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Pulitzer Prize for Public Service
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The Pulitzer Prize for Public Service is one of the fourteen American Pulitzer Prizes, awarded annually for journalism, recognizing distinguished public service through the use of journalistic resources, including editorials, cartoons, photographs, and online material. It was established in 1917 as one of the original Pulitzers and is the only prize to award a gold medal, being the most prestigious one for a newspaper to win. The Public Service prize has been awarded 96 times in its first 97 years to 2013, with four years having no award given, and two prizes in 1967, 1990, and 2006.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Islamic Terrorism
- 3.War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
- 4.Torture
- 5.September 11 attacks
- 6.Oman Foreign Policy
countries
- 1.Yemen
- 2.Haiti
- 3.Egypt
- 4.Cuba
- 5.China
- 6.Afghanistan
- 7.Israel
- 8.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 9.Oman
- 10.Qatar
- 11.Russian Federation
- 12.Rwanda
organizations
- 1.Hamas
- 2.Taliban
- 3.US National Security Council
- 4.US State Department
- 5.Warner Bros Discovery Company
- 6.White House
- 7.al-Qaeda
- 8.Asia Consultancy Group
- 9.Cable News Network, Inc
- 10.Federal Bureau of Investigation
- 11.Pentagon
persons
- 1.Donald Trump
- 2.George Glezmann
- 3.Alex Brandon
- 4.Alistair Dawber
- 5.Arlette Saenz
- 6.Austin Tice
- 7.Ayman Al-Zawahri
- 8.Carol Rosenberg
- 9.Jack Blackburn
- 10.Jake Sullivan
- 11.Julian Barnes
- 12.Justin Webb