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In 1998, it went global by establishing the first Philippine radio station to conquer the United States airwaves through WRMN in New York City. In June 2007, RMN FM station DWKC 93.9 in Manila was the first commercial station in the country to broadcast with HD Radio technology. It broadcast in three HD Radio digital audio channels along with ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=WRMN_New_York&oldid=1160219339"
The AM broadcast band in the Philippines is on 531–1701 kHz with 9 kHz spacing (530–1700 kHz with 10 kHz spacing from the American colonial era and post-independence up to 1978), and is predominantly used for news and public service broadcasting. The FM band is the most commonly used broadcast band, with most music radio stations in the ...
WRMN (1410 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Elgin, Illinois. [2] It serves the Fox Valley in the northwest suburbs of Chicago. [3] The station's broadcast license is held by Elgin Community Broadcasting LLC. It has a format of talk radio shows and shopping programs. By day, WRMN is powered at 1,000 watts non-directional.
They distributed mimeographed copies of "The Woman-Identified Woman", in which they argued that lesbians are at the forefront of the struggle for women's liberation because their identification with other women defies traditional definitions of women's identity in terms of male sexual partners, and expressed, "...the primacy of women relating ...
Backlash is Susan Faludi's 550 page analysis of social, economic and political inequities and resulting difficulties American women faced in the 1980s. [citation needed] The book was hailed as "the most vehement and unapologetic call to arms to issue from the feminist camp in many years", [3] and "a rich compendium of fascinating information and an indictment of a system losing its grip."
Two:Thirteen (sometimes titled 2wo:Thirteen, or simply 2:13), is a 2009 horror/thriller film directed by Charles Adelman and starring Mark Thompson, Mark Pellegrino, Teri Polo, and Kevin Pollak. [ 1 ]
Monell was a part of a class of women employees of the Dept. of Social Services and Board of Education of the city of New York who were compelled to take maternity leave before such leaves were required for medical reasons. The women sued the Dept. and its Commissioner, the Board and its Chancellor, and the city of New York and its Mayor. [2]