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Defunct religious radio stations in the United States (291 P) Pages in category "Defunct radio stations in the United States" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,317 total.
KLEA-FM (101.7 FM) was a radio station broadcasting an oldies music format. [1] Licensed to Lovington, New Mexico, United States, the station was owned by Lea County Broadcasting Co. [2] KLEA-FM signed on in October 1965. [3] The station shut down on June 30, 2017; [4] on October 31, 2017, KLEA-FM ceased all remaining operations. [5]
KRSN won ten New Mexico Broadcaster Association Awards [3] including Radio Division 4 Station of the Year for 2010. KRSN traced its history to "KRS", a local " carrier current " station with restricted coverage, which was established in conjunction with the Manhattan Project , and started broadcasting in February 1946. [ 4 ]
KICA (980 AM) was a radio station broadcasting a farm and agriculture format. Licensed to Clovis, New Mexico, the station served the Clovis-Portales CSA; it could also be heard in the Amarillo metropolitan area during the daytime.
New Mexico radio station stubs (154 P) Pages in category "Radio stations in New Mexico" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 221 total.
KLLT was a radio station on 95.3 MHz in Grants, New Mexico, that operated between April 16, 1980, and July 27, 1988.The station's deep indebtedness, combined with a refusal of permission to build a mountaintop tower and move into the Albuquerque radio market, led the station to cease operations.
KHOB (1390 AM) was a radio station licensed to Hobbs, New Mexico, United States. The station was last owned by American Asset Management. [2] On May 21, 2017, KHOB changed to an adult standards format with local news and events. It previously carried a sports format. [citation needed] KHOB went off the air June 24, 2022. [3] The Federal ...
The station was moved to 1400 kHz in 1941 and had a power increase to 250 watts in 1947. 1430 was the new frequency with 5,000 watts daytime and 1000 watts night, with a nighttime directional array at a new transmitter location 5.5 miles northwest of downtown Roswell. The station was silent from February 1967 to October 1968.