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Ron Stone (reporter)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ron Stone (April 6, 1936 – May 13, 2008) was an American news anchor at KPRC-TV in Houston, Texas for 20 years from 1972 to 1992. He was called "the most popular and revered news anchor the city has ever known" by the Houston Chronicle.[1] He was president of Stonefilms, Inc., a Texas production company.[2]

Education and early career

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Stone attended college and received a B.A. from East Central State University. He had an M.L.A. degree from Houston Baptist University. After college, Stone was a broadcaster for the National Football League and the Southwest Conference.[3]

Career

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Television news career

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Stone was born in Hanna, Oklahoma, graduated from East Central University in Ada, then known as East Central State Teachers College, and worked in radio and television in several small Oklahoma markets. He was working at KVOO-TV (now KJRH-TV) in Tulsa in 1961, when he caught the eye of Dan Rather, who was then KHOU Houston, Channel 11's lead anchor.

Stone started his television news career at Houston CBS affiliate KHOU, where he worked for nearly a decade except for a ten-month period in 1967 where he went to New York City to work as a news writer and reporter for the NBC Radio Network.[4] In 1972, Stone moved to NBC affiliate KPRC-TV as anchor for what was known at the time as Big 2 News. During his time at KPRC-TV, he co-anchored the news with Paula Zahn, who later anchored on CNN and who worked with Ron Franklin before his eventual move to ESPN. Stone anchored the weekday editions of the ChannelTwoNews with Jan Carson from 1983 to 1991 and with Linda Lorelle during his final year at KPRC-TV.[5][6]

Independent producer and other work

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After retiring from television news in 1992, he started the production company, Stonefilms, Inc. with his son.[3] In 1979, he succeeded Ray Miller (1919–2008) as host of KPRC-TV's The Eyes of Texas cultural anthology series. Stone hosted The Eyes of Texas until 1999.[7]

On May 21, 2002, he anchored the news for one evening as a commemorative celebration along with veteran meteorologist Doug Johnson (1939 - 1/3/2019) at KPRC-TV.[8]

He lived with renal cell carcinoma and gave motivational speeches about cancer survival.[4]

Stone died of cancer. He was 72.[9]

Scholarly works

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Stone wrote three books about Texas history, A Book of Texas Days, Disaster at Texas City, and Houston: Simply Spectacular.[3]

He served as Artist in Residence in the Communications Department at the University of St. Thomas in Houston.[3]

Awards

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  • Communicator of the Year, 1990, University of Houston School of Communications[10]
  • Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters Degree, University of Houston, 1994[3]

Professional membership

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  • Sons of the Republic of Texas[3]
  • Knight of San Jacinto[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ 2005 Programs
  2. ^ TABulletin: Pioneer Round-Up
  3. ^ a b c d e f Ron Stone Biography, Stonefilms of Texas, retrieved 2008-05-13
  4. ^ a b Join Us to Celebrate Life at CanCare's Annual Survivors Day Luncheon, About Life, No. 2, 2006, retrieved 2008-05-13
  5. ^ Barron, David (2008-05-13). "Anchorman Ron Stone left deep imprint on local news". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  6. ^ RON STONE OBITUARY Legacy.com May 2008. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  7. ^ The Eyes of Texas - https://www.worldcat.org/ Retrieved 2020-06-06
  8. ^ Ron Stone, Doug Johnson: A Look Back - Station News Story - KPRC Houston
  9. ^ Ron Stone Passes Away At 72 Archived 2008-06-17 at the Wayback Machine, KPRC-TV Channel 2, Houston, 2008-05-13, retrieved 2008-05-13
  10. ^ School of Communication
  11. ^ Previous Speakers and Chapter Activities in 2003