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Editor's Note: Inductee biographies
are attached. For e-mailed inductee photo sketches, contact Elizabeth
Smith in University Relations at 205/348-3782 or esmith@ur.ua.edu.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Four distinguished leaders were inducted into
the College of Communication and
Information Sciences Hall of Fame at The University of Alabama
on Oct. 2, 2003.
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 marked
the sixth class of inductees into the Hall of Fame. These honored
individuals include:
Morris S. Dees, Jr. (1936 - )
Lawyer and founder/creator of the Southern Poverty Law Center
Robert B. Ingram, Jr. (1926 - )
Political reporter, columnist and author
James T. Stephens (1936 - )
Benefactor, champion of libraries and CEO of EBSCO Industries Inc.
Margaret DeBardeleben Tutwiler (1950 - )
U.S. Ambassador to Morocco
The individuals have brought lasting fame to the state of Alabama
through the disciplines that comprise the College. Each class of
inductees has a special quality that unites them across their various
callings. This year that tie is "taking what others have done
and doing it better."
"This group of inductees forms a special class indeed, individuals
who started at different points in life and took different directions,
but all wound up at the top," said Dr. E. Culpepper Clark,
dean of the UA College of Communication and Information Sciences.
Morris Dees combined the conscience of a crusader with the acumen
of an entrepreneur to make life unpleasant for hate groups.
Bob Ingram became a one man fourth estate in Montgomery, placing
Alabama's state capitol under a journalistic light that left no
place to hide.
Jim Stephens took the trail blazed by his parents in industry
and community service and expanded the role of EBSCO Inc., as a
giant of the information industry and an asset to this state. No
library or university can access and retrieve the information it
needs without the services of EBSCO.
U.S. Ambassador to Morocco Margaret Tutwiler was America's voice
during the first Gulf War and now shapes messages that will define
America's role in the world to come.
"Because of the paths each took, they have made Alabama,
the nation, and the world better for their efforts," Clark
said. "Their lives and accomplishments are an inspiration for
generations to come."
2002 College of Communication and Information Sciences
Hall of Fame Inductees
MORRIS S. DEES JR.
(1936 - )
Morris Dees is best known for his ground-breaking legal work battling
the Ku Klux Klan and other hate groups and for the creation of the
Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonviolent organization dedicated
to seeking justice. However, this Shorter native's first accomplishments
were in communication, and his skills as a communicator play a large
part in the success of the Southern Poverty Law Center.
An incredibly enterprising student at The University of Alabama,
Dees sold birthday cakes for classmates through a mail marketing
campaign directed at their parents. Along with partner Millard Fuller,
he published a student telephone directory that grew four-fold in
two years. It was the beginning of a national publishing company
that Dees sold to the parent company of The Los Angeles Times.
His publications included Off to College, a nationwide
magazine for college-bound students that still is in circulation;
Above and Beyond, a 21-volume aerospace encyclopedia created in
cooperation with NASA and the Smithsonian; a four-volume sex education
series still in print and sold in syndication through World Book
Encyclopedia, "My Weekly Reader" and other major publishers
in the family field; "The Cookbook Collectors Library;"
and the "Favorite Recipe" series.
In addition to serving as chief legal counsel for the Southern
Poverty Law Center and arguing its most challenging cases against
hate groups and supremacist organizations, Dees uses his communication
expertise to direct the Center's educational division. That includes
the publication of Teaching Tolerance, a free magazine
sent to more than 600,000 K-12 teachers; distribution of free kits
to more than 75,000 schools that include one Oscar-winning documentary
and three others that have received Oscar nominations; Tolerance.org,
a Web site that takes tolerance education beyond the classroom;
Intelligence Report, a magazine that reports on hate groups
for law enforcement; and a nationwide capital punishment program
for lawyers who do death penalty work called Building Team Defense.
Dees holds two degrees from The University of Alabama and has
received numerous humanitarian awards and honorary degrees from
colleges and universities throughout the country.
Dees used his direct mail expertise to help fund the presidential
campaigns of George McGovern and Jimmy Carter, and he has been inducted
into the Direct Marketing Hall of Fame for using the mail for business,
political and human rights purposes.
As no other, Dees combines the spirit of the entrepreneur and
the humanitarian. By targeting hate groups, he has been a target
all of his professional life.
ROBERT B. INGRAM JR.
(1926 - )
The stories he can tell about Big Jim Folsom alone would fill
a book. Big Jim cutting a birthday cake in the Governor's Mansion
with a ceremonial sword … Big Jim hallooing him awake at 6
o'clock in the morning in a Russellville boarding house …
an aircraft carrier take-off that won a hearty, loud and profane
endorsement from Big Jim.
Bob Ingram has witnessed so much Alabama history, recorded it
and interpreted it, that he is regarded as an institution by those
who love the story of this state. He was born in Centre, graduated
from Cherokee County High, and served in World War II as a radio
operator/gunner aboard the USS Panamint, a vessel that endured numerous
kamikaze attacks in the Central and South Pacific.
In 1949 he graduated from Auburn University (then Alabama Polytechnic
Institute), and put his English major and history minor to good
use working for The Cherokee County Herald, The Gadsden Times and
The Montgomery Advertiser.
As a capitol reporter and political columnist for 15 years, he
had a unique vantage point to witness many of the state's extraordinary
events, from the Montgomery Bus Boycott to the rise and fall of
George C. Wallace.
He was not always on the outside looking in. Governor Albert Brewer
appointed Ingram state finance director in 1968. He would later
write about those experiences, which included picking up a $100,000
political donation from a Nixon lawyer and having a ringside seat
in 1970 to one of the most contentious and disheartening elections
in the state's history.
For 13 years Ingram published ALABAMA magazine in which
he reported on the inner workings of the state's government. He
has written a weekly syndicated column published in more than 30
small daily and weekly papers for more than 40 years. He won numerous
awards as the longtime editorial directors and political analyst
for WSFA. Ingram is the author of two books on Alabama politics:
"That's the Way I Saw It" and "That's The Way I Saw
It II." In 1998, the communications department of Auburn University
in Montgomery established the Robert Ingram Lecture Series, which
brings to campus people who have distinguished themselves in the
field of communication.
Alabama is richer for Bob Ingram's keen eye, sharp pen and legendary
objectivity. And that's the way we see it.
JAMES T. STEPHENS
(1936 - )
EBSCO Industries Inc. is the largest subscription agency in the
world and the world's largest manufacturer of fishing lures -- a
model success story for resourcefulness, imagination, initiative
and creativity. It is a reflection of the innovative and enterprising
leadership of James T. Stephens, one of Alabama's most gracious
and generous business leaders.
Born and raised in Birmingham, Stephens is a product of the public
schools. Among the profound experiences of his childhood are the
lessons from his parents, Elton and Alys. "Their example taught
a mix of commitment, fairness, determination, patience, integrity,
kindness, loyalty and sheer hard work," says F. Dixon Brooke
Jr., vice president and general manager, EBSCO Industries Inc.
Stephens also was deeply affected by his experiences as a Boy
Scout, and it is only one of many organizations that has profited
form his wise leadership and generous support. He is past president
of the board of trustees of Altamont School and Highlands Day School;
board member of The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation
finance committee; and a member of the board of trustees of Birmingham-Southern
College.
A member of the American Library Association, Stephens served
as chairman of a very successful campaign in the mid-1990s for the
School of Library and Information Studies at The University of Alabama.
Stephens received his undergraduate degree from Yale and an M.B.A.
from Harvard. In 1970, after service in the Army and eight years
working in the family business, he was named CEO of EBSCO Industries
Inc., a complex business organization with a diverse mix of companies.
He was only 30 years old, but his remarkable talents helped EBSCO
become the second largest privately owned business in Alabama with
22 companies, 75 profit centers, 4,500 employees and annual sales
in excess of $1 billion. The company never has had a "loss"
year.
EBSCO's Information Services has two divisions that provide vital
resources to libraries. The Subscription Services Division provides
47,000 libraries with subscription services from its title database
of 265,000 serial publications. The Publishing Division authors
100,000 abstracts for journals each month; optically scans and makes
electronically searchable 62,000 articles a month; and delivers
50 million page views over the Internet.
"My main hobby is probably my work and trying to meet the
challenge of making things work in an organizational environment.
That puts you with people. It provides the challenge of whatever
organizational mission you are connected with, and that's a pleasure,"
Stephens says.
And indeed for lovers of libraries and information the world over,
it is a pleasure to recognize Jim Stephens by induction into the
Communication Hall of Fame.
MARGARET DEBARDELEBEN TUTWILER
(1950 - )
Just saying her name -- Margaret DeBardeleben Tutwiler -- is an
Alabama history lesson, bringing to mind one of the state's industrial
giants and its most famous champion of education and reform.
As Ambassador to Morocco, Tutwiler has created her own history
through passionate and thoughtful service to her country as a key
player in the administrations of three U.S. presidents and having
worked for a fourth.
During President George H.W. Bush's administration, Tutwiler served
as assistant secretary of state for public affairs and State Department
spokesperson from 1989 to 1992. She traveled extensively in the
Middle East and North Africa and dealt on a daily basis with the
issues and policies that faced the region.
Nearly every night on the evening news she spoke with candor,
aplomb and authority on behalf of the State Department. Some journalists
contended she was one of the most powerful women in Washington and
that her voice and face were as recognized around the world as the
president's.
Tutwiler told The New York Times she was not powerful -- it was
only the position that was powerful.
She began her rise during the Regan administration where she served
in the White House as an assistant to Chief of Staff James Baker
III and as a deputy assistant to the president for political affairs.
In President Regan's second term she served in the Treasury Department
as assistant secretary for public affairs. Recently, Tutwiler served
as a special envoy to the U.S. Office in Iraq to direct media relations
during the post-war reconstruction, after which she returned to
Morocco.
She has received numerous awards for public service and is the
youngest person ever to be inducted into the Alabama Hall of Honor.
Tutwiler grew up in Birmingham and graduated from The University
of Alabama. She told The Birmingham News that she is reminded of
home at her diplomatic post, because Moroccans are like Southerners.
"They are very family-oriented, gracious people who invite
you into their homes. Manners are important there."
Tutwiler's manners, command of the language, and passion for public
service have made her an indispensable government servant.
President George H. W. Bush put it best when he said, "When
I was president, her service at the State Department with Secretary
Baker had no limits. She was wonderful. She's been an outstanding
ambassador in Morocco. She's been strong and represented our country
with honor in tough times."
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