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KSUA-FM did not go on the air until the mid-1980s, but the station's roots stretch back for two decades before that, to the first UAF radio station, KUAC-FM.KUAC, the Fairbanks North Star Borough's public radio station, went on the air October 1, 1962, operating out of the Constitution Hall [2] studios KSUA now occupies.
KSUA: Fairbanks: Alaska: University of Alaska Fairbanks: 91.5 FM ... Following are radio stations affiliated with U.S. colleges and universities that only broadcast ...
Public Radio KSUA: 91.5 FM: Fairbanks: University of Alaska, on Behalf of U Of AK, Fairbanks: Alternative rock KSUP: 106.3 FM: Juneau: BTC USA Holdings Management Inc. Hot AC KSVQ: 89.3 FM: Gambell: Nome Seventh-Day Adventist Church: Christian KSYU: 98.1 FM: Saint Marys: Big River Public Broadcasting Corporation: Public Radio KTDZ: 103.9 FM ...
KUAC is a non-commercial FM radio station in Fairbanks, Alaska, broadcasting at 89.9 MHz.The station is operated by the University of Alaska Fairbanks.It debuted on October 2, 1962, originally at 104.9 MHz, as Alaska's first non-commercial radio station and second FM station (after KNIK in Anchorage).
The Fairbanks television market includes all of Fairbanks North Star Borough, the western half of Southeast Fairbanks Census Area, and a portion of southern Yukon–Koyukuk Census Area. [8] In its Fall 2013 ranking of television markets by population, Arbitron ranked the Fairbanks market 202nd in the United States.
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However, because KUWL broadcast in the reserved band, it could not be used to operate a commercial radio station. However, one group had a license that could: KSUA at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, which had operated on a commercial basis from 1984 to a financial collapse in 1993. In August 1995, Borealis and the university struck a ...
In the 1950s and 60s, WANN Radio in Annapolis became a beacon for Black listeners by playing music and broadcasting voices that other mainstream stations ignored.