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In 1971, the owners of the WIMA stations opted to sell, splitting the radio and television operations. In June 1971, the locally owned Lima Broadcasting Corporation acquired WIMA-AM-FM. [30] As a result, the news staffs for radio and television were split. Channel 35 could no longer use the WIMA-TV call sign and changed to WLIO-TV on September 1.
WLOK staffers were notified on July 30, 1954, that the stations were in the process of being sold, which was confirmed to The Lima News, but the buyer's name was not disclosed. [41] The same day, Lloyd Pixley died at the age of 54; he had suffered a heart attack while attending the 1953 Ohio State-Michigan game and had been in hospital care on ...
Dec. 26—It was a year of change for the Lima region in 2021, as some well-known names and places changed. Whether it was a new person in charge in Lima for the first time in 32 years, the ...
Fox News’ Neil Cavuto, one of the few anchors whose time at the Fox Corp. owned outlet dates to its 1996 launch, said in late December he was leaving. All these exits take place amid a not-so ...
WOHL-CD (channel 35) is a low-power, Class A television station in Lima, Ohio, United States, affiliated with ABC and CBS. Owned by Block Communications, it is sister to full-power dual NBC/Fox affiliate WLIO (channel 8). The two stations (and two repeaters)—which all operate under the collective banner of "Your Hometown Stations"—share ...
Nov. 21—Three weeks from today will mark the 28th year I have been at The Lima News, the last 20 as its editor. We moved here with a son Joseph, who was ready to enter the first grade, and a ...
Her broadcasting career in Cleveland started at ABC affiliate WEWS, Channel 5, on July 17, 1977, when she became co-host of Afternoon Exchange, and early evening news/interview program. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] She co-hosted the news program Live On 5 beginning in 1982 and the following year began co-anchoring the 11 p.m. newscast with longtime anchor Ted ...
The newspaper was first printed on July 21, 1926. [1] The paper was owned by Freedom Communications, a privately held California-based company whose flagship paper is the Orange County Register, until 2012, when it was sold to Ohio Community Media, an affiliate of the private equity firm Versa Capital Management. [2]