NOUN
- United States newspaper publisher (born in Hungary) who established the Pulitzer prizes (1847-1911)
How To Use Joseph Pulitzer In A Sentence
- More than 100 years ago, unionized newsboys in New York City waged a successful strike against newspaper barons Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst.
- He was retro with a twist, sticking to a page layout that would seem familiar to a 19th-century newspaper reader; favoring the garish and grotesque in a way that would have gladdened a Joseph Pulitzer or a William Randolph Hearst; and, oddly, doing more to encourage the reading of traditional journalism on the Internet than anyone else. Time For A Slow-Word Movement
- Named after Joseph Pulitzer , the Hungarian - born US newspaper publisher, the prizes were established by Pulitzer's will.
- The column triggered a fusillade that recalled the sulfurous exchanges between Joseph Pulitzer and his contemporaries in an earlier era.
- Two newspaper magnates, William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer, turned producing newspapers into a war when they began adding special sections including sports and multiple frame cartoon strips.
- The newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer established the prize.
- Have you ever heard of the Pulitzer Prizes? Named after Hungarian newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer, this award honors excellence in American literature, journalism, drama and music.