Loren Jenkins
Loren Jenkins | |
---|---|
Born | (1938-10-26)October 26, 1938 New Orleans |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | journalist |
Spouse(s) | Nancy Harmon (1964-1985), Laura Throne (1986) |
Loren Jenkins (born 1938) is a war correspondent for the Washington Post who won a 1983 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting "for reporting of the Israeli invasion of Beirut and its tragic aftermath".[1][2]
Biography
Loren Jenkins was born in New Orleans into a family of American Foreign Service employees. He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Colorado in Boulder at the end of the 1950s and then stinted with the Peace Corps in Puerto Rico and Sierra Leone. Jenkins returned to Aspen in 1964, where he worked as a ski instructor. He later continued his studies at Aspen University and did his graduate work at Columbia University in New York.[1][3][4]
Jenkins got his first position as a reporter in 1964 with the Daily Item. After leaving the newspaper in 1965, he worked for United Press International as an overseas correspondent in New York, London, Rome, and Madrid. In 1969–1979, Jenkins served in Newsweek to cover Black September, the Suez Crisis, and the Vietnam war. Correspondent's articles for Newsweek was honored with the Overseas Press Club Award in 1976.[1][3]
In 1980, Jenkins joined the Washington Post staff. During his tenure with the newspaper, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 1983 for his coverage of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. At that time, the Washington Post was criticized for bias in covering the Israel–United States conflict. For example, Marty Peretz described Jenkins as «anti-Israel» and inane declared that the journalist won a Pulitzer Prize because most of the judges subscribed to the Washington Post–Los Angeles Times news service.[5][6]
In 1990, Jenkins returned to Colorado, where he got the editor position at the Aspen Times. In 1995, he was named an editor of the international desk at National Public Radio, where he worked for the next fifteen years. Under Jenkins's leadership, correspondents of the radio station covered the wars in Kosovo, Chechnya, Iraq, and Afghanistan. In 2005 the international desk at NPR was awarded the George Peabody Award. In November 2011, Loren Jenkins retired but continued to write as a freelancer.[7][1]
References
- ^ a b c d Brennan 1999, p. 592.
- ^ "Thomas L. Friedman and Loren Jenkins of The New York Times and The Washington Post, (respectively)". The Pulitzer Prizes. 2020. Retrieved 2020-10-21.
- ^ a b Fischer H. D. 2020.
- ^ J. C. Pickrell, S. Benner, J. Cowen (October 11, 2014). "Sojourner Salutes". SagaCity Media. Retrieved 2020-10-21.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Friedman 1987, pp. 169–179.
- ^ Friedman 1987.
- ^ J. Urquhart (October 14, 2011). "Jenkins steps down at NPR". The Aspen Times. Retrieved 2020-10-21.
Books
- Brennan (1999). Who's who of Pulitzer Prize Winners. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 666. ISBN 9781573561112.
- Friedman, Robert I. (1987). "Selling Israel to America". Journal of Palestine Studies: 1987.
- Fischer H. D. (2020). 1978–1989: From Roarings in the Middle East to the Destroying of the Democratic Movement in China. Vienna: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 379. ISBN 9783110862928.
- v
- t
- e
- Laurence Edmund Allen (1942)
- Ira Wolfert (1943)
- Daniel De Luce (1944)
- Mark S. Watson (1945)
- Homer Bigart (1946)
- Eddy Gilmore (1947)
- Paul W. Ward (1948)
- Price Day (1949)
- Edmund Stevens (1950)
- Keyes Beech, Homer Bigart, Marguerite Higgins, Relman Morin, Fred Sparks & Don Whitehead (1951)
- John M. Hightower (1952)
- Austin Wehrwein (1953)
- Jim G. Lucas (1954)
- Harrison E. Salisbury (1955)
- William Randolph Hearst Jr., J. Kingsbury-Smith & Frank Conniff (1956)
- Russell Jones (1957)
- Staff of The New York Times (1958)
- Joseph Martin & Philip Santora (1959)
- A. M. Rosenthal (1960)
- Lynn Heinzerling (1961)
- Walter Lippmann (1962)
- Hal Hendrix (1963)
- Malcolm W. Browne & David Halberstam (1964)
- J. A. Livingston (1965)
- Peter Arnett (1966)
- R. John Hughes (1967)
- Alfred Friendly (1968)
- William Tuohy (1969)
- Seymour M. Hersh (1970)
- Jimmie Lee Hoagland (1971)
- Peter R. Kann (1972)
- Max Frankel (1973)
- Hedrick Smith (1974)
- William Mullen (1975 shared)
- Ovie Carter (1975 shared)
- Sydney H. Schanberg (1976)
- Henry Kamm (1978)
- Richard Ben Cramer (1979)
- Joel Brinkley & Jay Mather (1980)
- Shirley Christian (1981)
- John Darnton (1982)
- Thomas L. Friedman & Loren Jenkins (1983)
- Karen Elliott House (1984)
- Joshua Friedman, Dennis Bell & Ozier Muhammad (1985)
- Lewis M. Simons, Pete Carey & Katherine Ellison (1986)
- Michael Parks (1987)
- Thomas L. Friedman (1988)
- Bill Keller & Glenn Frankel (1989)
- Nicholas D. Kristof & Sheryl WuDunn (1990)
- Caryle Murphy & Serge Schmemann (1991)
- Patrick J. Sloyan (1992)
- John F. Burns & Roy Gutman (1993)
- Staff of The Dallas Morning News (1994)
- Mark Fritz (1995)
- David Rohde (1996)
- John F. Burns (1997)
- Staff of The New York Times (1998)
- Staff of The Wall Street Journal (1999)
- Mark Schoofs (2000)
- Ian Denis Johnson & Paul Salopek (2001)
- Barry Bearak (2002)
- Kevin Sullivan & Mary Jordan (2003)
- Anthony Shadid (2004)
- Kim Murphy & Dele Olojede (2005)
- Joseph Kahn & Jim Yardley (2006)
- Staff of The Wall Street Journal (2007)
- Steve Fainaru (2008)
- Staff of The New York Times (2009)
- Anthony Shadid (2010)
- Clifford J. Levy & Ellen Barry (2011)
- Jeffrey Gettleman (2012)
- David Barboza (2013)
- Jason Szep & Andrew R. C. Marshall (2014)
- Staff of The New York Times (2015)
- Alissa J. Rubin (2016)
- Staff of The New York Times (2017)
- Clare Baldwin, Andrew R.C. Marshall & Manuel Mogato (2018)
- Maggie Michael, Maad al-Zikry & Nariman El-Mofty (2019)
- Staff of Reuters including Wa Lone & Kyaw Soe Oo (2019)
- Staff of The New York Times (2020)
- Megha Rajagopalan, Alison Killing & Christo Buschek (2021)
- Staff of The New York Times including Azmat Khan (2022)
- Staff of The New York Times (2023)