I worked at WVOC in its country incarnation for a few months, part time while also at WULA-WKQK/Eufaula. This was just a few months before Aylett B. Coleman brought in the crew that launched Kiss-FM in 1984 (they did a "sneak-preview" playing "Kiss On My List" by Hall and Oates every hour, and each of the jocks did an hour or two on the air).
WVOC, you might recall, was in the mansion on Wynnton Road at 13th Avenue. When the time came for the format flip, the engineer (Bill Thompson) was ready with a brand new Pacific BMX board, 6 TomCat cart machines (remember those), and other such goodies. The initial studio for Kiss was the old V-103 production room. They ripped out all the old equipment and built new counters for the new stuff. It was pretty cool to watch the transformation.
BTW, the cast of characters I worked with at 'VOC were: Bill Bowick, mornings; David McManus (aka John Alexander-also OM/PD), late mornings; Mac Farish (aka Bob Roberts), early afternoons; Joe Cook, afternoons; Sharon (?), nights, and Rasheeda Ali, overnights). Marcia Shipley (Ludgood) and another lady whose name escapes me were news hounds, and several other parttime and fill-in folks. Oh, and lest we forget Philup Space, whose office was the AP closet under the staircase. Whaddaguy!
The Kiss-FM studios were moved from the mansion to the building farther down Wynnton (across from Channel 9) about 6 months after they launched the CHR, so that would have been mid-1985.
I had a great time working at V-103 for that short period of time. Then I spent a VERY short time at WDAK and WEIZ... in fact, come to think of it, Allen Woodall Jr. still owes me a paycheck.
Oh, and as far as the V-103 AC logo, John Rodriguez, the market manager at Cumulus/Macon, was at VOC during the Bluegrass Broadcasting days. Don't know if he was there in the AC days, but he might know where to find a copy of that logo.
TDO