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・ WTBG
・ WTBH
・ WTBI
・ WTBJ
・ WTBK
・ WTBL-CD
・ WTBN
・ WTBO
・ WTBP
・ WTBQ
・ WTBR
・ WTBR-FM
・ WTBS
・ WTBS-LD
・ WTBU
WTBU (college radio)
・ WTBU (FM)
・ WTBX
・ WTBY-TV
・ WTC
・ WTC 9/11
・ WTC View
・ WTC Wharf
・ WTCA
・ WTCB
・ WTCC
・ WTCC (FM)
・ WTCE-TV
・ WTCF
・ WTCG


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WTBU (college radio) : ウィキペディア英語版
WTBU (college radio)

WTBU (A.M. 640 kHz/F.M. 89.3 MHz) is a "Part 15" student-managed and -operated radio station at Boston University. This means it is not licensed by the FCC but operates legally under special "low power" rules (not to be confused with LPFM FCC licensed stations). It has a block-format programming schedule, with individual DJs able to play pretty much whatever they choose during their weekly airshifts (usually two hours in length). Overall the sound skews mostly rock/alternative, but can vary significantly, including pop, urban, rap, classic rock, Triple-A, trance, electro, industrial and metal...or just true freeform.
WTBU is on the air 20 hours a day,〔(WTBU Official Website - program schedule ) Schedule for Spring 2009 semester. Retrieved Mar.29, 2009.〕 any day that the BU dorms are open (at least eight months of the year). During the summers the studios may be used for special classroom exercises by the Boston University College of Communication, or "COM."
Taking advantage of the large number of broadcast journalism majors at COM, there are regular newscasts and sports updates. There is also extensive live coverage of BU sporting events, like hockey, basketball, soccer and more.〔(WTBU Official Website - sports page ) Retrieved Mar.29, 2009.〕
WTBU is entirely "student managed." There is a faculty advisor with some oversight duties. Virtually all positions are unpaid volunteers. There is an informal policy of only having current students to be on the air; community volunteers and alumni are not allowed.
There is no formal class curriculum specifically for radio broadcasting at B.U., save for some broadcast journalism classes in COM that include radio.〔(BU College of Communication 2008–09 Bulletin - list of undergraduate courses ) Retrieved March 29, 2009.〕
==History==
''Much of this history is either directly from, or inferred from, early BU yearbooks and old editions of student newspapers like the Daily Free Press. There are no online versions available of these editions.''
The earliest known reference to WTBU comes from the 1960 (Boston University HUB ) (the name for the student yearbook at the time). Some students listed both WBUR and WTBU, suggesting that originally there was some overlap in staff between the two stations.
The studios were originally located on the second floor of the George Sherman (student) Union building. In 1969 it moved to the first floor of the Myles Standish Hall dormitory. In 1982, it moved into the new Myles Standish Annex, where the defunct Grahm Junior College was; the actual broadcast from the new space was delayed several months due to a broken water main. In the late 1980s, the basement studios were completely refurbished with new soundproofing, angled windows etc.. In 1997, WTBU moved to third floor of the College of Communication building at 640 Commonwealth Avenue in Boston, taking over much of the space vacated by WBUR when it moved to 890 Commonwealth Avenue. Both stations remain in those spaces today. Before moving out, torrential rains in October 1996 flooded many basements (and the tunnel of the next-door MBTA Green Line!).
The heyday of WTBU seems to be in the late 1960s and early 1970s. While WBUR was suffering controversy after controversy (in 1964, a long process started of appointing professionals to run WBUR, only to have to fire them and start over again-a process that lasted until the early 1970s). During that time, WTBU enjoyed a significant boost in student attention from displaced WBUR volunteers and overall attention paid to "underground" radio stations by student protesters. As late as 1971 there were articles touting awards WTBU was winning (Station Manager (George Schweitzer ) won the United Press International Broadcast Documentary Award First Prize), special broadcasts they were running (the ''Distinguished Lecture Series'', for example) and being a core member of the "Ivy Network Corporation" - a collaboration between WTBU, WZBC, WBRS, WHRB, WTBS, WZLY and WBRU.
At some point in the 1980s, the tradition of "Cram Jams" was formally instituted. This refers to the last week or two of the semester, when finals are being taken. The entire WTBU schedule is revised and DJs tend to play music they feel is especially relevant to test-taking.〔(WTBU Official Site: Blog post about Cram Jams ) Posted Dec.15, 2008. Retrieved Mar.29, 2009.〕
In the mid-to-late-1990s there was a general drop in interest in college radio, WTBU included; but by 2000, renewed interest in media in society had brought WTBU back up to near-24/7 broadcasting during the academic year. On Halloween night of 1999, WTBU started streaming on the web as a means of finally reaching both the campus as well as alumni. This drew WTBU national attention when Bill Rigby, the station manager at that time, was featured in the New York Times discussing the station's expansion to online.〔(Thanks to the Web, Campus Radio Is Casting a Much Wider Net. Retrieved July 10, 2009. )〕 Today WTBU has over 100 student volunteers every semester.
Additional history can be found on (the official WTBU website: wtburadio.org )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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