HU JOURNALISM
SCHOOL ANNOUNCES 2003-2004 HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES
Date: May 6, 2004
Source: Hampton University Website
2003-2004 Press Releases
Hampton, VA - Three Hampton University alumni
have been selected for induction into the Scripps Howard School
of Journalism and Communications 2003-2004 Hall of Fame. The recipients
are Barbara Ciara, anchor and managing editor of WTKR NewsChannel
3; Douglas Smith, a former sports writer with USA Today; and Emil
Wilbekin, former editor-in-chief of Vibe magazine and current
editorial director and vice-president for brand development for
parent company Vibe Ventures.
The three media professionals were selected for
the school’s Hall of Fame based on their professional achievements
in journalism and communications that have had regional, national
or international impact. The recipients are also recognized for
having emerged as trendsetters, experts or notable authorities,
and as media professionals who have worked toward the advancement
of inclusiveness in the journalism and communications field.
Ciara and Smith will be inducted during the Class
of 2004 senior celebration Saturday, May 8 from 3 p.m. –
5 p.m. in the Robert P. Scripps Auditorium in the Scripps Howard
School of Journalism and Communications on the Hampton University
campus. Wilbekin will be inducted during a separate ceremony tentatively
scheduled Oct. 15.
Former Hall of Fame inductees include Washington
Post columnist and 1976 HU alumna Donna Britt; Dr. William Kearney,
founder of HU’s Department of Mass Media Arts, and 1980
HU alumnus Brett A. Pulley, a senior editor at Forbes Magazine.
2003-2004 Hall of Fame Inductees
Barbara Ciara, joined WTKR-TV in July of 2000
and is now anchor of the station’s news programs on weeknights
at 5:30 p.m. 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. Ciara has more than 20 years of
experience as a broadcast journalist. She has won numerous community
and professional honors for her work on camera and in the community.
Ciara started off the year 2000 completing her
degree Summa Cum Laude at Hampton University, winning an Emmy
for her series "Guilty Til Proven Innocent," and receiving
honors from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism
for her reports on race and ethnicity. Her co-honorees were CBS'
Dan Rather and producers from 60 Minutes.
-more-
When people refer to Ciara's world of experience, they are talking
about her global travels to get the story in Cuba, Saudi Arabia
during operation Desert Storm/Shield, Europe, Haiti, and Mexico.
Ciara received the 1997 Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio
and Television News Directors Association, 1997 Emmy nomination
for "Operation Haiti" featuring children living in poverty
on the island nation, 1995 Emmy nomination for the series "Letters
from the Hood," a gripping story documenting the lives of
children who live in violent urban areas.
Ciara has also been honored with numerous Associated
Press and United Press International awards dating back to 1986,
as well as a dozen prestigious "Excel" awards from the
Hampton Roads Black Media Professionals.
Ciara also volunteers her time to the Tidewater AIDS Crisis Taskforce,
Habitat for Humanity, Children's Hospital of the Kings Daughters,
American Cancer Society, Candi House, the Urban League of Hampton
Roads, the Joy Fund, and the Boys and Girls Clubs.
Doug Smith, currently a visiting professional
in the Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications,
is an award-winning journalist with more than 25 years of successful
achievement as an editor and writer with three of the most influential
newspapers in the United States – Newsday, The New York
Post, and USA Today. His candid, forceful and informed writing
style set new standards of excellence in sports reporting.
In October 2001, Smith retired from a 15-year
stint at USA Today where he was recognized as one of the worlds
most preeminent and influential tennis writers. He covered numerous
tennis events each year, including the Grand Slams – Australian
Open, French Open, Wimbledon and U.S. Open. In addition, Smith
wrote a column – “Match Points” – on the
USA Today web site.
Smith routinely broke news in the tennis world.
His 1992 world exclusive on the late Arthur Ashe having contracted
AIDS prompted years of useful discourse in newsrooms, as well
as in the nation’s journalism schools. He wrote numerous
cover stories and introspective features on the superstars of
tennis – Andre Agassi, Jennifer Capriati, Pete Sampras and
the Williams sisters, Venus and Serena. Junior players consistently
sought the byline – “By Doug Smith” –
as he monitored their development.
In recognition of his sustained excellence in
tennis reporting and writing, Smith is the recipient of numerous
awards, including the U.S. Tennis Association Lifetime Achievement
Award (1988), the Women’s Tennis Association Media Person
of the Year (1989, 1995), and the Tennis Week Great American Writing
Award (for deadline writing) in 1990 and 2000.
Smith is a 1964 graduate of Hampton University,
where he majored in mathematics. He was a member of the University’s
CIAA championship (1961, 1962 and 1964) tennis team.
Smith also has made important contribution to
the world of book publishing as an editor and writer. In 1992,
he edited and updated Ashe’s three volume book, Hard Road
to Glory: A History of the Black Athlete in America, originally
published in 1988 by Amistad Press. In a collaborative effort
with former tennis pro Zina Garrison, Smith wrote her autobiography
– Zina, My Life in Women’s Tennis – published
in May 2001 by North Atlantic Books (Berkeley, California).
Currently, Smith is working on a biography of
the late Robert Walter Johnson. Johnson, a physician, built a
tennis court in the backyard of his Lynchburg, Va. home, where
he trained and developed promising black juniors – including
Ashe and Athea Gibson – in the 1940s and 1950s, a time when
blacks were barred from playing in most USTA events and on all
public courts in the South.
Smith maintains an active personal interest in
sports; including those that he has attained a degree of mastery
– table tennis, tennis and basketball. He is continuing
to ponder his golf game.
Emil Wilbekin, editorial director and vice-president for brand
development for Vibe Ventures, joined Vibe magazine in 1992 when
it was merely in its conceptual stages. Since then, Wilbekin has
advanced markedly, holding a myriad of editorial positions and
editing nearly every section of the magazine. Prior to joining
Vibe, he held reporting positions at Metropolitan Home, the Associated
Press, The Chicago Tribune, and People magazine. He has also contributed
to The New York Times, Rolling Stone, and Emerge.
Under Wilbekin's astute guidance, Vibe recently
won the 2002 National Magazine Award for General Excellence in
its circulation category. After several nominations, Vibe bested
magazines like The New Yorker, Gourmet, and Wired. The win marked
the first time a magazine with a primarily black readership has
won in the General Excellence category. Wilbekin celebrated his
fourth year as editor-in-chief of Vibe with the magazine's September
2003, 10th anniversary "Juice" issue.
A Cincinnati native, Wilbekin is a 1989 graduate
of Hampton University and Columbia University's Graduate School
of Journalism. He provides frequent expert commentary on music,
urban culture, and fashion for numerous television outlets and
programs, including NBC's Today, CNN, The Fox News Channel, BET,
MTV, and VH1.
Wilbekin serves on the board of directors
for a number of professional and philanthropic organizations,
such as, the American Society of Magazine Editors (ASME), the
Design Industries Fighting AIDS (DIFFA), the Brotherhood SisterSol,
and 24 Hours for Life. A committed community activist, Wilbekin
has also been honored with a number of high profile service awards
including, the Pratt Institute's Creative Spirit Award; the Howard
University Entertainment, Sports, and Law Club Media Award; The
Anti Violence Project's Courage Award; and The Hetrick Martin
Institute's Emory Award. He is also a member of the Black AIDS
institute.