WOBN

WOBN is an American college radio station owned and operated on 97.5 MHz FM by Otterbein College in Westerville, Ohio. The station's studio is located at 33 Collegeview Road and tower is located at Cowan Hall on the campus of Otterbein College.

WOBN
CityWesterville, Ohio
Broadcast areaWesterville, Ohio
Frequency97.5 MHz
SloganThe Best in College Radio.
Programming
FormatCampus radio
Ownership
OwnerOtterbein College
History
First air date1957 or 1958 as WOBC-AM, 1968 as WOBN-FM at 91.5 FM
Former call signsWOBC
Call sign meaningW Otterbein Broadcasting Network
Technical information
Facility ID50761
ClassD
ERP29 watts
HAAT20 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteWOBN website

The station began operations in 1948 as an AM station with the callsign of WOBC. In 1968, the station's programming moved to the FM band on 91.5 FM. In the early 1980s, the station changed frequencies to 105.7 MHz - a frequency located within the current commercial portion of the FM band. In 1989, the FCC required that Otterbein relinquish the commercial frequency to make room for a new commercial station in Marysville (now licensed to Hilliard as WXZX). In 1990, WOBN-FM moved to the frequency of 101.5 MHz. In November 2008 WOBN moved once again to the present frequency of 97.5.

Programming

Because WOBN is a student-run college radio station, its lineup and content change frequently as new students enter and experienced students graduate. In addition to WOBN's formatted music programming, the station's mission statement includes supporting local athletes and early airplay of major and independent label new releases.

WOBN-FM is the voice for all Otterbein football, basketball, and baseball teams, as well as many of Westerville's other local sports.

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gollark: Oh, the simulation we use to sabotage other companies' progress!
gollark: I'm sure *you'd* like to think so.
gollark: Your proof wasn't run by our truth cuboids, so it might be wrong.
gollark: An experimental GTech™ project managed to count as high as 29 at one point. It used a significant fraction of our computational resources and some recently generated number theory.

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