One degree won't make any difference. Dumb question, but you are sure that it's pointed north, right? I mean, you know generally which way north is without the compass, and that's where it's pointed, right? Just checking.
I ask because I once helped a directionally-challenged friend of a relative put up an OTA antenna. They didn't really know for sure which way North was (WTF?!?) and I discovered that their compass didn't really work either. So they thought the antenna was pointed south when it was actually pointing northeast.
I don't really know how WAND's signal strength compares to others, but it's great over here. There are many variables at play as to whether or not you can pick up a channel.
It's likely that the problem is just in the placement of your antenna, or in how the antenna is picking up stations. Keep tinkering. Some antennas are better or worse within the UHF band than others. I would try tinkering with the location of your antenna. Keep it pointed north, but try different areas of your attic. Try near a window, if you have one up there. If that fails, get a better antenna. If that still fails, try that better antenna with a quality pre-amp/amp.
It could also be the (probably) cheap pre-amp that the Phillips is using too. That could be causing a problem. I've read that cheap ones can inject more noise than signal. Can you try it without the pre-amp? See if that makes a difference. The first pre-amp/amp I bought was one from Radio Shack. It was crap. It would boost the signal strength on weak channels, yes, but it also drastically increased the number of dropouts and pixelation.
Like I said, I spent about $120 on my DB-4 and ChannelMaster 7777 pre-amp/amp combo, and I'm very happy with the setup.