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Parsons Media Group, owned by Wayne Gilmore and former station employee Greg Chalker, acquired the KLKC stations for $30,000; the seller also received five 30-second commercial ads per day on the stations for a period of two years. [11] By that time, the 1540 AM frequency was airing a classic country format known as "Katy Country". [12]
Licensed to Parsons, Kansas, United States, it serves the Pittsburg area. The station is currently owned by Wayne Gilmore, Kirby Ham and Greg Chalker, through licensee Parsons Media Group, LLC. The station is currently owned by Wayne Gilmore, Kirby Ham and Greg Chalker, through licensee Parsons Media Group, LLC.
Parsons is a city in Labette County, Kansas, United States. [1] As of the 2020 census , the population of the city was 9,600. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It is the most populous city of Labette County, and the second-most populous city in the southeastern region of Kansas.
Charges are being sought against a Parsons officer after a necropsy found that the “extreme temperature on the day in question” was the “sole factor contributing to K-9 Karim’s” death ...
A small central Kansas police department is facing a torrent of criticism for raiding a local newspaper’s office and the home of its owner and publisher, seizing computers and cellphones, and ...
The Morning Sun – Pittsburg; The Newton Kansan – Newton; The Olathe News – Olathe; Ottawa Herald – Ottawa; Parsons Sun — Parsons; Shawnee Mission Post - Northern Johnson County; The Salina Journal – Salina; The Topeka Capital-Journal – Topeka; The Wichita Eagle – Wichita
Classes 6A, 5A and 3A ran the course at Rim Rock Farm Saturday morning, while Wamego Country Club was the championship site for Classes 4A, 2A and 1A. Kansas cross country championships. CLASS 6A BOYS
The county was named after LaBette creek, [3] [4] the second-largest creek in the county, which runs roughly NNW-SSE from near Parsons to Chetopa. The creek in turn was named after French-Canadian fur trapper Pierre LaBette who had moved to the area, living along the Neosho River , and marrying into the Osage tribe in the 1830s and 1840s.