Yea Eadurdo, radio is a growth-industry and crappy HD radios will save it!
"Steve" wrote in message
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On Jan 8, 11:51 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message
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On Jan 8, 10:46 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message
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No, I signed some documents with my lawyers, and they filed them
within
hours. A socialist government could not go against a worker's
cooperative,
a
day old or a century old. I lost the stations, but not to the
government.
I
still grin when I imagine the faces of the military junta guys when
they
realized they had a Catch 22 on their hands.
The government went against the cooperative. So much for that story.
Nope, not so. Cooperative operated 590 and 810 for about 30 years.
Foolishly, they abandoned the FM simulcast licenses and when AM started
to
die in the larger cities of Ecuador, the stations went silent.
It was merely called the "cooperative". It was the government.
It was cooperative president Ulpiano Orozco. Write the Ecuadorian
Association of Broadcasters and ask.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I did.
I doubt it. Considering they don't have an office, just a mailing address,
there is no way you could have an answer so soon.
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