Professor Douglas Cannon has been the faculty adviser for the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) at Virginia Tech for 30 years. He has witnessed the evolution of the PRSSA's annual networking event, Elevations, through memorabilia stored in a cardboard box. Cannon has had a long career in journalism, public relations, and teaching, working for various newspapers after college and serving in the military. He currently mentors PR students at Virginia Tech and remains dedicated to their success, often working late into the night with his desk lamp on.
Professor Douglas Cannon has been the faculty adviser for the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) at Virginia Tech for 30 years. He has witnessed the evolution of the PRSSA's annual networking event, Elevations, through memorabilia stored in a cardboard box. Cannon has had a long career in journalism, public relations, and teaching, working for various newspapers after college and serving in the military. He currently mentors PR students at Virginia Tech and remains dedicated to their success, often working late into the night with his desk lamp on.
Professor Douglas Cannon has been the faculty adviser for the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) at Virginia Tech for 30 years. He has witnessed the evolution of the PRSSA's annual networking event, Elevations, through memorabilia stored in a cardboard box. Cannon has had a long career in journalism, public relations, and teaching, working for various newspapers after college and serving in the military. He currently mentors PR students at Virginia Tech and remains dedicated to their success, often working late into the night with his desk lamp on.
Professor Douglas Cannon has been the faculty adviser for the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) at Virginia Tech for 30 years. He has witnessed the evolution of the PRSSA's annual networking event, Elevations, through memorabilia stored in a cardboard box. Cannon has had a long career in journalism, public relations, and teaching, working for various newspapers after college and serving in the military. He currently mentors PR students at Virginia Tech and remains dedicated to their success, often working late into the night with his desk lamp on.
Beloved communication professor reminisces about his 30-year career
By Neeka Eghbali | [email protected] | 703-309-5380 BLACKSBURG, Va. Nestled in the corner of a room in Shanks Hall is a cardboard box overflowing with table cards, flyers and other remnants from the Public Relations Student Society of Americas (PRSSA) annual networking event, Elevations. They are not mere objects, however. They are memories. Only one man has had the chance to witness the events evolution since his first year at Virginia Tech in June 2010. Professor Douglas Cannon, PRSSA faculty adviser and professor of practice in the department of communication, said he tell[s] every special events person to look at the box to see the history.
Professor Douglas Cannon has been part of the faculty at Virginia
Tech since June 2010. Behind him is a collection of all of the newspapers he has worked for in the past.
This years event Elevations, previously
called Comm Connections, is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 4. Speakers will address aspiring PR students with a special emphasis on personal branding. However, unbeknownst to a majority of members in PRSSA is that their own faculty adviser possesses a unique personal brand that is deeply rooted in his early career. Although he has spent 20 practicing public relations and is accredited in the field. His passion for journalism emerged during high school in Ohio. Cannon got his start studying journalism and working for the Lantern newspaper at The Ohio State University. Prior experience in journalism taught him the value of good writing, but much of Cannons discipline and diligence stem from his time in the military. He was on a ROTC
scholarship at The Ohio State, and after
graduating and working for The TimesLeader, Cannon reluctantly served as an armor officer. He would have liked to have been a signal officer whose expertise was in TV and radio, a preference that was an indication of his persisting passion for journalism. In his subsequent position as a public affairs officer, he was able to revisit what he had always loved doing. Cannon ran The Turret, the weekly newspaper in Fort Knox, Kentucky. The publication was recently renamed The Gold Standard in February 2012. Under his jurisdiction, it was the top newspaper in the Army and in the Department of Defense for three years. Emblazoned on a single wall in Cannons office is a collection of each of the newspapers he worked for, framed and lined
up neatly. However, he was quick to point
out one publication in particular. I owned a newspaper called The
Bob Robertson, a man characterized by his
entrepreneurial spirit. Although Robertson focused little on the logistical details and more on the big picture, Cannon nevertheless admired him for his willingness to fail if necessary. It is a trait that Cannon attempts to instill in his own students, he says. An article he co-wrote with Professor Jenn MacKay will be published in the Newspaper Research Journal next summer about a study they conducted on millenials examining their civic duty to keep informed.
Photo by Public Relations Society of America (PRSA)
Professor Cannon (first row, third from right) was inducted
into the College of Fellows by the Public Relations Society of America in 2014. He is the first full-time Virginia Tech communication faculty member to receive this honor.
Sellersburg Star and ran that for a few years.
Then, the Depression did it in at the end of the Carter administration. A lot of things went out of business in Sellersburg, and that was when I got an offer to teach journalism at the University of Kentucky, said Cannon. After leaving his job at the University of Kentucky, Cannon went to work for the United Methodist Church for 25 years. As a Protestant, his specialty is researching how faith groups practice public relations. Cannon noted that most individuals look at religion in the news, but not at the strategic ideas of how faith groups try to tell their stories and relate to different publics. He gained his PhD in Journalism from The University of Texas at Austin, and his dissertation focused on faith in public relations. While working at the United Methodist Church, Cannon met his mentor and pastor
Doug Cannon is a fantastic colleague. He
has this tremendous focus. This paper reminds us that the next generation has lost the desire to stay fully informed about the world around them, said MacKay. Cannon's office is his own personal box of memories. He especially cherishes the lamp on his desk, which used to be his fathers during his teaching days at Eastern Kentucky University. His students knew that if they went by his door and the lamp was on, he would be available, said Cannon. Cannon is not very different from his father, and recent graduate and former president of PRSSA Melanie Ford can attest to that fact. Professor Cannon is an incredible mentor and is more than willing to dedicate time to his students and to PRSSA, she said. Always there for his students, one may find Cannon sitting in room 106 in Shanks Hall, working on grading papers or a project, with the lamp on.
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