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From 1960’s Riots to 45 Years of Excellence

Howard University School of Communications

Photo by Victoria Jones:  Urban League President Marc Morial and his wife, CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller, a Howard University School of Communications alumna, hosted the 45 Anniversary of the university's School of Communications, which has graduated some of the nation's top journalists and communicators.

WASHINGTON – Their names, faces and work are part of the lives of millions of American households.

Fredricka Whitfield and Victor Blackwell of CNN.  Michelle Miller of CBS. Pulitzer Prize winner Keith Alexander of the Washington Post.  Stan Verrett of ESPN.  D’Artagnan Bebel, vice president, general manager for Fox Television. Michelle Hord-White, vice president at NBC Universal.  Pulitzer Prize winner and renowned author Isabel Wilkerson.

All of them are graduates of the prestigious Howard University School of Communications.   

The school, born out of the riots that swept America in the mid- and late-1960s, celebrated 45 years of achievement over the weekend with an evening of awards and honors at the Newseum in Washington.

More than 300 of the school’s students, faculty, staff and alumni from across the nation came together, network, and celebrate the success of its graduates.

Five alumni were recognized for their excellence in their respected field, Bebel, Christopher Cathcart, president and founder of OneDiaspora Group; Johnetta Davis, associate dean emeritus for student affairs at University of Maryland and emeritus professor at Howard University; Constance Cannon Frazier, chief operating officer at American Advertising Federation, and Whitfield of CNN.

In addition, Hord-White was awarded the Corporate Partner Award.  The event was hosted by alumna Miller and her husband, Urban League President Marc Morial.

The school, like journalism programs at all historically black colleges and universities, was created following the 1965 and 1967 riots that rocked America.   

President Lyndon Johnson appointed a commission, later known as the Kerner Commission, to answer three questions, "What happened? Why did it happen? What can be done to prevent it from happening again and again?"  One of the major culprits, the commission concluded, was the media.  As a result, black colleges and universities established journalism schools to supply the nation’s future black journalists.

Photo by Victoria Jones: CNN anchor Fredricka Whitfield, center,  was one of five Howard
alumni to receive special awards from the school as examples of professional excellence.

Many of the honorees thanked their favorite professor.  One professor was frequently mentioned by many of the honorees – Lawrence Kaggwa.

Kaggwa, a journalism professor emeritus and the publisher of the District Chronicles, was recognized for his excellence and influence on so many lives.

“When you walk out of my classes, and you graduate from Howard, and you come from Howard, nobody is going to tell you that you’re not qualified for anything that you have applied for,” he said.

Kaggwa, who is originally from Uganda, is a pillar of the school, coming to Howard armed with three degrees not long after starting Norfolk State University journalism program in 1974. 

He said he was proud to see so many former students become successful.

“With mentioning me in their speech that’s not that big a deal, but being as successful as they are that’s what were hired to do,” he said.

Alum Martin A. Smith, who graduated in 1992 as a legal communications major and is now a retirement planning financial advisor with Wealthcare Financial Group Incorporated, said he thinks Howard has one of the best media programs in the country.

 “If you’re going to start in communications,” he said, “and with the research people in media have to do, there’s no better place than having the Library of Congress here, all the federal government agencies that are here, so it puts you in an area where everything is at your fingertips.” 

Photo by Victoria Jones:  Professor emeritus Lawrence Kaggwa
was a pillar in the foundation and growth of the School of Communications.
  He received praise from the hundreds of students he trained
as journalists in his more than 30 years at the university.

George Sting Appiah, who graduated as a print journalism in 2008 and is now a federal investigator of the United States Office of Personnel Management, wanted to come to the 45th Anniversary Soirée to support Howard and the School of Communications.

Appiah believes that the curriculum is what really makes the School of Communications an excellent school and prepares you for the real world.

“It was challenging,” he said.  “It’s not going to be easy because it’s not easy in the real world, and that’s one of the things I appreciated about it.  A lot of these schools are just pushing these students through…but Howard’s not like that.  They want to make sure that you’re learning and you’re equipped to go out into the field and apply your trade.”

Sherry Soanes, a 1988 graduate in legal communications, is now a lawyer with the Department of Justice.  She said believes that Howard is the perfect place to be if you want to be successful.

Soanes said that School of Communications really prepared for her career today and is the foundation of everything she does.

“I have to communicate my position to opposing counsels, to the client, and to the judge,” she said.  “So, communication is at the center and the foundation for everything I do and I got that foundation at Howard."