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・ Who Done It? (1949 film)
・ Who Done It? (1956 film)
・ Who Drinks My Beer When I'm Gone
・ Who Drives Me Crazy
・ WHO Drug Dictionary
・ Who Dunit
・ Who Dunnit
・ Who Else!
・ WHO Expert Committee on Biological Standardization
・ WHO Expert Committee on Leprosy
・ Who Fears Death
・ Who Fears the Devil?
・ WHNT-TV
・ WHNZ
・ Who
WHO (AM)
・ Who (magazine)
・ Who (pronoun)
・ Who (Unix)
・ Who Am I (B1A4 album)
・ Who Am I (Casting Crowns song)
・ Who Am I (Drapht album)
・ Who Am I (Sim Simma)
・ Who Am I (Starboy Nathan song)
・ Who Am I (Will Young song)
・ Who Am I 2015
・ Who Am I Living For?
・ Who Am I This Time?
・ Who Am I This Time? (film)
・ Who Am I to Say


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WHO (AM) : ウィキペディア英語版
WHO (AM)

WHO is a iHeartMedia radio station broadcasting 50,000 watts on 1040 AM from Des Moines, Iowa with a news/talk format. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The station can be heard over most of the continental United States during nighttime hours. During daytime hours, its transmitter power and Iowa's flat land (with near-perfect soil conductivity) allows it to be heard in almost all of Iowa, as well as parts of Minnesota, Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas, and Wisconsin.
==History==
WHO first began broadcasting on April 11, 1924, from the top floor of the Liberty Building in downtown Des Moines.〔http://www.skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=18905〕 The station was originally owned by Bankers Life, which is now the Principal Financial Group. After the FRC's General Order 40 reallocated frequencies in 1928, WHO ended up sharing time on the same frequency with WOC in Davenport. In 1930, B. J. Palmer, owner of WOC, bought WHO, and the two stations operated together as WOC-WHO until a new 50,000-watt transmitter near Mitchellville began operating on November 11, 1933. (WOC ceased broadcasting that day but returned on another frequency a year later.) WHO moved from 1000 AM to the current 1040 AM on March 29, 1941, as a result of the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement. Today WHO is one of only two 50,000-watt AM radio stations in Iowa (KXEL in Waterloo is the other, however, it is not on a "1928 Band Plan" clear channel like
WHO, but is on a NARBA band plan clear channel, dually allocated to The Bahamas (Class I-A) and to Waterloo, IA (Class I-B)), though WHO's signal is non-directional and KXEL's is directional, as are most, but not all Class I-Bs.〔http://www.radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/finder?call=kxel&x=0&y=0&sr=Y&s=C〕
In 1948, WHO-FM 100.3 signed on the air; WHO-FM has changed formats and call letters several times since then and now broadcasts as KDRB, "100.3 The Bus." In 1954, WHO-TV began broadcasting on channel 13.
WHO was owned by the Palmer family until Jacor Broadcasting purchased the station in 1997; Jacor merged with Clear Channel Communications a year later. WHO and the other Clear Channel radio stations in Des Moines (KDRB, KDXA, KKDM, and KXNO) continued to share a building with WHO-TV until they moved into a new facility in 2005.
For many years, WHO has used an owl as its mascot—an apparent play on its call letters.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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