Thirty-two works by Nieman Pulitzer winners that tackle abuses of power


John Hughes, NF ’62
International Reporting, 1967 · The Christian Science Monitor
Hughes, the paper’s East Asia correspondent, covered the attempted Communist coup in Indonesia in 1965 and the purge that followed.
Mary Jordan, NF ’90
International Reporting, 2003 · The Washington Post
Jordan and her husband Kevin Sullivan, co-bureau chiefs of the Post’s Mexico City bureau, were recognized for their exposure of the treacherous and unjust conditions in the Mexico criminal justice system.



Anthony Lewis, NF ’57
National Reporting, 1955 · Washington Daily News
Lewis wrote a series of articles about Abraham Chasanow, a civilian employee of the U.S. Navy who—deemed a security risk for allegedly having communist associations—was suspended from his job for 14 months. The articles helped clear Chasanow’s name and got him reinstated to his job. The Navy ultimately acknowledged that it committed a grave injustice and apologized to Chasanow.


Shirley Christian, NF ’74
International Reporting, 1981 · The Miami Herald
Christian was recognized for her dispatches from Central America. Her specialty was reporting on the human dimensions of political strife.
Hedrick Smith, NF ’70
Public Service, 1972 · The New York Times
Smith recalls his time as a member of the team at the Times that worked on the Pentagon Papers.



Daniel R. Biddle, NF ’90
H.G. Bissinger, NF ’86
Fredric N. Tulsky, NF ’89 Investigative Reporting, 1987 · The Philadelphia Inquirer Biddle, Bissinger, and Tulsky’s series on the Philadelphia court system documented an array of incompetence, politicking, and other transgressions, leading to federal and state investigations.
H.G. Bissinger, NF ’86
Fredric N. Tulsky, NF ’89 Investigative Reporting, 1987 · The Philadelphia Inquirer Biddle, Bissinger, and Tulsky’s series on the Philadelphia court system documented an array of incompetence, politicking, and other transgressions, leading to federal and state investigations.
Robert A. Caro, NF ’66
Biography, 2003 · “Master of the Senate”
In “Master of the Senate,” the third installment of “The Years of Lyndon Johnson” biography (of which there are currently four published volumes; a fifth is expected), Caro explores Johnson’s rapid ascent in the U.S. Senate. Interwoven into the narrative is an examination of how legislative power works in America, details Caro gleaned from years of research that included examining thousands of documents and interviewing hundreds of sources, from senators to coatroom clerks.

Brent Walth, NF ’06 Public Service, 2001 · The Oregonian Read and Walth were members of a team that conducted a meticulous examination of abuses and systematic problems, including harsh treatment of foreign nationals, within the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. Their work prompted reforms.
Madeleine Blais, NF ’86
Feature Writing, 1980 · The Miami Herald
In the 1970s World War I veteran Edward Zepp frequently showed up in Florida newsrooms, trying to interest a reporter in his battle to get his military release status upgraded from “general discharge” to “honorable discharge.” For a story in the Herald’s Sunday magazine, Blais rode the train with the 83-year-old Zepp from Deerfield Beach, Florida to Washington, D.C., where he had a hearing at the Pentagon.

Gene S. Graham, NF ’63 National Reporting, 1962 · The Nashville Tennessean Caldwell and Graham spent half a dozen years reporting on the undercover deal between United Mine Workers president John L. Lewis and billionaire financier Cyrus Eaton, who had major interests in the coal industry.




Cynthia Tucker, NF ’89
Commentary, 2007 · The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Tucker was recognized for her columns exhibiting a strong sense of morality and connection to the community, such as the one excerpted here about former Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell, who was the target of a seven-year federal investigation into corruption during his time in office. Campbell was convicted on three counts of tax evasion and spent more than two years in prison.
Gilbert M. Gaul, NF ’83
Public Service, 1990 · The Philadelphia Inquirer
Gaul’s five-part investigative series “The Blood Brokers” exposed safety issues and lax federal regulation of the blood industry.

Ken Armstrong, NF ’01
Explanatory Reporting, 2016 · The Marshall Project
For “An Unbelievable Story of Rape,” Armstrong and ProPublica’s T. Christian Miller investigated the case of an 18-year-old woman who said she was raped at knifepoint, then said she made it all up. In the process, the pair exposed law enforcement’s systematic failures to understand the trauma victims endure. The rapist is now serving time for raping the woman and four others.
William Lambert, NF ’60
Wallace Turner, NF ’59 Local Reporting, 1957 · The Oregonian Lambert and Turner’s stories about efforts on the part of union and underworld figures to wrest control from municipal officials in Portland, Oregon helped spur investigations into organized crime in cities across the country.
Wallace Turner, NF ’59 Local Reporting, 1957 · The Oregonian Lambert and Turner’s stories about efforts on the part of union and underworld figures to wrest control from municipal officials in Portland, Oregon helped spur investigations into organized crime in cities across the country.

