Few businesses can have been transformed by the Covid-19 pandemic as dramatically as the Norfolk Painting School. Moving online has given it a global reach and it is set to grow exponentially.
Few businesses can have been transformed by the Covid-19 pandemic as dramatically as the Norfolk Painting School. Moving online has given it a global reach and it is set to grow exponentially.
Without a âstuntâ pulled by Texas A&M electrical engineering students during the annual A&M-University of Texas rivalry football game in 1921, broadcast as it is known today might not exist.
About 50 feet away from the War Hymn statue hundreds of A&M fans pass on game days is a monument of a different kind. A historical marker at the northeast entrance to Kyle Field describes the 1921 broadcast and the attempts at play-by-play that came before it.
What began as experiments by electrical engineering students in A&Mâs amateur radio club which operated under the call sign 5YA, now called W5AC, became instrumental to the current state of broadcasting, said the clubâs historian David Gent, Class of 1975.
A&Mâs amateur radio club, called W5AC, is an example of this.
The club was involved with the 1921 play-by-play broadcast of an A&M-University of Texas football game â the first of its kind by an amateur radio station. However, a commercial station in Pittsburgh beat it out to be the first in the nation.
But the clubâs history runs deeper than that.
Founded in 1912 in Bolton Hall, W5AC is the oldest college radio club that is currently operating under its original call sign, though there is some debate surrounding that fact.
Harvard claims its radio club, W1AF, was founded in 1909, but W5AC historian David Gent, Class of 1975, said there are issues with that claim.