(Orlando's Channel 9 is owned by Cox Broadcasting, the nation's 14th-largest TV chain, a privately held company that analysts say is extremely profitable.)
Ms. Schafer, who is keeping her name, is a reporter in the Washington bureau of Cox Broadcasting.
In July 1963, the station was purchased by Atlanta-based Cox Broadcasting for $12 million.
But in that case, Cox Broadcasting v. Cohn, the reporter had obtained the victim's name from court records.
Welcome South Brother, (Cox Broadcasting, 1973)
And the Cox family has done the going-private thing before: in 1985, it bought back Cox Broadcasting from shareholders.
"It's still a big unknown, the question of how do we make money with it," said Nick Trigony, Natpe's chairman and the president of Cox Broadcasting.
Mpath Interactive and Cox Broadcasting were added to the sponsors list.
Mr. Reinsch retired in 1973 from Cox Broadcasting.
It then later flipped to a news-talk format, which remained after its purchase from Cox Broadcasting in the 1990s.
(Orlando's Channel 9 is owned by Cox Broadcasting, the nation's 14th-largest TV chain, a privately held company that analysts say is extremely profitable.)
Ms. Schafer, who is keeping her name, is a reporter in the Washington bureau of Cox Broadcasting.
In July 1963, the station was purchased by Atlanta-based Cox Broadcasting for $12 million.
But in that case, Cox Broadcasting v. Cohn, the reporter had obtained the victim's name from court records.
Welcome South Brother, (Cox Broadcasting, 1973)
And the Cox family has done the going-private thing before: in 1985, it bought back Cox Broadcasting from shareholders.
"It's still a big unknown, the question of how do we make money with it," said Nick Trigony, Natpe's chairman and the president of Cox Broadcasting.
Mpath Interactive and Cox Broadcasting were added to the sponsors list.
Mr. Reinsch retired in 1973 from Cox Broadcasting.
It then later flipped to a news-talk format, which remained after its purchase from Cox Broadcasting in the 1990s.