A complete listing of AP's
Pulitzer Prize Winners
The Associated Press has won 48 Pulitzer Prizes,
more than any other news organization in categories for which
it can compete. The AP has won 19 Pulitzer Prizes for writing
and 29 Pulitzer Prizes for pictures.
The Pulitzer Prizes, American journalism's most prestigious
honor, were established by Joseph Pulitzer and are presented
annually for outstanding achievement.
Here is a list of The Associated Press winners:
2005 -Bilal
Hussein, Karim Kadim, BrennanLinsley, Jim MacMillan, Samir
Mizban, Khalid Mohammed, John B. Moore , Muhammad Muheisen,
Anja Niedringhaus, Murad Sezer and Mohammed Uraibi for
breaking news photography for a stunning series of pictures
of bloody yearlong combat inside Iraqi cities.
2001 -Alan Diaz for his
photo of a federal agent in riot gear during a pre-dawn raid
in Miami, confronting a man holding Elian Gonzalez in a closet.
2000 -Sang-Hun Choe, Charles J. Hanley, Martha Mendoza
and Randy Herschaft for Investigative Reporting, for "The
Bridge at No Gun Ri," a package of stories reporting
the mass killings of South Korean civilians by American troops
at the start of the Korean War..
1999 -J. Scott Applewhite, Roberto
Borea, Khue Bui, Robert F. Bukaty, Ruth Fremson, Greg Gibson,
Ron Heflin, Charles Krupa, Wilfredo Lee, Dan Loh, Joe Marquette,
Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Doug Mills, Stephan Savoia and Susan
Walsh, Feature Photography, for a series of pictures of
the events surrounding President Clinton's impeachment.
1999 -Sayyid Azim, Jean-Marc Bouju,
Dave Caulkin, Brennan Linsley, John McConnico and Khalil Senosi,
Spot News Photography, for a series of pictures after the
U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.
1997 -Alexander Zemlianichenko,
for his photo of Russian President Boris Yeltsin dancing at
a rock concert in Rostov before elections.
1996 -Charles Porter IV, for
his photo of a fireman cradling an infant victim of the Oklahoma
City bombing.
1995 -Mark
Fritz, for reports on the ethnic violence in Rwanda.
1995 -Jackie Arzt, Javier Bauluz,
Jean-Marc Bouju, Karsten Thielker for photos of the ethnic
violence in Rwanda.
1993 -J. Scott Applewhite, Richard
Drew, Greg Gibson, David Longstreath, Doug Mills, Marcia Nighswander,
Amy Sancetta, Stephan Savoia, Reed Saxon and Lynne Sladky
for a series of pictures from the 1992 U.S. presidential
campaign.
1992 -Olga Shalygin, Liu Heung Shing,
Czarek Sokolowski, Boris Yurchenko and Alexander Zemlianichenko,
for a series of pictures on the attempted coup in the
Soviet Union and the collapse of the Communist regime.
1991 -Greg Marinovich, for a
series of pictures showing the brutal killing of a man believed
to be a Zulu Inkatha supporter in South Africa.
1983 -Bill Foley, for a series
of pictures of victims and survivors of the massacre of Palestinians
in a refugee camp in Beirut.
1982 -Saul Pett, for a series
of stories on the bureaucracy of the federal government.
1982 -Ron Edmonds, for a series
of pictures showing the attempted assassination of President
Reagan.
1978 -J. Ross Baughman, for
a series of pictures showing white Rhodesian soldiers beating
and torturing black nationalist guerrillas.
1977 -Neal Ulevich, for a series
of pictures showing bloody fighting between police and left-wing
students in Bangkok, Thailand.
1977 -Walter R. Mears, for reports
on the 1976 presidential campaign and election.
1974 -Anthony K. Roberts, for
his picture sequence made during an alleged kidnapping attempt
in Hollywood.
1974 -Slava (Sal) Veder, for
a picture of a U.S. Air Force officer being greeted by his
family after being held a prisoner of war in Vietnam.
1973 -Huynh
Cong (Nick) Ut, for a picture of a Vietnamese girl
fleeing in terror after a napalm attack.
1972 -Horst Faas and Michel Laurent,
for a series of pictures of tortures and executions in Bangladesh.
1970 -Steve Starr, for a picture
of armed black students emerging after their 36-hour occupation
of a Cornell University building.
1969 -Edward (Eddie) Adams,
for a picture of Vietnamese Brig. Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan executing
a Viet Cong prisoner on a Saigon street.
1967 -Jack Thornell, for a picture
of James Meredith falling after being hit by a shotgun blast
near Hernando, Miss.
1966 -Peter Arnett, for war
reports from Vietnam.
1965 -Horst Faas, for photos
from Vietnam.
1964 -Malcolm Browne, for war
reports from Vietnam, including the overthrow of the Diem
regime.
1962 -Paul Vathis, for a picture
of President Kennedy and former President Eisenhower walking
at Camp David following an unsuccessful 1961 Cuban invasion.
1961 -Lynn Heinzerling, for
reports on the early stages of the Congo crisis and analysis
of other African events.
1958 -Relman Morin, for reports
on school desegregation rioting at Little Rock.
1954 -Mrs. Walter M. Schau,
for a photo of a thrilling rescue in Redding, Calif.
1953 -Don Whitehead,
for a story on President-elect Eisenhower's secret trips to
Korea.
1952 -John Hightower, for reporting
of international affairs.
1951 -Max Desfor, for a picture
of Korean War refugees in flight over ruins of a Taedong River
bridge.
1951 -Relman Morin and Don
Whitehead, for war reports from Korea.
1947 -Arnold Hardy, for his
photo of a girl leaping to death in a hotel fire.
1947 -Eddy Gilmore, for news
reports from Russia, especially an interview with Joseph Stalin.
1945 -Hal Boyle, for columns
and stories from the North African and European war theaters.
1945 -Joe
Rosenthal, for a picture of Marines raising the U.S.
flag on Iwo Jima.
1944 -Daniel DeLuce, for a series
of stories from Yugoslavia disclosing the strength of the
Tito movement.
1944 -Frank Filan, for a picture
of a blasted Japanese pillbox on Tarawa.
1943 -Frank Noel, for a picture
of a survivor of a torpedo attack begging for water in a lifeboat.
1942 -Laurence E. Allen, for
war reporting, especially stories on the bombing of the British
aircraft carrier Illustrious.
1939 -Louis P. Lochner, for
news reports from Nazi Germany.
1937 -Howard W. Blakeslee, for
reporting on the Harvard Tercentenary celebration.
1933 -Francis A. Jamieson, for
a news beat on finding the body of the kidnapped Lindbergh
baby.
1922 -Kirke L. Simpson, for a series of stories
on the burial of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.
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