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    The Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing has been awarded since 1917 for distinguished editorial writing, the test of excellence being clearness of style, moral purpose, sound reasoning, and power to influence public opinion in what the writer conceives to be the right direction. List of winners:
      1917: no author named, The New York Times, for an editorial article on the first anniversary of the sinking of the Lusitania.
      1919: no award given
      1921: no award given
      1924: no author named, Boston Herald, for an editorial entitled "Who Made Coolidge?"
      1930: no award given
      1932: no award given
      1935: no award given
      1954: Don Murray, Boston Herald, for a series of editorials on the "New Look" in National Defense which won wide attention for their analysis of changes in American military policy.
      1955: Royce Howes, Detroit Free Press, for an editorial on "The Cause of a Strike," impartially and clearly analyzing the responsibility of both labor and management for a local union's unauthorized strike in July, 1954, which rendered 45,000 Chrysler Corporation workers idle and unpaid. By pointing out how and why the parent United Automobile Workers' Union ordered the local strike called off and stating that management let dissatisfaction get out of hand, the editorial made a notable contribution to public understanding of the whole program of the respective responsibilities and relationships of labor and management in this field.
      1957: Buford Boone of Tuscaloosa News, for his fearless and reasoned editorials in a community inflamed by a segregation issue, an outstanding example of his work being the editorial entitled, "What a Price for Peace," published on February 7, 1956.
      1959: Ralph McGill, Atlanta Constitution, for his distinguished editorial writing during 1958 as exemplified in his editorial "A Church, A School...." and for his long, courageous and effective editorial leadership.
      1981: no award given
      1983: Editorial Board, Miami Herald, for its campaign against the detention of illegal Haitian immigrants by federal officials.
      1993: no award given
      2000: John C. Bersia, Orlando Sentinel, for his passionate editorial campaign attacking predatory lending practices in the state, which prompted changes in local lending regulations.
      2005: Tom Philp of Sacramento Bee, for his deeply researched editorials on reclaiming California’s flooded Hetch Hetchy Valley that stirred action.



        Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing
     
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