W.E.
UPJOHN AWARD TO SAMIR CHOPRA
(March 25, 2006)
Bridgewater,
NJ: Samir Chopra was recently honored as one of the International
recipients of the Walter E. Upjohn award. Given to individuals who
have based their work on Integrity, Innovation, Excellence, Leadership,
Performance and Community Service. Dr. William E. Upjohn was the
CEO of Upjohn Pharmaceuticals founded in Michigan, US in 1885 and
served as company president for nearly 40 years taking it
to a Global player. The W. E. Upjohn Awards were first presented
in 1938, five years after Upjohn's death, to honor his principles
and his personal philosophy.
Dr.
Upjohn's life and career were characterized not only by sharp business
acumen and technical innovation, but by a social conscience and
devotion to civic duty. He is most famed for solving local and national
unemployment problems of the Depression. The W. E. Upjohn Institute
for Employment Research was established to study methods to combat
unemployment and alleviate the distress caused by that condition.
As a person he was very concerned with the prospect of having to
lay off his own workers and the broader problem of the hardships
of unemployment in the community.
This
year, Samir Chopra is one of the International W. E. Upjohn Award
recipients which includes a substantial cash award. Samir has worked
for a variety of leading organizations including: the US Government,
US Health Care Financing Administration: Medicaid Physician Reimbursement,
Centers For Disease Control, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Deloitte &
Touche, Citigroup as a Vice President in the US business and the
Chief Judge of the United States District Court.
He
is a lifelong trustee of the Hindu Center, Director of the South
Asian Bar Association and Chair of the Judiciary Committee, State
Chairman of the New York Indian American Republican Committee and
Founder of the First Indian American Fraternity in the United States.
He has appeared on CNN Financial News and has been interviewed by
the New York Times for his work and analysis of the US economy.
He is most honored that the American mainstream and Fortune 500
companies are recognizing and honoring Indian Americans for the
work that we are performing for society and paying due notice to
the impact we as a community are having on global business.
Other
recipients include: Brad Burns from Australia, Friedrich Wenzelmann
of Germany, Nathalie Bidet of France, Katy Battrick of the United
Kingdom, and Sergio Rivolta of Italy, Hei-Soo Cho of Korea, Kyoko
Imamura of Japan and Raimundo Getulio Chav of Brazil.
Release
Source: www.c2b2bnews.com
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