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INDIAN
AMERICAN JOURNALIST GETS PRESTIGIOUS US PRIZE
New York, 22 September 2007 (IANS)
A
senior Indian American working with the Wall Street Journal has
been awarded the 2007 Victor Cohn Prize for excellence in medical
science reporting. New York-based Geeta Anand was chosen for her
powerful series of stories displaying extraordinary narrative technique,
emotional power and sharp and intelligent analysis. The
$3,000 prize was established in 2000 in memory of late Washington
Post medical reporter Victor Cohn by the Council for the Advancement
of Science Writing (CASW), a non-profit organisation of journalists
and scientists committed to improving the quality of science news
reaching the public.
The
prize will be presented to Anand in Washington on Oct 21 at the
annual awards banquet organised jointly by the CASW and the National
Association of Science Writers.
In
articles for the Journal, the 36-year-old has turned her skills
on the crisis confronting a biotech company when it was asked to
provide an experimental drug for a dying child; on the issues raised
by the use of a $600,000-per-year biotechnology drug; and on how
rare diseases can become huge money makers for drug companies, IndoLink,
an ethnic Indian newspaper, reported.
The
judges noted her "admirable display of narrative power"
and said she "combined the perspective of a business journalist
with the heart of a sensitive and empathetic reporter".
"Anand's
stories turn complicated business and medical issues into engaging
human tales that hold the reader spellbound all the way," the
judges said.
Anand,
a native of Mumbai, India, graduated from Dartmouth College.
She
was Indian national champion and record holder in 1982 in the women's
100 m and 200 m breaststroke. That year, she represented India in
the Asian Games in New Delhi and the Commonwealth Games in Brisbane,
Australia.
Anand's
first job, in 1989, was at Cape Cod News, a free weekly newspaper
on Cape Cod where she covered town government in Hyannis for two
years. After that she went to the Boston Globe where she spent four
years covering politics. During her time at the Globe, she was Boston
City Hall bureau chief. In 1998, she moved to the Wall Street Journal's
New England regional edition. In January 2001, she moved to the
main edition of the Journal to cover biotech and some drug industry
stories.
Anand
lives in Manhattan with her husband, Greg Kroitzsh, and children,
Aleka, 3, and Tatyana, 5.
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