MarcB said:It's the 10th Anniversary of Quinnipiac's Commercial Radio Station WQUN AM 1220 in Hamden. A special ceremony was held on Friday 9/14 and aired on the CT-N Cable Network this morning.
bub said:The 1220 signal in Hamden dates back to the old WDEE in the 1960's. They've also gone by call letters WCDQ, WOMN, WSCR and WNNR.
bub said:The all-Spanish station WQUN acquired was WXCT AM 1220 with studios and offices on Denslow Hill Road. Now where have I heard those call letters before? ;D
Times that I visited Uniondale, be it the Nassau Mausoleum or Hofstra, I would pick up WICC and WADS pretty good.GreatCalloftheNE said:I used to listen to WDEE from Long Island when I was in my teens back in the early 60's. I lived in Uniondale, close to NYC and was a big fan of the legacy rockers like WMCA, WABC, WINS and WMGM. I'd spend my summers out at my grandmother's place on the North Shore of LI in a place called Sound Beach.
You could still hear most of the NYC stations out there, but the CT stations came in like gangbusters. I loved listening to WAVZ and WDEE which I thought were both better than the NYC stations. (I also got WDRC and WPOP, but not as good.)
My memory isn't that great but I think I liked WDEE better than WAVZ and I was disappointed when they'd sign off each evening. Tracy Garneau was at WDEE at the time and I got to work with him later in the 60's along with Bill Beamish at WAVZ. Two great talents at two secondary market stations that sounded better than the New York rockers!
If that's the case, then I stand corrected. I'll have to look back to the newspaper accounts of that fire. So they didn't go back on as WCDQ? If not, when did they?Bill1820 said:>You are aware that WDEE shut down for good around 1965 or '66 due to a fire at the station site, aren't you?
Not true. I remember the station going back on the air sometime after the January 1965 fire as WDEE, and a I have a 1967 aircheck. WDEE-FM 101.3 didn't go on the air after the fire (I can't remember if the FM was on the air in the first place). The FM license was sold to Kopps-Monahan Communications, Inc.
After WNNR, WXCT (1220, Exciting 'XCT) came on board first as a locally-produced AC format. Bill Houston worked there briefly before heading to WHLI in Hempstead. Around 1988 or 1989, the owners dumped the format for the fledgling Business Radio Network out of Colorado Springs (They are now Business Talk Radio Network out of either Greenwich or Stamford). During that time, they were the station that broadcast Hamden High School Hockey. WXCT flipped to Spanish around Spring of 1991. I stopped by there the day of the flip.Bill1820 said:WDEE went back on the air after the fire with it's calls, then became WCDQ under new ownership in the late 60s with an MOR format. The station went country in the early 70s, then oldies before morphing into a top 40 format with Jerry Kristafer, Ken DeVoe and Jay McCormick. WPLR bought the station in 1978 and called it WOMN for WOMaN Radio. It was AOR for women. The station had no ratings and therefore was a big bust with no support. PLR kept the WOMN calls and called the station PLR2 - AOR without simulcasting the FM. Next calls and format - WSCR for Suburban Country Radio with John Savelle as program director. Pete Salant, the man who had put KC101 on the air, then bought the station in 1996 and changed it back to oldies as WNNR, Winner Radio in AM Stereo. Unfortunately WDRC-FM went oldies a few months later. Next - Spanish as WXCT before becoming WQUN.
Fox's Alan Combes worked there, too. So did Ed Flynn. So did George Grande, Carl Grande, Bob Picozzi and former Giants/Jets punter Dave Jennings. I was going to say Charley Steiner but that was 13 WAVZ.Bill1820 said:Two things - I meant to say WNNR was oldies in 1986, not 1996.
WNHC was top 40 in the late 60s/early 70s with a Bill Drake type format. Several jocks went on to Drake consulted RKO General stations. Bill Hennes went to CKLW, and Chris Bailey, Tom Kennedy and JJ Phillips went to WRKO.