University News
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Dozens of Chargers, including current and former members of the Universityâs award-winning radio station, gathered to reflect on the stationâs first 50 years on-air and to look to its next five decades of broadcasting and creating memorable opportunities for students.
June 14, 2023
JJ Dionisio â25 recently sat at the microphone at , preparing to go on-air. This was no ordinary broadcast, though. Members of the University community â including alumni who helped establish the Universityâs award-winning radio station 50 years earlier â surrounded him. There was a feeling of excitement â anticipation, even â as Dionisio prepared to officially kick off WNHUâs 50th anniversary celebration at the station and across the airwaves.
Program director for WNHU, Dionisio led the countdown as Chargers sipped champagne. There were 50 years of the student-run stationâs history to celebrate as part of this milestone, as well as the stationâs future.
âIt was cool to meet people who did my job in the past,â said Dionisio, a music and sound recording major. âI feel itâs an honor to do my job, and meeting them reinforced that perspective. Seeing those with this same passion that exists in me was meaningful, and I didnât know there were so many who also had it. This is very special to me and very emotional. It made me feel that Iâm doing the right thing.â
When Dionisio helped officially mark the 50th anniversary of the launch of WNHU, he turned the microphone over to Pete Sotere â74, who greeted listeners as his fellow Chargers cheered. A founding member of WNHU, Sotere was second person to broadcast on-air.
âItâs great that itâs still here after 50 years and still on-air,â said Sotere, who is among which airs every Monday night. âIt was an honor to be here, and I hope to be here in spirit for the 100th anniversary celebration. I hope all the enthusiasm here today is still here then. This is fantastic.â
The celebration included a wide array of alumni who have been involved with the station, as well as current students. It lasted the entire weekend of the anniversary, bringing together Chargers past and present for campus tours and a reception. It also included a discussion about the stationâs next 50 years led by professional in residence and WNHU general manager Bruce Barber.
Barber, a Connecticut radio veteran, discussed his interest in new technology, from advancements in digital technology to podcasting. He expressed his excitement about the richness of radio as a content platform, as well as the promise of what it can achieve. While part of the discussion focused on artificial intelligence, something Barber called a âgame changer,â he was confident there will remain an important place for radio.
âAI is doing amazing things, but it isnât humanity â and that exists right here in radio,â he said. âItâs a great time to be alive and to be a content creator. I hope this celebration of how far weâve come will continue for the next year. I think we need to take what we learned and discussed, let it marinate, and keep it alive. Thatâs our goal.â
Jess Finn â24, WNHUâs station manager, joined Barber in the discussion. Sheâd been looking forward to the celebration, and she says she was âhonoredâ to be a part of it.
âSeeing the passion that alumni put in, something I could still feel among them, I realize how important it is to honor the past and everything they did,â said Finn a communication major. âI hope this will inspire students. I want to be sure we all understand the work the stationâs founders put in. Even though I hadnât met them before, we all still felt like family.â
Those alumni who took part in the celebration shared their own experiences at the station, including what it meant to them to be a part of WNHU and how their involvement prepared them for their careers. Don Fertman â76, who was among the stationâs original founders, says he was thrilled to return to his alma mater to celebrate all the station has achieved since his time as a member of the stationâs student crewmembers.
âBeing here 50 years after we went on air, itâs like we never left,â he said. âItâs like Iâm 19 again. Iâm so confident that with the stationâs current leadership, that original spirit, the culture of radio, and the community of listeners are all being carried forward based on what we did 50 years ago. Theyâve made it even better with the technology of today.â
Current students also reflected on their own exciting and memorable experiences at the station. For Logan Dumas â24, â25 MBA, co-hosting a weekly variety show called âThe Kitchen Sinkâ with Dionisio has been particularly enjoyable. The show has enabled them to share their music tastes â Dumas has highlighted jazz, and Dionisio has covered electronic dance music â as well as music from TV shows.
Dumas was excited to be a part of the 50th anniversary celebration that helped him feel connected with the stationâs past and present, and inspired him to contemplate its future.
âBeing part of the anniversary celebration gives me even more respect for what the station does,â said Dumas, a music and sound recording major. âEveryone talked about the vibe, and it shows when I see those who have built the station. It gave me even more respect for the past and for the future. I canât wait to be here for the 100th anniversary celebration when Iâm in my 70s.â
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