Ronald Kotulak

Ronald Kotulak (born 1935) is an American author and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist.

Education and career

Kotulak attended Wayne State University from 1953 to 1954. He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan in 1959.

He began working at the Chicago Tribune in 1959 and became science editor for the newspaper in 1965. After graduating from the University of Michigan, he joined the staff as a school board reporter from 1961-1963.[1] He was also president of the National Association of Science Writers from 1972-1973.[2] His book, Inside the Brain: Revolutionary Discoveries of How the Mind Works, was published in 1996.[3]

Awards and accolades

Kotulak won the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism in 1994 for his "lucid coverage of current developments in neurological science."[4] His winning articles, Research Unraveling Mysteries of the Brain and Lost Lives and the Roots of Violence both explore environmental effects on early brain development.[5][6]

He received honorable mention at the Science Journalism Awards in 1964 for his article Plasma Physics.[7]

gollark: Anyway, it doesn't really matter if Signal is still extant if you can't download it easily (or at all on iPhones) and the backend servers are blocked (which the bill also gives the communications regulator the power to do...).
gollark: I see. Australia is probably among the worst places for it though.
gollark: Aren't they in Australia?
gollark: (But it would be totally possible to ban E2EE chat apps from stores)
gollark: (Obviously they can't entirely ban it)

References

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