Randall Davidson provides a comprehensive history of the innovative work
of Wisconsin's educational radio stations. Beginning with the first
broadcast by experimental station 9XM at the University of Wisconsin,
followed by WHA, through the state-owned affiliate WLBL, to the network
of stations that in the years following WWII formed the Wisconsin Public
Radio network, Davidson describes how, with homemade equipment and ideas
developed from scratch, public radio became a tangible example of the
Wisconsin Idea, bringing the educational riches of the university to all
the state's residents. Marking the centennial year of Wisconsin Public
Radio, this paperback edition includes a new foreword by Bill Siemering,
National Public Radio's founding director of programming.