COLLEGE PARK, Md. – The Web site chicagocrime.org, an innovative overlay of the city’s reported crimes with Google's online mapping technology, today won the $10,000 Grand Prize in the Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism. The site, created as a free public service by online journalist Adrian Holovaty with design input by Wilson Miner, was credited with “setting a new standard for interactive journalism.” Chicagocrime.org allows users to search by the type of crime, the street and neighborhood, or the date and pinpoint the location on a satellite map. One can even track crimes that occur en route to work. "It is one journalist's ability to see all the pieces and put them together," the Batten judges said, "but every city should provide this as a public service." Top
honors also went to $2,000 First Place winner The
View, Interactive Magazines Online (IMOL), a quarterly
netcasting magazine crafted of hip new story forms produced by senior "solo-jos" — backpack
journalists from England, the U.S. and South Africa — using
video-centric Web tools to tell point-of-view stories. Earning $1,000 Awards of Distinction are: • "Town
Square," News & Record, Greensboro, N.C. •
Public Insight Journalism, Minnesota Public Radio • "The
Cost of War," Newsday Also highlighting today’s symposium is a keynote dialogue on participatory news with Michael Kinsley, Editorial and Opinion Editor of the Los Angeles Times, and Jimmy Wales, Founder of Wikipedia, a collaboratively written online encyclopedia, and President and Chairman of the Wikimedia Foundation, which recently launched Wikinews, collaboratively written online news reports. The 2005 Batten Award winners were selected from 65 entries, submitted by print, television, radio, and online news organizations as well as educational and non-profit institutions. "We
were impressed again this year with the range of talents and ideas presented," said
Bryan Monroe, chairman of the Batten Awards Advisory Board and Knight Ridder
assistant
vice president/news. "Prevailing
themes were the increasing transparency, accessibility
and democratization of news." Also participating in this year's judging in addition to Monroe were Mark Hinojosa, associate managing editor, electronic news, the Chicago Tribune; Lee Rainie, founding director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project; Andrew Nachison, co-director, The Media Center at the American Press Institute; Jody Brannon, executive producer—news, USAToday.com; Chris Harvey, director, Maryland Newsline; Margaret Engel, managing editor, The Newseum; and Jan Schaffer, executive director, J-Lab. #### J-Lab
is a center of the University of Maryland Philip Merrill College
of Journalism. It is a spin-off of the Pew Center for Civic Journalism
(www.pewcenter.org). © 2004
University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism
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