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Gray rule

A Tale of a Radio Station

About WUGA
From WUGA's 10th Anniversary program guide, August 1997

Just before 6:00 a.m. on the morning of August 28, 1987, WUGA-FM signed on for its first day of broadcasting to Athens and the surrounding area. To our listeners, WUGA's history begins at that moment, but for the many people who played a part in bringing the radio station to life, the story began much earlier.

As an idea, a hope, and an aspiration, WUGA is as old as The University of Georgia Center for Continuing Education that serves as its home. The earliest floor plans for the Georgia Center show a radio station in room 151, which is now WUGA's on-air control room. Plans for a radio station were set aside during the Georgia Center's early years, as other efforts took priority.

By the early 1980s, public radio had become an important part of the American cultural scene. Established in 1971, National Public Radio was a presence in most major metropolitan areas and at institutions of learning and research. Its absence at The University of Georgia was becoming increasingly conspicuous and was sometimes cited as an obstacle to faculty recruitment.

Under the direction of Director Edward G. Simpson, Jr., the Georgia Center sought to address the UGA community's need for a public radio station. A second grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation to The University of Georgia in 1984 provided the means toward that end by specifically designating funds for a public radio station. In 1985, the Georgia Public Telecommunications Commission (GPTC) created Peach State Public Radio, with the mission of bringing public radio to as many Georgians as possible. Later the same year, the Georgia Center formed a committee to study the logistics of putting a radio station on the air. The committee served under the leadership of William H. Hale, Jr., who was then the Georgia Center's associate director for Communication Services.

On September 1, 1986, WUGA became an entity. As a unit within the Production Services Department of the Georgia Center's Division of Communication Services, WUGA at that point consisted of an office occupied by two people. The process of becoming a radio station would take almost an entire year -- 361 days, to be exact.

Along with his other duties at the Center, Jim Shehane was the first station manager. As program director, Bill Burpitt was responsible for determining what sort of radio station WUGA would be. Then, as now, I held the title of music director. Phil Allen of the Georgia Center's engineering department had the task of designing and putting together the station's facilities. News director Mary Kay Mitchell and producer David Bryant came aboard in January, 1987, and office manager Abbie Thaxton joined the staff in July.

Meanwhile, Dr. Simpson, along with the University's interim president, Henry King Stanford, and other officials, was involved in negotiations with the Georgia Public Telecommunications Commission. The ultimate result was a unique partnership, under which the GPTC holds the station's license and provides access to most nationally-distributed programs, while the Georgia Center operates the station and provides a slate of programs specifically for the local audience, including the University community.

During its year of preparation the radio staff was peripatetic, moving through a series of at least three different temporary offices. We finally moved into our permanent location late in the spring. By this time, it had been decided that the station would be called WUGA. The original license application had requested the call letters WLLL, a reference to the Georgia Center's longtime slogan of "life-long learning." Radio staffers were not unhappy to learn that those call letters were already assigned to another station. Just try saying "WLLL" rapidly. The call letters WUGA (which had been in use elsewhere in 1972, when the campus student station signed on) turned out to be available, and proved satisfactory to all.

By late July, final preparations were underway. Almost all control room equipment had been installed. Office cubicles had been installed in the outer portion of room 151. A small but serviceable music library had been assembled. Announcer/operators had been hired and were training.

Everything seemed to be on track for our planned sign-on date of August 10, a Monday. Late on the preceding Friday, though, we learned that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) would not grant final approval for regular broadcast operation until our transmitting antenna had passed an additional round of tests. Thus began a frustrating span of nearly three weeks, during which WUGA was on the air for one or two hours daily for test purposes. The necessary approval was finally granted, and we moved quickly to begin regular operations on Friday, August 28.

WUGA's first day on the air was similar to the days that followed. It began with Morning Edition, the middle of the day was devoted to our music programs, and the late afternoon brought All Things Considered and our local news magazine. The first day was a Friday, so the night was filled with jazz, while week nights were devoted to classical music.

The first day was also typical of many that would follow, in that we had scarcely been on the air twenty minutes when WUGA experienced its first transmitter power outage. Initially, power failures at the transmitter were frequent, but the utility providing service to the transmitter worked diligently to address the problem. Over the next two years, power service to the transmitter became much more reliable.

After a little more than a year of operation, WUGA became a separate department within the Division of Communication Services, and Bill Burpitt took on the duties of station manager. He was succeeded in 1989 by Gene Craven, who remained at the helm until April, 1997, when he became manager of a new public radio station in Fort Myers, Florida. Currently, Jerry L. Hargis is WUGA's acting station manager in addition to his duties as the Georgia Center's associate director for Communication Services.

During his time as station manager, Gene Craven was able to solve one of WUGA's most persistent problems. Very soon after the station signed on, we realized that our signal was difficult to receive in many parts of Athens, and especially on the UGA campus. There appeared to be no solution, but after a great deal of research, a way was found to double the station's power and switch to a non-directional antenna. With support from the University and the Athens community, a more powerful WUGA became a reality. However, some listeners in the downtown area still have difficulty receiving our main channel because of topography; these listeners can now tune to our low-power translator at 97.9 FM.

In ten years, WUGA has had some proud moments, as well as some embarrassing ones. The news department, directed by Mary Kay Mitchell, has received national recognition for its local news programs. Beginning on our first day of broadcasting, Centerlines was a daily 15-minute magazine of local news and events. It was replaced in 1992 by The Commons, a daily half-hour program that has twice been judged best in the nation by public radio news directors around the country.

As for the embarrassing moments, everyone who speaks into a microphone has them. Tapes that roll at the wrong speed, words that become tangled on the tongue, gross mispronunciations of exotic foreign names, or worse yet, pronunciation of an ordinary American English word as though it were foreign. If not quite everyday occurrences, these are still a part of life on the air. They make up a large part of the stories radio people tell, but the most memorable do not translate well to print.

Many talented people have passed through WUGA over the years, and a number of them have gone on to careers in public radio. Mark McCain, one of our original announcers, is now a station manager in Kansas. Angela Elam, who joined us midway through our first year and departed on the station's fifth anniversary, is now the producer and host of an independent, nationally-syndicated program. Several WUGA alumni have moved on to Peach State Public Radio headquarters, including its current music director, Winston King. Indeed, out of the seven former hosts of Night Music (a weeknight program produced by WUGA for the state network), five have gone on to work at network headquarters, as well as two former alternate hosts.

After ten years, WUGA has logged more than 85,000 hours on the air. If we have learned in that time to better serve the needs of the listening audience in the University community and the Athens area, we may consider ourselves successful.

--Robb Holmes, June, 1997
 
 

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WUGA

University of Georgia
1197 South Lumpkin Street
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