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・ Southern Ontario Gothic
・ Southern Ontario Junior A Hockey League
・ Southern Ontario Junior Hockey League
・ Southern Ontario Library Service
・ Southern Ontario Model United Nations Association
・ Southern Ontario Railway
・ Southern Ontario Tornado Outbreak of 2005
・ Southern Ontario Tornado Outbreak of 2009
・ Southern Oral History Program
・ Southern Oregon
・ Southern Oregon AVA
・ Southern Oregon Coast Range
・ Southern Oregon Fuego
・ Southern Oregon General Hospital Heliport
・ Southern Oregon Land Conservancy
Southern Oregon Public Television
・ Southern Oregon Raiders
・ Southern Oregon Raiders football
・ Southern Oregon Raiders football under Howard Hobson
・ Southern Oregon Raiders football under Roy McNeal
・ Southern Oregon Raiders football, 1937–38
・ Southern Oregon Raiders football, 2006–08
・ Southern Oregon RiverDawgs
・ Southern Oregon Spartans
・ Southern Oregon Speedway
・ Southern Oregon Timberjacks
・ Southern Oregon University
・ Southern Organization for Live Action Reenactments
・ Southern Oromo language
・ Southern Ostrobothnia


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Southern Oregon Public Television : ウィキペディア英語版
Southern Oregon Public Television

Southern Oregon Public Television is the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member Public television for most of southwest region of the U.S. state of Oregon. It operates KSYS, channel 8 in Medford and KFTS, digital channel 33 in Klamath Falls.
In 1965, Oregon Educational Broadcasting, forerunner of Oregon Public Broadcasting, persuaded the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to reassign channel 8 from Brookings to Medford. OEB intended to make channel 8 the third station in its television network, which at that time included flagship KOAC-TV in Corvallis and KOAP-TV (now KOPB-TV) in Portland. Southern Oregon was the only region of the state without public television. However, OEB backed out after a protracted battle with several commercial applicants. The license eventually went to Liberty Television, owners of KEZI in Eugene.
However, the owners of the two commercial stations in the area—Bill Smullin of KTVM-TV (now KOBI) and Ray Johnson of KMED-TV (now KTVL) -- helped a new nonprofit corporation, Southern Oregon Educational Company, buy the channel 8 construction permit from Liberty. They also pledged payments of $50,000 once the station signed on. Getting the funds to sign on proved more difficult than expected. With the FCC permit about to run out, KSYS went on the air on January 17, 1977 with the strongest signal of any station in the region, at 191,000 watts. This was still not enough to cover Klamath Falls, and SOEC (later renamed Southern Oregon Public Television, Inc.) immediately applied for another station to cover that region. However, it took 12 more years before KFTS went on the air in January 1989.
The two stations are the only public television stations in the state not affiliated with OPB, but occasionally air some of OPB's programs.
==Digital television==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Southern Oregon Public Television」の詳細全文を読む



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