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News Releases: 2007 Calendar Year
December 2007
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Dec. 31, 2007: Journalism Students Claim Overall Victory in 2007 Freshman iLife Challenge Several hundred self-made stars of the silver screen, faculty members and campus leaders, including Chancellor Brady Deaton, packed Bush Auditorium in Cornell Hall the night of Nov. 27 to honor the winners of the 2007 Freshman iLife Competition. This year's overall winner was team iLost, comprising first-year journalism students Spencer Ernst, Daniel Posey, Alex Ruppenthal and Fred Trotman. [More]
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Dec. 27, 2007: Missouri School of Journalism Magazine Students Remake Fundraising Publication for Barnes-Jewish Hospital As part of the final capstone project in Associate Professor John Fennell's magazine publishing class, six students revamped the 40-page glossy magazine distributed by the hospital's fundraising arm, the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation. The students redesigned the publication's layout, reported the stories, compiled the photography and re-conceptualized the magazine to give it a stronger focus on sharing inspiration. [More]
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Dec. 17, 2007: "Freedom Sings™" Performance to Launch 2008 Centennial-Dedication Activities "Freedom Sings™," a critically acclaimed multimedia experience featuring an all-star cast of musicians, will open the 2008 centennial and dedication celebration of the Missouri School of Journalism and the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute. The 90-minute event will be held the evening of Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2008, at the University of Missouri. [More]
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Dec. 5, 2007: Strategic Communication Students Join Professionals to Set Record Sales With guidance from the professionals at the Columbia Missourian, 16 Missouri School of Journalism strategic communication students sold 28 of 58 total ads in a 28-page Homecoming special section, helping to set a record for ad sales. Understanding the sales side of advertising is an important aspect of the Missouri Method, a teaching philosophy of learning by doing. [More]
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Dec. 3, 2007: Missouri School of Journalism Shares Grant to Improve Missouri's Health Literacy The Missouri School of Journalism is part of a $726,784 grant from the Missouri Foundation for Health to build an infrastructure that will become an interactive and comprehensive health literacy resource throughout the state. The award was given in conjuction with the MU Center for Health Policy. The grant is part of $7.1 million in funding approved by the Missouri Foundation for Health to establish its Missouri Health Literacy Enhancement initiative. [More]
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November 2007
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Nov. 30, 2007: New Center to Preserve and Showcase Historical Photojournalism Collections An unparalleled documentary photojournalism resource at the Missouri School of Journalism will be dedicated next September during the centennial of the School and the dedication of the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute. The Angus and Betty McDougall Center for Photojournalism Studies, named for the renowned photography innovator and educator and his wife, will preserve collections of photographs by newspaper, magazine and documentary photographers. [More]
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Nov. 27, 2007: Missouri School of Journalism Launches Brussels Program with Inaugural Class of Seven The Missouri School of Journalism will send students to work as journalists in Brussels, Belgium, headquarters of the EU, through a new study abroad program. Beginning in January, the inaugural class of seven students will spend four days a week in Brussels covering international issues for media organizations and one day a week attending a seminar class. [More]
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Nov. 19, 2007: Miami Herald Writers Win Sifford Prize in Journalism Amy Driscoll and Lisa Arthur of The Miami Herald have been awarded the 2007 Darrell Sifford Memorial Prize in Journalism, administered by the Missouri School of Journalism. They won for their series of emotion-packed articles on apartment tenants ousted by the South Florida building boom. [More]
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Nov. 14, 2007: Two Missouri School of Journalism Students Win Poynter Institute Summer Fellowships Missouri School of Journalism students Darla Cameron and Bryan Wendell received free admission to the six-week Poynter Institute Summer Fellowship for Young Journalists by winning a Society for News Design conference competition in Boston Oct. 11-13. They will be working in teams of four covering a community beat for the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times. [More]
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October 2007
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Oct. 26, 2007: Celebrated Photojournalist Delivers Two-day Seminar on Fundamentals of Web Video Time-Life photojournalist and 2007 Missouri Honor Medalist Dirck Halstead visited the School Oct. 10-11 to deliver his "Platypus Short Course," a two-day crash tutorial based on his standard nine-day workshop. The workshop surfaced as a result of Halstead's Platypus Papers, a manifesto he wrote in 1997 that compares new-age visual journalists to the platypus, a species that defied established classification systems. [More]
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Oct. 19, 2007: Master's Student Named David Kaplan Memorial Fellow at ABC News in D.C. Melissa Chee, a Missouri School of Journalism radio-television master's student, is the recipient of the 2007-2008 David Kaplan Memorial Fellowship. The fellowship, which is awarded each year to one Missouri Journalism student who has an interest in network field producing, includes a paid position at the ABC News Washington Bureau and a $10,000 stipend during the winter semester. Chee will be the School's 15th Kaplan fellow. [More]
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Oct. 16, 2007: Distinguished Visiting Scholar Program Welcomes David Paul Nord of Indiana University At noon on Wednesday, Oct. 24, in Tucker Forum, David Paul Nord will deliver the lecture, "What Should a Newspaper Do? Editors, Reporters and Readers Argue about Journalism in Early 20th Century New York." Nord is recognized nationally and internationally as a pre-eminent authority on journalism history and the history of the religious press. He has authored three books, several book chapters and articles in numerous journals, including the Journal of American History, Journal of Communication and Journalism History. The event is free and open to all students and faculty. [More]
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Oct. 15, 2007: Visiting Fellows Bring Expertise to the Newsroom and Classroom Three Missouri Journalism alumni are back on campus as fellows this semester to help prepare the next generation of graduates for 21st-century journalism careers. Jeanne Abbott, Keith Claxton and Liz Heitzman are helping transform the newspaper, which serves as a working laboratory for Missouri School of Journalism students, from a print-first to an Internet-first publication. [More]
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Oct. 15, 2007: Cameron and Journalism Alumni Colleagues Release New Public Relations Textbook In college classrooms across the country, Missouri School of Journalism professor Glen T. Cameron and a handful of Missouri Journalism alumni are helping to educate America's next generation of public relations professionals. Their new book, Public Relations Today: Managing Competition and Conflict, is an introductory text featuring classic and contemporary cases that illustrate the working world applications of public relations theory. [More]
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Oct. 12, 2007: 12 Missouri Journalism Students Spend Semester Working, Learning in Washington, D.C. Now nearly 40 years old, the Missouri School of Journalism's Washington Program continues to bring students into the halls of power for hands-on training in journalism and strategic communication in the nation's capital. This semester, 12 undergraduate and graduate journalism students are working with and learning from political reporters, foreign correspondents and strategic communicators in Washington, D.C. [More]
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Oct. 4, 2007: New Online Resources for Middle Managers Are Now Available from the Frontline Editors Project The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation today announced the launch of three new online resources from the Frontline Editors Project - the culmination of a three-year study that analyzed the role of the frontline editor in order to better prepare journalists for the pivotal newsroom role. Jacqui Banaszynski, Knight Chair in Editing at the School, will host a forum on the new Web site. [More]
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Oct. 3, 2007: Claude-Jean Bertrand, Creator of the Media Accountability System (M*A*S*) Concept, Dies Officials at the Missouri School of Journalism and the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute are saddened to learn of the recent death of Claude-Jean Bertrand. An expert in the fields of global journalism and media ethics, he created the Independent Press Councils Web site to improve media by providing a recognized set of ethical rules respected by journalists around the world. [More]
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September 2007
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Sept. 26, 2007: Missouri School of Journalism Students Hone Skills at Top Media Institutions For 12 weeks this past summer, going to work meant going to a baseball game for Carolyn Rauen, a senior radio-television journalism major. Dozens of Missouri Journalism students spent the academic off-season involved in prestigious internships across the country. Internships are a key element of the "Missouri Method," a proven style of instruction that emphasizes learning through hands-on experience. [More]
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Sept. 25, 2007: Journalistic Principles Can Survive and Thrive in Digital Environment It's the question that is on the minds of many editors and reporters these days: How can we ensure that the most important journalistic principles survive this time of fast-paced change? Some insights into how these values can make the transition will be shared Monday, Oct. 29, at the 2007 Curtis B. Hurley Symposium at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. "New Media, Enduring Values" will be held from 9-11 a.m. with a continental breakfast served at 8:30 a.m. [More]
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Sept. 18, 2007: Global Missouri Journalism to Host Study Abroad Fair Sept. 21 The Missouri School of Journalism will reinforce its reputation as a world-renowned institution at the School's first study abroad fair Friday, Sept. 21, hosted by Global Missouri Journalism, the School's study abroad office. Former study abroad students, advisers and exchange students will answer questions from those interested in studying abroad. [More]
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Sept. 17, 2007: Master's Student Named Warren T. Brookes Journalism Fellow at Washington, D.C., Think Tank Lene Johansen has been named the 2007-2008 Warren T. Brookes Journalism Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. As a Brookes Fellow, she will continue to research and write a book on the human cost of plant biotechnology regulation, as well as work on contrarian feature stories on agricultural subsidies, global warming and Food and Drug Administration reforms. [More]
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Sept. 17, 2007: Journalism School Makes Headlines in University's Alumni Magazine The Missouri School of Journalism made some headlines of its own recently when MIZZOU, the magazine of the Mizzou Alumni Association, featured it with three separate articles in its fall edition. The reason for the coverage, editor Karen Worley, BJ '73, said, is to feature the School's centennial celebration and dedication of the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute, scheduled for Sept. 10-12, 2008. [More]
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Sept. 10, 2007: Empower MediaMarketing Partnership Establishes Benchmark for Collaboration After attending a Strategic Communication Summit at the Missouri School of Journalism during the fall 2006 semester, Bill and Mary Beth Price started to think about how to give back to their alma mater. One year later, Missouri Journalism students are receiving top-notch instruction in media planning and buying from an industry professional, thanks to Empower's commitment to the School through an innovative partnership. [More]
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Sept. 6, 2007: Fall Programs Welcome New Students to Campus, Highlight Opportunities for Involvement Several hundred students, faculty and staff gathered in Peace Park on Aug. 30 for Fall Welcome, an annual event designed to connect new students with representatives of various journalism- and University-related organizations, programs and offices. Fall Welcome shows students the multiple facets of the School and helps faculty members, graduate students and upperclassmen interact with freshmen. [More]
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Sept. 6, 2007: Ten Media Leaders to Receive Prestigious Journalism Award Ten outstanding leaders in the field of journalism will receive one of the industry's highest awards, the prestigious Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism, presented annually by the Missouri School of Journalism. The 2007 medalists will be honored Tuesday, Oct. 9, on the campus of the University of Missouri-Columbia. [More]
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Sept. 5, 2007: Senior Wins $5,000 Newhouse Foundation Scholarship from NABJ Jamille Fields, a Missouri School of Journalism senior from St. Louis, was one of five recipients of a $5,000 Newhouse Foundation Scholarship awarded by the National Association of Black Journalists. The Newhouse Foundation Scholarship honors talented African-American students majoring in print journalism. [More]
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August 2007
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Aug. 30, 2006: Missouri Researchers Present 47 Papers, Panel Discussions at Leading Academic Conference Missouri Journalism graduate students and professors showcased their scholarly work in 47 paper presentations and panel discussions at the 2007 meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, which took place August 8-12 in Washington, D.C. Presenting to 14 of AEJMC's academic divisions and numerous interest groups, the Missouri researchers discussed wide-ranging issues in journalism, mass communication, public relations and advertising. Seven papers from the School received top honors at the conference. [More]
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Aug. 30, 2007: Center on Religion & the Professions Debuts New Name A new name will kick off the new school year for the Center on Religion & the Professions, an affiliate of the Missouri School of Journalism and the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the University of Missouri. The Center works to improve religious literacy among professionals, including journalists, so that they can better serve, cover and communicate with a diverse public. [More]
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Aug. 27, 2007: Missouri Journalism Professor Releases Sixth Edition of Media Ethics Textbook Terrorism. War. Corporate scandal. Media consolidation. These 21st-century headlines have become the subject matter of the newly released sixth edition of Media Ethics: Issues and Cases, authored by Lee Wilkins, a professor at the Missouri School of Journalism, and Philip Patterson, of Oklahoma Christian University. [More]
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Aug. 24, 2007: Online Master's Degree Students Visit Campus for Three-Day Seminar A reporter and anchor for ESPN New Media, a manager of communications for MetLife and a public affairs officer in the U.S. Air Force are just a few of the accomplished media professionals enrolled in the Missouri School of Journalism's innovative online master's degree program. The diverse group of reporters, editors, managers and public relations specialists met on campus Aug. 17-19 for a special three-day seminar, "The Chaos Scenario in News and Advertising." [More]
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Aug. 13, 2007: Senior Wins $5,000 Murray Foundation Scholarship Elizabeth Manring, a Missouri School of Journalism senior from Stockton, Mo., has been named a Murray Scholar by the Jim Murray Memorial Foundation. As a scholar, Manring receives a $5,000 scholarship and an expenses-paid trip to La Quinta, Calif., for the annual Murray Scholars Award Dinner. [More]
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July 2007
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July 31, 2007: Portrayal of Journalists in Harry Potter Books Doesn't Negatively Affect Young Readers' Perceptions When it comes to how journalists are portrayed in J.K. Rowling's immensely popular Harry Potter book series, doctoral student Daxton R. "Chip" Stewart, MA '04, expected perceptions to meet reality. The negative depiction of Rita Skeeter and the Daily Prophet, Stewart figured, would push readers' attitudes toward journalists in an adverse direction. A recent study of 657 students at MU, however, proved differently. [More]
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July 12, 2007: "Less is More" Online In a study that examined responses to pictures viewed online, Kevin Wise, assistant professor of strategic communication, and Kimberlee (Belcher) Pepple, BJ '04, MA '05, found that people were able to pay more attention to pictures selected from a small array of choices than from a large array of choices. These findings may have implications for Internet search engines, advertising and news sites. [More]
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July 12, 2007: Geneva Overholser Named CPI Board Chair The Center for Public Integrity is pleased to announce the election of Geneva Overholser to lead its board of directors. Overholser, who has served on the Center's board for the past two years, was named during the June board meeting to succeed co-founding board member and chairman Charles Piller, who will step down to join the Center's advisory board. [More]
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July 9, 2007: Charter Membership in Walter Williams Society Now Available Through 2008 The work of Walter Williams continues to influence the profession of journalism a century after he founded the world's first school dedicated to the field on Sept. 14, 1908. Now, charter membership is available for a special giving society created to ensure that Williams' vision continues into the School's second century. Society members will be recognized in a permanent display at the Missouri School of Journalism. [More]
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July 2, 2007: Dvorkin Steps Down as CCJ Director Jeffrey Dvorkin has stepped down as director of the Committee of Concerned Journalists, the consulting and training organization for the nation's newsrooms. Bill Kovach, CCJ chairman and one of the founders of the organization, will step in as acting director. [More]
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June 2007
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June 28, 2007: MU Students Develop Plans to Boost Weston Business This summer, Missouri School of Journalism strategic communication students spent a week in Weston, Mo., developing promotional campaigns to increase tourism in the small town just north of Kansas City, Mo. [More]
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June 28, 2007: KBIA Wins Second National Edward R. Murrow Award Senior radio-television major August Skamenca and Matt Wynn, BJ '07, won a 2007 national Murrow Award for their month-long collaborative investigation "Dead Voters" that aired on KBIA, the School's NPR-affiliate station that serves as a training lab for students. The award is the second for Skamenca, who worked with KBIA news director Sarah Ashworth and former reporter Kyle Palmer, BJ '05, on a story that won the station's first national Murrow in 2006. The Murrow Awards are highly competitive, and winners regularly include CBS Radio News, ABC News Radio and major stations throughout the country. [More]
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June 15, 2007: Missouri Broadcasters Association Awards KOMU, KBIA Top Honors The Missouri Broadcasters Association (MBA) recently gave KOMU top honors for its newscast, weathercast and feature reporting. MBA encourages the highest standards in broadcasting by recognizing samples of excellence and achievement. Hundreds of entries from across the state are received each year and considered for the awards. [More]
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May 2007
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May 31, 2007: Foundations Support Launch of Midwest Health Journalism Program A consortium of six health foundations in Kansas and Missouri has pledged $724,739 to establish the Midwest Health Journalism Program, an annual fellowship program for reporters and editors from both states. The Association of Health Care Journalists, based at the Missouri School of Journalism, will conduct the training program through its Center for Excellence in Health Care Journalism. [More]
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May 31, 2007: Woelfel Wins $10,000 O.O. McIntyre Professorship Radio-television instructor and KOMU news director Stacey Woelfel recently won the 2007 O.O. McIntyre Professorship for excellence in teaching given by the Missouri School of Journalism. The professorship carries a $10,000 salary supplement for the next academic year. [More]
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May 25, 2007: Three-Part Series on Media to Be Offered in New York This Summer The Missouri School of Journalism will present in June a three-part series on the changing nature of media as part of its New York Program. The panels will discuss the changing face of broadcast and cable news, the future role of newspapers in disseminating information and a look at how political advertising shapes campaign discussions. [More]
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May 25, 2007: Traudes Wins Atwater Prize for Writing Senior newspaper journalism major Cristof Traudes recently won the 2007 Atwater Prize for Writing at the Missouri School of Journalism. The Atwater Prize provides a $500 stipend to one talented writing student each year. Traudes submitted several of his stories from the Missourian for the competition, including "A Brother's Story," a 5,000 word personal report about growing up with a sibling with Asperger's Syndrome. Asperger's is considered the mildest form of autism. [More]
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May 22, 2007: Four Mizzou Seniors Conduct Historic Preservation Survey for Course Final A strong majority of local business professionals say they support historic preservation in Jefferson City. That's according to a survey conducted as part of a Strategic Communications course at the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Journalism. A team of four Mizzou seniors - Kate Renick, Allison Mang, Heather John and Sarah Hansom - presented the "Strategic Campaign" to the local historic preservation organization and elected officials earlier this month. [More]
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May 22, 2007: Winners of 2007 Missouri Lifestyle Journalism Awards Announced The Missouri School of Journalism has announced the winners of the 2007 Missouri Lifestyle Journalism Awards. Begun in 1960 as the Penney-Missouri Program, sponsored and administered by the Missouri School of Journalism, this awards program is the oldest and best-known feature writing and editing competition in the United States. Winners receive $1,000 in prize money and a lead crystal vase trophy. [More]
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May 14, 2007: Missouri Journalism Students Dominate Annual College News Design Contest Students from the Missouri School of Journalism recently swept the 19th-annual College News Design Contest, winning more awards than any other college or university and capturing first place in both the overall newspaper design and redesign competitions. The 2007 competition drew more than 700 submissions from colleges and universities across the United States. [More]
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May 1, 2007: Journalism Alumni Return to Campus for 2007 Reunion Rally Seven Missouri School of Journalism alumni returned to the University of Missouri-Columbia campus as part of the 2007 MU Alumni Association Reunion Rally activities held April 30. The alumni, from the classes of 1957 and 1967, were celebrating their 40th and 50th graduation anniversaries. [More]
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April 2007
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April 26, 2007: Colin Kilpatrick Wins 2007 "Pat on the Back" Award Executive Director of Advancement Colin Kilpatrick has received this year's "Pat on the Back" award, which honors outstanding contributions by Missouri School of Journalism staff members. In his position, Kilpatrick oversees the School's fundraising efforts that support faculty, students, facilities and programs. [More]
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April 19, 2007: KOMU Earns Regional Edward R. Murrow Award The Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) recently awarded KOMU-TV a regional Edward R. Murrow Award for Best News Series, the station's fourth Murrow in five years. KOMU, an NBC affiliate, is the only university-owned commercial television station in the United States that uses its newsroom as a working lab for students. [More]
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April 19, 2007: Student Reporters at KBIA Radio Win Four Regional Edward R. Murrow Awards Four Missouri School Journalism students working at KBIA radio competed with professionals and brought home top honors. Seniors Ryan Famuliner and August Skamenca, along with recent graduates Hayley Salvo, BJ '06, and Bente Birkeland, MA '06, each won a regional Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA). [More]
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April 19, 2007: Three Missouri Students Receive Health Journalism Fellowships Master's student Traci Angel, senior Jamie Greber and junior Tara Ballenger were among 18 professionals and students from the state who received an expenses-paid trip to Health Journalism 2007, AHCJ's national conference. Headquartered at the Missouri School of Journalism, AHCJ is a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing public understanding of health care issues. [More]
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