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Channel 6 radio stations in the United States; List of 50 kW AM radio stations in the United States; List of Air1 stations; List of college radio stations in the United States; List of community radio stations in the United States; List of FM broadcast translators used as primary stations; List of jazz radio stations in the United States
Following is a list of FCC-licensed community radio stations in the United States, including both full-power and low-power non-commercial educational services. The list is divided into two sections: Full-power community stations; Low-power community stations
Pages in category "Community radio stations in the United States" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 376 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. (previous page)
United Press International Radio Network; United Stations Radio Network (the original version, merged into Westwood One; the similarly named United Stations Radio Networks was a revival based on this version and is still in operation) Washington News Desk; Waitt Radio Networks (now owned by Dial Global) Westinghouse Broadcasting Company (Group W)
Eventually a small number of channel 6 LPTV stations determined it was more profitable to operate as de facto radio stations, although this had not been anticipated by the FCC. On August 1, 2002 KZND-LP, a channel 6 LPTV station in Anchorage, Alaska, began promoting itself as a musical format radio station on 87.7 MHz. [16]
WOWD-LP ("wow-dee") is a Variety formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Takoma Park, Maryland, serving a potential terrestrial audience of 250,000 [4] listeners in Takoma Park, College Park and Hyattsville in Maryland, along with parts of Northeast and Northwest Washington, D.C. [1] [5] WOWD-LP is owned and operated by Historic Takoma, Inc. [6]
The move ends a 57-year run for 880 as New York's all-news radio station, and the end of the station's 96-year run as CBS Radio Network's flagship station, 78 of those years under the call sign WCBS. WCBS's remaining programming merged onto its sister station and erstwhile rival WINS beginning August 26.
In the 1970s, the AM station switched to a country music format, with national news supplied by the ABC Information Radio Network. [7] On October 1, 1982, WEAT moved to a talk radio format. On April 16, 1984, it became adult contemporary station WCGY, emphasizing 1960s and 1970s music; it would devote 25 percent of its playlist to current music ...