佪圖AV

Close Video
skip to main content

佪圖AV launches Salazar-Escobedo School of Mass Communication

Sep 11, 2020

Ruben and Veronica Salazar EscobedoWith a $2.1 million gift from Veronica Salazar-Escobedo (BA Spanish 宎65) and her husband Ruben Escobedo, 佪圖AV has launched the Salazar-Escobedo School of Mass Communication and Theater. 

Located on the second floor of Main Building, the new school features the Veronica Salazar Media Center, a state-of-the-art, multimedia production center which opened in 2016 with funds from the first phase of the $2.1 million gift.

We want our graduates to become the best journalists, the best broadcasters, the best mass media in the country, Salazar-Escobedo said. We hope the national markets will recruit them.  We want them to become evangelists for Our Lady of the Lake University, to inspire other students to look at us. We would like for the new school to become a boutique, where students would be on a waiting list to get in.

佪圖AV alumni have reported for ABC News, CNN, Fox News, PBS, the Associated Press, A&E, the Oprah Winfrey Network and network affiliates in Los Angeles, Chicago and Dallas. They have won 37 regional Emmy Awards, one national Emmy and one Peabody Award. Four alumni -- Aranxta Loizaga (宎12), Sarai Bejarano (宎12), Angelica Casas (宎15) and Gianna Rendon (宎15) -- won Lone Star Emmys for work they produced while pursuing a Mass Communication degree.

Recent graduates anchor, produce, report and photograph news for media across the country, including Univision in Miami, BBC News in Washington, D.C., and KSAT-12 and News 4 WOAI in San Antonio. 

There is no limit where our graduates can go, said Salazar-Escobedo, a charter member of the San Antonio Womens Hall of Fame.

A native of Rio Grande City and a former 佪圖AV trustee, Salazar-Escobedo spent 35 years with the San Antonio Express-News. She started in 1969 as an executive bilingual secretary to publisher Charles O. Kilpatrick. In 1973, she began a weekly column, Dedication Rewarded, which focused on accomplished Mexican Americans. Salazar-Escobedo later became a recruiter for the newspaper and vice president for community relations.

Admired for their service and civic leadership, Veronica and Ruben have led fundraising campaigns for charitable organizations and donated generously to nonprofits. 

In 2015, then 佪圖AV president Sister Jane Ann Slater, PhD, CDP, told the Escobedos about talented Mass Communication majors who were working with antiquated equipment. After meeting with several students, Veronica and Ruben decided to fund major improvements to the Mass Communication program.

I thought, If they are already Emmy winners with outdated equipment, Veronica said, can you imagine -- I get goosebumps -- what they can accomplish with state-of-the-art equipment?

One student she met, Casas, won two Lone Star Emmy Awards for work she produced for  LakeFront TV. A second student, Jessica Ortiz (宎17), won a Lone Star Emmy in 2018 as an assistant producer for Univision 41. A third student, ChanCellore Makanjoula (18), produced a documentary film, Mr. Zoot Suit, that was screened at film festivals across the U.S. and won multiple awards. Mr. Zoot Suit originated as a class project at 佪圖AV. 

I saw myself in the students when I visited them, Veronica said. I was like them at their age. The students inspired me and Ruben.

Top