Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
On October 15, 1995, the station returned back on the air after a three-year hiatus as KRXZ with a country format, and finally on January 6, 1997, to the current KACO. [4] On June 29, 2019, KACO signed off Superstar Country at 8:58 Local time with Gone By Montgomery Gentry and at noon started stunting with Blake Shelton Goodbye Time.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
The first radio broadcast in Turkey began on May 6, 1927. In 1927, connection to New York City , London , Berlin , Vienna , Moscow and Tehran was established. In 1945, Turkey's first university radio, ITU Radio, was established and the first state radio, TRT , was established on May 1, 1964. [ 2 ]
Kaco may refer to: Kaco’ language, an Austro-Asiatic language of Vietnam; Kaco (drum), a type of shamanistic drum of the Ainu people; KACO (FM), a radio station licensed to Apache, Oklahoma, United States; Lake Kaco, Lempur, Jambi, Indonesia
Overall, Turkey is implementing a new foreign policy, aimed at expanding connections beyond the Western world, grounded in acknowledging historical, cultural, and political ties with the MENA and Central Asia; and the Turkish government is actively striving to establish Turkey as a global and regional leader. [27]
First international live broadcast from Munich Olympics: 9.9.1974 First 24-hour radio broadcast 22.3.1975 TRT represents Turkey in the Eurovision Song Contest. (Turkish performer takes the last place. But in later years, Turkish performers receive better results: in 1997 third place, in 2003 first place, in 2004 fourth place and in 2010 second ...
In 1996, Açık Radyo acted as a semi-official radio station for the UN HABITAT (II) Conference held in Istanbul, broadcasting bilingually for fifteen days. Since its second year of operation (1996) the station had presented a two-hour yearly wrap-up program, "Last Year in Perspective", on December 31 each year.
KECO began broadcasting on July 20, 1982; it was a country music station owned by Ronca Broadcasting, [5] a company controlled by Elk City farmer Ron Sewell. Ronca sold KECO to John B. Walton in 1984; Walton had previously been the licensee of KIKX in Tucson, Arizona, which had lost its FCC license and left the air in 1982 after a kidnapping hoax. [6]