SAJA Announces Winners for 2008 Knowledge @ Wharton Awards

This award offers winners the unique opportunity to attend the Wharton Seminars for Business Journalists on a scholarship. Watch for mid-summer deadline for 2009.

Winners of the Knowledge@Wharton Awards

2008
SAJA--Anupreeta Das, Reuters
AAJA--Erik Ortiz, The Press of Atlantic City
NABJ--La Neice Collins, CNN
NAHJ--Gina Acosta, The Washington Post

2007
SAJA--Priya Ganapati, TheStreet.com
AAJA--Mhari Saito, WCPN in Cleveland, Ohio
NABJ--Karen Rouse, the Denver Post
NAHJ--Jim Medina, Ventura County Star

2006
SAJA - Jewel Gopwani, Detroit Free Press
AAJA - Angie Lau, WEWS-TV (Cleveland)
NABJ - Corilyn Shropshire, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
NAHJ - Ellie Estrada, KMTR NewsSource 16 (Eugene, Ore.)
NAJA - Julie Nolin, freelance journalist (Vancouver)

2005
SAJA - Gita Sitaramiah, St. Paul Pioneer Press
AAJA - Janet Cho, Cleveland Plain Dealer
NAHJ - Ivaneide Leite, freelance journalist
NAJA - Shawna Gamache, freelance journalist

2004
SAJA - Krishnan Anantharaman, the Wall Street Journal
& Sudeep Reddy, The Dallas Morning News
AAJA - Li Jing, Voice of America
2003
SAJA - Vandana Sinha, Reynolds Center for Business Journalism
2002
SAJA - Sandeep Junnarkar, CNET News.com

2001
SAJA - Menaka Doshi, CNBC
2000
SAJA - S. Mitra Kalita, Newsday
1999
SAJA - Snigdha Prakash, National Public Radio

NEW YORK—The South Asian Journalists Association is pleased to announce four outstanding journalists who have won the 2008 Knowledge@Wharton Awards for Business Journalism, sponsored by SAJA, the Wharton School and the Knowledge@Wharton online business journal.

Anupreeta Das, a member of SAJA and a journalist with Reuters in San Francisco is the winner of the ninth annual SAJA-Knowledge@Wharton Award.
Erik Ortiz, member of the Asian American Journalists Association and a staff writer for The Press of Atlantic City in New Jersey, won the AAJA-Knowledge@Wharton Award.
La Neice Collins, a producer at CNN in New York City and a member of the National Association of Black Journalists, won the NABJ-Knowledge@Wharton Award.
Gina Acosta, an assistant editor for the editorial page of The Washington Post and a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, won the NAHJ-Knowledge@Wharton Award.

The awards provide journalists with a scholarship to attend the prestigious Wharton Seminars for Business Journalists (www.wharton.upenn.edu/journalists) at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in October.
Knowledge@Wharton and SAJA launched the award in 1999 and later expanded it to include the four organizations in UNITY: Journalists of Color -- AAJA, NABJ, NAHJ and NAJA.
"A mortgage crisis, global market turmoil, and federal, state and local government budget cuts. There is no doubt how important economic and business coverage is no matter what beat a journalist covers," said SAJA President Sandeep Junnarkar. "The Knowledge@Wharton seminar is an immensely valuable opportunity for journalists to learn about intricacies of business coverage. We're grateful to the Wharton School for the 9th year of continued support."
Any member of SAJA, AAJA, NABJ, NAHJ, NAJA who is a reporter, editor or producer (including freelancers) currently living in the United States or Canada and working in business journalism or a field that overlaps, such as healthcare or technology. Applicants must be available to attend the Wharton program this year. Individuals with two to seven years of experience as a business reporter or those new to business reporting, but with five to 10 years of experience as a reporter in another field, are encouraged to apply.
"Knowledge@Wharton seeks to disseminate the knowledge behind the news, and the continuing support of the Knowledge@Wharton Awards for SAJA and the UNITY organizations fits in well with this mission," said Mukul Pandya, executive director and editor in chief of Knowledge@Wharton. "We are delighted to welcome this year's winners to the Wharton Seminars."
This year's judges for the Awards were SAJA member Alan Goldstein, an editor at Bloomberberg News in New York, and previous Knowledge@Wharton Award winners and SAJA members, Wall Street Journal reporter Sudeep Reddy and Wired Digital reporter Priya Ganapati.

About Knowledge@Wharton and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
Knowledge@Wharton, http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/is a free biweekly online resource that captures knowledge generated at Wharton through such channels as research papers, conferences, books, and interviews with faculty on current business topics, and distributes that knowledge online to a global business audience. The Knowledge@Wharton network includes more than 1.25 million subscribers and contains more than 2,000 articles and research papers in its database, with more added every week.
The Wharton School -- founded in 1881 as the first collegiate business school -- is recognized globally for intellectual leadership and ongoing innovation across every major discipline of business education. The most comprehensive source of business knowledge in the world, Wharton bridges research and practice through its broad engagement with the global business community. The school has more than 4,600 undergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, and doctoral students; more than 8,000 annual participants in executive education programs; and an alumni network of more than 84,000 graduates.

About the South Asian Journalists Association
The South Asian Journalists Association http://www.saja.org, was founded in March 1994 as a networking group for journalists of South Asian origin in New York City. It has grown into a national group of over 800 journalists working for leading newspapers, broadcast networks and new media outlets in various cities in the US and Canada. The organization is best known for its Web-based SAJA Stylebook for Covering South Asia and the South Asian Diaspora (http://www.saja.org/stylebook) -- "Learn to tell your Hindi from Hindu, and much, much more." -- and its annual SAJA Journalism Awards, which recognize outstanding coverage of South Asia and excellence in reporting by South Asian journalists and students in the U.S. and Canada. Each year, more than 700 journalists attend the SAJA National Convention in NYC.