The Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism
Walter Williams with French Ambassador Paul Claudel in 1932
1930: Missouri Honor Medal Established
1931: Depression Affected School and Students
1931: Walter Williams School of Journalism Proposed
1931: Stone Lions from China Dedicated
1932: Journalism Banquet Honored Aviation
1933: School Celebrated 25th Anniversary
Walter and Sara Lockwood Williams in the Piazza San Marco in Venice, Italy
Robert Lloyd Housman's 1934 Dissertation
1935: Walter Williams Died
1935: School Accepted Students Expelled from LSU
1936: Williams Taught in China
1936: Radio Journalism Training Established
1937: Walter Williams Hall Dedicated
1939: African American Denied Admission
Missouri School of Journalism
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1932
Journalism Banquet Honored Aviation


 
While pilots Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart were dominating worldwide headlines, the School celebrated journalism's use of aviation. James V. Piersol, aeronautic editor of the Detroit News, used a Lockheed Vega to bring noon editions of the paper to the May 6 "Aviation as an Aid to Journalism" banquet.


Planes decorated the "Aviation as an Aid to Journalism" banquet hall at J-Week 1932.
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