When Rowe was named executive editor at
The Virginian-Pilot and
The Ledger-Star at age 36, she was one of only three women in the U.S. in the top position at a metro newspaper. Previously, in quick succession in her late 20s and early 30s, she was a reporter, section editor, city editor, assistant managing editor and then managing editor of
The Ledger-Star. In 1982,
The Ledger-Star merged newsrooms with its sister newspaper,
The Virginian-Pilot, and Rowe was named one of two managing editors of the combined newspaper, the largest daily in Virginia at that time. In 1984, she was named executive editor and vice president of the combined newspaper, which had a daily circulation of 225,000. Under her leadership, the newspaper won the
Pulitzer Prize for General News Reporting in 1985, its first in 25 years. She was editor of
The Oregonian in
Portland, Oregon, from 1993 until her retirement in January 2010. Under her leadership the newspaper won five Pulitzer Prizes, including the Public Service Prize in 2001 for a project led by
Amanda Bennett that documented systemic problems within the
Immigration and Naturalization Service. Additional Pulitzers received by the publication during Rowe's editorship include the 1999 Explanatory Reporting Prize, the 2001 Feature Writing Prize, the 2006 Editorial Writing Prize and the 2007 Breaking News Reporting Prize. At
The Virginian-Pilot and
The Oregonian, Rowe was known for building a newsroom of talented and ambitious reporters and editors, raising journalistic and ethical standards, for inspiring leadership and mentoring of journalists. After she retired from
The Oregonian, Rowe accepted a Knight fellowship at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School for the 2010 and 2011 academic year where she researched the case for partnerships and collaboration in local investigative reporting. In 2012, Rowe was the Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at
Arizona State University. == Awards and honors ==