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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Dr. E.
Culpepper “Cully” Clark,
dean of The University of Alabama’s College
of Communication and Information Sciences, received the Communications Educator of the Year award from the
Birmingham Advertising Federation.
Each year, the Birmingham Advertising Federation sponsors the
Peak Awards, intended to recognize advertising excellence. Communications
Educator of the Year is awarded to a professional educator who
has helped shape the future of individuals who are planning to
enter the advertising industry.
Serving nine years as the dean of the UA College of Communication
and Information Sciences, Clark has been instrumental in mentoring
and being accessible to students. He understands the importance
of representing the communication industry in many aspects in and
outside the work environment and wants communications, advertising
and public relations to remain one of the highest regarded fields
in the community. Clark takes time to offer his expertise on many
boards and associations in order to ensure the best decisions are
being made in the communication industry.
"No one is more deserving of the Educator of the Year Award
than Dean Clark,” said Bonnie LaBresh, director of development
for the UA College of Communication and Information Sciences. “He
has devoted his career to higher education and in particular, his
concern for the full development of students and faculty is unparalleled.
Clark has few equals."
Clark is past president of the Southern States Communication Association
and has served on numerous editorial boards. He is founder and
co-general editor of The University of Alabama Press Series “Studies
in Rhetoric and Communication” (more than 30 books have appeared
in the series, the latest, Lift Every Voice, is a much heralded
anthology of African-American oratory.) Clark is widely published
in both history and communications. He authored The Schoolhouse
Door: Segregation’s Last Stand at the University of Alabama,
published by Oxford University Press and listed among the Notable
Books of 1993 by The New York Times Book Review.
Currently, Clark serves on the National Communication Association,
International Communication Association, Southern States Communication
Association, American Journalism Historians Association, Association
for Communication Administration and Alabama Humanities Foundation.
He is also on the Board of Directors at the Intermark Group, a
full-service advertising agency headquarter in Birmingham, Ala.,
and serves as chairman on the Board of Trustees at Digital Media
Arts College, Inc in Boca Raton, Fla.
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