About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 185. Not illustrated. Chapters: Wbjc, Wbal, Wcbm, Wfbr, Wtmd, Wweg, Wrbs, Wwhc, Wcmd, Wvmd, Wfwm, Wryr-Lp, Wilc, Wmet, Wgop, Wtgm, Wmdm, Wicl, Wmjs-Lp, Wfre, Wwfg, Wktt, Wmvk-Lp, Wsry, Wees-Lp, Wfrb, Wtri, Wcei-Fm, Wmsg, Wcem-Fm, Wico-Fm, Wwpn, Wtdk, Wbis, Wayz, Waai, Wqjz, Wlxe, Wkik, Wkhi, Wolc, Winx-Fm, Wnst, Wxsu-Lp, Wjdy, Wqmr, Waij, Wark, Wsby-Fm, Wdkz, Weaa, Wbmd, Wxcy, Wlic, Wmtb-Fm, Wkhz, Xtsr, Wqhq, Wolb, Wnav, Wemd, Wctr, Wkik-Fm, Wptx, Wdih, Wsmd-Fm, Wkdi, Wbey-Fm, Woel-Fm, Wctn, Wbgr, Wfsi, Wkhs, Wwin, Wcao. Excerpt: WBJC (91.5 FM) is a public, non-commercial, radio station owned by Baltimore City Community College, in Baltimore, Maryland. WBJC was originally on 88.1 MHz and broadcast with 250 watts effective radiated power. When it first went on the air in 1952, it was operated by students of Baltimore Junior College, which shared the campus of a Baltimore high school, known as City College. The antenna was on the top of the school's tallest section and covered the City of Baltimore. Generally speaking the station operated a flexible schedule as it was largely dependent on student volunteers. Generally the station signed off at 5 PM, but sports events often extended the broadcast day and led to weekend operation. In 1953 or 1954, the Adult Education Department of the Baltimore Board of Education began the so-called "Evening Programs" from 7 to 11PM, seven days, which consisted of classical music and occasionally dramatic plays, using a volunteer staff of adults and music lovers, who produced the programs and published a monthly program guide. Early FM radios often would not tune down to as low as 88.1 MHz, so Clarence DeHaven, who oversaw operation of the station, in addition to his teaching and administrative duties, asked the FCC to allow a change of WBJC's frequency to one which was adjacent to the frequencies us...