In 1922, Professor Westhafer, the
one and only physics professor at Wooster, had
finished designing a radio transmitter. The department
had decided to display it at an open house in April.
The audience crowded into Severance
Gym (which is now Ebert
Art Center ) to listen to the broadcast but
to everyone's chagrin, nothing happened. Try as
they might, nothing could be done to fix it. Fortunately,
Vic Andrews was attending Wooster in 1922. Vic
was a genius in physics and went on to found the Andrew
Corporation , which is still one of the largest
suppliers of industrial and military communication
equipment in the United States (Vic Andrew also
invented coaxial cable). Vic helped design a new,
fully functional transmitter for the physics
department.
In 1926, radio at Wooster became official. It
was called WABW and only remained on the air
for a year. During that year only fine arts and
sports were broadcast on WABW. WABW only used
50 Watts of power (as opposed to the 1050 Watts
now used by WCWS). Interesting enough, WABW could
still be tuned in as far away as Minnesota or
Massachusetts. This is because AM uses longer
wavelengths which can be received at much greater
distances. In any case, WABW went off the air
after one year, and radio disappeared from Wooster
for over 20 years.
In the fall of 1949, Bob Smith came to the College
of Wooster as a freshman. Bob was the man destined
to be the Chief Engineer at WCWS (then called
WCW), but that is another story. He petitioned
the administration for a campus radio station.
Generously, they agreed and gave the new facility
a start-up budget of $50. In 1949 that kind of
money went a lot further than it can go today
but it still was not much to start a radio station.
It certainly was not enough money to buy an industrial
transmitter of any kind. Bob's solution was a
simple homemade AM carrier current. Carrier current
couples the transmitter's signal to an existing
power line to a building (rather than to an antenna).
Many carrier current stations exist at colleges
like ours. One of their advantages is that they
don't need a tower to broadcast. In addition,
they can only broadcast to a limited number of
people, and as such, are not regulated by the
FCC. The new Wooster carrier current station
was called WCW. As you can imagine with a homemade
transmitter, WCW struggled to stay on the air
despite many technical problems. In the spring
of 1950, the student senate allotted an annual
budget of $200 for WCW.
But perhaps Bob is remembered less for his creation
of the station and more for a stunt he pulled
as a student. Bob Smith, like all people in radio,
wanted more listeners. He devised a plan that
would allow the entire community of Wooster to
hear WCW. He coupled WCW's transmitter to the
main power truck that linked all of Wooster.
It worked perfectly until the administration
received some long distance calls about a radical
new station called WCW, which put a temporary
shutdown. But radio at Wooster was here to stay.
The WCW staff grew in both size and experience
over the next several years. In 1957, WCW was
able to break away from the boundaries of being
a carrier current station. Ted Evens, the general
manager for WWST (a commercial station) offered
WCW two hours a day of broadcasting time on his
station. This, coupled with a donation of a dedicated
telephone line from the WCW studios to WWST from
the Ohio Central Telephone Company, allowed WCW
to no longer rely on the carrier current system.
For the next nine years, WCW staff produced 20
shows per week, including lectures, faculty recitals
and cultural programming pre-recorded from British
Broadcasting Corporation and the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation . These programs
were sent directly to WWST via the dedicated
line.
In November of 1966 WWST broke off its agreement
with WCW because of the profitability of FM.
WCW was forced to look into other alternatives
for broadcasting. The result was WCWS. In 1968
WCW became WCWS, broadcasting at 91.9 FM and
utilizing 388 Watts. Like most other new endeavors
the new WCWS ran into problems. For instance,
it was discovered that it didn't broadcast as
far as was intended. In fact, there were several
places on campus where WCWS could not be picked
up. This was because the antenna for the station
was shorter than the surrounding trees and buildings
and could not cover the intended area.
At first, broadcast only included fine arts
and sports, but within the first year, two technologies
arrived and greatly expanded the format. The
first broadcasting of the New
York Metropolitan Opera was in December
of 1968; phone lines from New York carried this
broadcast. The second was the addition of the
UPI (United Press) service to WCWS. The UPI greatly
enhanced the limited news department at the station.
For the next 15 years, things remained relatively
stable at the station. As is true with any student-run
organization, much of what happened at the station
depended on the current philosophy and interest
of the students involved. In 1984, Chief Engineer
Herman Gibbs filed an application for a construction
permit with the FCC to increase the wattage to
890 Watts. He also requested a new antenna tower
measuring over 100 feet! In the fall of 1985
the tower was complete and WCWS was being received
as far away as 20 miles. In that same year, Texaco announced
that it would be giving WCWS a satellite dish
from which we could receive the Metropolitan
Opera . The new satellite allowed the station
to receive the "Met" in stereo. So in January
of 1985, Gibbs installed a stereo generator and
WCWS was suddenly a stereo FM station.
Since 1985, there have been few major changes
at WCWS. The first was a frequency change from
91.9 to 90.9 FM. This was done to allow for an
output increase without bleeding into Kenyon's
radio station, which was also broadcasting at
91.9. While the FCC approved this change in 1987,
the station never achieved full output. What
was soon discovered after the output increase
was that WCWS was affecting experiments in the Physics
Department . The transmitter was much too
powerful to be located in Wishart
Hall . Certain adjustments were made and
the power was modified (as were broadcasting
hours) to allow the Physics
Department certain hours to conduct experiments.
In 1992, the station transmitter was moved to Back
Orville Road , the location of the three
hundred foot antenna. This solved the interference
problem with the Physics Department, and due
to the additional height and elevated location
of the transmitter; WCWS can cover the Wooster
area more thoroughly without using its full
power potential.
Under the FCC Table of Allotments, WNZR (the Nazarene
College of Mount Vernon ) also broadcasts
at 90.9 MHz, which keeps WCWS from maximizing
its wattage potential.
In the Fall of 2004, a Texas Christian Radio
group challenged WCWS during it's FCC license
renewal. The student management, under then General
Manager Andrew Darneille '05, responded by taking
on the challenging task of improving the quality
of the station. A new identity and logo were
designed, and in January of 2005, WCWS became
known in the community as WOO 91 - Wooster 's
Sound Alternative. The new WOO 91 organized the
daily scheduling of DJs to bring more continuity
to its listeners, and worked with the DJs to
create a more professional sound. These efforts
paid off in May of 2005 when the FCC denied the
challenge to the license renewal.
As a further step to prevent future challenges
to the station's license, on August 1 st , 2005
, WCWS began broadcasting 24 hours a day, seven
days a week year round. This was done by becoming
the first radio station in the country to utilize
the Quebbe music system for broadcasting. This
step will increase the station's music selection,
and will also increase station listenership.
WCWS now brings the Wooster community it's only
non-stop, commercial free station, 365 days a
year.
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