Office of the Dean
CCIS AWARDS AND RECOGNITION CEREMONY
The College of Communications and Information Studies held its first College Recognition Ceremony and Awards Dinner in September 2000. The College awards program was designed to publicly recognize and honor the accomplishments of our faculty, staff, students, distinguished alumni and friends.
The 2008-2009 College Awards and Recognition Ceremony is scheduled to be held on November 14, 2008 from 6:00 - 9:30 p.m. at the Hillary J. Boone Center on the University of Kentucky campus. Tickets are $25.00 per person.
For information and reservations contact: Janice Birdwhistell at (859) 257-4241 or by e-mail at Janice.Bird@uky.edu.
Past award recipients are as follows:
-- Excellence in Teaching Award --
Excellence in teaching is a multi-faceted achievement. It requires not only mastery of the subject matter, but also awareness of current developments, and a vision of what's to come. It requires the ability to communicate that knowledge to students in ways, which foster understanding, intellectual growth, and a broadening of perspectives. It requires a never-ending quest to stay attuned to student needs, concerns and interests. Nominations for this award are accepted from students and alumnus each spring.
| 2008 | Dr. Lisa O'Connor , Faculty |
| 2007 | Dr. Kevin Real , Faculty |
| 2006 | Dr. J. Michael Farrell, Faculty |
| 2005 | Dr. Aaron Boyson, Faculty |
| 2004 | Yvonne Cappe, Faculty |
| 2003 | John F. Clark, Faculty |
| 2002 | Dr. Rosemary B. Bryant, Faculty |
| 2001 | Dr. Lois M. Chan, Faculty |
| 2000 | Joesph B. Miller, Faculty |
| 1999 | No recipients |
| 1998 | Dr. Derek R. Lane, Faculty |
| Stephen J. Haggerty, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| 1997 | Bruce K. Berger, Graduate Teaching Assistant |
| 1996 | Dr. Alan D. DeSantis, Faculty |
| Gina Wesley, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| 1995 | Professor Richard L. Roth, Faculty |
| Donna Shannon, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| 1994 | Dr. James K. Hertog, Faculty |
| Celia Wall, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| 1993 | Dr. Ramona R. Rush, Faculty |
| Tina Harris, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| 1992 | Dr. S. Scott Whitlow, Faculty |
| Marilyn Hunt, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| Lynda Thomas, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| 1991 | Dr. Vince R. Waldron, Faculty |
| Chris Foreman, Graduate Teaching Assistant | |
| 1990 | Dr. Enid S. Waldhart, Faculty |
| Martha J. Einerson, Graduate Teaching Assistant |
-- Faculty Community Service --
This award recognizes achievements by our faculty with our community.
| 2008 | Dr. Seth Noar, COM |
| 2007 | Dr. Lois M. Chan, SLIS |
| 2006 | Dr. Alan DeSantis, COM |
| 2005 | Dr. Enid Waldhart, COM |
| 2004 | No award given |
| 2003 | No award given |
| 2002 | Professor Rick Roth, JAT |
| 2001 | No award given |
| 2000 | Dr. Roy L. Moore, JAT and Associate Dean of Graduate Studies |
| 2000 | Professor Scoobie Ryan, JAT |
-- Research Award --
This award recognizes achievement in faculty research.
| 2008 | Dr. Deborah Chung , JAT |
| 2007 | Dr. Chan Yoo , JAT |
| 2006 | Dr. Michael I. Arrington , COM Dr. Richard Labunski, JAT |
| 2005 | Dr. Chike Anyaegbunam, JAT Dr. Seth Noar, COM |
| 2004 | Dr. Kevin Real, COM |
| 2003 | Dr. Derek R. Lane, COM |
| 2001 | Dr. Sorin Matei, JAT |
| 2000 | Dr. Rick Zimmerman, COM |
| 1999 | Dr. Philip C. Palmgreen, COM |
-- Friend of the College Award --
This award is presented to a person that has demonstrated support to the College or one of its units by volunteering, or by providing internships or by their involvement in programs or events supported by the College.
| 2008 | Phil Osborne . . . |
| 2007 | Carl West was educated in the public schools of Campbell County, Kentucky. He graduated from University of Kentucky School of Journalism in 1966. He started his newspaper career with The Kentucky Post as a general assignment reporter in 1966. Carl moved to the Frankfort bureau of the Post in 1969. He went to Washington, D.C. in 1971 as a regional correspondent in the Scripps-Howard News bureau in 1971, representing the Post in Covington and The Evansville (Ind.) Press. He moved to the Scripps-Howard national desk in 1973 as part of a two-member investigative team. Coverage included Watergate, and the fraud and abuse in Medicaid and Medicare. He was a co-winner of the Raymond Clapper Memorial Award for Washington reporting for stories on congressional junkets. In 1978, he was assigned to cover the Pentagon. He returned to Frankfort in 1979 as editor of The State Journal. He is the founder of the Kentucky Book Fair which is now in its 26th year. In 2003 he was inducted into the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame. Carl has helped the School of Journalism and Telecommunications by partnering with us in an on-going senior-level JOU course, “Covering the Capitol.” This course is offered in the spring semester to coincide with the Kentucky State Legislature’s session. Students meet weekly in the State Journal’s offices in Frankfort and report on and write stories related to state government issues. The class has been offered three times so far. The partnership has resulted in numerous publications for JAT students, most of them on the front page of The State Journal. Carl also helps mentor the students. This has been a great experience that the School plans to continue to offer in the future. Carl has also partnered with the school twice to host the print journalists in the Edward R. Murrow Journalism Fellows group. The group spends several hours at The State Journal, meeting with Mr. West and other State Journal staff members and touring the facility. Mr. West also participated in JAT’s spring 2007 Richard G. Wilson Journalism Alumni Symposium, discussing his experiences as a Washington-based reporter during Watergate. |
| 2006 | Albert P. "Al" Smith, Jr. is the host/producer of KET’s Comment on Kentucky, now in its 32nd year. He grew up in Florida and Tennessee. After military service in World War II, he attended Vanderbilt University and then spent his first 10 years in journalism working for daily papers in New Orleans, the Times-Picayune and the New Orleans Item. He came to Kentucky in 1958 to edit the Russellville News-Democrat which later became part of a chain of weeklies which he organized and headed until selling the company in 1985. In Washington in the Carter and Reagan administrations (1980-82), he was federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission which invests in economic development in Kentucky and 12 other states. He has chaired or been active in several statewide civic and educational groups including the Governor’s Council on Educational Reform (chair); the Kentucky Press Association (chair); the Shakertown Roundtable (chair); Kentucky Oral History Commission (founding chair); the Prichard Committee for Educational Excellence, and Leadership Kentucky (chair). He is a member of the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame housed at UK. He has received numerous honors including the Distinguished Rural Kentuckian Award, LRC’s Vic Hellard Award for public service, KPA’s Lewis Owen Award for Community Service, UK Library Associates Medallion for Intellectual Achievement, and the East Kentucky Leadership Conference Media Award. Six Kentucky universities and colleges have awarded him honorary doctoral degrees. Al is currently writing a memoir of politics and journalism, veteran journalist. Al Smith, along with Rudy Abramson, developed the idea for the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues that is now a part of UK, the College and the School of Journalism and Telecommunications. It was Al, more than anyone else, who pushed, prodded and pulled UK into recognizing and then supporting the IRJCI. Al worked to help secure the initial funding from the Sigma Delta Chi Foundation, and then get the grants from the Knight Foundation and Ford Foundation that made it possible to hire a Director and get things underway. In two short years, the IRJCI has become a key component of the School of Journalism and Telecommunications. It has already made a major impact on the practice of journalism in rural communities, particularly in central Appalachia, and its national influence continues to grow. He currently chairs the Institute’s Steering Committee and co-chairs another committee to raise additional funds for its outreach. |
| 2005 | Patricia Hunter Shannon currently lives in Purchase, N.Y. with her husband Scott. Shannon, who earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism from UK in 1978, is Vice President of Penguardia Productions, a wholly owned corporation for creation and production of radio and television programming. She currently serves as a member of the School of Journalism and Telecommunications Alumni Advisory Board, and previously worked at WVLK Radio and for Hyatt Hotels Corporation as the Public Relations Director and National Sales Manager for their properties in Lexington, Ky., Sarasota and Tampa, Fl., and Grand Hyatt, NY. Shannon is very involved in her community. She is a member of the Rye Resurrection Church, the Junior League of Westchester on the Sound, Vice President of the Parents Association for the Covenant of Sacred Heart, member of the Blythedale Children’s Hospital Capital Campaign and is active in fund raising for the Carver Center and St. Vincent’s of Westchester. Her nominator states, “Trish has taken a very active role in the School of Journalism and Telecommunications over the years, helping with renovations to the Maggie Room and with the addition of two large display plaques that list all of the members of the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame. The University of Kentucky Journalism Alumni Association, of which Trish is a member, established the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame in 1980. The first recipients were inducted on April 13, 1981. New members are inducted each year and are included on the plaques that we proudly display in the Maggie Room located on the first floor of the Grehan Building. The purpose of the Hall of Fame is to recognize Kentuckians who have made significant contributions to the profession of journalism. Selection of the Hall of Fame members is made from individuals, living or dead, who are natives of Kentucky, or who have spent a significant portion of their careers in Kentucky. With Trish’s leadership, the framed display boards and plaques listing all of the Hall of Fame members were placed in the room in 2004. Trish has also assisted the School by using her contacts in broadcasting in New York City to help identify prospective speakers for the annual Joe Creason Lecture.” |
| 2004 | Dr. Gifford Blyton was born in 1908. He spent his early childhood growing up on a soft fruit ranch in Wawawai, Washington and playing with Nez Perce Indian children. Blyton’s first eight years of school were spent in a one-room schoolhouse. He graduated from Lewiston High School in Lewiston, Idaho, in 1927. Blyton spent one year at LSU before moving to Columbus, Ohio, to continue work on his PhD at Ohio State University. While in Baton Rouge, he met Marion Geren and they married in 1938. Three years later he received his PhD, which led to him accepting his second teaching position at Western Michigan University. His first teaching assignment was at Ohio University where he taught basic courses in speech and directed a speech clinic. He came to UK in 1948 to teach speech and communications. He taught at UK from 1948 to 1975 and coached the UK debate team for 21 years. He has also served as parliamentarian for the University Senate for the last 29 years. The College is very proud to have an endowed professorship named in honor of Dr. Blyton. The professorship, established in 2002, honors his legacy of contributions as a teacher and a scholar. The effort to raise money for the professorship was spearheaded by his former debate student, Stan Craig. The first holder of the Gifford S. Blyton Endowed Professorship is Dr. Enid Waldhart in the CIS Department of Communication. |
| 2003 | Nell Blair Vaughn, '50 Journalism graduate. Nell was a summer Kernel Editor at UK and worked for the Lexington Leader in 1972. Nell has been very involved with the College. She regularly attends all JAT events as well as the annual college awards dinner. Nell has helped the staff compile information for the 50th Anniversary of the Grehan Building and provided photos and information for displays during the event. |
| 2002 | David L. Weller, currently lives in Frankfort and is a 1974 UK graduate. He has been regional director of corporate and external affairs for BellSouth since 1991. He serves as a part-time instructor in the UK School of Journalism and Telecommunications and serves on the college's board of advisors. |
| 2001 | Richard G. "Dick" Wilson, he was a Courier-Journal reporter and bureau chief for nearly 34 years and was the recipient of several awards for his coverage of higher education. He was inducted into the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame in 1999. He is a 1966 graduate of UK with a degree in Journalism. He was a Kernel editor, a faculty advisor, is a long-time member of the JAT Alumni Executive Committee and in 2002-2003 served as the Acting Director of the UK School of Journalism and Telecommunications. He has been a faithful and strong supporter of the College and rarely misses events and has played a major role in organizing many others. |
| 2000 | Rosemary Westley, widow of Bruce Westley, former professor and director of the School of Journalism. She has worked closely with the college and its graduate program in establishing the Bruce Westley Memorial Graduate Scholarship in communications, awarded each year. |
-- Outstanding Alumnus Award --
This award is presented to an outstanding alumnus of the College and recognizes their many contributions to our community.
| 2008 | Dr. Philip Palmgreen . . . |
| 2008 | Andrew Oppmann . . . |
| 2007 | Dr. Lee B. Becker has had an outstanding career. Dr. Becker received his B.A. degree in journalism from UK in 1969 and his M.A. degree in Communication from UK in 1971. After graduating from UK, he worked as a journalist in this region and in Kansas before returning to school to earn a doctorate in Mass Communications from the University of Wisconsin. He has been a faculty member at the University of Georgia since 1997 and has been recognized for outstanding graduate teaching there. As part of his responsibilities in Georgia’s James M. Cox Jr. Center, he conducts the Annual Surveys of Journalism & Mass Communication, essential tools for JMC administrators because the data provide salary benchmarks for faculty and placement information for JMC graduates. Dr. Becker is a prolific researcher and has received recognition including the Krieghbaum under 40 Award from AEJMC and the Harold L. Nelson Award from UW-Madison. He is a MAPOR Fellow and has been a Fulbright Research Scholar twice. He is one of the best-known scholars in journalism and mass communication. Dr. Becker’s career success speaks directly to the mission of the College, the graduate program, and the School of Journalism and Telecommunications. Dr. Becker is an excellent example of how a professional undergraduate degree and a research-based master’s degree can combine to give a student appropriate grounding for a research career. Dr. Becker is an outstanding role model for both our undergraduate and graduate students, and eminently worthy of recognition as an outstanding alumnus. |
| 2006 | Everett J. “EJ” Mitchell II is a 1985 UK journalism graduate. He was recently named Executive Editor of the Courier Post in Cherry Hill, NJ. Prior to this appointment, he was the vice president/news and editor of The Tennessean in Nashville. He is the first African-American to serve as editor of The Tennessean. EJ started his career in 1985 as a reporter with The Evening Sun in Baltimore. He joined The Courier-Journal at Louisville in 1986 as a general assignment reporter and courts reporter. He moved to The Detroit News as a reporter covering the Detroit Police Department in 1989. While there he worked with a team of reporters covering both Nelson Mandela’s tour and corruption in the Detroit Police Department, which resulted in the police chief being sentenced to federal prison. He was named assistant city editor at The News in 1991 and day city editor in 1992. As an editor he coined the term “carjacking.” He joined The Cincinnati Enquirer as assistant managing editor/local news in 1993. He was named managing editor of The News Journal at Wilmington in 1997. Mitchell moved to executive editor of the Statesman Journal in Salem in 1999. |
| 2005 | Dr. Bruce Berger ('99). As a doctoral student at UK, Bruce was the recipient of the Bruce Westley Memorial Graduate Scholarship (1998) for academic excellence in mass communication research and theory and was a recipient of the 1997 Excellence in Teaching Award in the College of Communications and Information Studies. Before going to Alabama, Berger taught courses in public relations and organizational communications at UK. He currently serves as a professor and chairman of the University of Alabama Department of Advertising and Public Relations. He also serves as director of The Betsy Plank Center for Public Relations Studies in the College. Berger teaches courses in public relations writing, management, campaigns courses, persuasion, communication campaigns, and international public relations. His current research focuses on power and influence in public relations and the uses of new information technologies in the practice. He has published more than 25 academic and professional articles in leading scholarly journals and trade publications. Prior to entering academia, Berger was public relations professional and executive for 20 years. From 1975-1989 he worked at Upjohn Company (now Upjohn/Pharmacia a division of Pfizer), a pharmaceutical research and manufacturing company. Berger, who served as director of Worldwide Human Health Public Relations for Upjohn, was responsible for media relations and public relations marketing support programs in 25 countries, receiving with his colleagues a Silver Anvil Award from Public Relations Society of America (PRSA). He joined the Whirlpool Corporation in 1989, and would later be named corporate vice president of corporate affairs, and president of the Whirlpool Foundation. Berger’s leadership in innovative employee communications programs received national recognition, including an “Inside Public Relations” All-Star Award for communication leadership and development of The Whirlpool Management Journal.
Berger is a member of PRSA, the International Communication Association, the National Communication Association, and the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. He serves as a member of the editorial review boards of the Journal of Public Relations Research and the Atlantic Journal of Communication. His nominator described him as “a strong supporter of and contributor to the Graduate Program in Communication. He has assisted the program in recruiting students and has been a role model with his strong academic and professional achievements." |
| 2004 | Judy (’67) and Gene Clabes (’69) left the University of Kentucky with two important shared commitments - to journalism and to the personal partnership they made when they married as juniors. Both grew up in Henderson, Kentucky. Gene and Judy both graduated from Henderson County High School in 1963. Gene attended Henderson Community College for two years during which he became sports editor and interim city editor of the Henderson Gleaner. He then came to the University of Kentucky where he joined The Kentucky Kernel staff and was managing editor his senior year. Judy came to UK as a freshman, joined The Kernel staff and served as summer editor and associate editor. In the late '80s Gene became publisher and editor of the Recorder Newspapers, heading up a group that purchased the weeklies. Under his leadership, circulation grew dramatically, special editions were created for specific communities, and they won numerous awards for excellence. He served on the board and as president of the Kentucky Press Association and is currently on the board of the Kentucky 4-H Association. Judy became president and CEO of the Scripps Howard Foundation in 1996. Under her leadership, the Foundation distributes over $5 million in journalism and general charitable funding around the country. Her stewardship includes the founding of the Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications at Hampton University, a historically black institution in Virginia, increased funding for journalism scholarships and internships. When the Recorder Newspapers were sold in the late 1990's, Gene Clabes devoted his time to building the family horse farm in Bracken County, Ky. He took a special assignment as Freedom Forum Visiting Professional for four semesters at Hampton University. Currently, he is equine director for the Kentucky Equine Education Project, a statewide horse advocacy group, where he combines his love of horses with his skills as a journalist and communicator. Both have remained very involved in the School of Journalism and Telecommunications as volunteers and as participants in numerous School programs and activities. |
| 2003 | Jody Carbiener Dreyer, '83 Journalism graduate. Jody is the senior vice president, corporate public service for The Walt Disney Company. She oversees Disney's employee VoluntEARS initiatives worldwide, the company's corporate relations function, and the Disney Learning Partnership, which includes Disney's American Teacher Award. Jody has worked for the organization in some capacity for over 20 years, beginning with summer work at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida. She began working at Disney while as an intern while she was a student at the University of Kentucky. |
| 2001 | Dr. Rona J. Roberts, a Monticello native who earned a master's and doctorate in communication before starting her own research and Web site firm. Her firm, Roberts & Kay is located in Lexington and offers qualitative research facilitators and Web site design services. |
| 2000 | Kathryn R. Costello was the senior vice president for external affairs at the University of Georgia and currently has her own consulting business. She holds both her bachelor's (1963) and master's degree (1974) from our College. |
| 1999 | John R. "Jack" Guthrie, a 1963 graduate of UK with a degree in Journalism, is chairperson and CEO of Guthrie/Mayes Public Relations, past president of the UK School of Journalism Alumni Association and former member of the UK Board of Trustees. He has also been very involved in the Joe Creason Lecture Series, the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame and the James C. Bowling Executive-in-Residence Lecture Series. |
-- Outstanding Staff Award --
This award recognizes outstanding service to the college by a staff member.
| 2008 | Nathan Stevens, JAT |
| 2007 | Maggie Chapman, COM |
| 2006 | Janice Birdwhistell, Dean's Office |
| 2005 | Scott Johnson, COM |
| 2004 | Cathy Hunt, Dean's Office |
| 2003 | Pamela Thompson, SLIS |
| 2002 | Henry Daniels III, Dean's Office |
| 2001 | Julie H. Berry, JAT |
| 2000 | Steven W. Ingram, COM |
| 1999 | Gregory A. Herron, JAT |
| 1998 | Sheila J. Breeding, Dean's Office |
| 1997 | Octavia Louise Julian, Dean's Office |
| 1996 | Particia J. Matthews, JAT |
| 1995 | Tina M. Moorhead, SLIS |
*If you are interested in learning more about the nomination process or would like to attend the College Recognition and Awards Dinner, contact Janice Birdwhistell at (859) 257-4241.
>> View College Photo Album of award winners and special events.
Last updated: September 30, 2008 by Derek R. Lane in cooperation with Janice Birdwhistell.

