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E. W. Ziebarth

E. W. ("Easy") Ziebarth (October 4, 1910 – February 27, 2001) was a Peabody Award winning radio broadcaster as well as a professor and administrator at the University of Minnesota. Born in 1910 in Columbus, Wisconsin, Ziebarth attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison for his undergraduate and master's degrees before coming to the University of Minnesota to begin his doctoral studies in speech and communication in 1937.[1]: 1, 8  Ziebarth would remain at the University of Minnesota as a professor of speech for over 40 years. He also served as the dean of the College of Liberal Arts from 1963 to 1973 and as interim university president in 1974 after the departure of Malcolm Moos.[2]

E. W. ("Easy") Ziebarth
E. W. Ziebarth, c. 1950s
Interim President of the
University of Minnesota
Preceded byMalcolm Moos
Succeeded byC. Peter Magrath
Personal details
BornOctober 4, 1910
Columbus, Wisconsin
DiedFebruary 27, 2001 (aged 90)
Minneapolis, Minnesota

Ziebarth also had a long career in broadcasting beginning at the University of Minnesota's Radio K (then called WLB).[1]: 8  Later he joined WCCO Radio and also served as a foreign correspondence for CBS. His 1950s program This I Believe was broadcast internationally via Voice of America in six different languages. He was also involved in the initial setup of Twin Cities Public Television's studios on the University of Minnesota's St. Paul campus.[2]

Ziebarth won two Peabody awards for his work. The first in 1959 was awarded to WCCO for a series of programs on international relations. Ziebarth had traveled to the Soviet Union with a small group of academics and journalists and reported back on his experience.[3][4]: 108  His second came in 1971 for a WCCO radio program he did entitled "The Heart of the Matter" which chronicled his own open heart surgery.[5]

Ziebarth retired from teaching in the late 1970s. He died in 2001.[2] A collection of his papers can be accessed at the University Archives, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Ziebarth, E. W.; Chambers, Clarke A. (28 August 1984). "Interview with E.W. Ziebarth". University of Minnesota's Digital Conservancy. hdl:11299/50870.
  2. ^ a b c Smetanka, Mary Jane (March 1, 2001). "'U' Dean, Broadcaster E. W. Ziebarth, 90, Dies". Star Tribune. Minneapolis, MN. pp. B1, B5. Retrieved June 22, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.  
  3. ^ "Institutional Award: WCCO Radio for Local Public Service". Peabody Awards. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  4. ^ Good News to the Northwest: 1924-1974 (PDF).
  5. ^ "The Heart of the Matter". Peabody Awards. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  6. ^ "ArchivesSpace Public Interface | UA | Elmer W. Ziebarth papers". archives.lib.umn.edu. Retrieved 2017-01-24.

ziebarth, easy, ziebarth, october, 1910, february, 2001, peabody, award, winning, radio, broadcaster, well, professor, administrator, university, minnesota, born, 1910, columbus, wisconsin, ziebarth, attended, university, wisconsin, madison, undergraduate, mas. E W Easy Ziebarth October 4 1910 February 27 2001 was a Peabody Award winning radio broadcaster as well as a professor and administrator at the University of Minnesota Born in 1910 in Columbus Wisconsin Ziebarth attended the University of Wisconsin Madison for his undergraduate and master s degrees before coming to the University of Minnesota to begin his doctoral studies in speech and communication in 1937 1 1 8 Ziebarth would remain at the University of Minnesota as a professor of speech for over 40 years He also served as the dean of the College of Liberal Arts from 1963 to 1973 and as interim university president in 1974 after the departure of Malcolm Moos 2 E W Easy ZiebarthE W Ziebarth c 1950sInterim President of theUniversity of MinnesotaPreceded byMalcolm MoosSucceeded byC Peter MagrathPersonal detailsBornOctober 4 1910Columbus WisconsinDiedFebruary 27 2001 aged 90 Minneapolis Minnesota Ziebarth also had a long career in broadcasting beginning at the University of Minnesota s Radio K then called WLB 1 8 Later he joined WCCO Radio and also served as a foreign correspondence for CBS His 1950s program This I Believe was broadcast internationally via Voice of America in six different languages He was also involved in the initial setup of Twin Cities Public Television s studios on the University of Minnesota s St Paul campus 2 Ziebarth won two Peabody awards for his work The first in 1959 was awarded to WCCO for a series of programs on international relations Ziebarth had traveled to the Soviet Union with a small group of academics and journalists and reported back on his experience 3 4 108 His second came in 1971 for a WCCO radio program he did entitled The Heart of the Matter which chronicled his own open heart surgery 5 Ziebarth retired from teaching in the late 1970s He died in 2001 2 A collection of his papers can be accessed at the University Archives University of Minnesota Twin Cities 6 References edit a b Ziebarth E W Chambers Clarke A 28 August 1984 Interview with E W Ziebarth University of Minnesota s Digital Conservancy hdl 11299 50870 a b c Smetanka Mary Jane March 1 2001 U Dean Broadcaster E W Ziebarth 90 Dies Star Tribune Minneapolis MN pp B1 B5 Retrieved June 22 2021 via Newspapers com nbsp Institutional Award WCCO Radio for Local Public Service Peabody Awards Retrieved 26 May 2015 Good News to the Northwest 1924 1974 PDF The Heart of the Matter Peabody Awards Retrieved 26 May 2015 ArchivesSpace Public Interface UA Elmer W Ziebarth papers archives lib umn edu Retrieved 2017 01 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title E W Ziebarth amp oldid 1194721608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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