WERS

Coordinates: 42°21′8.4″N 71°3′23.2″W / 42.352333°N 71.056444°W / 42.352333; -71.056444 (WERS)
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
WERS
R&B)
Ownership
OwnerEmerson College
History
First air date
November 14, 1949[1]
Former frequencies
88.1 MHz (1949–1950)
Call sign meaning
Emerson Radio Station
Technical information[2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID19482
ClassB1
ERP4,000 watts
HAAT186 meters (610 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
42°21′8.4″N 71°3′23.2″W / 42.352333°N 71.056444°W / 42.352333; -71.056444 (WERS)
Translator(s)See § Translators
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
HD2: Listen live
Websitewers.org
HD2: wersplus.org

WERS (88.9

radio stations (the other being campus station WECB), located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Programming features over 20 different styles of music and news, including live performances and interviews. WERS stands as the oldest non-commercial radio station in New England, and has been in operation since November 1949. Among the founders of the station was WEEI
program director Arthur F. Edes, who first taught broadcasting courses at Emerson in 1932 and helped to plan a campus radio station. The chief architect of WERS in its early years was Professor Charles William Dudley.

Translators

Broadcast translators
for WERS
Call sign Frequency City of license FID ERP (W)
HAAT
Class Transmitter coordinates FCC info
W268AM 101.5 FM Gloucester, Massachusetts 138772 38 71.1 m (233 ft) D 42°37′28.3″N 70°39′13.2″W / 42.624528°N 70.653667°W / 42.624528; -70.653667 (W268AM) LMS
W243BG 96.5 FM New Bedford, Massachusetts 142088 55 53.1 m (174 ft) D 41°38′25.4″N 70°55′1.1″W / 41.640389°N 70.916972°W / 41.640389; -70.916972 (W243BG) LMS

In June 2007, WERS inaugurated a

MHz in New Bedford, Massachusetts, relaying WERS's programming to New Bedford and nearby communities. Another translator, on 101.5 MHz in Gloucester, Massachusetts, on Cape Ann
, went on the air in July 2008.

Critical acclaim

According to The Princeton Review, WERS is the #1 college radio station in America, an award the station has won or come close to winning almost every year since The Princeton Review started ranking colleges.[3]

WERS is the most highly rated student-run college radio station in the US.[citation needed] In the Boston market (10th largest in the nation), WERS's daytime programming usually ranks at 20th to 25th.[citation needed]

Sports

In the late 1990s and mid-2000s, WERS featured a successful sports-themed program, Sports Sunday, which aired Sundays from noon to 2 pm. The program won three consecutive

NHL.com
columnist Bob Snow.

Former show hosts include Lon Nichols (current anchor for

Palm Beach Post Miami Hurricanes
beat reporter), Steve Crowe (Boston Globe part-timer) and Ryan Heisler (noted triathlete).

References

  1. ^ Halper, Donna; Wollman, Garrett. "The Eastern Massachusetts Radio Timeline: the 1940s". The Archives @ BostonRadio.org. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
  2. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WERS". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  3. ^ "Best 361 College Rankings". The Princeton Review.

External links


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