|
$250,000 bequest establishes fellowship to honor Kansas editor
 |
|
Stauffer-Flint Hall
Photo courtesy University Relations
|
Kansas newspaperman Whitley Austin, who once suggested that
the University's William Allen White School of Journalism
and Mass Communications be abolished and its home be turned
into a parking lot, will have a KU journalism fellowship established
in his honor.
During his tenure as a member of the Kansas Board of Regents,
Whitley argued that all academic specialties should be concentrated
at one state college or university to more efficiently use
higher education funds. He abandoned his crusade to have journalism
courses consolidated at Kansas State University soon after
his son decided to major in journalism at KU.
Whitley's son, Danforth W. "Dan" Austin, j'68,
said he wasn't sure why his father favored Kansas State as
the site for the state's sole journalism school. "I suspect
he viewed KU as more of a true university in a classic sense
and less as a collection of professional schools," Dan
said.
Whitley, who began his career as a cub reporter for William
Allen White and ended it as the outspoken editor and publisher
of the Salina Journal, was known throughout the state for
his forceful, and sometimes controversial, opinions on key
issues.
To honor Whitley's career, Dan, his mother, Mary Frances
Austin, and sister, Catherine "Cathy" Austin Roberts,
have bequeathed $250,000 to the Kansas University Endowment
Association to establish the Whitley and Mary Frances Austin
Graduate Fellowship.
"The fellowship will help the school recruit a talented
graduate student who can do important work, such as manage
a computer lab, assist a faculty member in research or teach
a class," said James K. Gentry, dean of journalism. "Whitley
Austin had an incredibly successful and varied career. We're
deeply honored to have a fellowship that bears his name."
Dan said he thought his dad would be pleased with the gift.
"We gave the gift to the KU journalism school as a way
of honoring my dad's contributions to the profession and both
of my parents' lifelong interest in Kansas educational institutions,"
Dan said. "I think Dad would have gotten a chuckle out
of having a KU journalism fellowship named in his honor, but
I also think that he would have felt honored."
After graduating from the University of Wisconsin in 1931,
Whitley returned to his hometown of Emporia to work as a reporter
for William Allen White's Emporia Gazette. He later worked
for the Hutchinson News. In 1949, he joined the Salina Journal
as editor and publisher, a job he held until his retirement.
In addition to overseeing the paper's news and business operations,
he wrote memorable editorials.
"These editorials were frequently picked up by other
Kansas newspapers and, through their force and clarity, made
him known throughout the state-sometimes not always favorably,"
Dan said. "For instance, he was one of the first Kansas
editors to come out against the Vietnam War, arguing that
it was 'the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time.'
"Much of his personal and professional life was dedicated
to the proposition that a newspaper editor had a special obligation
to the community, both as an instrument of change as well
as a reflective mirror and a provider of a forum for differing
opinions and voices."
Whitley won the William Allen White Foundation Citation,
was a chairman of the Board of Regents, served on a state
commission on judicial reform and was a Pulitzer Prize juror.
He died in 1995.
Now retired, Mary Frances grew up in Hutchinson. After graduating
from Hutchinson Junior College, she worked as a bank teller.
She married Whitley in 1941. When the family moved to Salina,
she worked with a variety of civic and church organizations,
serving as a director of the St. Francis Boys Home (now St.
Francis Academy) and the Salina Community Theater.
Dan is the vice chairman of Ottaway Newspapers Inc., a subsidiary
of Dow Jones & Co. Previously, he served as a vice president
of The Wall Street Journal. He and his wife, Gail, c'68, c
'69, have two children and live in Short Hills, N.J.
Cathy, a graduate of Kansas State, is a first-grade teacher.
She and her husband, Craig, have two children and live in
Flagstaff, Ariz.
The Austin family's gift counts toward the $500 million goal
of KU First: Invest in Excellence, the largest fund-raising
campaign in KU history. KU Endowment is conducting KU First
on behalf of KU through 2004 to raise funds for scholarships,
fellowships, professorships, capital projects and program
support. KU Endowment is an independent, non-profit organization
serving as the official fund-raising and fund-management organization
for KU.
#top#
|