WUWM Records, 1950-2014

Scope and Content Note

Collection contains records created by the Mass Communication Department and public radio station WUWM of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The records of the Dept. of Mass Communication (series 1) contain correspondence of the department chair (1951-1976) documenting the creation of the department, its goals, and activities such as the curriculum, staffing and policy needs. It also includes minutes of the executive committee (1970-1979) and faculty meeting minutes (1970-1974).

The WUWM General Files (series 2) document station programming and, to a lesser extent, the staffing and technical needs of the station. The correspondence of the director (1963-1983) provides details on the operations and activities of the station including equipment purchases, staffing needs, policy decisions and employee relations. For example, some 1969 letters to the dean of the College of Letters and Science concern controversies after profane language had been used on the air. The station director's memos also document the policies and the needs of the station for 1978 and 1979. One folder contains information on African American programs on the station, and a series of folders documents the station's financial and programming connections to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Series 3-10 include audio reel recordings of the College Talk program, the Grass Roots program, the East Side Issues program, the University Roundtable program, the Milwaukee Ideas program, the UWM Today program, the Chancellor's Report, and other miscellaneous programs. The tapes were recorded at varying speeds and are organized by sequential numbers. Most of the audio reels are from the Grass Roots program, which covered local Milwaukee politics between 1964 and 1966. The host interviewed public officials, including Lloyd Barbee, John Doyne, Warren Knowles, Gaylord Nelson, Henry Reuss, and Clement Zablocki. Tape 117 is a recording of Robert F. Kennedy speaking at a political rally for Patrick Lucey at UWM's Baker Field House on September 17, 1966. A number of recordings concern conditions and policies at Wisconsin prisons. A College Talk program tape includes interviews with African American families concerning the housing situation in Milwaukee in 1969.

The University Roundtable, Milwaukee Ideas and UWM Today recordings cover a mixture of UWM-specific topics, reports on faculty research, and current events interpreted by UWM faculty and staff. University Roundtable, the earliest of these, took the form of conversations between Station manager Dave Edwards and Chancellors John Schroeder and Nancy Zimpher, and discussed topics such as Sexual Discrimination awareness on campus, the state budget and its effect on UWM, and the UWM Basketball program. These programs were not preserved in their full runs; much of 1996-1999 is not represented at all in this collection.

The later programs moved to a weekly schedule and are much more comprehensive, though gaps in the collection do still exist. Specific topics from these shows include the Peck School of the Arts performance schedule for the upcoming year, discussion of local and national political races, an overview by Prof. Barry Rousseau of his research in volcanology, updates on UWM student community-building in New Orleans post-Katrina, and UWM Athletics previews. Of particular interest are Chancellor Nancy Zimpher's discussion of UWM's response to the 9/11/2001 terrorist attacks, as well as the large number of Freshwater Studies-related programs, which describe the work being done by the Great Lakes WATER Institute and, after 2009, the School of Freshwater Studies.

The Chancellor's Report recordings, which span over both Milwaukee Ideas and UWM Today, served as a monthly forum for the Chancellor to publicly discuss the issues facing their office and UWM as a whole, and provide an excellent month-to-month summary of the Chancellor's activities and what they considered important that month. Recordings are present in the collection from Chancellors Nancy Zimpher (1998-2003), Carlos Santiago (2004-2010), and Michael Lovell (2010-2014). The records of the Office of the Chancellor (UWM Archival Collection 46) contain program notes and supplementary materials for many of these recordings, after 2003 in electronic format.