Photo: Anthony Durniak
|
Spectrum's Winners: [From left] Bill Sweet, Jean Kumagai, Steven
Cherry, Mark Montgomery, Susan Hassler, Harry
Goldstein, and Randi Silberman.
|
No profession, it has been said, has higher
self-esteem than journalism. And while this may be
debatable—doctors never struck us as suffering from
negative self-image—few professions bestow upon
themselves as many awards as does journalism. In the
United States, many have heard of the country's
glitziest competitions: the Pulitzer Prizes and the
National Magazine Awards. But there are literally
hundreds of other competitions, including annual ones
for such subjects as the best article about osteoporosis
and one for the article judged to have done the best job
of "presenting biblical truth in the secular media.
Among these many competitions, the Jesse H. Neal
National Business Journalism Awards have established
themselves as the premier venue for recognizing
excellence in special-interest magazine journalism. So
it was particularly gratifying for us here at IEEE
Spectrum to win four honors at the most recent Neal
ceremony, held this past 23 March in New York City.
One award was for our special issue titled China's
Tech Revolution, [June 2005]. The other
was for an investigative article by senior editor Harry
Goldstein titled "Who Killed the Virtual Case File?"
[September 2005], about the FBI's troubled attempt to
automate its main record-keeping systems. The other two
awards came at the end of the event, when the Neal
judges announced the winner and two runners-up for its
Grand Neal Award, the highest commendation of the
ceremony. As always, the Grand Neal was selected from
among the 34 winners in all the various categories,
which had themselves been selected from 1200 entries.
The Grand Neal is a kind of "best in show that considers
all the different honorees and picks three winners among
the winners.
We were pleased, and a little stunned, to receive the
first and second runner-up Grand Neal citations for the
China issue and for the FBI case file story,
respectively. To get those honors, we had to beat
competition from Baseline magazine, Advertising Age,
Aviation Week & Space Technology, Business Week
SmallBiz, CIO magazine, Washington Technology, and
others. The Grand Neal itself went to Farm Journal, for
a series of articles on a disease affecting soybean plants.
The honors are a testament to the diligence of Harry
and of our staffers who worked on the China issue,
especially Jean Kumagai and Bill Sweet. They pushed for
it and took on editorial duties beyond their normal
ones.
Most of all, we are indebted to the 367 395 IEEE
members, who give us the resources to cover important
and complex issues in global technology—and to do it
with authority and rigor.
The editorial content of IEEE Spectrum does not
represent official positions of the IEEE or its
organizational units. Please address comments to
Forum at n.hantman@ieee.org.