E.W. Stevens; Eminent Moscow Reporter
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Edmund W. Stevens, the Pulitzer-Prize winning dean of the Moscow press corps who covered the Soviet Union for half a century, died Sunday in Moscow after a stroke.
Stevens, 81, worked for a variety of British and American publications starting in the late 1930s, battling Soviet censors under dictator Josef Stalin and building a formidable network of contacts.
He won the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting in 1950 for “Russia Uncensored,” a series on life under Stalin. Stevens first went to the Soviet Union in 1934 after graduating from Columbia University. In 1935, he married a Russian woman and lived in a communal apartment with three other families during the terror of Stalin’s purges.
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