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Wendy Leopold at
(847) 491-4890 or w-leopold@northwestern.edu
April 20, 2004
Medill School of Journalism Names Winner of $10,000 Mongerson Prize
WASHINGTON, D.C. --- Howard Kurtz, media writer for The Washington
Post, is the 2004 winner of the $10,000 Mongerson Prize for Investigative
Reporting on the News, the Northwestern University Medill School
of Journalism announced Monday (April 19).
The winners of two $1,000 Awards of Distinction -- Jim Avila of NBC Nightly News
and Michael Getler of The Washington Post -- and a special Citation of Excellence
for the San Antonio Express-News also were announced.
The Mongerson Prize honors outstanding reporting that uncovers and promptly corrects
incomplete, inaccurate or misleading news stories. It will be presented to Kurtz
at a luncheon Wednesday, May 19, at the National Press Club in Washington.
Kurtz broke the story of New York Times reporter Jayson Blair's apparent plagiarism
on April 30, 2003, starting with the San Antonio Express-News' alert to the Times
and following through with sources quoted by Blair who said they were never interviewed
by Blair. Kurtz continued with coverage of the Times' internal investigation.
"He subjected The New York Times to the same relentless scrutiny that the
best journalists apply to any institution," the judges said in awarding
Kurtz the top honor. "His writing dominated the reporting on this story."
Kurtz' entry also included his coverage of Times reporter Rick Bragg's reporting
methods, drawing on sources within the Times to give a revealing picture of the
saga that led to Bragg's departure.
The Medill School also announced the awarding of a special Citation of Excellence
to the San Antonio Express-News for discovering similarities between one of its
stories and a story written by Blair and for reporting the fact to New York Times
managing editor Gerald Boyd.
NBC Nightly News reporter Avila was honored for a story he reported that corrected
mistakes that had been published and aired concerning the capture of Pfc. Jessica
Lynch. Getler was honored for columns he wrote as ombudsman for The Washington
Post that chronicled a disturbing pattern of omissions in its coverage of the
build-up to the war in Iraq and called into question the Post's story on Lynch
and its subsequent reconstruction of her capture.
"The outstanding journalism by all of this year's winners shows the importance
of quickly and prominently correcting mistakes so that the public is not misinformed," said
Medill Assistant Dean Ellen Shearer. "The news media's credibility depends
on the public's belief that mistakes won't go uncorrected."
The Mongerson Prize was created in 2001 through a grant from Paul Mongerson,
an engineer, businessman and author who has studied the news media from a consumer's
perspective. It is administered by Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism
and based at the Medill News Service in Washington.
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