VelvetR said:
Memory says that The Outlet Company donated the former WJAR-FM to what was then known as "Providence/Barrington Bible College" (or name very similar) when they found FM to be a loser. It was then sold to Plantations...I recall an involvement with Judge Harold C. Arcarro who was involved in Providence's first UHF channel (WNET, I think Channel 16 originally) and after that faded away, in the initial iteration of what became WTEV-6 in New Bedford. The WPFM site was on Smith Hill just back of the State House with a self-supporting tower. Mort Blender used to do a classical music program Sunday nights. It was while Mort's taped show was running Verdi's "Requiem" that an engineer (whose name I know but will leave out) fried himself to death while working inside the transmitter. The station subsequently was sold to a group somehow affiliated with Brown but I can't recall whether it was first to the university itself then to a separate group. At the time of the dead engineer incident Bob Stone was PD. He later went on to WXCN but where, after that, I have no idea!
A Harold Arcaro is listed as President of WPFM in 1963. At the time the station was listed as an affiliate of the CRB Network (which I would presume means WCRB Waltham/Boston?) and using the "Fine Music FM Broadcasters" as their rep firm. (which seemed to represent classical-music stations)
I note in the 1966
Yearbook the WPFM calls appear on 94.1 - which is listed as simulcasting WHIM AM 1110 30%, and with the same ownership as owned WPFM in 1963. Judge Arcaro is still listed (now, with his title) as president of the firm. The calls were changed to WHIM-FM by the 1967
YB.
In the 1963
YB Joseph LaFreniere is listed as PD. The later listings are incomplete.