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WSPF (defunct) : ウィキペディア英語版 | WSPF (defunct) WSPF (1000 AM) was a radio station licensed to Hickory, North Carolina, known as "Channel One Radio". The station had a 5000-watt daytime-only signal, with a transmitter on Tate Boulevard and studios at Second Avenue Southeast and N.C. 127. ==History== WSPF signed on in October 1963 with a rock and roll format. In March 1982, the format changed to modern country.〔 On August 8, 1985, morning DJ Gary "Mountain Man" McMahan began raising funds to rescue 4-year-old Barney the Buffalo, who weighed . Barney escaped from a farm in Franklin County, North Carolina, attacked a car, and was purchased for $1 by E.B. Harris, who vowed to slaughter the animal unless someone raised the money to take care of him. McMahan made Barney his show's mascot and vowed to raise $1000. After three sleepless nights for McMahan, the goal was met August 10. Newton musician Buddy Rhodes wrote "The Ballad of Barney the Buffalo" and recorded it with his band Hard Times for WSPF. A Philadelphia radio station interviewed McMahan, and the station received calls form San Diego, California and Monroe, Washington. A store at an area mall printed "Bucks for Barney" t-shirts, which bartenders at one area location wore while asking customers for money.〔Foon Rhee, "Disc Jockey Raising Money to Rescue Buffalo," ''The Charlotte Observer'', August 9, 1985.〕〔Lisa Pullen, "Buffalo Saved from Slaughter," ''The Charlotte Observer'', August 11, 1985.〕 Eventually, WSPF raised $1,600, of which $1,135.13 went to Harris; the rest went to charity. A.B. Cooke's Buffalo Ranch, a 71-acre park with a petting zoo and a lake in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, took Barney. In January 1986, Cooke sold the ranch, but WSPF operations manager Scott Conley said a Catawba County, North Carolina farmer agreed to take Barney if necessary.〔"Will Ranch Sale Displace Barney?" ''The Charlotte Observer'', January 12, 1986.〕〔Kathy Haight, "Mooo. Baaaah. Oink. Hissssss. Quit Your Squawking. There Are Plenty of Animals to See Without Going All the Way to the Zoo," ''The Charlotte Observer'', February 7, 1992.〕 Willis Deal owned Piedmont Broadcasting, which owned the station for its entire history. On December 31, 1987, WSPF signed off for the last time. Deal, retiring at age 68, sold the property for $450,000 to Westcom Ltd., the owners of WIRC and WXRC. DJ Scott Conley, who had been part of WSPF for 18 years, moved to WKGX in nearby Lenoir.〔Bill Chapman, "WSPF Signs Off in Hickory," ''The Charlotte Observer'', December 31, 1987.〕
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