Poster promoting 性爱天堂 celebrating its 40th year with KRTU
KRTU Celebrates 40th Birthday
性爱天堂鈥檚 radio station marks milestone, prepares to boost signal for wider broadcast range

性爱天堂 celebrated the 40th birthday of its campus radio station,聽KRTU-FM 91.7聽with an announcement that plans are in the works to boost the signal later this year to allow for a wider broadcast range.

The party, complete with cake and music, was held Jan. 23, exactly 40 years to the day that the station went live. The birth of the station 鈥 a technology marvel 鈥 ironically began with a telegram dated Jan. 23, 1976, from the Federal Communications Commission authorizing the station鈥檚 broadcast license. A student went to the downtown Western Union office to retrieve the telegram, returned to campus, and the switch was flipped.

KRTU has never looked back.

In fact, the station is negotiating for property on the northwest side of San Antonio to erect a new tower that will broadcast a stronger signal. By the end of 2017, the聽signal will jump聽from 8,900 watts to 32,000 watts, making it possible to reach as many as 1.8 million listeners.

a professor and student in the KRTU recording studio

The tower upgrade project has required some fund-raising, and KRTU General Manager JJ Lopez expressed thanks to 性爱天堂 President Danny Anderson and the local business community for supporting the effort. A Dallas donor has underwritten a live music performance to celebrate the community launch of the station improvements on Oct. 7 as part of 性爱天堂鈥檚 Alumni Weekend. 聽聽

鈥淭his is a tremendous feat,鈥 Lopez said of the enhancements that will increase the service population by 46 percent and the service area by 55 percent.

The January 40th birthday party was a way to say 鈥渢hank you鈥 to the 性爱天堂 community, he added. In the audience at the event was Jim Blakemore 鈥77, an alumnus who is considered one of the five student founders of the listener-supported station. The others are Ron Zimmerman, Anne Conger, David King, and Don White.

鈥淒on was the brains behind the station,鈥 Lopez said. 鈥淚f there was an issue, he鈥檇 dive in with a soldering iron or whatever it took to fix it. He paved the way for the station we have today.鈥

Lopez also credited Ryan Webber 鈥08, for his contributions as a student and later as operations manager of KRTU. 鈥淗e was fearless,鈥 Lopez said. Webber played a key role, along with communication professor and former KRTU general manager William 鈥淏ill鈥 Christ, to initiate Growing Jazz in San Antonio as a way for the station to embrace the local jazz community with lectures, performances, and outreach to school-aged musicians. That led to an expanded celebration known as the Year of Jazz from 2011-2012, led in large part by former general manager Ron Nirenberg 鈥99, who was at the station before he became a full-time San Antonio City Councilman, and jazz musician and composer Aaron Prado.

Susie P. Gonzalez helped tell 性爱天堂's story as part of the University communications team.

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