Marjie Lundstrom

Marjie Lundstrom (born 1956) is an American journalist. She received the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 1991.

Biography

Lundstrom was born in 1956. Her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Max Lundstrom, are from Wayne, Nebraska.[1]

A journalism graduate of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1959, Lundstrom has served on the staffs of The Ft. Collins Coloradoan, Denver Monthly, and The Denver Post. She is a reporter and senior writer for The Sacramento Bee. At The Bee she also has been a columnist and assignment editor. She worked with the Sacramento Bee from January 1989 - March 1990 but later returned after deciding she wanted to live on the West Coast.[1]

She was a 1991 recipient of a journalism Pulitzer Prize. Lundstrom and Rochelle Sharp of New York City—at the time, both reporters for Gannett News Service, based in Washington, DC—were jointly awarded the prize for National Reporting for a series of stories they wrote about child abuse.[1]

gollark: New people, this is just a regular part of esolangs - bizarre complex conversations or messages being played backward by reminderbots.
gollark: You'll see.
gollark: Well, you like obfuscators, and page fault computation would be hard to debug, so do so.
gollark: You should make some obfuscator which writes some of the logic in page faults.
gollark: ~~<@319753218592866315>~~ <@!356107472269869058> make esolang

References

  1. "NU College of Journalism & Mass Communications- Alumni News- Spring 1991 (pulitzer)". College of Journalism and Mass Communication. Archived from the original on 8 June 2010. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  • The Sacramento Bee Pulitzer Prizes, 1991


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