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who enjoyed playing music for the listening pleasure of those who would gather in adjacent common areas. Located directly between a men's and a women's lounge on Memorial University's Parade Street campus, the society enjoyed much in the way of early success and notoriety within the walls of the fledgling scholastic institute. Ten years later, in 1961, the organization took a step forward in moving to Memorial University's present Prince Phillip Drive campus. It was here that the MUN Radio would come to occupy three small rooms at the back of the gymnasium, these being the spotlight booth, which doubled as an office and gathering place, a projection booth which housed the bulk of the group's broadcasting equipment, and a ventilation shaft which was utilized as an engineering and technical work area. Volunteers would then share music with the listening audience found in the former cafeteria room of the Physical Education Building by means of a closed-circuit speaker system. It was in 1965 that a more formal approach was deemed necessary if MUN Radio wished to have itself taken seriously, and it was station Manager Ted Bartlett who spearheaded this motion after working during the summer months at CBC Newfoundland. Bartlett instituted for MUN Radio, program logs, standard operating procedures and the accumulation of some proper radio equipment. As such, the organization shifted from a society into a focused entity, which soon brought about more than music for students on-campus. Soon afterwards, short clips by the MUN radio club which were featured on local commercial station VOCM, later it was arranged to have a half-hour weekly program air on CBC radio Newfoundland, CBN, called University Review. MUN Radio's involvement with CBN was not to be its final partnership with larger forms of radio in the city, however. It was CJON radio, predecessor to CJON television or NTV, who provided the club with 10 minutes for a weekly feature called Spotlight on Campus, before the 6:00 PM news, while subsequent arrangements were also made with CJYQ and VOWR. The mid-to-late sixties also saw the station expand its listening audience, by augmenting its closed circuit feeds to residence buildings in Paton College, and common lounge areas. As both legitimacy and the listening audience of CHMR's predecessor continued to increase, in 1968, news of the soon-to-be-constructed Thompson Student Center would bring three individuals heavily involved with MUN Radio, Craig Peterman, Keith Bartlett and Don Butler, to work in conjunction with design architects. The objective being to draw up plans for an ideal studio and office setting in order to make the most of the 2400 square feet allotted for the MUN Radio club. The plans were shortly afterwards brought into life, and in 1969, MUN Radio moved into a facility that, at the time, rivaled some of the professional stations in the city. However, it was not until November of 1975 that CHMR could technically be called a radio station. It was on this date that the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission granted a license for the station to broadcast carrier current at 860 AM in the Paton College residence. Building on this success, Craig Peterman was, in 1976, appointed to the Communications Committee for the upcoming 1977 Canada Summer Games. It was through this committee that a crafty idea was brought forth: Canada Games Radio, a station that would come to life through the efforts of CHMR facilities and volunteers in order to keep in touch with athletes and provide them with programming with which they can identify during the length of the Games. Says a pamphlet from the games: "The Canada Games Radio concept is unique in that this is the first Canada Games competition to sport its own radio station... many students gave up summer jobs to participate in this project. Certainly the spirit of '77 must be at CHMR." A secondary purpose for the station was to inform local fans of the latest news related to the games, and to broadcast live coverage from events, as for two weeks, Canada Games Radio would be heard throughout the St. John's vicinity and as far as Conception Bay North. Assuming this role of the Voice of Athletes Village proved to be highly successful in raising the profile of CHMR during 1977, and also built credibility useful for advancing the station's cause in years to come. The 1980s saw CHMR maintain the same sort of relevancy as it had in the past. Peter Jackson, writer for The Evening Telegram remembers "a cold October morning during the 1980 Prince Phillip Parkway blockade. We were demanding that skywalks be built after a young student was killed one rainy day while trying to cross the street. CHMR had speakers set up outside to entertain the troops, and that morning Roger Howse came on air with a message that went something like this: "This is for all those residence people who said they'd be down bright and early to relieve the overnight shift... Where the hell are you? " The decade in question also brought with it a new troupe of volunteers and station members, including present Station Manager Kathy Rowe, who joined in 1982. Until 1989, however, Terry Kelly held the title of station manager, and it was under his supervision that CHMR was launched into 93.5 FM in January 1987. ------ Shows: Making Contact, Bioneers, New Dimensions, WINGS, WoodSongs Old-time Radio Hour, World of Possibilities, Alternative Radio ----- Hosts: Kenny Ausubel, Neil Harvey, Dorothy Edwards, Joe Conkwright, Roger Duvall
Website: http://www.mun.ca/chmr/main.html Email: Tel: (709) 864-7935 (709) 864-4777 Address: Box A-119 Memorial University St. John's, NL A1C 5S7 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Instant-Replay-on-935-CHMR/239714998809
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