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Cherry Ripe is the nickname of a discontinued shortwave numbers station that used several bars from the folk song "Cherry Ripe" as an interval signal. The station, which appears to have commenced transmissions in the late 1960s, is believed to have been controlled by the British Secret Intelligence Service .
Cuban numbers station HM01 A recording of The Gong numbers station, run by the National People's Army of the German Democratic Republic, from 1988.. A numbers station is a shortwave radio station characterized by broadcasts of formatted numbers, which are believed to be addressed to intelligence officers operating in foreign countries. [1]
Cherry Ripe, a numbers station of identical format, is believed to have been broadcast from Guam, and later Australia, for agents working in Asia. Like the Lincolnshire Poacher, it used several bars from its namesake folk song as its interval signal. [4] [5] Cherry Ripe ceased broadcasting in December 2009. [6]
Frequency City of License [1] [2] Licensee Format [3] WAJM: 88.9 FM: Atlantic City: Atlantic City Board of Education: Freeform/Educational WAWZ: 99.1 FM: Zarephath: Pillar of Fire Church: Contemporary Christian WAYV: 95.1 FM: Atlantic City: iHM Licenses, LLC: Top 40 (CHR) WBBO: 98.5 FM: Ocean Acres: Press Communications, LLC: Top 40 (CHR) WBGO ...
KBLG was owned by Cherry Creek Radio until 2010 when it was acquired by Connoisseur Media along with sister stations KRZN-FM and KRKX-FM. For the remaining Cherry Creek Radio station KYYA-FM , it was announced on May 24, 2010, that the frequency of 93.3 FM would be operated by Elenbaas Media Inc, while Elenbaas's 730 AM frequency would be ...
The station went on the air as KGRU on April 22, 1987. On May 1, 1988, the station changed its call sign to the current KARY-FM. [3]On May 26, 2010, it was rumoured that KARY's parent company, New Northwest Broadcasters, stations could possibly be sold in the near future.
Though 2024 seems a distant memory, the years’ top beauty trends — bobs, bold blush and cherry everything — are still dominating. And there was yet another trend that perhaps not even ...
Amplitude is a 2003 rhythm video game developed by Harmonix and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 2.It is the sequel to Frequency (2001).. In Amplitude the player controls a beat blaster ship across a lane of six tracks, each track representing a musical instrument and containing note gems that the player shoots at in time with the music.