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#1
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![]() "Gerard M Foley" wrote in message ... The old call signs, like WBZ, WTIC, WEAF, WJZ, WCAU, KDKA, WGY, WGN, WOO, KYW, KOA, KFI didn't mean anything. The three and four letter call signs were shared with coastal stations, point-to-point stations and ships. Broadcasters got what was left. WLIT, Lit Brothers Department Store in Philadelphia was the first station I remember that had a call sign that meant anything. 73 Broadcasters could get the calls originally assigned to ships for their radio stations. "The Tribune obtains the call letters WGN (World's Greatest Newspaper) from Great Lakes skipper Carl D. Bradley." http://wgngold.com/timeline/1920s1930s.htm Frank Dresser |
#2
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Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
sd wrote: and the "LI"s: WLIM, WLIR, WLIX, etc., (Long Island) WTBS, Tech Broadcasting Station from the mass. instutite of TECHnology, (MIT) later sold to Turner. WIBG (I believe in G-D) a relegious radio station in Philly, latter a Rock and Roll station in the 1960's. KYW (doesn't mean anything, was K for the U.S. Y for experimental, W for Westinghouse), I assume at one time they had a KXW, there were four stations. As Gerard said, most older calls didn't mean anything. Most of the three-letter calls, and four-letter calls with A or B as the second letter, especially. I'm pretty sure WIBG is one of these assigned in order by the government calls. It was not unusual for a station to choose a slogan *after* receiving its assigned call letters from the government. For example, that's where WSM's "We Shield Millions" came from: the government chose WSM first, then WSM chose a slogan to match. They could just as well have ended up assigned "WSI" - "We Sell Insurance". Some stations held contests, asking the public to come up with a slogan. (I believe I've read that's where WSB's "Welcome South, Brother" came from) Let's see, the four original Westinghouse stations?: KYW, Chicago (yes, Chicago - it moved to Philly later) KDKA, East Pittsburgh WBZ, Boston WBZA, Springfield Y was actually for educational institution stations, like W9YT (University of Wisconsin), W0YC (Univ. of Minnesota), W9YH (U. of Illinois), etc.. And only with the "ham-format" number-letter calls. Experimental stations were X, and still are - at the time, calls like W9XM. (also operated by the U. of Wisconsin) Today experimental stations get something like KC2XIM. X & Y in all-letter calls like KYW had no special significance. KYW is somewhat of a mystery, not falling into any of the known categories of how a Eastern station got a K call. Them and KQV, Pittsburgh. -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
#3
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![]() There's always WSB, "Welcome South, Brother" and WCMP-FM, "We Can't Modulate Properly." --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
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Steve Sobol wrote:
WXIX Channel 19 Cincinnati, Ohio. XIX is the Roman numeral 19. WXIX was originally in Milwaukee, but its owners dumped it after its channel was changed to 18. Then it became WUHF. |
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