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Note to Editors in Birmingham, Montgomery, Atlanta,
Ga., and Jackson, Miss: UA Alumni in your area will receive an award.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The superintendent of education for the Tuscaloosa
County School Board and the managing director of the Campaign for
Alabama are among the six University of Alabama alumni that will
be presented with Outstanding Alumni Awards on April 18 from UA’s
College of Communication and Information
Sciences during Honors Week Activities.
Award winners are Dr. Joyce Sellers, superintendent of education
for the Tuscaloosa County School Board; William “Bill”
O’Conner, executive director of Campaign for Alabama; Charles
Allen, president and CEO of American Exhibition Services in Birmingham;
Richard “Rick” Looser, COO of The Cirlot Agency in Jackson,
Miss.; David Mattingly, CNN correspondent and environmental reporter,
and Steven Shipowitz, CNN vice president and senior executive producer,
both from Atlanta.
The annual awards will be presented along with outstanding student
awards at C&IS’s Honors Week program at 10 a.m. in Reese
Phifer Hall on the UA campus. The C&IS Outstanding Alumni Awards
are as follows:
Outstanding Alumnus in Advertising -- Birmingham businessman
Charles Allen received his bachelor’s in advertising from
UA in 1984 and his MBA in 1986. During his undergraduate years,
he was a member of the Alabama Forensic Council. He started from
humble beginnings in his rise to president and CEO of American Exhibition
Services Inc., a company he started in 1988 that, today, is one
of the largest exhibition marketing companies in the world, with
offices in Birmingham, Las Vegas, Nevada, and soon in Chicago, Ill.
The total event marketing that AES espouses helps companies organize,
streamline and improve their return on investment for conventions,
trade shows and their exhibitors.
AES’ first product was the Exhibitor Preview, which allowed
exhibitors to have their sales literature and directions on a revolving
kiosk in high traffic areas. A couple of years later, during the
Gulf War, Allen noticed that convention attendees would leave the
floor to watch CNN in their rooms. That observation led to exclusive
marketing rights to the live broadcast of CNN Headline News in convention
venues.
Allen serves as co-chairman of the Exhibition Industry Promotional
Campaign, which is the global exhibition industry’s $2.5 million
effort to promote itself around the world to business leaders as
a primary marketing medium. He was the youngest member ever inducted
into the Birmingham Business Journal’s “Top 40 Under
40.”
Outstanding Alumnus in Public Relations -- Richard W. “Rick”
Looser Jr., received his bachelor’s in public relations from
UA in 1983. Today he is the COO of The Cirlot Agency in Jackson,
Miss., which he co-owns with his wife, Liza. The Cirlot Agency
is a full-service marketing, public relations and corporate communications
firm that services accounts on a regional, national and international
scale, and includes some of the largest publicly traded and privately
owned businesses in the nation.
During the past 19 years, the Cirlot Agency has grown to become
one of the most successful in the Southeast, handling accounts from
Fortune 100 businesses to internationally known corporations. Under
Looser’s leadership, the Cirlot Agency led a nation-wide advertising
and public relations campaign for the DD(X) Gold Team (Northrop,
Grumman, Raytheon and Boeing) that helped land the second largest
defense contract in history, worth an estimated $60 billion. The
Cirlot Agency is considered by many to be one of the nation’s
top three agencies to represent clients in the defense industry.
Looser has been the recipient of the Grand Prammy, an annual award
honoring the top public relations professional in Mississippi. During
the same year, he was named to the “Top 40 Under 40,”
a yearly accolade that recognizes the state of Mississippi’s
top 40 business professionals under the age of 40. A member of the
board of directors of UA’s Capstone Communication Society,
Looser received the 1999 Southern Public Relations Federation Senior
Practitioner of the Year for Mississippi, and, in 2002, the Southern
Public Relations Federation Lantern Award.
Outstanding Alumna in Communication Studies and The Betsy
Plank Distinguished Achievement Award -- Tuscaloosa, Alabama’s
Dr. Joyce Sellers has received three degrees from UA. She received
her bachelor’s in speech/theatre in 1971, her master’s
in education in 1973 and her doctorate in instructional leadership
in 1989. Today, she serves as the superintendent for the Tuscaloosa
County Board of Education, a post she has held since 1994.
One of the most highly acclaimed educators in the state of Alabama,
Sellers has led a distinguished career as an educator in Tuscaloosa
County. Recently, the State Department of Education gave her “two
thumbs up” for scoring nearly perfect on an evaluation that
rates her performance as an effective manager and leader.
Since 2001, Sellers has served as adjunct professor in instructional
leadership for the College of Education at UA, a course she also
taught in 1990. From 1986 to 1990, she served as principal of Holt
High School and from 1990-1994 as principal of Hillcrest High School.
Sellers is active in the Tuscaloosa community, serving on numerous
boards and committees. She has received many awards, including the
Southern Christian Leadership Award in 2003; the Excellence in Educational
Leadership Award from the University Council for Educational Administration
in 2002; and in 1999, in honor of her many contributions, Holt High
School named the library for her.
Outstanding Alumnus in Journalism -- David Mattingly received
his bachelor’s in journalism from UA in 1982. Today, he spends
his time as an Atlanta-based CNN correspondent and contributor
for “The Point,” a nightly show that explores the top
news of the day. He joined CNN in 1992 and has reported from Vietnam,
South Africa and Cuba on issues ranging from politics, the environment
and international business to entertainment. On Sept. 11, 2001 Mattingly
was on vacation near Shanksville, Pa., where Flight 93 crashed.
He was among the first national journalists to report from the scene
of the crash. Other recent stories include the Andrea Yates capital
murder trial in Houston and the protracted 2000 Presidential Election.
Mattingly has won several national awards for journalism. He has
received National Headliner Awards as well as an Emmy award for
his contribution to the “CNN Presents” program that
focused on the Mississippi River floods.
Outstanding Alumnus in Telecommunication and Film -- Steven
Shipowitz received his bachelor’s in telecommunication and
film communication from UA in 1987. Today, based in Atlanta,
he is vice president and senior executive producer of the CNN Airport
Network. He is responsible for overseeing all aspects of CNN Airport
Network and CNN Airport Network International. In addition to managing
the network’s staff, Shipowitz is responsible for all programming
and on-air editorial decisions for CNN Airport Network. He also
contributes to CNN Airport Network’s sales, marketing and
programming deals.
Shipowitz is an award-winning producer who began his career at
CNN in 1996 as a supervising producer, where he oversaw the day-to-day
operations of the newscasts. He was promoted to associate general
manager and senior executive producer. Before joining CNN, Shipowitz
was an Atlanta-based freelance producer for MSNBC, where he was
responsible for the set-up and execution of the network’s
coverage of the 1996 Atlanta-based Summer Olympics. He also was
an integral part of MSNBC’s coverage of the Republican and
Democratic conventions.
The Bert Bank Distinguished Service Award -- William F.
“Bill” O’Conner Jr., of Birmingham, Ala.,
received his bachelor’s in journalism from UA in 1973 and
his master’s in 1974. After years of hard work in education
and in bringing jobs into Alabama, his career path took a new direction
last November when he joined the newly established Campaign for
Alabama as managing director. The goal of the organization is to
reform Alabama’s tax structure, seek more efficiency and accountability
in government and to improve the quality of education at all levels.
Before joining the Campaign for Alabama, O’Conner served
as the president and CEO of the Business Council of Alabama. Before
that he served as vice chancellor for public affairs in the UA System
and is the former executive director of the Alabama Press Association.
O’Conner served as an associate professor in the College of
Communications’ department of advertising and public relations
from 1986 until 1995 and was named the department’s Outstanding
Alumnus in 1982.
O’Conner is an active supporter of the American Cancer Society
where he was recognized as Volunteer of the Year and served on the
national board, as well as the Child Abuse Prevention Center in
Tuscaloosa. He has worked for more than 15 years to provide service
and leadership to the University and to the state of Alabama through
both corporate and governmental relations as an advocate for a better
Alabama.
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