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The studio design at WNWI was the inspiration for the large plate-glass window studios seen today for WGN radio on Michigan Avenue in Chicago. WBBM-TV even used the over-engineered tower structure at WNWI as a TV antenna relay for a brief period in the 1960s to improve TV service to Northwest Indiana until the Sears Tower was built and the CBS ...
He is the author of a series of radio and TV interviews with the highest Yugoslavian and foreign statesmen. He is the winner of the greatest journalist awards in his company and in Serbia, a journalist who was in the last fifteen years interviewed and quoted in several dozen of greatest world magazines (the Washington Post , the New York Times ...
TV Slagalica (Serbian Cyrillic: ТВ Слагалица; English: TV Puzzle) or simply Slagalica is a Serbian quiz show produced by RTS and airs on RTS 1.It is based on Des chiffres et des lettres, a French game show.
The business office and studios were located in Lansing, Illinois. [1] They are currently on Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago. [4] The station originally aired a mixture of religious and ethnic programming. [5] In 1992, the station was sold to Douglas Broadcasting, for $2 million. [6] [7] In 1994, the station joined Douglas Broadcasting's new ...
The Chicago Tribune confirmed his death per an announcement released by WLS-AM 890. Biondi is one of the earliest personalities to play classic rock […] Dick Biondi, Chicago Radio Legend, Dies at 90
WSBC hired the nation's first full-time African-American radio announcer, Jack Cooper, who on November 3, 1929, began hosting The All-Negro Hour, a vaudevillesque entertainment program. [18] [19] On April 1, 1933, Gene Dyer purchased WSBC from C.J. Gordon, who had operated it since August 1932. [20] At the time, Dyer also owned WGES in Chicago ...
WSSD (88.1 MHz, "The Blues Station") was a non-commercial radio station licensed for Chicago, Illinois, United States. [1] It was an all-blues station and its 10 watt signal covered only the South Side of Chicago. [2] The station went silent for technical upgrades on June 25, 2014.
From January 2010 to April 2011, if you bought shares in companies when James J. Mongan joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a 26.8 percent return on your investment, compared to a 15.2 percent return from the S&P 500.