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William Allman Memorial Arena

Buildings and structures completed in 1924Buildings and structures in Stratford, OntarioCanadian ice hockey venue stubsIndoor arenas in OntarioIndoor ice hockey venues in Canada
Ontario Hockey League arenasSport in Stratford, OntarioSports venues in Ontario
William Allman Memorial Arena Stratford, ON
William Allman Memorial Arena Stratford, ON

The William Allman Memorial Arena, originally Stratford Arena, is an ice hockey arena in Stratford, Ontario. This arena is home to the Stratford Warriors (Formerly the Stratford Cullitons). The arena has been used by numerous film and television crews, also in Bauer's "Leave an Impression" advertising campaign. Many NHLers began their Junior hockey career in Stratford with the Junior B Stratford Cullitons (who have moved back to their original name 'Stratford Warriors' in 2016). A portrait of Queen Elizabeth II hangs at one end of the rink.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article William Allman Memorial Arena (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

William Allman Memorial Arena
Lakeside Drive, Stratford

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.373962 ° E -80.976191 °
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William Allman Memorial Arena

Lakeside Drive
N5A 3A7 Stratford
Ontario, Canada
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William Allman Memorial Arena Stratford, ON
William Allman Memorial Arena Stratford, ON
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CJCS-FM
CJCS-FM

CJCS-FM is a Canadian radio station in Stratford, Ontario broadcasting at 107.1 FM with a classic hits/variety hits format branded as 107.1 CJCS. The station is owned by Vista Radio. CJCS also broadcasts Toronto Blue Jays games. The station, known as 10AK began broadcasting in 1928 as an amateur station at 250 metres. In 1933, the station changed to 1200 kHz, moved to 1210 in 1936 and then moved to 1240 on March 29, 1941. 10AK switched to its present callsign CJCS in 1935. Lloyd Robertson, Bob Bratina and Tony Parsons all started their respective broadcasting careers at this station. Over the years since the station began broadcasting in 1928, CJCS went through a number of different ownerships. On May 11, 1990, the CRTC denied an application by Telemedia Communications to convert CJCS to 104.1 MHz.On June 25, 1997, Raedio Inc., received approval from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to acquire CJCS from Telemedia Communications.CJCS was owned by Raedio Inc. and opened up a new FM sister station CHGK-FM on September 2, 2003. In September 2010, Raedio Inc. announced a tentative deal, pending CRTC approval, to sell the station to Haliburton Broadcasting Group which received CRTC approval on February 21, 2011.On April 23, 2012 Vista Broadcast Group, which owns a number of radio stations in western Canada, announced a deal to acquire Haliburton Broadcasting, in cooperation with Westerkirk Capital. The transaction was approved by the CRTC on October 19, 2012.On January 23, 2015, Vista applied with the CRTC to convert CJCS to FM with an average effective radiated power (ERP) of 900 watts (maximum ERP of 4,000 watts with an effective height of antenna above average terrain of 32.6 metres). The application was approved on August 10, 2015.On August 3, 2017, CJCS officially moved to 107.1 FM and relaunched as 107.1 Juice FM.Due to its low ERP, CJCS-FM has co-channel interference with CILQ-FM in Toronto, Ontario which has a higher ERP. On July 7, 2022, the station changed back to its old brand name, 107.1 CJCS.