIN POLICY STILL A PUZZLE by George E. R. Gedye, Istanbul
74
0
COVENTRY DEAD LAID IN ONE GRAVE by Raymond Daniell, Coventry
76
Ο
ITALIAN DEAD MARK FIELD OF 'CONQUEST' by Cyrus L. Sulzberger, Albania
80
0
JAPAN HAS GIVEN UP CHINA PEACE HOPES by Hallett Abend, Singapore
84
0
UNITY OF AMERICAS IS INAUGURAL NOTE by Arnaldo Cortesi, Mexico City
85
0
LISBON'S REFUGEES NOW PUT AT 8,000 by James B. Reston, Lisbon
91
SPECIAL SERIES OF ARTICLES
95
0
HITLER PREPARED THE PROPAGANDA FRONT by Otto D. Tolischus
0
SOVIET CENSORSHIP BLACKS OUT NEWS by George E. R. Gedye
103
0
NAZIS AIM TO WIN FRANCE TO SYSTEM by Percy J. Philip
107
THE MILITARY AND NAVAL COMMENT
95
115
0
THE FAR EASTERN PROBLEM by Hanson W. Baldwin
115
0
IF GIBRALTAR IS ATTACKED by Hanson W. Baldwin
118
0
SHADOW ON THE MEDITERRANEAN by Hanson W. Baldwin
120
179 EDITORIAL COMMENTS ON THE WAR
125
0
BATTLE OF ORAN IS CHALLENGE OF WAR by Anne O'Hare McCormick
Ο
CONFIDENCE THE WORLD'S FOUNDATION STONE by Anne O'Hare McCormick
Ο
THE LEAGUE SERVED US BETTER by Edwin L. James
131
Ο
HITLER REWRITES MILITARY STORY by Edwin L. James
135
WORLD NEWS IN TYPICAL WEEKDAY AND SUNDAY ISSUES
126 . 129
139
O
THE INTERNATIONAL SITUATION (I) by Various Authors
141
Ο
THE INTERNATIONAL SITUATION (II) by Various Authors
143
THE MAP SERVICE OF THE NEWSPAPER
145
O
WORLD DOMAINS THAT HANG IN THE BALANCE OF THE EUROPEAN WAR
146
Ο
WHERE JAPAN SEES HERSELF AS THE RULER OF A MIGHTY EMPIRE .
147
Ο
WHERE THE ITALIANS AND BRITISH ARE CLASHING IN EAST AFRICA. 148
Ο
LONDON - THE HEART OF THE CITY
149
Ο
HOW ALL FRANCE IS DIVIDED INTO MANY PARTS
150
0
A WORLD OIL MAP SHOWING SOURCES AND ROUTES OF THE FUEL OF WAR 151
0
HOW THE MAP OF EUROPE HAS CHANGED DURING THE LAST YEAR
152
COMMENTS ON THE PAPER'S NEWS VALUE
153
0
Hamilton Fish Armstrong, Editor of 'Foreign Affairs'
154
0
Edward C. Carter, Secretary-General of the Institute of Pacific Relations
155
0
Frank Ross McCoy, President of the Foreign Policy Association
156
0
Carl W. Ackerman, Dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University 157
180 0 0
The New York Times Advertisement after receiving the Pulitzer Prize
158
Members of the Advisory Board of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University
160
APPENDIX
161
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
162
0
PUBLICATIONS ON THE NEW YORK TIMES
162
0
PUBLICATIONS ON THE PULITZER JOURNALISM PRIZES
167
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 4
Political Editorial 1916 -1988: From War-related Conflicts to Metropolitan Disputes
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München · London · New York • Paris 1990
CIP-Titelaufnahme der Deutschen Bibliothek The Pulitzer prize archive: a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; London ; New York ; Paris : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 4 : Pt. B. Opinion journalism. Political editorial 1916 — 1988 : from war-related conflicts to metropolitan disputes / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 9 0 ISBN 3-598-30174-X Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier / Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten · All Rights Strictly Reserved K. G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1990 Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by W S Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Mainz Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30174-X (Vol. 4) ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
183
FROM THE PREFACE Whereas the preceding volumes in this series concentrated on the three main reporting categories of the Pulitzer Prize system international, national and local reporting - the focus now changes to the field of opinion journalism. This particular volume covers the most traditional category
in this field, namely "Editorial
Writing," for which prizes were already awarded in 1917. According to Joseph Pulitzer's will, this prize was to be awarded to "the best editorial article written during the previous year." He went on to make the following specifications: "For distinguished editorial writing in a United States newspaper, published daily, Sunday or at least once a week, during the year, the test of excellence being clearness of style, moral purpose, sound reasoning, and power to influence public opinion in the right direction." In 1928 the wording of the last part of the sentence was changed to "power to influence public opinion in what the writer conceives to be the right direction." Although Joseph Pulitzer originally intended the award to be given to the best individual editorial in any one year, the emphasis today is placed on "the whole volume of the writer's editorial work during the year." To avoid any misinterpretations the Pulitzer Prize plan of award contains the following restrictions: "Exhibits... are limited to. .. ten... editorials... Exhibits must be presented
in scrapbooks... to make clear the full scope
and impact the material entered... The Pulitzer Prize Board requires that any entry which exceeds the limits on article number... be revised to conform the entry requirements before it can be given jury consideration."...
184
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
Ν
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
XIX Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT O F THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR EDITORIAL WRITING
XIX
SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA
Ι 2
ABOUT MILITANT PATRIOTISM IN 1916 By Frank H. Siraonds, New Jork Tribune
3
GERMAN WAR ATROCITIES ARE AN ATTACK UPON CIVILIZATION .. ABOUT WAR CONSEQUENCES IN 1917 By Henry Watterson, The Courier-Journal,
' Louisville
IDEA OF PACIFISM IN TIMES OF EMERGENCY MEANS TREASON ... ABOUT NO TOPIC IN 1918 By Nobody, No Newspaper
10 IS
or News
Agency
BOARD MEMBERS IN SPRING 1919 VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD' ABOUT LYNCHING PRACTICES IN 1919 By Harvey E. Newbranch, Morning World-Berald,
16 IT
Omaha
LAW EMBODIES THE ONLY PROTECTION AGAINST RIOTS AND VIOLENCE ABOUT NO TOPIC IN 1920 By Nobody, No Newspaper
4
18 23
or News
Agency
BOARD MEMBERS IN SPRING 1921 VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD' ABOUT SYMBOLIC ACTIONS IN 1921 By Frank M. O'Brien, The New lork
24 25
Herald
DUTY AND HONOR REPRESENT THE WELLSPRINGS OF VICTORY
26
185 ABOUT BASIC RIGHTS IN 1922 By William A. White, The Emporia
29 Gazette
FREEDOM OF SPEECH IS FUNDAMENTAL TO JUSTICE AND PEACE .. ABOUT CALVIN COOLIDGE IN 1923 By Frank W. Buxton, The Boston
31
Herald
HOW TO BECOME PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES ABOUT REGIONAL MENTALITY IN 1924 By Robert Lathan, The News and Courier,
32 35
Charleston
POLITICAL INEFFICIENCY OF SOUTHERN STATES IS PERILOUS .. ABOUT POOR CITIZEN IN 1925 By Edward M. Kingsbury, The Hew York
ABOUT DEATH PENALTY IN 1926 By F. Lauriston Bui lard, The Boston
Timee 40 « Berald
INCONGRUOUS VERDICTS OF GUILT CALL FOR TOTAL CLEARING UP ABOUT ALABAMA LAWS IN 1927 By Grover C. Hall, The Montgomery
36 39
THE DISTRESSED NEED SOCIETY'S GENEROUS HELP AND CHARITY
44 ^
Advertiser
EXECUTIVE POWER KEEPS RATHER QUIET IN VIEW OF OUTRAGES . ABOUT LYNCHING PROCEDURE IN 1928 By Louis I. Jaffe, Virginian-Pilot
48 SI
and Norfolk
Landmark
RACIAL TENSIONS HAVE TO BE OUTLAWED TO STOP MOB MURDERS ABOUT NO TOPIC IN 1929 By Nobody, No Newspaper
30
52 55
or News
Agenoy
BOARD MEMBERS IN SPRING 1930 VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD' ABOUT NEBRASKA POLITICS IN 1930 By Charles S. Ryckman, The Fremont
56 57
Tribune
EMBITTERED MIDDLE WEST TAKES UNUSUAL REVENGE ON THE NATION
58
186 ABOUT NO TOPIC IN 1931 By Nobody, No Newspaper
65 or News
Agency
BOARD MEMBERS IN SPRING 1932 VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD' ABOUT INTERNATIONAL QUESTIONS IN 1932 By Henry J. Haskell, The Kaneaa City Star EUROPE'S CONFLICTING SELFISH INTERESTS LOAD MUTUAL CONTACTS ...... ABOUT FINANCIAL DIFFICULTIES IN 1933 By Edwin P. Chase, Atlantic Vewe-Telegraph PROSPERITY CAN ONLY BE REGAINED BY THRIFT AND HARD WORK ABOUT NO TOPIC IN 1934 By Nobody, So Newspaper
66 67
68 T3 74 ™
or News
Agency
BOARD MEMBERS IN SPRING 1935 VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD' ..... ABOUT ROOSEVELT'S INITIATIVES IN 1935 By Felix Morley, The Washington Poet; George B. Parker, Scrippe-Uoward Newspapers PROGRESS AND REVIVAL WILL BE ACHIEVED BY COLLECTIVE EFFORT ABOUT ELECTION LOSSES IN 1936 By John W. Owens, The Baltimore
80 EI
82 87
Sun
ELECTION CAMPAIGN REVEALS REPUBLICANS' LACK OF INTELLECT
88
ABOUT IOWA TRADITIONS IN 1937 By William W. Waymack, The Dee Moines Register FOR ONE CENTURY NOW A SEPARATE AND DEMOCRATIC STATE
93
ABOUT PATRIOTIC FEELINGS IN 1938 By Ronald G. Call vert, The Oregonian,
97
94
Portland
FUNDAMENTAL DEMOCRATIC VALUES MUST BE KEPT WELL IN MIND
98
187 ABOUT HITLER'S CONQUESTS IN 1939 By Bart B. Howard, St. Louie Post-Dispatch GERMANY'S RAIDS THREATEN THE CONTINENTAL BALANCE OF POWER ABOUT GROWING TOTALITARIANISM IN 1940 By Reuben Maury, Daily News, New York
ABOUT NATIONAL ESSENTIALS IN 1941 By Geoffrey Parsons, New lork Herald-Tribune MILITARY ACTION IS BOUND TO STRENGTHEN THE NATION'S DEFENSES
116 121 122 127
Journal 128 131
Democrat-Times
BRAVE EAST ASIAN-AMERICAN SOLDIERS DESERVE FULL RESPECT ABOUT ECONOMICAL CONDITIONS IN 1946 By William H. .Grimes, The Wall Street
132 135
Journal
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS REQUIRE A SYSTEM OF CHECKS AND BALANCES ABOUT FOREIGN AFFAIRS IN 1947 By Vlrginius Dabney, Richmond
110
Star
FREEDOM OF THE PRESS HINGES ON CLEAR ECONOMIC INDEPENDENCE ABOUT JAPANESE-AMERICANS IN 1945 By W. Hodding Carter, The Delta
109
US
LANDING IN NORTH AFRICA BADLY PREPARED BY ADMINISTRATION ABOUT WARTIME CENSORSHIP IN 1944 By George W. Potter, The Providence
106
Register
BASIC DEMOCRATIC IDEAS IN JAPAN HAVEN'T BEEN ERASED YET ABOUT AFRICAN BATTLEFIELDS IN 1943 By Henry J. Haskell, The Kansas City
102 105
STATE CONTROL OF INDIVIDUAL AND BUSINESS IS BEING STEPPED UP
ABOUT EAST ASIA IN 1942 By Forrest W. Seymour, The Des Moines
101
136 141
Times-Dispatch
SHOWDOWN OF NATIONAL INTERESTS PREVENTS WORLD-WIDE CONFLICTS
142
188 ABOUT RELIEF PROGRAMS IN 1948 By John H. Crider, The Boston Herald; The Washington Post
Herbert B. Elliston,
EUROPE'S RECOVERY DEPENDS ON GENEROUS AND WELL-ORGANIZED AID ABOUT AMERICAN HOPES IN 1949 By Carl M. Saunders, Jackson
ISI Citizen-Patriot
PRAYERS FOR PEACE WILL LIFT THE BURDEN OFF A WARLIKE WORLD ABOUT CONSTITUTIONAL SUBJECTS IN 1950 By William H. Fitzpatrick, The New Orleans
155 INDIVIDUAL
ABOUT EXAMINATION CHEATING IN 1951 By Louis LaCoss, St. Louis Globe-Democrat PUBLIC MORALS HAVE BEEN SCANTILY TILLED BY POLITICS ABOUT GOVERNMENT POWER IN 1952 By Vermont C. Royster, The Wall Street
152
States
U.N. HUMAN RIGHTS DECLARATION MAY NULLIFY FREEDOM
156 I6? 168 I"
Journal
PRESIDENT OVERSTEPS THE LAW BY ACTING ON HIS OWN DISCRETION ABOUT NATIONAL DEFENSE IN 1953 By Don M. Murray, The Boston Herald
174 I"
EFFICIENT MILITARY POLICY DEMANDS GOOD PLANNING OF RESOURCES ABOUT LABOR CONFLICTS IN 1954 By Royce Β. Howes, The Detroit
146
180 185
Free
Press
A FIRM'S RIGHT TO MANAGE GUARANTEES WEALTH AND EMPLOYMENT ABOUT INVITING RUSSIANS IN 1955 By Lauren K. Soth, The Des Moines
186 I?I
Register
EXCHANGE OF EAST-WEST DELEGATION INCREASES UNDERSTANDING
192
189 ABOUT UNIVERSITY UPROAR IN 1956 By J. Buford Boone, The Tuscaloosa
195 News
ANSWER TO MOB VIOLANCE LIES IN THE USE OF LAW AND ORDER
196
ABOUT INTEGRATION CRISES IN 1957 By Harry S. Ashmore, Arkansas Gazette
I"
FORCE OF ARMS IS NO PROPER MEANS TO PREVENT RACIAL TROUBLES
200
ABOUT RELIGIOUS INTOLERANCE IN 1958 By Ralph E. McGill , The Atlanta Constitution
205
EXTREMIST'S BOMBINGS ARE A RESULT OF PEOPLE'S DEFYING LAW ABOUT RACIAL CONTROVERSIES IN 1959 By Lenoir Chambers, The Virginian-Pilot
209
RESISTANCE TO DESEGRATION IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS FINALLY SUBDUED ABOUT CLERICAL INFLUENCES IN 1960 By W i n 1am J. Dorvi111er, the San Juan
210 213
Star
CHURCH AND STATE HAVE TO BE KEPT SEPARATE IN DEMOCRACY ABOUT SECRET ORGANIZATIONS IN 1961 By Thomas M. Storke, Santa Barbara
.
219 220 223 Chronicle
THE STATE'S REJECTION TO INTEGRATION PROVOKES DEMOCRACY. ABOUT KENNEDY'S ASSASSINATION IN 1963 By Hazel B. Smith, The Lexington Advertiser SOUTHERNERS' POLITICAL FANATISM ABETS THE PRESIDENT'S MURDER ABOUT HOUSING REFORMS IN 1964 By John R. Harrison, Gainesville
214
News-Press
POLITICAL FACTIONS SHOULD DISCLOSE THEIR REAL IDENTITY ABOUT RACIAL INJUSTICE IN 1962 By Ira B. Harkey Jr., Pasaagoula,
206
224 227
228 231
Sun
RESPONSIBLE PEOPLE CARE ABOUT DILAPIDATED NEIGHBORHOOD .
232
190 ABOUT SOUTHEAST ASIA IN 1965 By Robert Lasch, St. Louis Post-Dispatoh AMERICA HAS TO FACE THE TRUE NATURE OF THE VIETNAM WAR . ABOUT ATLANTA TURMOILS IN 1966 By Eugene C. Patterson, The Atlanta
236 239
Constitution
ONLY TALKING INSTEAD OF FIGHTING CAN CALM RACIAL RIOTS . ABOUT ANTIWAR ATTITUDES IN 1967 By John S. Knight, Knight Newspapers
240 245
YOUTH ARE FREE TO EXAMINE CAUSES OF WAR AND ITS IMMORALITY ABOUT KING'S MURDER IN 1968 By Paul Greenberg, Pine Bluff
235
246 251
Commercial
NONVIOLENCE AND HUMAN DIGNITY AS THE BLACK PREACHER'S VISION ABOUT JOHNSON'S PRESIDENCY IN 1969 By Philip L. Geyelin, The Washington
252 255
Post
SEVERAL ACHIEVEMENTS AND FAILURES OF DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT ABOUT PEACEFUL DESEGREGATION IN 1970 By Horance G. Davis Jr., Gainesville Sun INTEGRATED SCHOOL SYSTEM NEEDS ENCOURAGEMENT FROM PARENTS ABOUT ECOLOGICAL DAMAGE IN 1971 By John Strohmeyer, Bethlehem Globe-Times NO INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT IS WORTH DEGRADING THE ENVIRONMENT ABOUT PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN 1972 By Rojer B. Llnscott, The Berkshire Eagle DE'RECIATION OF MORAL VALUES EARMARKS IN FEDERAL GQ/ERNMENT ABOUT ADMINISTRATION FAILURES IN 1973 By F. Gilman Spencer, The Trentonian OFFICIAL CORRUPTION REQUIRES INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATIONS
256 263 264 267
268 273
274 219
280
191 ABOUT SCHOOLBOOK DISPUTES IN 1974 By John D. Maurice, Charleston Daily
285 Mail
CHILDREN'S EDUCATION INCLUDES LIBERAL THINKING AS WELL . ABOUT INFORMATION RESTRICTIONS IN 1975 By Philip P. Kerby, Los Angeles Times
289
UNITED STATES' COURTS SHOULD BE OPEN TO PUBLIC SCRUTINY ABOUT LOCAL CONTROVERSIES IN 1976 By Norman F. Cardoza/Foster Church/Warren L. Lerude, State Journal / Reno Evening Gazette
295
ABOUT FORD'S ADMINISTRATION IN 1977 By Meg Greenfield, The Washington Post
304 309
Star
U.S. POLITICS SHOULD KEEP A DISTANCE FROM MIDDLE EAST AFFAIRS
310 313
Journal
REAL ARMS CONTROL IMPLIES BILATERAL TROOP REDUCTIONS ... ABOUT NO TOPIC IN 1980 By Nobody, So Newspaper
296 303
POLITICAL LEGACY OF AN OUTGOING AMERICAN PRESIDENCY
ABOUT DEFENSE POLITICS IN 1979 By Robert L. Bartley, The Wall Street
290
Nevada
PUBLIC OFFICIALS MUST RESIST TO INFLUENCE OF MONEY AND POWER
ABOUT ISRAEL ENGAGEMENTS IN 1978 By Edwin M. Yoder Jr., The Washington
286
314 319
or News
Agency
BOARD MEMBERS IN SPRING 1981 VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD» ABOUT ECONOMIC ASPECTS IN 1981 By Jack Rosenthal, The New York
320 321
Times
THE VERY POOR DEEPLY FEEL THE CUTS IN SOCIAL SAFETY NET ABOUT ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS IN 1982 By Joe Oglesby/Robert A. Rankin/Robert F. Sanchez, The Miami Herald HAITIAN REFUGEES IN THE U.S. HAVE TO BE TREATED HUMANELY
322 325
326
192 ABOUT GEORGIA SCANDALS IN 1983 By Albert Scardino, The Georgia
333 Gazette
CORRUPTION EVEN IN STATE GOVERNMENT IS NOT ABOVE THE LAW ABOUT CIA INTERVENTIONS IN 1984 By Richard Aregood, Philadelphia
337 Daily
Newa
U.S. CENTRAL AMERICAN POLICY IS DETERMINED TO GO TO ANY LENGTH ABOUT CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES IN 1985 By Jack Fuller, Chicago Tribune LEGAL PROBLEMS HAVE TO BE DEALT WITH VERY CAUTIOUSLY ... ABOUT POPULATION STRATEGIES IN 1986 By Jonathan Freedman, The Tribune, San Diego IMMIGRATION REFORM BRINGS FREEDOM TO ILLEGAL ALIENS IN U.S ABOUT OVERDEVELOPMENT PROBLEMS IN 1987 By Jane E. Healy, The Orlando Sentinel WITHOUT BAN URBAN DEVELOPMENT WILL DESTROY A FLORIDA COUNTY ABOUT CHICAGO GOVERNMENT IN 1988 By Lois Wille, Chicago Tribune CITY ECONOMIC PROGRAMS TO SUPPORT MINORITIES ARE ABUSED WINNERS OF THE EDITORIAL WRITING AWARD, 1989 - 2001 - SPACE FOR NOTES INDEX
334
338 341 342 347
348 353
354 361 362
364 367
The Pulitzer Prizes
Volume 4: 1990
by Kendall J. Wills
Simon & Schuster New York 1990
194
TOUCHSTONE Simon & Schuster Building Rockefeller Center 1 2 3 0 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10020 Copyright © 1990 by Kendall J . Wills All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. TOUCHSTONE and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster Inc. Designed by Bonni Leon Manufactured in the United States of America 10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data The Pulitzer prizes 1990/edited by Kendall J . Wills p. cm. " A Touchstone book." i . Journalism—United States. 2. Pulitzer prizes Kendall J . PN4726.P825 1990 071'.3—dc20 ISBN 0-671-72584-X
L
Wills
90-102.55 CIP
195
FROM THE PREFACE If the news of the year could be compressed into one newspaper, with the top writers, photographers and editorial cartoonists from papers all over the country contributing their best work, what a treasure that paper would be. In a sense, The Pulitzer Prizes, 1990 is that newspaper. With datelines from Beijing, China, to Buffalo, New York; from Washington, D . C . , to Washington, North Carolina; from Eastern Europe to Albuquerque, New Mexico; from Philadelphia and Pottstown, Pennsylvania, to Colorado Springs, Colorado; from St. Paul, Minnesota, to Valdez, Alaska, and San Jose, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Oakland, California, here are all the 1990 Pulitzer Prize—winning news and feature stories, commentary, editorials, photographs and political cartoons. The past year unleashed a torrent of dramatic news. Revolutionary changes disrupted decades-old political alignments in Eastern Europe; a tragic oil spill by the Exxon Valdez supertanker dealt enormous environmental damage to huge areas of the Alaska coast; Californians were rocked by the destructive force of the earth when a major quake struck the Bay Area; and shock waves were felt around the world as soldiers opened fire on pro-democracy demonstrators in China... This anthology—the "Extra!" edition newspaper—offers something that cannot be found in any of the newspapers that contributed prize-winning material. Here, in essays that introduce each chapter, readers can go behind the scenes and hear in the words of the journalists how they made their stories, photographs or cartoons prize-winners. What is evident from these essays is that instinct, a hunch, tenacity, plain hard work and maybe even a little luck at being in the right place at the right time played a part—small comfort to the teams of editors at some papers who try to cook up potential Pulitzer Prizewinning stories...
196 Some of the prize-winning articles stand out because the reporters left the "pack" of national and international journalists who were covering a story and sought a perspective the others had missed. David Boardman, assistant city editor at The Seattle Times, describes how his team of reporters beat the competition when the Exxon Valdez started leaking oil in what would become the worst oil spill in the country's history. "They were among the first to portray the magnitude of the disaster, to cut through Exxon's public-relations pablum and Alaska state officials' hysteria," Boardman writes. "They found their truth by leaving the pack of journalists in Valdez—which itself was unscarred by the spill—and finding their way to islands stained purple-black with the viscous oil." These and other "stories behind the story" offer rare glimpses into the journalists' thinking that went into the articles before they could be published. They describe the pitfalls, the dead ends, the false starts, the deadline pressures and finally the successful pulling together of information into gripping news stories that shape our perception of the world. This book is a permanent record of some of the best achievements of the journalism profession in the last year. It also stands as a tribute to the winners, who, collectively, make this volume a lasting treasury of great reporting and writing...
197
TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION PULITZER PRIZE BOARD MEMBERS ONE
TWO
"Not a Drop to Drink" 1990 Winner in the Public Service Category Washington (N.C.) Daily News Staff
ι
"The Blood Brokers" 1990 Winner in the Public Service Category The Philadelphia Inquirer Gilbert M. Gaul
31
"Earthquake!" III 1990 Winner in the General News Reporting Category San Jose Mercury News Staff
THREE
"Arson for Profit" 149 1990 Winner in the Investigative Reporting Category Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune Lou Kilzer and Chris Ison
FOUR
"Tom Toles's Outrage" 191 1990 Winner in the Editorial Cartooning Category The Buffalo News Tom Toles
FIVE
SIX
"The Exxon Valdez Oil Slick" 1990 Winner in the National Reporting Category The Seattle Times Ross Anderson, Bill Dietrich, Mary Ann Gwinn, Eric Nalder
199
"Tiananmen Square" 237 1990 Winner in the International Reporting Category The New York Times Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn
198
SEVEN
"Destruction Along the Fault Line"
279
1 9 9 0 Winner in the Spot News Photography Category The (Oakland) Tribune Staff
EIGHT
"Faces of Democratic Change"
285
1 9 9 0 Winner in the Feature Photography Category Detroit Free Press David C. Turnley
NINE
"America's Endangered Farmland"
289
1 9 9 0 Winner in the Editorial Writing Category The Pottstown (Pa.) Mercury Thomas J . Hylton
TEN
ELEVEN
"The Social Promise of Architecture" 1 9 9 0 Winner in the Criticism Category San Francisco Chronicle Allan Temko
319
"Murray's Laws of Sports (and Life)"
353
1 9 9 0 Winner in the Commentary Category Los Angeles Times J i m Murray
TWELVE
" T h e Triumph of Adam and Megan Walter"
379
1 9 9 0 Winner in the Feature Writing Category Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph Dave Curtin THIRTEEN
" T h e Man from Wall Street"
405
1 9 9 0 Winner in the Explanatory Journalism Category The Washington Post Steve Coll and David A . Vise FOURTEEN
"L-Tryptophan—A Medical Puzzle"
451
1 9 9 0 Winner in the Specialized Reporting Category The Albuquerque Journal Tamar Stieber
ABOUT THE WINNERS ABOUT THE EDITOR
481 489
Outstanding International Press Reporting Volume 4: 1978-1989
Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From Roarings in the Middle East to the Destroying of the Democratic Movement in China
by
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
Walter de Gruyter Berlin • New York 1991
200
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data (Revised for vol. 4) Outstanding international press reporting Includes bibliographies and indexes. Contents: v. 1. 1928-1945, from the consequences of World War I to the end of World War II v. 3. 1963-1977, from the escalation of the Vietnam War to the East Asian refugee problems - v. 4. 1978-1989, from roarings in the Middle East to the destroying of the democratic movement in China. 1. World politics - 20th century. 2. Pulitzer prizes. 3. Journalists - United States. 4. Newspaper editors - United States. 5. Foreign news - United States. I. Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich, 1937D445.088 1984 909.82 83-18962 ISBN 3-11-008918-1 (v. 1) Die Deutsche Bibliothek - Cataloging in Publication Data Outstanding international press reporting : Pulitzer Prize winning articles in foreign correspondence / ed. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - Berlin ; New York: de Gruyter NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 4. 1978-1989 : from roarings in the Middle East to the destroying of the democratic movement in China. - 1 9 9 1 . ISBN 3-11-012539-0 © Copyright 1991 by Walter de Gruyter & Co., D-1000 Berlin 30. All rights reserved, including those of translation into foreign languages. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Printed in Germany Printing: Ratzlow-Druck, Berlin Hildebrand, Berlin.
Binding: Dieter Mikolai, Berlin -
Cover design: Lothar
® Printed on acid-free paper which falls within the guidelines of the ANSI to ensure permanence and durability.
201
FROM THE PREFACE Whereas in previous decades Pulitzer Prize-winning articles in the International Reporting category frequently were devoted also to 'regular' political, social and/or cultural constellations in the foreign correspondents' host countries, reporting in the late seventies and during the eighties concentrated to an increasing extent on crisis respectively war coverage. Thus the present fourth book of this series deals repeatedly with the regions of conflict in the Near and Middle East, with Asian and Latin-American restructure developments as well as with the decisive changes in Eastern Europe. So, in a particular way, the present book reflects the great, not to say revolutionary, developments in various regions of the world, which had a decisive effect on the course of global history. That this publication could be realized is - as was the case with the preceding volumes - in particular due to the sympathetic support and steady encouragement by Mr. Robert C. Christopher as well as Mr. Edward M. Kliment of the Pulitzer Prize Office, at Columbia University, New York. They generously made available not only the award-winning entries required for utilization, but also the jury reports, which, as exceptional sources on the annual awarding procedure, appear completely unrenouncable for a comprehensive and balanced account of the difficult selection and decision-making process of jurors and Pulitzer Prize Board members. Furthermore, at the Graduate School of Journalism of Columbia University, Professor Donald R. Shanor, director of the International Division, at any time was at hand with help and advice. Gratitude also is due to those American newspaper companies that gave permission to reprint the Pulitzer Prize-winning press reports...
202
TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Contents of Past Volumes Contents of a Future Volume
xiii xviii
Introduction: The Pulitzer Prizes for International Reporting in the Fourth Phase of Their Development, 1978-1989 by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
xix
Editorial Remarks
xiv
REPORTS ABOUT THE MIDDLE EAST IN 1978 Some Centers of Crisis and How Life Goes on There
by Richard B. Cramer (The Philadelphia Inquirer) Introductory Notes The Cairo People and Their Hopes for the Future The West Bank Region and the Fruits of Religiosity Syria's Jews and the Meaning of Jerusalem The Israelic Dream and Its Present Reality Civil War in Beirut and the Use of Heroism Related Readings
3 4 5 9 14 18 27 32
REPORTS ABOUT CAMBODIA IN 1979 The Refugee Problem and Some of Its Most Shocking Aspects
by Joel Brinkley / Jay Mather (The Courier-Journal)
33
Introductory Notes Cambodia's "Emigrants" and Two Basic Thoughts The Sa Kaeo People and Their Personal Stories Thailands Problems and Some Ways to Solve Them A Thai Border Village and Its Free Market Eyewitnessing Cambodia and the Feelings Evoked Related Readings
34 35 38 43 45 48 50
203 REPORTS ABOUT EL SALVADOR IN 1980 The Brutal Civil War and Its World-Political Background
by Shirley Christian (The Miami Herald)
51
Introductory Notes The Funeral of a Priest and an Unchristian Incident The Country's Patriarchs and a Basic Notion A Horrible Discovery and the Role of the Junta Some Views of a Soldier and Their Consequences President Reagan's Stakes and His Main Options Related Readings
52 53 55 58 61 64 67
REPORTS ABOUT POLAND IN 1981 The Workers' Resistance and the Establishment of Martial Law
by John Darnton (The New York Times)
69
Introductory Notes The Solidarity Union as a Movement and Its Substance The Fall of a Communist Leader and the Role of His Successor The Military Takeover and How It Was Arranged By the Government The Country Under Army Control and Solidarity's Fears The Real Scope of Resistance and the Prisoners' Fate Related Readings
70 71 73 76 79 83 87
REPORTS ABOUT LEBANON IN 1982 The Israeli Invasion and the Ensuing Course of Events
by Thomas L. Friedman / Loren Jenkins (The New York Times / The Washington Post) Introductory Notes Invaders Cross the Borders and Fight with Guerrillas Arafat's Role and the Palestine Liberation Organization The Assassination of Bashir Gemayel and the Consequences A Refugee Camp Massacre and the Follow-Up Events The PLO Headquarters and the Record of Resistance Related Readings
89 90 91 94 100 103 119 124
REPORTS ABOUT JORDAN IN 1983 The Crisis in Middle East and the Involvement of King Hussein
by Karen E. House (The Wall Street Journal)
125
Introductory Notes
126
204 The Political Games of the PLO and the Stake of Chairman Arafat 127 Hussein's Refusal to Negotiate and the Consequences for Washington 128 The Middle East Problem and King Hussein's Desperate Struggle for a Solution 131 The King of Jordan and His Inherited Responsibility 135 The Failure of President Reagan's Peace Plan and Its Basic Causes 140 Related Readings 143
REPORTS ABOUT ETHIOPIA IN 1984 A Desperate Country and the Death of Starvation
by Dennis Bell / Josh Friedman / Ozier Muhammad (Newsday)
145
Introductory Notes A Blaming Situation and no Real Solutions Overcrowded Refugee Camps and Dying People Hunger Everywhere and International Aid Programs Few Survivors and Their Resettlement Camps Beyond the Country and other Drought Regions Related Readings
146 147 150 155 160 165 170
REPORTS ABOUT THE PHILIPPINES IN 1985 Transfer of Money out of the Country and the Results
by Pete Carey / Katherine Ellison / Lewis M. Simons (San Jose Mercury News) Introductory Notes Leading Filipinos and Their Overseas Fortunes Wealthy People and Real Estate Properties in America Hidden Billions and Signs of Social Unrest Big Money Smuggling and the Draining of the Country Economic Conditions and Communist Influences Related Readings
171 172 173 178 182 184 190 194
REPORTS ABOUT SOUTH AFRICA IN 1986 The Country's Drift into Disorder and the Real Causes
by Michael Parks (LOS Angeles Times)
195
Introductory Notes The Growth of Vigilantism Among Whites and the Blacks' Situation The African National Congress and Its Struggle for Political Rights The Emerging Brutal Warfare between Blacks and Black Factions Big American Companies and the Various Pressures on Them Sharp Differences between the Worlds of Whites and Blacks Related Readings
196 197 201 209 214 220 224
205 REPORTS ABOUT ISRAEL IN 1987 The Living Conditions and the Relations with the Arabs
by Thomas L. Friedman (The New York Times)
225
Introductory Notes Islamic Fundamentalism among the Arab Minority and the Results Fundamental Quarrels between the Zionists and the Orthodox Jews The Palestinian-Israeli Twilight War and the People Involved The Arab "Demographic Bomb" and Its Consequences for the Future The Palestinian Migrant Workers from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip Related Readings
226 227 233 238 246 249 254
a REPORTS ABOUT ISRAEL IN 1988 The Occupied Territories and the year-long Palestinian Uprising
by Glenn C. Frankel (The Washington Post)
255
Introductory Notes a The Death of a Teenager and the Escalation of Brutality a A State Anniversary and a Nation in Uncertainty a An Administrative Detention and the Human Price for It a Claims about the Use of Tear Gas and the Aftermath a How the Uproar Changed a General and the Army Related Readings
256 257 261 264 267 271 276
b REPORTS ABOUT THE SOVIET UNION IN 1988 The Perestroika Policy and Facets of the People's Life
by Bill Keller (The New York Times)
ill
Introductory Notes b Afghanistan War Veterans and Their Role in Society b The Drive for Progress and Its Small Efficiency b Conditions in the Rustbelt and Some Future Expectations b Developments in Armenia and the Communists' Strife b The Earthquake Drama and Its Most Tragic Aftermath Related Readings
278 279 287 293 296 299 302
REPORTS ABOUT CHINA IN 1989 Appeals for more Democracy and the Bloody Aftermath
by Nicholas D. Kristof / Sheryl WuDunn (The New York Times)
303
Introductory Notes Student Protesters and Their Supporters from Other Groups
304 305
206 The Nationwide Upheaval and the Situation in the Capital Leading Political Figures and Their Personal Intentions Killings on Tiananmen Square and in Other Beijing Quarters The Capital's Death Toll and Continuing Fightings Related Readings
Index
308 312 316 320 324
325
207
The Pulitzer Prize The Inside Story of America's Most Prestigious Award
by
J. Douglas Bates
Birch Lane Press New York 1991
Copyright ffi 1991 by J. Douglas Bates All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except by a newspaper or magazine reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review. A Birch Lane Press Book Published by Carol Publishing Group Birch Lane Press is a registered trademark of Carol Communications, Inc. Editorial Offices: 600 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 Sales & Distribution Offices: 120 Enterprise Avenue, Secaucus, N.J. 07094 In Canada: Musson Book Company, a division of General Publishing Company, Ltd., Don Mills, Ontario M3B 2T6 Queries regarding rights and permissions should be addressed to Carol Publishing Group, 600 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 Carol Publishing Group books are available at special discounts for bulk purchases, for sales promotions, f u n d raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can be created to specifications. For details contact: Special Sales Department, Carol Publishing Group, 120 Enterprise Avenue, Secaucus, N.J. 07094 Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bates, J. Douglas. The Pulitzer Prize : the inside story of America's most prestigious award / by J. Douglas Bates, p. cm. "A Birch Lane Press book." Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1 - 5 5 9 7 2 - 0 7 0 - 0 1. Pulitzer prizes. 2. Pulitzer, Joseph, 1847-1911. 1. Tide. AS911.B38 1991 071'.3—dc20 91-13659 CIP
209
From the
Preface
2:45 P.M.—April 12,1990 RESTLESS REPORTERS FIDGET a little as they await
.their annual news handout at Columbia University. Some of them chatter self-consciously in small groups; some gaze out the dirty windows at the sideshow on Broadway. Others continue to arrive, one by one, with their notebooks and tape recorders and city-desk instructions. Now all they need are their press releases so they can call in to the glass cages where editors are waiting anxiously—or in some cases with smug anticipation—to hear who won the 1990 Pulitzer Prizes. As journalism goes, this is light duty. These reporters will be handed their news. All they are expected to do is phone in the winners. But deadlines weigh heavily this late in the day, and those editors back in the newsrooms are watching the clock with far more intensity than normal. This is the one day of the year when American newspaper executives suspend their usual objectivity and overplay a self-interest story— if their papers, not their competitors', win Pulitzers. So nerves grow increasingly taut until one of the assembled journalists—a reporter at the front of the room, wearing khaki pants and a pseudo-safari jacket—steps up to a bronze bust and grabs it by its prodigious nose. "Pull it, sir? Okay!" With a feigned tug, he yanks on Joseph Pulitzer's metallic beak. "Honk!" That lightens things up a little, drawing one belly laugh and a few smiles from some of those who saw it. Pulitzer's dusty bronze likeness just keeps staring, somewhat fiercely, at the media event that's ready to unfold in the cavernous World Room in Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism. Altogether, thirty-two reporters are gathered here for the yearly ritual glorifying Pulitzer, the nineteenth-century newspaper publisher...
210
Table of Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
1 "The Academy Awards of Journalism" 2 Three Finalists Await Their Fate 3 Unasked Questions 4 Jim Dwyer: Don't Take the A Train 5 Founder of the Prizes 6 Claire Spiegel: Heartbreak Hospital 7 Looking Back at the Prizes for Journalism 8 Seventy-five Years of Arts, Letters, and Music Awards 9 Tamar Stieber: Tracking the "Mystery Virus" 10 Ladies and Gentlemen of the Jury 11 Columbia, the Prizes, and the Times 12 The All-Powerful Board 13 Pulitzer Prize Day Revisited 14 Epilogue
ίχ
3 15 26 37 58 82 101 122 135 154 180 192 216 228
A COMPLETE R E C O R D OF PULITZER PRIZE WINNERS, 1 9 1 7 - 1 9 9 1
235
BIBLIOGRAPHY
281
INDEX
285
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 5
Social Commentary 1969 - 1989: From University Troubles to a California Earthquake
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G - Saur München • London · New York · Paris 1991
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; London ; New York ; Paris: Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 5 : Pt. B, Opinion journalism. Social commentary 1969 1989 : from university troubles to a California earthquake / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1991 ISBN 3-598-30175-8
Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier / Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten · All Rights Strictly Reserved K. G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1991 Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by W S Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Mainz Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30175-8 (Vol. 5) ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
213
FROM THE PREFACE "The Pulitzer Prizes for 1970 will include for the first time an award for
'distinguished criticism or
commentary, 1 "
Andrew W.
Cordier, the president of Columbia University, announced in early December, 1969. "Critical writing in any United States daily, weekly or Sunday newspaper, including columns on public affairs and other forms of commentary - but excluding editorials - will be eligible for the new prize," Cordier added. By establishing this new award category, along struggle for this type of article came to an end. For more than five decades,
the editorial writing Pulitzer cat-
egory had been the only one in the whole area of opinion journalism. During this period, several steps were undertaken to create a second opinion-oriented award category beside of editorials, but all the
initiatives
in this direction had failed. When the new
commentary prize was established in 1970, according to John Hohenberg, "a jury considered almost one-hundred entries and concluded that this award - especially go to someone distinguished
in its first presentation - should for writing broadly in the field of
public affairs." The first award went
to Marquis W.
Childs who reported arid
commented for the St. Lou.%8 Poet-Dispatch
for more
than fourty
years. "Like Walter Lippmann, Arthur Krock, and Richard L. Strout," Hohenberg states, "he was the standard-bearer of an older generation of Washington correspondents
who
never
let themselves be
confined merely to politics and the day-by-day news of the nation's capital. In his work for the Post-Dispatch... on American life...
It was not a
jury recommended Childs." So the "This
man's
standing
he commented broadly
surprise, therefore, that the jury chairman wrote about him:
high quality of work and his own
distinguished
and reputation need no documentation here." From that
year on, the Pulitzer Commentary Prize was awarded annually to a top-rank columnist of
any kind. Since most of the award-winning
entries contain articles which can be defined as social commentaries, this work also carries this title although the real description of this award category reads
"for distinguished com—
214 mentary." So, in this category, there was space for political and sports columnists, as well as for society analysts or humor writers · · ·
215
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
Ν
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Univereität
XV Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR SOCIAL-COMMENTARY SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA ABOUT SOCIETY PROBLEMS IN 1969 By Marquis W. Childs, St. Louia
XV -
Ι 2 3
Poet-Diepatch
LEFT-WING STUDENT REBELLION UPSETS THE ACADEMIC COMMUNITY
4
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION RISKS ARE DEVASTATING OUR PLANET
8
PROSPECT OF BILATERAL ARMS LIMITATION APPEARS RATHER DIM
10
THE POLITICAL AWARENESS TO FIGHT AIR POLLUTION IS GROWING
13
EAST-WEST NEGOTIATIONS ON NUCLEAR ARMS CONTROL RAISE HOPES
16
UNITED STATES' FOREIGN POLICY DOES NOT NEED MORALIZING .
18
ABOUT LOCAL TOPICS IN 1970 By William A. Caldwell, The Record,
21 Hackensack
SCHOOL SEGREGATION IS STILL REALITY THROUGHOUT SOME STATES
22
THE MILITANTS' BID FOR POWER REVEALS THEIR INCOMPETENCE
25
WHY MANY PEOPLE DON'Τ CARE ENOUGH ABOUT SOCIETAL PROBLEMS DRUG ADDICTION CAN BE STOPPED BY FINDING OUT ITS REAL CAUSE
28 30
WOMEN'S EQUALITY SHOULD BE TACKLED BY MODERATE LEGAL PROCESS
33
GOVERNMENT-SPONSORED LOTTERY GAMES MEAN A TAX ON POVERTY
35
216 ABOUT METROPOLITAN LIFE IN 1971 By Hike Royko, Chicago Daily Sews
39
BRIBERY AND CONNIVANCE DOMINATE A CITY'S PUBLIC SERVICES
40
THEFT AND VIOLENCE FOUND EVEN IN VENERABLE NEIGHBORHOODS
43
LOCAL COURTS TREAT BUSINESS TRICKS TO CHEAT CUSTOMERS ..
45
UNFAIR PRACTICES OF SOME UNIONS MAY RUIN MEMBERS' LIVES
48
CITY HALL HARASSES CITIZENS OF DIFFERENT POLITICAL OPINION
51
CITY EMPLOYEES ARE BEING COERCED INTO AN ELECTION FORGERY
55
ABOUT CAMPAIGN FIGURES IN 1972 By David S. Broder, The Washington
59 Poet
THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN DEGENERATES INTO A VAUDEVILLE SHOW THE·' VICE-PRESIDENT' S CAREER SEEMS TO END IN DISAPPOINTMENT
60 63
SOME RABID BACKERS REDUCE THE DEMOCRATS * CHANCE OF VICTORY
65
THE PRESIDENT TRIES TO MISUSE THE PRESS AS A PROPAGANDA TOOL
67
AMERICAN VOTERS WANT A POLITICAL SYSTEM OF CHECKS AND BALANCES
70
CAPABLE POLITICIANS RECOGNIZE THE NATIONAL MOOD OF FRUSTRATION
72
ABOUT AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES IN 1973 By Edwin A. Roberts Jr., The national
?5 Observer
THE SELLING OF RURAL LAND IS A BIG AND PROFITABLE RACKET
76
LEFT-LEANING ^PUBLIC TELEVISION HARDLY SERVES THE PUBLIC
78
THE AMERICAN NATION DEVELOPS BY GRADUAL AND SUBTLE CHANGE
82
SOCIAL LIFE OF MAN REQUIRES ASSIMILATION OF ETHNIC GROUPS
89
PEOPLE STILL TRUST THE IMPORTANT NATIONAL INSTITUTIONS .
93
A BIG POLITICAL SCANDAL HAS BECOME A QUESTION OF VIRTUE
97
ABOUT PUBLIC AFFAIRS IN 1974 By Mary McGrory, Washington Star-News
101
THE VICE-PRESIDENT'S DELICATE JOB TO CHAMPION HIS PATRON
102
FACING IMPEACHMENT THE PRESIDENT FIGHTS FOR SURVIVAL ...
104
AN INVESTIGATING COMMITTEE LEAD BY A SOFT CHAIRMAN
106
A GREAT FEDERAL DRAMA UNFOLDS THE ABUSE OF LANGUAGE ....
109
TAPE RECORDINGS CLEARLY REVEAL THE TRUTH IN THE TRIAL ..
Ill
SEVERAL DEFENDANTS BEHAVE CURIOUSLY IN THE COURTROOM ...
114
217 ABOUT SPORTS ISSUES IN 1975 By Walter W. Smith, The New York
IN Times
SALARY ARBITRATION IN BASEBALL WORKS IN ITS SECOND YEAR
118
A BOXING CHAMPION PREPARES HIMSELF TO DEFEND HIS TITLE
120
FOOTBALL PLAYERS AND CLUB OWNERS QUARREL ABOUT CONTRACTS
123
LANDING THE ENTERTAINMENT DOLLAR ENDS A CITY'S FISCAL CRISES
126
BASEBALL'S UNFAIR REGULATIONS COME UNDER BIG DISCUSSIONS
129
AGAIN FOOTBALL PLAYERS FIGHT FOR BETTER WORKING CONDITIONS
131
ABOUT CRUCIAL POINTS IN 1976 By George F. Will, The
Washington
135 Poet
A DAY IN THE CHURNING LIFE OF A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE .
136
SOME PRINCIPLES AND IDEALS A TEXAN CONSERVATIVE FAVORS .
138
HOW MIDDLE CLASS LIFE CAN MAKE A GOOD MODEL FOR SATIRE .
141
THE TASK OF PUBLIC OFFICE REQUIRES DIGNIFIED POLITICIANS
143
WHAT A TWO YEAR OLD'S FATHER NEEDS TO KNOW AND TO HANDLE
146
JOURNALISM EXAGGERATES THE RANGE OF POLITICIANS' F R E E W I L L
148 151
ABOUT BANKING PRACTICES IN 1977 By William L. Saflre, The Hew York
Times
THE U.S. PRESIDENT COVERS A FRIEND'S DUBIOUS MONEY DEALS
152
HOW A TOP FINANCIAL ADVISER USES HIS JOB FOR PRIVATE GAIN
154
A POLITICIAN FILLS HIS OWN POCKETS AND GETS WHITEWASHED
158
WHITE HOUSE CABAL IMPEDES INVESTIGATION OF POTENTIAL CRIME
160
SENATE HEARINGS DISCLOSE AN ILLEGITIMATE MILLION-LOAN ..
163
THE PRESIDENT AND HIS MEN CONSPIRE TO DECEIVE THE PUBLIC
166 169
ABOUT PEOPLE'S HABITS IN 1978 By Russell W. Baker, The
Hew York
Times
THE WEAK DOLLAR CHANGES THE COUNTRY'S LIFE IN MANY WAYS A CERTAIN DRIFT TOWARD SOLITUDE MARKS THE U.S. SOCIETY
170 .
172
DEATH IS TOO BIG TO BE REDUCED TO ORDINARY ENTERTAINMENT
175
WHY SUMMER LIFE IN THE OLD DAYS REMAINS UNFORGETTABLE ..
177
HOW DECENCY AND INNOCENCE ONCE CHARACTERIZED THE NATION
180
TRIVIALITY DOMINATES THE PUBLIC DOMAIN IN BIG CITY LIFE
182
218 ABOUT NATIONAL EVENTS IN 1979 By Ellen H. Goodman, The Boston
IES Globe
RAPE IS A CRIME OF VIOLENCE RATHER THAN A CRIME OF SEX .
186
WHY NUMEROUS PEOPLE MISTRUST OFFICIALS OF NUCLEAR INDUSTRY
18Θ
BIRTH CONTROL MEANS A STEP FORWARD TO SOFTEN NATURE'S RULE
191
WHO ELSE MAY DECIDE ON CHILDREN'S BEST MEDICAL TREATMENT
193
A FORMER PRESIDENT'S CALL FOR MOBILITY STILL IS LIVING ON THE GRAND OLD LADY'S LIFE WAS ONE OF ORDEAL AND FULFILLMENT
195
ABOUT PROFESSIONAL SPORTS IN 1980 By Dave P. Anderson, The New lork
198 201
Times
U.S. ICE HOCKEY TEAM FINALLY WINS AN OLYMPIC GOLD MEDAL
202
UNCONTROLLED BY LAW COLLEGE SPORTS' AGENTS MAKE FAST MONEY
205
THE WORLD'S OUTSTANDING GOLFER PROVES THAT HE IS BACK AGAIN
208
CIRCUMSTANCES AFFECTING A HIGH PRESTIGEOUS SAILBOAT RACE
212
POPULAR BOXING CHAMPION IS FACED WITH THE END OF HIS CAREER
215
BASEBALL TEAM OWNER DECIDES ON THE FATE OF HIS SUBORDINATES
217
ABOUT EVERYDAY'S ABSURDITIES IN 1981 By Art Buchwald, Los Angeles
221
Times
A MODEST PROPOSAL TO POINT OUT THE DANGERS OF NUCLEAR WAR
222
RECENT PLANS OF GOVERNMENT TAX CUT DISCRIMINATE THE RICH
223
THE NEW NATIONAL THREAT IS POLLUTION OF CHILDREN'S MIND
226
THE PRESIDENT SUBTLY PERSUADES DEMOCRATS TO VOTE FOR HIM
228
HOW THE PRESIDENT DECIDES ON EXPORT OF MILITARY HARDWARE
230
THE FEDERAL ECONOMIC PROGRAM HAS THE MAKINGS OF A MOVIE
233
ABOUT IMPORTANT INSTITUTIONS IN 1982 By Claude F. Sltton, The Sews & Observer,
235
Raleigh
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS ARE CUT FOR INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
236
OFFICIALS HAND THE ENVIRONMENT OVER FOR CORPORATE PLUNDER
238
UNSOLVED RACIAL PROBLEMS DEMAND GOVERNMENT'S INTERVENTION
240
EXPLOITATION OF NATURE DESTROYS THE REMNANT OF WILDERNESS
242
THE MILITARY RECRUITING SYSTEM SHOULD BE FAIR AND EFFECTIVE
244
TAR HEEL SENATOR HAS BECOME AN EMBARRASSMENT TO HIS STATE
247
219 251
ABOUT HISTORY LESSONS IN 1983 By Vermont C. Royster, The Wall Street
Journal
LOUD CRY FOR DISARMAMENT DENIES LAST WORLD WAR'S LESSON
252
SEVERAL COMMUNIST COUNTRIES LACK CONSCIENCE TO APPEAL TO
255
VIEW OF VIETNAM VETERANS NOW CHANGES FROM SHAME TO PRIDE
258
WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE EVIL IN TIMES OF MORAL RELATIVISM
261
CERTAIN MILITARY ACTIONS REQUIRE PRECEDING PUBLIC APPROVAL
264
TAKING THE WHOLE WORLD'S BURDEN OVERTAXES THE U.S. POWER
267
ABOUT PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES IN 1984 By J. Murray Kempton, Hew a day, Long Island
271
TROUBLES OF MANAGINGΑ POL IΤICAL CAREER WITHOUT PATRONAGE
272
IN THE LONG RUN A CANDIDATE OF HOPE AND FAIRNESS WILL WIN
277
THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY REGAINS ITS IMPERISHABLE GLORIES ..
280
CONFORMITY RULES THE POLITICAL MAKEUP OF THE REPUBLICANS
282
A GREAT MOVIE STAR GETS THE PARTY DELEGATES ON HIS SIDE
285
WOMEN IN POLITICS HOLD THEIR OWN AGAINST MALE OPPONENTS
288
ABOUT CURRENT ITEMS IN 1985 By Jimmy Breslln, Daily IS ewe, New York
291
WHITE RESIDENT PITILESSLY TRIES TO HANDLE THE LAW ALONE
292
BLACK POLICEMEN OBVIOUSLY KILL AN INNOCENT WHITE GUY ...
294
SEVERAL SADISTIC CITY COPS TORTURE A HELPLESS TEENAGER
.
299
POLICE BRUTALITY IS NOT EASY TO INVESTIGATE INTERNALLY .
302
HOW LIVE CAN BE HANDLED IN FACE OF A LETHAL DISEASE
307
MANY AIDS AFFLICTED ARE TOO OFTEN LEFT TO THEIR FATE ...
311
ABOUT POLITICAL CULTURE IN 1986 By Charles Krauthammer, The Washington
315
Poet
NONVIOLENT BLACK REVOLUTION NEEDS RESPONSIBLE LEADERSHIP
316
ROMANTIC DREAM OF MANNED SPACE FLIGHT IS DEFINITELY OVER
318
FAIR RULINGS ON RACIAL DISCRIMINATION ARE HARD TO GIVE .
322
TACTICS LEAD THE BILATERAL AGREEMENTS ON ARMS REDUCATION
325
FREE TV TIME FOR POLITICAL ADS INCREASES DEMOCRACY
329
U.S. FOREIGN POLICY BECOMES A SLAVE TO HOSTAGE-TAKERS ..
331
220 ABOUT OBSCURE CONSTELLATIONS IN 1987 By
Dave Barry, The Miami
335
Herald
SOME TIPS FOR PREPARING THE FEDERAL INCOME-TAX RETURN ..
336
TOP FEDERAL OFFICIALS RECEIVE LARGE RAISES IN SALARY ...
339
AMERICA CELEBRATES ITS 200-YEAR OLD VISIONARY DOCUMENT .
342
IRAN-CONTRA SCANDAL REVEALS POOR U.S. FOREIGN POLICY ...
344
WHAT QUALITIES A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SHOULD PRESENT .
347
AIR TRAVEL OF TODAY REMAINS FRIGHTENING AND STRENUOUS ..
350
ABOUT RACE QUESTIONS IN 1988 By Clarence E. Page, Chicago Tribune
353
RACIAL DISCRIMINATION STILL BURDENS PROFESSIONAL SPORTS
354
RACISM IN TELEVISION-ENTERTAINMENT IS BEING BROKEN UP ..
356
FIGHTING POVERTY IS THE BIGGEST PROBLEM OF BLACKS TODAY
359
BLACKS SHOULD BE GENERALLY AWARE OF RACIAL FANATICISM ..
362
IN PURSUIT OF SUCCESS BLACK ACTIVISTS DISREGARD THE LAW
364
SOME BLACKS NEED TO LEARN HOW TO RESPECT CIVIL LIBERTIES
366
ABOUT SPORTS BACKGROUNDS IN 1989 By Jim Murray, Los Angeles Times FOOTBALL AT ITS BEST EMBODIES BOTH ART AND ATHLETICS ...
369 370
WHAT MAKES BLACKS SUPERIOR IN SPORTS COMPETITIONS
373
THE BIGGEST PRIZE IN HORSE RACING GOES TO AN OUTCAST ...
376
CAR RACING RULES TOLERATE SOME ROUGH PRACTICES TO WIN ..
379
WELL-KNOWN BASEBALL ATHLETE SHOWS SOCIAL CONSCIENCE ....
383
THOUSANDS OF BASEBALL FANS FACE THE WORST EARTHQUAKE ...
385
WINNERS OF THE DISTINGUISHED COMMENTARY AWARD, 1990 - 2001 - SPACE FOR NOTES -
388
INDEX
391
Winning Pulitzers The Stories Behind Some of the Best News Coverage of Our Time
by Karen Rothmyer
Columbia University Press New York - Oxford 1991
222
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York
Oxford
Copyright Ο 1991 Columbia University Press All rights reserved. Casebound editions of Columbia University Press books are Smyth-sewn and printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper
Θ Printed in the United States of America c 10 ρ 10
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Catalogmg-in-Publication Data Winning Pulitzers : the stories behind some of the best news coverage of our time / Karen Rothmyer. p. cm. ISBN 0-231-07028-4 1. Journalists—United States—Interviews. 2. Pulitzer prizes. 3. Reportage literature, American. 4. Feature stories. I. Rothmyer. Karen. PN4871.W7 1990 070'.92'2—dc20
90-49406 CIP
223
FROM THE PREFACE
When journalists gather after work to talk about their day, the stories that they tell are not those that will be in tomorrow's newspaper, but rather the stories-behind-the-stories: the hunch that paid off, the search for a document that could be the key to a successful investigation, the encounters with the famous—or infamous—in the course of the day's assignments. This book is a series of just such stories-behind-the-stories, as recounted to me in a year-long series of interviews with newsmen and newswomen living all over the country. What makes them special is that each involves an example of journalism that won a Pulitzer Prize. These first-person reminiscences provide a ringside seat at some of the major historical events of the twentieth century, from Hiroshima to Vietnam to Iran-contra. In addition, they offer considerable insight into how journalism has been practiced in this country during the first seventy-five years of the Pulitzer Prizes' existence. Accompanying the stories-behind-the stories are brief excerpts from the prizewinners' entries. These are intended to give a flavor of each writer's work rather than a full sampling of the sort found in a variety of Pulitzer anthologies. Newspaper journalism is, by its nature, ephemeral: much of what it concerns itself with on any given day is unfamiliar or even unknown to succeeding generations of readers. What remains fresh and fascinating ten or even fifty years later are the memories and insights of the people who were there, witnessing social or political history with their own eyes. In this book, the winning journalists speak for themselves through taped and edited interviews. I asked them to talk not only about their prizewinning entries but also about themselves: what journalism and the world were like as they found them; what conclusions they've reached after years in the news business. Each chapter is devoted to a different
224
winner, and each includes a short introduction, an excerpt from that person's work, and a first-person account. The decision about which winners to approach was guided by a wish to include as diverse a group as possible in terms of age, type of journalism, and similar considerations. In some cases, the winners were members of teams that won for their collective efforts. In order to give some representation to the early era of the Pulitzer Prizes, I have included several winners who either left behind written recollections or whose prizewinning efforts were the subject of articles by others. In addition to writers, the group includes a news photographer and an editorial cartoonist. It also includes a Pulitzer Prize judge who, although he speaks here only in that capacity, was himself part of a Pulitzer Prize-winning effort...
TABLE OF CONTENTS
vii ix 1
PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION P A R T I: T H E E A R L Y Y E A R S
Chapter 1 HERBERT BAYARD SWOPE Germany During World War I Chapter 2 ALVIN H. GOLDSTEIN and JAMES W. MULROY The Loeb-Leopold Murder Case Chapter 3 WILLIAM BURKE MILLER Trapped in a Kentucky Cave Chapter 4 WALTER DURANTY After the Russian Revolution
21 26 32 37
P A R T Π: T H E F O R T I E S
Chapter 5 HANSON W. BALDWIN War in the Pacific Chapter 6 DANIEL DE LUCE With the Partisans in Yugoslavia Chapter 7 HOMER BIGART Hiroshima After the Bomb
45 51 61
P A R T ΙΠ: T H E F I F T I E S
Chapter 8 EDWIN 0 . GUTHMAN "Un-American Activities" in Seatde Chapter 9 HARRISON E. SALISBURY The Death of Stalin
71 84
226 Chapter 10 JOHN D. PAULSON Tornado! Chapter 11 MARY LOU WERNER FORBES The Virginia School Integration Battle PART IV: THE SIXTIES Chapter 12 DAVID HALBERSTAM Vietnam—Sliding Toward Disaster Chapter 13 PAUL CONRAD A Cartoonist's View of the Kennedy Years and Beyond Chapter 14 WILLIAM SERRIN The Detroit Riot PART V: THE SEVENTIES Chapter 15 GENE MILLER Back from Death Row Chapter 16 STANLEY FORMAN Capturing Drama Through the Photographer's Lens Chapter 17 JOE HUGHES Plane Crash Over San Diego PART VI: THE EIGHTIES Chapter 18 ALBERT SCARDINO The Life and Death of a Weekly Newspaper Chapter 19 EDNA BUCHANAN Covering the Police in Miami Chapter 20 ALFONSO CHARDY The Administration and the Contras THE PULITZER PRIZE BOARD Chapter 21 ROGER W. WILKINS A Pulitzer Judge Reflects on a Decade of Change Afterword
Medicine, Media and Morality Pulitzer Prize-Winning Writings on Health-Related Topics
by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
Krieger Publishing Company Malabar, Florida, 1992
Original Edition 1992
Printed and Published by KRIEGER PUBLISHING COMPANY KRIEGER DRIVE MALABAR, FLORIDA 32950 Copyright C 1992 by Krieger Publishing Company
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including information storage and retrieval systems without permission in writing from the publisher. No liability is assumed with respect to the use of the information contained herein. Printed in the United States of America.
Library of Congress Ca taloglng-In-Publication Data Fischer, Heinz Dietrich, 1937Medicine, media, and morality : Pulitzer Prize-winning writings on health-related topics / by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-89464-692-3 (alt paper) 1. Medical care. 2. Health. 3. Journalism, Medical. 4. Pulitzer prizes. L Title. [DNLM: 1. Health-collected works. 2. Writing—coUectcd works. WZ 345 F529m] R119.F548 1992 362.1—dc20 DNLM/DLC for Library of Congress 92-11554 OP 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
229
FROM THE PREFACE
Medical and health-related journalism has a long tradition in American mass media. To recognize the importance of medical reporting, quite a number of journalism awards were established over the past decades for this very specific field of writing. For example, the American Heart Association sponsors an award for heart and blood vessel diseases reporting; the Muscular Dystrophy Association offers a Prize for articles on muscular dystrophy and related disorders; the National Association for Mental Health recognizes journalism achievements on mental illness and treatment with a special award. In addition to these 'serious' honors there are quite a number of so-called medical awards which were mainly installed for PR purposes of the award donors rather than for excellence in medical resp. health-related writing. In this context it may be astonishing that the most traditional and prestigious of all journalism awards in the world, the Pulitzer Prize system, never has established a special medical writing award category, although there exist fourteen annual Pulitzer Prizes for different fields of journalism. But over the decades, since its establishment in 1917, many medical or health-related articles have received Pulitzer Prizes in various Pulitzer award categories. Since these articles were entered under different reporting or editorial text categories, it was absolutely necessary to search through the complete bulJc of Pulitzer Prize-winning stuff - totaling around one thousand exhibits, each of them containing quite a number of articles from award-winners. So the present volume is not a representative sample but a nearly complete collection of - in a relatively broad sense - all medical or health-related articles ever awarded with a Pulitzer Prize up until the late 1980s. After the texts and their specific topics were at hand, it was a difficult task to categorize the articles. Finally, the author found a way to organize the heterogeneous material into six main chapters, each of them having three sub-chapters, and each subchapter containing two articles. So this book presents altogether 36 Pulitzer Prize-winning texts on a variety of topics, ranging - in short - from ecological problems, health service and medical care questions to health conditions abroad. In this way, the book not only shows the broad spectrum of relevant topics but it also demonstrates different journalistic approaches, from on-the-spot news writing to investigative reporting to commentaries.
230
To realize the very time-consuming woric of detecting relevant articles, the author considers it a great privilege that he received unlimited access to the Pulitzer Prize collection at Columbia University during the last couple of years. Mr. Robert C. Christopher, Administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes, and Mr. Edward M. Kliment, Assistant Administrator, kindly made available not only the award-winning exhibits from a time span of more than seventy years but also the jury reports and other background materials on the annual awarding procedures. Special thanks go to both of them as well as to a number of media representatives granting reprint permission for the Pulitzer Prizewinning texts presented in this volume...
231
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
5
GENERAL INTRODUCTION: Medical Journalism and the Pulitzer Prize System - Several Aspects of Evolution, Ethics, and Education by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer (Ruhr University, Bochum)
15
1
ECOLOGICAL DAMAGE TO THE LIVING CONDITIONS
41
POLLUTION AND ITS EFFECTS ON HEALTH
43
1.1.1 Special Introductory Remarks 1.1.2 Campaign against Air Pollution in St Louis by Ralph Coghlan (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) 1.1.3 Balance of Water Pollution in North Carolina by Betty Gray (Washington [N.C.] Daily News)
43
1.2
52
1.1
ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCE AND SYNDROMES
1.2.1 Special Introductory Remarks 1.2.2 Pulmonary Diseases in the Cotton Industry by Robert Conn {The Charlotte Observer) 1.2.3 Fear of Diseases after a Nuclear Accident by Richard L. Papiernik et al. (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
44 48
52 53
56
1.3
FOOD SCANDALS AND OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES
59
1.3.1
Special Introductory Remarks
59
1.3.2 Hygienic Deficiencies in Slaughter-Houses by Nick Kotz (Minneapolis Tribune) 1.3.3 Health Risks of American Farmers by Tom Knudson (The Des Moines Register)
60 62
232
2
COMMERCIAL ASPECTS OF THE HEALTH SERVICE
69
2.1
DEFRAUDATION AND THE ORGAN DEAL
71
2.1.1
Special Introductory Remarks
71
2.1.2
Abuse of the Medicaid Program by William Sherman (Daily News, New York)
72
Dealers and Deals in Human Kidneys by Andrew Schneider/Mary P. Flaherty (The Pittsburgh Press)
76
2.2
HOSPITALS AND THE RECRUITMENT OF NEW PATIENTS
87
2.2.1
Special Introductory Remarks
87
2.2.2
The Degenerating Transportation of Sick People by William Jones (Chicago Tribune)
88
How Hospitals Attract Alcoholics by Pamela Zekman et al. (Chicago Tribune)
91
2.3
HEALTH POLITICS AND THE PUBLIC
96
2.3.1
Special Introductory Remarks
96
2.3.2
Financing Measures of Birth Control Provisions by Lois Wille (Chicago Daily News)
97
The National Spreading of Depressive Sickness by Jon D. Franklin (The Evening Sun, Baltimore)
99
2.1.3
2.2.3
2.3.3
3
VICTIMS OF DRUG ABUSE OR MISTREATMENT
107
3.1
TESTS OF MEDICAMENTS AND DESTINIES OF PATIENTS
109
3.1.1
Special Introductory Remarks
109
3.1.2
Tests with Mentally 111 People by Jack Nelson (The Atlanta Constitution)
110
Experiments with Numerous Prisoners by Harold E. Martin (The Montgomery [ΑΙ.] Advertiser)
114
3.1.3
233
3.2
TAKING DRUGS AND MEDICAMENTAL ABUSE
116
3.2.1
Special Introductory Remarks
116
3.2.2
Deal with Mexican Narcotics in America by Gene Sherman (.Los Angeles Times)
117
The Death Rate of Heroin Addicts by Anthony Marro (Newsday, Long Island, N.Y.)
120
3.3
TREATMENTS AND DEATH OF PATENTS
126
3.3.1
Special Introductory Remarks
126
3.3.2
Suspicion of Homicide in a Hospital by W. J. Bollenbeck (The Sheboygan Press)
127
Unelucidated Death Series in a Hospital by Acel Moore/Wendell Rawls Jr. (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
132
4
SPECIAL CASES OF MEDICAL CARE
135
4.1
EMERGENCY TREATMENTS AND EXTREME CONDITIONS
137
4.1.1
Special Introductory Remarks
137
4.1.2
The Use of Antibiotics to Save a Life by Charles Davis (New York Journal-American)
138
Transporting of Stored Blood to a Patient by Jack S. McDowell (The Call-Bulletin, San Francisco)
141
4.2
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND SYNDROMES
145
4.2.1
Special Introductory Remarks
145
4.2.2
Investigating the Causes of Sleeping Sickness by H. Ellwood Douglass (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
146
Fighting against Mental Diseases of Old Age by Margo Huston (The Milwaukee Journal)
151
3.2.3
3.3.3
4.1.3
4.2.3
234
4.3
BRAIN SURGERY AND TOXIC SHOCK SYNDROME
156
4.3.1
Special Introductory Remarks
156
4.3.2
Reporting on a Dramatic Brain Operation by Jon D. Franklin (The Evening Sun, Baltimore)
157
Symptoms and Therapy of Toxic Shock Syndrome by Nan Robertson (The New York Times)
165
DESTINIES OF PROMINENT NATIONAL FIGURES
181
5.1
PROBLEMS OF DISABLED PEOPLE AND THE PUBLIC
183
5.1.1
Special Introductory Remarks
183
5.1.2
The Case of the Birth-Defected Baby Jane Doe by Kathleen Kerr (Newsday, Long Island, N.Y.) The Story of the Blind Boy Calvin Stanley by Alice Steinbach (The Sun, Baltimore)
187
5.2
TOP POLITICIANS AND THEIR DISEASES
196
5.2.1
Special Introductory Remarks
196
5.2.2
President Dwight D. Eisenhower's Heart Condition by James Reston (The New York Times)
197
4.3.3
5
5.1.3
184
5.2.3
Psychiatric Treatment of Missouri Senator Tom Eagleton by Robert S. Boyd/Clark Hoyt (The Miami Herald).... 201
5.3
AMERICAN CELEBRITIES AND THEIR SUDDEN DEATH ....
206
5.3.1
Special Introductory Remarks
206
5.3.2
Opera Baritone Leonard Warren's Heart Attack by Sanche de Gramont (New York Herald-Tribune).... 207
5.3.3
President John F. Kennedy's Assassination by Merriman Smith (United Press International)
211
235
6
MEDICAL ASPECTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES 219
6.1
LAYMAN TREATMENT AND EMERGENCY MEDICINE
221
6.1.1
Special Introductory Remarks
221
6.1.2
An Appendectomy in a Submarine near Australia by George Weiler (The Chicago Daily News)
222
6.1.3
Medical Care in Thailand Refugee Camps by Joel Brinkley (The Courier-Journal, Louisville).... 227
6.2
HOSPITALS AT THE FRONT AND AMERICAN SOLDIERS ..
232
6.2.1
Special Introductory Remarks
232
6.2.2
A World War Army Hospital in France by Harold V. Boyle (The Associated Press) A Field Hospital's Situation in Korea by Jim G. Lucas (Scripps-Howard Newspapers)
6.2.3
233 236
6.3
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES AND FOOD SHORTAGE
238
6.3.1
Special Introductory Remarks
238
6.3.2
Consequences of the Overspill Population in India by William Mullen (Chicago Tribune)
239
The Gigantic Famine Problems in Ethiopia by Josh Friedman (Newsday, Long Island, N.Y.)
243
7
FIRST ORIENTATION BIBLIOGRAPHY
251
7.1
MEDICAL AND HEALTH JOURNALISM
253
7.2
MEDIA ETHICS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
255
7.3
PULITZER AND PULITZER PRIZES
256
6.3.3
INDEX
259
237
Struggle for Press Freedom in Canada A case study from the Province of Alberta and the key role played by the Edmonton Journal in 1938 Based on a Pulitzer Prize winning exhibit
by
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
Universitätsverlag Dr. N. Brockmeyer Bochum, Germany, 1992
238
Die D e u t s c h e Bibliothek - C I P - E i n h e i t s a u f n a h m e F i s c h e r , Heinz-Dietrich: Struggle for press freedom in Canada / by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - Bochum: Universitätsverlag Brockmeyer 1992 (Canada communication; Vol. 1) ISBN 3-8196-0050-7 NE: G T ISBN 3-8196-0050-7 Alle Rechte vorbehalten © 1992 by Universitätsverlag Dr. Ν. Brockmeyer Uni-Tech-Center, Gebäude MC, 4630 Bochum 1 Gesamtherstellung: Druckerei Muscheiko, Inh. Manfred Stamm Fröhliche Morgensonne 2, 4630 Bochum 6 Telefon (0 23 27) 3 31 83
239
FROM THE PREFACE It was no little surprise when in May 1938 the announcement of the annual Pulitzer Prizes contained this statement: "A special public service prize in the form of a bronce plaque is awarded to the Edmonton (Alberta) Journal for its leadership in defense of the freedom of the press in the province of Alberta." Until today no other non-American newspaper has been so honored because - according to the will of Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911) - Pulitzer Prizes only can be awarded to American authors resp. publications. Why is this award earned by a Canadian newspaper so unique in the field, even after more than five decades now? The answer may be that since the mid-thirties great dangers for press freedom came up in many European countries, and it was the Canadian province of Alberta where similar steps for press control were undertaken, - a development which not only touched media freedom in Canada but also had some relevance for the press in North America as a whole. Since 1935 several attempts were made to limit the freedom of expression and especially that of the press in the Canadian province of Alberta to avoid critical comments on government politics, climaxing in a repressive press bill in 1937. Not only the newspapers in Alberta but the press from all parts of Canada lost no time in opposing the proposed restrictive press act by organizing nation-wide campaigns against the bill and its far-reaching consequences. The present publication intends to cover the press battle from its early beginnings to the final success, focusing on the extraordinary role the Edmonton Journal played in that heavy struggle. Basic information about the conflict and its various steps came from the award-winning exhibit available in the Pulitzer Prize Collection at Columbia University in the City of New York. The Pulitzer Prize Office also made accessible the Jury Reports and other background sources of the awarding procedure in 1938. Additional research had to be done in the archive of the Edmonton Journal and in the Edmonton Public Library where the newspapers could be analyzed for the purpose of this research project. Various other Canadian Libraries in Alberta as well as in Ottawa were helpful in completing the material needed for this study...
240
TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface
7
1. THE BASISA Short Glimpse at Canadian Newspaper Development
13
2. THE PRELUDEEarly Press Restrictions in the Province of Alberta
16
3. THE CASEIdea and Concept of a Special Alberta Press Bill
18
4. THE REACTION The Edmonton Journal's Fight against Press Control
21
5. THE PROTESTJoint Action of the Alberta Newspaper Publishers
28
6. THE SEDITIONGrim Newspaper Comments on the Proposed Press Bill
35
7. THE SUSPENSIONWithhold of the Press Law by Lieutenant-Governor
42
8. THE SUCCESSAlberta Press Bill is Declared Unconstitutional
47
9. THE SUMMARYA Comprehensive Account of the Press Law Struggle
53
10. THE REWARDEarning a Pulitzer Prize by the Edmonton Journal
60
11. THE SUPPLEMENTKey Texts and Documents of the Press Bill Battle
71
12. THE BIBLIOGRAPHY Books on Canadian Media and the Pulitzer Prizes
138
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 6
Cultural Criticism 1969 - 1 9 9 0 : From Architectural Damages to Press Imperfections
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München • London · New York · Paris 1992
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive: a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; London ; New York; Paris: Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 6 : Pt. B, Opinion journalism. Cultural criticism 1969 1990 : from architectural damages to press imperfections / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 9 2 ISBN 3-598-30176-6
Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier / Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten - All Rights Strictly Reserved K. G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1992 A Reed Reference Publishing Company Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by W S Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30176-6 (Vol. 6) ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
243
FROM THE PREFACE When,
in 1970,
a new Pulitzer Prize category was
established
called "distinguished criticism or commentary," especially the "prize
for
criticism
growing importance journalism," most
John
powerful
was
a
long
of cultural Hohenberg
newspapers,
overdue
recognition
affairs as a special
stated. which
"Only
included
of
the wealthiest most
of
the
field of the
and
large
ones," he added, "could afford to maintain their own critics in such varied fields as books and drama, movies and television, art and architecture,
and music." What the Advisory Board of
the Pulitzer Prizes as well as the annual juries in this award category
hoped
for
was
to
encourage
also
younger
newspaper
people to go in for critical writing in years to come. Although it
is too early
to
decide whether
this gentle
aim could be
realized through this Pulitzer Prize category, the deeper sense behind establishing
the new award in the beginning
also might have been a question of image-lifting
seventies
for a some-
times hated journalistic profession. "Critic baiting,
like
riding to hounds,"
George N.
Gordon
said, "is an old and honorable sport that has it roots in Periclean Athens,
if not before.
Its
antiquity
derives
from the
fact that artistic criticism is certainly as old as the arts possibly has
older, because the
never
stood
in
the
absence, of anything to
way
of
the
confirmed
criticize
and
devout
critic... The trouble with criticizing critics is that it is all too easy to do poorly. Critics are vulnerable, and they may be
'proved' wrong
in too many
ways···
244
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
t ·
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
ν XV
Bo ahum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR DISTINGUISHED CRITICISM SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES .· REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA ABOUT ARCHITECTURE ISSUES IN 1969 By Ada L. Huxtable, The Hew lork Times MUNICIPAL TRAFFIC PLANS WILL MAIM SOME DOWNTOWN DISTRICTS SENSE OF HISTORY AND ESTHETICS PERVADES A NEW CITY HALL .
XV 1 2 3 4 8
A BLACK COMMUNITY FIGHTS A STATE OFFICE BUILDING PROJECT
12
RENEWAL PROGRAMS THREATEN CITY DISTRICTS AND NATURAL ASSETS
16
ABOUT MUSIC TOPICS IN 1970 By Harold C. Schonberg, The Sew lork
19
Times
SOVIET AVANTGARDE MUSIC OBSERVED BY THE POLITICAL SYSTEM
20
CONDUCTING MUSIC THE CELLIST VIRTUOSO BECOMES A YOUNG MAN
23
SOME GREAT CLASSICAL COMPOSERS DESERVE TIMELESS RELEVANCE
28
REMINISCENCES OF TWO FAMOUS BUT VERY DIFFERENT CONDUCTORS
32
ABOUT DANCE ARRANGEMENTS IN 1971 By Frank L. Peters Jr., St. Louis
Π Post-Dispatah
BALLET PERFORMANCES ENJOY POPULAR UPSWING AMONG FANS
38
FANATICAL DEVOTION OF CHAMBER MUSICIANS TO THEIR WORK ...
42
IN A WORLD OF INDIFFERENCE SOME PEOPLE LIVE THEIR MUSIC .
47
SENS I VITY TO ALL SORTS OF MUSIC CHARACTERIZES THAT PRODIGY
52
245 ABOUT TELEVISION OUTLINES IN 1972 By Ronald D. Powers, Chicago Sun-Timea
55
YOUNG CREATIVE WRITERS COULD ENLIVEN SILLY TV ENTERTAINMENT
56
OLYMPIC GAMES TV REPORTERS AS CUSTODIANS OF NATIONAL HONOR
60
SOBERING INSIGHTS INTO ONE OF AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR TV SHOWS
62
ELECTED TRUSTEES OF PUBLIC TV TRY TO SERVE VIEWERS' INTEREST
64
ABOUT ART EXHIBITIONS IN 1973 By Emily Genauer, Hewaday Syndicate
69
A NORWEGIAN PAINTER SEEN UNDER ASPECTS OF HIS PRIVATE LIFE
70
THE GREAT CUBIST'S POSITION IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY ART
73
NUDITY AND VIOLENCE IN ART AS EXPRESSIONS OF MODERN LIFE
78
THE PAINTER OF BIBLICAL VISIONS HAS GOT HIS OWN MUSEUM ..
82
ABOUT FILM PRODUCTIONS IN 1974 By Roger J. Ebert, Chicago Sun-Timea
SI
FEMALE MOVIE ROLES REPRESENT ONLY STEREOTYPED IMAGES
88
NEW WAVE FILMS AND THEIR TREATMENT OF SEX PROBLEMS
93
A PRIVATE EYE MOVIE AS COMPLEX STORY OF EVIL ITSELF CINEMATIC STRUCTURES OF TWO SUCCESSFUL FILM DIRECTORS ... ABOUT DANCE EVENTS IN 1975 By Alan M. Kriegsraan, The Waahington
97 103 109
Poat
INTERNATIONAL BALLETIC BRILLIANCE NOW SHOWN FOR DECADES .
110
ASPECTS OF SYMBIOTIC AFFILIATION BETWEEN FILM AND DANCE .
114
MOSCOW'S FAMOUS BALLET COMPANY EXPECTED WITH NEW PROGRAM
120
CERTAIN EFFECTS OF POLITICS ON A DANCER'S CAREER
127
ABOUT BOOK PUBLICATIONS IN 1976 By William A. McPherson, The Washington
131
Poat
A PROLIFICE WRITER'S NEW NOVEL IS ABOUT MONEY AND POWER .
132
DISTURBANCE OF EDEN BY PROGRESS IN A SMALL FARM VILLAGE .
136
YOUNG POET BETWEEN EDWARDIAN IDEALS AND OUTRAGEOUS REALITY
139
LETTERS ILLUMINATING VARIED DECADES OF AMERICAN HISTORY .
143
246 ABOUT THEATER PERFORMANCES IN 1977 By Walter F. Kerr, The Hew !ork
1*7
Times
THE FASCINATING ART OF PLAYING A ROLE SENSITIVELY
148
THEATER ONCE DEALT WITH ROMANCE NOW EXPOSES SEX
152
TWO FEMALE ENTERTAINERS PUT ON A STRIKING SHOW
15Θ
INTERPRETATIONS OF TWO ACTORS PLAYING THE SAME ROLE
162
ABOUT ARCHITECTURE DEFICIENCIES IN 1978 By Paul J. Gapp, Chicago Tribune
"7
NEW FEDERAL BUILDING NOT COMPATIBLE WITH CITY MASTER PLANS
168
CHEERLESS SHAPING OF LIVING SPACE IN SOME DOWNTOWN AREAS
172
FEW CITY HOTEL LOBBIES OFFER A TASTEFUL GENERAL ATMOSPHERE
176
RUTHLESS WRECKING OF LANDMARKS BY URBAN RENEWAL PROJECT .
180
ABOUT TELEVISION CONCEPTS IN 1979 By William A. Henry III, The Boston
Globe
FAIRYTALE FASCINATES TV AUDIENCE OVER TWO DECADES
186
HOW TO ADAPT A FAMOUS NOVEL OF GUILT AND LOVE FOR TV
189
ETHICS OF SEVERAL TV SPORTSCASTERS' BELONG ON THE SIDELINES
192
HIGHLY STEREOTYPED CHARACTERS DOMINATE TV NETWORK PROGRAMS
195
ABOUT BOOK MESSAGES IN 1980 By Jonathan Yardley, The Washington
199 Star
SLIMY'EXERCISES IN THE "NEW" JOURNALISM PROFESSION
200
CHINESE-AMERICANS' PROBLEMS O F CULTURAL INTEGRATION
203
A GREENHORN'S WILD ADVENTURES IN THE EARLY SIXTIES
207
GLIMPSES OF AN INFLUENTIAL COLUMNIST'S DUAL CAREER
210
ABOUT MUSIC PRESENTATIONS IN 1981 By Martin Bernheiraer, Los Angeles Times
215
AN OUTSTANDING VIOLINIST'S STANDARD WAS SIMPLY PERFECTION
216
MODERN SETTING OF A CLASSIC OPERA AS BIG MUSICAL CHALLENGE
221
ACCLAIMED STAR TENOR DISAPPOINTS IN ITALIAN OPERA PERFORMANCE
224
OPERA MASTERPIECE PERFORMED AS NAIVE COMPENDIUM OF CLICHES
227
247 ABOUT ART ASPECTS IN 1982 By Manuela V. Hoelterhoff, The Wall Street
233 Journal
AN ESTHETICALLY FASCINATING TV SERIES AS GREAT FILM ART .
234
TWO ART EXHIBITIONS ILLUMINATE MODERN ITALIAN PAINTING ..
236
SOME OLD MASTERS' PAINTINGS VISUALIZE HEAVEN AND EARTH ..
240
CONTEMPORARY ART SHOW DOESN'T INDICATE FUTURE TRENDS
244
ABOUT ARCHITECTURE CHALLENGES IN 1983 By Paul J. Goldberger, The Hew lork Times
249
A WORLD CAPITAL'S STEEL ICON BECOMES ONE CENTURY OLD
250
RESTORATION PLANS THREATEN U.S. PARLIAMENT BUILDING
254
DESIGN OF NEW COLLEGE HALL SHOWS COMPOSITIONAL TALENT ...
258
WEST COAST CITY PLANS TO LIMIT UNFETTERED DOWNTOWN GROWTH
263
ABOUT TELEVISION COVERAGES IN 1984 By Howard Rosenberg, Los Angeles Times IF PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES ONCE HELD AN HONEST TV DEBATE
269 270
ELECTRONIC PREACHERS MIX THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINAIRE POLITICS
273
A TV NETWORK'S JINGOISTIC COVERAGE OF THE L.A. OLYMPIC GAMES
276
SOFT-FOCUSED NEWS PROGRAMS PRESENTED BY PERKY TV ANCHORS
280
ABOUT MUSIC CONDITIONS IN 1985 By Donal J. Henahan, The Hew lork Times
283
A SOPRANO'S FAREWELL APPEARANCE IN A DEFICIENT PRODUCTION
284
THE MIRACLE OF TWO BAROQUE COMPOSERS' MUSICAL ACHIEVEMENT
287
OPERAGOERS' PROPOSALS TO PERFORM A MURDER SCENE PLAUSIBLY
292
FAULTS IN THE MUSICAL LOGIC OF TOO MANY YOUNG COMPOSERS .
296
ABOUT BOOK CONTENTS IN 1986 By Richard 6. Eder, Los Angeles
301
Times
TUMULTOUS SEARCH FOR A WOMAN'S PAST IN SOCIETY
302
MEMORIES OF A VERY HAUNTING ANO SOLITARY CHILDHOOD
305
AGE IS WELL ABLE TO PREVAIL OVER CHALLENGING YOUTH
309
NEW STEP IN A JOURNEY FROM A DARK CAVE INTO THE LIGHT ...
313
248 ABOUT TELEVISION PROGRAMS IN 1987 By Thomas W. Shales, The Washington Post
317
FICTIONAL TV STORY ON A SOVIET-OCCUPIED AMERICA
318
DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CONTENDERS IN TV DEBATES
325
TV TRANSMITTED HEARING ON NOMINATION TO SUPREME COURT ...
328
TV COVERAGE DOESN'T COME UP TO GRACIOUS HISTORIC SUMMIT .
332
ABOUT BOOK QUESTIONS IN 1988 By Michael Skube, The Sews and. Observer,
337 Raleigh
WHAT A FELLOWSHIP OF REGIONAL WRITERS SHOULD SET AS ITS AIM
338
TWO NOVELISTS RECONSTRUCT AMBIVALENT TIES OF FATHER TO SON
341
SHAPELESS AND WOODEN NOVEL AGAIN ATOP THE BEST SELLER LISTS LETTERS OF AN EXCELLENT MUSIC CRITIC SHOW WIT AND FRANKNESS ABOUT ARCHITECTURE PROBLEMS IN 1989 By Allan B. Temko, San Franaisoo Chronicle
344 347 351
FORMER ARMY BASE AS CULTURAL AND EDUCATIONAL RESOURCE ...
352
ESTHETIC QUALITY SHOULD LEAD DOWNTOWN BUILDING PROGRAMS .
357
EARTHQUAKE REVEALS SOME FAULTS IN BUILDING TECHNIQUES ...
362
NEW HALFWAY HOUSE IS A MASTERPIECE OF SOCIAL DESIGN
368
ABOUT MEDIA FAILURES IN 1990 By David L. Shaw, Los Angeles Times
373
MOSTLY UNCRITICAL MEDIA COVERAGE OF A CONTROVERSIAL TRIAL
374
LOOKING TOWARD AUTHORITIES THE MEDIA PREJUDGED DEFENDANTS
381
HOW A LARGE NEWSPAPER CAN CONTRIBUTE TO PUBLIC OUTRAGE ..
387
WHAT IS DECISIVE FOR A GAZETTE'S FAIR COURT REPORTING? ..
396
WINNERS OF THE DISTINGUISHED CRITICISM AWARD, 1991-2001 - SPACE FOR NOTES INDEX
407
249
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 7
American History Awards 1917-1991: From Colonial Settlements to the Civil Rights Movement
by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München · New Providence · London · Paris 1994
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; New Providence ; London ; Paris: Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] 7 : Pt. C, Nonfiction literature. American history awards 1917 - 1991 from colonial settlements to the civil rights movement / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1994 ISBN 3-598-30177-4
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1994 A Reed Reference Publishing Company Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30177-4 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
251
FROM THE PREFACE
Among the awards that carry the name of Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911) and which were established in Pulitzer's will of 1903 there are not only prizes to honour works in different categories of journalism but also in the arts. One of these prizes for literary products was defined as awarding authors "for the best book of the year upon the history of the United States." This Pulitzer Prize for American History, John Hohenberg stresses, "remains in substantially the same form today, 'the best' having been replaced by 'a distinguished.' It was discovered very early in the risky business of prize-giving," Hohenberg explains, "that an award for 'the best' of anything invariably created an unnecessary amount of argument and the Pulitzer authorities dropped the term." The present volume of the Pulitzer Prize Archive deals with this special literary award, established in 1917, and its development until now. At the same time the book marks the beginning of a three-volume series handling the Pulitzer Prizes for non-fictional book publications. As the history award's definition was wide-ranged from its beginning on, books on rather all historical eras, topics and aspects were allowed to take part in the competition. Consequently strongly different publications were awarded with a Pulitzer Prize in the course of time. Among the Prize-winning works count historical overall views as well as more detailed examinations and problemorientated case studies with topics from outside the political history. As the awarded books in the history category sometimes were published more than once and sometimes as pocket books or otherwise licensed, the problem of copyright for reprinting short sequences was not easy to solve. Furthermore, it was difficult to choose particularly those text portions which were to a certain extend representative for the work as a whole and which could be understood without knowing the book's entire content. Different authors as well as the publishers to whom we addressed generously agreed to this practice, so that - next to the detailed presentation and analysis of the prize's history based upon the jury reports - short text examples could be presented to the reader...
252
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE INTRODUCTION
V XIX
By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität Bochum HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR AMERICAN HISTORY
XIX
SELECTIONS F R O M AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA
1 2
1917 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICANS IN VARIOUS HISTORICAL PHASES
3
By Jean J. Jusserand PIERRE L'ENFANT DESIGNS THE FEDERAL CITY
4
1918 AWARD: ABOUT THE STAGES OF THE CIVIL WAR
7
By James F. Rhodes SOME BASIC LIFE CONDITIONS IN THE NORTH 1919 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE HISTORY PRIZE By The Advisory Board
8 11
NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
12
1920 AWARD: ABOUT THE CENTRAL ASPECTS OF THE WAR WITH MEXICO
13
By Justin H. Smith THE SITUATION AROUND THE SANTA FE AREA 1921 AWARD: ABOUT THE NAVAL STRATEGY IN WORLD WAR I By William S. Sims / Burton J. Hendrick AMERICAN DESTROYERS IN FULL ACTION 1922 AWARD: ABOUT THE FOUNDING OF NEW ENGLAND STATES...
14 17 18 21
By James T. Adams THE GREAT MIGRATION IN THAT REGION
22
253 1923 AWARD: ABOUT THE SUPREME COURT IN U.S. HISTORY
27
By Charles Warren THE TIMES OF SLAVERY AND STATE DEFIANCE 1924 AWARD: ABOUT THE BACKGROUND OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
28
31
By Charles H. Mcllwain TRIALS OF A CONSTITUTIONAL INTERPRETATION 1925 AWARD: ABOUT THE FRONTIER DEVELOPMENT OF THE U.S...
32 35
By Frederic L. Paxson THE BOUNDARY LINE IN EARLY 19TH CENTURY 1926 AWARD: ABOUT THE GENERAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
36
41
By Edward Channing EARLY RAILROADS IN THE OHIO VALLEY REGION 1927 AWARD: ABOUT THE DISPUTES ON THE MISSISSIPPI QUESTION .
42 45
By Samuel F. Bemis DIPLOMACY IN THE OLD AND THE NEW WORLD 1928 AWARD: ABOUT THE ROMANTIC REVOLUTION IN AMERICA
46 49
By Vernon L. Parrington INDICATORS OF THE MIND OF THE SOUTH 1929 AWARD: ABOUT THE UNION ARMY'S ADMINISTRATION
50 53
By Fred A. Shannon FEEDING AND CLOTHING THE VOLUNTEERS 1930 AWARD: ABOUT THE RESULTS OF THE INDEPENDENCE W A R .
54 57
By Claude H. Van Tyne EUROPEAN COUNTRIES SUPPLY SECRET AID 1931 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMING OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR
58 61
By Bernadotte E. Schmitt THE UNITED STATES AND MEDIATION IN PARIS
62
254 1932 AWARD: ABOUT THE PERSONAL EXPERIENCES IN WORLD WAR I
65
By John J. Pershing THE U.S. COMMANDER AND THE ARMISTICE TALKS 1933 AWARD: ABOUT THE SECTIONS IN AMERICAN HISTORY
66 69
By Frederick J. Turner STATE-MAKING IN THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA 1934 AWARD: ABOUT THE PRESIDENTS AFTER GEORGE WASHINGTON
70 73
By Herbert S. Agar FROM WOODROW WILSON TO WARREN HARDING 1935 AWARD: ABOUT THE COLONIAL PERIOD OF NORTH AMERICA.
74 79
By Charles M. Andrews SOME ASPECTS OF EARLY MASSACHUSETTS LIFE 1936 AWARD: ABOUT THE CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
80
83
By Andrew C. McLaughlin THE FINAL ADOPTION OF THE U.S. CONSTITUTION 1937 AWARD: ABOUT THE FLOWERING OF THE NEW ENGLAND REGION
84
87
By Van W. Brooks EVENTS IN THE HISTORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE 1938 AWARD: ABOUT THE ROAD TO AMERICAN REUNION
88 91
By Paul H. Buck THE SITUATION OF BLACKS IN THE SOUTH 1939 AWARD: ABOUT THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN PERIODICALS
92 95
By Frank L. Mott SKETCH OF THE UNITED STATES MAGAZINE 1940 AWARD: ABOUT THE WAR YEARS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN
96 99
By Carl A. Sandburg KILLING THE PRESIDENT IN FORD'S THEATER
100
255 1941 AWARD: ABOUT THE CONTINUING SETTLEMENT OF THE UNITED STATES By Marcus L. Hansen PIONEERS OF THE GREAT ATLANTIC MIGRATION
105 106
1942 AWARD: ABOUT THE CONCLUSIVE PHASE OF LINCOLN'S PRESIDENCY
111
By Margaret K. Leech THE LINCOLN FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS 1943 AWARD: ABOUT THE UPCOMING OF A FAMOUS BOSTON PIONEER
112
119
By Esther Forbes PAUL REVERE AND THE WORLD HE LIVED IN 1944 AWARD: ABOUT THE GROWTH OF THOUGHT IN AMERICA
120 123
By Merle E. Curti THE POPULARIZATION OF BUSINESS KNOWLEDGE 1945 AWARD: ABOUT THE U.S. POLICY AFTER THE FIRST WORLD WAR
124
129
By Stephen Bonsai AMERICA'S POSITION AT THE PARIS CONFERENCE 1946 AWARD: ABOUT THE AGE OF PRESIDENT ANDREW JACKSON.
130 135
By Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. THE PRESIDENTS FIRST YEAR IN OFFICE 1947 AWARD: ABOUT THE U.S. STRUGGLE FOR SUPERIORITY IN WORLD WAR II
136
139
By James P. Baxter ΠΙ THE ANTIMALARIALS AND MILITARY MEDICINE 1948 AWARD: ABOUT THE CROSSING OF THE MISSOURI RIVER
140 145
By Bernard A. DeVoto PIONEER TIMES OF THE CITY OF ST. LOUIS 1949 AWARD: ABOUT THE DISRUPTION OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY
146 149
By Roy F. Nichols MAIN ASPECTS IN THE SPLIT OF THE REPUBLIC
150
256 1950 A W A R D : ABOUT THE ART AND LIFE IN THE UNITED STATES..
153
By Oliver W . Larkin ARCHITECTURE OF CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS 1951 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PIONEER PERIOD OF THE NORTHWEST..
154 159
By R. Carlyle Buley MEDICAL AND HEALTH-RELATED CONDITIONS 1952 A W A R D : ABOUT THE GREAT MIGRATIONS IN AMERICA
160 163
By Oscar Handlin GHETTOS IN SEVERAL METROPOLITAN AREAS 1953 AWARD: ABOUT THE YEARS OF PRESIDENT JAMES MONROE.
164 167
By George B. Dangerfield THE PRESIDENTS BACKGROUND AND PLANS 1954 A W A R D : ABOUT THE CIVIL WAR IN THE STATE OF VIRGINIA..
168 171
By C. Bruce Catton A BATTLE NEAR THE APPOMATTOX RIVER 1955 AWARD: ABOUT THE RIO GRANDE IN NORTH AMERICAN HISTORY
172 175
By Paul Horgan AMERICAN AND MEXICAN RIVER SETTLEMENTS
1956 A W A R D : ABOUT THE AGE OF REFORM IN THE UNITED STATES
176
179
By Richard Hofstadter PROGRESSIVE IMPULSE IN THE URBAN SCENE 1957 AWARD: ABOUT THE EARLY SOVIET-AMERICAN RELATIONS
180 183
By George F. Kennan THE MAJOR STATESMEN IN THAT PROCESS
1958 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICAN BANK POLICY SINCE THE REVOLUTION
184
189
By Bray Hammond THE GROWTH OF MAJOR BANKING INSTITUTIONS
190
257 1959 AWARD: ABOUT THE HISTORY OF THE U.S. ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM
193
By Leonard D. White / D. Jean Schneider GLANCES OF THE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT 1960 AWARD: ABOUT THE TWENTY-FIFTH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
194
197
By Margaret K. Leech MCKINLEY AS A CHAMPION OF PROTECTIONISM 1961 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICAN POSITION AT THE POTSDAM CONFERENCE
198
201
By Herbert Feis ROOSEVELTS AND TRUMAN'S POLAND POLICY 1962 AWARD: ABOUT THE PRE-REVOLUTION YEARS IN AMERICA
202 207
By Lawrence H. Gipson NEWSPAPERS IN SOME METROPOLITAN AREAS 1963 AWARD: ABOUT THE EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. CHIEF NATIONAL CITY
208
213
By Constance M. Green THE VILLAGE AND CAPITAL OF WASHINGTON 1964 AWARD: ABOUT THE FORMATION OF A NEW ENGLAND SPOT
214 219
By Sumner C. Powell THE MASSACHUSETTS VILLAGE OF WATERTOWN 1965 AWARD: ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENT OF AMERICAN FINANCE POLICY
220
223
By Irwin Unger ASPECTS OF POST-CIVIL WAR MONEY DEBATE 1966 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIFE OF THE MIND IN AMERICA
224 229
By Perry G. Miller ORIGINS OF CHURCH AND STATE SEPARATION 1967 AWARD: ABOUT THE EXPLORERS OF THE AMERICAN WEST..
230 235
By William H. Goetzmann SOME LEADING FIGURES OF THAT REGION
236
258 1968 AWARD: ABOUT THE IDEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND OF THE REVOLUTION By Bernard Bailyn THE LITERATURE AS A DISCUSSION PLATFORM
1969 AWARD: ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF THE FIFTH AMENDMENT
241 242
245
By Leonard W. Levy THE BASIC RIGHT AGAINST SELF-INCRIMINATION
1970 AWARD: ABOUT THE EXPERIENCES IN THE STATE DEPARTMENT
246
251
By Dean G. Acheson TOP GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS IN WORLD WAR II
1971 AWARD: ABOUT THE THIRTY-SECOND PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
252
255
By James M. Burns THE REELECTION OF FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
1972 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPARISON OF RACE RELATIONS IN AMERICA
256
261
By Carl N. Degler STATUS OF BLACKS IN BRAZIL AND U.S.A
1973 AWARD: ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF AMERICAN CIVILIZATION
262
265
By Michael G. Kämmen SOME PARADOX ASPECTS OF THE PEOPLE
1974 AWARD: ABOUT THE DEMOCRATIC EXPERIENCE IN THE UNITED STATES
266
269
By Daniel J. Boorstin SOME KEY FOUNDERS OF DEPARTMENT STORES
1975 AWARD: ABOUT THE TIME AND LIFE OF THOMAS JEFFERSON
270
273
By Dumas Malone BEGIN OF THE PRESIDENTS SECOND TERM
1976 AWARD: ABOUT THE ACTIVITIES OF Α MISSIONER IN AMERICA
274
279
By PaulHorgan THE MOUNT VERNON TIME OF LAMY OF SANTA FE
280
259 1977 A W A R D : ABOUT THE IMPENDING C R I S I S IN THE UNITED STATES
283
By David M. Potter THE BASIC FUNCTION OF THE 1860 ELECTION 1978 A W A R D : ABOUT THE MANAGERIAL REVOLUTION IN U.S. BUSINESS
284
289
By Alfred D. Chandler Jr. EARLY RAILROADS AS THE KEY ENTERPRISES 1979 A W A R D : ABOUT THE SIGNIFICANCE OF A S U P R E M E COURT DECISION
290
295
By Don E. Fehrenbacher THE DRED SCOTT CASE AS KEY JUDGMENT 1980 A W A R D : ABOUT THE AFTERMATH OF SLAVERY IN THE UNITED STATES
296
301
By Leon F. Litwack THE SUDDEN FEEL OF FREEDOM FOR BLACKS
302
1981 A W A R D : ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENTS IN AMERICAN EDUCATION POLICY 305 By Lawrence A. Cremin NEW YORK CITY'S EARLY SCHOOL SYSTEM
306
1982 A W A R D : ABOUT THE EYEWITNESS R E P O R T S FROM THE CIVIL WAR 309 By C. Vann Woodward THE GREAT DIARY BY MARY BOYKIN CHESNUT
310
1983 A W A R D : ABOUT THE TRANSFORMATION OF EIGHTEENHUNDRED VIRGINIA
313
By Rhys L. Isaac THOMAS JEFFERSON AS A SYMBOL AND A LEGEND 1984 A W A R D : ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE HISTORY PRIZE
314 317
By Pulitzer Prize Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
318
260 1985 AWARD: ABOUT THE PROTAGONISTS OF THE U.S. REGULATION IDEAS
319
By Thomas K. McCraw GOVERNMENT TRIALS TO REGULATE ECONOMY 1986 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICAN INVOLVEMENT IN SPACE AGE
320 323
By Walter A. McDougall STRATEGIES DURING THE EISENHOWER ERA 1987 AWARD: ABOUT THE PRE-REVOLUTION PEOPLING IN THE UNITED STATES
324
327
By Bernard Bailyn IMMIGRATION TO THE EAST COAST STATES 1988 AWARD: ABOUT THE LAUNCHING OF MODERN SCIENCE IN THE U.S
328
333
By Robert V. Bruce SOME TRENDSETTERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION 1989a AWARD: ABOUT THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT YEARS
334 337
By Taylor Branch MARTIN LUTHER KING'S WASHINGTON SPEECH 1989b AWARD: ABOUT THE ERA OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
338 341
By James M. McPherson ASPECTS AND BOOKS ON SPECIFIC QUESTIONS 1990 AWARD: ABOUT THE UNITED STATES INFLUENCE IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
342
345
By Stanley Karnow AMERICA EXPORTS ITSELF TO THE PHILIPPINES 1991 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIFE IN EIGHTEEN-HUNDRED MAINE
346 349
By Laurel T. Ulrich A WOMAN FROM THE KENNEBEC RIVER REGION
350
WINNERS OF THE AMERICAN HISTORY AWARD, 1 9 9 2 - 2 0 0 2
352
INDEX
355
261
Sports Journalism at its Best Pulitzer Prize-Winning Articles, Cartoons, and Photographs
by
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
Nelson-Hall Chicago, Illinois, 1995
262
Project Editor Rachel Schick Typesetter Ε. T. Lowe Printer Bookcrafters Cover Painting: Joseph J. Cuitin Library of C o n f r e * · Cataloglng-tn-PnbllcAtlon Data Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich, 1937Sports journalism at its best: Pulitzer Prize-winning articles, cartoons, and photographs / Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 04304-I36S4 1. Sports journalism. 2. Pulitzer prizes. I. Title. Π. Title: Pulitzer Prize-winning articles, cartoons, and photographs. PN4784.S6F57 1995 070.4'49796—dc20
94-27374 CIP
Copyright Ο 1995 by Nelson-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for broadcast or for inclusion in a magazine or newspaper. For information address Nelson-Hall Publishers, 111 North Canal Street, Chicago, Illinois 60606. Manufactured in the United Stales of America 10
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
FROM THE PREFACE
263
Sports in the History of the Pulitzer Prizes
Sports journalists in American press organs didn't always have the prestige they enjoy nowadays. It has been handed down, for instance, that a sports editor, working in the mid-thirties at the highly reputed New York Herald-Tribune, "hated his sports job with an abiding and venomous hatred. He didn't like sports, didn't see any sense in a sports page and wanted to get back to the city staff as fast as he could. He had been transplanted against his will and the first chance he got, he left, becoming assistant city editor" of another New York-based newspaper. In 1935, another journalist of the Herald-Tribune became the first ever to win a Pulitzer Prize for sports journalism, thereby boosting the prestige of the whole trade. William H. Taylor was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in the "Reporting" category, created in 1917, "for his series of articles on the international yacht races" published in the THb in 1934. (see p. 14). In contrast to the sports detestors at the New York Herald-Tribune, Taylor, the yachting editor of the paper, is said to have had a great affinity for sports: he was "familiar with boats and the sea through a lifetime of close association, a seaman in the most exacting sense of the word. He was born at New Bedford, Massachusetts, the port from which many of his ancestors had sailed in whalers and in merchant ships. His family summer home was only a step from the beach, off which he paddled a skiff for the first time when he was a small boy." Thus, the first Pulitzer Prize winner for sports-related reporting represented the sort of sports journalist typical throughout the thirties, who wrote about a kind of sport he himself knew
264
competently. Although in 1934 "there were 455 collegiate institutions in the United States offering journalism instruction, and 812 teachers of journalism throughout the country," the systematic professional training of sports journalists was an absolute rarity among the various curricula. In 1935 the creation of the first graduate school of journalism at Columbia University was a milestone, and "indicative of.. .change in the field of journalism education," but this was only a humble beginning on the way "to the social demands for more effectively trained newspaper men and women." Concretely, the ambitious training program at the university center of education founded by Joseph Pulitzer offered "classes in government, history, economics, law, science, business, philosophy, international relations and other subjects as a reporter would be given assignments by his city editor." The enumeration of the enlarged training program continues, "Another innovation was the organization of the program of the school along the lines of a newspaper office," soon expressly including "coverage of sports" too. It is also reported that at the New York Times, "sports bylines multiplied like rabbits" as early as 1925... Although a Pulitzer Prize category solely dedicated to sports journalism has never existed, over the decades quite a number of articles, cartoons, and photos dealing with sports topics have earned this highest honor for print media communication. As Percy H. Tannenbaum once stated in an article for Journalism Quarterly in 1950, there "arose a new brand of sports writing and reporting during the Twenties... Informality of style, originality of composition and a new jargon blossomed on the sports pages—but accompanied by a tendency towards verbosity, triteness, and shopworn cliches, synonyms and analogies. The golden age of sports was matched by a slightly tarnished silver age of sports writing." Since the mid-thirties, sports journalism in several newspapers has reached a certain standard and—step by step—outstanding achievements in this field have been awarded Pulitzers. So, to some extent, the progress in sports coverage is reflected in the
265 development of the Pulitzers until today. The present book intends to be a supplementary volume to books like Douglas A. Anderson's Contemporary Sports Reporting. Anderson wrote, "on pages that not long ago were filled almost totally with play-by-play accounts and features of major sports, we now find first-person stories," demonstrating "the changes that have occurred on the nation's daily newspaper sports pages."...
266
TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE ix CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION 1 Sports in the History of the Pulitzer Prizes 1 Sports as Part of a New Pulitzer Prize Category 6 CHAPTER TWO
FACT-ORIENTED GENRES 13 Spot News Sports Reporting 13 Preparations for an International Yacht Race 14 A Heavyweight Boxing World-Championship 18 A National Football League's Annual Auction 21 Winning an Olympic Ice Hockey Gold Medal 24 Accident During an International Car Race 27 Sports Photography Coverage 31 Retirement Ceremony of a Baseball Hero 32 Dangerous Attack on a Football Player 34 Short Break for the World's Best Diver 36 Jubilation of a Successful Women's Coach 40 A Soccer Player Observed in Full Action 42
267
CHAPTER THREE
BACKGROUND-ORIENTED GENRES 47 Profiles of Sports Celebrities
47
An Old Master Among American Jockeys 48 A Glamour Boxing Champion and His Court 50 Comeback of a Famous Golf Professional 53 Unusual Engagement of a Top Ballplayer 56 The Personal Tragedy of a Basketball Idol 58
Investigative Sports-Related Cases
61
Exposures of Big Corruption in Basketball Improper Use of University Athletic Funds Problems Facing Athletic College Programs Career Steps of a University Football Player Disclosure of College Basketball Cheatings
62 69 78 82 86
CHAPTER FOUR
OPINION-ORIENTED GENRES 93 Editorial Page Sports Comments
93
Basic Discussions About Sports Amateurism 94 Fears About the 1980 Moscow Olympics 97 A Plea for Curbing of Sports Agents 98 Opposing Racial Remarks About Black Athletes 1 02 Curious Theories on Athletic Supremacy 104
268
Criticizing Television Sportscasting 108 Values and Judgments of a Sportscaster 109 Violence Coverage from the Munich Olympics 111 Sportscasting and Its Ethical Background 114 Deficits in the Coverage of the LA. Olympics 118 Sportscasters Highly Ignore the Losers 121 CHAPTER FIVE
CONCLUSION
125
NOTES 129 BIBLIOGRAPHY
141
269
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 8
Biography / Autobiography Awards 1917-1992: From the lucky Discoverer of America to an unfortunate Vietnam Veteran
by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G - Saur München · New Providence • London · Paris 1995
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; New Providence ; London ; Paris : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 8 : Pt. C, Nonfiction literature. Biography, autobiography awards 1917-1992 : from the lucky discoverer of America to an unfortunate Vietnam veteran / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. -1995 ISBN 3-598-30178-2
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1995 A Reed Reference Publishing Company Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS-Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30178-2 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
271
FROM THE PREFACE
Together with the Pulitzer Prize for American History the one for Biography and Autobiography respectively has the longest tradition among the awards for non-fiction literature - both came into existence in 1917, the first year the awards were given away. "The vogue for biography in the United States, at the time the Pulitzer Prizes were inaugurated," John Hohenberg states, "was even greater than the urge to find different approaches to American history. The American public fairly reveled in highly personal books about the great and the near-great and rewarded the irreverent authors with both wealth and heady praise." In view of the large wave of biographical/autobiographical books published since the turn of the century that partly referred to the "famous names" in American history, Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911), defining the prize in his testament, gave a remarkable description with the following delimiting content: The prize was meant "for the best American biography teaching patriotic and unselfish service to the people, illustrated by an eminent example, excluding as too obvious the names of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln." Looking back on the history of this award the historian Julian P. Boyd once pointed out, "that this form of letters has attracted the pens of some of the ablest writers in twentieth-century America." As a consequence quite a few winners of the Pulitzer Prize in the biography/autobiography category were themselves highly prominent authors or personalities well-known to the public such as John F. Kennedy, who was among the individuals honored with this prestigious award. But in the course of time the passage in the definition of the prize, according to which biographical works on Lincoln and Washington were to be excluded, was dropped and because of that studies on these two subjects increasingly came into consideration, sometimes even winning Pulitzer Prizes...
272
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
V XIX
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR BIOGRAPHY/AUTOBIOGRAPHY SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA 1917 Award: ABOUT THE POET JULIA WARD HOWE
XIX 1 2 3
By Laura E. Richards / Maud H. Elliott / Florence H. Hall HER BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC 1918 Award: ABOUT THE AUTHOR BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
4 9
By William C. Bruce HIS MORAL STANDING AND FINANCIAL STATUS 1919 Award: ABOUT THE HISTORIAN HENRY ADAMS
10 13
By Henry B. Adams HIS STUDIES AND EXPERIENCES IN BERLIN
14
1920 Award: ABOUT THE JUSTICE JOHN MARSHALL
19
By Albert J. Beveridge HIS INTENTIONS AS A BIOGRAPHER 1921 Award: ABOUT THE AUTHOR EDWARD BOK
20 25
By Edward W. Bok HIS WORK FOR THE LADIES' HOME JOURNAL 1922 Award: ABOUT THE SETTLER ISABEL McCLINTOCK
26 31
By Hamlin Garland HER FAILING HEALTH AND LONELINESS
32
273 1923 Award: ABOUT THE DIPLOMAT WALTER H. PAGE
37
By Burton J. Hendrick HIS RESIGNATION FROM AMBASSADOR POST
38
1924 Award: ABOUT THE PHYSICIST MICHAEL PUPIN
41
By Michael I. Pupin HIS NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL PORTRAIT
1925 Award: ABOUT THE EDUCATOR BARRETT WENDELL
42
47
By M. A. DeWolfe Howe HIS VISITING PROFESSORSHIP IN PARIS
1926 Award: ABOUT THE PHYSICIAN WILLIAM OSLER
48
53
By Harvey W. Cushing HIS PRINCIPLES OF MEDICINE BOOK
1927 Award: ABOUT THE POET WALT WHITMAN
54
59
By R. Emory Holloway HIS EARLY YEARS AS A JOURNALIST
1928 Award: ABOUT THE CONDUCTOR THEODORE THOMAS
60
63
By Charles E. Russell HIS MOVE FROM NEW YORK TO CHICAGO
1929 Award: ABOUT THE EDITOR WALTER H. PAGE
64
69
By Burton J. Hendrick HIS ACTIVITIES AT THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY
1930 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN SAM HOUSTON
70
73
By Marquis James HIS PLANS FOR THE STATE OF TEXAS
1931 Award: ABOUT THE EDUCATOR CHARLES W. ELIOT
74
77
By Henry James HIS ESTABLISHMENT OF GRADUATE DEGREES
1932 Award: ABOUT THE PRESIDENT THEODORE ROOSEVELT
78
83
By Henry F. Pringle HIS INAUGURATION SPEECH CIRCUMSTANCES
84
274 1933 Award: ABOUT THE PRESIDENT GROVER CLEVELAND
89
By Allan Nevins HIS FORMATION OF THE FIRST CABINET
1934 Award: ABOUT THE DIPLOMAT JOHN HAY
90
95
By Tyler W. Dennett HIS POLICY UNDER THEODORE ROOSEVELT
96
1935 Award: ABOUT THE GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE By Douglas S. Freeman
99
HIS APPOINTMENT AS HEAD OF WEST POINT
1936 Award: ABOUT THE PSYCHOLOGIST WILLIAM JAMES
100
105
By Ralph B. Perry HIS EARLY STUDY AND BOOK PUBLICATION
1937 Award: ABOUT THE SECRETARY HAMILTON FISH By Allan Nevins HIS RETIREMENT FROM BIG POLITICS
1938a Award: ABOUT THE PHILOSOPHER BRONSON ALCOTT By Odell Shepard HIS FAME AS A THINKER AND EDUCATOR
1938b Award: ABOUT THE GENERAL ANDREW JACKSON By Marquis James HIS PLANS AFTER THE FLORIDA RAID
1939 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN BENJAMIN FRANKLIN By Carl C. Van Dören HIS BEGINNING AS POSTMASTER GENERAL
1940 Award: ABOUT THE PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON By Ray S. Baker HIS VARIOUS ACTIVITIES DURING WORLD WAR I
1941 Award: ABOUT THE THEOLOGIAN JONATHAN EDWARDS
106
109 110
115 116
121 122
125 126
131 132
135
By Ola E. Winslow HIS DISMISSAL FROM NORTHAMPTON PULPIT
136
275 1942 Award: ABOUT THE AUTHOR HARRIET BEECHER STOWE
141
By R. Forrest Wilson HER SUCCESSFUL BOOK UNCLE TOM'S CABIN 1943 Award: ABOUT THE ADMIRAL CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS
142 147
By Samuel E. Morison HIS LANDING IN THE NEW WORLD 1944 Award: ABOUT THE INVENTOR SAMUEL MORSE
148 151
By Carleton Mabee HIS MEETING IN PARIS WITH DAGUERRE 1945 Award: ABOUT THE HISTORIAN GEORGE BANCROFT
152 155
By Rüssel B. Nye HIS LAST VOLUME OF THE U.S. HISTORY
156
1946 Award: ABOUT THE NATURALIST JOHN MUIR
159
By Linnie M. Wolfe HIS ACTIVITIES IN YOSEMITE PARK 1947 Award: ABOUT THE EDITOR WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE
160 163
By William A. White HIS PURCHASE OF THE EMPORIA GAZETTE 1948 Award: ABOUT THE POLITICIAN JOHN BIGELOW
164 169
By Margaret A. Clapp HIS IDEA OF A NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 1949 Award: ABOUT THE SECRETARY HARRY L. HOPKINS
170 173
By Robert E. Sherwood HIS TRAVEL TO THE CASABLANCA CONFERENCE 1950 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN JOHN QUINCY ADAMS
174 179
By Samuel F. Bemis HIS INFLUENCE ON THE MONROE DOCTRINE 1951 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN JOHN C. CALHOUN
180 183
By Margaret L. Coit HIS PRIVATE DOMICILE AT FORT HILL
184
276 1952 Award: ABOUT THE JURIST CHARLES EVANS HUGHES By Merlo J. Pusey HIS NOMINATION AS U.S. CHIEF JUSTICE 1953 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN EDMUND PENDLETON By David J. Mays HIS START AS JUSTICE OF CAROLINE COUNTY 1954 Award: ABOUT THE AVIATOR CHARLES LINDBERGH By Charles A. Lindbergh Jr. HIS ARRIVAL AND RECEPTION AT PARIS
189 190 193 194 197 198
1955 Award: ABOUT THE SENATOR ROBERT A. TAFT By William S. White HIS NEW TRY FOR PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION
203
1956 Award: ABOUT THE ARCHITECT B. HENRY LATROBE By Talbot F. Hamlin HIS WORK FOR THE U.S. GOVERNMENT
207
1957 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN DANIEL WEBSTER By John F. Kennedy HIS OUTSTANDING ROLE AS AN ORATOR
213
204
208
214
1958 Award: ABOUT THE PRESIDENT GEORGE WASHINGTON By Douglas S. Freeman / John A. Carroll / Mary W. Ashworth HIS RETIREMENT FROM FEDERAL OFFICE
219
1959 Award: ABOUT THE PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON By Arthur C. Walworth Jr. HIS FAMOUS FOURTEEN POINT SPEECH
223
1960 Award: ABOUT THE ADMIRAL JOHN PAUL JONES By Samuel E. Morison HIS LAUNCHING OF THE SHIP AMERICA 1961 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN CHARLES SUMNER By David H. Donald HIS ROLE AS AN OUTRAGEOUS PHILANTHROPIST
220
224 229 230 235 236
277 1962 Award: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE BIOGRAPHY PRIZE 239 By The Columbia Trustees NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR GIVING THE AWARD 240 1963 Award: ABOUT THE NOVELIST HENRY JAMES By J. Leon Edel HIS FINANCIAL SITUATION IN PARIS
241
1964 Award: ABOUT THE POET JOHN KEATS By W. Jackson Bate HIS WRITING LEVEL IN HYPERION
247
1965 Award: ABOUT THE HISTORIAN HENRY ADAMS By Ernest Samuels HIS TRAVEL TO PRE-WORLD WAR I EUROPE
251
1966 Award: ABOUT THE PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY By Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. HIS FAMOUS SPEECH IN WEST BERLIN
255
1967 Award: ABOUT THE AUTHOR MARK TWAIN By Justin Kaplan HIS WORKING ON THE TOM SAWYER BOOK
259
1968 Award: ABOUT THE DIPLOMAT GEORGE F. KENNAN By George F. Kennan HIS GERMAN MISSION IN WORLD WAR II
263
1969 Award: ABOUT THE PHILANTHROPIST JOHN QUINN By Benjamin L. Reid HIS AIDS FOR SEVERAL FAMOUS POETS
242
248
252
256
260
264 267 268
1970 Award: ABOUT THE GOVERNOR HUEY P. LONG By T. Harry Williams HIS HONORARY DEGREE FROM LOYOLA
273
1971 Award: ABOUT THE POET ROBERT FROST By Lawrance R. Thompson HIS TEACHING POSITION AT AMHERST
279
274
280
278 1972 Award: ABOUT THE FIRST LADY ELEANOR ROOSEVELT By Joseph P. Lash HER RADIO SPEECHES ON VARIOUS TOPICS
285
1973 Award: ABOUT THE PRESSMAN HENRY LUCE
289
286
By William A. Swanberg HIS SUCCESSFUL WORK AT LIFE MAGAZINE 1974 Award: ABOUT THE DRAMATIST EUGENE O'NEILL By Louis Sheaffer HIS RETURN TO THE BROADWAY STAGES 1975 Award: ABOUT THE MASTERBUILDER ROBERT MOSES By Robert A. Caro HIS GIGANTIC TRIBOROUGH BRIDGE PROJECT
290 295 296 301 302
1976 Award: ABOUT THE NOVELIST EDITH WHARTON By Richard W. B. Lewis HER SUCCESSFUL PUBLICATIONS AND INCOME
305
1977 Award: ABOUT THE ADVENTURER THOMAS E. LAWRENCE By John E. Mack HIS TIME AS ADVISOR TO CHURCHILL
311
1978 Award: ABOUT THE AUTHOR SAMUEL JOHNSON By W. Jackson Bate HIS WORK FOR GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE
306
312 317 318
1979 Award: ABOUT THE RABBI LEO BAECK By Leonard Baker HIS SURVIVAL FROM THE HOLOCOUST
321
1980 Award: ABOUT THE COLONEL THEODORE ROOSEVELT By Edmund Morris HIS CUBAN BATTLE OF SAN JUAN
327
1981 Award: ABOUT THE CZAR PETER THE GREAT By Robert K. Massie HIS WORKING AND LIVING PRINCIPLES
322
328 331 332
279 1982 Award: ABOUT THE PRESIDENT ULYSSES S. GRANT By William S. McFeely
335
HIS ENTHUSIASTIC RECEPTION IN LONDON
336
1983 Award: ABOUT THE AUTHOR RUSSELL BAKER By Russell W. Baker HIS CHILDHOOD DURING WAR TIMES
339
1984 Award: ABOUT THE EDUCATOR BOOKER T. WASHINGTON By Louis R. Harlan HIS BASIC IDEAS OF HIGHER EDUCATION 1985 Award: ABOUT THE THEOLOGIAN COTTON MATHER By Kenneth E. Silverman HIS PREPARATION FOR PREACHER'S CAREER 1986 Award: ABOUT THE POET LOUISE BOGAN By Elizabeth Frank HER LESS HAPPY FINAL YEARS
340 345 346 351 352 357 358
1987 Award: ABOUT THE REVEREND MARTIN LUTHER KING By David J. Garrow HIS WINNING OF THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
361
1988 Award: ABOUT THE NOVELIST THOMAS WOLFE By David H. Donald HIS BOOK OF TIME AND THE RIVER
367
1989 Award: ABOUT THE DRAMATIST OSCAR WILDE By Richard Ellmann
373
HIS IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST PLAY
374
1990 Award: ABOUT THE STATESMAN NICCOLO MACHIAVELLI By Sebastian de Grazia HIS WRITING PRACTICES AND HABITS 1991 Award: ABOUT THE PAINTER JACKSON POLLOCK By Steven W. Naifeh / Gregory W. Smith HIS BREAKTHROUGH BY PRESS PROMOTION
362
368
377 378 381 382
280 1992 Award: ABOUT THE ATTORNEY LEWIS PULLER
387
By Lewis B. Puller Jr. HIS SUFFERING FROM VIETNAM EXPERIENCES
388
WINNERS OF THE BIOGRAPHY/AUTOBIOGRAPHY AWARD, 1993-2003
391
INDEX
393
281
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 9
General Nonfiction Awards 1962 -1993: From the Election of John F. Kennedy to a Retrospect of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address
by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München · New Providence · London · Paris 1996
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; New Providence ; London ; Paris: Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 9 : Pt. C, Nonfiction literature. General nonfiction awards 1962-1993: from the election of John F. Kennedy to a retrospect of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg address / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 9 6 ISBN 3-598-30179-0 Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1996 A Reed Reference Publishing Company Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS-Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30179-0 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
283
FROM THE PREFACE
The award group General Non-Fiction is an absolute latecomer among the categories in the Pulitzer Prize system for outstanding journalistic and literary achievements, which exist since the end of World War I. Only created in 1962, the new category for non-fictional books at the time of its establishment thus was roughly four and a half decades younger than the two other Pulitzer Prize categories in this realm, including the fields of American History as well as Biography/Autobiography - both awarded for the first time in 1917. The General Non-Fiction category, set up at the beginning of the 60s, however, was not established coincidentally, but sprang from a multiple need. Because the two older non-fictional book categories were restricted to historical and (auto)biographical works respectively, heretofore all other sorts of non-fiction automatically were of no consequence for the Pulitzer Prize system. In the course of time, therefore, a considerable whirlpool developed to honor excellent work outside the historical-biographical range. When the General Non-Fiction category finally was established, it soon turned out to be so encompassing that problems arose how the jurors could possibly exclude certain areas of content. Theoretically, this category could be conceived for cookbooks or instructions for horticultural landscaping as well as for highly specialized scientific treatises. Jurors once complained about this character of a "diffuse and catch-all category", yet it did not prevent the juries in nearly all years of awarding from reaching relatively unanimous votes concerning the respective finalists and potential prizewinners. Essentially, the main problem remained the comparatively high number of publications on hand, theoretically protecting the chances of many authors and realms of contents, and the jurors each time had to carry out sometimes rigorous methods of selection to arrive at convincing results...
284
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
V
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
XV Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR GENERAL NON-FICTION SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA 1962 AWARD: ABOUT THE U.S. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1960..
XV 1 2 3
By Theodore H. White WINNING THE WHITE HOUSE BY JOHN F. KENNEDY 1963 AWARD: ABOUT THE EARLY STAGES OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR
4
13
By Barbara W. Tuchman THE SITUATION IN BERLIN IN AUGUST 1914 1964 AWARD: ABOUT THE ANTI-INTELLECTUALISM IN AMERICAN LIFE
14
23
By Richard Hofstadter RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INTELLECT AND POWER 1965 AWARD: ABOUT THE FORMATIVE YEARS OF THE AMERICAN CULTURE
24
33
By Howard M. Jones FOREIGN IMAGES OF THE STRANGE NEW WORLD 1966 AWARD: ABOUT THE JOURNEY OF A NATURALIST
34 43
By Edwin W. Teale THE LEVEL FLOOR OF THE TULAROSA BASIN
44
285 1967 AWARD: ABOUT THE PROBLEM OF SLAVERY IN WESTERN CULTURE By David B. Davis THE CASE OF 18TH CENTURY LATIN AMERICA 1968 AWARD: ABOUT THE UPCOMMING OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
53 54
61
By Ariel Durant / Will Durant TOWARDS THE MEETING OF THE STATES GENERAL 1969a AWARD: ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENT OF PESSIMISM IN AMERICA
62
71
By Rend J. Dubos PREDICTIONS OF SOME PROPHETS OF GLOOM 1969b AWARD: ABOUT THE ANTI-VIETNAM WAR MOVEMENT IN THE U.S
72
81
By Norman Mailer PREPARATIONS FOR A MARCH TO THE PENTAGON
82
1970 AWARD: ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF GANDHI'S MILITANT NONVIOLENCE
91
By Erik H. Erikson FIGURES OF THE INDIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS 1971 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECLINE AND END OF THE JAPANESE EMPIRE
92
101
By John W. Toland THE FALL OF OKINAWA IN WORLD WAR II
102
1972 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE IN CHINA SINCE 1911 111 By Barbara W. Tuchman STILWELL AND THE SINO-JAPANESE WAR 1973a AWARD: ABOUT THE LIVES OF THE U.S. URBAN POOR
112 121
By Robert Coles GHETTO PEOPLE IN SOME NORTHERN CITIES
122
286 1973b AWARD: ABOUT THE INHABITANTS AND THE AMERICANS IN VIETNAM
131
By Frances FitzGerald SEVERAL NATIONS AND EMPIRES OF THE REGION 1974 AWARD: ABOUT THE DENIAL OF DEATH BY HUMAN BEINGS...
132 141
By Ernest Becker DEPTHS PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF HEROISM 1975 AWARD: ABOUT THE MEMORIES OF A VALLEY IN VIRGINIA
142 151
By Annie D. Dillard LIVING IN A BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS AREA 1976 AWARD: ABOUT THE TRAGEDY OF OLD AGE IN AMERICA
152 161
By Robert N. Butler REALITY AND MYTHS ABOUT SENIOR CITIZENS
1977 AWARD: ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY AREA
162
171
By William W. Warner FOUNDING AND PROGRESS OF THE CRAB FISHING
172
1978 AWARD: ABOUT THE EVOLUTION OF HUMAN BEINGS
181
By Carl E. Sagan ASSUMPTIONS RELATING TO THE EARTH'S AGE 1979 AWARD: ABOUT THE PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN NATURE
182 189
By Edward 0 . Wilson APPEARANCE OF THE SPECIES HOMO SAPIENS
1980 AWARD: ABOUT THE CONCEPT OF NEW FORMAL SYSTEMS....
190
199
By Douglas R. Hofstadter A DIALOGUE BETWEEN TORTOISE AND ACHILLES 1981 AWARD: ABOUT THE FIN-DE-SIECLE CITY OF VIENNA
200 209
By Carl E. Schorske URBAN MODERNISM AT THE RINGSTRASSE AREA
210
287 1982 AWARD: ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENT OF COMPUTER S Y S T E M S
219
By J. Tracy Kidder IBM AND THE RAPID GROWTH OF AN INDUSTRY 1983 AWARD: ABOUT THE CREEDMOOR PSYCHIATRIC CENTER IN QUEENS
220
229
By Susan Sheehan A WOMAN'S MISHAP AND HER HOSPITALIZATION 1984 AWARD: ABOUT THE TRANSFORMATION OF AMERICAN MEDICINE
230
239
By Paul E. Starr STRUGGLES FOR SOLID MEDICAL CARE SYSTEMS
240
1985 AWARD: ABOUT THE ORAL HISTORY OF WORLD WAR TWO.... 249 By Studs L. Terkel MEMORIES AND TRAUMAS OF TERRIBLE TIMES 1986a AWARD: ABOUT THE MANY AND TROUBLED PEOPLES OF SOUTH AFRICA
250
259
By Joseph S. Lelyveld PHASES OF DEVELOPING THE APARTHEID SYSTEM 1986b AWARD: ABOUT THE INFLUENTIAL POLITICIANS FROM BOSTON
260 269
By J. Anthony Lukas SEARCH FOR A U.S. VICE-PRESIDENT CANDIDATE
270
1987 AWARD: ABOUT THE CONFLICTS BETWEEN ARABS AND JEWS 279 By David K. Shipler WAR AS AN EXPERIENCE OVER DECADES 1988 AWARD: ABOUT THE PIONEERS OF THE ATOMIC BOMB
280 289
By Richard L. Rhodes ROBERT OPPENHEIMER'S WAY TO LOS ALAMOS
290
1989 AWARD: ABOUT THE BACKGROUND SZENES OF THE VIETNAM WAR 299 By Neil Sheehan J. P. VANN'S STATE FUNERAL AT ARLINGTON
300
288 1990 A W A R D : ABOUT THE RISE AND FALL OF THE COTTON INDUSTRY
309
By Dale D. Maharidge / Michael S. Williamson SPREAD OF THE PLANT OVER THE CENTURIES
310
1991 A W A R D : ABOUT THE TERRESTRIAL WORLD'S PREMIER SOIL TURNER
319
By Bert K. Hölldobler / Edward 0. Wilson ASPECTS OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF ANTS 1992 A W A R D : ABOUT THE OIL POLICY AND THE WORLD ECONOMY
320 331
By Daniel H. Yergin OPEC AND THE KEY ROLE OF SAUDI ARABIA 1993 A W A R D : ABOUT THE GETTYSBURG A D D R E S S BY ABRAHAM LINCOLN
332
341
By Garry Wills VARIOUS VERSIONS OF THE SPOKEN TEXT
342
W I N N E R S O F T H E G E N E R A L NON-FICTION A W A R D , 1994-2004
351
INDEX
353
289
The Pulitzer Diaries Inside America's Greatest Prize
by John Hohenberg
Syracuse University Press Syracuse, N.Y., 1997
290
Copyright Ο 1997 by John Hohenberg All Rights Reserved First Edition 1997 96 97 - 9 8 99 00 01
6 5 4 3 2 1
T h e paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.481984.@"
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hohenberg, John. The Pulitzer diaries : inside America's greatest prize / John Hohenberg. — 1st ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8156-0392-4 (cloth : alk. paper) 1. Pulitzer prizes—History. 2. Hohenberg, John. I. Title. AS911.P8H625 1996 07Γ.3—dc20 96-34121
Manufactured m the United States of America
291
From the Preface
After a lifetime's contribution of memorable lyrics to the American theater, Oscar Hammerstein II concluded, "There is no invariable or inevitable method in writing songs." That also is true of the art of the diarist. Just as a change of a few notes or words in a song may warm the heart, the perceptive diarist sometimes can vary his method or add new material to give a more valid picture of the society about him. That has been my purpose in this work, based on the diaries and notebooks covering my twenty-two years as administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes. What I have done in effect is to complete the public record of the years of struggle for control of the prizes and the system through which they are selected. That applies as well to my activities and my close-up view of such combined awards as those for the Pentagon Papers, Watergate, and the Vietnam War together with individual prizes such as those for John F. Kennedy and William Randolph Hearst Jr.; nor do I overlook the denial of a similar honor to Duke Ellington. It was my decision entirely to delay my public accounting even if what I did or did not do was no secret to my superiors either at Columbia University or on the Pulitzer board. This is not to say that we diarists as a rule take ourselves as seriously as our more austere associates—the historians, biographers, and social scientists among them. The prince of diarists, Samuel Pepys, wrote once after a difficult weekend three centuries ago: "After dinner, we all went to the church stile, and there we ate and drank, and I was as merry as I could counterfeit myself to be." Does the diarist, then, often counterfeit himself into merriment? I can observe only that pretense and cajolery, like outright lying, nullify the basic purpose of keeping a diary, which is to try to be honest with oneself. True, Pepys felt, in some of his sharper observations, that it would be prudent for him to resort to code, but he nevertheless had his say.
292 Code is not, however, something I have been obliged to use in this work about my long association with the Pulitzer Prizes. Nor was I ever handicapped, as my predecessors sometimes were, by the refusal of an earlier Columbia president, Nicholas Murray Butler, to consider Pulitzer Prizes for books, plays, or journalistic feats of which he disapproved. And usually, he carried with him the Pulitzer board of his time. Fortunately for me, I never had to contend with such moral problems as the administrator of the prizes. Nor have I, in these eminently personal reflections on my years at Columbia, adhered to the convention in American journalism under which the writer refrains from serious personal commentary as I was bound to do in my earlier work, The Pulitzer Prizes: A History, for which some of my superiors acted as editors before publication in 1974. A lot of changes have occurred since, as these pages now demonstrate in my ninth decade. To give the background of my diaries, they were begun toward the conclusion of my second year as a tenured Columbia professor in 1952 when I hadn't the faintest inkling of a future association with the prizes. I find the first notation of the Pulitzers in these hastily scrawled pages in 1953: April 23—The Pulitzer Prizes were decided upon today behind closed doors in the Journalism building. My friend Professor Richard T. Baker, who was in the room with the Pulitzer board and its secretary, Dean Carl W. Ackerman, offered to tell me in confidence who won in advance of the formal announcement, but I said no thanks. I didn't see much point in knowing about the Pulitzer winners when the news would become public shortly.
I wasn't prepared for my unexpected appointment as the prize administrator as well as board secretary in 1954, therefore. And I was even less certain how I would be able to handle work that was so new to me in addition to my usually full academic load of instruction as a university professor. Such feelings were reflected in the opening pages of the diaries which, from then on, became more concerned with the Pulitzers than anything else at Columbia...
293
Table of Contents
The Art of the Diarist
PART ONE
xi
Expanding Horizons
1. The Big Prize
3
2. My View of the Prizes 3. An Atomic Crisis
8
13
4. New Times for the Prizes 5. Test for a Teacher
29
6. With Hearst in Moscow 7. The Kennedy Prize PART TWO
21 39
47
The Best of Times
8. A Question of Funding 9. The University Experience
59 68
l·
10
In the Public Interest
11
Shuffling the Prizes
80
12
Presidential Politics
88
13
Press versus Government
14
The Soviet Challenge
15
Showdown
PART THREE
74
95 103
109
The Prizes as History
16
The Greatest Sacrifice
121
17
Asian Dilemma
18
The Prizes and Vietnam
19
Honors for the Duke
145
20
Fifty-Year Reckoning
152
21
The Grand Show
22
Losing a Prize
128
161 169
136
295
PART FOUR
Surviving the War
23. The Oldest Rebel 24. Turnabout
181
189
25. The War at Home
196
26. Another World
204
27. The Peace Riots
212
28. Tragedy at Kent State 29. Rommy
227
30. Saigon Revisited
PART FIVE
220
236
The Trials of Peace
31. Life after Vietnam
247
32. Turmoil at Columbia 33. Watergate in Retrospect
257 265
34. The Awards under Fire 35. A Prize Solution 36. Beyond Defeat
283 290
37. Auld Lang Syne
297
Southern Exposure Notes
313
Bibliography Index
335
331
304
297
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 10
Novel / Fiction Awards 1917 - 1994: From Pearl S. Buck and Margaret Mitchell to Ernest Hemingway and John Updike
by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München · New Providence · London • Paris 1997
298
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München ; New Providence ; London ; Paris : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 NE: Fischer, Heinz-Dietrich [Hrsg.] Vol. 10: Pt. D, Belles lettres. Novel, fiction awards 1917-1994: from Pearl S. Buck and Margaret Mitchell to Ernest Hemingway and John Updike / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 9 6 ISBN 3-598-30180-4
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1996 A Reed Reference Publishing Company Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS-Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30180-4 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
299
FROM THE PREFACE
With the volume on hand this series of publications for the first time is turning to the field of fiction that holds an eminent place within the Pulitzer Prize system. J. Douglas Bates once tried to account for this fact by offering the following explanation: "An argument can be made that Joseph Pulitzer's journalism prizes never would have become famous if he hadn't tacked on the separate awards in arts and letters. These first national prizes for books and plays captured the public attention right from the start. And that happened primarily as a result of headline-grabbing controversy." Indeed the other Pulitzer Prizes hardly ever provoked such controversial opinions as the one that in the early years from 1917 onwards was known under the term of "Novel" and in 1949 was renamed "Fiction". In all eight decades of awarding the prize there was repeatedly strong, sometimes even harsh criticism of the decisions made by the jury and the Pulitzer Prize Board respectively. And time and again names of authors were publicly discussed that - for whatever reasons - were never even considered for the prestigious award. In this respect the book at hand not only is a complete documentation of the laureates but - running along the jury reports - an exciting inside-story on the annual decision-making process of selecting, nominating and bestowing the prize in all of the various committees. Franz Schneider stated once that, from the point of view of an communications scientist, "the interdependency of the decisive discussions of such committees and the so-called public opinion" forms actually one of the very "central problems of communication sciences."...
300
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
V
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
XXI Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR NOVEL/FICTION
SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA
1917 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE NOVEL PRIZE
XXI
1 2
3
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1918 AWARD: ABOUT THE MIDDLE-AGED FATHER OF AN OLD NEW YORK FAMILY
4
5
By Ernest Poole STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1919 AWARD: ABOUT THE HISTORICAL PATTERNS OF THE GROWTH OF THE NATION
6
9
By N. Booth Tarkington STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1920 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE NOVEL PRIZE
10
13
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1921 AWARD: ABOUT THE PICTURE AND ANALYSIS OF A CASTE DURING A PERIOD
14
15
By Edith N. Wharton STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
16
301 1922 AWARD: ABOUT THE SYMPATHIC PORTRAIT OF A MIDDLECLASS HOME-LIFE
19
By N. Booth Tarkington STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1923 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIFE AND DEATH OF A NEBRASKAN IN WORLD WAR ONE
20
23
By Willa S. Cather STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1924 AWARD: ABOUT THE FRONTIER LIFE OF THE SCOTTISH PRESBYTERIANS
24
27
By Margaret W. Wilson STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1925 AWARD: ABOUT THE EFFORTS MAKING A DEBT-RIDDEN FARM PROSPEROUS
28
31
By EdnaFerber STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1926 AWARD: ABOUT THE PHASES IN THE CAREER OF A MEDICAL RESEARCHER
32
35
By H. Sinclair Lewis STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1927 AWARD: ABOUT THE MARRIAGE OF A WOMAN INTO A WEALTHY FAMILY
36
39
By Louis Bromfield STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1928 AWARD: ABOUT THE COLLAPSE OF A BRIDGE AND THE FIVE PEOPLE KILLED
40
43
By Thornton N. Wilder STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1929 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIVES OF BLACKS ON A SOUTH CAROLINA PLANTATION
44
47
By Julia M. Peterkin STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
48
302 1930 AWARD: ABOUT THE RESULTS OF A TRAGIC AMERICAN INDIAN LOVE AFFAIR By Oliver H. La Farge STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1931 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIFE OF A WOMAN AND THE AMERICAN SOCIAL SCENE By Margaret A. Barnes STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1932 AWARD: ABOUT THE CHINESE FARMER RISING TO A WEALTHY LANDOWNER By Pearl S. Buck STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1933 AWARD: ABOUT THE CRUMBLING OF THE OLD AND THE BIRTH OF A NEW SOUTH By Thomas S. Stribling STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1934 AWARD: ABOUT THE EXPERIENCES OF A FAMILY IN THE GEORGIA WILDERNESS By Caroline Miller STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1935 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIVING CONDITIONS ON A SMALL MIDWESTERN FARM By Josephine W. Johnson STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1936 AWARD: ABOUT THE MIGRATION FROM THE HOP FIELDS TO EASTERN OREGON By Harold L. Davis STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1937 AWARD: ABOUT THE HUMAN RELATIONS IN THE CIVIL WAR AND AFTERWARDS By Margaret M. Mitchell STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
51 52
55 56
59 60
63 64
67 68
71 72
75 76
79 80
303 1938 AWARD: ABOUT THE PERSONAL PORTRAIT OF AN INFLUENTIAL BOSTON IAN
83
By John P. Marquand STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1939 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMING OF AGE OF A POOR BOY IN A FLORIDA AREA
84
87
By Marjorie K. Rawlings STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1940 AWARD: ABOUT THE MIGRATION OF THE DUST BOWL OKIES TO CALIFORNIA
88
91
By John E. Steinbeck STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1941 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE NOVEL PRIZE
92
95
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD'
1942 AWARD: ABOUT THE FAMILY MEMBERS FROM A VIRGINIA TIDEWATER CITY
96
97
By Ellen A. Glasgow STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1943 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICANS RECOGNIZING THE THREAT FROM GERMANY
98
101
By Upton B. Sinclair Jr. STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1944 AWARD: ABOUT THE PRISON OF LONELINESS OF A VERY SUCCESSFUL MAN
102
105
By Martin A. Flavin STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1945 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICANS IN ITALY DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR
106
109
By John R. Hersey STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
110
304 1946 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE NOVEL PRIZE
113
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1947 AWARD: ABOUT THE TRAGEDY OF THREE FORMER CHILDHOOD FRIENDS
114
115
By Robert P. Warren STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1948 AWARD: ABOUT THE SOUTH PACIFIC ISLANDS DURING WORLD WAR TWO
116
119
By James A. Michener STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1949 AWARD: ABOUT THE DEEPER MEANING OF HUMAN CONFLICT SITUATIONS
120
123
By James G. Cozzens STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1950 AWARD: ABOUT THE DREAM OF THE RICH LANDS IN THE AMERICAN WEST
124
127
By Alfred B. Guthrie Jr. STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1951 AWARD: ABOUT THE AMERICAN PIONEERS ON THE WAY TO CIVILIZATION
128
131
By Conrad M. Richter STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1952 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIVES OF MEN ON SHIPBOARD AND THEIR PROBLEMS
132
135
By Herman Wouk STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1953 AWARD: ABOUT THE OLD FISHERMAN IN THE WORLD OF THE GULF STREAM
136
139
By Ernest M. Hemingway STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
140
305 1954 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE FICTION PRIZE
143
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1955 AWARD: ABOUT THE REVOLT OF A FRENCH ARMY UNIT IN WORLD WAR ONE
144
145
By William Faulkner STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1956 AWARD: ABOUT THE CONFEDERATE PRISON STOCKADE IN THE CIVIL WAR
146
149
By MacKinlay Kantor STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1957 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE FICTION PRIZE
150
153
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1958 AWARD: ABOUT THE DEATH IN A CLOSELY KNIT FAMILY FROM TENNESSEE
154
155
By James Agee STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1959 AWARD: ABOUT THE JOURNEY OF A FATHER AND HIS SON TO CALIFORNIA
156
159
By Robert L. Taylor STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1960 AWARD: ABOUT THE SMOKE-FILLED COMMITTEE ROOMS OF THE U. S. SENATE
160
163
By Allen S. Drury STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1961 AWARD: ABOUT THE YEARS OF DEPRESSION IN A SMALL ALABAMA TOWN
164
167
By N. Harper Lee STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
168
306 1962 AWARD: ABOUT THE PORTRAIT OF A PRIEST AND IRISHAMERICAN LIFE
171
By Edwin G. O'Connor STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1963 AWARD: ABOUT THE JOURNEY OF THREE MISSISSIPPI BOYS TO MEMPHIS
172
175
By William Faulkner STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1964 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE FICTION PRIZE
176 179
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1965 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIVES OF BLACKS AND WHITES AT THE GULF COAST
180
181
By Shirley A. Grau STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1966 AWARD: ABOUT THE ASSEMBLED TALES AND STORIES ON VARIOUS TOPICS
182
185
By Katherine A. Porter STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1967 AWARD: ABOUT THE TRANSFORMATION FROM A LITTLE MAN INTO A BIG ONE
186
189
By Bernard Malamud STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1968 AWARD: ABOUT THE REVOLT LED BY AN OUTSTANDING BLACK PREACHER
190
193
By William C. Styron Jr. STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER 1969 AWARD: ABOUT THE ROOTS AND THE SOUL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN
194
197
By N. Scott Momaday STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
198
307 1970 AWARD: ABOUT THE THIRTY STORIES FROM AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN AREAS
201
By Jean Stafford STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1971 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE FICTION PRIZE
202
205
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1972 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIVES OF FOUR GENERATIONS OF AN AMERICAN FAMILY
206
207
By Wallace E. Stegner STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1973 AWARD: ABOUT THE MEMORIES OF GROWING UP IN A MISSISSIPPI TOWN
208
211
By Eudora Welty STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1974 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE FICTION PRIZE
212
215
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1975 AWARD: ABOUT THE MOST CRUCIAL BATTLE DURING THE CIVIL WAR TIME
216
217
By Michael J. Shaara Jr. STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1976 AWARD: ABOUT THE TRIALS AND TEMPTATIONS OF THE AMERICAN ARTIST
218
221
By Saul Bellow STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1977 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE FICTION PRIZE
222
225
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
226
308 1978 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIFE AT THE BORDERLINE OF BLACK AND WHITE AMERICA
227
By James A. McPherson STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1979 AWARD: ABOUT THE SIXTY-ONE STORIES DEALING WITH A LONG-LOST WORLD
228
231
By JohnCheever STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1980 AWARD: ABOUT THE CRIME AND PUNISHMENT OF A CONVICTED MURDERER
232
235
By Norman Mailer STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1981 AWARD: ABOUT THE RENDERING OF REAL LIFE IN DOWNTOWN NEW ORLEANS
236
239
By John K. Toole STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1982 AWARD: ABOUT THE CHIEF SALES REPRESENTATIVE OF A MOTOR COMPANY
240
243
By John H. Updike STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1983 AWARD: ABOUT THE HEROIC LIVES OF TWO SEPARATED AMERICAN SISTERS
244
247
By Alice M. Walker STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1984 AWARD: ABOUT THE RETURN OF A FORMER BASEBALL PLAYER TO ALBANY
248
251
By William J. Kennedy STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1985 AWARD: ABOUT THE CROSSING OF THE PATHS OF TWO AMERICAN ACADEMICS
252
255
By Alison Lurie STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
256
309 1986 AWARD: ABOUT THE CATTLE DRIVE OPERATIONS FROM TEXAS TO MONTANA
259
By Larry J. McMurtry STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1987 AWARD: ABOUT THE PRIVILEGED SOCIETY OF WELLBORN TENNESSEAN PEOPLE
260
263
By Peter H. Taylor STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1988 AWARD: ABOUT THE LIFE OF A FORMER SLAVE IN POSTCIVIL WAR OHIO
264
267
By Toni Morrison STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1989 AWARD: ABOUT THE RETROSPECT ON AN ENTIRE LIFE OF A MARRIAGE
268
271
By Anne Tyler STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1990 AWARD: ABOUT THE VARIOUS SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF AN ERA IN MUSIC
272
275
By Oscar Hijuelos STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1991 AWARD: ABOUT THE LOOKING FOR REASONS TO LIVE AT LATE MIDDLE AGE
276
279
By John H. Updike STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1992 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERY SPECIAL WORLD OF A THRIVING FARM IN IOWA
280
283
By Jane G. Smiley STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
1993 AWARD: ABOUT THE MANY VIETNAMESE EXPATRIATES LIVING IN AMERICA
284
287
By Robert O. Butler Jr. STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
288
310 1994 AWARD: ABOUT THE CRACKED-UP CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN FAMILY LIFE By E. Annie Proulx STYLE SAMPLE FROM THE OPENING CHAPTER
291 292
WINNERS OF THE NOVEL / FICTION AWARD, 1995-2005
295
INDEX
297
311
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 11
Poetry / Verse Awards 1918 - 1995: From Carl Sandburg and Robert Frost to Archibald MacLeish and Robert Penn Warren
by
Heinz-D. Fischerand Erika J. Fischer
K G - Saur München 1997
312
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München: Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 11: Pt. D, Belles lettres. Poetry, verse awards 1918-1995: from Carl Sandburg and Robert Frost to Archibald MacLeish and Robert Penn Warren / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 9 7 ISBN 3-598-30181-2
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1997 Part of Reed Elsevier Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS-Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30181-2 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
313
FROM THE PREFACE
As the original award concept did not take into consideration a Pulitzer Prize for top-class poetry performances, some years had to go by until such an award was established additionally. There was, however, an indirect forerunner of the later prize, which had been awarded for two years. The actual Pulitzer Poetry Prize, though, was not established before 1922 and thus proved to be a latecomer in the history of the whole award system. Yet there is another point which makes this prize a special one in some respect: "The one major difference between poetry and the other categories is," J. Douglas Bates once put it, "that most of the winning books are collections, so verse theoretically has multiple chances to win. Poems that failed to win a prize one year could be published in a new collection that might win in a future year." Besides, it is also remarkable that, for many decades, there were far less controversies among the members of the different juries than in the other award categories based on book publications. That is also the reason why there has been only one "no award"-year since the establishment of the Pulitzer Poetry Prize about three quarters of a century ago. It is more than fifty years, though, since that "no award" decision has been made. It proved to be impossible to get into contact with all the prize-winners as well as their descendants and/or the publishing houses of the poetry volumes documented in the book on hand. Therefore, as already practised in the preceding volume of this series, the poems in this book could be reprinted with reference to the "Doctrine of Fair Use" as embodied in the United States Copyright Act of 1976. According to this doctrine, excerpts of copyrighted works in the context of a compendium or a work of reference may be reprinted when the quotation does not encompass a substantial portion of the copyrighted work and enhances public awareness and value of the work in question...
314
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
V
INTRODUCTION
XVII
By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität Bochum HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR POETRY
XVII
SELECTIONS F R O M AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES
1
REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA
2
1918 A W A R D : A B O U T THE V E R S E C O L L E C T I O N LOVE
SONGS
3
By SaraTeasdale SAMPLE POEM "Summer Night, Riverside"
4
1919a A W A R D : A B O U T THE V E R S E C O L L E C T I O N CORNHUSKERS
5
By Carl A . Sandburg SAMPLE POEM "Prairie"
6
1 9 1 9 b A W A R D : A B O U T THE P O E M S THE OLD ROAD
TO PARADISE....
9
By Margaret Widdemer SAMPLE POEM "Old Books" 1920 A W A R D : A B O U T THE M I S S I N G O F A POETRY
10 PRIZE C A T E G O R Y
13
By The Editors SOME ADDITIONAL REMARKS 1921 A W A R D : A B O U T THE MISSING O F A POETRY
14 PRIZE CATEGORY
15
By The Editors SOME ADDITIONAL REMARKS 1922 A W A R D : A B O U T THE V O L U M E COLLECTED
16 POEMS
17
By Edwin A. Robinson SAMPLE POEM O l d Trails" 1923 A W A R D : A B O U T THE V E R S E C O L L E C T I O N A FEW THISTLES
18 FIGS
FROM 21
By Edna St. Vincent Millay SAMPLE POEM "Recuerdo"
22
315 1924 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION NEW HAMPSHIRE.... By Robert L. Frost SAMPLE P O E M "New Hampshire"
24
1925 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE VOLUME THE MAN WHO TWICE By Edwin A. Robinson
DIED 27
SAMPLE P O E M "The Man Who Died Twice"
28
1926 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION WHAT'S O'CLOCK.... By Amy Lowell SAMPLE P O E M "Autumn and Death"
1927 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION
23
31 32
FIDDLER'S
FAREWELL By Leonora Speyer
35
SAMPLE P O E M "Ballad of a Lost House"
36
1928 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE VOLUME TRISTRAM By Edwin A. Robinson
39
SAMPLE P O E M "Tristram"
40
1929 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE VOLUME JOHN BROWN'S By Stephen V. Ben6t
BODY...
SAMPLE P O E M "Prelude — The Slaver"
1930 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME SELECTED By Conrad P. Aiken
44
POEMS
47
SAMPLE P O E M "Evensong"
1931 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME COLLECTED By Robert L. Frost
48
POEMS
SAMPLE P O E M "Christmas Trees"
1932 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE STONE By George Dillon SAMPLE P O E M "One Beauty"
43
51 52
FLOWERING 55 56
316 1 9 3 3 A W A R D : ABOUT T H E NARRATIVE P O E M CONQUISTADOR
59
By Archibald MacLeish SAMPLE POEM "Prologue"
60
1 9 3 4 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME THE COLLECTED
VERSE
63
By Robert S. Hillyer SAMPLE POEM "Ecstasy"
64
1935 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION BRIGHT AMBUSH By Audrey M. Wurdemann
67
SAMPLE POEM "The Eagle's Wing"
68 STRANGE
1 9 3 6 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION HOLINESS
71
By Robert P. T. Coffin SAMPLE POEM "First Flight"
72
1 9 3 7 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION A RANGE
FURTHER 75
By Robert L. Frost SAMPLE POEM "A Roadside Stand"
76
1 9 3 8 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION COLD MORNING By Marya A. Zaturenska SAMPLE POEM "The Daisy" 1 9 3 9 A W A R D : ABOUT T H E VOLUME SELECTED
SKY
79 80
POEMS
81
By John G. Fletcher SAMPLE POEM "In Memory of a Night" 1 9 4 0 A W A R D : ABOUT T H E VOLUME COLLECTED
82 POEMS
85
By Mark A. Van Dören SAMPLE POEM "Now the Sky" 1941 A W A R D : ABOUT T H E VERSE COLLECTION CAPTURE
86 SUNDERLAND 89
By Leonard Bacon SAMPLE POEM "Sunderland Capture"
90
317 1942 AWARD: ABOUT THE POEMS BOOK THE DUST WHICH IS GOD
93
By William R. Bendt SAMPLE POEM "Calendar Leaves' 1943 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION A WITNESS TREE...
94 97
By Robert L. Frost SAMPLE POEM 'The Wind and the Rain" 1944 AWARD: ABOUT THE NARRATIVE POEM WESTERN STAR
98 101
By Stephen V. Benet SAMPLE POEM "Prelude" 1945 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION V-LETTER
102 105
By Karl J. Shapiro SAMPLE POEM "THE SYNAGOGUE" 1946 AWARD: ABOUT THE WITHHOLD OF THE POETRY PRIZE
106 109
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
110
1947 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION LORD WEARY'S CASTLE
111
By Robert T. S. Lowell Jr. SAMPLE POEM "The Ghost" 1948 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE VOLUME THE AGE OF ANXIETY..
112 115
By Wystan H. Auden SAMPLE POEM "The Night of All Souls" 1949 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION TERROR AND DECORUM
116
119
By Peter R. E. Viereck SAMPLE POEM "A Walk on Snow" 1950 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION ANNIE ALLEN
120 123
By Gwendolyn Brooks SAMPLE POEM "The Children of the Poor"
124
318 1951 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME COMPLETE
POEMS
127
By Carl A. Sandburg SAMPLE POEM "Moonlight and Maggots" 1952 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME COLLECTED
128 POEMS
131
By Marianne C. Moore SAMPLE POEM "People's Surroundings" 1953 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME COLLECTED
132 POEMS
135
By Archibald MacLeish SAMPLE POEM "Empire Builders"
136
1954 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE WAKING
139
By Theodore Roethke SAMPLE POEM "Unfold! Unfold!"
140
1955 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME THE COLLECTED
POEMS
143
By Wallace Stevens SAMPLE POEM "To an old Philosopher in Rome"
144
1956 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME POEMS-NORTH
AND SOUTH
147
By Elizabeth Bishop SAMPLE POEM "The Monument"
148
1957 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THINGS WORLD
OF THIS 151
By Richard P. Wilbur SAMPLE POEM "Looking into History"
152
1958 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION PROMISES
155
By Robert P. Warren SAMPLE POEM "Colder Fire" 1959 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME SELECTED
156 POEMS
159
By Stanley J. Kunitz SAMPLE POEM "The Thief" 1960 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION HEART'S
160 NEEDLE....
163
By William D. Snodgrass SAMPLE POEM "These Trees Stand..."
164
319 1961 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION TIMES THREE
165
By Phyllis McGinley SAMPLE POEM "The Doll House"
166
1962 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION POEMS
169
By AlanDugan SAMPLE POEM "Sixteen Lines on Marching"
170
1963 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION PICTURES BRUEGHEL
FROM 171
By William C. Williams SAMPLE POEM "Tapiola"
172
1964 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION AT THE END OF THE OPEN ROAD
173
By Louis A. M. Simpson SAMPLE POEM "Lines written near San Francisco"
1965 AWARD: ABOUT THE VOLUME SEVENTY-SEVEN
174
DREAM SONGS
177
By John Berryman SAMPLE POEM "A Stimulant for an Old Beast"
1966 AWARD: ABOUT THE VOLUME SELECTED
178
POEMS
181
By Richard G. Eberhart SAMPLE POEM "Meditation One"
1967 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION LIVE OR DIE
182
185
By Anne G. Sexton SAMPLE POEM "Those Times ..."
1968 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE HARD HOURS..
186
189
By Anthony E. Hecht SAMPLE POEM "Behold the Lilies of the Field"
1969 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION OF BEING NUMEROUS
190
193
By George Oppen SAMPLE POEM "Of Being Numerous"
194
320 1970 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION UNTITLED SUBJECTS
197
By Richard Howard SAMPLE POEM "1824-1889"
1971 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE CARRIER OF LADDERS
198
201
By William S. Merwin SAMPLE POEM "The Judgment of Paris"
1972 AWARD: ABOUT THE VOLUME COLLECTED POEMS
202
205
By James A. Wright SAMPLE POEM "The Assignation"
1973 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION UP COUNTRY
206
209
By Maxine W. Kumin SAMPLE POEM "Cellar Hole in Joppa"
1974 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE DOLPHIN
210
213
By Robert T. S. Lowell Jr. SAMPLE POEM "Winter and London"
1975 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION TURTLE ISLAND
214
217
By Gary Snyder SAMPLE POEM "The Bath"
1976 AWARD: ABOUT THE POEMS SELF-PORTRAIT IN A CONVEX MIRROR
218
221
By John L. Ashbery SAMPLE POEM "Voyage in the Blue"
1977 AWARD: ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION DIVINE COMEDIES...
222
225
By James I. Merrill SAMPLE POEM "The Book of Ephraim"
1978 AWARD: ABOUT THE VOLUME THE COLLECTED POEMS
226
229
By Howard Nemerov SAMPLE POEM "Watching Football on TV"
230
321 1979 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION NOW AND THEN
233
By Robert P. Warren SAMPLE POEM "Amazing Grace in the Back Country" 1980 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME SELECTED
234
POEMS
237
By Donald R. Justice SAMPLE POEM "A Letter"
238
1981 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME THE MORNING
OF THE POEM..
239
By James M. Schuyler SAMPLE POEM "Bob, who am I kidding ?" 1982 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME COLLECTED
240 POEMS
243
By Sylvia Plath SAMPLE POEM "Daddy" 1983 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME SELECTED
244 POEMS
247
By Galway Kinnell SAMPLE POEM "The Schoolhouse" 1984 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION PRIMITIVE
248 AMERICAN 251
By Mary Oliver SAMPLE POEM "Postcard from Flamingo" 1985 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION YIN
252 253
By Carolyn A. Kizer SAMPLE POEM "Semele Recycled" 1986 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE FLYING CHANGE
254
257
By Henry S. Taylor SAMPLE POEM "Taking to the Woods" 1987 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THOMAS AND BEULAH
258
261
By Rita F. D o v e SAMPLE POEM "The Satisfaction Coal Company"
262
322 1988 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION PARTIAL ACCOUNTS
265
By William M. Meredith SAMPLE POEM "Hydraulics"
266
1989 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME NEW AND COLLECTED
POEMS.
269
By Richard P. Wilbur SAMPLE POEM "Castles and Distances"
270
1990 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PROSE POEMS THE WORLD DOESN'T END
273
By Charles Simic SAMPLE POEM "Once I knew..."
274
1991 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION NEAR CHANGES
275
By Mona J. Van Duyn SAMPLE POEM "The Ferris Wheel" 1992 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VOLUME SELECTED
276 POEMS
279
By James Tate SAMPLE POEM "I Take Back All My Kisses"
280
1993 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE WILD IRIS
283
By Louise E. Glück SAMPLE POEM "The Silver Lily" 1994 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION NEON
284 VERNACULAR
285
By Yusef Komunyakaa SAMPLE POEM "Fever" 1995 A W A R D : ABOUT THE VERSE COLLECTION THE SIMPLE
286 TRUTH
289
By Philip Levine SAMPLE POEM "Soul"
290
WINNERS OF THE P O E T R Y / V E R S E AWARD, 1 9 9 6 - 2 0 0 6
293
INDEX
295
323
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 12
Drama / Comedy Awards 1917 - 1996: From Eugene O'Neill and Tennessee Williams to Richard Rodgers and Edward Albee
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München 1998
324
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München: Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 12: Pt. D, Belles lettres. Drama, comedy awards 1917-1996: from Eugene O'Neill and Tennessee Williams to Richard Rodgers and Edward Albee / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 1 9 9 8 ISBN 3-598-30182-0
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1998 Part of Reed Elsevier Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS-Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30182-0 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
325
FROM THE PREFACE
"How significant is the Pulitzer award in the development of contemporary American drama I am not prepared to say; but I think its influence has been and is noticeable." With these restrained words William L. Phelps, who temporarily had acted as juror in the drama category himself, commented more than half a century ago, in the mid-thirties, on the Pulitzer Prize for drama. Today there can be no doubt that this prize is one of the most prestigious among all the awards for theatrical achievements, prompting each year comparatively many playwrights to compete for the coveted honor. "For some playwrights, the award comes after years of effort," Carol Lawson writes, "for others it arrives remarkably quickly. Some feel they won for the best play of their career; others feel they wrote more deserving plays that went unrecognized." As the drama award is held in especially high regard, this Pulitzer Prize category traditionally has been controversially discussed not only among the members of the juries and the Advisory Board but on side of the public as well. The volume at hand reflects vividly the judgments made by and all the aspects taken into consideration by the juries while trying to decide who was most deserving of the award. In addition, it was of main concern for the authors of this book that the original cast of each prize-winning play was documented in its completeness with regard to its first New York production. The intention to convey an impression of the design and content of the various theater programs necessitated endeavours sometimes taking several years in order to print facsimiles of the original playbill of every single Pulitzer Prize-winning work...
326
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
V
Dedication to George Gershwin
VI!
Note about the Special Award
VIII
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
XIX Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR DRAMA/COMEDY SELECTIONS FROM AWARD-WINNING ENTRIES REMARKS ABOUT THE SELECTIONS CRITERIA 1917 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
XIX 1 2
3
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1918 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMEDY WHY MARRY?
4 5
By Jesse L. Williams THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1919 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
6
9
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1920 AWARD: ABOUT THE TRAGEDY BEYOND THE HORIZON
10 11
By Eugene G. O'Neill THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1921 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMEDY MISS LULU BETT
12 15
By Zona Gale THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1922 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY ANNA CHRISTIE
16 19
By Eugene G. O'Neill THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
20
327 1923 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY ICEBOUND
23
By Owen Davis THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1924 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY HELL-BENT FER HEAVEN
24 27
By Hatcher Hughes THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1925 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMEDY THEY KNEW WHAT THEY WANTED
28
31
By Sidney C. Howard THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1926 AWARD: ABOUT THE DRAMA CRAIG'S WIFE
32 35
By George E. Kelly THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1927 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY IN ABRAHAM'S BOSOM
36 39
By Paul Green THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1928 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY STRANGE INTERLUDE
40 43
By Eugene G. O'Neill
'
THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
44
1929 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY STREET SCENE
47
By Elmer L. Rice THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1930 AWARD: ABOUT THE FABLE THE GREEN PASTURES
48 51
By Marc(us) C. Connelly THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1931 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY ALISON'S HOUSE
52 57
By Susan K. Glaspell THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1932 AWARD: ABOUT THE MUSICAL OF THEE I SING
58 61
By George S. Kaufman / Morrie Ryskind / Ira Gershwin THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
62
328 1933 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY BOTH YOUR HOUSES
67
By Maxwell Anderson THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1934 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY MEN IN WHITE
68 71
By Sidney Kingsley THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1935 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY THE OLD MAID
72 75
By Zoe Akins THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1936 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY IDIOTS
DELIGHT
76 79
By Robert E. Sherwood THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
80
1937 A W A R D : ABOUT THE COMEDY YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU
83
By Moss Hart / George S. Kaufman THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
84
1938 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY OUR TOWN
87
By Thornton N. Wilder THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1939 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY ABE LINCOLN IN ILLINOIS
88 91
By Robert E. Sherwood THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1940 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE
92 95
By William Saroyan THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1941 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY THERE SHALL BE NO NIGHT
96 99
By Robert E. Sherwood THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1942 A W A R D : ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
100
103
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
104
329 1943 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMEDY THE SKIN OF OUR TEETH
105
By Thornton N. Wilder THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1944a AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
106
109
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD" 1944bSPECIAL AWARD: ABOUT THE MUSICAL OKLAHOMA!
110 111
By Richard Rodgers / Oscar Hammerstein Π THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
112
1945 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMEDY HARVEY
117
By Mary C. Chase THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1946 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMEDY STATE OF THE UNION
118 121
By Russel Crouse / Howard Lindsay THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1947 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
122
125
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1948 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE
126 127
By Tennessee Williams THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1949 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY DEATH OF A SALESMAN
128 131
By Arthur Miller THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1950 AWARD: ABOUT THE MUSICAL PLAY SOUTH PACIFIC
132 135
By Richard Rodgers / Oscar Hammerstein II / Joshua L. Logan ΙΠ THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
136
330 1951 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
141
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1952 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE SHRIKE
142
143
By Joseph Kramm THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1953 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY PICNIC
144
149
By William M. Inge THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1954 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE TEAHOUSE OF THE AUGUST MOON
150
153
By John Patrick THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1955 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF By Tennessee Williams THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1956 AWARD: ABOUT THE DRAMA THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK
154
159 160
163
By Albert Hackett / Frances Goodrich THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
164
1957 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT By Eugene G. O'Neill
167
THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
168
1958 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL
171
By Ketti H. Frings THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1959 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY IN VERSE J. Β
172
177
By Archibald MacLeish THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
178
331 1960 AWARD: ABOUT THE MUSICAL FIORELLO!
183
By Jerome Weidman / George F. Abbott / Jerry L. Bock / Sheldon M. Harnick THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1961 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY ALL THE WAY HOME
184 189
By Tad Mosel THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1962 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING
190
195
By Frank Loesser / Abe Burrows THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1963 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
196
201
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1964 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
202
203
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1965 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE SUBJECT WAS ROSES
204 205
By Frank D. Gilroy THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1966 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
206
209
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1967 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY A DELICATE BALANCE
210 211
By Edward F. Albee THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1968 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
212
215
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
216
332 1969 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE GREAT WHITE HOPE
217
By Howard Sackler THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1970 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMEDY NO PLACE TO BE SOMEBODY.
218 225
By Charles Gordone THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1971 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE EFFECT OF GAMMA RAYS ON MAN-IN-THE-MOON MARIGOLDS
226
229
By Paul Zindel THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1972 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
230
233
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1973 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THAT CHAMPIONSHIP SEASON
234 235
By Jason Miller THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1974 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
236
239
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1975 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY SEASCAPE
240 241
By Edward F. Albee THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1976 AWARD: ABOUT THE MUSICAL A CHORUS LINE
242 245
By Michael Bennett / James Kirkwood / Nicholas Dante / Marvin F. Hamlisch / Edward L. Kleban THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1977 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE SHADOW BOX
246 251
By Michael Cristofer THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
252
333 1978 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY THE GIN GAME
255
By Donald L. Coburn THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1979 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY BURIED
256
CHILD
259
By Sam(uel) Shepard THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
260
1980 A W A R D : ABOUT THE COMEDY TALLEY'S FOLLY
263
By Lanford E. Wilson THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1981 A W A R D : ABOUT THE DRAMA CRIMES
264
OF THE HEART
267
By Beth Henley THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
268
1982 A W A R D : ABOUT THE DRAMA A SOLDIER'S
PLAY
271
By Charles H. Fuller Jr. THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
272
1983 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY 'NIGHT, MOTHER
275
By Marsha Norman THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1984 A W A R D : ABOUT THE PLAY GLENGARRY
276 GLEN ROSS
279
By David A. Mamet THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1985 A W A R D : ABOUT THE MUSICAL SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE
280
283
By Stephen J. Sondheim / James E. Lapine THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE 1986 A W A R D : ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE DRAMA PRIZE
284
289
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1987 A W A R D : ABOUT THE DRAMA FENCES
290 291
By August Wilson THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
292
334 1988 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY DRIVING MISS DAISY
295
By Alfred Uhry THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1989 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE HEIDI CHRONICLES
296
299
By Wendy Wasserstein THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1990 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE PIANO LESSON
300
305
By August Wilson THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1991 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY LOST IN YONKERS
306
309
By M. Neil Simon THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1992 AWARD: ABOUT THE SERIES OF PLAYS THE KENTUCKY CYCLE
310
315
By Robert F. Schenkkan THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1993 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY ANGELS IN AMERICA
316
323
By Tony Kushner THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1994 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THREE TALL WOMEN
324
329
By Edward F. Albee THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
330
1995 AWARD: ABOUT THE PLAY THE YOUNG MAN FROM ATLANTA. 333 By Horton Foote THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
1996 AWARD: ABOUT THE MUSICAL RENT
334
337
By Jonathan Larson THE WORK AND ITS NEW YORK PREMIERE
338
WINNERS OF THE DRAMA /COMEDY AWARD, 1 9 9 7 - 2 0 0 7
343
INDEX
345
335
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 13
Editorial Cartoon Awards 1922 - 1997: From Rollin Kirby and Edmund Duffy to Herbert Block and Paul Conrad
by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G - Saur München 1999
336
Die Deutsche Bibliothek-CIP-Einheitsaufnähme The Pulitzer prize archive: a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 13: Pt. E, Liberal arts. Editorial cartoon awards 1922 -1997 : from Rollin Kirby and Edmund Duffy to Herbert Block and Paul Conrad / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. -1999 ISBN 3-598-30183-9
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1999 Part of Reed Elsevier Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by WS-Druckerei Werner Schaubruch, Bodenheim Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30183-9 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
337
FROM THE PREFACE While preparing this book, we had a completely unexpected reunion with someone we haven't seen for decades: In the late fifties, during a lecture dealing with "The Political Cartoon Past and Present" at the Free University of Berlin the professor showed slides of some estimated examples. In one session, a caricature appeared on the wall of the darkened room and Prof. Dr. Emil Dovifat, one of the doyens of German "Journalism and Communication Research," pointed to it explaining that this one was awarded the Pulitzer Prize. The name of that drawing was "Peace Today" and the artist was Reuben Goldberg of the New York Sun. The cartoon gave an extremely graphic description of the Cold War Period displaying an atomic bomb on the edge of an abyss, which symbolized the highly explosive situation of those days. All the students, including the authors, were particularly appealed by that drawing at a point of time when West Berlin was in the center of the permanent confrontation between the Western and Eastern Super Powers. Thus, the authors have developed a special affinity for the cartoon by Reuben Goldberg dated 1947, of which a reprint can be found on page 104 of the volume on hand. In general, while making this book, we ran into numerous difficulties: The definite location of the award-winning cartoons in the Pulitzer Prize Collection at Columbia University was one of these problems as well as finding usable reproduction copies. Furthermore, it proved to be exceptionally complicated to pinpoint where exactly the drawings were located within the newspapers when they were first published. That is why, for instance, it took weeks of extensive research in the Library of Congress, Washington/D.C. and in the New York Public Library as well as in different municipal and newspaper archives all over the US in order to ensure precise bibliographical and other references...
338
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
V
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
χχΐ Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR EDITORIAL CARTOON PRESENTATION PRACTICES OF AWARD-WINNING CARTOONS REMARKS ABOUT THE DOCUMENTATION CRITERIA 1922 AWARD: ABOUT PROBLEMS WITHIN THE SOVIET UNION IN 1921
XXI 1 2
3
By Rollin Kirby, The World, New York "WELL-YOU MAY 'KEEP PART OF YOUR FOOD,' IVAN" "ASSISTING THE SICK MAN" "ON THE ROAD TO MOSCOW" 1923 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE PRIZE FOR WORK DONE IN 1922
4 5 6
7
By The Advisory Board, Columbia University, New York NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
8
1924 AWARD: ABOUT AMERICAN PEOPLE AND INSTITUTIONS IN 1923
9
By Jay N. Darling, Des Moines Register & Tribune "IN GOOD OLD U.S.A." "RIDDLE: WHY IS THE MACHINERY OF GOVERNMENT LIKE ANY OTHER KIND OF MACHINERY?" "AND WE TALK ABOUT STABILIZING THE FARM INDUSTRY BY LEGISLATION I"
10
1925 AWARD: ABOUT PEACE HOPES AND WAR FEARS IN 1924
13
11 12
By Rollin Kirby, The World, New York "NEWS FROM THE OUTSIDE WORLD" "A COUPLE OF QUESTIONS" "BRINGING A LITTLE LIGHT INTO IT"
14 15 16
339 1926 AWARD: ABOUT LAW AND ORDER VALUES IN 1925 By Daniel R. Fitzpatrick, St. Louis
17
Post-Dispatch
"THE LAWS OF MOSES AND THE LAWS OF TODAY" "THE VOLSTEAD TRAIL" "MAKING HER RIDICULOUS" 1927 AWARD: ABOUT CONFLICTS AND PROBLEM SOLVING IN 1926..
18 19 20 21
By Nelson Harding, Brooklyn Daily Eagle "TOPPLING THE IDOL" "TOP-HEAVY STRUCTURES REQUIRE BRACING" "HIS OWN DUST" 1928 AWARD: ABOUT PEACE KEEPING WITH LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES IN 1927
22 23 24
25
By Nelson Harding, Brooklyn Daily Eagle "MAY HIS SHADOW NEVER GROW LESS" "A NEW BOUNDARY MARK" "A BIRD OF PEACE" 1929 AWARD: ABOUT ASPECTS OF THE GRAND OLD PARTY IN 1928 .
26 27 28 29
By Rollin Kirby, The World, New York "TAMMANY" "SEE THE PRETTY BANNER" "WE'LL RUN THIS CAMPAIGN" 1930 AWARD: ABOUT WAR DEPTS AND REPARATIONS IN 1929
30 31 32 33
By Charles R. Macauley, Brooklyn Daily Eagle "PAYING FOR A DEAD HORSE" "WILL THE PEACE DOVE RETURN?" •LIGHTING THE WORLD"
34 35 36
1931 AWARD: ABOUT RUSSIA'S INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL ITEMS IN 1930
37
By Edmund Duffy, The Sun, Baltimore "AN OLD STRUGGLE STILL GOING ON* •CAN'T GET A FIRM GRIP" "MOVE OVER!"
38 39 40
340 1932 AWARD: ABOUT DEPRESSION AND UNEMPLOYMENT IN 1931 .... By John T. McCutcheon, Chicago Daily
41
Tribune
"A WISE ECONOMIST ASKS A QUESTION" "THE DANGEROUS SHORT-CUT" "THE DREAM OF LABOR"
42 43 44
1933 A W A R D : ABOUT JAPAN'S QUARRELS AND AGGRESSIONS IN 1932 . By Harold M . Talburt, The Washington Daily
45
News
"THE LIGHT OF ASIA" "HARA KIRI" "FANNING THE FLAME"
46 47 48
1934 A W A R D : ABOUT AMERICAN LYNCHING PRACTICES IN 1933
49
By E d m u n d Duffy, The Sun, Baltimore "OVER THE DOME AT ANNAPOLIS—" "CALIFORNIA POINTS WITH PRIDE—II" "A REMINDER"
50 51 52
1935 AWARD: ABOUT STRIKES AND LABOR ACTIVITIES IN 1934 By Ross A. Lewis, The Milwaukee
53
Journal
"WHY MUST IT REACH THIS 'POINT?'" "WE COVER THE WATERFRONT" "SURE, I'LL WORK FOR BOTH SIDES"
54 55 56
1936 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE PRIZE FOR WORK DONE IN 1935 By T h e Advisory Board, Columbia University,
57
N e w York
NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
1937 A W A R D : ABOUT DANGEROUS EUROPEAN CONDITIONS IN 1936.
58
59
By Clarence D. Batchelor, Daily News, N e w York "COME ON IN, I'LL TREAT YOU RIGHT. I USED TO KNOW YOUR DADDY" "EUROPE'S EYE VIEW OF HER FUTURE" "A FAMOUS CAT BEGINS TO WORRY OVER ITS REMAINING LIVES"
1938 AWARD: ABOUT ARISING OF WORLD-WIDE CONFLICTS IN 1937 . By V a u g h n Shoemaker, The Chicago Daily
60 61 62
63
News
"WHEN THE LAST ETHIOPIAN IS DEAD" "WHEEEEE-E-E-E-E-E-E—BANG!—EXCUSE IT, PLEASE" "THE ROAD BACK?"
64 65 66
341 1939 AWARD: ABOUT GERMANY'S STRATEGIES OF OCCUPATION IN 1938
67
By Charles G. Werner, The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City "THE NEXT BITE" "THE STAKES ARE HIGH" "NOMINATION FOR 1938"
1940 AWARD: ABOUT BREAKING OUT OF WORLD WAR II IN 1939
68 69 70
71
By Edmund Duffy, The Sun, Baltimore "THE OUTSTRETCHED HAND" "THE BOY AT THE DIKE" "THE WILD WAVES AREN'T SAYING NICE THINGS"
72 73 74
1941 AWARD: ABOUT GERMANY'S BOMBING OF GREAT BRITAIN IN 1940
75
By Jacob Burck, Chicago Times "IF I SHOULD DIE BEFORE I WAKE..." •WEATHER FORECAST: CLOUDY - CONTINUED SHOWERS" "ALL IS CALM..."
1942 AWARD: ABOUT WAR AND ITS ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES IN 1941
76 77 78
79
By Herbert L. Block, Newspaper Enterprise Association, Cleveland "BRITISH PLANE" "LOSSES" "LABOR DAY PARADE - 1941"
1943 AWARD: ABOUT WARTIME COMMUNICATIONS IN 1942
80 81 82
83
By Jay N. Darling, The Des Moines Register "NEWS AT HOME AND ABROAD" "WHAT A PLACE FOR A WASTE PAPER SALVAGE CAMPAIGN" "THE MOST EXCITING READING OF ALL TIME"
1944 AWARD: ABOUT CONDITIONS OF FIGHTING NATIONS IN 1943 ..
84 85 86
87
By Clifford K. Berryman, The Evening Star, Washington, D.C. "POST WAR FOOD PLANS" "BUT WHERE IS THE BOAT GOING?" "THANKSGIVING FEAST IN BERLIN, 1943"
88 89 90
342 1945 AWARD: ABOUT AMERICAN INFANTRY TROOPS IN EUROPE IN 1944 By William H. Mauldin, United Feature Syndicate, "COLONEL CAPTURED BY GERMANS" "FRESH, SPIRITED AMERICAN TROOPS..." ΎΑ DON'T GIT COMBAT PAY..."
1946 AWARD: ABOUT SUPER POWERS AFTER THE WAR IN 1945 By Bruce A. Russell, Los Angeles
91
New York 92 93 94
95
Times
"HITLER'S LEGACY" "TIME FOR ATOMIC STATESMANSHIP" "TIME TO BRIDGE THAT GULCH"
96 97 98
1947 AWARD: ABOUT LIVING COSTS AND STARVATION IN 1946 By Vaughn Shoemaker, Chicago Daily
99
News
"OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MIND" "MEMORIAL" "STILL RACING HIS SHADOW"
100 101 102
1948 AWARD: ABOUT FEARS OF ANOTHER WORLD WAR IN 1947
103
By Reuben L. Goldberg, The Sun, N e w York "PEACE TODAY" "COUNTING BEARS" "PRAYER FOR TODAY"
104 105 106
1949 A W A R D : ABOUT INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL U.S. PROBLEMS IN 1948 By Lute C. Pease Jr., Newark Evening
107
News
"WHO, ME?" "AUGUST IN BERLIN" "Ά LOT OF FACES WILL BE RED'-PROPHET TRUMAN"
1950 A W A R D : ABOUT TRUMAN'S ADMINISTRATION AND THE PUBLIC IN 1949
108 109 110
111
By James T. Berryman, The Evening Star, Washington, D.C. "THERE ARE ENTIRELY TOO MANY HEADLINE HUNTERS..." "ECONOMIC REPORT TO THE NATION" "ALL SET FORA SUPER-SECRET SESSION IN WASHINGTON"
112 113 114
343 1951 AWARD: ABOUT EARLY PHASES OF THE KOREAN WAR IN 1950
115
By Reginald W. Manning, The Arizona Republic, Phoenix "SHIPS THAT PASS" "HATS" "WE LOVE THE RED CHINESE, WE LOVE THEM NOT..."
116 117 118
1952 AWARD: ABOUT PRESIDENT TRUMAN AND THE DOLLAR VALUE IN 1951
119
By Fred L. Packer, Daily Mirror, New York "OUR GLORIOUS DEAD I" "I WAS A HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP..." "YOUR EDITORS OUGHT TO HAVE MORE SENSE...." 1953 AWARD: ABOUT CONSEQUENCES OF THE KOREAN WAR IN 1952
120 121 122
123
By Edward D. Kuekes, Cleveland Plain Dealer "WHITE CROSSES MOUNT WHILE PEACE TALKS DWINDLE" "CROSSES" "AFTERMATH" 1954 AWARD: ABOUT STALIN'S DEATH AND HIS FOLLOWER IN 1953
124 125 126 127
By Herbert L. Block, The Washington Post "YOU WERE ALWAYS A GREAT FRIEND OF MINE, JOSEPH" "ERA OF THE MECHANICAL MAN" "ANY OTHER IMPORTANT FUNERALS COMING UP?" 1955 AWARD: ABOUT EAST-ASIAN ZONES OF CRISIS IN 1954 By Daniel R. Fitzpatrick, St. Louis
128 129 130 131
Post-Dispatch
•HOW WOULD ANOTHER MISTAKE HELP?" "SLOGAN PAINTER'S TROUBLES" "IT STOPPED THE RED RASH IN EUROPE, DOCTOR" 1956 AWARD: ABOUT DEFICITS DURING PROSPERITY TIMES IN 1955
132 133 134
135
By Robert York, The Louisville Times "ACHILLES" "CONSTRUCTION BOOM" "SOME ARE STRANDED ON THE LEDGES"
136 137 138
344 1957 AWARD: ABOUT HEALTH QUESTIONS AND LIFE RISKS IN 1956 By Tom Little, The Nashville
139
Tennessean
"WONDER WHY MY PARENTS DIDNT GIVE ME SALK SHOTS?" 'EVERY TIME I START TO DOZE OFF, HE DROPS ΈΜ" "THINK YOU'LL MAKE IT?"
140 141 142
1958 AWARD: ABOUT SOCIAL AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS IN 1957.. 143 By Bruce M. Shanks, Buffalo Evening News "THE THINKER" "LITTLE ROCK" "VOX POP"
144 145 146
1959 AWARD: ABOUT ACTIVITIES OF THE SOVIET UNION IN 1958 By William H. Mauldin, St. Louis
147
Post-Dispatch
"I WON THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE. WHAT WAS YOUR CRIME?" "DON'T PUSH YOUR LUCK, MISTER" "GOOD MORNING, COMRADES!"
148 149 150
1960 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE PRIZE FOR WORK DONE IN 1959
151
By The Advisory Board, Columbia University, New York NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
152
1961 AWARD: ABOUT KHRUSHCHEV'S ROLE IN WORLD POLITICS IN 1960
153
By Carey Orr, Chicago Daily Tribune "A WARNING FROM THE JUNGLE" "HIT BACK! HIT BACK! YOU CAN'T WIN COVERING UP!" "THE KINDLY TIGER"
154 155 156
1962 AWARD: ABOUT INTENTIONS OF SOCIALIST COUNTRIES IN 1961
157
By Edmund S. Valtman, The Hartford Times "BY GOVERNMENT DECREE EVERY MEMBER OF THE COMMUNE IS ENTITLED TO A PRIVATE LOT" "I WOULD HAVE PREFERRED IT WELL-DONE" "WHAT YOU NEED, MAN, IS A REVOLUTION LIKE MINE!"
158 159 160
345 1963 AWARD: ABOUT NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND WORLD POLITICS IN 1962
161
By Frank A. Miller, The Des Moines Register "I S A I D - W E SURE SETTLED THAT DISPUTE, DIDN'T WE!' "A NEEDLE IN A HAYSTACK IS EASY" "AWALL!"
1964 AWARD: ABOUT ATTITUDES AND HOPES TOWARD INTEGRATION IN 1963 By Paul F. Conrad, The Denver Post "STAND BACK EVERYBODY! HE'S GOT A BOMB.!!" "NO CHEEKS LEFT TO TURN" "PROFILE IN COURAGE"
1965 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE PRIZE FOR WORK DONE IN 1964 By The Advisory Board, Columbia University, New York NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
162 163 164
165 166 167 168
169 170
1966 AWARD: ABOUT CONFLICT PHANTASIES AND REALITIES IN 1965
171
By Don C. Wright, The Miami News "YOU MEAN YOU WERE BLUFFING?" "ANYBODY SEE A PLACE TO GET OFF?" "HOW THE WAR WENT TODAY"
172 173 174
1967 AWARD: ABOUT SOUTH-EAST ASIAN TROUBLE ZONES IN 1966 .. 175 By Patrick B. Oliphant, The Denver Post "THEY WONT GET US TO THE CONFERENCE TABLE ...WILL THEY?".. 176 "YOU WANT US TO SIT DOWN AND DISCUSS OUR PROBLEMS? / DON'T HAVE ANY PROBLEMS!" 177 "PROPOSALS..." 178
1968 AWARD: ABOUT PRESIDENT JOHNSON AND SENATOR KENNEDY IN 1967
179
By Eugene G. Payne, The Charlotte Observer "DR. KING SAYS, WOULD YOU PLEASE MOVE TO THE BACK OF THE BUS?" "THE WAR IS GOING VERY W E L L - P A S S IT ON" "IT'S TERRIBLE THE WAY TOBACCO ADVERTISING IS SLANTED TOWARDS YOUNG PEOPLE"
180 181 182
346 1969 AWARD: ABOUT WAR OUTSIDE AND WITHIN THE U.S. IN 1968
183
By John Fischetti, Chicago Daily News "SPEAKING FROM A POSITION OF STRENGTH...· "AMERICAN STYLE" "TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP, THE BOYS ARE MARCHING..."
184 185 186
1970 AWARD: ABOUT AMERICANS DURING THE VIETNAM WAR IN 1969
187
By Thomas F. Darcy, Newsday, Garden City, N.Y. "GOOD NEWS, WE'VE TURNED THE CORNER IN VIETNAM!" "PRISONER OF WAR" "SORRY FELLAS... BUT THAT'S THE ONLY WAY OUT"
188 189 190
1971 AWARD: ABOUT WAR CONDITIONS AND WAR VICTIMS IN 1970 .. 191 By Paul F. Conrad, Los Angeles Times "THE OPERATION WAS A COMPLETE SUCCESS... AS THE AUTOPSY WILL SHOW I" "FROM HERE TO ETERNITY" "THE U.S. ARMY..."
192 193 194
1972 AWARD: ABOUT AMERICAN POLITICS AND ECONOMY IN 1971 .. 195 By Jeffrey K. MacNelly, The Richmond News Leader "GEORGE?..." "FEDERAL FLOATING NOTE" "THE ECONOMY" 1973 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE PRIZE FOR WORK DONE IN 1972
196 197 198
199
By The Advisory Board, Columbia University, New York NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR 'NO AWARD" 1974 AWARD: ABOUT WATERGATE AND ITS FOLLOW-UP IN 1973
200 201
By Paul M. Szep, The Boston Globe "SOME OF THE STARS HAVE JUST ARRIVED" "I'VE DECIDED NOT TO TELL YOU ABOUT THE ALLEGED SHIPWRECK" "YOU'RE SURROUNDED NIXON... GIVE UP THE TAPES!"
202 203 204
347 1975 A W A R D : ABOUT POLITICS OF THE POST-WATERGATE ERA IN 1974
205
By Garry Trudeau, Universal Press Syndicate, N e w Y o r k "THE PRESIDENT FIGHTS BACK" "CONGRESS GROWS RESPONSIVE" "THE WATERGATE REUNIONS"
1976 A W A R D : ABOUT FOREIGN COUNTRIES AND DOMESTIC ISSUES IN 1975
206 207 208
209
By Tony Auth, The Philadelphia Inquirer "O BEAUTIFUL FOR SPACIOUS SKIES, FOR AMBER WAVES OF GRAIN..." "BEIRUT..." "CIA..."
1977 A W A R D : ABOUT FACETS OF THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN IN 1976
210 211 212
213
By Paul M . Szep, The Boston Globe "THREE VERSIONS OF JIMMY CARTER" "I'LL BE JACK KENNEDY... WHO DO YOU WANT TO BE?" "END OF ROUND ONE"
214 215 216
1978 A W A R D : ABOUT TAX QUESTIONS AND ENERGY ASPECTS IN 1977
217
By J e f f r e y K. M a c N e l l y , The Richmond News Leader "INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX RETURN" "IRS..." "ENERGY PROGRAM"
218 219 220
1979 A W A R D : ABOUT POLITICS AND CAMPAIGN SPENDINGS IN 1978. 221 By Herbert L. Block, The Washington Post "AND BRING ME THEIR HEADS SO I CAN SEE WHAT GOES ON INSIDE THEM" "PRE-ELECTION BALLOT BOX" "ELECTION TRENDS"
1980 A W A R D : ABOUT DEATH PENALTY PROBLEMS OF FLORIDA IN 1979
222 223 224
225
By Don C. Wright, The Miami News •FLORIDA STATE PRISON" "THE ELECTRIC CHAIR" "SHORTAGE OF BURIAL PLOTS"
226 227 228
348 1981 AWARD: ABOUT UNEXPECTED RESULTS OF CONDITIONS IN 1980 By Mike B. Peters, Dayton Daily News
229
"CAN YOU GUESS WHICH ONE'S BEEN BANNED?" 230 "LOOK, LADY-YOU'RE THE ONE WHO ASKED FOR A FAMOUS MOVIE STAR WITH DARK HAIR, STRONG NOSE AND DEEP SET EYES..." ... 231 "HE'S GROWN A FOOT SINCE I SAW HIM LAST..." 232
1982 AWARD: ABOUT WAR RELICTS AND DEFENSE ASPECTS IN 1981
233
By Ben Sargent, The Austin American-Statesman "WELCOME HOME HOSTAGES' "U.S. GUNS IN EL SALVADOR" "DEFENSE SYSTEM"
1983 AWARD: ABOUT PRESIDENT REAGAN'S PUBLIC APPEARANCE IN 1982
234 235 236
237
By Richard E. Locher, Chicago Tribune "DIPLOMACY IN ACTION" "RONALD REAGAN'S WEATHER MAP" "WATT"
1984 AWARD: ABOUT POLITICAL EMOTIONS AND ATTITUDES IN 1983
238 239 240
241
By Paul F. Conrad, Los Angeles Times "PLAY IT AGAIN, RON ..." "WELL, TELL HIM TO TURN UP HIS HEARING AID!" "THE DAY AFTER"
242 243 244
1985 AWARD: ABOUT TOP AMERICAN POLITICAL FIGURES IN 1984... 245 By Jeffrey K. MacNelly, Chicago Tribune "ASK YOURSELVES ..." "CABINET MEETINGS" OKAY, SENATOR GARN..."
1986 AWARD: ABOUT BASIC ATTITUDES OF AMERICANS IN 1985
246 247 248
249
By Jules Feiffer, The Village Voice, New York "REAGAN CRITICIZES RACISM..." "THE U.S. IS NOT GOING..." "THE MEDIA REPORTS..."
250 251 252
349 1987 AWARD: ABOUT REALISTIC PROBLEMS OF AN UNREALISTIC WORLD IN 1986
253
By Berke Breathed, The Washington Post "MILO'S MEADOW" "69,9 CENT A GALLON!" "GOOD MORNING, MADAM"
254 255 256
1988 AWARD: ABOUT EXCUSES AND ILLUSIONS IN THE U.S. IN 1987 257 By Doug N. Marlette, The Charlotte Observer / The Atlanta
Constitution
"THAT'S RIGHT-JIM AND TAMMY WERE EXPELLED FROM PARADISE AND LEFT ME IN CHARGEI" "TO ERR IS HUMAN..." "PRESIDENT?... NO, CHILD, BUT YOU CAN GROW UP TO BE FRONTRUNNER!" 1989 AWARD: ABOUT THEMES AND TABUS IN AMERICAN LIFE IN 1988
258 259 260
261
By Jack Higgins, Chicago Sun-Times "HOW ABOUT MORE BLACKS..." "BEST ACTRESS..." "...ALL CONGRESSMEN..." 1990 AWARD: ABOUT REAGAN LEAVING BUSH ENTERING THE STAGE IN 1989
262 263 264
265
By Tom G. Toles, The Buffalo News "WE WONT FORGET YOU!" "FIRST AMENDMENT" "THE EDUCATION PRESIDENT"
266 267 268
1991 AWARD: ABOUT CONFLICTS AND GERMANY'S REUNIFICATION IN 1990
269
By Jim M. Borgman, The Cincinnati Enquirer •DOMINO THEORY" "NOW WE WAIT..." "ACTUALLY, ITS SO WE ALWAYS KNOW WHERE THEY ARE" 1992 AWARD: ABOUT HUMAN NEEDS AND SOCIAL CONDITIONS IN 1991
270 271 272
273
By Signe Wilkinson, Philadelphia Daily News "PULL THE PLUG?!!" "HELLO, WASHINGTON?" "HOME ALONE"
274 275 276
350 1993 AWARD: ABOUT U.S. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGNING IN 1992
277
By Stephen R. Benson, The Arizona Republic, Phoenix "I HOPE I CAN GET THIS TURNED AROUND..." "HANG IN THERE" "MY ELECTION STRATEGY IS SIMPLE..."
278 279 280
1994 AWARD: ABOUT VARIOUS INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT AREAS IN 1993
281
By Michael P. Ramirez, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis "NEVER AGAIN ..." "AS THE SMOKE CLEARED..." •SOMALIA"
282 283 284
1995 AWARD: ABOUT AMERICAN BEHAVIOR IN KEY SITUATIONS IN 1994
285
By Mike Luckovich, The Atlanta Constitution "PIE-EATING CHAMPIONSHIP..." "MOMENT OF SILENT PRAYER AT BEGINNING OF CLASS" "WHEN YOUR BIRTHDAY'S ON CHRISTMAS..."
286 287 288
1996 AWARD: ABOUT TOPICS OF THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION IN 1995
289
By Jim Morin, The Miami Herald OPINION POLLS" "WHO CARES ABOUT BOSNIA?" "FACE LIFTS AND COSMETIC SURGERY"
1997 AWARD: ABOUT FACETS OF THE WASHINGTON ESTABLISHMENT IN 1996
290 291 292
293
By Walt Handelsman, The Times-Picayune, New Orleans "...WELFARE REFORM..." "... I LIED, I CHEATED..." "FBI SEEKS NEW SUSPECTS..."
294 295 296
WINNERS OF THE EDITORIAL CARTOON AWARD, 1 9 9 8 - 2 0 0 8
297
INDEX
299
Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners
by Elizabeth A. Brennan and Elizabeth C. Clarage
Foreword by Seymour Topping
Oryx Press Phoenix, Arizona 1999
352
© 1999 by The Oryx Press 4041 North Central at Indian School Road Phoenix, Arizona 85012-3397 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from The Oryx Press. Published simultaneously in Canada Printed and bound in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Brennan, Elizabeth A. Who's who of Pulitzer Prize winners / by Elizabeth A. Brennan, Elizabeth Clarage. p. cm. Includes biblographical references and index. ISBN 1-57356-111-8 1. Pulitzer Prizes. 2. Biography—20th century. I. Clarage, Elizabeth. II. Title. AS911.P8B74 1999 071'.3'092273—dc21 98-44979 CIP
353
From the Preface
SCOPE Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners was inspired by the difficulty we had as librarians when attempting to answer questions from students and library patrons about the people who won the award. We believe that the winners of the Pulitzer Prize, one of the pre-eminent awards given in journalism, letters, and music, deserve coverage in a source that includes information on their lives, careers, and accomplishments. The first edition of this work includes 1175 entries for 1334 awards presented. The discrepancy exists where some prizes were awarded to groups of individuals, each of whom is profiled, or where winners won multiple prizes. All prize winners from 1917, when the prizes were established, through 1998 are included. The authors researched each entry by using traditional biographical sources as well as information from the Pulitzer Prize archive at Columbia University Office of Public Affairs, and from information supplied by the individual winners.
thereafter under each prize category and year that the winners have received the award. If no award was given in a particular year for a certain category, "No award" is noted under the year for that category...
ENTRIES Each entry includes up to 15 fields of biographical and bibliographic information. (See "Using This Book.") Information has been included in each field when available and verifiable. The dates of winning newspaper articles were provided whenever such information was readily available from sources such as the Pulitzer Prize archive, newspaper articles about the prizes, or from the winning newspaper. Unfortunately, many newspaper companies cited in the entries are no longer in existence. We have often tried to keep the exact wording used by the Pulitzer Committees when they awarded these prizes. We've also included other information about the winners in the Commentary field.
INDEXES ARRANGEMENT The main body of this book is arranged alphabetically by prize category. Within each category, entries are arranged chronologically, and in the case of multiple winners in a given year, alphabetically. For winners who have received more than one award, a full entry is provided the first time one of their prize categories appears according to the alphabetical arrangement of this book, and cross-references to that full entry appear
Four indexes have been developed to assist users of Who's Who in Pulitzer Prize Winners: (1) Newspaper and Organization Winners—an alphabetical listing of these winners; (2) Individual Winners—an alphabetical listing of individual winners; (3) Education Institutions—a listing of all postsecondary educational institutions and the winners who attended those schools; and (4) Chronology of Prizes Awarded—a listing arranged by year of all the awards and their recipients...
Outstanding International Press Reporting Volume 5:1990-1999
Pulitzer Prize Winning Articles in Foreign Correspondence: From the Reunification of Germany to the Impact of Aids in Africa
by
Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
K G - Saur München 2000
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme Outstanding international press reporting : Pulitzer prize winning articles in foreign correspondence / ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München: Saur Vol. 5 . 1 9 9 0 - 1 9 9 9 : from the reunification of Germany to the impact of aids in Africa. - 2000 ed. with general and special introd. by ISBN 3-598-23024-9
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 2000 Part of Reed Elsevier Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany Printed and bound by Strauss Offsetdruck, Mörlenbach
ISBN 3-598-23024-9
357
FROM THE PREFACE In 1998 Edward Seaton, editor-publisher of the Kansas-based Manhattan Mercury and member of the Pulitzer Prize Board, was elected President of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. Upon his election Seaton declared: "It is an effort to look at how we are using international news with an emphasis on helping readers figure out how international forces are effecting and changing their communities and their lives." This remarkable statement was picked up by Tom Winship, chairman of the International Center for Journalists in Washington, D.C. Winship commented: "This is not a project to juice up the likes the New York Times, the Washington Post or the husky regionale to print more foreign news. Far from it. This is about more approaches to global news within easy reach of community newspapers of all sizes." The above statements point to a central problem in the field of international communication: "Foreign reporting is neglected by many of the small and medium-size newspapers of the United States. Is it simply that these papers leave the field of foreign reporting to the papers of the major cities although they themselves could at least publish reports by news agencies? Do the editors think that foreign reports do not interest their readers? Is there a belief that the field of foreign reporting is most effectively covered by the major televisionchannels, or are there yet other reasons for the neglect of foreign reporting by many newspapers?" In addition to the explanations mentioned, one factor that certainly comes to mind is the financial one. A number of years ago an analysis was undertaken that compared the Süddeutsche Zeitung of Munich with the Boston Globe. Both newspapers by that time were similar with regard to their overall structure and readership, and yet one striking difference was discovered: while the Süddeutsche Zeitung employed a number of foreign correspondents, the Boston Globe did not have a single one. When asked about the reasons for this discovery, the editor in chief of the Boston Globe frankly admitted that financial considerations kept the newspaper from hiring own foreign correspondents. The large amount of money required to establish and maintain a network of correspondents is thus at least partly responsible for the fact that many American newspapers refrain from offering their readers the "luxury" of foreign reporting. To a certain degree this also explains why the Pulitzer Prize-winning entries in the category of foreign reporting most times come from a limited number of large newspapers. The prize-winning articles collected on the following pages illustrate this fact. Within the decade documented here, The New York Times collected no less than four Pulitzer Prizes for foreign reporting. New York Newsday received two, while the Washington Post, the DallasTimes Herald, the Wall Street Journal, the news agency Associated Press and New York's Village Voice all received one prize. At the same time there were indications that the newspapers thus honored increasingly employ teamwork in the field of foreign reporting, as the increase in the number of group awards shows...
358
TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface
ν
Dedication Page
νϋ
Contents of Past Volumes
xiii
Introduction: The Pulitzer Prizes for International Reporting in the Fifth Phase of Their Development, 1990-1999 by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer
xxi
Editorial Remarks
li
REPORTS ABOUT GERMANY IN 1990 Phases of Reuniting the Divided Country
by Serge Schmemann (The New York Times) Introductory Notes The Currency Union as a very First Step Two Towns Share a Common Heritage Subdued Mood Replaces Early Euphoria Division of Berlin Comes to an happy End Results of the First Free All-German Elections Related Readings
3 4 5 9 14 16 19 22
REPORTS ABOUT KUWAIT IN 1990 Iraqi Invasion of the Persian Gulf Emirate
by Caryle M. Murphy (The Washington Post)
23
Introductory Notes The Ruling Emir Family Flees to Saudi Arabia Many Kuwaitis ignore of Seeing the Dangers Resistance and Some Hopes for the near Future Many Westerners Caught by Occupation Troops Establishment of the Nineteenth Province of Iraq Related Readings
24 25 28 31 37 43 48
359 REPORTS ABOUT KUWAIT IN 1991 Gulf War Called Operation Desert Storm
by Patrick J. Sloyan (Newsday)
49
Introductory Notes Clouds and Sandstorms Influence the Fights The Largest Battle Occurred for Two Days U.S. Army Division Breaks Through Iraqi Lines How U.S. Soldiers Were Accidentally Killed The Troops' Bitter Legacy and Bad Memories Related Readings
50 51 54 56 59 68 72
REPORTS ABOUT BOSNIA IN 1992 Some Cases of Aggressions Towards Civilians
by Roy W. Gutman (Newsday)
73
Introductory Notes Deportation and Destruction of Muslims Serbs Establish Concentration Camps An Eyewitness of Death and Torture Many Civilians as Victims of Terror Observations of a Death Camp's Survivor Related Readings
74 75 77 82 83 85 88
REPORTS ABOUT BOSNIA IN 1992 Aspects of the Civil War in Former Yugoslavia
by John F. Burns (The New York Times)
89
Introductory Notes Ancient Ties of Coexistence Are Broken Anger and Grief in the Ruins of Sarajevo People Under Artillery Fire Try to Overcome How a Hospital Works Under Horror Conditions Practices and Results of the Ethnic Cleansing Related Readings
90 91 95 99 104 108 111
REPORTS ABOUT GLOBAL FACTS IN 1993 Violence Against Women in Various World Areas
by Anne Reifenberg et al. (The Dallas Morning News)
113
Introductory Notes Abuses of Rights in International Perspective
114 115
360 Poor Thai Parents Sell Girls Into Prostitution Situation in Islamic Countries Like Egypt Sexual Abuse Practices by Dallas Policemen Vienna World Conference on Human Rights Related Readings
120 126 132 137 141
REPORTS ABOUT RWANDA IN 1994 Chaos and Killings in a Civil War
by Mark Fritz (The Associated Press)
143
Introductory Notes The Country as a Gigantic Killing Field Brutal Slaughters in a small Village Basic Fears of Returning 6migr6s Many Children become War Victims Soldiers are Expecting Foreign Aid Related Readings
144 145 146 148 150 152 154
REPORTS ABOUT BOSNIA IN 1995 The Largest Tragedy in Europe since the Holocaust
by David Rohde (The Christian Science Monitor)
155
Introductory Notes Strong Evidence of Massacre of Prisoners Muslims are Executed by Bosnian Serbs An Eyewitness Report of Mass Killings Peacekeepers Fail to Protect Civilians Graves Found That Confirm War Crimes Related Readings
156 157 160 163 166 171 174
REPORTS ABOUT AFGHANISTAN IN 1996 Rule and Terror of the Islamic Taliban Force
by John F. Burns (The New York Times)
175
Introductory Notes Kabul under Continuing War Conditions From Cold War to another Conflict Area Proclamation of a Muslim Fundamental System Keeping Foreigners from Mass Executions An Autocratic Regime and its many Victims Related Readings
176 177 182 188 192 196 202
361
REPORTS ABOUT MEXICO IN 1997 Heavy Drug Trafficking across the U.S. Border
by Sam Dillon et al. (The New York Times)
203
Introductory Notes High Officials Involved in Illegal Achievements Military Leaders as Links to Drug Connection Misinformation and Mistakes about Corruption Informant Names Multiple Layers of Betrayal United States Looking for Anti-Drug Partner Related Readings
204 205 212 216 227 237 243
REPORTS ABOUT RUSSIA IN 1998 Economic Crisis and Struggles to Overcome
by Andrew T. Higgins et al. (The Wall Street Journal)
245
Introductory Notes Old Soviet Standards turn Many Profits into Losses General Problems of a Missing Market Discipline Belarus Promotes a Down-with-Free-Markets Campaign Heavy Harvests Shortages and following Panic Buyings Apathy and Anger Lead to Unexpected Reactions Related Readings
246 247 254 258 261 266 269
REPORTS ABOUT AFRICA IN 1999 The Aids Virus as the Agony of the Continent
Index
by Mark Schoofs (The Village Voice)
271
Introductory Notes A Generation of Orphans in Zimbabwe Virus Inflicted Relatives from Nigeria Past and Future Epidemics in Gabon Vaccination of Prostitutes in Kenya Building a Movement in South Africa Related Readings
272 273 280 286 293 300 307 309
363
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 14
Press Photography Awards 1942-1998: From Joe Rosenthal and Horst Faas to Moneta Sleet and Stan Grossfeld
by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München 2000
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive: a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 14: Pt. E, Liberal arts. Press photography awards 1942 - 1 9 9 8 : from Joe Rosenthal and Horst Faas to Moneta Sleet and Stan Grossfeld / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 2000 ISBN 3-598-30184-7
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 2000 Part of Reed Elsevier Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by Strauss Offsetdruck, Mörlenbach Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30184-7 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
365
FROM THE PREFACE In the history of the system of Pulitzer Prizes, the award for photography was a comparatively late invention. John Hohenberg describes how "with the outpouring of photography from domestic sources and the combat zones... a new photography prize was... created in 1942," at the height of the Second World War. At first the award was designed to cover the entire field of photo-journalism, but it took only a quarter-century until the necessity arose to split it up. In 1968 two prizes were established which were independent from one another, and there has been one award-category for "Spot News Photography" and another category for "Feature Photography" ever since. Also, while in the first decades of its history the prize was usually awarded for exactly one photograph, it later became common practice to honor several pictures by one photographer, as long as they dealt with one topic. This book attempts to document the history of the Pulitzer Prize for photography. It contains a collection of Pulitzer Prize winning photographs from more than half a century, and carefully explains their contents and cultural background. The reproduction of the individual photographs varies in quality, which in some cases is due to the varying quality of the photographs' negatives which could be retrieved from the Pulitzer Prize Collection. There are also cases, when photographs had to be "reconstructed" from newspaper clippings, because their negatives could no longer be found in any of the archives of the different media or photographers. Despite such difficulties, it was possible to document the complete history of the Pulitzer Prize for photography...
366
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE INTRODUCTION HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
V
XXV
PRESENTATION PRACTICES OF AWARD-WINNING PHOTOS
1
REMARKS ABOUT THE DOCUMENTATION CRITERIA
2
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE DEMONSTRATORS OF A MAJOR DETROIT MOTOR PLANT IN 1941
3
1942
By Milton E. Brooks, The Detroit News
1943
FORD STRIKERS RIOT
4
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT AN EXTREMELY THIRSTY INDIAN SAILOR CLOSE TO DEHYDRATION IN 1942
5
By Frank Noel, The Associated Press
1944
WATER!
6
GENERAL AWARD (I) ABOUT A TOTALLY DESTROYED ISLAND IN THE PACIFIC WAR THEATRE IN 1943
7
By Frank X. Filan, The Associated Press
1944
TARAWA ISLAND
8
GENERAL AWARD (II) ABOUT A SOLDIER'S RETURN AND THE WELCOME BY HIS FAMILY IN 1943
9
By Earle L. Bunker, World-Herald, Omaha HOMECOMING
10
367 1945
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE ERECTION OF A WAR HISTORICAL AMERICAN MONUMENT IN 1945 By Joe Rosenthal, The Associated
1946
11
Press
THE PLANTING OF THE FLAG ON MOUNT SURIBACHI, IWO JIMA
12
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE PRIZE FOR PHOTOS FROM 1945
13
By The Advisory Board, Columbia University, New York
1947
NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD"
14
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE FLAMES DESTROYING A COMPLETE BUILDING AND KILLING PEOPLE IN 1946
15
By Arnold Hardy, The Associated
1948
Press
A MOST DISASTROUS HOTEL FIRE
16
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT BOSTON PATROLMEN AND AN UNEXPECTED SHOOTING IN 1947
17
By Frank Cushing, Boston Traveler
1949
BOY GUNMAN AND HOSTAGE
18
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT A HERO OF BASEBALL AND HIS MOVING RETIREMENT CEREMONY IN 1948
19
By Nathaniel Fein, New York Herald-Tribune
1950
BABE RUTH BOWS OUT
20
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT DANGEROUS FLYING MANOEUVRES AT OAKLAND AIRPORT IN 1949
21
By Bill Crouch, Oakland Tribune NEAR COLLISION AT AIR SHOW
22
368 1951
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT FLEEING PEOPLE IN THE EARLY STAGES OF THE KOREAN WAR IN 1950
23
By Max Desfor, The Associated Press
1952
FLIGHT OF REFUGEES ACROSS WRECKED BRIDGE IN KOREA
24
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT AN UNFAIR ATTACK ON A TOP BLACK FOOTBALL PLAYER IN 1951
25
By John R. Robinson / Don T. Ultang, Des Moines Register & Tribune
1953
EVER SEE A JAW BROKEN ?
26
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE ADLAI STEVENSON IN MICHIGAN IN 1952
27
By William M. Gallagher, The Flint Journal
1954
ADLAI'S FOOTWEAR
28
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT A SEMI-TRUCK ACCIDENT AND SOME KIND OF A MIRACLE IN 1953
29
By Virginia Schau, The Associated Press
1955
THRILLING RESCUE
30
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT A COUPLE AFTER THEIR INFANTS DEATH AT THE BEACH IN 1954
31
By John L. Gaunt Jr., Los Angeles Times
1956
TRAGEDY BY THE SEA
32
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT A BURNING AIRPLANE AFTER SMASHING TO A LONG ISLAND GROUND IN 1955
33
By George Mattson et al., New York Daily News BOMBER CRASHES IN STREET
34
369 1957
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE ANDREA DORIA SHIP CATASTROPHE IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC IN 1956
35
By Harry A. Trask, Boston Traveler
1958
SINKING OF A SEA LINER
36
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT A TWO-YEAR OLD BOY TALKING TO A POLICEMAN DURING A PARADE IN 1957
37
By William C. Beall, The Washington Daily News FAITH AND CONFIDENCE 1959
1960
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE TRAGEDY OF A YOUNG CHILD KILLED AT A MINNEAPOLIS STREET IN 1958 By William C. Seaman, Minneapolis Star
38
39
TOO LATE - THE DOCTOR WALKED AWAY
40
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE RESULT OF A WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL BY CASTRO'S TROOPS IN 1959
41
By Andrew Lopez, United Press International
1961
RECEIVING LAST RITES
42
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT AN ASSASSINATION BY SWORD OF A JAPANESE POLITICIAN IN 1960
43
By Yasushi Nagao, United Press International
1962
TOKYO STABBING
44
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT CONVERSATIONS OF EISENHOWER AND KENNEDY AT CAMP DAVID IN 1961
45
By Paul Vathis, The Associated Press SERIOUS STEPS
46
370 1963
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE FINAL ABSOLUTION BY A NAVY CHAPLAIN IN VENEZUELA IN 1962
47
By Hector Rondon, The Associated Press AID FROM THE PADRE
1964
48
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT JACK RUBY'S SHOOTING OF THE ACCUSED KENNEDY SLAYER IN 1963
49
By Robert H. Jackson, The Dallas Times Herald
1965
THE MURDER OF A PROPOSED MURDERER
50
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT THE HARSH REALITIES OF THE VIETNAM WAR TO CIVILIANS IN 1964
51
By Horst Faas, The Associated Press
1966
INNOCENT VICTIM
52
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT VIETNAMESE WOMEN AND CHILDREN TRAPPED IN THE ACTION IN 1965
53
By Kyoichi Sawada, United Press International
1967
FLIGHT TO SAFETY
54
GENERAL AWARD ABOUT SHOOTING DOWN OF A BLACK VOTER ON A MISSISSIPPI HIGHWAY IN 1966
55
By Jack R. Thornell, The Associated Press SHOOTING BY A ROADSIDE RIFLEMAN
1968 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT A SUCCESSFULL MOUTH-UPON-MOUTH REANIMATION PROCEDURE IN 1967
56
57
By Rocco Morabito, Jacksonville Journal THE KISS OF LIFE
58
371 1968 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE FRUSTRATION OF AMERICAN SOLDIERS IN VIETNAM BATTLE FIELDS IN 1967
59
By Toshio Sakai, United Press International DREAMS OF BETTER TIMES 1969 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE KILLING OF A PRISONER BY VIETNAM'S NATIONAL POLICE CHIEF IN 1968
60
61
By Edward T. Adams, The Associated Press SAIGON EXECUTION 1969 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE ATLANTA FUNERAL SERVICE FOR A MONUMENTAL BLACK LEADER IN 1968
62
63
By Moneta J. Sleet Jr., Ebony magazine MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.'S WIDOW 1970 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT S O M E HEAVY TURMOILS AND VIOLENT ACTIONS AT CORNELL UNIVERSITY IN 1969
64
65
By Steve Starr, The Associated Press CAMPUS GUNS 1970 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT LIVING CIRCUMSTANCES AND POVERTY OF FLORIDA MIGRANT W O R K E R S IN 1969 By Dallas Kinney, The Palm Beach Post CROP WORKERS IN FIELDS UNHEALTHY HOUSING CONDITIONS RESTING SENIOR CITIZENS 1971 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE SHOOTINGS AND TRAGEDIES AT KENT STATE UNIVERSITY IN 1970
66
67 68 69 70
71
By John P. Filo, The Valley Daily News & Daily Dispatch, Tarentum STUDENTS AND GUARDS FORM THEIR LINES A KILLED STUDENT LYING ON THE GRUND UPSET STUDENT CALLS GUARD MURDERER
72 73 74
372 1971 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT CONDITIONS AT ILLINOIS STATE SCHOOLS FOR THE RETARDED IN 1970
75
By Jack W. Dykinga, Chicago Sun-Times OVERCROWDED SLEEPING COTTAGE APATHETIC WHEELCHAIR GROUP RESIDENTS IN THE DAY ROOM 1972 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT SHOCKING TORTURES AND KILLINGS OF PEOPLE IN BANGLADESH IN 1971
76 77 78
79
By Horst Faas / Michel Laurent, The Associated Press BRUTALITY AGAINST TIED PRISONERS GRISLY BAYONETTING OF TWO VICTIMS ALL THE PRISONERS ARE MURDERED 1972 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT SEVERAL DISCOURAGING FACTS ON THE VIETNAM WAR IN 1971
80 81 82
83
By Dave H. Kennedy, United Press International AMERICAN FLAG AND A SOUTH VIETNAMESE SOLDIER SOLDIER MOVES AMID SHATTERED TREES WOUNDED SOUTH VIETNAMESE SOLDIER 1973 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT VIETNAMESE CHILDREN ESCAPING FROM A NAPALM BOMB AREA NEAR SAIGON IN 1972
84 85 86
87
By Huynh Cong Ut, The Associated Press THE TERROR OF WAR 1973 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT WITNESSING THE BIRTH OF A CHILD IN MIDDLE AMERICA IN 1972
88
89
By Brian T. Lanker, Topeka Capital-Journal PREPARATION IN A STERILE HOSPITAL ROOM MOMENT OF JOY AFTER THE DELIVERY THE BABY GIRL SHORTLY AFTER HER BIRTH
90 91 92
373 1974 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE KILLING OF AN ALLEGED KIDNAPER IN HOLLYWOOD IN 1973
93
By Anthony K. Roberts, The Associated Press HOSTAGE AND KIDNAPER SECURITY GUARD'S INTERVENTION KIDNAPER SHOT TO DEATH 1974 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE RETURN OF AN U.S. SOLDIER FROM A NORTH VIETNAMESE PRISON CAMP IN 1973
94 95 96
97
By Slava J. Veder, The Associated Press BURST OF JOY 1975 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT TOTALLY EXHAUSTED FIREMEN AFTER THE BURN OUT OF A HOUSE IN 1974
98
99
By Gerald H. Gay, The Seattle Times LULL IN THE BATTLE
100
1975 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT SEVERAL ASPECTS OF THE WASHINGTON LIFE-STYLE IN 1974 101 By Matthew Lewis Jr., The Washington Post ART HISTORIAN IN A NATIONAL GALLERY CITY COUNCILMAN AT THE CORNER OF HIS BLOCK OLD LADY AT HOME WITH HER ANIMAL FAMILY 1976 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE TRAGEDY AND THE RESULTS OF A BOSTON HOTEL FIRE IN 1975
102 103 104
105
By Stanley J. Forman, The Boston Herald American FIREFIGHTERS ARRIVE FIRE ESCAPE COLLAPSES WOMAN FALLS TO DEATH 1976 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT STRONG CONTROVERSIES ON BUSING IN LOUISVILLE'S SCHOOLS IN 1975
106 107 108
109
By Frank Kimmel et al., The Courier-Journal and The Louisville Times WISH TO RETURN TO HIS FORMER SCHOOL TWO BOYS IN EMPTY CLASSROOM POLICEMAN ESCORTES SCHOOL BUS
110 111 112
374 1977 a SPOT AWARD (I) ABOUT HEAVY DISORDER AND BRUTALITY IN THE STREETS OF BANGKOK IN 1976
113
By Neal H. Ulevich, The Associated Press WOUNDED STUDENT AFTER DEMONSTRATION MOMENTS BEFORE STORMING THE UNIVERSITY STRIKING THE BODY OF A STUDENT VICTIM
114 115 116
1977 a SPOT AWARD (II) ABOUT TROUBLE ON A BOSTON CITY PLAZA AFTER STUDENT DEMONSTRATIONS IN 1976 117 By Stanley J. Forman, The Boston Herald American FLAG AS A LANCE 1977 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE CHATTANOOGA ARMED FORCES DAY PARADE AT A RAINY DAY IN 1976
118
119
By Robin L. Hood, Chattanooga News-Free Press DISABLED VIETNAM VETERAN 1978 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE KIDNAPPING OF AN INDIANAPOLIS BROKER AND THE ROLE OF TV IN 1977
120
121
By John H. Blair, United Press International HOSTAGE AT GUNPOINT 1978 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE WHITE-RULED RHODESIA AND OPPOSING GUERILLA ACTIVITIES IN 1977
122
123
By J. Ross Baughman, The Associated Press ROPE AROUND PRISONER'S NECK SOLDIER HOLDS ENEMY NEWSMAN PRISONERS IN MIDDAY SUN 1979 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT A FAMILY TRAGEDY IN A SMALL PENNSYLVANIA TOWN IN 1978
124 125 126
127
By Thomas J. Kelly III, The Pottstown Mercury PREPARATION TO STORM A CRIMINAL'S HOME DRAMATIC CAPTURE OF A MURDERER INJURED GIRL IN SAFE HANDS
128 129 130
375 1979 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE DESTROYING POWER OF A NEW ENGLAND BLIZZARD IN 1978 131 By Paul Benoit et al., The Boston Herald American RESCUE WORKER IN ACTION STRANDED CARS ON HIGHWAY LIGHTHOUSE IN ANGRY SEA
1980 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE EXECUTION OF PEOPLE BY THE NEW IRANI LEADERSHIP IN 1979
132 133 134
135
By Unnamed Photographer, United Press International FIRING SQUAD IN IRAN
1980 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE LONELY AND ASCETIC LIFE OF THE TEXAS WESTERN COWBOY IN 1979
136
137
By Erwin Η. Hagler, Dallas Times Herald TEXAS COWBOY WORKING CONDITIONS ONE-ROOM HOME
1981 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE PUNISHMENT OF PEOPLE OF THE FORMER LIBERIAN GOVERNMENT IN 1980
138 139 140
141
By Larry C. Price, Fort Worth Star-Telegram SOLDIER KICKS A CIVILIAN EXECUTION OF GOVERNMENT LEADERS SLUMPED BODIES AFTERWARDS
1981 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE LIVING CONDITIONS IN THE MICHIGAN STATE PRISON AT JACKSON IN 1980
142 143 144
145
By Taro M. Yamasaki, Detroit Free Press PRISON CELLS SUPERVISING GUARD OBSERVATION OFFICER
146 147 148
376 1982 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT ON PRESIDENT REAGAN IN WASHINGTON IN 1981 By Ron Edmonds, The Associated Press SHOT PRESIDENT PUSHED INTO LIMOUSINE SECRET SERVICE AGENT GIVES COMMANDS WOUNDED PRESIDENTIAL AIDES LIE ON STREET 1982 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT ARMY MEMBERS, POLICE DUTIES AND MUSIC EDUCATION IN ILLINOIS IN 1981
149 150 151 152
153
By John H. White, Chicago Sun-Times SEARCHING POLICE OFFICER SPECIAL VIOLONIST TECHNIQUE NATIONAL GUARD GROUP 1983 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT VICTIMS AND SURVIVORS OF A MASSACRE IN A BEIRUT CAMP IN 1982
154 155 156
157
By Bill Foley, The Associated Press STREET SCENE AFTER THE MASSACRE NUMEROUS BODIES LIE IN STREETS ON THE WAY TO A MEMORIAL SERVICE 1983 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT LIFE AND DEATH DURING THE EL SALVADOR CIVIL WAR IN 1982
158 159 160
161
By James B. Dickman, Dallas Times Herald WOMEN TAKEN FROM HER HOME BY DEATH SQUAD INNOCENT CHILDREN IN RAMSHACKLE REFUGEE CAMPS BODY OF A FAMILY MEMBER PLACED ON A TABLE
162 163 164
1984 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT SOME EFFECTS OF THE WAR ON THE PEOPLE OF LEBANON IN 1983
165
By Stan Grossfeld, The Boston Globe FRIGHTENED CHILDREN PLAYING ORPHANS PALESTINIAN WIDOW
166 167 168
377 1984 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT MEMORIAL DAY GRIEVING AND THE EFFECTS OF STARVATION IN ETHIOPIA IN 1983
169
By Anthony Suau, The Denver Post SOLDIER'S GRIEVING WIDOW HUNGRY ETHIOPIAN BABY WOMAN AT A WATER HOLE
170 171 172
1985 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT SOME HIGHLIGHTS AND TRAGEDIES AT THE L.A. OLYMPICS IN 1984
173
By Rick Rickman et al., The Register, Santa Ana DISMOUNT FROM THE RINGS EXHAUSTED MARATHON COMPETITOR MISFORTUNE IN A SEMIFINAL
1985 b FEATURE AWARD (I) ABOUT ILLEGAL MEXICANS AT THE U. S. BORDER AND FAMINE IN ETHIOPIA IN 1984
174 175 176
177
By Stan Grossfeld, The Boston Globe MEXICANS TRY TO MOVE INTO THE UNITED STATES LONG LINE OF ETHIOPIANS LEAVING THEIR COUNTRY ETHIOPIANS FLEEING TO FOOD RELIEF CAMPS IN SUDAN
1985 b FEATURE AWARD (II) ABOUT WAR VICTIMS OF THE FIGHTS IN ANGOLA AND EL SALVADOR IN 1984 By Larry C. Price, The Philadelphia
178 179 180
181
Inquirer
FAMILY FLEES FROM EL SALVADOR FOOD FOR SALVADORIAN CHILDREN ANGOLAN WOMEN GREET SOLDIERS
1986 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE DEVASTATION AFTER A COLOMBIA VOLCANO ERUPTION IN 1985
182 183 184
185
By Carol Guzy / Michel du Cille, The Miami Herald RESCUE WORKERS' AND VICTIMS TEENAGER IN DANGER TO LIFE HELICOPTER LIFTS A SURVIVOR
186 187 188
378 1986 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT HOMELESS PEOPLE AT THE STREETS OF PHILADELPHIA IN 1985
189
By Tom Gralish, The Philadelphia Inquirer AIDING A MAN ASLEEP HELPING A HOT-DOG VENDOR WATCHING RESTAURANT CUSTOMERS 1987 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE FALL OF MARCOS' AUTOCRATIC SYSTEM IN THE PHILIPPINES IN 1986
190 191 192
193
By Kim Komenich, San Francisco Examiner FERDINAND MARCOS' LAST BATTLE MARCOS AND HIS WORRIED LOOKING WIFE TRIBESMEN EXORCISE A MARCOS STATUE 1987 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE SHATTERED ECONOMIC DREAMS OF MANY AMERICAN FARMERS IN 1986
194 195 196
197
By David C. Peterson, The Des Moines Register COUPLE FORCED TO SELL THEIR FARM SELLING THE FARM AND MOVING TO TOWN ONE HUNDRED-YEAR OLD FARM SOLD 1988 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT A BABY'S ACCIDENT AND THE SUCCESSFUL LIFESAVING PROCEDURES IN 1987
198 199 200
201
By Scott A. Shaw, The Odessa American RESCUE OF A CHILD 1988 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT DESCRIBING AND ANALYZING THE GRADUAL DECAY OF DRUG CONSUMERS IN 1987
202
203
By Michel du Cille, The Miami Herald MAN SMOKING CRACK FROM A PIPE WOMAN TEMPTED INTO CRACK SCENE WEEPING MAN AFTER HIS ARREST
204 205 206
379 1989 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE RESCUE ATTEMPTS AT A BURNING ST. LOUIS APARTMENT BUILDING IN 1988 By Ron Olshwanger, St. Louis
207
Post-Dispatch
FIRST AID BY FIREFIGHTER
208
1989 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT SOME FACETS OF STUDENT LIFE AT A DETROIT HIGH SCHOOL IN 1988 209 By Manny Crisostomo, Detroit Free Press THREE OUT OF FOUR DROPPED OUT LINING UP FOR GRADUATION CEREMONIES ENJOYING A STUDENTS' GARDEN PARTY 1990 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE RESULTS OF THE SAN FRANCISCO KILLER EARTHQUAKE IN 1989
210 211 212
213
By Roy H. Williams et al., The Tribune, Oakland MAN RESCUED FROM A COLLAPSED BRIDGE WOMAN ESCAPED AND SAVED HER LIFE COUPLE IN SAFETY AFTER THE DESTRUCTION 1990 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE POLITICAL UPRISINGS IN CHINA AND ROMANIA IN 1989
214 215 216
217
By David C. Turnley, Detroit Free Press MAN KILLED AT TIANANMEN SQUARE DAYS AFTER THE BEIJING MASSACRE AFTER THE CEAUSESCU ERA IN ROMANIA 1991 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE AFRICAN NATIONAL CONGRESS MURDERING A SUPPOSED ENEMY IN 1990 By Greg Marinovich, The Associated
218 219 220
221
Press
MAN BEING ATTACKED DURING FACTIONAL VIOLENCE BEATING AND STONING OF THE VICTIM FINALLY THE VICTIM WAS SET ON FIRE
222 223 224
380 1991 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT ORPHANED CHILDREN LIVING IN POST-COMMUNIST ROMANIA IN 1990
225
By William D. Snyder, The Dallas Morning News RESPONSIBLE FOR TWENTY CHILDREN ON THE WAY TO GATHER FOOD TEENAGE BOY BEHIND BARBED WIRE 1992 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT AN ATTEMPTED COMMUNIST COUP D'ETAT IN MOSCOW IN 1991
226 227 228
229
By Liu Heung-Shing et al., The Associated Press CONVOY OF SOVIET TANKS INVADES TOPPLED STATUE OF KGB FOUNDER BORIS YELTSIN AFTER FAILED COUP 1992 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE LIFESTYLES OF TWENTY-ONE-YEAR-OLDS ACROSS THE U.S. IN 1991
230 231 232
233
By John Kaplan, Block Newspapers BAND MEMBER WITH HIS PET BOA HARVARD STUDENT IN HER DORM ROOM BOY DISPLAYS HIMSELF ON THE STREET 1993 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES IN BARCELONA IN 1992
234 235 236
237
By Ken Geiger / William D. Snyder, The Dallas Morning News SOCCER GAME U.S. AGAINST ITALY BASKETBALL PLAY OF U.S. AND ANGOLA POLE VAULT WORLD RECORD HOLDER 1993 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT SOME IMAGES OF BILL CLINTON'S PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN IN 1992
238 239 240
241
By J. Scott Applewhite et al., The Associated Press SMALL TALK IN NEW HAMPSHIRE EARLY BIRD SPEECH IN TEXAS SAXOPHONE PLAYER IN GEORGIA
242 243 244
381 1994 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE DANGEROUS AMERICAN MISSION TO SOMALIA'S CAPITAL MOGADISHU IN 1993
245
By Paul R. Watson, The Toronto Star KILLED AMERICAN SOLDIER
246
1994 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT A COLLAPSED SUDANESE GIRL ON HER WAY TO A FEEDING CENTER IN 1993
247
By Kevin Carter, The New York Times AN ICON OF STARVATION
248
1995 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE POLITICAL CRISIS IN THE STATE OF HAITI AND ITS AFTERMATH IN 1994
249
By Carol Guzy, The Washington Post HAITIANS SALUTE U.S. ARMY HELICOPTER U.S. SOLDIERS PROTECTING A HAITIAN CELEBRATION OF PRESIDENTS RETURN
1995 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE FLIGHT OF RWANDANS TO OVERCROWDED ZAIRE CAMPS IN 1994 By Jacqueline Artz et al., The Associated
250 251 252
253
Press
HUTU BOY AND HIS DYING MOTHER CHILD TOO WEAK TO STAND IN VACCINATION LINE REFUGEE CHILDREN SEPARATED FROM THEIR FAMILIES
254 255 256
1996 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE OKLAHOMA CITY BLAST AND THE RESCUE OF A VICTIM IN 1995
257
By Charles H. Porter IV, The Associated
Press
SEARCH FOR VICTIMS IN DESTROYED BUILDING A BABY BODY IS FOUND IN THE CHAOS FIREFIGHTER AND DEAD BABY
258 259 260
1996 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT A KENYAN GIRL SUFFERING FROM A SHOCKING CIRCUMCISION RITE IN 1995 261 By Stephanie Welsh, Newhouse News Service DURING THE CUTTING AFTER THE MARTYRIUM DOUBTS AND FEARS
262 263 264
382 1997 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT THE HEAVY CALIFORNIA FLOODWATER CATASTROPHE IN 1996 265 By Annie J. Wells, The Press Democrat, Santa Rosa LAST MINUTE RESCUE SUCCESS 1997 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT THE RUSSIAN PRESIDENT IN ACTION AT A ROCK CONCERT IN ROSTOV IN 1996
266
267
By Alexander V. Zemlianichenko, The Associated Press DANCING BORIS YELTSIN
268
1998 a SPOT AWARD ABOUT HUMAN TRAGEDIES IN CENTRAL AFRICAN COUNTRIES IN 1997 269 By Martha Rial, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette REFUGEE TRAIN FROM RWANDA CARING FOR A TANZANIAN ORPHAN FLEEING MAN FROM BURUNDI
270 271 272
1998 b FEATURE AWARD ABOUT YOUNG CHILDREN OF ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSING ADULTS IN 1997 273 By Clarence J. Williams ΙΠ, Los Angeles Times ALCOHOLIC FATHER AND HIS SON WOMAN SCREAMING AT YOUNG BOY BOY DIGS THROUGH GARBAGE CONTAINER
274 275 276
WINNERS OF THE PHOTOGRAPHY AWARD, 1999 - 2009
277
INDEX
279
383
Written into History Pulitzer Prize Reporting of the Twentieth Century from The New York Times
by Anthony Lewis
Henry Holt and Company New York 2001
384
Times Books Henry Holt and Company, L L C Publishers since 1866 115 West 18th Street New York, New York 10011 Henry Holt* is a registered trademark of Henry Holt and Company, L L C . Copyright © 2001 by The New Yor^ Times Introductions copyright © 2001 by Anthony Lewis All rights reserved. Published in Canada by H. B. Fenn and Company Ltd. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Written into history : Pulitzer Prize reporting of the twentieth century from the New York times / edited and with an introduction by Anthony Lewis, p. cm. Includes index. ISBN: 0-8050-6849-X i. Journalism—United States. 2. Pulitzer Prizes. I. Lewis, Anthony, 1927II. New York times. PN4726 .W75 2001 07ΐ'·3—dc2i
2001035555
Henry Holt books are available for special promotions and premiums. For details contact: Director, Special Markets. First Edition 2001 Printed in the United States of America 1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
385
From the Preface
...Pulitzer Prizes are the preeminent mark of achievement in American journalism. As the prizes for reporting on Vietnam in defiance of official wishes show, they also point to the press's view of its role in society. That view has changed substantially over the more than eighty years of the Pulitzer Prizes' existence. Exposing official corruption on a local level has always been part of what journalists see as their function. But today, more than ever before, they are ready to write critically about the policies of the federal government, even in the once sacrosanct areas of foreign and national security affairs... This book presents some great, and lasting, examples of American journalism. Lasting is a necessary qualifier, because journalism tends to be ephemeral. Sketches in the Sand, James Reston of the New Yorl{ Times called a collection of his columns. These pieces have lasted. Some are firsthand history, others evocations of memorable people and situations. They appear here just as they were originally published and won Pulitzer Prizes, except for some cuts for reasons of space. There can be no claim that this book canvasses the American press or the Pulitzer Prize record as a whole. It does not include the triumphs of other newspapers, such as the Watergate disclosures by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein that brought the prize for meritorious public service to the Washington Post in 1973. T h e New Yorf{ Times alone is represented. But the Times and its staff have won more Pulitzers than any other paper or news service, and the pieces collected here are a fair sample of what the American press can do at its best. It is inevitably an eclectic collection, spanning the work of decades as it does and ranging from reports of murders to commentary by critics of the arts. I alone, as editor, made the choices of what to include from the eighty-one Pulitzers won by the Times and staff members from 1918 to 2001. The selection was based on what would make good reading and what would throw light on the development of journalism and society over those decades...
386
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
IX
ONE: What a Government Doesn't Want You to Know TWO: In Danger THREE:
FOUR:
five·.
ι 50
Around the Globe
89
The Public Advocate
142
Life and Times
182
SIX: New Frontiers
211
SEVEN: Up Close
243
EIGHT:
Personal Stones
310
APPENDIX:
Chronological List of New York Times Pulitzer Prizes
343
index
347
387
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 15
Musical Composition Awards 1943-1999:
From Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber to Gian-Carlo Menotti and Melinda Wagner
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
Κ · G • Saur München 2001
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 15: Pt. E, Liberal arts. Musical composition awards 1943 -1999 from Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber to Gian-Carlo Menotti and Melinda Wagner / ed. with general and special introd. by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer in cooperation with Erika J. Fischer. - 2001 ISBN 3-598-30185-5
Θ Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH, München 2001 Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by Strauss Offsetdruck, Mörlenbach Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30185-5 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
389
FROM THE PREFACE When the American conductor James Levine brought works by Charles Ives and Roger Sessions to European concert halls, he had selected composers who had won Pulitzer Prizes in "Musical Composition". Within the system of Pulitzer awards, this category is a rather new one, and it was not created until the 1940s. Joseph Pulitzer's will, writes J. Douglas Bates, "did not ask for a prize in music. It called only for a scholarship for a music student." The category of Musical Composition has, similar to other categories, provoked the question, which American composers never won a Pulitzer Prize, although their works were considered important and influential. Some famous composers were, indeed, never nominated for the award. Thus, Leonard Bernstein never won a Pulitzer Prize. George Gershwin and Duke Ellington, on the other hand, received special awards only posthumously, many years after they had died. Ever since the prize in Musical Composition was created, the Pulitzer Board has taken great care that the juries consist of experts in music. When the first prize was awarded, the entries were judged by only three people, but among them were the composer and critic Chalmers Clifton and the composer Quincy Porter, who was to win the prize a decade later. Through the years, it became usual practice that the juries consisted of both, composers and music critics. Increasingly, former prize-winners were also included. Examples are Dominick Argento, Milton Babbitt, Aaron Copland, John Harbison, Leon Kirchner, Wayne Peterson, Gunther Schuller, Charles Wuorinen or Ellen Taaffe Zwilich...
390
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
V
INTRODUCTION By Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Ruhr-Universität
XV||
Bochum
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR MUSIC . XVII P R E S E N T A T I O N O F A W A R D - W I N N I N G M U S I C A L C O M P O S I T I O N S ... REMARKS ABOUT THE DOCUMENTATION CRITERIA 1943 A W A R D : ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SECULAR - A FREE SONG
1 2
CANTATA
NO. 2 3
By William H. Schuman FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
4
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
5
1944 A W A R D : ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SYMPHONY
NO. 4, OPUS 34
7
By H o w a r d H. Hanson FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
8
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
9
1945 A W A R D : ABOUT THE BALLET MUSIC APPALACHIAN
SPRING
11
By Aaron Copland FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
12
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
13
1953 A W A R D : ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE MUSIC PRIZE
43
By T h e Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1954 A W A R D : ABOUT THE COMPOSITION CONCERTO PIANOS AND ORCHESTRA
44
FOR TWO 45
By Quincy W. Porter FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
46
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
47
391 1955 AWARD: ABOUT THE OPERA THE SAINT OF BLEECKER STREET
49
By Gian-Carlo Menotti FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
50
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
51
1956 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SYMPHONY NO. 3
53
By Ernst Toch FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
54
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
55
1957 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION MEDITATIONS ON ECCLESIASTES
57
By Norman Dello Joio FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
58
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
59
1958 AWARD: ABOUT THE OPERA VANESSA
61
By Samuel Barber FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
62
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
63
1959 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION CONCERTO FOR PIANO AND ORCHESTRA
65
By John La Montaine FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
66
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
67
1960 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SECOND STRING QUARTET
69
By Elliott C. Carter Jr. FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
70
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
71
1961 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SYMPHONY NO. 7
73
By Walter H. Piston Jr. FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
74
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
75
392 1962 AWARD: ABOUT THE OPERA THE CRUCIBLE
77
By Robert E. Ward FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
78
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
79
1963 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION PIANO CONCERTO NO. 1 ..
81
By Samuel Barber FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
82
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
83
1964 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE MUSIC PRIZE
85
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1965 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE MUSIC PRIZE
86
87
By The Advisory Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1966 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION VARIATIONS FOR ORCHESTRA
88
89
By Leslie R. Bassett FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
90
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
91
1967 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION QUARTET NO. 3
93
By Leon Kirchner FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
94
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
95
1968 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION ECHOES OF TIME AND THE RIVER
97
By George H. Crumb FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
98
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
99
393 1969 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION STRING QUARTET NO. 3...
101
By KarelHusa FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
102
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
103
1970 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION TIME'S ENCOMIUM
105
By Charles P. Wuorinen FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
106
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
107
1971 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SYNCHRONISMS FOR PIANO AND ELECTRONIC SOUND
NO. 6 109
By Mario Davidovsky FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
110
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
111
1972 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION WINDOWS
113
By Jacob R. Druckman FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
114
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
115
1973 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION STRING QUARTET NO. 3...
117
By Elliott C. Carter Jr. FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
118
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
119
1974 AWARD: ABOUT THE CHAMBER MUSIC PIECE NOTTURNO
121
By Donald J. Martino FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
122
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
123
1975 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION FROM THE DIARY OF VIRGINIA WOOLF
125
By Dominick Argento FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
126
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
127
394 1976 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION AIR MUSIC
129
By NedRorem FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
130
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
131
1977 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION VISIONS OF TERROR AND WONDER
133
By Richard F. Wernick FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
134
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
135
1978 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION DEJÄ VU FOR PERCUSSION QUARTET AND ORCHESTRA
137
By Michael C. Colgrass FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
138
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
139
1979 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION AFTERTONES
OF INFINITY.
141
By Joseph Schwantner FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
142
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
143
1980 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION IN MEMORY OF A SUMMER DAY
145
By David Del Tredici FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
146
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
147
1981 AWARD: ABOUT THE DECISION TO WITHHOLD THE MUSIC PRIZE
149
By The Pulitzer Prize Board NAMES OF THE BOARD MEMBERS VOTING FOR "NO AWARD" 1982 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION CONCERTO FOR ORCHESTRA
150
151
By Roger H. Sessions FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
152
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
153
395 1983 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SYMPHONY NO. 1
155
By Ellen Taaffe Zwilich FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
156
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
157
1984 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION "CANTI DEL SOLE" FOR TENOR AND ORCHESTRA
159
By Bernard Rands FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
160
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
161
1985 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SYMPHONY, RIVERRUN
163
By Stephen J. Albert FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
164
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
165
1986 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION WIND QUINTET IV
167
By George Perle FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
168
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
169
1987 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT..
171
By John Harbison FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
172
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
173
1988 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION 12 NEW ETUDES FOR PIANO 175 By William E. Bolcom FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
176
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
177
1989 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION WHISPERS OUT OF TIME..
179
By Roger L. Reynolds FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
180
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
181
396 1990 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION "DUPLICATES": A CONCERTO FOR TWO PIANOS AND ORCHESTRA By Mel Powell
183
FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
184
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
185
1991 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION SYMPHONY
187
By ShulamitRan FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
188
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
189
1992 AWARD: ABOUT THE FACE OF THE NIGHT, THE HEART THE DARK By Wayne T. Peterson
OF 191
FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
192
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
193
1993 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION TROMBONE
CONCERTO
195
By Christopher C. Rouse Π Ι FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
196
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
197
1994 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION OF REMINISCENCES REFLECTIONS
AND 199
By Gunther Α. Schuller FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
200
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
201
1995 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION STRINGMUSIC
203
By Morton Gould FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
204
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
205
1996 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION LILACS
207
By George T. Walker Jr. FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
208
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
209
397 1997 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION BLOOD ON THE FIELDS
211
By Wynton Marsalis FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
212
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
213
1998 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION STRING QUARTET NO. 2 ... 215
By Aaron J. Kemis FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
216
THE S C O R E S OPENING PASSAGE
217
1999 AWARD: ABOUT THE COMPOSITION CONCERTO STRINGS
AND PERCUSSION
FOR FLUTE, 219
By Melinda Wagner FIRST PERFORMANCE OF THE WORK
220
THE SCORE'S OPENING PASSAGE
221
WINNERS OF THE MUSICAL AWARD, 2000 - 2010
223
INDEX
225
399
Capture the Moments -
The Pulitzer Prize Photographs
by Cyma Rubin and Eric Newton
W. W. Norton New York - London 2001
400
Copyright © 2001, 2000 by The Freedom Forum Newseum, Inc. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by the Newseum, Arlington, Va. in association with W. W. Norton, New York - London All of the photographs in this volume are protected individually under United States Copyright laws. Unauthorized use or reproduction is forbidden. Newseum web site address http://www.newseum.org Printed by Mondadori Printing, S . p A , Verona, Italy, on acid-free paper
401
From the Preface
This catalogue records the first major exhibition in the United States of Pulitzer Prize-winning photographs, many of which are cited around the world as classics of photojournalism. The 118 newspaper photographs reprinted in these pages capture defining moments in the tumultuous second half of the 20th century. Typically published on front pages, these are the pictures that influenced our thinking in times of crisis and sometimes stirred us to action. They still bear stark witness against the brutalities of war, racism and despotism. Others are exemplars of heroism, compassion and the strivings of ordinary people for a better life under the burdens of poverty and crime.
Among these are indelible images that, in coming centuries, will inevitably be used as flashbacks to illustrate the triumphs and tragedies of our era ...
403
INTRODUCTION Seymour Topping
5
THE PULITZER PRIZE PHOTOGRAPHERS 1942
Milton Brooks
1943
Frank Noel
10
1944
Frank Filan
12
1944
Earle L. Bunker
14
1945
Joe Rosenthal
16
1947*
Arnold E. Hardy
18
1948
Frank Cushing
20
1949
Nathaniel Fein
22
1950
Bill Crouch
24
1951
Max Desfor
26
1952
Donald T. Ultang and John R. Robinson
28
1953
William M. Gallagher
30
1954
Virginia Schau
32
1955
John L. Gaunt, Jr.
34
1956
New York Daily News staff"
36
1957
Harry A. Trask
38
1958
William C. Beall
40
1959
William Seaman
42
1960
Andrew Lopez
44
1961
Yasushi Nagao
46
1962
Paul Vathis
48
1963
Hector Rondon
50
1964
Robert H. Jackson
52
.1965
Horst Faas
54
1966
Kyoichi Sawada
56
1967
JackR. Thornell
58
1968 Spot News
Rocco Morabito
60
' 1946: No Award
8
404
1968 Feature
Toshio Sakai
62
1969 Spot News
Edward T. Adams
64
1969 Feature
Moneta Sleet, Jr.
66
1970 Feature
Dallas Kinney
68
1970 Spot News
Steve Starr
70
1971 Spot News
John Paul Filo
72
1971 Feature
Jack Dykinga
74
1972 Spot News
Horst Faas and Michel Laurent
76
1972 Feature
David Hume Kennerly
78
1973 Spot News
Huynh Cong Ut
80
1973 Feature
Brian Lanker
82
1974 Spot News
Anthony K. Roberts
84
1974 Feature
Slava Veder
86
1975 Feature
Matthew Lewis
88
1975 Spot News
Gerald H.Gay
90
1976 Feature
The Courier-Journal and Louisville Times Photographie staff
92
1976 Spot News
Stanley J. Formen
94
1977 Spot News
NealUlevich
96
1977 Spot News
Stanley J. Forman
98
1977 Feature
Robin Hood
100
1978 Spot News
John H. Blair
102
1978 Feature
J. Ross Baughman
104
1979 Spot News
Thomas J. Kelly III
106
1979 Feature
Boston Herald American staff
108
1980 Spot News
Photographer unnamed
110
1980 Feature
Erwin Hagler
112
1981 Feature
Taro M. Yamasaki
114
1981 Spot News
Larry C. Price
116
1982 Spot News
Ron Edmonds
118
1982 Feature
John H. White
120
405
1983 Spot News
Bill Foley
122
1983 Feature
James B. Dickman
124
1984 Spot News
Stan Grossfeld
126
1984 Feature
Anthony Suau
128
1985 Spot News
The Orange County Register staff
130
1985 Feature
Larry C. Price
132
1985 Feature
Stan Grossfeld
134, 136
1986 Feature
Tom Gralish
138
1986 Spot News
Carol Guzy and Michel duCille
140
1987 Feature
David Peterson
142
1987 Spot News
Kim Komenich
144
1988 Spot News
Scott Shaw
146
1988 Feature
Michel duCille
148
1989 Spot News
Ron Olshwanger
150
1989 Feature
Manny Crisostomo
152
1990 Feature
David C. Turnley
154
1990 Spot News
The Oakland Tribune Photo staff
156
1991 Feature
William Snyder
158
1991 Spot News
Greg Marinovich
160
1992 Spot News
The Associated Press staff
162
1992 Feature
John Kaplan
164
1993 Spot News
Ken Geiger and William Snyder
166
1993 Feature
The Associated Press staff
168
1994 Spot News
Paul Watson
170
1994 Feature
Kevin Carter
172
1995 Spot News
Carol Guzy
174
1995 Feature
The Associated Press staff
176
1996 Feature
Stephanie Welsh
178
1996 Spot News
Charles Porter IV
180
1997 Feature
Alexander Zemlianichenko
182
1997 Spot News
Annie Wells
184
406
1998 Feature
Clarence J. Williams ΙΠ
186
1998 Spot News
Martha Rial
188
1999 Spot News
The Associated Press staff
190
1999 Feature
The Associated Press staff
192
2000 Spot News
Rocky Mountain News staff
194
2000 Feature
Carol Guzy, Michael Williamson and Lucian Perkins
196
2001 Spot News
Alan Diaz
198
2001 Feature
Matt Rainey
200
AFTERWORD
202
BIOGRAPHIES OF THE PHOTOGRAPHERS
203
407
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 16
Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners 1917 - 2000: Journalists, Writers and Composers on their Ways to the Coveted Awards
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
Κ · G • Saur München 2002
408
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive: a history arid anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 16: Pt. F, Documentation. Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners 1917 - 2000 : Journalists, Writers and Composers on their Ways to the Coveted Awards by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer. - 2002 ISBN 3-598-30186-3
Θ
Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH, München 2002 Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by Strauss Offsetdruck, Mörlenbach Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30186-3 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
409
FROM THE PREFACE The history of the Pulitzer Prizes is also the personal success story of those journalists, writers and composers who won this coveted award. In many cases, the honor of winning advanced their professional careers. In other cases, personal tragedy resulted from the fact that someone was repeatedly nominated for the Prize or applied for it, but never won. Some of those who never were awarded the Prize did, however, belong to the finalists selected by the jurors: For a number of years, the names of the finalists have been published alongside the names of the actual winners at the annual awards announcements. This volume portrays the careers of those prizewinners who were individually named on the official lists by the Pulitzer Prize Board. This includes individuals who contributed to collective works and thus were named on the lists of winners. Two names often mentioned in connection with the Pulitzer Prize are, however, missing in this book: Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward. Although they played a central role in the coverage of the Watergate affair, the 1973 Prize was not awarded to them, but to the Washington Postl The biographies of the 1.118 Pulitzer-Prize winners portrayed in this work are largely based upon brief biographical sketches which were included in the application material. Additionally, general biographical works of reference as well as biographies and autobiographies were consulted. Large-scale correspondence with prizewinners or their descendants was used for retrieving additional information. In more recent times, the internet was also employed to locate missing facts and data from a number of sources. Each biography contained in this book follows the life of a prizewinner up to the point of his or her winning the award. Due to the varying quality of the sources used, the different biographies must naturally be of slightly varying informational value. Despite all efforts, in a small number of cases it was not possible to retrieve the date and/or place of birth of the laureates. This book contains a complete list of award winners from 1917 to 2000...
410
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE Abbreviations
V VIII
Dedication
χ
A
George F. Abbott - William A. Auth
1
Β
Milton B. Babbit - Robert O. Butler
11
C
Herbert E. Caen - Harvey W. Cushing
35
D
Virginius Dabney - Jack W. Dykinga
51
Ε
William J. Eaton - Erik H. Erikson
63
F
Horst Faas - Jack W. Fuller
67
G
William C. Gaines - Mary A. Gwinn
79
Η
Albert Hackett - Thomas J. Hylton
93
I
William M. Inge - Charles E. Ives
113
J
Harold Jackson - Donald R. Justice
115
Κ
Michiko Kakutani - Tony Kushner
120
L
Louis La Coss - Jeffrey R. Lyon
135
Μ
Carleton Mabee - James P. Murray
149
Ν
Yasushi Nagao - Russell Β. Nye
175
Ο
Frank M. O'Brien - John W. Owens
179
Ρ
Fred L. Packer - Ernest T. Pyle
182
Q
AnnaQuindlen
194
R
Howell H. Raines - Morrie Ryskind
195
S
Howard Sackler - Paul M. Szep
208
Τ
Harold M. Talburt - Anne Tyler
238
U
Alfred Uhry - Huynh C. Ut
248
V
Edmund S. Valtman - Paula Vogel
250
W
Melinda Wagner - Audrey M. Wurdemann
253
Y
Taro M. Yamasaki - Robert York
271
Ζ
Marya A. Zaturenska - Ellen Taffee Zwilich
273
Appendix: Prize Winners by Award Categories
275
411
The Pulitzer Prize Archive, Vol. 17
Complete Historical Handbook of the Pulitzer Prize System 1917 - 2000: Decision-Making Processes by Nominating Jurors and Board Members in all Award Categories
by
Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer
K G · Saur München 2003
412
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme The Pulitzer prize archive : a history and anthology of awardwinning materials in journalism, letters, and arts / ser. ed.: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. - München : Saur ISBN 3-598-30170-7 Vol. 17: Pt. F, Documentation. Complete historical handbook of the Pulitzer Prize System 1917 - 2000 : Decision-Making Processes in all award categories based on unpublished sources / by Heinz-D. Fischer and Erika J. Fischer. - 2003 ISBN 3-598-30187-1
Θ
Gedruckt auf säurefreiem Papier Printed on acid-free paper Alle Rechte vorbehalten / All Rights Strictly Reserved K.G. Saur Verlag GmbH, München 2003 Printed in the Federal Republic of Germany by Strauss Offsetdruck, Mörlenbach Bound by Buchbinderei Schaumann, Darmstadt Cover Design by Manfred Link, München ISBN 3-598-30187-1 ISBN 3-598-30170-7 (Complete Set)
413
FROM THE PREFACE To speak of "Pulitzer Prizes" means to speak of a highly differentiated system of awards for outstanding works in various areas. Since their creation about eight and a half decades ago, the bestowal of the Prizes has without doubt become a public institution in America. Along with the Nobel Prizes, which are awarded annually in Stockholm and Oslo, and along with the Academy Awards ("Oscars"), which are awarded in Los Angeles, the Pulitzer Prizes belong to the most prestigeous honors worldwide. They are given for first class journalistic, literary and artistic achievements on the basis of a strict system of selection and assessment criteria. This book takes a close inside-look at the complex structure of the Pulitzer-Prize system and its various categories of awards. The development of each category is described chronologically. Each description begins with the year the category was established. An excellent source of information could be used for an exact reconstruction of the decisive debates of the individual juries: Due to the friendly help of the Pulitzer Prize Board we enjoyed the privilege of being able to study all existing approximately 1.200 unpublished jury reports with a total of about 3.000 pages. This book, therefore, is the first general work on all Pulitzer Prizes from 1917 through 2000 which is based exclusively on authentic sources. The focus is placed on the precise description of those discussions which led to the selection of the prize winners. Secondary sources are only used in a small number of passages where they are necessary to point out complex facts. Because of the large amount of material consulted, it was not possible to aim at stylistic elegance. Rather, the plain analyses of decisionmaking processes and their results was our main focus. With regard to the contents of the book, we were guided by the intention of devoting the main chapters to prizes which belong together thematically. This "dramaturgic" concept enables the reader to observe the interdependencies between different media which are honored by Pulitzer Prizes. We have benefited from our long experience in studying the history of the Pulitzer Prizes and from the publication of - up to this point about twenty books on the subject, which, among other things, have documented many prize-winning works...
414
TABLE OF CONTENTS
FOREWORD
V
1. 1.1 1.2
PRIZES NAMED AFTER JOSEPH PULITZER Life of the Journalist and Publisher Instigator of various Benefactions
1 1 4
1.3
Operation of the Award System
7
2. 2.1 2.2 2.3
PRIZES FOR VARIOUS PRESS-RELATED FIELDS Meritorious Public Service Award Newspaper History Award School of Journalism Development Award
13 13 36 36
3. 3.1 3.2 3.3
PRIZES FOR REPORTING ON DOMESTIC TOPICS Reporting Award Telegraphic National Reporting Award National Reporting Award
39 39 49 51
4. 4.1 4.2 4.3
PRIZES FOR REPORTING ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS Correspondence Award International Telegraphic Reporting Award International Reporting Award
67 67 74 76
5. 5.1 5.2 5.3
PRIZES FOR REPORTING ON REGIONAL EVENTS Local Reporting Award Local Reporting, Edition Time Award Local General Spot News Reporting Award
97 97 98 102
6. 6.1 6.2 6.3
PRIZES FOR DIVERSE REPORTAGE CLASSES General News Reporting Award Spot News Reporting Award Breaking News Reporting Award
109 109 111 113
7. 7.1 7.2 7.3
PRIZES FOR RECHERCHE JOURNALISM EFFORTS Local Reporting, No Edition Time Award Local Investigative Specialized Reporting Award Investigative Reporting Award
115 115 118 124
415 8. 8.1 8.2 8.3
PRIZES FOR G E N R E S O F OPINION JOURNALISM Editorial Writing Award Commentary Writing Award Criticism Writing Award
129 129 155 167
9. 9.1 9.2 9.3
PRIZES FOR SPECIFIC JOURNALISM DIVISIONS Feature Writing Award Explanatory Journalism Award Specialized/Beat Reporting Award
181 181 186 192
10. 10.1 10.2 10.3
PRIZES FOR PICTORIAL JOURNALISM AREAS Photography Award Spot / Breaking News Photography Award Feature Photography Award
197 197 207 218
11. 11.1 11.2 11.3
PRIZES FOR T O P ARTISTIC ACHIEVEMENTS Drama Award Music Award Cartoon Award
231 231 261 280
12. 12.1 12.2 12.3
PRIZES FOR FACT-ORIENTED LITERATURE American History Award Biography/Autobiography Award General Non-Fiction Award
303 303 327 355
13. 13.1 13.2 13.3
PRIZES FOR AREAS OF BELLES-LETTRES Novel Award Fiction Award Poetry Award
371 371 381 397
14. 14.1 14.2 14.3
PRIZES FOR EXTRAORDINARY MERITS Special Journalism Award Special Letters Award Special Music Award
427 427 430 431
AFTERWORD
433
BIBLIOGRAPHY
437
INDEX
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416
Plan for the Award of the Pulitzer Prizes The following provisions govern the award of the Pulitzer Prizes and Fellowships established in Columbia University by the will of thefirstJoseph Pulitzer: 1. The prizes and fellowships are awarded by Columbia University on the recommendation of The Pulitzer Prize Board. The Board meets twice annually. The prizes are announced during the Spring. Nominating Jurors for the prizes are appointed by the Board in each category. They are invited to exercise their independent and collective judgment and submit three nominations· The Nominating Jurors are advised that their nominations are for the information and advice of The Pulitzer Prize Board only inasmuch as the Board is charged with the responsibility and authority under the will of Joseph Pulitzer to select, accept, substitute or reject these nominations, and may in extraordinary circumstances offer its own. Each Nominating Jury should submit to the Board three nominations in its category. These must be listed in alphabetical order and each of the three must be accompanied by a statement as to why the jury believes that this particular entry merits a Pulitzer Prize. It is not a part of the jury's charge to offer its preferences among its three nominees. 2 Entries must be submitted in writing and addressed to the Administrator of The Pulitzer Prize Board, Mr. Seymour Topping, 709 Journalism, 2950 Broadway, Mail Code 3865, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 10027. Entries for journalism awards must be submitted on or before February 1 to cover work done in the preceding calendar year. Entries for letters awards must be submitted on or before July 1 of the year of publication in the case of books published between January 1 and June 30 and on or before November 1 in the case of books published between July 1 and December 31. Competition for prizes is limited to work done during the calendar year ending December 31, except in drama and music For the drama prize, works produced during the twelve months from March 2 through March 1 are considered. For the music award, works given their American premiere during the twelve months between March 2 through March 1 are considered. 3. Entries for journalism awards may be made by any individual from material appearing in a United States newspaper published daily, Sunday or at least once a week during the calendar year. Each entry must be accompanied by an exhibit, in scrapbook form, of news stories, editorials, photographs or cartoons as published, with name and date of paper. Exhibits in the public service category are limited to twenty items, which may include articles, cartoons, photographs, and a single on-line presentation. (If an on-line presentation is submitted as part of a public service entry, it must be in the form of a single CD-ROM whose content pertains to the print items in the exhibit and was produced for and published on the newspaper's Web site.) Entries in the cartoon and photography categories are limited to twenty cartoons or pictures, and in the remaining categories to ten articles or editorials, except for feature writing which is limited to five articles. Up to three individuals may be named on a team entry, otherwise the entry must be made in the name of the staff of the newspaper. Any significant challenge to the accuracy or fairness of an entry, such as published letters, corrections, retractions, as well as responses by the newspaper, should be included in the submission. In the photography categories, no entry whose content is manipulated or altered, apart from standard newspaper cropping and editing, will be deemed acceptable. Exhibits must be presented in scrapbooks measuring no more than 12 χ 17 inches, except in cases where a full newspaper page is required to make clear the full scope and impact of the material entered.