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Scott Simon
National Public Radio
Scott Simon is an award winning journalist and correspondent whose career took off when he reported continuously from ground zero in New York to ground zero in Kabul.
Simon joined NPR in 1977 as chief of its Chicago bureau. Since then, he has reported from all 50 states, covered presidential campaigns and eight wars, and reported from Central America, Africa, India, the Middle East, and the Caribbean. In 2002, Simon took leave of his usual post at Weekend Edition Saturday to cover the war in Afghanistan for NPR. He has also reported from Central America on the continuing wars in that region; from Cuba on the nation's resistance to change; from Ethiopia on the country's famine and prolonged civil war; from the Middle East during the Gulf War; and from the siege of Sarajevo and the destruction of Kosovo.

Simon has received numerous honors for his reporting. His work was part of the Overseas Press Club and Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards NPR earned for coverage of 9/11 and its aftermath. He was part of the NPR news teams that won prestigious Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards for covering the war in Kosovo as well as the Gulf War. In 1989, he won a George Foster Peabody Award for his weekly radio essays. The award commended him for his sensitivity and literary style in coverage of events including the murder of six Jesuit priests in El Salvador and the San Francisco earthquake. Simon also accepted the Presidential End Hunger Award for his series of reports on the 1987-1988 Ethiopian civil war and drought. He received a 1986 Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for his coverage of racism in a South Philadelphia neighborhood, and a 1986 Silver Cindy for a report on conditions at the Immigration and Naturalization Service's detention center in Harlingen, Texas.

Simon has been a frequent guest host of the CBS television program Nightwatch and CNBC's TalkBack Live. In addition to hosting Weekend Edition Saturday, Simon appears as an essayist and commentator on NBC's Weekend Today and NOW with Bill Moyers.

He has written for The New York Times' Book Review and Opinion sections, the Wall Street Journal opinion page, and for The Los Angeles Times, and Gourmet Magazine.

Simon's book Home and Away: Memoir of a Fan was published in the spring of 2000, and was cited as one of the best books of the year in the Washington Post, Boston Globe, and several other publications. His newest book is Jackie Robinson and the Integration of Baseball.
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Weekend Edition Saturday
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$10,000-$20,000
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