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Volunteer engineers handle the technical end for the station, which broadcasts from a tower in Shady Grove.
Low power means it can be heard well on the radio for about an 8-mile radius based on conditions, and Burkholder said he can tune in from Chambersburg, depending on what vehicle he is in.
However, WRGG s diverse programming has the ears of listeners from across the country and around the world, thanks to livestreaming on the WRGG website, devices like Alexa and apps such as TuneIn.
On the airwaves I got a $100 donation from someone in Dallas who listens to me in the afternoon, said Burkholder, who is behind the mic from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. three days a week as a DJ.
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RANSOM TWP. At the Ransom Township supervisors’ meeting Monday, chairman Dennis Macheska said that the Pennsylvania State Historical Preservation is looking for sites in Ransom Township to include in their survey.
He asked for public input. He said that the responses are due on Friday, May 7. Supervisor Allan Myers announced that a Lutheran church, which the supervisors recently renovated, and its neighboring cemeteries, will be submitted to the preservation.
“If there’s anything else you can think of that’s historical in Ransom, let us know,” he told the public.
Solicitor Edmond Scacchitti added that the site has to have historical significance in some way. Things mentioned by the public during the meeting were a mill by the creek in Milwaukee, the Mount Dewey Community Hall, which used to be a schoolhouse, and the post office in Ransom Township.
For the first time in nine years, the annual legislative session won t include Pat Myers.
His fate was not in the hands of voters, who picked and chose which legislators to send to Topeka. Nor is he a lobbyist or reporter, who come and go in the halls of the capitol, with new faces seemingly cropping up every session.
Instead, Myers is one of the army of staffers who are hired on a temporary basis to help serve as vital cogs in the machine that is the state legislature. Serving in a variety of roles, he found himself gravitating towards work as an office assistant for several members, most recently Rep. Fred Patton, R-Topeka.