The Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism
1941: Dean Martin Died Suddenly
1942: WWII Disrupted Curriculum
1942: Mott Named Dean
1942: WWII Halted Graduate Studies
1944: Racial Issues Continued
1944: Photography Tradition Established
1945: Kappa Alpha Mu Founded
1946: Public Relations Course Offered
1946: Veteran Enrollment Engulfed Campus
1947: Mott Trained Japanese Journalists
1948: Television Arrived on Campus
1948: Radio Reporting Improved
1949: School Offered Technical Certification
1949: Facsimile Technology Implemented
1949: First Missouri Photo Workshop Held
Missouri School of Journalism
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1948
Radio Reporting Improved


 
Radio students wrote, edited and produced 11 daily newscasts on KFRU, a Columbia community radio station. A new studio was constructed in 213 Walter Williams Hall, and radio journalism students began using a new tape recorder to cover spot news in the Columbia area. The KFRU partnership began in 1936, marking the establishment of the radio curriculum at the School.

In 1941, one of the first women to announce on KFRU went on the air (top). "Headlines on Parade" was a KFRU program broadcast from Journalism Week 1948 with the help of radio journalism students (bottom).

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