2011 Pulitzers Honor Best "Print" Journalism
Pulitzer.org: "2011 Pulitzer Prize Winners"
Eric Ernst, Sarasota Herald-Tribune: "Pulitzer board took notice, not lawmakers"
Jesse Eisinger and Jake Bernstein, ProPublica: "The Wall Street Money Machine"
Los Angeles Times: "High salaries stir outrage in Bell"
Los Angeles Times: "California public records: A guide to your rights as a citizen"
Mark Johnson, Kathleen Gallagher, Gary Porter, Lou Saldivar and Alison Sherwood, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: "One In a Billion: A boy's life, a medical mystery" (Sherwood is a graduate of the Missouri School of Journalism)
Melissa Bell, The Washington Post: "Pulitzer watch: Is there no more breaking news in newspapers?"
Three Cups of Deception?
Steve Croft, 60 Minutes, CBS News: "Questions over Greg Mortenson's stories"
Jon Krakauer, Byliner Originals: "Three Cups of Deceipt"
Gail Schontzler, Bozeman Daily Chronicle: "Mortenson under fire from '60 Minutes' -- Bozeman philanthopist denies allegations"
Nicholas D. Kristof, The New York Times: "'Three Cups of Tea,' Spilled"
Nicholas D. Kristof, The New York Times: "'Three Cups of Tea,' Spilled"
Koch Uses Google to Refute Story
John Aloysius Farrell, Center for Public Integrity: "Koch's web of influence"
Cole Goins, Center for Public Integrity: "Koch buys online advertising to attack report on its lobbying influence"
Keach Hagey, Politico's On Media blog: "Koch buys ads claiming 'bias' in CPI story"
Koch Industries, Inc., KochFacts.com: "Responding to Slanted Journalism at the Center for Public Integrity" (Readers are taken to this page when they search Google for "Center for Public Integrity" and click on the first, sponsored link.)
U.S. News & World Report, John A. Farrell's opinion pieces for the publication.
Spencer MacColl, Center for Responsive Politics: "Capital Rivals: Koch Brothers vs. George Soros"
HuffPo Lawsuit Rests on Questionable Theory
Nathan Olivarez-Giles, Los Angeles Times: "Arianna Huffington says Huff Po writer's lawsuit is 'utterly without merit'"
Matthew Ingram, GigaOm, Bloomberg Businessweek: "Arianna Huffington: Slave Owner or Crowdsourcing Pioneer?"
Joe Mullin, paidContent.org: "Tasini On HuffPo Lawsuit: We Have 'All Sorts of Inside Information'"
Jeff Bercovici, Forbes: "Why the Times Pays Writers Even When It Doesn't Have To"
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