Introduction
In this age of global media conglomeration,
high-powered commercial radio stations broadcast to broadly defined
audiences. For instance, with Clear Channel Communications,
homogenized programming decisions made in San Antonio, Texas, are
disseminated to over 1200 stations across the United States. In
addition, Clear Channel’s Premier Radio Network syndicates more than
100 programs to more than 7,800 radio stations and has equity
interests in over 240 radio stations internationally (Clear
Channel). In 2000, the Federal Communication Commission agreed to
begin to license low-power FM radio stations to serve individual
community needs. However, existing broadcasters successfully lobbied
congress to dramatically limit the number of low-power stations.
Today, instead of the hundreds or thousands of stations proposed in
the United States, there are just a few dozen (Croteau & Hoynes,
2003). Elsewhere in the world, however, there are countless
low-power stations targeted to specifically defined communities. In
Paris, France, alone, nearly one forth of all FM frequencies are
assigned to "community stations." Among these "radio associatives"
are an anarchist station, a station closely associated with the
right-wing National Front, Jewish, Protestant, and Catholic
stations, a station with programming for gay listeners, along with
stations that target minority listeners, including North African,
Flemish, Basque, Bosnian, Kurdish, and Portuguese (Poindexter,
1997). Low-power radio stations also serve a valuable role in the
dissemination of social information in areas of the world with low
literacy levels, limited financial resources, and developing areas
without electricity (see Olorunnisola, A., 1997 and Rockwell, R.,
2001).
While the FCC licensing action in 2000 has not
changed the trend toward broader and broader radio communities in
the United States, there is an important history of low-power
stations serving very narrowly defined communities in the U.S. By
examining the historical debut of radio in small town America,
perhaps we can shed light on the contradictory position of low-power
radio in today’s "McDonaldized" mass media.
The Debut of Radio in Small Town America: Athens,
Ohio
Scholars have argued over which broadcasting station
in the United States was the first, almost as long as there has been
radio in the United States. In "Broadcasting's Oldest Stations: An
Examination of Four Claimants," Baudino and Kittross (1977)
concluded that Pittsburgh's KDKA, which took to the air in 1920,
deserves the title of oldest broadcasting station in the United
States. The development of radio in small town America, however,
came much later. The first radio stations in the Appalachian college
town of Athens, Ohio, provide an example of this slower growth in
local rural radio broadcasting.
More than twenty-two years after KDKA's first
broadcast on November 2, 1920, Athens' first radio station had its
debut. The headline in the Ohio University Post read, "First student
radio station to take air for trial debut" (First Student, 1942).
The date announced was the following Tuesday, December 15, 1942,
from 7:30 to 8 p.m. Technically, this station may not even be
considered a true broadcasting station, since it did not use
wireless technology[i]. According to the Post:
WOUB, entered as a trial radio station member of the
Inter-collegiate Broadcasting System, will be of the wired type now
in use at eastern universities such as Harvard, Brown, Yale and
Princeton. Under this set-up, however, reception can only be gotten
in buildings which have a direct wire leading to them from the
broadcasting station in Ewing balcony, although there will be no
need for special connections of individual radios (p. 1).
As a result, only residents of Lindley Hall
dormitory and patrons of the Student Grill were able to hear the
"broadcast." The engineering department hoped to obtain the
necessary materials to send the broadcasts over the lighting
circuit. This would have enabled radio sets to pick up the programs
within 50 feet of any university lighting circuit. However, the
United States had been in a state of war for just over a year when
WOUB debuted. As Athens Messenger reporter Roy Cross put it, "You
couldn't do anything during the war. It was hard enough to get a
pound of hamburger, much less radio equipment."[ii] Nevertheless,
according to the Athens Messenger, broadcasts were scheduled for
7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays "until the broadcasts can be
made daily" (Radio Station, 1942).
The first program included an adaptation of Edgar
Allan Poe's The Telltale Heart and five minutes of news of the world
and the community. An Ohio University class in news broadcasting
gathered Lowell Thomas' broadcast and edited it into five minutes of
news. Cross recollected:
We didn't have a wire service for a while so we had
to tune in the other stations to pick up their newscasts and then
later on we'd go on with pirated news. We clipped newspapers, that
was for national or international stories. But we would send someone
to the fire department to find out what was going on in the
community. We did not have a wire service, but we had a record that
sounded like a teletype, sort of like Lowell Thomas. It would play
in the background, here's the news tat-a-tat-tat-tat.[iii]
Needing a radio set within 50 feet of a university
lighting circuit to receive WOUB was not the ideal set-up. Archie
Greer, who worked in the radio station as a student and then became
a professor at Ohio University, recalled:
The wired system was not very effective. If you were
close to an electrical outlet, you might be able to get it but if
you were somewhere else in the building, you didn't get it. And of
course there was very little in the way of portable radios, so you
didn't hear it outside of the building.[iv]
As the station continued to grow, the Ohio
University Post carried stories on its development. While the Post
was not publishing a regular program schedule for WOUB at this time,
it would feature stories on the station's upcoming programs. For
instance, on February 9, 1943, a front-page story had the heading,
"WOUB Offers Thriller Tonight" (1943). Little more than two months
after going on air, WOUB expanded its audience by extending its
wiring to the men's dorm. The thirty-minute program also was
extended to forty-five minutes (WOUB Will Broadcast, 1943).
On February 27, Ohio University's rapidly expanding
radio station took another step in local radio pioneering when it
broadcast a basketball game from the men's gymnasium. Using a
500-foot line, engineering students laid temporary lines from the
gym to the studio in Ewing Hall. In the weeks to follow, permanent
lines were laid underground for the wiring of the Student Center
Building. This represented a connection to the north end of the
campus, as WOUB extended its wired radio coverage (WOUB Will
Broadcast).
By early March 1943, WOUB's first program guide
appeared in the Ohio University Post. The ad read:
WOUB Program at 550 On Your Radio Dial
TONIGHT
7:30 World News and Classical Music
7:45 "This Precious Freedom" A play by Arch Obler
8:00 Campus News and Popular Music (WOUB Program,
1943).
Although tiny compared to the encyclopedic listings
of twenty-four hour radio stations in major markets, another WOUB
program guide would not appear in the Post until more than a month
later. Coverage of the burgeoning radio station was beginning to
abate. Rather than promoting upcoming programs, the Post started
reviewing previous night's performances. Critiques of radio plays
with the mention of every actor involved became standard practice.
Stories also started to appear that unveiled the magic behind radio.
In "OU Fakes Exposed at Radio Station," the Post gave away some of
the radio station's secrets.
For example when you're listening to one of their
[WOUB's] war plays, that murderous tommy gun is nothing but a
typewriter that never hurt a soul. Too lazy to slam a door when the
script says "slam door," sound effects men push a drawer shut in an
old desk near-the mike. A rickety old wagon coming down the street
is an egg beater and a crisp piece of cellophane crunched in the
hand is a nice hot fire (OU Fakes, 1943).
WOUB had found a home at Ohio University, but the
intended audience remained the university community and not the
public at large. Still, it is clear that the station did serve its
intended community. As the years passed, Athens' only "local" radio
station continued to grow. Greer noted:
The improvements continued as more and more
buildings on campus were linked. After the war, the station moved.
Initially the wired station was housed in a little control room
built on the balcony of Ewing Hall.... Shortly after the war ended,
the university was able to get an old metal Quonset hut which sat on
the road that runs in front of the library and, in fact, it was
housed right where the library sits now. We had the studio and
control room and offices for the station there until they built
Kantner Hall around 1951. That's when they moved from the Quonset
hut to the basement of Kantner Hall.[v]
The Quonset hut location kept WOUB centrally located
in university life. Cross, who worked for WOUB as a student after
World War II, commented:
A Quonset hut was a military hut that came up in
World War II that was a semi-circle. There were no corners to it. It
was made of metal, galvanized metal. And it got its name because it
was first used at Quonset Rhode Island Naval Base. And well our
studio was in that and on any Friday or Saturday night there'd be
someone celebrating who'd walked by and throw marbles on the roof,
and that would play hell with your programming.[vi]
Despite WOUB’s almost exclusive appeal to the
university community, it remained the only local station in Athens
for more than half a decade. Its survival, and its intimate role in
campus life, illustrate the service that low-powered stations can
provide to narrowly defined communities.
During the station’s first year of operation, the
Athens Messenger, the local newspaper, did not list WOUB's
programming schedule and made little mention of it except for its
debut (Radio Station, 1942). During WOUB's infancy, the Messenger
was absorbed in covering the war in Europe. Most days during that
period had headline stories devoted to wartime occurrences. The
Messenger, however, did list radio programs of other stations whose
signals could be picked up in Athens at night.
Because of WOUB’s wired limitations, few people in
the community outside the university could pick up the station.
They, along with the university community, listened to clear channel
stations from as far away as Atlanta.[vii] These clear channel
stations were permitted by the Federal Communications Commission to
broadcast at high power levels, enabling radio listeners hundreds of
miles away to pick up programming. According to Broadcasting
magazine:
From 1930 to 1950--give or take a few years on
either side--the clear channel stations reigned supreme. They were
the big voices of the air….Their programs and commercials rang loud
and clear during the day, and rose to a roar at night….It was these
stations that carried the most popular programs, the national
advertising--both network and national spot--that brought to
millions of listeners in rural America their only nighttime service
(Clears Tops for 20 Years, 1962, p. 29).
Rural communities may have had the most to gain from
the introduction of clear channel radio because of their isolation.
Few towns the size of Athens could support a wireless radio station
in the 1940's. Athens' population in 1946 was slightly above 10,000,
with an additional 5,000 in the outlying vicinity (Turnbull, 1949).
In "The Radio in Rural America," Wik (1981) observed that without
local stations, radio owners "became obsessed with efforts to reach
out as far as possible. Apparently there was a fascination with the
notion that now you could annihilate distance" (p. 345).
Cross remarked, "Down here you were so restricted,
you couldn't get the Columbus station like BNS but you could get
Atlanta, loud and clear".[viii] Greer also remembered listening to
clear channel stations. "You didn't get a lot of radio back then in
this area. You got WLW out of Cincinnati, that was a clear channel
you could get on a good night. Also WJR out of Detroit. Of course,
at night you could pick up a lot of stuff. You could pick up New
York, Nashville, Boston, Atlanta".[ix]
The introduction of the Federal Radio Commission's
1928 frequency allocation plan was the first to allow a handful of
stations to broadcast on AM frequencies at the highest power
available: first 25,000 watts and later 50,000 watts. Other stations
could use these frequencies during the day but were forced off the
air at night to prevent interference with these clear channel
stations. The purpose was to provide service to ensure good
reception for rural and remote radio listeners. The Federal Radio
Commission and later the Federal Communications Commission agreed
that this policy should be among their most important concerns
(Foust, 1994).
Owners of clear channel stations formed the Clear
Channel Broadcasting Service (CCBS) to lobby for the protection of
clear channel policy. After the start of World War II, CCBS members
wrote a letter to President Roosevelt affirming the group's interest
in keeping rural and small town radio listeners informed:
As the nation's independently owned clear channel
stations, ours is a doubled responsibility in radio during this
crisis. Our audiences comprise not only city listeners, but also the
millions of Americans living on farms and in small towns across the
country. The principal radio voice reaching some 50,000,000 rural
and small town listeners must promote the unified effort needed to
win this crucial struggle (Foust, p. 129).
During the war, the CCBS had little to fear from the
expansion of new stations that would compete with their clear
channel frequencies. The Federal Communications Commission had
issued a freeze on new station construction in 1942. Foust wrote
that this delayed "the calls for duplication on clear channels, but
it created an even greater pent-up demand for frequency space after
the war" (Foust, p. 128).
The war and rural isolation of many in the region
gave clear channel radio broadcasting, and its wider audiences, a
strong advantage over smaller stations with more limited audiences.
These combined factors explain why Athens remained without a
wireless regional broadcast radio station until the end of the
1940's. Still, there remained a need for regional broadcasting that
could link people within the community to each other.
The Coming of FM
Such a role for radio may have been envisioned when,
after the war, the Federal Communications Commission began to
allocate a band of frequencies to allow educational institutions to
build FM stations with no more than 10 watts of power (Greer, 1984).
However, it would still take until the end of the decade for Athens'
first wireless broadcast station (WOUB-FM) to begin to operate.
Greer recalled:
Remember we had just come out of a war and people
had their minds occupied with other things during that period. So
people didn't really give much thought to it. Radio was relatively
new. It had been around for about 20-30 years. They listened to the
networks and that was it. Local radio was very, very different
during those days.[x]
In December 1948, Vincent Jukes, an assistant
professor of dramatic art and speech, applied for and received
permission to construct a ten-watt FM station. The new station,
WOUB-FM, was to be operated in conjunction with the existing campus
station at Ohio University (Radio Broadcasting, 1959). One year
later, on December 13, 1949, WOUB-FM went on the air (Broadcasting
and Cable, 1996).
The day after the station's debut,
The Athens
Messenger wrote:
Ohio University's new FM radio station…officially
took to the air waves Tuesday evening [December 13, 1949]
when regular programming was launched with a special 15-minute
program at 8 p.m.
Operating on 88.1 megacycles with an educational
license granted by the Federal Communications Commission, the
station will be on the air from noon to 1 p.m., and 6 to 9 p.m.,
regularly, Monday through Thursday, during the noon hour on Friday,
and for special broadcasts of home athletic events and other campus
activities (OU Radio, 1949).
Starting out with only 10 watts of power, however,
the new station could only expect its signal to be received within a
radius of not much more than a mile. This established a listening
audience composed largely of university students and personnel, like
the previous, non-wireless WOUB. But wireless FM broadcasting did
expand the intended audience community for the new station. A
preliminary report published by Ohio University stated that when the
trustees of the university approved the FM station in December 1948,
"certain basic principles were established for the operation of the
station, the most important of which were:
1. That it should be operated on an educational,
i.e., noncommercial basis to provide a program service to the campus
and community that would be "basically instructional and
educational," foster good public relations for the University," and
"provide entertainment on the level consistent with the policies and
practices of the University."
2. That it should function as a laboratory providing
practical experience for students and supplementing regular
classroom instruction in radio and journalism.
3. That the operation of the station and its
broadcasting program should be entirely controlled by the University
through its administrative officers and faculty (Radio Broadcasting,
1959).
The report’s first basic principle makes it clear
that although WOUB was chartered as an educational station to serve
as a laboratory for students, the new FM station also was meant to
provide program service to the community. Joseph Welling, the former
director of the Telecommunications Center at Ohio University,
recollected that "It was doing general audience programming but you
could only get it in Athens. It was intended as a community service.
It wasn't just done for university students".[xi] According to
Greer:
The community really rallied behind the FM station
and consequently we got very involved in community activities. Even
though it was a student-operated station they got very involved. I
remember we did remotes from the gas company store window for United
Appeal and all the local sports were covered by the FM station.[xii]
Yet, the question remains, who was listening? In the
mid-1940's, the cost of an FM table model receiver was more than $60
(Sterling & Kittross,
1990). Compared to the average cost of $32 for an AM
table model (Peter, 1941), the FM radio was nearly twice as
expensive. This is one reason why few people in the Athens community
were listening to FM radio. Cross had a "two-bit radio that you
could plug in, stick a coat hanger on, stick out the window, and
[you were] in business. But it was an AM radio, and it wasn't for a
while that you could buy a radio with both AM and FM. At that time
it was an expensive proposition".[xiii]
When the FM station debuted, it was expected to
serve about 500 FM radio owners in the Athens area (WOUB to Make
First, 1949). This represented only about five percent of the
community. To overcome the limited reception area of the station
(given its mere 10 watts of power), engineering students increased
the length of the wire that served as the FM station antenna. Greer
recollected:
Now, rather than only getting out a mile or so, we
began to get calls from listeners 40-50 miles away. The crowning
blow came when we were picked up in Colorado Springs. This, of
course, violated every tenet of our licensing agreement. So the FCC
asked us to cease and desist until we could get that antenna problem
solved. A good pair of wire cutters took care of it in short order.
There was some talk of it being an atmospheric freak, but I think it
was that wire (Greer, p. 3).
Despite the need and desire to serve a broader
community with wireless radio, technological limitations and
government regulations made that impossible until 1969, when WOUB-FM
received permission from the FCC to increase its power to 50
kilowatts. At this point, WOUB-FM became a regional facility.
Athens' First Commercial Station
Commercial interests led to the first development of
true regional broadcast radio in Athens. Given the amount of
advertising revenue necessary to support a commercial station,
speculators interested in establishing a radio presence in Athens
looked to AM. By the end of 1948, there were more than 544
applications for AM stations on file with the FCC (FCC Box Score,
1948). By 1950, there were approximately 2,100 AM stations on the
air in the United States (Sterling, 1984). One of them was now in
Athens.
WATH-AM went on the air October 25, 1950. The
1,000-watt station operated on 1540 kilocycles and broadcast from
sunrise to sunset. Ivan Tribe, a country-music scholar and a faculty
member at the University of Rio Grande, remembered when WATH came on
the air. "We couldn't listen to it for the first year or two for
some reason. I think it was 1540 on the dial then, and our radio
only went to 1500. So, until we got another radio, as I recall, we
couldn't get it".[xiv]
In addition to inadequate radio equipment, other
factors also stood in the way of the community’s acceptance of
commercial regional radio stations like WATH-AM. Clear channel
stations were powerful competitors for audiences. According to
Tribe, "Here in the Athens area just about everybody listened to WLW
out of Cincinnati. At night they did network shows. And then in
about 1950 we started listening to WSM in Nashville a lot, and the
'Grand Ole Opry.' People also listened to WLS in Chicago".[xv] Those
clear channel stations had frequency signal protection at night from
700 to 750 miles (Foust), and Athens' geographical location placed
it within the frequency protection zone of several clear channel
broadcasters.
Yet, these stations were hundreds of miles from
Athens and could not provide a public service to the local
community. As WATH's current owner, David Palmer put it:
If you listen to WLW and you listen to WATH, the
only thing that makes one appealing over the other is localism.
They're not going to do local news of interest to Athens….They're
not going to tell you about school closings or the Athens' weather
or an incident uptown. And that's why we will always have a
place….Localism is what has caused radio to be so successful.[xvi]
A similar sentiment was also being voiced in
Congress. Foust reported:
In 1949, Senator Edwin C. Johnson…read into the
record a telegram from the owner of WTCM in Traverse City, Michigan.
The telegram told of an incident there involving a rabid dog. The
dog's owner took it to a veterinarian, saying it had bitten a small
child. After the dog died of rabies, local authorities asked WTCM
for help, and the station responded by dropping much of its regular
programming and airing announcements trying to locate the child. Two
hours later, the child was in the hospital receiving treatment.
"What could WJR or WGN, with 750-watt [sic] power, do about this?"
the owner asked. This incident was merely anecdotal, but Johnson's
reading it into the Congressional record showed that such arguments
were valuable to opponents of the clear channels. In the end, the
FCC decided that it was better to provide more voices for more
people (Foust, p. 276).
Commercial AM stations also had advantages over
low-power FM stations like WOUB. WATH debuted nearly one year after
WOUB-FM but with 1,000 watts of power, WATH was 100 times as
powerful as the university station. Consequently, WATH served a far
greater area of the community. Tribe recalled, "I lived out in
Albany, 10 miles out, and I don't think it [WOUB] hardly reached
that far. You probably couldn't get it out of the city".[xvii] Given
its limited broadcast area, WOUB-FM did not provide the same level
of service to the community at large. Tribe continued, "Stuff that
was played on the OU station was mostly of interest to the college
population. To the best of my knowledge, I'm not sure people in the
rest of the area listened to it that much".[xviii]
Conclusion
In looking back at the history of radio in this
small college town in rural Appalachia, there were three levels of
broadcasting, all serving different communities in different ways.
WOUB, in both its wired and wireless phases, served the very
specific needs of a college community, WATH linked people within a
larger regional community, and the clear channel stations, although
unable to link individuals within the community, were able to link
isolated areas of the country to a national community. I would argue
that there still is a need for all three levels; the local, the
regional, and the national. Commercial radio stations are successful
for obvious reasons, yet looking back, we see how low-power stations
can serve small communities’ needs, which are often overlooked
within the "McDonaldization" of media today. Certainly, within all
developing areas of the globe, low-power radio, with its lower
costs, can provide much needed information on health, agriculture,
and education. Throughout the world, low-power stations can provide
specific communities of local interest with a means for information
exchange and identity building.
In looking towards the future, with the advancement
of cellular telephone technology, many underdeveloped areas of the
world are now better able to take advantage of telephone access,
which may not have been as readily-available if traditional wiring
of the region was required. This could make possible the wide spread
use of Web radio, which could perform the function of old style
clear channel stations; linking people nationally and even
internationally, but avoiding the homogenization methods of
multinational conglomerations like Clear Channel Communications. Web
radio could bring news and entertainment into underprivileged
regions of the world not already within the receiving area of
traditional broadcast stations. Just as the arrival of radio into
rural Appalachia addressed an individual community, the arrival of
Web radio could result in the increase of communal listening habits
in underdeveloped regions without radio stations. Residents could
gather at community centers, or even listen to the news while riding
on a bus; thereby creating an opportunity whereby issues of the day
could be discussed with other members of the community. Of course,
Web radio could also complement areas with established broadcast
stations by bringing alternative voices into a region. It is in
these areas that future research would be beneficial.
End Notes
[i] New technologies developed since these early
stations have changed broadcasting terminology significantly.
According to the Communication Act of 1934, broadcasting is "the
dissemination of radio communications intended to be received by the
public, directly or by the intermediary of relay stations [and said
stations are] equipped to engage in radio communication or radio
transmission of energy" (The Communications Act of 1934). According
to R. Franklin Smith (1959-60), there are five criteria for defining
a broadcast station. These are the same criteria used by Baudino and
Kittross. "A broadcast station," Smith wrote, "(1) transmits by
wireless; (2) transmits by telephony (this second stipulation
requires that messages transmitted be composed of sounds instantly
intelligible to the general public, for instance music and voice as
opposed to Morse code); (3) transmits to the public; (4) transmits a
continuous program service; and (5) is licensed by the government"
(p. 43).
[ii] Interview with Roy Cross
[iii] Ibid.
[iv] Interview with Archie Greer.
[v] Ibid.
[vi] Cross interview.
[vii] Ibid.
[viii] Ibid.
[ix] Greer interview.
[x] Ibid.
[xi] Interview with Joseph Welling.
[xii] Greer interview.
[xiii] Cross interview.
[xiv] Interview with Ivan Tribe.
[xv] Ibid.
[xvi] Interview with David Palmer.
[xvii] Tribe interview.
[xviii] Ibid.
Baudino, J. E. & Kittross, J. B. (1977).
Broadcasting's oldest stations: An examination of four claimants.
Journal of Broadcasting, 21(1), 61-81.
Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook, (1996). p. B158.
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http://www.clearchannel.com/
Clear tops for 20 years. (1962, October 15).
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Communications Act of 1934, Title 47, U.S. Code
Sections 3(o) and (k).
Croteau,D & Hoynes,H. (2003). Media society:
Industries, images, and audiences (3rd ed.) Thousand Oaks: Pine
Forge Press.
FCC box score. (1948, October 11). Broadcasting, p.
11.
First student radio station to take air for trial
debut. (1942, December 8). Ohio University Post, p. 1.
Foust, J. C. (1994). A History of the Clear Channel
Broadcasting Service, 1934-1980. Unpublished doctoral dissertation,
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of radio studies 4, 242-257.
OU fakes exposed at radio station. (1943, April 13).
Ohio University Post, p. 3.
OU radio station programs begin. (1949, December
14). The Athens Messenger, p. 2.
Peter, P. F. (1941). The American listener in 1940.
In The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social
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report. (1959). Ohio University, Athens.
Radio station on OU campus to broadcast. (1942,
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Rockwell, R. (2001). Finding power of hidden radio
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concise history of American broadcasting (2nd ed.). Belmont, CA:
Wadsworth.
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establishing an AM radio station in the Athens market. Unpublished
master’s thesis, Ohio University, Athens.
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Agricultural history, 55, 339-350.
WOUB offers thriller tonight. (1943, February 24).
Ohio University Post, p. 3.
WOUB program at 550 on your radio dial. (1943, March
9). Ohio University Post, p.3.
WOUB will broadcast game from gym tomorrow night.
(1943, February 26). Ohio University Post, p.3.
WOUB to make first broadcast next Tuesday. (1949,
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About the Author
Jacob J. Podber, (Ph.D., Ohio University School of
Telecommunications, 2001) is Assistant Professor in the College of
Mass Communication and Media Arts at Southern Illinois University.
His research interests are in electronic media usage in rural
Appalachia and other "outsider" communities. His article "Early
Radio in Rural Appalachia: An Oral History" appears in the Journal
of Radio Studies. He also has a chapter forthcoming in Global Media
Studies: Ethnographic Perspective. Routledge Press. Dr. Podber has
won several awards, including the Outstanding Dissertation of the
Year Award from the Broadcast Education Association, the Carl A.
Ross Paper of the Year Award from the Appalachian Studies
Association, the Top Paper Award from the Broadcast Education
Association, and the Top Paper Award on an American Theme from the
Ohio University-American Studies Steering Committee. In addition,
Dr. Podber was Graduate Production Supervisor for the videotape
accompaniment to the book Entertainment-Education: A Communication
Strategy for Social Change by Everett Rogers & Arvind Singhal.