| Editor's Note:
Inductee biographies are attached. For e-mailed inductee photo sketches,
contact Susanne Hibbard in University Relations at 205/348-5320.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Four distinguished communication leaders in
fields ranging from broadcast news to public relations will be inducted
into the College of Communication and Information Sciences (C&IS)
Hall of Fame at The University of Alabama on Oct. 4.
Media will have an opportunity to meet with the four inductees
during a press conference to be held on Thursday, Oct. 4, at 2:30
p.m., in the Logan Room of the Bryant Conference Center on the UA
campus.
Established by the C&IS Board of Visitors, the Communication
Hall of Fame was created in 1998 to honor, preserve and perpetuate
the names and accomplishments of communication personalities who
have brought lasting fame to the state of Alabama. This year marks
the fourth class of inductees into the Hall of Fame. These honored
individuals include:
Tom Cherones (1939 - )
Hollywood Director and Producer
John Cochran (1939 - )
ABC News Chief Correspondent
Betsy Plank (1924 - )
Public Relations Executive and First Female President of Public
Relations Society of America
Kathryn Tucker Windham (1918 - )
Journalist and Now Alabama's Favorite Storyteller
These remarkable individuals have had a profound impact on
the social, economic, political and cultural life of Alabama and
the nation through the disciplines of communication, said
Dr. E. Culpepper Clark, C&IS dean. These men and women
represent the finest the state has to offer. Their commitment to
their profession has raised the sights of us all in the communication
and information disciplines.
The Communication Hall of Fame Gallery is now located in the rotunda
of Reese Phifer Hall on the UA campus. Permanent archives will be
established and maintained for the collection of memorabilia related
to the lives and careers of those chosen for placement in the Hall
of Fame.
The College of Communication
& Information Sciences is among the largest and most prestigious
communication colleges in the country, having graduated more than
12,000 students and ranking among the top institutions in the country
in the number of doctorates awarded. Communication graduates have
earned four of the six Pulitzer Prizes awarded to UA alumni.
2001 College of Communication and Information Sciences Hall
of Fame Inductees
TOM CHERONES (1939- )
The man who produced or directed the first 86 episodes of Seinfeld,
the most successful situation comedy in the history of television,
got his first broadcasting job at The University of Alabama. I
was working at the A&P in Tuscaloosa, but I was looking for
something more interesting, Tom Cherones remembers. When
I started at University TV, my pay fell from about 80 cents an hour
to 40 cents an hour.
Cherones grew up in downtown Tuscaloosa. His grandfather immigrated
to the United States from Greece and opened the Tuscaloosa Café
on Broad Street (now University Boulevard). His father was a maintenance
engineer at WTBC and operated a radio and TV repair shop in Tuscaloosa.
His first jobs in television may have made him wistful for the
glamour of the A&P. We swept floors, we moved sets, we
did everything, Cherones recalls about working in the TV studios
on the second floor the Old Union building - now Reese Phifer Hall.
I worked on Chemistry Can Be Fun with George Toffel,
and eventually I was directing productions at the University.
Cherones finished his undergraduate work at the University of New
Mexico and after serving as producer and director in Pittsburgh
at WQED, one of public televisions flagship stations, he returned
to The University of Alabama where he earned a masters degree
in telecommunication and film in 1976. He served as a lieutenant
in the U.S. Navy from 1961 to 1965 where, after duty at sea, he
was, among other things, assigned to make motion pictures of explosions.
It was apparently the last time he shot a bomb.
In 1975 Cherones moved to Hollywood. His first job was production
manager for General Hospital, and since 1975 he has been
an independent producer and director for Warner Brothers, ABC-TV,
CBS-TV, Paramount, Lorimar and Mary Tyler Moore Productions. He
was also the production manager of Welcome Back Kotter. In
1980 he wrote and produced a movie, Two of Hearts, for cable
and public television. He has directed and produced episodes of
Caroline in the City, Boston Common, Ellen, Growing Pains, News
Radio, and Ladies Man.
Cherones has a reputation for staying calm and running a congenial
set in a high-pressure business where tempers flare. When
I produce a show, everyone has his job and everybody is important.
If everybody does his job there is no problem.
He has received the Directors Guild of America Outstanding
Comedy Director Award for Seinfeld, an Emmy award for Seinfeld,
a Golden Globe award, a Monitor award, The Peabody award, the Peoples
Choice award, the TV Critics award and the Christopher award. He
has also received six Emmy and three Directors Guild of America
award nominations. In 1993 he was presented the UA College of Communications
Outstanding Alumnus award.
Cherones even appeared on camera as a director in one
episode of Seinfeld. The Tuscaloosa News asked him
to critique Tom Cherones, the actor. Mediocre, he said.
I wouldnt hire him again.
JOHN COCHRAN (1939- )
John Cochran is a consummate broadcast news reporter who has earned
a reputation for fairness, accuracy, and objectivity.
Now chief Washington correspondent for ABC NEWS, Cochran was born
and raised in Montgomery, Ala. He got his first broadcasting job
as a student at The University of Alabama when Bert Bank (2000 Hall
of Fame inductee) hired him to announce records and read the news
at WTBC radio in Tuscaloosa.
But all was not rock and roll during his time at the
Capstone. Memorable was his insiders view of President Frank
Rose during the Schoolhouse Door crisis precipitated by then Gov.
George Wallace. Also memorable was the camera shot that found Cochran
peeking over President Roses shoulder in a group photograph
that famously included Bear Bryant and President John
F. Kennedy.
After military service and graduate study at the University of
Iowa, Cochran worked as a television reporter and anchor at WSOC-TV
in Charlotte and WRC-TV in Washington, D.C. In 1977 he joined NBC
News, working first as its Pentagon correspondent and then as chief
foreign correspondent from 1977-1987. He showed extraordinary courage
in his reporting of stories such as the overthrow of the Shah in
Iran and the Islamic Revolution. He pursued stories wherever they
might be found, even to battlegrounds.
Cochrans honest reporting angered officials in totalitarian
and authoritarian regimes, a journalistic diligence that occasionally
led to detention and incarceration. He received Emmy awards for
his coverage of the Solidarity movement in Poland and the overthrow
of the Romanian government. He served as NBCs chief diplomatic
correspondent and chief White House correspondent before joining
ABC NEWS as chief Capitol Hill correspondent in 1994. Today he is
a frequent reporter and commentator for ABC World News Tonight and
other ABC NEWS programs.
John Cochran received the UA College of Communications Outstanding
Alumnus Award in 1977 and its Distinguished Achievement Award in
1989. He also serves on the Board of Visitors for the College of
Communication and Information Sciences. In 1999 the University awarded
him an honorary doctor of humane letters, where he also received
a rare standing ovation for his commencement address. Perhaps his
greatest achievement is that despite the revolutionary changes in
broadcast news during his 24 years as a network reporter, he remains
one of the nations most trusted correspondents.
Hes been very good for a very long time, says
ABCs Peter Jennings. I know because Ive been his
competitor ... and his editor.
BETSY PLANK (1924- )
Betsy Plank might be called public relations First Lady.
She was the first woman elected president of the Public Relations
Society of America, and the first person to receive PRSAs
two top professional honors: the Gold Anvil as the nations
outstanding professional and the Lund Award for exemplary civic
and community service. At Ameritech she was the first female to
head a company department, directing external affairs.
Plank credits The University of Alabama for much of her success.
She says the Capstone provided an outstanding foundation for her
career even though there was no such thing as a public relations
major when she graduated with a bachelors degree in history
in 1944. The University gave me those rich disciplines which
have served so faithfully throughout a professional lifetime,
she said.
Plank served as executive vice president and treasurer of Edelman
Public Relations, an international counseling firm, and later served
as director of public relations planning for AT&T before joining
Ameritech (formerly Illinois Bell).
She spent more than 17 years with Ameritech and it was here that
she faced her greatest challenge - shaping and articulating that
institutions response to the divestiture of the Bell System.
We had a couple of years to break up the worlds largest
corporation and prepare it without a single missed step, she
recalls. There were many problems. It was fascinating to live
through, challenging to prepare for and carry out, and almost 20
years later, the telecommunications industry hasnt settled
down yet.
Plank is dedicated to civic causes in Chicago, such as the Girl
Scouts and the United Ways Crusade of Mercy. She serves on
the advisory board of Illinois Issues and as a trustee of the Illinois
Council of Economic Education.
Her dedication to public relations education is unexcelled. Northern
Illinois University, Ball State University, the University of Texas,
Kent State University, and the University of Florida all have
honored her for excellence in the field. She co-chaired the 1987
national commission to develop guidelines for the undergraduate
public relations curriculum at colleges and universities and is
a founding member of PRSAs College of Fellows, an honorary
group of national leaders in public relations.
In 2000 Plank received the Distinguished Lifetime Achievement Award
from the Arthur W. Page Society, a professional organization whose
mission is to strengthen the policy-making role of the chief corporate
public relations officer. Also that year she was presented The University
of Alabama College of Communication and Information Sciences Distinguished
Achievement award, which was renamed in perpetuity the Betsy Plank
Distinguished Achievement Award.
I think public relations is fundamental to a democratic society,
she says, explaining that the framers of the constitution were,
in a sense, the nations first practitioners of public relations.
Its necessary because people need to be informed, and
they need to make intelligent choices. Public relations is the broker
of that kind of information.
KATHRYN TUCKER WINDHAM (1918- )
Alabamians consider her the states best storyteller. Public
radio listeners consider her a best friend.
They have found in her a loving companion who shares intimate,
evocative memories of swimming holes, penny candy, eccentric neighbors,
and lazy days spent counting buzzards and stamping gray mules.
After graduating from Huntingdon College, Kathryn Tucker Windham
became the first woman hired by the Alabama Journal in Montgomery.
However, her journalism career began in her hometown of Thomasville
where, as a teenager, she wrote movie reviews for her cousin Earl
Tucker, the editor of the local newspaper. Though it was a small
town, she lived a large life and shares its wonders through her
richly textured stories and essays. And it was there, with a giveaway
drugstore Brownie camera, that this accomplished photographer snapped
her first pictures. Today her photos are exhibited in galleries
and museums.
She served as reporter, photographer, and state editor for the
Birmingham News and reporter, city editor, state editor,
and associate editor for the Selma Times Journal. She promoted
statewide war bond drives during WWII and was community service
planner for the Area Agency on Aging in Camden, Ala.
She had never really told stories until a surprise invitation to
speak at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesboro, Tenn.
Now she is a fixture at that event and appears at numerous other
festivals in the United States and abroad. Her ghost stories, which
she first collected in Thirteen Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey,
have been favorites for generations of schoolchildren. Her thoughtful
and poignant stories about growing up and living in the South secured
her an audience of all ages when she was featured on National Public
Radios All Things Considered, and her commentaries
are still heard every Friday morning on Alabama Public Radio.
In her many books she has remembered the fascinating yet largely
forgotten lives of the people in isolated and insular Gees
Bend, Ala. She has preserved treasured family recipes and documented
rich, compelling stories, legends, and folkways from Alabamas
past. In a one-woman play, she rescued the legacy of Julia Tutwiler,
one of Alabamas greatest citizens and reformers.
Writing from her home in Selma, looking out upon her bottle trees,
she has little interest in e-mail and cell phones, and wont
hear of plugging in an answering machine. Still, she accomplished
something in her stories that cannot be duplicated by the most sophisticated
machines. I think storytelling is a way of saying I
love you, she explains. I love you enough to tell
you something that means a great deal to me.
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