WYBC and the Summer of ‘68
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WYBC and the Summer of ‘68

In June of 1968, when students were leaving the Yale campus for summer vacation, about a dozen of us decided to stick around New Haven and keep WYBC-FM on the air 24×7 until our classmates returned in September.

This was the first time in WYBC’s history that the station would be on the air non-stop instead of signing off when the school year ended, as many college radio stations did.

If you weren’t part of WYBC or the radio biz, this might not seem like a big deal. But it was. Many forces were at work that affected us personally, culturally, politically, and artistically. These forces led us to do what we did at WYBC in the Summer of ’68 in a way that totally changed our lives and changed radio as we knew it.

WYBC: Kevin McKeown
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WYBC: Kevin McKeown

Almost immediately upon arrival at Yale, in fall of my freshman year, it became a nightly ritual for the four rooms on my floor of Welch Hall to come together and play the nightly contest on WYBC’s “Stardust.”

The hope of winning a Naples pizza was part of it, as was the amazement over what radio could do if not bound by the FCC. The contests were often obscene, or at least the winning answers usually were, and WYBC-AM, “closed circuit to the Yale campus,” played some politically incorrect singles. That unrestrained radio and a little alcohol made for a dorm party almost every night.

WYBC: Tom Guterbock
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WYBC: Tom Guterbock

It was in some ways a foregone conclusion that I would heel WYBC. My brother Walt (TD ’66) was the Program Director of the station when I was a freshman.

I was naturally blessed with the gift of gab, a resonant voice, and a love of radio. That deal was sealed the night in January 1966: The WYBC Freshman News Reading Contest!

I learned the next day that I had WON the free pizza. My brother took no end of grief about his younger brother acing the competition.

WYBC: Ken Devoe
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WYBC: Ken Devoe

Just about everything good that’s happened in my adult life is a direct result of my experience at WYBC.

When I got to Yale, I had no clue as to what I wanted to do post-Yale. My plans or lack of them didn’t include going into radio. In fact, I had no idea that college radio even existed.

[… Then] I heard what sounded like a couple of people my age broadcasting play-by-play of a Yale football game. I was astounded. College kids on radio?

WYBC: Andy Schnier
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WYBC: Andy Schnier

Like most of us of that time I think, commercial radio (rock and roll) was an important part of my life.  I came from NYC (albeit its weird outlying borough, Staten Island) where we had WABC and WMCA and some other big-time AM “top 40″ radio stations to listen to.  Transistor radios were ubiquitous.  My mother had taught me to love classical music. Folk music was the tune my generation was marching to, and rock and roll was what made the blood pulse in your veins.

WYBC: Alan Zaur
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WYBC: Alan Zaur

I was, among other things, a techie at WYBC. I also remained in New Haven during 1968 and did a little technical work at the station when it was required. In order to have money for school I needed a “real job”. So, I worked at WNHC-TV that summer as a broadcast engineer at the TV transmitter.

In 1968, being a techie at WYBC had its amusing moments. One morning at about 2 AM …

alternative: Crisis at Columbia

alternative: Crisis at Columbia

Here is a scanned copy of a May ’68 issue of an “underground” journal that frankly I had forgotten about: the alternative. This issue drilled into the “Crisis At Columbia,” as reported by a ’67 Yalie who was a grad student at Columbia at the time. Re-reading this now was eerie — partly because it was more complex than I remember, and the threat of violence was …

Remember The New Journal?  Here’s Its First Year!

Remember The New Journal? Here’s Its First Year!

The New Journal began in 1967, the brainchild of Yale Daily News expatriates Pete Yeager and Dan Yergin, both ’68.   It was student-run and free — one of the first serious, college publications that didn’t require a subscription.
A few of us ’69ers joined that first year:  Paul Malamud, Howard Newman, Jean-Pierre Jordan.  (Any others? if so, leave a comment.)    The next year more people got involved: According to the Yale Banner a total of 12 of our classmates were involved: John Adams, Milton Anderson, Paul …

Newsletter Archive

Newsletter Archive

The Yale Class of 1969 Newsletter is published approximately monthly and contains “post summaries” of all new posts that have been published since the previous newsletter. Classmates can subscribe or unsubscribe by going to their edit-profile page, near the bottom, and changing subscription preferences. Here are all the back issues of the Newsletter: Vol. 1,…

That Was The Week

That Was The Week

Coed Week was our class’s unique and history-changing contribution to Yale; and there’s
a live recording of its key moment, pitting Youth against Experience in the
Trumbull dining room. See how the confrontation strikes you, from 50 more years of perspective.

Timothy Dwight Senior Picture

Timothy Dwight Senior Picture

Here’s a large copy of the Senior Picture for TD, contributed to the Archives Project (gathering pictures, documents, flyers, audio tapes, posters, 8mm movies, publications, etc., etc. — generally, memorabilia that will bring a smile of recollection to a Classmate).   Do you have a senior picture from YOUR College? There’s also a cool “crowdsourcing” element, asking TD’ers to add names of Classmates in the Legend below the picture.

Calling All Packrats

Calling All Packrats

We are looking for pictures (especially!), document, flyers, audio tapes, posters, publications, etc., etc.– memorabilia, generally. We want to digitize them and use them in the ClassBook and on the website. So NOW is the time to dig out old scrapbooks, shoeboxes or other stored materials from Back In The Day … and get it to us for preservation, use and return to you (if you want the item/hard copy back).