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KPLU is
the region's pre-eminent Public Radio station, presenting
NPR news, jazz and blues.
We've
come a long way since KPLU hit the air in November 1966 as
a 10 watt radio station broadcasting classical music to students
on the Pacific Lutheran University campus in Parkland, Washington.
Potential audience for the student-run station increased significantly
when its wattage jumped to 40,000 in 1972.
Early
in 1980 KPLU moved its transmitter site off-campus to a 420
foot tower near Port Orchard once owned by Burlington Northern
Railroad. Power was upped again to a round 100,000 watts,
and in February the station added National Public Radio news
and information to its program mix.
In 1983
KPLU switched from classical to jazz and NPR news and by 1985
was broadcasting 24 hours a day. The mid-80s and early 90s
also saw an increase in KPLU's geographical coverage as the
station installed a network of seven "translators" to relay
its signal all over western Washington.
KPLU
moved its main transmitter to its present location on West
Tiger Mountain in 1989, bringing even wider coverage and a
clearer signal. KPLU employs a staff of more than 30 full
time professionals serving a weekly audience of a-quarter-million
listeners through-out Western Washington, lower British Columbia
and Northern Oregon.
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