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Encyclopedia > 1967 Pulitzer Prize
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1967 Pulitzer Prize - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (316 words)
The following are the Pulitzer Prizes for 1967.
The Milwaukee Journal, for its successful campaign to stiffen the law against water pollution in Wisconsin, a notable advance in the national effort for the conservation of natural resources.
John Hughes of the Christian Science Monitor, For his thorough reporting of the attempted Communist coup in Indonesia in 1965 and the purge that followed in 1965-66.
Joseph Pulitzer (1158 words)
Pulitzer was the founder of the Pulitzer Prizes.
Joseph Pulitzer was born in Makó, Hungary, as the eldest son of Hungarian Jews.
In the journalism the Prizes were awarded in the 1920s for exposing the practices of the Ku Klux Klan, revealing the dehumanizing prison conditions and exploring the problems of labor during a national coal strike.
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