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1998 Alfred I. duPont — Columbia University Awards in Television and Radio Journalism| GOLD BATON | | | Frontline, for remarkable quality and sustained commitment to controversial and sensitive stories as exemplified by four programs: “Murder, Money and Mexico,” “The Choice '96,” “Secret Daughter,” and “Innocence Lost: The Plea” (WGBH–TV, Boston) | | SILVER BATONS | | | Television Awards: | PrimeTime Live: “Debt Reckoning” (ABC News); “Why Can't We Live Together?” (NBC News and Scripps Howard News Prods.); “Enter the Jury Room” (CBS News) | | Major-Market Television: | WABC–TV (New York) for “Room 104: The Overcrowding Crisis,” about a first-grade classroom in Brooklyn | | Small-Market Television: | Wisconsin Public Television for “Welcome to Poverty Hollow,” which followed three families in an innovative anti-poverty effort in northern Wisconsin that responded to the state's new welfare reform system; KTCA–TV (St. Paul, Minn.) for NewsNight Minnesota: “Unisys,” a series of reports about the impact of downsizing on long-term employees of the Unisys Corporation | | Independent Television Productions: | The Center for New American Media for “Vote for Me: Politics in America” (PBS); Blowback Productions for “CIA: America's Secret Warriors” (Discovery Channel); Jon Else, Sandra Itkoff, and Marc Reisner for “An American Nile” (PBS); KCET (Los Angeles) and the BBC for “The Great War and the Shaping of the 20th Century” (PBS) | | Radio Awards: | KUSC (Los Angeles) for Marketplace, which proves that reporting on economic issues can be approached with energy and flair (Public Radio International) |
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