Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Nebraska Rural Radio Association: Country KNEB-FM: 94.1 FM: Scottsbluff: Nebraska Rural Radio Association: Country KNEF: 90.1 FM: Franklin: South Central Oklahoma Christian Broadcasting Inc. Southern gospel KNEN: 94.7 FM: Norfolk: Red Beacon Communications, LLC: Classic rock KNEY-LP: 100.9 FM: Kearney: Kearney SDA Radio: Religious Teaching KNFA ...
KQKY (105.9 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Top 40 (CHR) format. [2] Licensed to Kearney, Nebraska, United States, the station serves the Grand Island-Kearney area.The station is currently owned by NRG Media.
KOLN/KGIN also produces nightly newscasts, My News at 9, formerly Nebraska Central News and 10/11 Central Nebraska News, targeting all of the viewing area and featuring weather forecasts for both eastern (Lincoln) and central (Grand Island/Hastings/Kearney) Nebraska, which airs at 9 p.m. on KSNB's digital subchannel and KOLN/KGIN's digital ...
KVNO (90.7 FM) is a radio station with a classical music format in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. It is owned by the University of Nebraska Omaha (UNO) and broadcasts from studios on the university's Dodge Street campus and a transmitter facility co-sited with television station KMTV. The station is a media operations unit of UNO's College of ...
The Kearney Symphony Orchestra is the full orchestra for Kearney, Nebraska, consisting of community musicians from Central Nebraska, music instructors from the University of Nebraska-Kearney, and students from the University of Nebraska-Kearney and area high schools. [1] [2] The orchestra performs four concerts each year. The current director ...
Kearney County is a county located in the U.S. state of Nebraska. As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 6,688. [1] Its county seat is Minden. [2] The county was formed in 1860. It was named for Fort Kearny, which in turn was named for Brigade General Stephen W. Kearny. Kearney County is part of the Kearney Micropolitan ...
Kearney Hawks (2016–2017) The Viaero Center , [ 3 ] previously known as the Kearney Event Center and Firstier Event Center , is a 5,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Kearney, Nebraska . It opened in November 2000 as the Tri-City Arena .
Mentor A. Brown, founder of the paper. The paper was founded in 1888, and was first published on October 22, 1888. [2] [3] Its founders included Mentor A. Brown (1853-1932), formerly of the Beatrice Press, and R.H. Eaton, who together organized the Hub Printing Company to publish the paper and to take over the Central Nebraska Press which dated from 1873.