-40%
Autographed Envelope Paul Salopek journalist Won 1998 Pulitzer Prize
$ 8.44
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
See my other itemMake me an Offer !!
I Combine Shipping on Multiple Item Orders !!
These autographs came out of a large collection of scrapbooks. This Gentleman would send first day covers and Photos to stars of all
professions
whether
Movies, Music, Athletes Business Tycoons Politicians and Authors plus many more. There are literally thousands of items in these books so keep checking back everyday for new listings. Quite a varied and interesting collection.He spent
a lot
of time over many many years writing to famous people. Most have been personalized some are just signed pieces of paper others are
various
size photos provided by the star and others are signed photo copies that he would send to the star for them to sign for him. It is quite a varied collection please check out all my
listings
. I have indicated in the title if I believe the signature is just a faux printed one. There is a huge quantity of Postal related items First day covers hand cancellation and such. He would send a first day cover hand cancelled that represented something special to that person and have the first day cover signed by them.
Paul Salopek of the Chicago Tribune won the 1998 Pulitzer Prize in the explanatory reporting category Tuesday for a profile of the Human Genome Diversity Project, which seeks to chart the genetic relationship among all people. It was the Tribune's 19th Pulitzer. Salopek came to the Tribune in 1996 from National Geographic magazine. Previously he was Mexico City bureau chief for Gannett News Service and the El Paso Times. A California native who grew up in Mexico, Salopek is a graduate of the University of California at Santa Barbara. He is married and has won more than a dozen journalistic awards. The Grand Forks Herald in North Dakota won the Pulitzer for public service Tuesday for its coverage of the blizzard, flood and fire that devastated the city and the newspaper's own plant last year. The New York Times won three Pulitzers--for beat reporting, international reporting and criticism--and the Los Angeles Times was honored for breaking news reporting and feature photography. Also receiving a Pulitzer was an 11,800-circulation weekly, The Riverdale Press, for editorial writing. In the arts, Philip Roth was awarded his first Pulitzer Prize in the fiction category for his 22nd novel, "American Pastoral." Paula Vogel won the Pulitzer for drama for "How I Learned To Drive." The poetry award went to Charles Wright for his collection "Black Zodiac." The prizes are presented by Columbia University.