WBAU

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WBAU
CityGarden City, New York
Frequency90.3 MHz
Programming
FormatDefunct
History
First air date
July 1972 (1972-07)
Last air date
August 1995 (1995-08); 23 years

WBAU (90.3 FM) was the call sign[1] of the student-operated radio station located at Adelphi University in Garden City, New York, 18 miles (29 km) east of Midtown Manhattan. The new web-based radio station is PAWS Web Radio.

History[]

WBAU was located at 90.3 on the FM dial,[2] which it shared with WHPC, owned by Nassau Community College. Under the original agreement, WHPC owned the frequency from 9:00 AM until 5:00 PM, and WBAU owned it from 5:00 PM until 1:00 AM. From 1:00 AM until 9:00 AM, the two stations switched ownership of the frequency on an "odd–even day" basis, although neither station generally operated between 1:00 and 9:00 AM until 1982, when the agreement was amended to allow WBAU to operate daily between 6:30 and 9:00 AM. WBAU did take advantage of its time during its annual "Radiothon" fundraiser.

WBAU was originally called WALI, and broadcast entirely through carrier current at 640 on the AM dial. When, in 1971, the school decided to expand broadcast to the FM band, a protest by nearby WHLI (based on the call letters sounding so similar) led to the change to WBAU. Under these new call letters, the station began FM broadcasting in July 1972. They also continued broadcasting via carrier current to the school's dormitories and were piped directly into Post Hall (the resident students' dining hall) and the cafeteria in the Student Center. The first record played was "Long Time Gone" by Crosby, Stills and Nash.

WBAU's broadcast tower was originally located in Mitchel Field; however when the tower was taken down in 1981, the station reduced power to 130 watts and moved their antenna to the top of the student center. Three years later they secured a new, higher location atop the Marriott Hotel in Uniondale, New York. The new antenna broadcast WBAU's signal at an effective radiated power of 1,100 watts, making it one of the strongest signals on Long Island at the time.

In August 1995, due to a clash of philosophies between the university president and the student-run radio station, WBAU was abruptly shut down by the university. Its license and equipment were reportedly "voluntarily" sold to WHPC. The remnants of the dual control room, multichannel studios and the 10,000+ album record/CD library, which took over 40 years to collect, were discarded by the university.

Alumni and former radio staff[]

  • Mark Alan Biggs [1]
  • Andre "Doctor Dré Brown, (former Yo! MTV Raps Today host), T-Money (also a former Yo! MTV Raps Today host), Rapper G., Easy G Rockwell, and Wildman Steve of Original Concept
  • Claude Call, Engineering Operations Manager, currently producer/host of the How Good It Is music podcast [2]
  • Michael Casano
  • William "M.C. D.J. Flavor Flav" Drayton Jr. of Public Enemy
  • Kenny Deep
  • Gary Dell'Abate
  • Jim Doig - Jazz Fusion, The Who Knows What Show—call in trivia program
  • Kevin J. Doran
  • Michael Feldman 1977-1981, News Director
  • Michael R. Glaser http://linkedin.com/in/michael-r-g-48b6717
  • Ben Guralnik [Former Vice-President]
  • Russell "Rusty Jay" Johnson
  • Doug Miles, 1981-1986 Sports Director, Newscaster, Host Big Band Sound. Currently broadcaster/writer/producer in Sarasota,FL (dougmilesmedia) [3] [4]
  • Ken Norian [5]
  • Carlton "Chuckie D. Rapper" Ridenhour, Hank "Shocklee" Boxley, and Keith "Shocklee" Boxley of Public Enemy A.K.A. The Spectrum City Sound System Mixers.
  • D.J. Riz
  • Frank Van Brunt (1988-1994) and John W. Cronin (1994-1995) "Spark in the Dark" Christian Rock n' Roll Show, Fridays 8-10pm
  • Gary "On The Radio" Petrowsky (Sat Mornings)
  • N.Y. Polka Bob Petrowsky
  • Gregory Sneed - Engineer & DJ, R&B, Urban Contemporary and Jazz Programming, Sundays 10pm to 1am, (1975-1978)
  • John Rosenblatt
  • John Schmidt
  • David Schwartz, host of pro wrestling radio show "The Main Event"
  • Laura J. Scott (Who Knows What, ASM 1981-82) [6]
  • William "Mr. Bill" Stephney
  • Adario Strange
  • Michael "Jah Mike" McDonald
  • Naphtali "Jimi Bruce", aka "BJ The DJ" [first black Program Director (1977), Publicity Director (1972); Jazz, R&B, Disco "Even-Flo Radio Show"; Music Director (1974); campus emcee and Rathskellar DJ]; 10pm - 1am; Mornings via carrier current DJ.
  • Receiver Zee
  • Solomon "KingSol" Petersen (co-host with WildMan Steve)
  • Thaddeus Robinson
  • Vitamin C. [7]
  • Amy "The Night Nurse" Wachtel
  • Jim "J.D. Walker" White, host of the WBAU's Overnight Flight [8] [9]
  • Jonathan Wolfert, founder of Jam Creative Productions

See also[]

  • WHPC — radio station at 90.3 FM that used to share time with WBAU

References[]

  1. ^ "Call Sign History". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau. Retrieved April 26, 2013.
  2. ^ "Station Search Details (DWBAU)". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau. Retrieved April 26, 2013.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""