Jamie--The TOS of about 10 years ago is a lot different from the TOS that exists today, or even 2 or 3 years ago. In the summer of '99, I was helping a buddy of mine move up to college at the University of Maine in Farmington and we discovered 105 TOS on our way up there and were blown away. They had a wide playlist, and they seemed to not have any desire to play any radio edits whatsoever. We also liked the "voice of God" announcer saying "the mountain of pure rock." I was up there again last year and found the station kind of boring and had a much tighter playlist. My own musical tastes have changed (I prefer alternative stations like WFNX and WEQX these days), so perhaps I'm not judging it as fairly, but you know when a radio station just doesn't sound as good as it used to.
As far as WHRL/Albany goes, I consider them active rock. WHRL is an example of a station that reporting panels, like BDS and Mediabase seem to be having trouble placing since most typical active rockers still play some Led Zeppelin, AC/DC, Guns N' Roses, etc., while WHRL stays pretty much post-1991. However, their currents match very closely to what the active rock chart is rather than the alternative chart, therefore in my eyes, Mediabase has it right by reporting them as active, while BDS needs to get their heads out of you-know-where and report them as active rock as well.
Back to Connecticut, I think that WURH would sounds pretty damn good if it were programmed similar to WFNX, and flood the area with promotions and events.
Jacko