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WXJM

WXJM
Wxjm2007.jpg
City Harrisonburg, Virginia
Broadcast area Metro Harrisonburg
Branding "88–7 WXJM"
Frequency 88.7 MHz
First air date October 1, 1990
Format Variety
ERP 390 watts
HAAT 19 meters (62 ft)
Class A
Facility ID 4247
Transmitter coordinates 38°26′22″N 78°52′21″W / 38.43944°N 78.87250°W / 38.43944; -78.87250
Callsign meaning WX James Madison
Former callsigns WZJM (1989)
WXJM (1989–present)
Owner James Madison University
(James Madison University Board of Visitors)
Sister stations WEMC, WMRA, WMRL, WMRY, WMLU
Webcast WXJM Webstream
Website WXJM Online

WXJM (88.7 FM) is an American non-commercial educational radio station licensed to serve Harrisonburg, Virginia, USA. The station, established in 1990, is owned and operated by James Madison University. The station's broadcast license is held by the James Madison University Board of Visitors.

WXJM station management reports to the JMU Media Board, which is under the jurisdiction of the University Board of Visitors. WXJM also receives guidance and technical support from WMRA.

WXJM broadcasts a variety music format to the greater Harrisonburg metropolitan area. WXJM's tower and antenna sits atop Burruss Hall on the JMU campus. The station operates with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 390 watts. Although the "official" range (60 dBu contour) of the station is about 6 miles (9.7 km), it can be heard at times in Staunton, which is approximately 20 miles (32 km) southwest of the station.

The forerunner of WXJM was the audio stream played over a few James Madison University campus buildings' public address systems to give interested students some practice with broadcasting. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the "Dining Hall DJ's" advocated for airbore-broadcast capability. Early planners sought a callsign of WJMR for (W) James Madison Radio but were dismayed to learn that the letters were already taken by an existing station in Wisconsin, WJMR-FM.

The Board of Visitors of James Madison University filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to construct a new FM radio station in March 1988. This station would broadcast with 260 watts of effective radiated power from an antenna 14.5 meters (48 ft) in height above average terrain (HAAT). The FCC granted the original construction permit for this new station on September 1, 1989, with a scheduled expiration date of March 1, 1991.


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