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Mississippi
University for Women’s Communication program
possesses a distinguished history, replete with
distinctive changes and substantial progress. A
review of that history illustrates the program’s
innovativeness and vision for the future.
In 1885, when the W still answered to Industrial
Institute and College for Women, Pauline Orr served
as first teacher of English and Elocution (Speech)
and was hired to head the department. This
department debuted the first school newspaper, The
Power, in 1892. During the 1904-1905 school year,
the newspaper became The Spectator, which it remains
to this day. Interestingly, The Spectator began as a
literary magazine, but quickly switched to covering
news around campus.
Nineteen-twenty-six marked the entrance of the
distinguished Southern author Eudora Welty. The
then-unknown Welty served on The Spectator as staff
writer and cartoonist, drawing the "Missie Dear"
strip.
The Department of
Speech was made a separate department in 1939. Ten
years later, Dr. Harvey Cromwell, known to his
students as "Dr. C," became Full Professor and
Chairman of the Department of Speech. During his
tenure, the Speech Program and curriculum developed
and expanded greatly. The program became aligned
with the Theater program for a period of time and
was named the Department of Speech and Theater. Read
more about the life and contributions of Dr. Harvey
Cromwell here.
When Cromwell arrived
in 1949, he helped develop the first radio station,
which broadcast from Orr Chapel, named in honor of
Pauline Orr.
In 1977, the Journalism department (renamed in 1976)
moved into the new Cromwell Communications Building.
The building was dedicated to the then-retired
Harvey Cromwell. It boasted the highest advances in
technology of the time in the fields of print
journalism, radio and television broadcasting, and
speech pathology.
In 1981, when the
university changed its name to the current moniker
of Mississippi University for Women, the new radio
station, called WMUW and now located in Cromwell,
made its first broadcast on 88.5 FM.
The MUW Communication
Department also hosts the annual Ray Furr Journalism
Workshop. This workshop brings interactive
instruction in the field of journalism to high
school and junior college students. In the past,
students would travel to the MUW campus from across
the state. Today, the Ray Furr Journalism Workshop
offers both an on-campus and online experience with
live interactive lectures broadcast as streaming
video and audio to participating schools. Students
are able to respond in real-time with queries via
e-mail during online lectures.
Ray Furr made a
lasting contribution to the University as head of
the Journalism from 1960 until his death in 1970. He
started the tradition of the Silver Inky in 1969 and
it continues to honor journalists of note, who
rightly deserve recognition for their pursuit of
excellence in reporting the news, and years of hard
work, dedication and public service.
The Communication
Department holds a dignified history, and the future
promises only more of the same. Join the students
and faculty of the Department of Communication at
MUW, and become a part of this innovative program
with a proven
track record of producing outstanding
Communication scholars and professionals.
If you would like
more information about the Department of
Communication, click
here.
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