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  JOURNALISM/EDITORIAL AWARDS  
  Updated February 6, 2005  
     
 

THE ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION

2003 Marriott Lifetime Achievement Award — “The Age Of Arthritis,” December 9, 2002, Christine Gorman and Alice Park

Judges' Comments:
"By putting arthritis on the cover, you have helped millions realize the importance of this painful and debilitating disease. More importantly, you have raised awareness regarding how to get crucial information and access to treatment."


CLARION AWARDS, ASSOCIATION FOR WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS

Best Overall External Magazine, Circulation of 500,000 or more


DEADLINE CLUB AWARDS, NEW YORK CITY CHAPTER OF THE SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS

Finalist, Feature Reporting: Magazines, Amanda Ripley, "Outside the Gates," January 21, 2002

Finalist, News, Series or Investigative Reporting: Magazines,
Don Bartlett and James Steele, "Look Who's Cashing In at Indian Casinos" December 2002

Finalist, Business Feature Reporting: Print, Dan Kadlec, "Will You Ever Be Able to Retire?" July 29, 2002


EDUCATION WRITERS ASSOCIATION AWARDS

Magazines--National Circulation category (TIME was the only magazine recognized in the Magazine category)

Special Citation -- John Cloud, "Inside the New SAT"

Judges Comments:
"An interesting look at the new SAT test and some of the issues it raises for students, educators, and society."

GERALD R. FORD JOURNALISM PRIZES

Ford Journalism Prize on National Defense: Mark Thomson and Michael Duffy

Ford Journalism Prize on the Presidency: James Carney


GLAAD MEDIA AWARDS

TIME Nominated for Outstanding Magazine Overall Coverage and Outstanding Magazine Article - "The New Face of Gay Power" by John Cloud


GLOBAL MEDIA AWARDS FOR EXCELLENCE IN POPULATION REPORTING GIVEN BY THE POPULATOIN INSTITUTE

Best Periodical


HENRY LUCE AWARDS

Winner Reporting Category, Matthew Rees, "Untangling Jenin's Tale," May 13, 2002


IRE INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING CONTEST

Finalist, Don Barlett and James Steele, "Look Who's Cashing In At Indian Casinos" December 2002


LINVINGSTON AWARDS FOR YOUNG JOURNALISTS

Finalist, John Cloud

Finalist, Amanda Ripley


NATIONAL HEADACHE FOUNDATION

Winner of the Media Excellence Award, "Preventing Headaches," October 7, 2002

Judges Comments:
"Your well-written article conveyed the impact of this life-altering condition and went a long way in helping to ease the suffering of the 45 million Americans who experience chronic recurrent headaches."


NATIONAL HEADLINER AWARDS

First Place in War and War Related Coverage: "Portrait of a Platoon" December 29, 2003- January 5, 2004, Awarded to Michael Weisskopf and Romesh Ratnesar

Judges comments:
"This gripping, intimate account took readers along on patrol with a group of soldiers where they were rendered as real people. More than any other entry, it succeeded in portraying the boredom, the terror and the gritty truth of war in utterly unsentimental terms."

First Place, Magazines: Special Column on One Subject, Awarded to Joe Klein

Judges comments:
"Klein's insights into President Bush, Wesley Clark and others don't succumb to echo-chamber punditry. They're fresh, authentic and provocative. Likewise, his unflinching take on "the PG-rated war" shows a refreshing eagerness to hold the media - and those who monitor the media - equally accountable for telling and hearing truth amid the fog of war."

Second Place, Magazines: Coverage of Major News Event, Awarded to: Nancy Gibbs, "Lights Out"

Second Place, Magazines: Writing on a Variety of Subjects, Awarded to: John Cloud

Second Place, Magazines: Writing on a Variety of Subjects, Awarded to: Jeffrey Kluger


NYABJ JOURNALISM AWARDS, NEW YORK ASSOCIATION OF BLACK JOURNALISTS

Winner, Magazine Spot/General News, "Outside the Gates," Amanda Ripley, January 21, 2002


NEW YORK PRESS CLUB

TIME's cover story "Bombshell Memo" (June 2002) written by Romesh Ratnesar and Michael Weisskopf has been recognized with a 2003 journalism award by the New York Press Club in the Spot News Category.


NEWSWOMAN'S CLUB OF NEW YORK

Front Page Award for 9/11-Related Coverage, "What Is a Life Worth?," February 11, 2002, by Amanda Ripley


THE PETER LISAGOR AWARDS, CHICAGO HEADLINE CLUB

Finalist, General-Circulation Magazine In-Depth Reporting Category, Maggie Sieger and Amanda Ripley, "The Special Agent," December 3, 2002 - January 6, 2003


ROCHE INTERNATIONAL AWARD FOR OBESITY JOURNALISM

Winner, Consumer Magazine, J. Madeleine Nash, "Cracking the Fat Riddle," September 2, 2002

Judges Comments:
"In her article 'Cracking the Fat Riddle', J Madeleine Nash provided a compelling, in-depth review of diet options and their impact on weight loss."


THE SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS, SIGMA DELTA CHI AWARDS FOR EXCELLENCE IN JOURNALISM

Winner, Magazine Writing, Jodie Morse, "The 9/11 Kid," September 2002

Judges Comments:
"'The 9/11 Kid' is a model of masterful reporting. Jodie Morse took a well-worn subject - families of those who died in the World Trade Center - and made it fresh, using telling anecdotes and quotations gleaned from depth interviews to tell the story of a young girl coming to terms with her father's death. The result is a story that is beautifully written, moving and illuminating. Everyone should read it."

Winner, Magazine Investigative Reporting, Don Barlett and James Steele, "Look Who's Cashing In At Indian Casinos," December 2002

Judges Comments:
"The Barlett and Steele piece met the conventional and still timely method of all good investigative reporting: follow the money. Doing so, led the team to the inescapable conclusion that the people who were benefiting from the explosion of casinos on Indian reservations were not Native American tribes, but instead people with tenuous ties to Native Americans. What makes this project worth the trouble is that it involves millions and millions of federal tax dollars that are not going to the people it is intended to help. The piece is told as a story -- it has a plot, a beginning, a middle and an end. It's engaging and the authors did exhaustive work -- digging through piles of public records and conducting numerous interviews. A real gotcha."


SAJA -- SOUTH ASIAN JOURNALISTS ASSOCIATION

Third Place, Category for South Asian Journalists in the US or Canada, Outstanding print story on any subject, Romesh Ratnesar, "Do We Still Need the Saudis," August 5, 2002. A report from Riyadh about the U.S.-Saudi relationship.


THE DAVID WATT PRIZE

Finalist, Michael Elliott, "The Trouble with Saving the World," December 30, 2002/ January 6, 2003


THE WILBUR RELIGION AWARDS FROM THE RELIGION COMMUNICATIONS COUNCIL

Winner, Magazine Category, David Van Biema, "Abraham," September 30, 2002

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