Gerald Loeb Award winners for Large Newspapers

The Gerald Loeb Award is given annually for multiple categories of business reporting. The "Newspaper" category was awarded in 1958–1973. It was split into two categories beginning in 1974: "Small Newspapers" and "Large Newspapers". A third category, "Medium Newspapers", was created in 1987. The small and medium newspaper awards were combined as "Medium & Small Newspapers" in 2009–2012, and "Small & Medium Newspapers" in 2013–2014. The last year newspaper categories were awarded was 2014.

Gerald Loeb Award for Large Newspapers

  • 1974: Paul Steiger, Los Angeles Times[1][2]
Article:
"Use by Some Banks of Loan Loopholes Worries Regulators",[3] December 3, 1973[4]
  • 1975: "Utility Rates: Too High or Too Low?" by Allan Sloan, Detroit Free Press[5]
  • 1976: Willard Randal and Stephen Solomon, Philadelphia Inquirer[6]
Their special feature article documented the health hazards to workers of a chemical used at the Philadelphia plant of Rohn & Haas that led to 54 cancer deaths.[6][7]
Article:
"54 Who Died", October 26, 1975[7]
  • 1977: "Commodity Options" by Susan Trausch and Larry Collins, The Boston Globe[8]
Their series investigated firms in the commodity options business.[8]
  • 1978: "The Dollar: Its History and Current Woes" by Paul Steiger, Robert Rosenblatt, Ronald Soble, Murray Seeger and Sam Jameson, Los Angeles Times[9]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Ups, Downs of the Dollar: How, Why", November 20, 1977[10]
  2. "The Dollar: It's Rebuilt the World and Paid the Price", November 20, 1977[11]
  3. "Europe Still Believes U.S. Economy Basically Strong", November 20, 1977[12]
  4. "The Yen Is So Healthy It's Making Japan Sick", November 20, 1977[13]
  5. "A U.S. Trade Deficit Indefinitely", November 20, 1977[14]
  6. "Americans Asking How Good Is Gold?", November 20, 1977[15]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Trade Battle: As giants fight, little man suffers", April 2, 1978[18]
  2. "U.S. jobs vanish in flood of imports", April 3, 1978[19]
  3. "It's dog-eat-dog for profits and jobs", April 4, 1978[20]
  4. "Our bad-will envoy: the U. S. Dollar", April 5, 1978[21]
  5. "Japanese way: lifetime job, $30 rent", April 6, 1978[22]
  6. "Is the last boom over? U.S. most swim or sink", April 7, 1978[23]
Articles in Series:
  1. "The Great Gas Crunch – Who Is to Blame and Why?",[24] May 20, 1979[25]
  2. "U.S. Oil Appetite: 5 years of Failure",[24] June 24, 1979[26]
They were awarded for their "in-depth examination of the problems of corporate mergers."[28]
The four-part series described how technology and changing times removed the Port of Philadelphia from its position as the busiest on the North Atlantic coast.[30]
Articles in Series:[30]
  1. "102 miles up the river", January 24, 1982[31]
  2. "Phila. ports adrift in currents of cargo revolution", January 25, 1982[32]
  3. "Confusion, disunity on the waterfront", January 26, 1982[33]
  4. "A no vote for a super port unit", January 27, 1982[34]
  5. "Ports of Phila. can survive by filling void left by others", January 27, 1982[35]
  6. "How other ports forged ahead", January 27, 1982[36]
  7. "The Phila. port loses the cocoa bean", January 27, 1982[37]
The story describes the Federal Reserve's five-year battle against inflation.[39]
The article describes the revised federal tax code.[43]
He was awarded for the story of American Express' dealings with banker Edmond Safra."[45]
Their series examined how a Southern California family dominates the market for low-priced handguns used in crimes.[47]
His series describes how the Prudential Securities unit of Prudential Insurance falsely portrayed $8 billion worth of risky limited partnerships as safe for retirees.[49]
  • 1995: "Investigative Series on SAFE Investment Fund" by Joel Rutchick and Timothy Heider, Plain Dealer[50]
His series exposed the questionable investments of public funds by the Cuyahoga County, Ohio, treasurer.[50]
Their series described the federal price fixing investigation of Archer-Daniels-Midland and the double life of an executive who became an FBI informant.
  • 1997: "Test by Fire: The Story of Malden Mills" by Bruce D. Butterfield, Boston Globe[52]
The four-part series "detailed the hardships faced by Malden Mills's owner, Aaron Feuerstein, his managers, and his employees as they battled to stay in business while building a new mill costing more than $400 million."[52]
Articles in Series:
  1. "What flames could not destroy", September 8, 1996[53]
  2. "Public acclaim, private pressure", September 9, 1996[54]
  3. "The bottom line: Base pay not enough", September 9, 1996[55]
  4. "Investigation focuses on flock", September 9, 1996[56]
  5. "On the road and selling hard", September 10, 1996[57]
  6. "Triumph carries a painful price", September 11, 1996[58]
  7. "A phone call that hasn't come", September 11, 1996[59]
Siconolfi was awarded for "his page one article on the practice of 'spinning,' which revealed how investment banks allocate hot IPOs to the personal accounts of corporate executives in an apparent bid for business."[60]
Her series on cash-balance pension plans made the difficult topic comprehensible to readers and led to worker activism and government scrutiny.[62]
They wrote "an exposé of the for-profit sale of body parts."[63]
Articles in Series:
March 11–14, 2001[65]
  1. "Patients never knew the full danger of trials they staked their lives on"[65]
  2. "During Protocol 126, The Hutch adopted a rule barring scientists from work in which they have financial stake."[65]
  3. "As the failures and deaths mounted, Protocol 126 was altered again and again, but new patients still weren't told the risks."[65]
  4. "He saw the tests as a violation of 'trusting, desperate human beings'"[65]
  5. "With a year or two to live, woman joined test in which she was misled — and died"[65]
  6. "Many patients think that joining testing will help them, but often they're mistaken"[65]
  7. "He helped create the biotech boom and when it went bust, so did he"[65]
  8. "No wonder they call the place 'Mother Hutch'"[65]
  9. "The Hutch zealously guards its secrets"[65]
  10. "System's serious flaws have led many to call for regulatory reform"[65]
His investigation into the accounting practices of AOL led to AOL having its accounting firm re-certify nine transactions before the Post published the stories. AOL subsequently revised its financial results for 2000–2002 and became the subject of two federal investigations.[66]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Unconventional Transactions Boosted Sales", July 18, 2002[67]
  2. "Creative Transactions Earned Team Rewards", July 19, 2002[67]
  3. "Unorthodox Partnership Produced Financial Gains", July 19, 2002[67]
  4. "AOL Time Warner Discloses SEC Probe", July 25, 2002[67]
  5. "Dealmaker At AOL to Shift Focus", July 30, 2002[67]
  6. "SEC Expands Probe of AOL", August 2, 2002[67]
  7. "AOL To Revise Financial Results", October 24, 2002[67]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Inside the Nature Conservancy", May 4, 2003[68]
  2. "A House in the Woods", May 6, 2003[68]
  3. "When Conservation and Business Fail to Mix", May 5, 2003[68]
Articles in Series:[70]
  1. "In Seaths at Rail Crossings, Missing Evidence and Silence", July 11, 2004[70]
  2. "Other Cases and Other Questions", July 11, 2004[70]
  3. "A Crossing Crash Unreported And a Family Broken by Grief", July 12, 2004[70]
  4. "Railroad Safety Agency Says It Is Addressing Fatal Crashes", July 23, 2004[70]
  5. "Federal Inquiry to Review Regulation of Railroad Grade Crossings", September 2, 2004[70]
  6. "Amtrak Pays Millions for Others' Fatal Errors", October 15, 2004[70]
  7. "For Railroads and the Safety Overseer, Close Ties", November 7, 2004[70]
  8. "Safety Group Closely Echoes Rail Industry", November 14, 2004[70]
  9. "Regulators Plan to Step Up Union Pacific Safety Checks", November 17, 2004[70]
  10. "Unions Ask Agency to Oppose Union Pacific on Inspections", December 2, 2004[70]
  11. "Head of Railroad Administration, Facing Two Inquireies, Is Quitting in Two Weeks", December 18, 2004[70]
  12. "Questions Raised on Warnings at Rail Crossing", December 30, 2004[70]
Their series of stories exposed the egregiousness of Georgia's lending laws.[71]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Harsh lending laws fail consumers", January 30, 2005[72]
  2. "Swift foreclosures dash American dream", January 30, 2005[72]
  3. "Why Georgia can be a bad place to buy a car", October 23, 2005[72]
  4. "The cost is high and so is the risk of borrowers who post car titles as collateral for quick cash", January 31, 2005[72]
  5. "Lenders often pack small loans with insurance and other extras that spike costs for consumers", February 1, 2005[72]
  6. "Lenders win, lose in Gold Dome battles", February 1, 2005[72]
  7. "Auto deal gone sour?", October 24, 2005[72]
Articles in Series:
  1. "The Perfect Payday", 2006[73]
  2. "Open Spigot, Bosses' Pay: How Stock Options Became Part of the Problem", 2006[73]
  3. "Matter of Timing, Five More Companies Show Questionable Options Pattern", 2006[73]
  4. "Dating Game, Stock-Options Criminal Charge: Slush Fund and Fake Employees", 2006[73]
  5. " Executive Retreat, Stock-Options Scandal Fugitive Puts Roots Down in Namibia", 2006[73]
  6. " Bad Options, How a Giant Insurer Decided to Oust Hugely Successful CEO", 2006[73]
  7. "Executive Pay: The 9/11 Factor", 2006[73]
"This investigative series included exhaustive reporting and colorful storytelling on an important topic — how dangerous and poisonous pharmaceutical ingredients from small factories in rural China have flowed into the global market. Reported on four continents, this comprehensive series presented a compelling analysis of the 'toxic pipeline' that has had a devastating, sometimes deadly, cost to humans."[74]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Behind Biggest Insurer's Crisis, A Blind Eye to a Web of Risk", September 28, 2008[76]
  2. "U.S. May Take Ownership Stake in Banks to Ease Credit Crisis", October 9, 2008[76]
  3. "From Midwest to M.T.A., Pain From Global Gamble", November 2, 2008[76]
  4. "Citigroup Pays for a Rush to Risk", November 23, 2008[76]
  5. "White House Philosophy Stoked Mortgage Bonfire", December 21, 2008[76]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Unusual Decisions Set Stage for BP Disaster", May 27, 2010[79]
  2. "There Was 'Nobody in Charge'", May 28, 2010[79]
  3. "On Doomed Rig's Last Day, A Divisive Change of Plan", August 26, 2010[79]
Articles in Series:
  1. "A vicious cycle in the used-car business", October 31, 2011[81]
  2. "Wall Street loves used cars", November 1, 2011[81]
  3. "Hard road for poor needing cars", November 3, 2011[81]
  4. "Used-car leases are a plus for dealers; drivers, not so much", December 30, 2011[81]
Articles in Series:
  1. "Playing with fire" May 6, 2002[83]
  2. "Labels provide little help when picking produxts", May 6, 2012[83]
  3. "Testing shows treated foam offers no real safety benefit", May 6, 2012[83]
  4. "Big Tobacco's clout", May 8, 2012[83]
  5. "Big Tobacco's playbook", May 8, 2012[83]
  6. "'Flat-out deceptive'", May 9, 2012[83]
  7. "How 8 TV fires spread around the world", May 9, 2012[83]
  8. "Toxic roulette", May 10, 2012[83]
  9. "A suspicious similarity", May 10, 2012[83]
  10. "Flawed research props up industry", December 30, 2012[83]
  11. "A new study, but fl awed again", December 30, 2012[83]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Historical Winners List". UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved January 31, 2019.
  2. ^ "Winners selected for Loeb Awards". The New York Times. June 18, 1974. p. 58. Retrieved February 6, 2019.
  3. ^ Rosenblatt, Robert A. (September 17, 1974). "'Amazing' Number of Frauds Still Exist, SEC Official Says". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCIII, no. 288. pp. Part III 7, 13. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  4. ^ Steiger, Paul E. (December 3, 1973). "Use by Some Banks of Loan Loopholes Worries Regulators". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCII, no. 365. pp. Part I 1, 14–15. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  5. ^ "State reporter awarded Loeb". The Raleigh Register. Vol. 96, no. 80 (afternoon ed.). United Press International. September 24, 1975. p. 1. Retrieved February 15, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ a b "Gerald Loeb Awards given to top business journalists". Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph. July 25, 1976. p. 2-F. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  7. ^ a b "Inquirer wins 2 of 5 funancial news awards". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 295, no. 22. July 22, 1976. p. 2-A. Retrieved February 27, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ a b "'77 Loeb winners named in business journalism". The New York Times. June 1, 1977. p. 74. Retrieved February 6, 2019.
  9. ^ "More honors". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVII. May 29, 1978. p. 10 Part III. Retrieved February 14, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Steiger, Paul E. (November 20, 1977). "Ups, Downs of the Dollar: How, Why". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVI, no. 352 (Final ed.). pp. Part I 1, 22–24. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  11. ^ Rosenblatt, Robert A. (November 20, 1977). "The Dollar: It's Rebuilt the World and Paid the Price". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVI, no. 352 (Final ed.). pp. Part VII 1, 18. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  12. ^ Seeger, Murray (November 20, 1977). "Europe Still Believes U.S. Economy Basically Strong". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVI, no. 352 (Final ed.). pp. Part VII 1, 11. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  13. ^ Jameson, Sam (November 20, 1977). "The Yen Is So Healthy It's Making Japan Sick". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVI, no. 352 (Final ed.). pp. Part VII 1–3. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  14. ^ Steiger, Paul E. (November 20, 1977). "A U.S. Trade Deficit Indefinitely". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVI, no. 352 (Final ed.). pp. Part VII 1–2. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  15. ^ Soble, Ronald L. (November 20, 1977). "Americans Asking How Good Is Gold?". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVI, no. 352 (Final ed.). pp. Part VII 1, 7. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
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  18. ^ Longworth, R. C.; Neikirk, Bill (April 2, 1978). "Trade Battle: As giants fight, little man suffers". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 131, no. 92 (Final ed.). pp. 1, 12 Section 1. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  19. ^ Neikirk, Bill; Longworth, R. C. (April 3, 1978). "U.S. jobs vanish in flood of imports". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 131, no. 93 (5 Star Final ed.). pp. 1, 8 Section 1. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  20. ^ Neikirk, Bill; Longworth, R. C. (April 4, 1978). "It's dog-eat-dog for profits and jobs". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 131, no. 94 (5 Star Final ed.). pp. 1, 8 Section 1. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  21. ^ Neikirk, Bill; Longworth, R. C. (April 5, 1978). "Our bad-will envoy: the U. S. Dollar". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 131, no. 95 (5 Star Final ed.). pp. 1, 8 Section 1. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  22. ^ Neikirk, Bill; Longworth, R. C. (April 6, 1978). "Japanese way: lifetime job, $30 rent". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 131, no. 96 (3 Star Final ed.). pp. 1, 8 Section 1. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  23. ^ Longworth, R. C.; Neikirk, Bill (April 7, 1978). "Is the last boom over? U.S. most swim or sink". Chicago Tribune. Vol. 131, no. 97 (Final ed.). pp. 1, 6 Section 1. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
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  25. ^ Shaw, Gaylord; Steiger, Paul E.; Redburn, Tom; Soble, Ronald L.; Rempel, William C.; Decker, Cathleen; Eaton, William J.; Kempster, Norman; Rosenblatt, Robert A. (May 20, 1979). "U.S. Oil Appetite: 5 years of Failure". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVIII, no. 168 (Sunday Final ed.). pp. 1, 3, A–B Part I. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  26. ^ Steiger, Paul E.; Pryor, Larry; Redburn, Tom; Stall, Bill; Goldstein, Martha (June 24, 1979). "U.S. Oil Appetite: 5 years of Failure". Los Angeles Times. Vol. XCVIII, no. 203 (Sunday Final ed.). pp. 1, 12–16 Part I. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
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  30. ^ a b "Frump wins Gerald Loeb Award". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 308, no. 98. April 8, 1983. p. 2-A. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
  31. ^ Frump, Robert R. (January 24, 1982). "102 miles up the river". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 306, no. 24. pp. 1-A, 14-A–15-A. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
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  33. ^ Frump, Robert R. (January 26, 1982). "Confusion, disunity on the waterfront". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 306, no. 26. pp. 6-C, 12-C–13-C. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  34. ^ Frump, Robert R. (January 27, 1982). "A no vote for a super port unit". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 306, no. 27. pp. 1-D, 7-D. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  35. ^ Frump, Robert R. (January 27, 1982). "Ports of Phila. can survive by filling void left by others". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 306, no. 27. pp. 1-D, 6-D. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  36. ^ Frump, Robert R. (January 27, 1982). "How other ports forged ahead". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Vol. 306, no. 27. pp. 1-D, 6-D–7-D. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
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  44. ^ "Two Times business section reporters win Loeb Award". Los Angeles Times. Vol. CIX, no. 170. May 22, 1990. p. D2. ISSN 0458-3035.
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  51. ^ "Journal reporters win Loeb Award for ADM coverage". The Wall Street Journal. April 30, 1996. p. B8.
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External links

  • Gerald Loeb Award historical winners list
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