Dana Canedy Named Administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes

Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University, has announced that Dana Canedy will be the new administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes. Canedy has worked at the New York Times since 1996, most recently as special adviser to the chief executive officer and executive editor. Earlier, she was a business reporter and served as Florida bureau chief. In Florida, she covered the 2000 presidential election recount and the flight school training of the 9/11 terrorists. Before joining the Times, Canedy was a reported and editor at The Plain Dealer in Cleveland.

In 2001, as a special projects reporter for the Times, Canedy was the lead journalist in a series entitled “How Race Is Lived in America.” The series won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting.

Charles Monroe King, Canedy’s partner and the father of her child Jordan, was killed in the first Iraq War. She used his diary as the basis for the book A Journal for Jordan: A Story of Love and Honor (Crown Publishers, 2008). The book is scheduled to become a movie starring Denzel Washington.

Canedy is a native of Indianapolis and grew up in Kentucky. She holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Kentucky.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

In Memoriam: James Solomon, Jr., 1930-2024

While teaching at Morris College, an HBCU in South Carolina, Solomon enrolled in the graduate program in mathematics at the University of South Carolina, making him one of the institution's first three Black students.

Street Named to Honor the First Black Football Player at the University of Memphis

Rogers walked-on to the football team at what was then Memphis State University in 1968, making him the institution's first Black football player. After graduating in 1972, he spent the next four decades as a coach and administrator with Memphis-area schools.

In Memoriam: Clyde Aveilhe, 1937-2024

Dr. Aveilhe held various student affairs and governmental affairs positions with Howard University, California State University, and the City University of New York.

Ending Affirmative Action May Not Produce a More Academically Gifted Student Body

Scholars from Cornell University have found removing race data from AI applicant-ranking algorithms results in a less diverse applicant pool without meaningfully increasing the group's academic merit.

Featured Jobs