The New York Times reported on Monday to report four Pulitzer Awards with the pictures of Donald J Trump to kill the United States in the Sudan Civil War and Afghanistan war in Afghanistan.
The Times also won a non -profit newslet called Baltimore banner to investigate the deadly OPW crisis.
New York won three awards, comments and features for photography as well as for its investigator podcast, “In the Dark”.
Beginning in 1917, the Pulitzer Awards presents the University of Columbia every year for journalism and superiority in letters. Propabolika won the award for the public service, which was considered the most prestigious among Pulitzers for the coverage of state abortion ban across the country. These journalists used death certificates and hospital records to uncover how the mothers were directly caused by the ban on the ban on the ban on the ban of Kabitha Surana, Lizi Pressure and Casandra Jaramilo and photographer Stacy Cranitz.
Washington Post staff won the award for breaking news reporting to promote Mr. Trump at Batler, Pa in July, Pa, which incorporated audio and visual forensic with the Traditional Test Report.
Before the Washington Post Ann Telnes was given a prize for illustrated reports and commentary. Cartoonist Mrs. Telnes resigned from the post in January, after rejecting a cartoon by portraying the owner of the publishing Jeff Bezos. The Pulitzer Board provides the comments to “skill, creativity on strong person and organization – and a fearlessness that departed from the news agency after 17 years”. “
Reuters was awarded the investigating report for “Fentannell Express”, which is a series of drug trade behind the US OPW crisis. Investigations showed how easy it was to get the chemicals needed to make Fentanel from China and how packages were avoided in Mexico and the United States.
The National Reporting Award Wall Street Journal workers went to the world’s richest man for the coverage of Elon Mask. Mr. Kastur’s influence on conservative politics on the coverage, illegal drug use and Russian President Vladimir V. The details of the conversation with Putin were published.
New York Times Azam Ahmed, Christina Goldboum and Matthew Eycins won the explanatory report to investigate the consequences of the Afghan war and what the United States was left behind. The report revealed a regulatory campaign for forcibly disappearing by an Afghan General -backed Afghan General.
Diclan Walsh and New York Times workers have won the award for their international report for their ongoing civil war on Sudan’s ongoing Civil War, including the role of the United Arab Emirates in the conflict and its destructive human number.
New York Times Doug Mills won the Breaking News Photography Award for his images last year trying to assassinate President Trump, where a bullet was seen.
Baltimore banner and New York Times Allisa Zhu, Nick Theme and Jessica Galgon were awarded a local report for an investigating series, which showed the perfect scale of the Fentannell crisis in Baltimore and found that the city was the overdose capital of the United States of America. This is the first Pulitzer Award for the banner, it is a non -profit Newsroom that started in 2022. The work was done in collaboration with the New York Times Local Investigation FellowshipThe
The award of the feature went to Mark Warren, who contributed to Eskire Magazine, “Alabama priest for the right -wing media and death: an American tragedy”, which a website tested the death of Baptist priest in a small town after its online life was published.
Mosab Abu Toha, who contributed to New York, won the comment award for a deeply personal and reporting article in the Gaza Valley during the continued war with Israel.
Moys Saman, who contributed to New York, was awarded the Feature Photography Award for his images in Syria after the collapse of the Assad government with a black-and-white photo of the notorious Sendaya detention facilities. New York workers were awarded the Audio Reporting Award for “In the Dark” Podcast, which investigated the killing of 24 Iraqi civilians by US Marines during the Iraq war.
Alexandra Langer, author of Bloomberg Citilab, was awarded criticism for his writing about public space and how the architectural and design community could develop.
Houston Chronicle Raj Mankad, Sharon Steinman, Lisa Falkenberg and Leya Bincovitz were awarded editorial writing for a series of hazardous rail crossings and a series of blocked interviews in the city, demanding action from lawyers.
The Arts and Letters’ Award was awarded the Persival Evereet’s “James” fiction award. “James” re -imagines the story of Holibiri Finn from the point of view of the slave.
Branden Jacobs-Zenkins’ “Purpose” won the drama award. The drama follows a count in a prominent black family related to the civil rights movement.
The award of history is “Native Nations: North America in a Millennium”, and Cathlene Duwal, and “Cambimi: Harriet Tubman, Black River Raid and Black Freedom during Civil War”, ADA L Fields-Black.
The biographical award went to Author Jason Roberts “Every living thing: The Great and Deadly Race to All Life”, which is a dual biography of eighteenth-century scientist Carl Linness and Georges-Lewis de Buffon and their efforts to auditory.
Tessa Halsa’s “Feeding Ghosts: A Graphic Memorial” was awarded autobiography. The book depicts three generations of the author’s Chinese family history and transmitted trauma. Benjasin Nathans “for the success of our hopeless reason: many lives of the Soviet dissatisfied movement,” General Non -Fiction Award was given.
The Poetry Award went to “new and selected poems”, Mary Howo, a compilation of more than four decades that observe daily life. Susie Ibra’s “Sky Islands”, the music was awarded. This essay, inspired by the Rain Forest of the Philippines Luzon, was premiere at the Asia Society in New York in July.
The Pulitzer Award Board also covered the civil rights movement and gave a special quote to Chak Stone, a leading black journalist who was a legendary columnist from the Philadelphia Daily News. The National Association of Mr. Stone Black Journalists also co-founded. He died at 89 in 2014.
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