WUSO

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WUSO (89.1 FM) is a radio station in Springfield, Ohio, United States. It is owned by Dayton Public Radio, Inc. and rebroadcasts the classical music programming of WDPR in Dayton on a full-time basis from its transmitter atop Tower Hall on the Wittenberg University campus.

From 1966 to 2019, WUSO was Wittenberg's student-run college radio station, with studios in Firestine Hall on the campus.

History

Radio returns to Wittenberg

Wittenberg University (WU) received a construction permit from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to build a new 10-watt radio station on the campus on October 11, 1965.[1] Organization on campus for a new station had dated to 1961, when a radio club was formed with 35 students.[2] Two years later, a student committee was formed to analyze the idea,[3] and the university appropriated funds to purchase equipment.[4] On February 20, 1966, WUSO began broadcasting.[5] The station represented the return of broadcasting to the university, which had shown an interest in radio transmissions beginning in 1896.Template:R Signing on in 1922,[6] station WCSOTemplate:Efn—the university being Wittenberg College at the time—operated until 1930,[7] when it was shuttered as part of a consolidation that formed WGAR, a new station in Cleveland.[8][9]

WUSO initially broadcast for six hours a day;[10] by 1971, it was on for three hours in the morning and then 11 hours in the evening.[11] The station survived a 1977 funding cut by the WU student government (SGA) that nearly threatened it with closure because it suggested relocating the facility without considering the technical and legal implications of such a move.[12] Pressure from SGA forced cutbacks, such as the elimination of a news wire, as well as internal reforms.[13] Studios were in the basement of Alumni House before relocating to Sprecher Hall in 1979.[14] The move required major changes and left the station off the air for a year and a half,[15] and it also saw the station convert to stereo broadcasting.[16]

Over time, WUSO began operating with a freeform format, a contrast to the Top 40-heavy FM dial in the area.[17] Programs ranged from Christian rock to jazz; in 1986, station manager Krista May did on-air shifts hosting a punk rock show under the name "Chrystal Meth".[18] However, despite a series of efforts over the years, WUSO remained a 10-watt outlet. By 1986, the original transmitter was out of service for six weeks during the winter term.[19] Even with 10 watts, the station attracted substantial interest on campus: there were 120 DJs in 1990.[20] The station narrowly survived another financial challenge again in 1996 when the student senate made a grant to allow the station to purchase Emergency Alert System equipment that it needed in order to meet requirements for the new service.[21][22] The station abandoned Sprecher Hall in 1998 as part of its demolition, moving into the basement of Firestine Hall and replacing much of its equipment in the process.[23]

Upgrade to 120 watts

As a Class D station operating on the same 10-watt basis as in 1966, WUSO was vulnerable. In the late 1970s, the FCC encouraged many stations to upgrade to Class A status—100 watts minimum—and left Class D stations a secondary service, vulnerable to being bumped by other stations. Furthermore, even though the transmitter was atop Tower Hall, students living there sometimes had trouble receiving the station.[24] WUSO had twice solicited power increases, first in 1971[25] and then in 1986.[26] However, such changes also would have come with needed upgrades to professionalize even as FCC restrictions tightened the ability of Class D stations to upgrade.[27] Alongside moving to Firestine, the station mounted a third effort at a power increase, hoping to avoid the paperwork-related problems that had plagued past pushes.[28] The proposed increase turned into a years-long legal battle in the wake of two related applications from Christian groups, the American Family Association and Life Radio Ministries.[29] This conflict was lengthened because the FCC overhauled the process by which it compared applications for non-commercial educational radio stations, leaving the three applications—WUSO's improvement and the two new Christian radio stations, one for Urbana and one for Delaware—in a mutually exclusive group.[30] The three parties then filed a universal settlement, granting WUSO's improvement and the Delaware new station application, which was granted on April 25, 2003.[31]

In November 2004, WUSO upgraded from 10 watts to 120, improving its coverage area and signal strength in the Springfield area.[32] In December 2003, Wittenberg athletics moved to WUSO from commercial station WULM; the move came in the middle of the basketball season after WULM refused to produce and carry broadcasts of Wittenberg women's basketball games.[33] WUSO also initiated online streaming in 2006.[34] WUSO's studios in the basement of Firestine Hall were flooded when a water pipe burst on April 8, 2012. Four feet of water inundated the facilities, and the studio equipment was a total loss.[35] The station was off the air for nearly a year; the studios were rebuilt with increased space for live bands to play and an expanded lobby.[36] By 2018, the station had 18 student-produced shows on its lineup.[37]

Sale to Dayton Public Radio

In August 2017, WUSO entered into a partnership with WDPR Dayton Public Radio to rebroadcast its classical music programming from 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. on weekdays. As WDPR's signal does not reach Springfield, this expanded the service's coverage.[38] In March 2019, WUSO began rebroadcasting WDPR on a full-time basis,[39] and WU filed in December 2022 to sell the station outright to DPR for $94,580.[40] The sale was consummated on March 13, 2023.

Notes

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References

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External links

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