NEW YORK For Judith Miller of The New York Times, controversy seems to follow her everywhere, from Iraq to getting sent to a detention facility in Virginia for refusing to reveal a source to federal investigators. Now a organization of journalists that was planning to give Miller an award for her source protection efforts may change its plans following an outpouring of opposition from some members. The American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA), a 50-year-old group of some 1,100 non-fiction independent writers, had proposed giving Miller its "Conscience in the Media" award earlier this week. The group's nine-member First...