Michael Vitez

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Michael_Vitez an entity of type: Thing

Michael Thomas Vitez (born April 11, 1957) is an American Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author. He is the son of immigrants, his father having fled from Budapest, Hungary in 1939, and his mother came to America from Europe as a German Jew in 1941; both leaving their homeland to escape from Hitler's reign. He is the Director of Narrative Medicine at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, after serving as a journalist over a three decade career (1985-2015) with The Philadelphia Inquirer. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Michael Vitez
rdf:langString Michael Thomas Vitez
rdf:langString Michael Thomas Vitez
rdf:langString Washington, D.C.
xsd:date 1957-04-11
xsd:integer 9776136
xsd:integer 1114760042
xsd:integer 1997
xsd:date 1957-04-11
xsd:integer 3
rdf:langString Director of Narrative Medicine, Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University
rdf:langString from the Forward by Sylvester Stallone
rdf:langString Maureen Fitzgerald
rdf:langString "You can't borrow Superman's cape. You can't use the Jedi laser sword. But the steps are there. The steps are accessible. And standing up there, you kind of have a piece of the Rocky pie."
rdf:langString Michael Thomas Vitez (born April 11, 1957) is an American Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author. He is the son of immigrants, his father having fled from Budapest, Hungary in 1939, and his mother came to America from Europe as a German Jew in 1941; both leaving their homeland to escape from Hitler's reign. He is the Director of Narrative Medicine at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, after serving as a journalist over a three decade career (1985-2015) with The Philadelphia Inquirer. His work at the Inquirer was focused on human-interest stories. In 1997, Vitez, along with Inquirer photographers April Saul and Ron Cortes, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Journalism for a series of articles he wrote on end-of-life care, telling the stories of terminally ill patients who wished to die with dignity. He has authored four books, one based on his Pulitzer Prize-winning stories, Final Choices.
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xsd:gYear 1957

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