If this is true, (WEUS being sold and turned religious), this could be the right thing at the right time, depending upon how they program the thing. I'm old enough to remember (and probably many of you too), if you turned on a religious station, what you heard was speaking and preaching, maybe recordings of church services and periods of music. The ad agency guys used to tell us how loyal the listeners were and how other preachers were falling all over each other to get the 9 A. M. to Noon time slot because the husband was gone, the kids were at school and the wife was at home with the checkbook and a cup of coffee. Today however, it seems the world of religious radio has gone to hell just like regular formats. For example, in Tampa, if you wanted to listen to some of the more famous preachers, you had to endure the "latest breakthrough infomercial involving the newly discovered health benefits of the extracts from the right leg of the lamoomba grasshopper discovered in Kenya". Somehow I cannot imagine the serious religious radio listener wanting to hear this phoney crap. I couldn't believe it when I turned on my radio while driving in TPA. The night before I was listening to WBT in Charlotte and left it set there. The next morning, booming in loud and clear was the local station and their infomercials before and after Charles Stanley.