> > The cobwebs are clearing...
> >
> > When they switched from Star 95 to easy listening sometime
>
> > in the mid 80's, they changed their calls to KAEZ. It
> seems
> > that the KLSQ calls were shorted lived. In the early 90's,
>
> > they changed from KAEZ to KLSQ, then back to KAEZ within a
>
> > few weeks or months, then eventually to KFRO-FM when
> Waller
> > bought it.
>
> Looks like they only used the KAEZ call letters for one
> stretch. I vaguely remember KLSQ, and KCGL went smooth by
> me. FCCInfo.com and RECnet.com seem to agree on the call
> letter progression, which went like this:
>
> KNIF - license to cover granted Sep 9 1980
>
> Call letter changes with effective date:
>
> KAEZ - Dec 5 1986
> KLSQ - Sep 17 1990
> KFRO-FM - Mar 1 1993
> KCGL - Dec 7 1998
> KFRO-FM - Feb 15 1999
>
> Once again it's worth noting that since they teamed up with
> 102.3 KLJT as "The Breeze," 95.3 is ID'ed illegally every
> hour as "KFRO Gilmer-Longview," without the "-FM" suffix.
>
Completely forgot about the stint as KCGL--a promotional kick that revolved arounf the imaging as "Cool 95.3" or somesuch. The station's first format stabil;ity was when the it went on Transtar, then Sunburst began fragnenting dayparts between local origination and the satellite. Then when Waller bought the AM and FM there was more skittering among formats--Transtar oldies, then salsa, finally back to oldies but with Jones Radio. Now the Breeze. For 23 years the station was caught up in a format conundrum that totally confused its listeners.