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・ WVNP
・ WVNR
・ WVNS-DT2
・ WVNS-TV
・ WVNT
・ WVNU
・ WVNV
・ WVNW
・ WVNY
・ WVNZ
・ WVOA-LP
・ WVOB
・ WVOC
・ WVOD
・ WVOE
WVOF
・ WVOG
・ WVOH
・ WVOH-FM
・ WVOI
・ WVOJ
・ WVOK
・ WVOK (AM)
・ WVOK-FM
・ WVOL
・ WVOM
・ WVOM-FM
・ WVON
・ WVOO-LP
・ WVOP


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WVOF : ウィキペディア英語版
WVOF

WVOF (88.5 FM) is a radio station licensed to Fairfield, Connecticut, USA. The station is owned by Fairfield University.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=WVOF Facility Record )〕 As of August 2008, the station has been a partner with Connecticut Public Radio and carries Connecticut Public Radio and NPR programming.
==History==
WVOF commenced operations in the spring of 1970 as a carrier current radio station heard on 620 AM serving the residence halls located in the quadrangle of Fairfield University. A carrier current system is a method of broadcasting utilizing the electrical wires in a building as an antenna. This type of operating does not require the station to be licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
In the early 1970s, then-station manager Stan Hrniak (who later went on to work for Connecticut public television) made the first application to the FCC for an FM license. The first antenna was placed on Canisius Hall. The station's broadcasts were piped into the Barone Campus Center. WVOF's record library was kept in the basement of Regis Hall and the early news broadcasts were produced with the aid of a UPI rip-and-read teletype. By 1976 there were two broadcast studios and one production studio in the cramped quarters.
Some of the early student personalities during that time 1970-76 included Hrniak, a senior when the station "went FM" who hosted music and news events, who is widely credited with being the single most influential person responsible for navigating the station's initiative to move to FM; Mick McCullough, who later became station manager and a music host;Bill O'Neal, a Maine native who worked professionally for a number of stations in Portland after graduating from Fairfield in 1972; Mary Beth Carmody, one of the station's first female hosts; Rich Mcheer, a hockey announcer when the Stags had a club hockey team that played at Bridgeport's Wonderland of Ice; and Doc Hynes, who was a music host and basketball play-by-play announcer who teamed with McCullough blending sports and comedy during game broadcasts, which occasionally got them in hot water with the university administration.
During the mid-1980s, the station was at the vanguard of the American alternative music scene, under the able leadership of Music Director Sean "The Hag" Hagearty. In 2002, the Fairfield University's worldwide, state-of-the-art radio station opened for business in a brand new three-studio complex in the John A. Barone Campus Center. WVOF regularly hears from listeners in South America, Europe, the West Coast and Canada.〔(WVOF to open new studios )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「WVOF」の詳細全文を読む



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