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WNGO was mostly a religious radio station, with local church minister H.M. Suthard and Paul Mullins as the original owners. Amazing Grace was the first song to be played on the station in its inaugural broadcast. [2]: 77 The station would launch WNGO-FM (94.7 MHz, now WZYK) in 1955 in order to broadcast local sporting events at night. In 1957 ...
The following radio stations broadcast on FM frequency 94.3 MHz: Argentina ... CNR Music Radio in Changchun, ... WKYX-FM in Golconda, ...
On December 26, 2022, WKYX and translator W265DZ 100.9 FM split from a news/talk simulcast with sister stations WKYX-FM and WNGO and changed their format to urban contemporary, branded as "102.5/100.9 The Beat". WKYX also changed its call sign to WBMP on January 30, 2023.
In September 1997, the station changed call letters to WFXF as "94-3 The Fox", a classic rock station with Howard Stern in the morning. [9] In June 1999, WFXF moved to 102.3 FM ; the format was replaced on 94.3 with a short-lived ABC Radio satellite-driven Hot AC format called "Kiss 94 FM" under the WKSO call sign with veteran Peoria ...
WSSQ (105.5 FM) – branded as Q105.5 – is a commercial adult contemporary radio station licensed to Sterling, Illinois, United States, serving primarily Whiteside and Lee counties in the Rock River Valley. Owned by Fletcher M. Ford, through licensee Virden Broadcasting Corp., WSSQ serves as the local affiliate for the Chicago Bulls Radio ...
The station on 94.3 FM at Garden Grove signed on in 1961 as KGGK, later to become KTBT, KORJ, KIKF ("KIK-FM", a country music station), and KMXN [1] before finally KEBN.. On November 18, 1994, KEBN and KBUA, the other area station on 94.3 FM began simulcasting the same country music format and 94.3 in San Fernando became KYKF.
(About WHAS and early radio in general) Jack Alicoate, ed. (1939), "Kentucky" , Radio Annual , New York: Radio Daily, OCLC 2459636 – via Internet Archive Federal Writers' Project (1939), "Press and Radio" , Kentucky: a Guide to the Bluegrass State , American Guide Series , New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, pp. 102– 109, hdl : 2027/uc1 ...
WDXR formerly broadcast on a frequency of 1560 kHz, before exchanging frequencies with WPAD (1450 AM) in February 1979. At the time of the swap, WDXR broadcast a middle of the road music format. [1] In April 1989, Pollack Communications, Inc., agreed to sell WDXR to Metro Media of Kentucky, Inc.