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KNKX was the brainchild of Chris Knudzen, a regent of PLU from Burlington who, in 1951, donated the then-under construction Eastvold Chapel (now the Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts [2]) with a radio studio to the university under the desire of having it host a radio station.
KNKX-HD2: 88.5 MHz Mainstream Terrestrial Friends of 88.5 (Community ownership) Tacoma Washington: Website: KNTU: 88.1 MHz HD2 [1] Mainstream Terrestrial University of North Texas: McKinney Texas: Website: KOJH-LP: 104.7 MHz Jazz, Blues Terrestrial Mutual Musicians Foundation, Inc. Kansas City Missouri: Website: KRTU-FM: 91.7 MHz Jazz ...
Wilke grew up in New London, Iowa and graduated from the University of Iowa in 1959. At school he played saxophone in a jazz band. [3] He moved to Seattle and started at KING-FM in 1961.
KUOW-FM (94.9 MHz) is a National Public Radio member station in Seattle, Washington.It is the largest of the three full-fledged NPR member stations in the Seattle and Tacoma media market, with two Tacoma-based stations, KNKX and KVTI being the others.
KCMP (89.3 FM, 89.3 the Current) is a radio station owned by Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) that broadcasts an adult album alternative (AAA) music format including a significant rotation of songs by local artists.
KOKZ (105.7 FM) is a radio station serving the Waterloo and Cedar Rapids metropolitan areas with a classic hits format which includes a diverse playlist of music from the late 1960s to the early 1990s.
In 1982, KFAE-FM 89.1 at Richland signed on, bringing public radio to the Tri-Cities for the first time. The next year, WSU activated a series of low-powered translators at Ellensburg, Goldendale/The Dalles, Yakima, Lewiston/Clarkston, Ephrata/Soap Lake, Wenatchee, Cashmere/Dryden, and Chelan/Waterville.
The duo eventually established the Deardorf Peterson Group in 2004. They released Portal, their first album as co-bandleaders, that same year. [6] Deardorf also released two albums as leader – Transparence (2011) and Perception (2019). [3] [7] He joked that he "play[ed] both kinds of music: country and western". [3]