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At one time or another, nearly every Oberlin student comes in contact with WOBC, now the largest extra-curricular organization on campus. A constantly increasing staff and excellent facilities in Wilder Hall have made it possible for us to expand our broadcasting to over 100 hours each week, one of the highest figures in the nation for college stations. Listener response is difficult to measure, although reactions received have been generally enthusiastic.
Programming is evenly divided between classical and popular music including the "Hot 100," folk and jazz. We have virtually limitless opportunities for the use of local talent.
In 1968, Oberlin College held a mock Republican National Convention at its field house. WOBC broadcast the proceedings live, and as seen in the picture below, a WOBC personality ended up on the podium: Ken Braiterman '69. He was the man behind our version of "Saturday Night Live," a Friday-night satirical hour called "Backgammon 101." (The gentleman in the background is the honorary chairman of the convention, future president Gerald Ford.)
For
the magazine article's photographer, a group of us sat in Studio A
and pretended to be conducting an "Oberlin Digest" panel
discussion. In the foreground is engineer Dick Stump '68.
At the table left to right are Paul Sturm '68, Tom Clark '69, myself,
and Ted Gest. |
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More staged pictures in studio A. Above, I'm at the piano. Randy Bongarten '71 is putting on the headphones, and Marc Krass '70 is on the right. Below, classical music director Mike Barone '68 is on the left, with Bruce Robinson '68 and Dick Lasko. Helpful Hiram is on the table.
In the 1965 Oberlin Alumni Magazine, Fred Leutner '65 wrote that "every four years a completely new staff rewrites policies which were thought unchangeable one student generation earlier." The only real trend we can cite with any certainty is that WOBC is constantly changing. Each new staff member and each new executive board works toward making WOBC a bigger and better "Radio Voice of Oberlin College."
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