<P> David Sanford, a Page One features editor who was infected with HIV in 1982 in a bathhouse, wrote a front - page personal account of how, with the assistance of improved treatments for HIV, he went from planning his death to planning his retirement . He and six other reporters wrote about the new treatments, political and economic issues, and won the 1997 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting about AIDS . </P> <P> Jonathan Weil, a reporter at the Dallas bureau of The Wall Street Journal, is credited with first breaking the story of financial abuses at Enron in September 2000 . Rebecca Smith and John R. Emshwiller reported on the story regularly, and wrote a book, 24 Days . </P> <P> The Journal claims to have sent the first news report, on the Dow Jones wire, of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 . Its headquarters, at One World Financial Center, was severely damaged by the collapse of the World Trade Center just across the street . Top editors worried that they might miss publishing the first issue for the first time in the paper's 112 - year history . They relocated to a makeshift office at an editor's home, while sending most of the staff to Dow Jones's South Brunswick, N.J., corporate campus, where the paper had established emergency editorial facilities soon after the 1993 World Trade Center bombing . The paper was on the stands the next day, albeit in scaled - down form . Perhaps the most compelling story in that day's edition was a first - hand account of the Twin Towers' collapse written by then - Foreign Editor (and current Washington bureau chief) John Bussey, who holed up in a ninth - floor Journal office, literally in the shadow of the towers, from where he phoned in live reports to CNBC as the towers burned . He narrowly escaped serious injury when the first tower collapsed, shattering all the windows in the Journal's offices and filling them with dust and debris . The Journal won a 2002 Pulitzer Prize in Breaking News Reporting for that day's stories . </P> <P> The Journal subsequently conducted a worldwide investigation of the causes and significance of 9 / 11, using contacts it had developed while covering business in the Arab world . In Kabul, Afghanistan, a reporter from The Wall Street Journal bought a pair of looted computers that Al Qaeda leaders had used to plan assassinations, chemical and biological attacks, and mundane daily activities . The encrypted files were decrypted and translated . It was during this coverage that terrorists kidnapped and killed Journal reporter Daniel Pearl . </P>

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