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Her abundant talents--intellect, wit, style, news judgment--set her apart with an élan uniquely her own. Her Pulitzer Prize commentary appears in more than 450 newspapers, making her one of the two most syndicated columnists in the United States. One of those rare writers and thinkers who senses emerging shifts in our public and private lives, Goodman alters perceptions of confounding issues. "She takes current events and sees their universal truths," says the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Goodman has been an innovative force in American journalism. She once said, "I think readers need to be less alienated from editorial pages" and made them so by expanding the debate on op-ed pages. She has commented on the tumult of social change and its impact on families, and shattered the mold of men writing exclusively about politics. She is widely acclaimed as a voice of sanity, and readers depend on her to help them make sense of their changing lives and relationships. In addition to the Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Commentary, Goodman has won many other awards, including the American Society of Newspaper Editors Distinguished Writing Award in 1980. She received the Hubert H. Humphrey Civil Rights Award from the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights in1988. In 1993, at its Seventh Annual Exceptional Merit Media Award Ceremony, The National Women's Political Caucus gave her the President's Award. In 1994, the Women's Research & Education Institute presented her with their American Woman Award. Goodman's first job was at Newsweek as a researcher, at a time when only
men became writers. She landed a job as a reporter for the Detroit Free
Press in 1965 and, in 1967, for The Boston Globe where she began writing her
column. Her column was syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group
beginning in 1976.
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