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...commercials with anonymous silhouettes dancing to their own tunes, and you’d get WHRB’s own Dance Conspiracy. On Friday, Nov. 17, a mass of silent students got their groove on all around Harvard, listening to the same music via Harvard’s radio station??and all the shenanigans were organized by Harvard arts magazine Present! and funded by the Drug and Alcohol Peer Advisor program. Over 100 students gathered at 9:30 p.m. in the Adams House Courtyard, where they received handheld radios and tuned into 95.3 WHRB-FM, Harvard?...
...studio equipment to inaugurate a new concert series.Record Hospital, the rock-music department of WHRB 95.3 FM, is adding an in-studio performance program to its repertoire. Every Friday, between 10 p.m. and midnight, artists from around the northeastern United States will perform live, on air, in the station??s studio. “It’s great for the whole station because it brings new, vibrant music that is innovative right at this moment,” says Shirley L. Hufstedler ’07, one of the program?...
...Venturelli said that Porter station??s depth is not necessarily a liability because if there were a radiological attack at ground level, the station could act as a natural fallout shelter...
...tried to compete with the Boston popular music stations,” Programming Director Gregory W. Harrison ’57 told The Crimson at the time. “What popular music we do play is usually jazz.” In 1956 over 70 percent of the station??s airtime was dedicated to classical music.CHANGING TASTES, CHANGING TUNESThe changes that began in 1956 initiated a period of rapid growth for WHRB. In 1958 WHRB took steps toward changing its radio frequency and boosting its total wattage by 80 percent, which would allow the station to reach...
WHRB’s acceptance of classical as the backbone of the station??s success—partly for financial reasons, to be sure— in addition to highly specialized niche programming, means that there is fundamentally no future for WHRB to become a station that primarily caters to mainstream college students...