1962 Pulitzer Prize
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The following are the Pulitzer Prizes for 1962.
- Public Service:
- The Panama City News-Herald, for its three-year campaign against entrenched power and corruption, with resultant reforms in Panama City, Florida, and Bay County, Florida.[1]
- Local Reporting, Edition Time:
- Robert D. Mullins of the Deseret News (Salt Lake City) for his resourceful coverage of a murder and kidnapping at Dead Horse Point, Utah.[2]
- Local Reporting, No Edition Time:
- George Bliss of the Chicago Tribune, for his initiative in uncovering scandals in the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, with resultant remedial action.[3]
- National Reporting:
- Nathan G. Caldwell and Gene S. Graham of the Nashville Tennessean, for their exclusive disclosure and six years of detailed reporting, under great difficulties, of the undercover cooperation between management interests in the coal industry and the United Mine Workers.[4]
- International Reporting:
- Walter Lippmann of the New York Herald Tribune Syndicate, for his 1961 interview with Soviet Premier Khrushchev, as illustrative of Lippmann's long and distinguished contribution to American journalism.
- Editorial Writing:
- Thomas M. Storke of the Santa Barbara News-Press, for his forceful editorials calling public attention to the activities of a semi-secret organization known as the John Birch Society.
- Editorial Cartooning:
- Edmund S. Valtman of the Hartford Times, for "What You Need, Man, Is a Revolution Like Mine", published on August 31, 1961.
- Photography:
- Paul Vathis of the Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, bureau of the Associated Press, for the photograph, "Serious Steps", published April 22, 1961.[5]