[Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 54 (Tuesday, March 25, 2025)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1818-S1819]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                         Recognizing WOWO Radio

  Mr. YOUNG. Mr. President, I am so glad the junior Senator from 
Indiana occupies the chair as Presiding Officer at this time because it 
was 100 years ago next week that ``The Voice of a Thousand Main 
Streets'' first began broadcasting from the second floor of the Main 
Auto Supply Building in downtown Fort Wayne, IN--an area that the 
Presiding Officer knows well.
  On March 31, 1925, at 500 watts, 1320 on the dial, the voice of the 
Midwest, WOWO Radio, hit the airwaves. In Indiana, from such humble 
beginnings, great things often rise, and those distinctive call 
letters, ``WOWO,'' endure today.
  In fact, over the past century, through good times and bad, Hoosiers 
in the northeast part of our State have turned on and tuned in to WOWO 
radio. Although the number on the dial has changed, the studio was 
moved, the station's wattage has expanded, and the world of media has 
evolved, Hoosiers still listen to WOWO today.
  WOWO is not just a radio station in this community; it is the 
community's radio station, one it has loved and taken care of for 100 
years now. Its programs didn't just entertain Fort Wayne but became 
part of its culture. Its personalities didn't simply report the news 
but made history.
  During the Great Depression, WOWO turned Fort Wayne into a midwest 
hub of country music and helped Hoosiers escape from hard times, if 
only for an hour.
  After Pearl Harbor, WOWO provided desperately needed updates as they 
arrived over the wire with word of the progress of the war effort to 
the families of the 12,000 soldiers from Fort Wayne fighting overseas.
  No matter the era or the decade, WOWO always looked out for its 
audience. It brought them the local news, helped them stay informed and 
engaged. Every morning, the legendary Bob Sievers called the Fort Wayne 
Police Department before going on the air.
  When the station moved to the Gaskins Building on Washington 
Boulevard, where there were no nearby windows, a reporter ran down the 
hall, climbed out on the fire escape, and looked to the sky to 
determine the weather. The Gaskins Building is now gone, but, as WOWO 
listeners know, the station still reports the weather from its ``world 
famous fire escape.''
  During the events that defined the last century for people in and 
away from northeast Indiana--from the blizzard of 1978 to that terrible 
September morning in 2001, from the thrill of the Moon landing to the 
loss of the space shuttle Challenger--listeners can still remember not 
just where they were when they heard the news but how they heard it: 
from WOWO through the radio in the car, on the kitchen table, in their 
classroom.
  During tough times, WOWO provided welcome distractions. The audience 
could tune in to the ``Hoosier Hop,'' where local talents Nancy Lee and 
the Hilltoppers played and Kenny Roberts yodeled. They could visit the 
Little Red Barn on a farm down in Indiana for the latest in ag news. 
``Modern Home Forum,'' hosted by the fictional Jane Weston, offered 
cooking lessons. Broadcasts of Komets and Pistons games brought the 
people of Fort Wayne together around their beloved hockey and 
basketball teams. The innovative and much imitated ``Man on the 
Street'' and ``One Moment'' programs turned the shows' listeners into 
stars.
  If a member of the Fort Wayne community lost their dog, WOWO could 
help them find it. If they fell on hard times, it offered them a hand 
up.
  In the 1940s, the station created the Penny Pitch, encouraging 
listeners to contribute pocket change for a disabled young man so he 
could realize his ambition of pursuing a career in journalism. The 
annual drive still raises money to provide resources to charities 
across northeast Indiana. Last year, the Penny Pitch raised over 
$135,000 for Habitat for Humanity of Greater Fort Wayne.
  Throughout WOWO's history, many of its personalities became household 
names across northeast Indiana. Broadcasters like Bob Chase, who served 
our Nation in World War II and then served WOWO listeners as sports 
director and the voice of the Komets hockey team for over six decades, 
were beloved figures. More recently, Charly Butcher, Patrick Miller, 
and Kayla Blakeslee became well known and trusted by the WOWO audience. 
Brian Ford, WOWO news director, recalled that as a child, when the sky 
grew dark and storms neared, his grandmother would simply say: Turn on 
WOWO.
  When news breaks, good or bad, at home or far away, at the beginning 
of another day in Fort Wayne, and the world turned beyond it, families 
still find WOWO on their dial or on their phones.
  So today, I join my fellow Hoosiers in marking this milestone, 
offering WOWO and its staff past and present congratulations on 
creating a truly remarkable bond with their audience and for serving 
fellow Hoosiers with news and entertainment.
  Oh, about that call sign--it is a bit counterintuitive, perhaps, but 
back in 1925, the ``W'' in ``WOWO'' designated the station's location 
east of the Mississippi River. The other three letters

[[Page S1819]]

didn't stand for anything; they were just catchy.
  At the time of the station's founding, a newspaper reported that WOWO 
``expects to become a familiar voice of the middle west despite the low 
wave length. The trick call letters, it is believed, will add to the 
novelty of the plant.'' The station's leaders were right on both 
accounts.
  A listener contest later determined that ``WOWO'' would stand for 
``Wayne Offers Wonderful Opportunities.'' But ``WOWO'' will never be 
just call letters. If you grew up in its listening range, you know what 
it stands for, what it means, and what it has meant to northeast 
Indiana since that first broadcast a century ago.
  I have no doubt, however much change that time and technology may 
bring, a hundred years from now, WOWO will remain on the air and remain 
an important part of the fabric of northeast Indiana.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts.