Career
He is remembered for his defense of the Delta Queen Steamboat in 1970, and his role in the Society of American Travel Writers (SATW) photo contest. As president of the Delta Queen from 1966–1976, he and vice-president Betty Blake worked to secure federal legislation to allow the boat to continue running. Bill Muster joined the SATW in 1974 to assist Betty Blake in representing the Delta Queen.
Thereafter, he remained an associate member to promote the photo contest.
In 1981 the SATW named the contest after him. In 1988 he earned the organization’s highest recognition, the Marco Polo Award.
The photo contest is known as the Muster Photo Competition. Muster published his World Traveler’s Almanac with Rand McNally in 1975 (updated in several editions), and a series of travel books under the Traveler’s Almanac imprint: America"s Top 500 Sights to See, by Larry Meyer and Nancy Meyer (1975).
Steamboat Log of the Lower Mississippi, by Bern Keating and Norman Kirk (1976).
Travel Adventures in California, by Frank Riley, photos by Bill Muster (1977). 101 Wonders of the Modern World, by Nancy Meyer (1977), and Olympic Adventures in California, by Frank Riley, Elfried Riley, and Bill Muster (WorldWay, 1983). His career as a marketing executive began at Capitol Records (1953–1959), where he produced the Wrap-Up, a newsletter for the company"s salesmen.
After Capitol, he went on to market pre-recorded reel-to-reel tape for Ampex, United Stereo Tapes division.
In 1961 he joined Pacific Network, Incorporated., and California Communications, Incorporated., as an executive. After joining the Army Air Forces in 1945, Muster served as a publicist, section head, and photo lab chief
He was stationed in Ansbach, Germany, where he photographed the Nuremberg Trials for the military. After the war, he attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, on the GI Bill, and earned his degree in journalism in 1950.
His legacy, the Bill Muster Foundation, supports photographers, including an award and scholarship for photojournalism at the University of California, Los Los Angeles