Thursday, January 3, 2013

Paul Taff obit

Paul Taff Obituary

 

He was not on the list.


Paul Kenneth Taff, 92, of Glastonbury, Conn., born in Belleville, Ill., on Jan. 21, 1920, one of seven children of Benjamin Harrison Taff and Louise Ada Wehmeier, died Thursday, Jan. 3, 2013, surrounded by his loving family.

Surviving are his wife of 71 years, Dawn; his son, Paul and wife, Valerie; his son, Richard and wife, Susan; and his granddaughter, Stephanie; his brother Rollie and wife, Marion of Belleville, Ill.; his sister, Lois Stroh and husband, Robert of O'Fallon, Ill.; his sister, Ruth Brewer of Troy, Ill.; and many nieces and nephews.

Mr. Taff graduated from Belleville High School and from Millikin University in Decatur, Ill., where he was president of the student council and lettered in baseball. He subsequently received a masters degree from Northwestern University and an honorary doctorate of humane letters from the University of New Haven. During his college years at Millikin, he met the love of his life, Dawn Odell, to whom he proposed on Valentine's Day, 1941, and married five months later on July 13th. While at college, he took his first broadcasting job at radio station WSOY in Decatur, Ill. After college he worked at radio station KFUO in St. Louis, Mo., announcing, and writing and producing programs.

When World War II began, he volunteered and was soon selected to join the Counter Intelligence Corps of the Military Intelligence Service. Assignments took him throughout the United States and around the world with stops in Casablanca, Tripoli, Cairo, India, Australia, the Philippines, Okinawa and Hawaii. After the war he resumed his broadcast career by returning to KFUO radio where he became assistant program director. His broadcasting career steadily advanced thereafter with him holding various positions at radio and television stations in Chicago, Decatur and Milwaukee. In 1960, he moved east and became director of children's programs, director of program operations and assistant program director for National Educational Television (NET), the predecessor of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS); president, CEO and president emeritus of Connecticut Educational Television Corporation, which subsequently became Connecticut Public Television (CPTV) and then Connecticut Public Broadcasting; and president and president emeritus of Connecticut Broadcasters Association. His proudest achievement while at NET was acquiring a children's program being locally produced in Pittsburgh by the name of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood and arranging for its distribution to a national educational television audience. He served as executive producer and announcer on the early programs and remained good friends with Fred Rogers thereafter, frequently vacationing at his cottage on Nantucket. He was also instrumental in securing the funding to allow Julia Child's first cooking program, the French Chef, to be distributed nationwide on educational television stations. While president of CPTV, he led the efforts to bring public radio to Connecticut in 1978 and, in recognition of that leading role, the call letters of Connecticut's first public radio station were subsequently changed to WPKT in his honor. During his career he served on many boards and commissions that focused on children's television programs or public broadcasting, including one that planned Sesame Street and one that planned the Connecticut Network (CT-N) which provides television coverage of state government. He also served on the Connecticut Ethics Commission and the State Board of Academic Awards. Among the many awards he received were the Belleville High School outstanding alumni award; Millikin University alumni merit award; National Educational Award for Excellence; National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, Boston-New England Chapter, Silver Circle Award and Gold Circle Award for significant contributions to the television industry for 25 and 50 years, respectively; Connecticut Public Broadcasting Network Founders Award; and Connecticut Broadcasters Association Lifetime Achievement Award, together with the establishment of a CBA scholarship in his name. Although during his long life and broadcasting career he traveled extensively, attended events like the launching of a spacecraft at Cape Canaveral and a reception at the White House, and interviewed or met First Ladies, Prime Ministers, 2009 Wall of Fame Belleville West Outstanding Alumni, Hall of Fame baseball stars, radio, television and movie celebrities and many other notable persons, he was a small town Midwestern boy at heart who was happiest when walking on the beach at Eel Point, spending time with his granddaughter, delighting the neighborhood children by dressing up as Big Bird on Halloween, reading mystery novels, telling stories or just sitting on his deck at home with his beloved wife and family.

In lieu of flowers, donations in his memory may be made to the Connecticut Broadcasters Association for the Paul K. Taff Scholarship, c/o Mike Rice, 90 South Park St., Willimantic, Conn. 06226.

Taff had an over 70-year career in broadcasting. His career started during his college years as a control room operator and occasional announcer on WSOY radio in Decatur, Illinois. That beginning was followed by positions as continuity director and assistant program director at KFUO radio, St. Louis; program director at WBEZ radio, Chicago; program director at WTVP television, Decatur, Illinois; station manager at WMVS, an educational television station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; director of children’s programs and director of program operations, National Educational Television (NET), New York City, the predecessor to the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS); president and general manager of Connecticut Educational Telecommunications Company, Hartford, Connecticut, which subsequently became Connecticut Public Broadcasting; and executive director, president and president emeritus of the Connecticut Broadcasters Association.


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