WCLU-FM

WCLU-FM (102.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting an Adult Contemporary format. Licensed to Munfordville, Kentucky, United States, the station serves the Bowling Green area. The station is currently owned by Royse Radio, Inc.[1]

WCLU-FM
CityMunfordville, Kentucky
Broadcast areaBowling Green
Frequency102.3 MHz
Programming
FormatAdult Contemporary
Ownership
OwnerRoyse Radio, Inc
Sister stationsWCLU-AM
History
First air dateAugust 1, 1964
Former call signsWLOC-FM (1979-1996)
WMCC (1996-1998)
Technical information
Facility ID61047
ClassA
ERP2,800 watts
HAAT125.0 meters
Transmitter coordinates37°10′41″N 85°55′15″W
Repeater(s)98.5 FM W253BN Glasgow

History

The station first signed on the air WCLU-FM on August 1, 1964.[2] The station's first callsign change took place on April 2, 1979, when the calls were changed to WLOC-FM to match that of then-sister station WLOC (AM).[3] It began broadcasting a Variety format, featuring a mix of country and adult contemporary music. The station became solely a Hot AC-formatted station when the callsign became WMCC on January 30, 1996.[3] It was acquired by Jacor in 1997. The station reverted to its original WCLU-FM calls in May 1998, two months after being acquired by its current owner, Royse Radio, Inc. The purpose of the most recent callsign change was to match that of Glasgow-based sister station WCLU-AM. The adult contemporary format remained with the station.

gollark: It would be important to make it reasonably easy to add and update packages.
gollark: Well, it would be less useful if there wasn't a good central repo too.
gollark: "Search packages" is `pacman -Ss [whatever]`, "install" is `pacman -S [whatever]`, "update repos and update all packages" (it is apparently unsafe to update only individual packages) is `pacman -Syu`.
gollark: You pick a "subcommand" with a capital-letter flag like `-S` (sync, which seems to be a fancy word for "Install packages"), `-Q` (query information aboud stuff) and then pass extra flags to configure how that works.
gollark: > what's a pacman-like CLI?Arch Linux (btw I use that) has a neat package manager called `pacman`.> what counts as package updating support?Updating packages without breaking things horribly, including not overwriting user-edited (config) files.> and library interface as in an API you can use from scripts?Precisely.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.