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03.12.2009: journalism senior named in national top 10 by the Associated Press Sports Editors
Journalism Senior Named in National Top 10 by the Associated Press Sports Editors
Columbia, Mo. (March 12, 2009) -- Missouri School of Journalism senior David Ubben won a top 10 ranking in the national Associated Press Sports Editors contest. His entry was entered in the explanatory story category of newspapers with an under-40,000 circulation. This is the third year in a row that the Columbia Missourian reporters have earned awards.
David Ubben
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In the summer of 2008, Ubben strode past a trophy case at the University of Missouri's athletic facility and noticed an asterisk on a trophy claiming the victory of the Iowa State Cyclones over Missouri. The football game took place in Iowa on Nov. 18, 2006. The Cyclones beat the Tigers 21 to 16. Ubben knew the asterisk signified the Big 12's apology for what they deemed an error in officiating that cost the Tigers a late touchdown, but he'd never heard about anything signifying the mistake on the Telephone Trophy.
"I made a mental note, and once the Iowa State game approached, I started making some calls to figure out where the blemish came from. I knew about the why, but the 'who' and 'how' went far deeper than I ever thought it could," Ubben said.
When Ubben started reporting the story, he requested a photographer take a picture of the trophy. "When I heard the trophy had been removed from the trophy case before our photographer could get a photo, I knew it had a chance to be a special story," Ubben said.
Greg Bowers, the Columbia Missourian's sports editor, worked closely with Ubben on the story. "This was a funny story from start to finish," Bowers said. "The asterisk seemed to signify that somebody, we weren't sure who, felt that Iowa State hadn't really 'won' the 2006 game. The search was on. After countless phone calls, the asterisk mysteriously disappeared from the trophy, and he had an entertaining story and a great example of observational reporting. I'm proud of him on a couple of levels."
Ubben's story, "Mystery Punctuates MU Rivalry Trophy's Asterisk," was published in the Columbia Missourian on Nov. 14, 2008.
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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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Dec. 8, 2006: Skamenca Wins National Unity Award for Coverage of Minority Affairs August Skamenca, a KBIA reporter and senior radio-television journalism major from Denver, Colo., is the first Missouri School of Journalism student to receive a national Unity Award in Media from Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Mo. His award-winning story, "Odyssey of Oppression," is an in-depth look at human smuggling in the central United States. [More]
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April 10, 2006: KBIA Faculty and Students Win Five Regional Edward R. Murrow Awards The collaborative work of Missouri School of Journalism faculty and students at KBIA radio has earned the station five regional Edward R. Murrow Awards. This is the most Murrow Awards ever won by KBIA, the NPR-affiliate member station at which radio-television and media convergence journalism students cover events, write stories and air newscasts. KBIA won five out of nine categories in the competition, including "Feature: Hard News," "News Documentary," "Newscast," "Sports Reporting," and "Use of Sound." [More]
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Nov. 2, 2005: Walter Williams Scholar Blogs for AOL's Red Service David Ubben, a Missouri School of Journalism freshman and a Walter Williams Scholar, dreams of becoming a great sports writer. In the meantime, he is a well-known blogger on the AOL® Red™ service for teens. Ubben is one of only six students in the United States to be featured on this first-of-its-kind reality series. Titled "Project: Freshman," the service includes videos, confessionals and daily blogs of the cast members at college. [More]
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April 19, 2005: Missouri Counts 12 Winners, 15+ Awards, in Region 7 SPJ Mark of Excellence Awards Eleven students and KOMU were honored with the presentation of the 2004 Mark of Excellence Awards. The Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ) presents the awards annually to honor the best in student journalism. The Missouri School of Journalism received 19 awards spanning over 13 of the 45 categories for print, radio, television and online journalism. [More]
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April 4, 2005: Journalism Students Win First, Eighth Place in Hearst Journalism Awards James Carlson and Kate Schweitzer have been named as winners in the 45th Annual William Randolph Hearst Foundation's Journalism Awards Program. Carlson's winning entry was an article he wrote for Vox Magazine titled, "Surviving the Guilt." The story was a profile of John Krogh, a survivor of Missouri's deadliest plane crash since 1973. Schweitzer's story was a feature on Peggy Kirkpatrick, the Central Missouri Food Bank director, and how she touches so many lives with her work. [More]
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