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Danny Gallagher with Boogie

An episode of the Radio Borders News podcast, hosted by Radio Borders News, titled "Danny Gallagher with Boogie" was published on January 23, 2015 and runs 3 minutes.

January 23, 2015 ·3m · Radio Borders News

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#25thbirthday

Unique By Nature Sage Tanguay WVMR hit the airwaves on July 9th, 1981 as a lone AM community station in the National Radio Quiet Zone. 40 years later, Allegheny Mountain Radio has grown into a network that spans Pocahontas (WV), Highland, and Bath (VA) counties – straddling the West Virginia-Virginia Border and continues to provide hyper-local news and music programming to the Allegheny Highlands. Unique By Nature is a limited podcast series which explores the establishment and development of Allegheny Mountain Radio. While our goal is to celebrate the history of our station, we are also hoping to ask (and maybe answer) some big questions about the nature of community media. Unique By Nature is produced by Allegheny Mountain Radio Soundcast Sound Advertising Bureau Det här är Soundcast – en podcast som ger röst till experter kring allt som rör ämnet ljud!Inspirerande och lärorik lyssning från Sound Advertising Bureau – SAB – Sveriges branschorganisation för ljudburen kommunikation.Bakom SAB står Acast, Bauer Media, NENT Radio och Spotify.  This is Soundcast – a podcast from the trade organization for soundborne communication in Sweden: Sound Advertising Bureau, an initiative by Acast, Buer Media, NENT Radio and Spotify. Since some of our episodes come in English, we appreciate to be listened and heard beyond our borders when possible. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. The Border War Podcast 🎙The Border War Podcast🎙 Tune in to help us combat the world of crappy local sports talk radio by listening to our slightly less crappy sports podcast each week! It's time to pick a side with BG & TanMan!! A Handbook of the Kavirondo Language - Part III - Dholuo Phrase Book by Fathers of St. Joseph's Society Loyal Books Kenyan Luo (also known as "Dholuo") belongs to the Luo grouping within the Western Nilotic grouping of the Nilo-Saharan language family. It is spoken by the Luo people of Kenya and Tanzania, numbering about 3 million, who occupy parts of the eastern shore of Lake Victoria and areas south of there. It is used for broadcasts on KBC (Kenya Broadcasting Corporation, formerly the Voice of Kenya) and Radio Ramogi. Dholuo is closely related to Lango, Acholi and Dhopadhola of Uganda. It is not to be confused with the fellow Western Nilotic language Luwo (spoken in Sudan); in addition, both of the aforementioned languages Lango and Acholi have the alternative names Lwo or Lwoo. A Handbook of the Kavirondo Language, published in Nairobi in 1920 by "Some Fathers of St. Joseph's Society", is one of the earliest written accounts of the Dholuo language. The authors wrote: "The language treated in this Grammar is spoken by a tribe inhabiting a great part of Kavirondo. On the north they border on the
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