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WEOS
WEOS (89.5 FM) is a public radio station licensed to Geneva, New York, broadcasting across the Finger Lakes region of New York. In addition to its main frequency, the station broadcasts on a relay transmitter at 90.3FM in Geneva.
WEOS, founded in 1949, is owned by the board of trustees of The Colleges of the Seneca, Inc., the legal name of Hobart and William Smith Colleges. The station's format is primarily public radio, with a focus on news/talk shows.
WEOS is an affiliate of National Public Radio, Public Radio Exchange, American Public Media and Pacifica Radio. In addition, it acquires similar programming from the Public Radio Satellite System, the internet, and local sources.
WEOS also maintains an active "community calendar" listings of local events. The station also carries special broadcasts of lectures, panel discussions, symposiums and live concerts from arts centers and other colleges in its region.
Besides its news/talk/information programs, the station schedules a few hours of music shows on weekdays and several hours on weekends. Some programming is produced locally by volunteer community DJs and also Hobart and William Smith students.
WEOS reaches most of the central Finger Lakes region of New York State. There are two FM transmitters: a primary and a repeater or "translator" station. Both broadcast exactly the same programming.
WITH 90.1FM: Related to WEOS is WITH 90.1FM (licensed to Ithaca, New York) broadcasting from the WSQG (WSKG) 90.9FM tower in North Lansing, with 1,000 watts ERP (omnidirectional). WITH broadcasts a separate programming schedule from WEOS, focusing mostly on Triple-A music. WITH is a partnership endeavor between WEOS and WXXI in Rochester.
WEOS started on May 6, 1949, as a carrier current radio station at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, primarily as a means of rebroadcasting recorded lectures from Western Civilization or other classes for students to either re-hear, or in some cases, hear for the first time if they missed class. However, there are records and citations that mention broadcast experiments and other related efforts in earlier years, one involving the broadcast of a Hobart and Union College football game in 1920.
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WEOS
WEOS (89.5 FM) is a public radio station licensed to Geneva, New York, broadcasting across the Finger Lakes region of New York. In addition to its main frequency, the station broadcasts on a relay transmitter at 90.3FM in Geneva.
WEOS, founded in 1949, is owned by the board of trustees of The Colleges of the Seneca, Inc., the legal name of Hobart and William Smith Colleges. The station's format is primarily public radio, with a focus on news/talk shows.
WEOS is an affiliate of National Public Radio, Public Radio Exchange, American Public Media and Pacifica Radio. In addition, it acquires similar programming from the Public Radio Satellite System, the internet, and local sources.
WEOS also maintains an active "community calendar" listings of local events. The station also carries special broadcasts of lectures, panel discussions, symposiums and live concerts from arts centers and other colleges in its region.
Besides its news/talk/information programs, the station schedules a few hours of music shows on weekdays and several hours on weekends. Some programming is produced locally by volunteer community DJs and also Hobart and William Smith students.
WEOS reaches most of the central Finger Lakes region of New York State. There are two FM transmitters: a primary and a repeater or "translator" station. Both broadcast exactly the same programming.
WITH 90.1FM: Related to WEOS is WITH 90.1FM (licensed to Ithaca, New York) broadcasting from the WSQG (WSKG) 90.9FM tower in North Lansing, with 1,000 watts ERP (omnidirectional). WITH broadcasts a separate programming schedule from WEOS, focusing mostly on Triple-A music. WITH is a partnership endeavor between WEOS and WXXI in Rochester.
WEOS started on May 6, 1949, as a carrier current radio station at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, primarily as a means of rebroadcasting recorded lectures from Western Civilization or other classes for students to either re-hear, or in some cases, hear for the first time if they missed class. However, there are records and citations that mention broadcast experiments and other related efforts in earlier years, one involving the broadcast of a Hobart and Union College football game in 1920.