About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 28. Chapters: 1987 radio programme debuts, Radio stations established in 1987, Radio Courtoisie, NU 107, Radio Le Mans, KOIL, KWVR-FM, KCKX, Radio Maria, CKUT-FM, WTRY-FM, WCKA, WAAO-FM, WPTR, Flying the Flag, WFNQ, WUGA, WEUP-FM, Sports Byline USA, WMOU, WSMS, Radio Nueva Vida, Heart Bath, DZAR, WYFK, KJJK, WNWF, KWVE, DZSR, WVVL, WQSO, KDVE, KRAB, WYMM, WSRA, Ram FM, WDIZ, WJYZ, DYRJ, KBSR, WWRF, WVVE, WOIZ, KAPA, KOYN, DXDJ, WQMJ, KIFX, WWVO, DYBT, WQKI-FM, WLTQ-FM, DWGB, DXRJ, WJNX, DYBQ, DXNU, WAVV, WAFZ-FM, WJYO, Chugoku Communication Network, DWCL, DWEJ, You Start, I'll Join In, The Party Party, 1987 in British radio, Citizens, Ohrenbar. Excerpt: Radio Courtoisie is a French radio station and cultural associative union created in 1987 by Jean Ferre. Serge de Beketch was also among its founders. Radio Courtoisie defines itself as the "free radio of the real country and the francophone world," declaring itself to be "open to all people of the political right, from Francois Bayrou to Jean-Marie Le Pen." Others, such as Christiane Chombeau of the newspaper Le Monde consider it as "open to the right and the extreme-right." In September 1981, Bernadette d'Angevilliers and Philippe Malaud, former minister under Charles de Gaulle and Georges Pompidou, created Radio Solidarite, with the support of Yannick Urrien. This free radio station had associations with RPR and with the UDF and was strongly opposed to the political left of Francois Mitterrand. At the time, Ferre was a radio and television columnist for Figaro Magazine, of which he had been a founder with Louis Pauwels. His columns, frequently kind to Radio Solidarite, brought him to the notice of d'Angevilliers who proposed a radio collaboration with him. In May and June 1982, Ferre created the broadcast formula of the Libre Journal: an hour and a half programme each evening b...