WSUI's studios and offices are on Grand Avenue in Des Moines.[3] The transmitter is off Sand Road SE in Hills, Iowa.[4]
History
Experimental years
WSUI got its start in 1911, prior to the era of broadcast radio, operating a "wireless telegraph" transmitter under the experimental radio call sign 9YA.[5] It began airing voice broadcasts in 1919, and was granted a full license on June 26, 1922, originally as WHAA.
The station's call sign, 9YA (the "Y" in the call sign indicating operation under a Technical and Training School license) was in use by the State University of Iowa—now the University of Iowa—since 1915, starting sometime after the installation of the university's first Morse code transmitter in 1913.[8] As of 1916, university electrical engineering students were operating a 2,000 watt spark gap transmitter at a 750-meter wavelength that could be heard 1000 miles away, with two-way communications taking place within a 500-mile radius.[9] The station aired 300-word lessons on a regular schedule that dealt with wireless communication.[10]
Early sound broadcasts
Carl Menzer, whose interest in wireless began at his high school in Lone Tree, entered the State University of Iowa as a freshman in 1917, and later became station director for WHAA/WSUI, a position he held until his retirement in 1968. After the World War I moratorium on radio transmission was lifted in 1919, Menzer brought vacuum tube technology to 9YA, signaling the start of regularly scheduled voice and music broadcasts.[11]
The first "radio telephone" station, built using two donated experimental vacuum tubes, required use of two microphones for voice and for pickup of a windup phonograph. The microphones were swapped frequently when the one in use became too hot to touch due to high current. In spite of audio quality and technical issues, the station gained a following among a collection of crystal radio enthusiasts.[12] Within two years, it had inspired sufficient interest to cause State University of Iowa President Walter A. Jessup and other educators to envision the feasibility of advanced study in broadcasting. That led to an application for a university broadcast license. On June 26, 1922, the call sign WHAA was assigned. By the end of September, test transmissions were complete, and on October 17, 1922, the station was officially on the air. A gala on-air commemoration included a talk by President Jessup.[13]
Switch to WSUI
WHAA changed its call sign to WSUI in 1925. WSUI represents the initials of State University of Iowa, the legal name of the University of Iowa. New radio stations in Iowa today have call signs beginning with a K. In the earliest days of broadcasting, stations in Iowa, such as WHODes Moines and WOI in Ames, were given call letters starting with a W. In 1923, the boundary between K and W stations moved from the western border of Nebraska and South Dakota to the Mississippi River, putting Iowa in K territory. Despite this change, stations in Iowa that already had W call signs were apparently allowed to request new ones: besides WSUI, WJAM became WMT in 1928, and WKBB became WDBQ in 1952.
WSUI was a charter member when National Public Radio first began in 1971. It was one of the 90 stations to carry the inaugural broadcast of All Things Considered, NPR's signature afternoon news program. It also served as a source of NPR programming for the Quad Cities until that area got its own public radio station, WVIK, in 1980.
Studios and transmitter
WSUI's studios were located for many years in the university's Engineering Building. They were relocated to a former supermarket building, just south of the campus, in the late 1990s, when expansion of the College of Engineering required WSUI and KSUI to vacate their space. The studios are now located in a UI-owned building south of downtown Iowa City on Clinton Street. This building is shared by WSUI/KSUI with the Office of the State Archaeologist. Iowa Public Radio's main studios for the statewide operation are on Grand Avenue in Des Moines, just west of downtown Des Moines.
WSUI's original three self-supporting broadcast towers were located just west of Mormon Trek Boulevard on the far west side of the campus. On June 29, 1998, a fierce line of thunderstorms packing winds of nearly 100 miles-per-hour toppled two of the towers. For months afterwards, WSUI's nighttime power output from the single remaining tower was limited to 1,250 watts non-directional. Today, the towers are located about 10 miles south of Iowa City, in the community of Hills.
A single tower is used during the day, when the station has a non-directional signal. Due to the transmitter's power, as well as Iowa's flat land, with near-perfect soil conductivity, its daytime signal covers almost all of eastern Iowa and part of western Illinois. Power is fed to all three towers in a directionalarray at night to protect WLS in Chicago at nearby 890 AM, concentrating WSUI's signal northward toward the Cedar Rapids and Iowa City areas.
Notable alumni
WSUI alumni include Harry Kalas, who served as sports director for the campus radio station WSUI and did play-by-play for all types of sports. Kalas received baseball broadcasting's highest honor—the Ford Frick Award from the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Early television
Iowa is a pioneer in educational broadcasting. It is home to two of the oldest educational broadcast stations in the world, WSUI and WOI. In 1933, The University of Iowa experimental TV station W9XK, later W9XUI, provided twice a week video programming, with WSUI providing the audio channel.
By 1941, the FCC allocated TV channels 1 and 12 for the W9XUI television station.[14] This early attempt at educational broadcasting ended with US entrance into World War II.[15][16] The concept of pure educational television, which Dr. E.B. Kurtz and his Iowa colleagues pioneered, was buried by the commercial television system which dominated development of the electronic media in Iowa after World War II.[17]
Although the University of Iowa applied for a construction permit for station WSUI-TV on channel 11 in February 1948, it was not granted before the FCC halted the issuance of any new permits eight months later in the Freeze of 1948.[18] In 1951, the university supported the reallocation of channel 11 to Des Moines for an educational television station there, and its own permit does not appear in any further records.[19]Iowa PBS's KIIN-TV (channel 12) signed on in 1970, returning educational television to the area.
^Menzer, Carl (November 1968). "Fifty Years of Broadcasting"(PDF). The Transit. LXXIII (2). The State University of Iowa College of Engineering: 21. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
^Ebert, Sylvanus (February 1938). "Radio History at Iowa"(PDF). The Transit. XLII (5). The State University of Iowa College of Engineering: 5. Retrieved 2012-08-12.