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WGLS-FM

WGLS-FM
Broadcast areaPhiladelphia, PA/Glassboro, NJ, U.S.
Frequency89.7 MHz
Branding"Rowan Radio"
Programming
FormatCollege radio
AffiliationsDelaware Blue Coats
Wilmington Blue Rocks
Ownership
OwnerRowan University
History
First air date
1964
Call sign meaning
W GLassboro State College
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID57778
ClassA
ERP750 watts
HAAT149 meters
Links
Public license information
Websitehttp://wgls.rowan.edu

WGLS-FM (89.7 MHz), known as Rowan Radio, is a college radio station licensed to Rowan University. The studios are located in the College of Communication on the campus of Rowan University in Glassboro, New Jersey. WGLS-FM is Gloucester County's only FM radio station.

WGLS's programming features a variety of music, sports, cultural, educational programs focused towards the interest of the Rowan University and South Jersey communities.

The call letters for WGLS hearken back to the former name of the institution: W GLassboro State College.

The station has won numerous local and national awards, including being named "College Station of the Year" by the National Association of College Broadcasters in 1997.[2][3]

History

Glassboro State College was granted a construction permit by the FCC to build a low watt FM radio station on the campus on May 17, 1963 and a broadcast license was issued the following year on April 9, 1964.[4] 89.7 WGLS-FM went on the air with funding provided by the college's Library Department. The library's Educational Media Director William McCavitt served as the first faculty supervisor of the 10-watt mono radio station until 1966.[5] He left Glassboro State and went on to establish two more college stations, WIUP-FM for Indiana University of Pennsylvania and WCUC-FM at Clarion University located in Clarion, Pennsylvania.[6]

Other faculty members continued to advise the students of WGLS, including 1967 supervisor George Reinfeld, who would eventually help establish the college's Department of Communication.[7] Joe Salviuolo was the station's advisor in 1968, but ultimately left academia to become a songwriter, producer and manager. Under the stage name "Sal Joseph", he collaborated with popular folk artist Jim Croce on the hit, "Thursday".[8] Dr. Gregory Potter, from the GSC Library Department, took over management of WGLS in 1969, and successfully led the effort to update the college's radio studio in the campus’ Bole Hall building, as well as correcting various engineering and transmission issues.

By 1970, the school's Library Department relinquished control of WGLS to the Department of Fine and Performing Arts. Dean Armand Vorce and advisor Bob Blake kept WGLS broadcasting until 1973, when it was decided that the radio station's broadcast license would be released back to the FCC due to management and operational concerns.[9] Student Station Manager Jim Servino successfully petitioned Glassboro State's then president Dr. Mark Chamberlain to keep the license, and to allow the students to manage WGLS on their own.

Servino and students enlisted the help of Communications professor Mike Donovan to help consult the radio station.[10] WGLS then lobbied for an estimated $70,000 in funding from the school's Student Government Association for technical upgrades.[11] The station moved across campus to Savitz Library, a new 50-foot tower was erected, and the transmitter power increased from 10 watts to 440 watts. By 1977, WGLS moved to larger studio space within Savitz Library and began to broadcast in stereo.

Following the tenure of station advisors Mike Donovan (1973 to 1988) and Phylis Johnson (1988 to 1990), the college decided that a dedicated full-time Station Manager was needed in order for WGLS-FM to grow. Former WFIL-AM broadcaster Frank Hogan assumed the newly created role in 1991. At the time, Hogan was serving Glassboro State College as a ¾ time radio professor, having previously worked as the engineering consultant on the station's 1977 stereo and studio upgrades.[12]

With the 1992 name change of Glassboro State College to Rowan University due to a $100 million donation from industrialist Henry Rowan, WGLS-FM re-branded itself as "Rowan Radio". The station's antenna moved to the Glassboro city water tower in 1993, and the increased height boosted the station's power to an effective radiated power of 640 watts. In 1995, Rowan Radio 89.7 WGLS-FM evolved from a student radio club into a permanently incorporated aspect of the newly created College of Communication and Creative Arts. WGLS-FM moved again into its fourth studio home on campus inside the then recently expanded Bozorth Hall building January 1996.

Rowan Radio began streaming over the internet in 2000. In January 2001, the station's transmitter was relocated 9 miles off campus to a 500-foot tower in South Harrison Twp., NJ, again increasing its signal strength to an ERP of 750 watts.[13] Sports broadcaster and college instructor Derek Jones and former commercial radio producer Leo Kirschner succeeded Frank Hogan upon his retirement in 2012.[14]

Programming

Rowan Radio 89.7 WGLS-FM since its inception in 1964 has maintained a "variety" format in its programming choices, which reflect FCC guidelines regarding the need for licensed radio stations to operate in the public interest and serve their communities.[15] The mixed variety format also allows WGLS’ student broadcasters to experience all kinds of radio programming as part of their studies.

WGLS-FM's broadcast schedule employs the theories of "horizontal programming" and "dayparting". Implemented by station manager Frank Hogan in 1991, Rowan Radio's programming schedule consists of daily music and talk shows airing at the same time weekdays with specialized niche programming on the weekends. Regular programming is sometimes pre-empted for the station's seasonal coverage of Rowan University Division III athletic games.[16]

Rowan Radio's current weekday programming schedule includes:[17]

Weekend Programming consists of more niche programming selections highlighting music from genres such as Broadway, Classical, Oldies, and Metal. Weekend shows include "The 80s Arcade", "The Icon Rock Show", "Satin Nights", "Saturday Night At The Oldies", "Sunday Sounds Of Music", "The Sunday Matinee" and more.

Public Affairs programming is produced by university students, instructors and civic leaders discussing a variety of local and national topics. Shows and podcasts include:

  • "A Community Affair"
  • "The African American Profile"
  • "The American Dream"
  • "Your Health Matters"
  • "Studio 89.7"
  • "The ARC Report" (produced in association with The ARC of Gloucester County, NJ)
  • "Everything Special Needs"
  • "Career Talk"
  • "Writers Roundtable"
  • "The Rowan Sport Review"
  • "The Rowan Report"
  • "Offsides"
  • "Third and Long"

Awards

Since its incorporation with Rowan University's College of Communication in 1995, 89.7 WGLS-FM has won over 300 broadcasting awards in local and national contests.[18] WGLS won "College Station of the Year" in 1997 from the National Association of College Broadcasters.

The college station has won numerous accolades for its various programming including honors from the Gracie Awards,[19] The Broadcast Education Association, The Communicator Awards, College Broadcasters, Inc., The Philadelphia Press Association and The New Jersey Broadcasters Association.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WGLS-FM". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "Rowan radio earns awards". Gloucester County Times. May 31, 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-08. [dead link]
  3. ^ "They're No. 1". The Philadelphia Inquirer. January 2, 1997. Archived from the original on June 24, 2007. Retrieved June 8, 2008.
  4. ^ "getimportletter_exh". licensing.fcc.gov. Retrieved January 30, 2024.
  5. ^ "50 Years and Counting: An Oral History of WGLS-FM". Rowan Radio Documentaries. November 6, 2015. Archived from the original on 2016-02-13. Retrieved 2018-10-04.
  6. ^ "Archival OCR Text". The Daily News, Huntingdon, PA. January 21, 1976.
  7. ^ "History of the College of Communication & Creative Arts". Rowan University website.
  8. ^ "Joe Salviuolo Obit". Morrill Funeral Home. June 2010.
  9. ^ "50 Years and Counting: An Oral History of WGLS-FM". Rowan Radio Documentaries. November 6, 2015. Archived from the original on 2016-02-13. Retrieved 2018-10-04.
  10. ^ "WGLS:The Voice Of Each New Generation". Rowan Magazine. Fall 2004.
  11. ^ "50 Years and Counting: An Oral History of WGLS-FM". Rowan Radio Documentaries. November 6, 2015. Archived from the original on 2016-02-13. Retrieved 2018-10-04.
  12. ^ "Rowan Radio manager announces retirement, looks back on 35 years". South Jersey Times. November 23, 2012.
  13. ^ "WGLS-FM station data". Radio-Locator.com.
  14. ^ "RadioInfo Front Page". RadioInfo.com. November 28, 2012.
  15. ^ "The Public and Broadcasting". FCC.gov.
  16. ^ "Rowan University Sports Schedule". Rowan Athletics website.
  17. ^ "Rowan Radio Programming Schedule". Rowan Radio 89.7 WGLS-FM website. Archived from the original on 2017-06-11.
  18. ^ "Rowan Radio Wins Four Awards". Rowan Today. May 5, 2015.
  19. ^ "2015 Gracie Award Winners". The Gracie Awards website. Archived from the original on 2015-12-28. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  20. ^ "Rowan Radio Awards". Rowan Radio 89.7 WGLS-FM website.

39°41′41″N 75°17′54″W / 39.6948°N 75.2982°W / 39.6948; -75.2982