Tags: wgsf

Issue time09:34:17 pm, by admin Email 1755 views
Categories: WGSF History

Link: http://wgsf.oldgleaner.com/

The first day of programming on the new WGSF Television station was March 18,1963. The following photo copy of the actual Program Log, signed by WGSF Chief Engineer, Robert Brooks, is shown in the Photo Album. (Open a separate page in your browser, and switch back and forth for best results)

Program Log

The entry "Hours 164" refers to the total operation of the transmitter up to that time, which included various tests and alignment prior to actual programming.

A poster identifying the channel and call letters ( WGSF, Channel 28, Newark, Ohio was shown during the interval between programs, while Mr.Brooks switched away from the WOSU-TV signal. A videcon camera borrowed from the ETV station in Toledo was set in the studio. The video source is indicated as "LS" or Live studio origination.
See: The First Day
for photos of Mr. Brooks, the camera in the studio, and the transmitter switching control panel.

Programming oriented toward children aired from 4:00 until 6:00 PM.

The first locally produced program was aired at 7:00 PM. Produced and narrated by Newark School's Superintendent Dr. Thomas Southard, utilized teachers who had taken a course on "Teaching By Television" at The Ohio State University.

Issue time05:17:25 pm, by admin Email 1182 views
Categories: Welcome, Background, WGSF History, General Discussion - WGSF Blog

Link: http://wgsf.oldgleaner.com/

You pass a lot of things as you drive down the road or across town, physical things. Cars and trucks in the next lane, behind you and before you. Buildings and bridges, Structures large and small, from the tidy to the tawdry, ‘McMansions’ and monuments. Even the magnificence of natural ‘wonders’ pales to insignificance when compared to the one element that grabs our attention, and our emotions - People!
Take away the human element and the most grandiose monument is just a pile of stone. Erase the names from the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, DC, ignore the association with its reason for being, and it retains only one thought in our minds - Who built it, and why. Stonehenge intrigues us, only in part because of its composition, but primarily because somebody built it. We know ‘What’ it is, and ‘Where’ it is, but we are driven to discover the ‘Who’ and the ‘Why’ - the people connection!
So, too, with any history we may compile. The physical elements are akin to computer firmware - things to touch and see. But people, ahh, people! That is the ‘software’ that gives life to history, that makes monuments truly majestic, and puts the “Awe” in awesome. Feelings, thoughts, emotions - the ties that bind and the forces that drive us.
Yes, we can analyze, we can describe, we can measure and calculate the finiteness of things, but life is not in them. Because we are human, things are only complete when we imbue them with a relationship to our humanity.

Now, why am I writing this as a prelude to a history of a television station?
Simply because we may write all we may about trucks and transmitters, cameras, consoles, and gadgets galore, and they, like a monument, are clumps of metal and plastic. A monument to human ingenuity, perhaps, but of meaningless utility until they are brought into the human equation.
Why did someone build it? What was it used for? How did this contribute to the sharing of feelings, emotions, conquests and failures of the human spirit? That is the essence of what any history is all about. Any trip down the road or across town is significant only of the passage of time until someone recounts what people did during the trip. Those experiences are what makes the journey memorable!

The ‘journey’ for the Television Station known as WGSF involved trucks and transmitters, cameras, consoles, and gadgets galore, but it is the “people” element that makes a history of this particular institution worthy of remembering, retelling and compiling.

That WGSF had some television equipment, at least some of the time, and used it for the purpose of broadcasting television programs, was one of the few things that was shared in common with most other stations. The deficiency of equipment was more than overcome by the exuberance of spirit shared by those who participated in this “adventure.” There must have been some mystic that so enthralled teen-agers that they would trudge across town, through snow, and up a two-hundred foot high hill, to become part of it. Let’s face it; it wasn’t just for the TV toys that you expended so much effort, but for the ’games’ you played with them. Talk about the equipment if it is relevant to the story line, but the real story is the people connection.

That is what I most wish to collect with this history.
What happened? Why do you remember that? Things that went right and things that went wrong tend to stick in our minds. Yes, I have documentation on many things, physical and procedural, but the most necessary component is the remembering and retelling of the experiences, the emotions, the frustrations and “hilltop” moments as you interacted with the people you encountered there.
Share the “who-what-where-why-how” of your “life” with WGSF Television. And, if you had a life after June 30, 1976, did it make a difference somewhere along the trip from then until whenever?

Please share what ever pops up from the repository of those memories of this part of your life journey.

Issue time07:59:47 pm, by admin Email 750 views
Categories: Background

Link: http://wgsf.oldgleaner.com/

Defunct Television Stations In Ohio

Defunct full-power stations

* Channel 15: WICA-TV - Ashtabula (8/25/1953-6/16/1956 and 12/15/1965-12/26/1967)
* Channel 16: WKTR-TV - Ind. - Kettering (3/20/1967-1970)
* Channel 26: WSWO-TV - Ind. - Springfield (7/14/1968-6/22/1970)
* Channel 30: WRLO - Portsmouth (5/14/1966-?)
* Channel 30: WUXA - Ind. - Portsmouth (5/8/1988-1989)
* Channel 31: WGSF - PBS - Newark (3/18/1963-6/30/1976)
* Channel 45: WXTV - Youngstown (11/15/1960-2/28/1962)
* Channel 61: WKBF-TV - Ind. - Cleveland (1968-1975)
* Channel 68: WCOM - Ind. - Mansfield (1988-1989)

Television stations in Central Ohio (Columbus)
(See last listing)
Local Stations


WCMH 4 (NBC, 4.2 RTN) • WSYX 6 (ABC, 6.2 MNTV/This) • WGCT 8 (Ind.) • WBNS 10 (CBS) • WDEM-CA 17 (Ind.) • W23BZ 23 (Ind.) • WTTE 28 (Fox) • WCSN-LP 32 (Ind.) • WOSU 34 (PBS) • WCPX-LP 48 (AZA) • WSFJ 51 (TBN) • WWHO 53 (CW)
Outlying areas
WHIZ 18 (NBC, Zanesville) • WBKA-CA 22 (A1, Bucyrus) • WOCB 39/WXCB 42 (TBN, Marion / Delaware) • WOUC 44 (PBS, Cambridge)
Cable-only stations
ONN • FSN Ohio • The Ohio Channel • STO
Defunct
WGSF 31 (PBS)

From Wikipedia, the Free Enclopedia
See also the Wikpedia article about WGSF

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These pages are dedicated to persons who were connected with the station, as Administrators, Employees, Student Staff, Volunteers, or Community Support.
~Help Preserve the Legacy of WGSF
~Share Memories
~View or Contribute Photos
~Post Messages to the 'Old Gang'
~Review the History of WGSF
~Search the Database Files
For tips about working with blogs, please go to the WGSF Information page.

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