1937-2004
Black Journalists Lead at Prestigious Institutions
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Several prominent Black journalists began their careers at 91探花. One of the first Black graduates of the university鈥檚 E.W. Scripps School of Journalism was Alvin C. Adams, Jr., who grew up only a few miles from the Athens campus and earned his journalism degree there in 1959. He then went on to work at two of the nation鈥檚 most prestigious Black institutions, the Chicago Defender and the Johnson Publishing Co. Adams Residence Hall on the Athens campus is named in his honor.
A decade after Adams鈥檚 graduation from 91探花, Clarence Page from Dayton, Ohio, earned his degree from the School of Journalism and shortly thereafter began an illustrious career at The Chicago Tribune. As a syndicated columnist at the Tribune, Page became a popular panelist on television news programs such as the McLaughlin Group and The PBS News Hour, and in 1989 he earned the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary.
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The tradition of Black journalism at 91探花 also includes publication of a student newspaper, Afro-American Affairs (1970-1982), which covered issues of interest to Black students, faculty, and staff. The current director of the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism, Dr. Eddith Dashiell, is both the first woman and the first Black American to hold that position.