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Thanks for a great Medallion Hunt

Hundreds more readers participated in our Wichita Eagle Medallion Hunt this year, and I want to thank all of you for sleuthing with us.

We brought the Medallion Hunt out of retirement last year, and we were thrilled with the response and the level of participation last spring. Then the entries grew by 62 percent this year.

I know it takes a lot of time and effort to read and decipher clues, and we appreciate those of you who jumped in to solve the riddles. We hope many of you learned a little more about Wichita and its history along the way.

Congratulations to this year’s winner, Jeremy Tomlinson, and thanks to everyone for playing. We hope to see you next time.

New health section coming Tuesday

We’re excited about the launch of a new section in your Eagle next Tuesday that will be devoted to living well — both physically and mentally. The new Healthy Living section will focus on getting (and staying) fit, eating healthy, managing stress, sleeping well, coping with illness, and everything else you want to know to live happy and healthy. Readers have frequently told us that health news is among the most important topics on their mind, and we’re happy to be expanding your Eagle and bringing you more of those articles and features.

Healthy Living will expand on the Tuesday focus of the former WichiTalk page, aiming to offer you advice and useful information to aid your mind and body. You’ll also find a column by Drs. Michael Roizen and Mehmet Oz, a feature named “What’s New on the Health Beat, a health-events calendar and “Boomer Life,” which focuses on health issues that affect the Baby Boomer generation.

You’ll also find the comics and puzzles moved to the new Healthy Living section.

Online at Kansas.com/healthyliving, you’ll find still more articles and features on important current health issues.

We want your feedback and your ideas for what you’d like to see in the section in coming weeks. Drop a note to Features Editor Lori Linenberger at llinenberger@wichitaeagle.com and let us know what you think.

Here’s to your health.

We want your feedback

We’ve put together a survey that seeks your feedback on The Eagle and Kansas.com. We hope you’ll take some time (about 15-20 minutes) to take the survey, at www.kansas.com/survey. Your feedback is important to us and our ongoing efforts to improve our print edition and Web site. We appreciate your time.

‘Best of Eagle’ awards honor staffers

One of my favorite newsroom gatherings every year is the day we announce “Best of Eagle” winners for our staff from the previous year’s work. In choosing winners, we look back over our best work of the previous year, and it’s always a reminder for me of how many talented journalists the newsroom is fortunate to have.

Throughout the year, we have in-house monthly contests to choose the best headline, photo, writing and page design. (For 2010, we’re adding a monthly contest for the best innovative work on Kansas.com.) At the end of each year, we ask outside judges to pick the best from the monthly winners. These are the Best of Eagle winners, and each receives a plaque and cash award. Their names are also engraved on plaques that remain in the newsroom to honor all previous winners.

On Thursday, we announced this year’s winners:

Headline: Rod Pocowatchit for his headline “Claws and Effects,” with a subheadline “Fight scenes, loud explosions drive X-Men Origins: Wolverine.” The headlines ran on the May 1 Go! section for the opening of the Hugh Jackman film.

Page Design: Rod Pocowatchit for his Go! section cover design for the movie “Angels & Demons.” You don’t need any more evidence of the range of Rod’s talents: best headline, best page design, and he writes weekly about movies in the Sunday Arts & Leisure section. This is the third time Rod has won the Best of Eagle design award, and his first award for headline-writing.

Writing: Roy Wenzl for his series, “The Miracle of Father Kapaun.” The eight-part series, published in December, recounted the Kansas priest’s life and death in a Korean War POW camp, through the voices of fellow prisoners who say Kapaun worked endlessly to lift their spirits and give them hope that they would survive. This award marks the seventh time Roy’s work has been honored as a Best of Eagle winner.

Photography: Fernando Salazar for his powerful image of Jacie Brown holding newborn Aiden, her son who would live 51 minutes, but touch his parents’ lives forever. This was the third time Fernando’s photographs have been named Best of Eagle.

We also honored Travis Heying’s multimedia work on video, audio, photographs and a 50-minute documentary on Father Emil Kapaun. Travis is a six-time winner of our photography award.

Congratulations to all of the Best of Eagle winners, as well as the monthly contest winners, for their hard work in bringing you a newspaper and Web site we’re proud of.


Thanks for feedback on puzzle

Thanks to all who dropped us a note to let us know you’re delighted to have both crossword puzzles now in the TV book. Quite a few of you wrote to say thanks for returning the old puzzle — and I think this is the first time I’ve ever been told I brought balance to someone’s life.

And others thanked me for not ditching the new puzzle from the New York Times. I appreciate the feedback, and I’m glad everyone is satisfied with the outcome.

Practices vary on newsroom Facebook use

Over the past month or so, I’ve gotten a few emails from readers who said they sent me a “friend request” on Facebook and wondered why I hadn’t accepted it. Two of them pointed out that they are already Facebook friends with a few other Eagle newsroom staffers, and they weren’t sure why there were differences among Eagle news staff in the connections they make on social media networks.

So let me talk a little bit about our social media guidelines as a newsroom, and mine individually.

Earlier this week, the newsroom staff had a great lunchtime discussion about how our personal and professional lives intersect on social media networks. We updated the newsroom’s ethics policy over the summer and added a social media section for the first time, and one thing is already clear — it needs to be more specific to give our staff more guidance in how to use networks like Facebook, Twitter or MySpace without compromising our credibility as a journalists (and, by extension, The Eagle’s).

Earlier this month, Mashable.com quoted a study in which more than half of employers surveyed block social media sites on work computers. At The Eagle, I believe that connecting to these networks, especially within our community, is an increasingly important part of our job. I encourage our staff to be engaged in digital community conversations as part of their job. And to do it with the same sound ethical guidelines we’ve adhered to in the print business for many decades.

The use of social media is evolving so rapidly, though, that stories are abundant of people who have harmed their careers and their employers’ reputations by exercising poor judgment in Tweets, blog posts or Facebook updates. Being a news organization just adds an extra few layers of complication, and we don’t yet have all the answers on how to handle every situation that can arise. Our guidelines and practices will change as we make mistakes, or discover ethical dilemmas we hadn’t anticipated.

In our discussion last week, I told our staff that I won’t issue rules on who they should or should not invite or accept as Facebook friends. Common sense should guide decisions for journalists who use Facebook as a mix of personal friends/family and professional connections. It’s common for journalists to have professional acquaintances connected to them on Facebook. I view it as a great compliment to our staff that readers and sources in the community want to have connections to our staff on social networks — they see our writers, editors, visual journalists, etc., as approachable, or they wouldn’t want to connect to them.

Some of us are, frankly, unsure how far to go in opening the doors of our Facebook pages. We’re figuring it out as we go, and, at least for me, practices change over time as use of the social network grows. It’s not that there are hoards of people banging at my Facebook door by any means. And I don’t have earth-shattering posts on my Facebook page (and I don’t update it often enough — I’m working on it). But I do have family members there, and my vacation photos, and conversations with close friends.

So a month or two ago I decided that I was not going to connect with people on Facebook if I don’t know them. It’s not meant as a slight to anyone. I just consider it something of an extension of my personal space, and I want to make sure that I know who the people are who are stopping by. At the same time, I’m not willing to suggest to Eagle staff members with their practice should be. That needs to be a personal decision. I do, though, ask that they be aware of the implications of people they might accept or invite as friends, and the potential for those connections to reflect on them in their role as a journalist.

Twitter is a much more open space, in my view, and I follow people there whom I have never met in person.

We’ll be working on a more specific social media policy in the coming weeks. If you wonder what other companies — both inside and outside the media business — have established for policies, Mashable points to a great directory of policies at Social Media Governance.

Any Fultz family still in Wichita?

Sharon in Asheville, NC, writes that she’s closing her furniture/consignment store and found an old photograph marked, “Uncle Floyd Fultz and Family.” She thought the family might want to have it. It’s stamped F.A. Wesely Studio in Wichita. Obituary archives indicate Floyd Fultz passed away in 1956. If you’re a surviving family member and would like to have the photo, drop me an email at schisenhall@wichitaeagle.com and I’ll put you in touch with Sharon.

Fultz family photo

Fultz family photo

Morning reading list

A reader asks via email which news sources I read in the morning to get started for the day. It varies by day, and by my schedule — whether I have an early meeting, or time to scan several news sites over coffee. And I do scan more than I read in the morning.

It should go without saying that I start with Kansas.com. I also like to check in on NPR, and I scan Mashable and TechCrunch once or twice through the day. I also keep an eye on local conversations via Twitter. If I’m having lunch at my desk, I might take a few minutes to look at some news industry sites, especially sites that focus on online news strategies. I try to take a few minutes to scan sites of the national broadcast networks and cable TV stations.

I generally don’t have time to read longer pieces — something from the NY Times or Wall Street Journal — till I get to the couch with my laptop at night.

An update on printing quality

The problem I noted in an earlier post with printing that is too light on some pages of the print edition should be corrected now. Cindy Trenary, vice president for production at The Eagle, says the shipment of new plates has arrived. This will correct the problem of pages that are not printing with enough ink. Thanks for your patience while we got our plates replaced.

We’re working to fix light printing

A couple of readers this week commented on printing being too light on some pages of their paper. We’ve got a problem with some of the plates we use on our press — we have a shipment of the wrong plates, and we’re trying to make them work until the new ones arrive. The new printing plates should be in very soon (maybe as you read this) and that will take care of the printing that isn’t dark enough. Sorry for the problems with the print quality in the meantime.