CISA-DT, VHF channel 7, is a Global owned-and-operated television station located in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. The station is owned by Shaw Media. CISA's studios are located on 28 Street and 14 Avenue North on the northeastern side of Lethbridge, and its transmitter is located near Highway 25 and Range Road 221, just outside the city. This station can also be seen on Shaw Cable (corporate sister through parent company Shaw Communications) channel 5 and in high definition on digital channel 211.
The station carries the full Global lineup, and its schedule is almost identical to that of sister station CICT-DT in Calgary; CISA's master control is also based out of CICT, along with the remainder of Shaw's television stations. It is the second-smallest station that is part of the Global network (behind only fellow sister station CJBN-TV in Kenora, Ontario) and is the only standalone commercial station in southern Alberta.
The station first signed on the air on November 20, 1955 as CJLH-TV, broadcasting on VHF channel 7 from a 167,000-watt transmitter atop a 638-foot tower located at what was the city limits of Lethbridge. The station was a joint venture between local radio station CJOC (the "CJ" in the call sign) and the Lethbridge Herald (the "LH"). It was managed by CJOC's owners, Taylor Pearson & Carson, and began life as an affiliate of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's (CBC) television network. Network programs on kinescope arrived within a few days to a week after they went to air live in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, or the U.S. networks. Three months after CJLH went to air, measurement services showed that the station had a potential audience of 9,400 homes, but within a year, that grew to 19,200, and of those, 16,000 had bought television sets. At the time, CJLH was the only station in the Lethbridge area.
Zisa or Cisa is a goddess in Germanic paganism, the best documented version of which is that of 10th and 11th century Norse religion. Zisa is an etymological double of Tyr or Ziu according to 19th century scholar Jacob Grimm who suggests that Zisa may be the same figure as Tyr's unnamed wife, mentioned by Loki in the 13th century Poetic Edda poem Lokasenna.
Zisa is mentioned in manuscripts from the 12th to 14th centuries which reference a victory against the Roman Empire attributed to the goddess. The anniversary of this victory was celebrated on the festival day of September 28 and involved games and merrymaking.
Scholar Stephan Grundy, and authors Nigel Pennick and Prudence Jones,reference two Medieval manuscripts which mention Zisa, Codex Monac circa 1135 and Codex Emmeran circa 1135, along with a corroborating third source, Melchior Goldast's Suevicarum rerum scriptores. These three are based on a first-century BCE record of a Swabian military victory over Roman forces. The record mentions a city where the inhabitants worshipped Zisa "with extreme reverence". Pennick identifies this city as ancient Augsburg, and further identifies the depiction of the red-dressed woman in the Golden Hall of the Augsburg Town Hall as one of Zisa.
CISA or Cisa may refer to:
I will die
So will you
When we go
I will choose
Now it's time
To make you pay
End it all
In just one day
Hold out your wrists for me
It is your fantasy
Bleed out your pains
From your wounded veins
I was born
So were you
Through the womb
To the tomb
Now it's time
To make you pay
End it all
In just one day
Hold out your wrists for me
It is your fantasy
Bleed out your pains
From your wounded veins
No one gets past me today
Their is no other way
No one gets past me today
Make a line to be saved
Now maybe you'll see
Connection to death is me
Now maybe you'll see
Connection to death is me
Hold out your wrists for me
It is your fantasy
Bleed out your pains