Difference between revisions of "Pulitzer Prize"

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(pronunciation is Pull it, Sir)
(General Non-fiction)
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*[[1976]]: [[Robert Neil Butler]] CC'49, physician
 
*[[1976]]: [[Robert Neil Butler]] CC'49, physician
 
*[[1984]]: [[Paul Starr]] CC'70, sociologist and public affairs professor at [[Princeton]]
 
*[[1984]]: [[Paul Starr]] CC'70, sociologist and public affairs professor at [[Princeton]]
 +
*[[1999]]: [[Edwin G. Burrows]] PhD'72, historian
  
 
===Poetry===
 
===Poetry===

Revision as of 15:42, 27 September 2009

See also Wikipedia's article about "Pulitzer Prize".

The Pulitzer Prizes are given out every April to writers and journalists by the Graduate School of Journalism‎. They are named for Joseph Pulitzer, the J-School's founding donor, and were first awarded in 1917. The proper pronunciation of the name Pulitzer is "Pull it, sir," according to administrators of the prize.

Often, Columbia will acclaim alums for having received them, although they're given out by the university itself. Specifically, the Pulitzer Board, which decides the winners, consists of a number of longtime editors and professors, and, ceremonially, the University President.

Clearly, they don't give out an award for ethics.

Columbia alumni winners

Notable Columbia alumni who have won the prize include:

International Reporting

Investigative Reporting

Crticism

Biography

Drama

Music

Fiction

General Non-fiction

Poetry

A more comprehensive list of Columbia alumni winners will be posted here soon.

External links