Event class: news, award, reporting, coverage, war, correspondent, covered, press, awards, national

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Events with high posterior probability

Carlton Sherwood Sherwood, John M. Hanchette, and William F. Schmick, were responsible for the Gannett News Service winning the 1980 Pulitzer Prize public service gold medal.
John A. KellyIn 1970, he joined WBZ (AM) News, where he significantly contributed as investigative reporter for several years, earning awards for excellence in reporting from United Press International.
Keith MorrisonMorrison returned to NBC in 1995, and since then has covered a wide variety of stories on Dateline, from 9/11 to Columbine, from the peace process in the Middle East to tsunamis in the far east, from wars fought by child soldiers in Africa to the medical miracles that keep other children alive, from the struggle to'' Free Willy'', to the battle waged over the fate of Elian Gonzales.
Sanjay Gupta In 2003, Gupta traveled to Iraq to cover the medical aspects of 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Liz MarlantesIn 2004, Marlantes, along with her colleague, Abraham McLaughlin, won the Press Club's National Headliner Award for the series,'' Vox Americana'', about American attitudes prior to the Iraq War.
Jonathan Klein (CNN)In 1988, Klein joined the fledgling prime-time magazine series 48 Hours as a field producer, eventually winning an Emmy Award for coverage of Hurricane Hugo and a Peabody Award for an hour he produced on the pro-life movement.
Henri HuetHe went on to work for United Press International (UPI), later transferring to AP in 1965, covering the Vietnam War.
James BrolanJust one month before he was killed Iraq, Brolan, as part the CBS News team that covered the 2005 Kashmir earthquake, received the 2005 Overseas Press Club Award -- the David Kaplan Award for Best Television Spot News Reporting From Abroad.
Rudi BakhtiarBakhtiar joined FOX News Channel (FNC) as a general correspondent in January 2006, reporting on major international news stories such as the Ahmadinejad - al-Maliki summit in Tehran, in September 2006, and the trial and execution of Saddam Hussein, in December of the same year.
Pete MullerIn 2011, Muller was named'' Wire Photographer of the Year'' by TIME Magazine for his contributions to the Associated Press from Sudan and Central Africa.
Richard Ellis (photographer)In 1984, he joined Reuters, the British based global news service, as a staff photographer in Hong Kong covering the People's Power Revolution in the Philippines and dozens of stories throughout Asia.
Ruth MontgomeryIn 1950, while a reporter for the New York Daily News, she was voted president of the Women's National Press Club.
Goran TomasevicDuring NATO's three-month bombardment of Serbia in 1999, Tomasevic was the only photographer working for foreign press to spend the duration of the conflict in Kosovo.
Richard Ben CramerHe won a Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 1979 for his coverage of the Middle East.
Terry A. AndersonThen he joined the Associated Press, serving in Asia and Africa before being assigned to Lebanon as the chief Mideast correspondent in 1983.
Lisa Howard (reporter)She covered the 1960 Democratic National Convention and became the first American reporter to interview Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Rodney Cocks Cocks was named the Victorian Australian of the Year for 2005 and one of eight finalists for the Australian of the Year 2005 for his humanitarian service in East Timor, Iraq and Afghanistan, and for his actions following the Bali and Baghdad terrorist attacks.
Mike TheissIn 2006, Theiss was nominated for an Emmy and won an award from (PDN) Photo District News and (NPPA) National Press Photographers Association for best news coverage of the year.
Jackie KablerAmong the major stories Kabler covered for GMTV were the Soham murders, interviewing Ian Huntley on live television days before his arrest for the murders, the impeachment of President Clinton, the Washington, D. C. sniper attacks, the 2004 Athens Olympics, the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
Martin Thomas Manton The 1940 Pulitzer Prize for reporting was awarded to S. Burton Heath for his coverage of the Manton trial for the New York World-Telegram.
Martin AgronskyIn 1961 he received the Alfred I. DuPont Award for his reporting on the trial of Adolph Eichmann, also while at NBC.
Anthony Mason (journalist)He contributed to the 1991 Soviet coup attempt, which was award-winning coverage.
Jo JohnsonHe has received awards from a range of organisations, including most recently the Foreign Press Association, the Society of Publishers in Asia and The Indian Express's 2009 Excellence in Journalism Awards.
Pete MullerIn April 2012, Muller was awarded the John Faber Award for Best Photographic Reporting for a Newspaper or News Wire by the Overseas Press Club of America.
Basildon PetaBasildon Peta (c. 1972 -) was the second journalist ever to be awarded the Media Institute of Southern Africa's Press Freedom Award for his reporting in Zimbabwe.
Paul SalopekIn 1998 he won the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting for two articles profiling the Human Genome Diversity Project.
David Hume KennerlySincerely, Jerry Ford'' After the White House, Kennerly went back on contract for Time Magazine, where he covered some of the biggest stories of the 1970s and 1980s for them ; Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's trip to Israel, the horror of Jonestown, exclusive photos of President Ronald Reagan and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's first meeting in Geneva in 1985, the Fireside Summit, and many other stories around the world.
Harold DowDow reported on the return of POWs from Vietnam and the kidnapping of Patricia Hearst, with whom he had an exclusive interview in December 1976.
Aaron GlantzWhen Saddam Hussein was overthrown on April 9, 2003, Glantz traveled to Baghdad as an unemembedded journalist to cover Iraqi experience of U. S. occupation.
Jonathan M. KatzHe was the only full-time American news correspondent stationed in Haiti during the January 2010 earthquake.
Sharanjit LeylThere she presented its main three-hour newscast,'' On The Money Asia'', reporting on breaking financial stories as well as major news events such as the US-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003.
Max FrankelHe won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973 for coverage of Richard Nixon's trip to the People's Republic of China.
Phil BronsteinIn 1986, he was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for his reporting on the fall of Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
Max FosterIn April 2009, Foster was promoted to primetime on CNN International where he anchored Connect the World and Quest Means Business.
Ernesto PagliaThe journalist left again for London in 2000, for another 2 year long period as international correspondent, when he covered the Palestinian Intifada and the American invasion of Afghanistan.
Jim McKayHe was on air for fourteen hours without a break, After an unsuccessful rescue attempt of the athletes held hostage, at 3:24 AM German Time, McKay came on the air with this statement : Although McKay received numerous accolades for his reporting of the Munich hostage crisis (including two Emmy Award s, one for sports and one for news reporting), he stated in a 2003 HBO documentary about his life and career that he was most proud of a telegram he received from Walter Cronkite praising his work he received the day after the massacre.
Tyler HicksHe shared the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting with a team from The New York Times recognized for coverage of Pakistan and Afghanistan, where he works frequently in the field, focusing on the ground-level experience.
Jeremy ScahillHe was among the few Western reporters to gain access to the Abu Ghraib prison when Saddam Hussein was in power and his story on the emptying of that prison won a 2003 Golden Reel Award from The National Federation of Community Broadcasters.
Anne NivatAnne Nivat (June 18, 1969) is an award-winning French journalist and war correspondent who has covered conflicts in Chechnya, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
Thomas Roberts (television journalist)He received an Emmy Award nomination in 2002 for his investigation into a local puppy mill that was eventually shut down due to his reporting, according to his profile at CNN.
Norah O'Donnell O'Donnell won the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Breaking News Coverage for the Dateline NBC story'' DC In Crisis,'' which aired on the night of September 11, 2001.
Richard WolffeWolffe joined Newsweek in November 2002 as diplomatic correspondent, covering foreign policy and international affairs.
Bob HerbertHe also chaired the Pulitzer Prize jury for spot news reporting in 1993.
David ChaterIn April 2003, during the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Chater reported from the streets of Baghdad before and during the arrival of US forces to the city, stayed throughout Operation Shock and Awe and also covered the Battle for Faluja.
Gregg JarrettWhile at Fox News, Jarrett covered the Iraq War as a correspondent based in Baghdad from May through July, 2003.
Gary ScullyHis coverage of a siege in Rose Bay in 1979 earned him a coveted Walkley Award.
Murray FromsonHe and his CBS colleagues were awarded two Overseas Press Club awards for their reporting on the fall of Saigon in 1975.
Bernard RedmontHe received the 1973 Overseas Press Club of America (OPC) Award for Best Radio Reporting from Abroad for his Vietnam Peace Talks story.
Joyce KulhawikShe also received a 2001 Boston/New England Emmy Award for WBZ-TV's Outstanding Team Coverage of Ground Zero.
R. W. Apple, Jr.Timothy Crouse profiled Apple in his book The Boys on the Bus about journalists covering the 1972 presidential campaign.
Scott NearingIn 1921 Nearing was, along with his colleague Louis Lochner, a co-founder of a forerunner of the Federated Press, a news service which sent out domestic and international news releases and picture mats five days a week to the labor and radical press in America.
William Tuohy In addition to the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting, Tuohy won the Overseas Press Club award for his reporting from the Middle East in 1970.
Martin BallardBallard was on-air when the 9/11 terrorist attacks took place and he has covered that and other tragic news stories including the London bombings in 2005, breaking the news in Leicestershire of the death of Jill Dando and was on-air during the Falklands crisis and both Gulf war's.
William L. ShirerOriginally a foreign correspondent for the Chicago Tribune and the International News Service, Shirer was the first reporter hired by Edward R. Murrow for what would become a CBS radio team of journalists, and he became known for his broadcasts from Berlin, from the rise of the Nazi dictatorship through the first year of World War II (1940).
James BrolanDuring the invasion of Iraq in 2003, Brolan worked with Bob Woodruff of ABC News.
Edgar SavisaarAlso his legendary conflicts with journalists and mass media started as early as 1988.
Satcha PrettoIn May 2008, one of her investigative reports was among the finalists for the Livingston Awards for journalists under 35.
Pete Williams (journalist)Williams became a correspondent for NBC News in 1993 after leaving the Defense Department ; his main areas of news coverage for NBC include the Department of Justice and Supreme Court.
Juliette KayyemShe was nominated for a 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary'' for her colorful, well reported columns on an array of issues, from women in combat to oil drilling in Alaska.''
Dorothy Bar-AdonFrom her immigration to Palestine in 1933 until her death she worked as a journalist for The Palestine Post (later to become The Jerusalem Post), covering a wide range of international and domestic issues.
Nathaniel BorensteinHe received the New York University Olive Branch Award for writing about peace in 1990, for an essay about his brief experience as a NATO consultant.
Martine DennisLater she joined BBC World Service Radio at the United Nations, New York in 1985, covering the Iran and Iraq war and interviewing many world leaders.
Larry MendteHe received a national Edward R. Murrow Award in 2008 for a report he wrote and produced about a soldier from Delaware, Stephen McGowan, who died in Iraq.
John M. Crewdson Crewdson was the recipient of the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting'' For his coverage of illegal aliens and immigration'' while writing for the New York Times.
Peter LaBarbera LaBarbera was a reporter for The Washington Times until 1990 and covered stories such as Communism in Central America, then became a freelance reporter in Nicaragua.
Matthew V. StorinHe served as Asian bureau chief from 1974 -- 75, where his reportage included covering the last stages of the war in Vietnam and Cambodia.
Joby WarrickThe Overseas Press Club of America gave him their 2003 award for best newspaper interpretation of international affairs for his articles about proliferation threats.
Guy Le QuerrecAfter having served in the army, he became a professional in 1967, and then worked as a picture editor and photographer for Jeune Afrique magazine, working in francophone Africa, including Chad, Cameroon, Niger, and Central African Republic.
Richard J. BurkeDuring his 28-year career at the Buffalo newspaper he received numerous awards, including the New York State Associated Press Association Award for a series of articles entitled Free Wheeling in WNY about his 1972 bicycle tour of Western New York.
Bill Downs In 1946, Downs covered the nuclear tests at Bikini Atoll for CBS ; some of his reporting was carried across all networks.
Bryan MonroeWhile there, he helped lead the team of journalists who won the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for coverage of Hurricane Katrina.
Fergal KeaneHe has won the James Cameron Prize for war reporting, the Edward R. Murrow Award for foreign reporting and the 1995 Orwell Prize for his book Season of Blood.
John F. BurnsBurns was awarded the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting citing'' his courageous and thorough coverage of the destruction of Sarajevo and the barbarous killings in the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina''.
Jessica SohoIn 1994, she received the Grand Prize from the Asia Pacific Broadcasting Union for her riveting coverage of a breaking news story.
Shaun RobinsonRobinson later joined newly formed KEYE-TV in Austin, Texas in 1995, as a reporter and anchor where her series'' Profiles in Power'', focusing on women who made an impact in Central Texas, earned Robinson an American Women in Radio and Television award.
Carl BernsteinFor his role in breaking the scandal, Bernstein received many awards, and his work helped earn the Post a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 1973.
Errol BarnettBarnett also incorporated social media like CNN's iReport s into coverage of breaking news events including the contested Iran elections and the offensive between Israel and Gaza in early 2009.
Richard ReadIn 2008, Read was a member of a team named as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting.
Edward WongHe shared a 2010 Feature Writing prize from the Society of Publishers in Asia for the Times' 10-part Uneasy Engagement series, about China's growing influence in the world.
Robert PenfoldIn 1991, he was one of the first reporters into Kuwait City in the First Gulf War.
Peter JenningsIn 1972, Jennings covered his first major breaking news story, the Munich Olympics massacre of Israeli athletes by Black September.
Herta HerzogAt the Radio Project, she was part of the team that conducted the groundbreaking research on Orson Welles' 1938 broadcast of The War of the Worlds in the study The Invasion from Mars.
Andrew Wilson (presenter)He became Sky News U. S. Correspondent in 2004, reporting from locations across the United States on the run-up to, and outcome of, the US Presidential Election.
Joris LuyendijkHis book Het zijn net mensen (2006, They are just like people) is a report of his experiences as a news correspondent in the Middle East, and quickly became a bestseller in the Netherlands.
Saadallah WannousIn 1982, and in the aftermath of the Israeli siege and invasion of Beirut, he lived through a period of shock, ceasing to write for a decade.
Colin BrazierBrazier then became Sky News' Europe Correspondent' following a stint in Pakistan and Afghanistan, where his coverage, jointly undertaken with colleague David Chater, won a Gold Medal at the 2003 New York TV Festival.
Christopher Morris (news presenter)During a career in broadcasting and journalism spanning 60 years he has reported from 120 countries, including 16 wars, and nearly lost his life in a series of minefield explosions while covering the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974.
Praveen SwamiIn 2006, he also won the Indian Express - Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism prize for'' for his extensive and in-depth reports on terrorism in Jammu & Kashmir, and investigations into the merchants of terror.''
Megyn KellyWhile at WJLA-TV she covered significant national and local events including major national events such as the 2004 presidential election and the Beltway sniper attacks.
Michael IsikoffHis online column with fellow journalist Mark Hosenball, `` Terror Watch,'' won the 2005 award from the Society of Professional Journalists for best investigative reporting online.
Rye BarcottABC World News with Charles Gibson covered his work in Kibera and his military service in Iraq and named him a Person of the Week and a 2006 Person of the Year.
Walker EvansIn 1933, he photographed in Cuba on assignment for the publisher of Carleton Beals' then-forthcoming book, The Crime of Cuba, photographing the revolt against the dictator Gerardo Machado.
Joseph Cookman Throughout his career, Cookman covered some of the most important stories around the country including : Additionally, Cookman was also present, witnessed and reported on the 1937 execution of second degree murder convict Eva Coo at Sing Sing Prison.
Glenn GreenwaldHis NSA reporting has won numerous awards around the world, including top investigative journalism prizes from the 2013 Online Journalism Awards, the Esso Award for Excellence in Reporting in Brazil for his articles in O Globo on NSA mass surveillance of Brazilians (becoming the first foreigner to win the award), the 2013 Libertad de Expresion Internacional award from Argentinian magazine Perfil, and the 2013 Pioneer Award from the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Dmitry KholodovReaction abroad was muted, apart from professional media monitors and human rights organisations, and after December 1994 his killing was overshadowed by the onset of the first Chechen war.
Pierre-Emmanuel Le GoffIn 2008, he continued his activities director including working for the webtv Council of Val de Marne and leading negotiations for the sale of previously unseen footage of the documentary'' John Rambo McCain, the great illusion'' of Daniel Roussel (war correspondent Log humanity during the Vietnam War) in the Journal of 20 Hours of France 2.
David L. Cunningham Cunningham directed the ABC miniseries The Path to 9/11, which dramatized terrorist activities and U. S. government responses from the 1993 World Trade Center bombing through the events of 9/11.
Cal PerryInitially an embedded producer in 2003, Perry remained in the country and finished as the network's lead correspondent, based in Baghdad, during which time he reported from nearly all of Iraq's provinces.
Con CoughlinBecoming a foreign correspondent, his first big assignment was to cover the American invasion of Grenada in late 1983.
Charles Sabine In 1989 Sabine won the News and Documentary Emmy Award for coverage of the Romanian Revolution.