May 2008
News & Announcements
ECU’s mission is to foster a learning environment in which students,
faculty, staff and community interact to educate students for life
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Amy Ford
Susan Ingram
East Central University
Communications and Marketing
(580) 559-5650 or (405) 812-1428 (cell)
Or Dr. Robert Greenstreet, Communication Department, 580-559-5485

Presenting a panel discussion at the annual Central States Communication Association convention in Madison, Wis., on Rotary International's efforts to eradicate polio worldwide are polio survivor Hugh Beall (front row, left), Dr. Robert Greenstreet of East Central University and (back, from left) Rebecca Gatz of ECU, Dr. Melissa Beall of the University of Northern Iowa, Dr. Arlie Daniel of ECU and Carol Pandak, manager of the Rotary International PolioPlus Program. Melissa Beall and Daniel are past presidents of the CSCA. Daniel, Pandak and Greenstreet are past presidents of their Rotary clubs.
ECU FACULTY DISCUSS ROTARY INTERNATIONAL’S
POLIO ERADICATION EFFORTS AT CONVENTION
Three members of East Central University’s Communication Department formed
the nucleus of a panel discussion at the annual Central States Communication
Association convention in Madison, Wis. The panel focused on Rotary
International's efforts to eradicate polio worldwide.
The panel was developed and organized by Dr. Robert Greenstreet,
chair and professor of communication at ECU. He also moderated the program
and provided concluding comments.
The discussion began with a brief presentation by Hugh Beall who
was told in his late teens that he would not survive polio. That was 55
years ago. Dr. Melissa Beall of the University of Northern Iowa joined him
in discussing the impact of his polio on their lives.
Carol Pandak, manager of the Rotary International PolioPlus
Program, discussed the history of the Herculean effort to eradicate polio.
The entire Western Hemisphere, Europe, Australia and Antarctica have been
declared polio free, she said.
Parts of Asia and Africa continue to report new cases of the
disease. By the time polio is eradicated, individual Rotarians will have
donated well over $800 million toward the effort, Greenstreet said. Rotary
has also enlisted several governments, the World Health Organization, the
United Nations Children's Education Fund, and the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in the struggle.
Dr. Arlie Daniel, ECU Adolph Linscheid distinguished teaching professor of
communication, focused on Rotary's efforts to adapt to the needs of
divergent cultures. In Nigeria, for example, it was necessary to involve
Islamic clergy in the effort to immunize children. Rotary also found an
Islamic pharmaceutical company to manufacture the vaccine, he said.
Rebecca Gatz, ECU instructor of mass communication, discussed Rotary
International's efforts to provide support for local Rotary clubs wishing to
publicize the PolioPlus program. She showed two articles from the Ada News.
The panel was sponsored jointly by the Organizational Communication and
Health Communication Interest Groups. The convention theme was
"Communication: an Activist's Tool." As the panel focused on the role of
communication in facilitating the Rotary International PolioPlus program,
both groups found the panel appropriate.
Melissa Beall and Daniel are past presidents of the CSCA. Daniel, Pandak and
Greenstreet are past presidents of their Rotary clubs. Daniel and
Greenstreet are multiple Rotary International Paul Harris Fellows.
Greenstreet is also a Rotary International Benefactor.
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