The Day

Co-founder of National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s dies at 89

- By LOUIE ESTRADA

Paul Brock, a former public relations consultant, radio news broadcaste­r, movie producer and Democratic National Committee communicat­ions official who in 1975 was one of the principal organizers of the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s, died March 14 at his home in Upper Marlboro, Md. He was 89.

The cause was complicati­ons from diabetes, said his wife, Virgenia Embrey-Brock.

One of Brock’s earliest jobs in journalism came in 1968, when he became news director at the public radio station WETA-FM in Arlington, Va., for which he hosted a weekly nighttime news program called “The Potter’s House.”

In 1971, he joined Howard University’s commercial radio start-up WHUR-FM as news director and focused on covering stories about the growing political turmoil across the country, federal trials of anti-Vietnam War activists, the political and social movement of Black-pride activists and the occupation protests of the American Indian Movement.

Around that time, Brock helped found the Washington

Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s and served as its first president. By the mid-1970s, Brock and television journalist­s Maureen Bunyan and Max Robinson began a campaign to unify the various Black journalist­s associatio­ns from different cities into a national organizati­on, which became known as the NABJ.

Crucial part

Brock, who by then was working as deputy director of communicat­ions for the DNC, developed an extensive media contact list and wrote letters inviting Black journalist­s to Washington to attend an organizing meeting in December 1975. The date was selected because many of the reporters were already scheduled to be in D.C. to cover a gathering of Black municipal officials from across the country.

“Paul was crucial to the organizati­on,” Bunyan said. “Even though he wasn’t working as a journalist at the time, he gave his time and energy to helping us, and I’m not sure if we could have started without him.”

The NABJ began with 44 members and with Brock as founding executive director. In ensuing years, he rarely missed the group’s annual conference, once taking a train from Washington to the convention in New Orleans when his doctor restricted him from flying on a

plane after a surgery.

The associatio­n, which has grown to a membership of more than 4,000 media profession­als and journalism students, provides profession­al training, promotes diversity in newsrooms and scrutinize­s media outlets’ coverage of minority communitie­s.

Brock worked for more than a dozen organizati­ons during his career. He was named senior vice president of American Urban Radio Networks in 1977. A couple of years later, he became a senior fellow for public affairs at Howard’s Institute for the Study of Educationa­l Policy, where he wrote a widely used law school primer on the 1978 Supreme Court affirmativ­e-action case Regents of the University of California v. Bakke.

He also held brief jobs as director for public informatio­n and communicat­ions for the NAACP and handled publicity and distributi­on for the TV program “Tony Brown’s Journal.” Brock moved to California in 1980 to help start a film-production company, Past America, which made historical docudramas.

Paul Hillery Brock was born in Washington on Feb. 10, 1932. He was raised by his mother and stepfather, both of whom ran a delicatess­en.

Brock graduated in 1950 from Armstrong High School and briefly studied pharmacolo­gy at Howard before leaving in 1951 to join the Air Force. Trained as a radio operator, he got his first job in journalism as editor of the newspaper at Griffiss Air Force Base in Rome, N.Y.

In the early 1990s, Brock returned to the Washington area and ran a communicat­ions and public affairs consulting firm as well as a film-production company. He also volunteere­d with programs to mentor aspiring journalist­s.

His first marriage, to Joan Roberts, ended in divorce. In addition to Embrey-Brock, his wife of 20 years, survivors include four children from his first marriage, Michael Brock of New York, Paula Shelley Rodgers of Frederick, Md., Christophe­r Brock of Washington and Lisa Brock of Los Angeles; four grandchild­ren; and 10 great-grandchild­ren.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Paul Brock co-founded the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s. He died March 14 in Maryland.
FAMILY PHOTO Paul Brock co-founded the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s. He died March 14 in Maryland.

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