WOJB explained

WOJB
City:Reserve, Wisconsin
Area:Northwestern Wisconsin
Branding:"Woodland Community Radio"
Airdate:March 1, 1982
Frequency:88.9 MHz
Callsign Meaning:W-OJiBwa
Format:Community radio
Erp:100,000 watts
Haat:184m (604feet)
Facility Id:36197
Class:C1
Owner:Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwa Public Broadcasting Corporation
Website:www.wojb.org
Licensing Authority:FCC

WOJB is a National Public Radio member on 88.9 MHz, and serves northwestern Wisconsin from the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation southeast of Hayward, Wisconsin, United States. Founded in 1982 with the intention of bridging the culture gap between the Native American population in the area and their non-Native neighbors in a time of heightened racial tension, the station is now a fixture of the northwestern Wisconsin airwaves, presenting a variety of programming, much of it presenting the culture of the local Ojibwa community and the wider Anishinaabe culture.[1]

The station also webcasts its programming via its website.

See also

Notes

  1. http://www.nativetelecom.org/news/nlv5i1/wojb.html Newsletter Vol. 5, issue 1: Station Profile: WOJB

External links

45.871°N -91.349°W