Group Award
In place of an individual Pulitzer Prize for foreign correspondence, the Trustees approved the recommendation of the Advisory Board that a bronze plaque or scroll be designed and executed to recognize and symbolize the public services and the individual achievements of American news reporters in the war zones of Europe, Asia and Africa from the beginning of the present war.
The Jury
The Jury
Theodore E. Bernstein
Robert E. Garst
Winners in Correspondence
Otto D. Tolischus
For his dispatches from Berlin.
Louis P. Lochner
For his dispatches from Berlin
Arthur Krock
For his exclusive authorized interview with the President of the United States on February 27, 1937.
Anne O'Hare McCormick
For her dispatches and feature articles from Europe in 1936.
1941 Prize Winners
No author named
For the public educational value of its foreign news report, exemplified by its scope, by excellence of writing and presentation and supplementary background information, illustration, and interpretation.
Jacob Burck
For "If I Should Die Before I Wake."