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・ WJHX
・ WJIA
・ WJIB
・ WJIC
・ WJIE-FM
・ WJIF
・ WJIH-LP
・ WJIK
・ WJIL
・ WJIM
・ WJIM (AM)
・ WJIM-FM
・ WJIP
・ WJIS
・ WJIT
WJIV
・ WJIZ-FM
・ WJJA
・ WJJA-LP
・ WJJC
・ WJJD
・ WJJF
・ WJJH
・ WJJJ
・ WJJK
・ WJJL
・ WJJM
・ WJJM (AM)
・ WJJM-FM
・ WJJN


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WJIV : ウィキペディア英語版
WJIV

WJIV ("Victory 101.9") is a commercial American Christian radio station licensed to Cherry Valley, New York. The signal coverage area includes the Capital District of Albany, the Mohawk Valley, Oneonta, and Utica/Rome. The transmitter tower is located about 3 miles (5 km) east of Cherry Valley village. The format of the station includes Christian talk and ministry programs, along with southern gospel music.
==History==
WJIV first signed on June 6, 1948 as WVCV, an affiliate of the Rural Radio Network, a service that provided farming news and rural entertainment to areas that generally lacked this type of specialized programming.
A call sign change to WRRC was made in 1953 to reinforce the station's "Rural Radio" identity. The Rural Radio Network survived until 1960, dropping most of the farm related programming in favor of an over-the-air simulcast of WQXR-FM New York, along with live weather reports from each of the stations in the network every hour.
On February 1, 1960, the network was purchased by the Ivy Broadcasting Company, a corporation headed by Woody Erdman. In April 1966, Ivy sold WJIV and the other four FM stations to Chenango and Unadilla Communications, a small upstate New York telephone company. In 1968, C&U was acquired by Continental Telephone, however FCC regulations prohibited control of broadcast licenses by large phone companies - so Continental was forced to divest WJIV.
Televangelist Pat Robertson acquired the five-station network as a tax-deductible gift.〔"The Autobiography of Pat Robertson: Shout It from the Housetops!", page 125. Bridge-Logos Publishers, 1987.〕 Mr. Robertson was already operating Channel 27 WYAH-TV and FM station WXRI in Virginia Beach, and incorporated the five upstate New York stations into his Christian Broadcasting Network on January 1, 1969.
Floyd Dykeman purchased WJIV from CBN on March 30, 1981, and kept the religious format. Dykeman increased the station's power to its current level in 1984, then sold the station to Detroit-based religious broadcaster Midwest Broadcasting in 2000.
The call sign WJIV had previously been assigned to the E.D. Rivers, Jr., station on 900 kHz in Savannah, Georgia. Midwest Broadcasting changed its name to Christian Broadcasting system in 2003 ().

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「WJIV」の詳細全文を読む



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