WWH22 (sometimes referred to as Beaumont All Hazards) is a NOAA Weather Radio station that serves Beaumont, Kansas and vicinity including the eastern part of the Wichita metropolitan area. It is programmed from the National Weather Service forecast office in Wichita, Kansas with its transmitter located in Beaumont. It broadcasts weather and hazard information for the following Counties: Butler, Chase, Chautauqua, Cowley, Elk, and Greenwood.
WWH37, sometimes referred to as Clarksville All Hazards, is a NOAA Weather Radio station that serves parts of northwestern Middle Tennessee and Western Kentucky, including Clarksville, Hopkinsville Fort Campbell, and Oak Grove. The transmitter is located on the north side of Clarksville near the 101st Airborne Parkway (Tennessee State Route 374).
WWH37 provides weather information and all hazardous weather information, watches and warnings issued by the National Weather Service near Old Hickory, Tennessee. The weather information specifically serves these counties: Montgomery, Robertson and Stewart counties in middle Tennessee, and Christian, Todd, and Trigg counties of western Kentucky.
WWH37 secondarily provides watch and warning information and hazardous weather information for Dickson County, Tennessee.
WWH37, along with KXI26 in Hopkinsville, KY, both serve the Clarksville/Hopkinsville area, including the Fort Campbell Military Reservation.
WWH27 is a NOAA Weather Radio station that serves the Hermiston-Umatilla area It is programmed from the National Weather Service forecast office in Pendleton, Oregon with its transmitter located near Plymouth, Washington. It has a repeater, WWH28, that broadcasts from a transmitter near Heppner on a frequency of 162.425 MHz.
It is normally heard across North Central Oregon and South Central Washington. WWH27 can sometimes be heard as far north as Moses Lake, WA, especially at night.
It broadcasts weather and hazard information for Gilliam, Morrow and Umatilla counties in Oregon, as well as Benton County in Washington
Madrugada may refer to:
Madrugada is a 1974 album released by Melanie featuring the singles "Lover's Cross" and "Love To Lose Again". In November 1973, "Will You Love Me Tomorrow" became a Top 40 hit in the United Kingdom and was subsequently added to the British release of the album.
As with Gather Me the album featured arrangements and conduction by Roger Kellaway.
The word madrugada is Portuguese for "daybreak".
All songs written by Melanie Safka except where noted:
U.K. version
"Madrugada" ("Dawn") was the Portuguese entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1975, performed in Portuguese by Duarte Mendes.
The song is a moderately up-tempo number, describing the joy felt in Portugal at the success of the Carnation Revolution of the year before, in which Mendes participated - which had been initiated by the playing of Portugal's previous Contest entry on the radio. Mendes describes the overthrow of the Estado Novo regime as being like a "rebirth" and a "dawn" for his country, and sings that "there can't be enough songs like this".
The song was performed sixteenth on the night, following Finland's Pihasoittajat with "Old Man Fiddle" and preceding Spain's Sergio y Estíbaliz with "Tú volverás". At the close of voting, it had received 16 points ( a surprising 12 points from Turkey, placing 16th in a field of 19 - a rare feat of symmetry.
It was succeeded as Portuguese representative at the 1976 contest by Carlos do Carmo with "Uma flor de verde pinho".
Closer, move in closer
Closer now than, than ever before
I doubt it that you can survive
So far from your trenches and your friends
This is where competition starts
and all of that ends
I sense a lot of tension
Loose, loose
Pull out your arsenal
Dance
(Chorus)
Step into this room and dance for me
By now we should know the music and the steps
I never asked, I never set you up
A little something for me?
A little something thrown back at me?
This is the floor, these are the rules, these are the moves
This is the room in which we dance
Close the door, say you will dance