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As of September 2024, WGN-TV presently broadcasts 72 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 12 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours each weekday, 5 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours on Saturdays and 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours on Sundays); in regards to the number of hours devoted to news programming, it is the highest newscast output of any television station in the ...
By 2014 the collection included more than sixty aircraft, [2] all German, showing their development from Otto Lilienthal's hang gliders through wooden machines to the earliest glassfibre aircraft of the 1960s. There are also photographic records, focussing on the series of Rhön contests, with aircraft pilots and designers.
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Carbondale/~Paducah KY: Johnston City: 15 15 W15BU-D: 3ABN: 3ABN Proclaim on 15.2, 3ABN Dare to Dream on 15.3, 3ABN Latino on 15.4, 3ABN Kids on 15.5, 3ABN Radio on 15.6, 3ABN Radio Latino on 15.7, Radio 74 on 15.8
In September 1990, WFLD announced plans to launch a 24-hour local cable news channel, to have been named "Chicago Cable News", in conjunction with former WLS-TV and WMAQ-TV weathercaster John Coleman (who was tapped to serve as the channel's general manager) and local cable provider Tele-Communications Inc. (which sold its Chicago area systems ...
The Illinois Channel is a 501 c (3) nonprofit corporation, modeled after C-SPAN, which produces programming on Illinois state government, politics and public policy. [ 1 ] Early history
The museum was founded by Joe DePaulo, Ray Jakubiak, Steve Meyers and Tim Tocwish in 2004 in a 6,000 sq ft (560 m 2) hangar it took over from an organization known as Packer Wings. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In 2009, it acquired the forward fuselage of a T-33.
The museum was established as an independent nonprofit corporation. The New York State Department of Education chartered the museum as a non-profit educational institution in 1972. [4] The museum replaced its original fire-damaged building in 1979 with a new 16,000 sq ft (1,500 m 2) facility.
[1] [2] [3] The following year, the museum purchased a Douglas C-53 Skytrooper at an auction in Rockdale, Texas and flew it back to Indiana. [4] [5] [6] To complement the new acquisition, construction began on a 2,592 sq ft (240.8 m 2) building in 1988. [7] The museum opened a new exhibit featuring oral history interviews with World War II ...