The awards were initially divided into three divisions – straight reporting assignments for a single story or a series of articles; regular features exclusively in the feminine field, including fashion columns, or sewing or cooking departments; any column or feature, including editorials, written consistently by a woman.[8] Broadcast and magazine categories were added in 1972.[9]
^October 11th 2014, The Economist, Ward Award, Retrieved August 3, 2015, "...Rosemarie Ward ... has won a Front Page Award from the Newswomen’s Club of New York ..."
^NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, October 5, 2006, NEWS FOTOG EGAN-CHIN WINS AWARD, Retrieved August 3, 2015, ".... Egan-Chin scooped the coveted Front Page Award..."
^The New York Times, Columnist Biography: Joyce Purnick, Retrieved August 3, 2015, "...Ms. Purnick’s other honors include the 1987 Peter Kihss Award for reporting on city government, given by the Fund for the City of New York, and a 1979 Front Page Award from the Newswomen's Club of New York..."
^Editorial staff, October 25, 2012, Wall Street Journal, Vanessa O’Connell, Retrieved August 3, 2015, "..n 2004, her series on cigarettes and tobacco companies was honored with a Front Page Award, including “Bans on Smoking in Prison Shrink a Coveted Market”; “New Leaf: Why Philip Morris Decided to Make Friends With FDA”; and “Burning Question: U.S. Suit Alleges Philip Morris Hid Cigarette Fire Risk.”..."