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Sacramento hourly news
Sacramento hourly news






King would later be hired by Nancy Pelosi as her top aide when she took over the California Democratic Party in 1981 and later served as the party's executive director and as a consultant. Her actions resulted in a commendation from two regions of Sigma Delta Chi. The revelation spread and forced Reagan to admit its veracity it also prompted a state tax board agent to interview King, hoping to learn more about the leak, but the journalist refused to divulge her source. KERS's most notable moment would come on April 30, 1971, when student reporter Rosemarie King broke a bombshell story on her newscast: that Governor Ronald Reagan had not paid any state income tax in 1970. By 1971, KERS's musical programming was largely progressive rock and jazz. It had nearly doubled its output, being on air 95 hours a week notable features included the telecast of all Sacramento State basketball games, home and away, as well as music recitals from the campus. Also installed at this time were a second production room, more offices and a wire service hookup. Sacramento State applied in 1967 to increase KERS's effective radiated power to 5,350 watts and move to 90.7 MHz the FCC approved the change on June 22, 1967, and the new facility was activated in April 1968. Initially broadcasting seven hours a day, students produced most of the programming on the new outlet it also aired taped lectures from faculty and other cultural programs. The Federal Communications Commission approved the application on June 17, and KERS began broadcasting October 5. Howard Martin had been the primary exponent for a radio station on campus. On April 21, 1964, Sacramento State College applied for a new noncommercial radio station to broadcast with 10 watts at 88.9 MHz Dr. 1.3 Multiple stations and a frequency swap.KXJZ's NPR news programming is also available on three high-power repeaters and three low-power translators in California and northern Nevada. In 2006, KXPR and KXJZ (88.9 FM) swapped frequencies. In 1978, KERS went silent as it converted to a public radio station as KXPR, which began operations April 2, 1979. KXJZ operates on the older of the two frequencies, which had been established in 1964 as KERS, a student-run station at Sacramento State. Both stations are owned by Sacramento State and share studio operations on campus, and KXJZ's transmitter is located near Rio Linda. The two stations are known as CapRadio (formerly Capital Public Radio). KXJZ's sister station in Sacramento is KXPR (88.9 FM), which broadcasts classical music and a few non-classical programs at the weekend. It also offers a continuous 24-hour commercial-free classical music radio format on its HD2 subcarrier. It airs programming from National Public Radio (NPR) and other public radio producers and distributors, as well as locally produced news and public affairs programs. KXJZ (90.9 FM) is a public radio station in Sacramento, California.








Sacramento hourly news