Other top writing winners, part 1
All categories and over 250,000
Story posted on April 23, 2007
Below are links to the stories and columns from other top finishers in the all circulation (investigative) and over 250,000 categories. The stories are currently offered in .pdf format, and will be offered as HTML at a later time.
ALL CIRCULATIONS
INVESTIGATIVE
1. Scott M. Reid, Robert Kuwada and Tony Saavedra, Orange County Register: Story 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
2. Terry Tomalin and Stephen Nohlgren, St. Petersburg Times: Story
3. Michael Ko and Christine Willmsen, Seattle Times: Story
4 (tie), Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times: Story 1 | 2 | 3
4 (tie), Eli Saslow, Mark Schlabach, Camille Powell, Eric Prisbell, Steve Goff, Julie Tate, Josh Barr, Alan Goldenbach, Michael Lee, and Adam Kilgore, Washington Post: Story 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12
OVER 250,000
COLUMNS
3. Selena Roberts, New York Times: Columns
4. Harvey Araton, New York Times: Columns
5. Thomas Boswell, Washington Post: Columns 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
FEATURE STORY
3. Mike Wagner, Columbus Dispatch
4 (tie), Brad Townsend, Dallas Morning News: Story
4 (tie), Kevin Manahan, Newark Star-Ledger
BREAKING NEWS
3. Ken Davidoff, Newsday: Story 1 | 2
4 (tie), Gordon Edes, Boston Globe
4 (tie), George King, New York Post
GAME STORY
3. Chris Jenkins, San Diego Union-Tribune: Story
4. Dick Jerardi, Philadelphia Daily News: Story
5. Erik Brady, USA Today: Story
EXPLANATORY
3. Gordon Edes, Boston Globe
4. Ed Hinton, Orlando Sentinel: Story
5. Daniel Uthman, The Oregonian: Story 1 | 2
PROJECT REPORTING
3. Jere Longman, New York Times: Story
4. Randy Covitz, Bob Dutton, J. Brady McCollough, Sam Mellinger, Jeff
Passan, Joe Posnanski, Matt Stearns and Wright Thompson, Kansas City Star
5. Joe Freeman, The Oregonian: Story 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
■ Here's a HUGE tip for making the PDF download process easier: Instead of clicking on the link to open the PDF from the browser, simply put your cursor over the link and right click and choose either "Save Target As..." (in Microsoft's Internet Explorer) or "Save Target Link As..." (in Netscape and Mozilla Firefox). What this will do is download the PDF to your harddrive. Once it's on your harddrive, it is much easier and faster to open and print.
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