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Scripps Health. Founded in 1924 by philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps, Scripps Health is a nonprofit integrated health care delivery system based in San Diego, California. Scripps treats more than 600,000 patients annually through the dedication of 3,000 affiliated physicians and more than 16,000 employees among its five acute-care hospital ...
Scripps News. Scripps News is an American news channel headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, and owned by the Scripps Networks division of the E. W. Scripps Company. It was previously known as Newsy, from its launch in 2008 [1] until December 31, 2022. Its content is available for free on OTT platforms including, FuboTV, Pluto TV, The Roku Channel ...
Station history KSPW debuted on the air on February 21, 1988, as KJLR. By July 1988, it adopted an adult contemporary format as KLTQ under the branding "Q96". KLTQ changed to a hot country music format on January 18, 1992. KLTQ subsequently switched to a soft rock format and then changed to a format referred to as "maximum country" in March 1996. The station changed its call sign to KMXH in ...
The Samuel H. Scripps American Dance Festival Award for Lifetime Achievement in Choreography is presented each year at the American Dance Festival in Durham, North Carolina. The award and its cash prize, currently $50,000, is given to modern dance choreographers in order to recognize their influence on the art form.
Instructure, Inc. Instructure, Inc. is an educational technology company based in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. It is the developer and publisher of Canvas, a web-based learning management system (LMS), and Mastery Connect, an assessment management system. Prior to its IPO in 2021, the company was owned by private-equity firm Thoma Bravo .
WHNH-CD (channel 2) is a low-power, Class A television station serving Hartford, Connecticut, United States, but nominally licensed to Manchester, Vermont. The station is affiliated with This TV and owned by Vision Communications.
It used to be an affiliate of The Box, from which the station gets its call sign, and was owned by Craig Fox, who owned several similar low-power stations across New York State. In December 2013, retired police officer Steven Ritchie [2] purchased the then-silent station. [3]
The station changed its call sign to WWWJ-CD on August 10, 2017, and back to WJYL-CD on September 27, 2017. At one time, WJYL-CD operated a translator, W65CX, broadcasting near Elizabethtown, Kentucky. As W05BE, the station was featured in the April 1994 edition of Popular Communications magazine, in a feature about low-power broadcasting.