KOFA (AM)

KOFA (1320 AM) is a public radio station airing a wide variety of music programs, along with a few news and talk programs. Licensed to Yuma, Arizona, United States, the station serves the Yuma area. The station is currently owned by Arizona Western College and features programming from National Public Radio and Public Radio International.[1]

KOFA
CityYuma, Arizona
Broadcast areaYuma, Arizona/El Centro, California
Frequency1320 kHz
BrandingBorder Radio 94.7 FM - 1320 AM
SloganVoices of the Border, Fresh from Yuma
Programming
FormatPublic Radio, Full service
AffiliationsBBC World Service
Ownership
OwnerArizona Western College
Sister stationsKAWC-FM
History
First air dateSeptember 6, 1959 (as KBLU)
Former call signsKBLU (1959-1970)
KAWC (1970-2017)
Call sign meaningKing OF Arizona silver mine
Technical information
Facility ID2758
ClassD
Power730 watts day
106 watts night
Transmitter coordinates32°41′22″N 114°30′0″W
Translator(s)94.7 MHz (K234CZ, Yuma)
Links
WebcastListen Live music
Websiteborderradioaz.org

History

1320 AM began life as the original KBLU, signing on September 6, 1959. When Eller Telecasting and Combined Communications merged in 1969, the newly formed group had to divest one of KBLU or KYUM at 560, choosing to keep the latter and donate the former to Arizona Western College. On January 1, 1970, the donation took effect, and 1320 AM signed off with the callsign changing to KAWC; 560 AM changed to KBLU.

Arizona Western College immediately relocated the transmitter to its campus and instituted a public radio format, which signed on for the first time on July 11, 1970.

In 2009, the K-Jazz Radio Network with its transmitters in northwestern and northern Arizona entered into agreement with Colorado River Public Media, by which those transmitters simulcast 1320 AM on weekdays.

The station changed its callsign to the current KOFA on July 13, 2017.

gollark: I wonder if you could somehow find the *most* compact possible representation.
gollark: There was something like that on the Lua Users wiki actually.
gollark: If you pass the unserializer very safe\* functions like `load` and `debug.setupvalue` and all that, you could serialize almost anything!
gollark: I was looking at trying to address the main issue with it - the possibility of```luatextutils.unserialise [[ (function() while true do end end)()]]```things (its _ENV is sandboxed, so it can't do anything other than denial of service attacks) but I think you would *basically* need a parser to prevent that.
gollark: `textutils.unserialize` is really bad and just uses `load` internally, see.

References


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