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WKZO (590 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Kalamazoo, Michigan. It is owned by Midwest Communications, Inc., and airs a talk radio format. The studios and offices are on West Main Street in Kalamazoo. WKZO's transmitter is a four-tower array on McKinley Street at 21st Street North in Cooper Township, Michigan. [2]
WWMT (channel 3) is a television station licensed to Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States, serving West Michigan as an affiliate of CBS.The station is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group, and maintains studios on West Maple Street in Kalamazoo; its transmitter is located in northwest Yankee Springs Township on Chief Noonday Road/M-179 near Patterson Road.
WKZO (AM), a radio station (590 AM) licensed to serve Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States; WZOX, a radio station (96.5 FM) licensed to serve Portage, Michigan, which held the call sign WKZO-FM from 2010 to 2013; WWMT, a television station (channel 8, virtual 3) licensed to serve Kalamazoo, Michigan, which held the call sign WKZO-TV from 1950 to 1985
Emergency responders along an icy Interstate 94 in Comstock Township, Michigan, ran for their lives Thursday morning when a box truck driver lost control, skidded along the slippery highway and ...
A massive pileup occurred on Interstate 94 on Monday morning just west of Kalamazoo, Michigan, forcing the highway's eastbound lanes to be shut down amid lake-effect snow squalls. Video from the ...
WVFM 106.5 - Kalamazoo - Variety Hits; WKZO 106.9 - Kalamazoo - News/Talk (FM translator for AM 590) WTNR 107.3 - Greenville/Grand Rapids - Country; WRKR 107.7 - Portage/Battle Creek/Kalamazoo - Classic Rock; AM radio stations that originate or can be heard over the air in Kalamazoo: WKZO 590 - Kalamazoo - News/Talk - (FM translator at 106.9)
WKMI (1360 AM) is a radio station licensed to Kalamazoo, Michigan broadcasting a talk format. WKMI is an affiliate of the Grand Valley State Laker football radio network. [2] WKMI, which began broadcasting in 1947, was a highly rated Top 40 music station from the 1950s through the 1970s.
For half a century, the economy in Connell, Washington, was hotter than oil. Up until last fall, this plant processed 300 million pounds of potatoes into french fries every year.