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WKSU & All Things Considered: Five Decades and Counting

WKSU has provided news and information for Northeast Ohio since October 2, 1950. And when 'All Things Considered' debuted on May 3, 1971, the station was preparing to cover the first anniversary of the deadly shootings by the National Guard at Kent State University. In the five decades since then, WKSU has covered the region every afternoon during 'ATC.'
WKSU
WKSU has provided news and information for Northeast Ohio since October 2, 1950. And when 'All Things Considered' debuted on May 3, 1971, the station was preparing to cover the first anniversary of the deadly shootings by the National Guard at Kent State University. In the five decades since then, WKSU has covered the region every afternoon during 'ATC.' Clockwise from top left, Vivian Goodman served as local host from 2000-2014; Susan Lowery (left) and Ruth Hoppert prepare to present the news; Reporter Mark Urycki edits pre-digital reel to reel tape; Reporter Kevin Niedermeier.

this afternoon heard a news program which was more than just bulletins鈥 more than trying to bring you the world in 22 minutes鈥 it was -- and remains 鈥 two hours of analysis, interviews, balanced news and commentary. 鈥淎ll Things Considered鈥 set a new standard for journalism, and that's apparent whether you鈥檝e listened just once, or every day since May 3, 1971.

Back then, Northeast Ohio was preparing to mark one year since the by the National Guard at Kent State University. Capturing the events of every anniversary of May 4th is part of the DNA at WKSU. On that first anniversary in 1971, 鈥淎ll Things Considered鈥 wasn't even on our schedule. -- and would be for several more years. One of those students was . Before he became a household name in Cleveland TV news, he began his career as a student reporter -- the same year that 鈥淎ll Things Considered鈥 hit the airwaves.

鈥淲hat I remember clearly is then-General Manager John Perry calling a meeting. And part of that was that this program called 鈥楢ll Things Considered鈥 was potentially coming our way. And what did it mean for us? That was a really big step: it was a landmark for NPR. What I remember John saying -- and those of us who were at that meeting thinking 鈥 was, 鈥榯his is very good for us because it allows us to have some kind of a vehicle to attach local news programming.鈥欌

Another student in that era was Al Bartholet. He would be WKSU鈥檚 General Manager from 2000-2012. He remembers what finally brought 鈥淎ll Things Considered鈥 to 89.7 in 1974.

鈥淲e were just coming off of the . Sen. Sam Ervin was running that [and] we had John Seiberling -- who was a local congressman -- on the Watergate Committee, and so there was a lot of interest and it was the Watergate hearings that were being broadcast, gavel to gavel, on NPR. That really made an impact with the public. Not only did WKSU begin its first baby steps in to coming into prominence; the network did as well. People stuck with 鈥楢ll Things Considered,鈥 perhaps after the Watergate hearings were wrapping up.鈥

Weaving it all together
Since 2014, Jeff St. Clair has been WKSU鈥檚 local anchor for 鈥淎ll Things Considered鈥 鈥 a period in which live coverage of congressional hearings and press conferences has become commonplace. St. Clair explains how he weaves together world news, national news, and the stories coming from Northeast Ohio.

鈥淯sually, the top story of the day -- we're going to start the hour with that -- that's out of Washington, D.C. So, I'm sitting in a studio here in Kent, listening to Ari Shapiro and Audie Cornish or Mary Louise Kelly or Ailsa Chang, and they will throw the outcue, 鈥楾his Is All Things Considered,鈥 and I jump in and I say, 鈥楾his is 89.7,鈥 and then we run our local news stories. We have four- or five-minute pieces that we put in there, or local newscasts that I'll do twice an hour. It's all integrated; it's all seamless.鈥

July 2, 1981: Akron Mayor Roy Ray announces the city's first designation as an 'All-America City'

Professionals at college
At the close of the 1980s, WKSU began increasing its commitment to providing local content during 鈥淎ll Things Considered.鈥 News director Roy Jones remembers that it was sometimes tough to be taken seriously.

鈥淭he guys who worked at the other radio stations in the area -- the other news departments 鈥 kind of tended to look down on us a bit. Some of them didn't really quite understand that we weren't just college kids; we were professionals [and] we've been in the business for years. Every once in a while, we would do something which would give us an opportunity to steal a march on one of them. And whenever we could do that, we just reveled in it. And the one that we really loved was in February, 1989.鈥

February 27, 1989: Mark Urycki on the CSX train derailment in Akron

鈥淚n the meantime, I saw on the wire that one of our senators, Howard Metzenbaum, had been in the area, had come to Akron to tour the damage, and he'd had a private talk with Mayor [Don] Plusquellic. [Reporter] Mark Urycki had a mobile phone in his car and I called him up and said, 鈥楳ark, you're going to be at that press availability with Mayor Plusquellic. Make sure you talk to him about what passed between him and Metzenbaum when he was there.鈥 Mark asked that question and everybody looked up and said, 鈥榃hat?鈥 We got every one of them; nobody else knew about [Metzenbaum].鈥

A new anchor
In 1996, Vivian Goodman joined WKSU as a classical music announcer.

鈥淲hen I think back on the people -- when I see faces [and] think of the interviews I did -- Pierre Boulez, the great conductor and composer, I did have four interviews with him. When he died, NPR asked for those and I was so privileged to have been able to meet him.鈥

April 28, 2005: Vivian Goodman interviews Pierre Boulez about 40 years with the Cleveland Orchestra
Boulez leading Cleveland Orchestra

In 2000, Goodman was appointed the local anchor of "All Things Considered." A year later came the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. 鈥淯rycki and I -- when we found out about the connection with the tower in Cleveland -- we had to really jump on that because until that point, we were anchoring NPR's coverage of this amazing and horrible tragedy.鈥

September 13, 2001: Kevin Niedemier asks Cleveland Galleria merchants about the economic impact of the terrorist attacks

Harvey Pekar
Later in the decade, Cleveland writer Harvey Pekar saw his life transformed into a feature film. At the same time, he became an occasional WKSU commentator.

鈥淚 originally appeared on [] in 1986. After Doubleday published a collection of my comic book stories. I really went over well to the point where Letterman bumped the comedian to give me more time. He also asked me to appear on his show again. So, I went a couple more times and got a lot of laughs, but not much else. Sales of my comic didn't increase at all, which is the real reason I went on the show. I was doing fine for Letterman but not for myself. We parted company because his [later] CBS audience didn't get me, but I wasn't sorry. My appearances on Letterman sure had me more well known to magazine and newspaper editors, and I began to get a lot more writing gigs -- as well as this great slot on WKSU.鈥

The past decade
Some of the most popular stories from the WKSU newsroom of the past decade include an edition of Jeff St. Clair's "Exploradio" about non-toxic pigments from bird feathers, M.L. Schultze on the duck-shaped 4th congressional district, and Amanda Rabinowitz's "Shuffle" interview with Phong Nguyen, ahead of the then-impending 50th anniversary of the May 4, 1970 shootings.

Much of WKSU's history can be traced in this story from our 70th anniversary (2020), and the video below from 2000 鈥 hosted by then-WEWS anchorman Ted Henry, a WKSU alum.

Kabir Bhatia is a senior reporter for 海角破解版's arts & culture team.