2001 Ian Johnson The Wall Street Journal. For his revealing stories from China about victims of the government's often brutal suppression of the Falun Gong movement and the implications of that campaign for the future. (With Entry Form; Nominating Letter)., 2001 Box 66 Highlight 2001 Ian Johnson The Wall Street Journal. For his revealing stories from China about victims of the Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.14: International Reporting, 1948-2011
1990 Tamar Stieber Albuquerque Journal. For persistent reporting that linked a rare blood disorder to an over-the-counter dietary supplement, L-Tryptophan, and led to a national recall of the product. (With Entry Form; Nominating Letter; Biography)., 1990 Box 106 Highlight 1990 Tamar Stieber Albuquerque Journal. For persistent reporting that linked a rare blood disorder Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.26: Specialized Reporting, 1985-1990
1954 Virginia Margaret Schau (Mrs. Walter M. Schau), an amateur from San Anselmo, CA. For snapping a thrilling rescue at Redding, Calif., the picture being published in The Akron (OH) Beacon Journal and other newspapers and nationally distributed by the AP., 1954 Box 23, Folder 1 Highlight a thrilling rescue at Redding, Calif., the picture being published in The Akron (OH) Beacon Journal Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.23: Photography, 1942-1967
1971 Winston-Salem (NC) Journal and Sentinel . For coverage of environmental problems, as exemplified by a successful campaign to block strip mining operation that would have caused irreparable damage to the hill country of northwest North Carolina. (With Entry Form; Nominating Letter). Box 85 Highlight 1971 Winston-Salem (NC) Journal and Sentinel . For coverage of environmental problems, as Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.24: Public Service, 1917-2011
1997 Staff of The Wall Street Journal. For its coverage of the struggle against AIDS in all of its aspects, the human, the scientific and the business, in light of promising treatments for the disease. (With Entry Form; Nominating Letter; List of Articles), 1997 Box 133 Highlight 1997 Staff of The Wall Street Journal. For its coverage of the struggle against AIDS in all of its Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.21: National Reporting, 1948-2011
1988 Daniel Hertzberg and James B. Stewart The Wall Street Journal. For their stories about an investment banker charged with insider trading and the critical day that followed the October 19, 1987 stock market crash. (With Entry Forms; Nominating Letter; Photographs; Biographies., 1988, October 19, 1987 Box 12, Folder 14 Highlight 1988 Daniel Hertzberg and James B. Stewart The Wall Street Journal. For their stories about an Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.9: Explanatory Journalism, 1985-1997
2002 Staff of The Wall Street Journal. For its comprehensive and insightful coverage, executed under the most difficult circumstances, of the terrorist attack on New York City, which recounted the day's events and their implications for the future. (With Entry Form; Nominating Letter; List of Articles), 2002 Box 113 Highlight 2002 Staff of The Wall Street Journal. For its comprehensive and insightful coverage, executed Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.3: Breaking News Reporting, 1998-2010
2010 Raquel Rutledge Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. For her penetrating reports on the fraud and abuse in a child-care program for low-wage working parents that fleeced taxpayers and imperiled children, resulting in a state and federal crackdown on providers. (With Entry Form; Nominating Letter), 2010 Box 141, Folder 2 Highlight 2010 Raquel Rutledge Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. For her penetrating reports on the fraud and abuse Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.18: Local Reporting, 1948-1952 2007-present, 1948-1952
1955 Anthony Lewis of Washington Daily News. For publishing a series of articles which were adjudged directly responsible for clearing Abraham Chasanow, an employee of the U.S. Navy Department, and bringing about his restoration to duty with an acknowledgment by the Navy Department that it had committed a grave injustice in dismissing him as a security risk. Mr. Lewis received the full support of his newspaper in championing an American citizen, without adequate funds or resources for his defense, against an unjust act by a government department. This is in the best tradition of American journalism. (With Entry Form; Nominating Letter)., 1955 Box 68 Highlight an unjust act by a government department. This is in the best tradition of American journalism. (With Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.21: National Reporting, 1948-2011
1980 Jahangir Razmi of Ettela'at, Iran. For the photograph "Firing Squad in Iran" that was distributed by United Press International. The photographer remained anonymous until his identity was revealed, with his consent, by Josh Prager of The Wall Street Journal in 2006. (Photocopy of picture of Monir Nahid holding a 1979 Paris Match magazine with her son, Farhad Rashisian (1988). The original photograph is framed and hanging in the Pulitzer Prize Committee Office., 1980, 1979 Box 76, Folder 1 Highlight , with his consent, by Josh Prager of The Wall Street Journal in 2006. (Photocopy of picture of Monir Rare Book & Manuscript Library Pulitzer Prizes collection, 1917-2017Series II: JournalismSubseries II.27: Spot News Photography, 1968-1999