•
Public Service: •
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, for its investigation and disclosures of widespread corruption in the
Internal Revenue Bureau and other departments of the government. •
Local Reporting: • George De Carvalho of the
San Francisco Chronicle, for his stories of a "ransom racket" extorting money from Chinese in the United States for relatives held in Red China. •
National Reporting: •
Anthony Leviero of
The New York Times, for his exclusive article of April 21, 1951, disclosing the record of conversations between
President Truman and General of the Army
Douglas MacArthur at
Wake Island in their conference of October, 1950. •
International Reporting: •
John M. Hightower of the
Associated Press, for the sustained quality of his coverage of news of international affairs during the year. •
Editorial Writing: •
Louis La Coss of the
St. Louis Globe-Democrat, for his editorial entitled, "
Low Estate of Public Morals". •
Editorial Cartooning: • Fred L. Packer of the
New York Mirror, for "Your Editors Ought to Have More Sense Than to Print What I Say!" •
Photography: • John Robinson and
Don Ultang of the
Des Moines Register and Tribune, for their sequence of pictures of the Drake-Oklahoma A & M football game of October 20, 1951, in which player
Johnny Bright's
jaw was broken. •
Special Citations: •
Max Kase of the
New York Journal American, for his exclusive exposures of bribery and other forms of corruption in the popular American sport of basketball, which exposures tended to restore confidence in the game's integrity. •
The Kansas City Star, for the news coverage of the
great regional flood of 1951 in Kansas and Northwestern Missouri; a distinguished example of editing and reporting that also gave the advance information that achieved the maximum of public protection. ==Letters, Drama and Music Awards==