Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WRUV is the radio voice of the University of Vermont. It is a non-profit, non-commercial, educational entity licensed by the FCC comprising UVM students, staff and community members. Most of the station's funding is provided by UVM's Student Government Association while fundraisers and community underwriting covers the rest.
The following is a list of full-power radio stations, HD Radio subchannels and low-power translators in the United States broadcasting Air1 programming, which can be sorted by their call signs, frequencies, city of license, state and broadcast area. Blue background indicates a low-power FM translator. Gray background indicates an HD Radio ...
It had been on 910 AM, White River Junction, Nassau Broadcasting III, LLC and was an All Sports station. In 2015, the license of WAOT-LP , 98.3 FM, Derby, was cancelled. It had been licensed to the Vermont Agency of Transportation .
On July 15, 1986, KLRD began broadcasting Christian hit/rock music from Yucaipa, California, and went by the on-air moniker K-LORD. In 1994, KXRD was started as a sister station to KLRD. [1] In 1995, K-LORD changed its name to "Air1" and began broadcasting via satellite from St. Helens, Oregon. Air1 Radio (formerly K-LORD) was originally ...
WITH (90.1 FM) is a public, listener-supported radio station serving Ithaca, New York and the surrounding area airing an Adult Album Alternative format identical to that of WRUR-FM in Rochester branded as The Route.
CNR Kazakh Radio in Xinjiang; CRI Hit FM in Xiamen (formerly News Radio before July 2017, stopped airing in May 2018) CRI News Radio in Hefei (stopped airing in August 2020) Radio Foshan Shunde People's Broadcasting Station in Shunde,Foshan
While the entire campus could hear the station, raising its profile, the station was co-channel to WRUV in Burlington—not an issue, provided both stations broadcast with 10 watts of power. When she attended Johnson State, Cyndi Lauper was a DJ on WJSC-FM. [4] As the 1970s ended, the FCC began to phase out 10-watt non-commercial stations.
A move to 90.1 FM and a power increase to 1,800 watts followed in 1977. The station's call letters changed to KSRQ in 1983. The station's transmitter was relocated to a taller tower and effective power was increased to 24,000 watts in 1989. Starting around 2003, the station's management started recruiting community volunteer hosts.