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  2. Rosalie Trombley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosalie_Trombley

    Trombley and her then-husband Clayton moved to Windsor, and she was hired in 1963 to work as a part-time switchboard operator and receptionist at CKLW. [5] [6] After becoming familiar with how a top 40 station worked, she accepted a position in the music library, and in the fall of 1968, she was offered a full-time position as CKLW's music director, [7] a job she later attributed to "being in ...

  3. Byron MacGregor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byron_MacGregor

    Byron MacGregor (born Gary Lachlan Mack; March 3, 1948 – January 3, 1995) [1] was a Canadian radio and TV news anchor, news director, and recording artist. He received a "LegendsInduction" into the Radio Hall of Fame in 2024. [2]

  4. Tom Shannon (broadcaster) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Shannon_(broadcaster)

    Thomas Shannon (August 11, 1938 – May 26, 2021) [1] was an American broadcaster from Buffalo, New York. [2]Shannon was born in Buffalo, New York, [2] and graduated from Bishop Timon – St. Jude High School in 1956 and Buffalo State College in 1960. [1]

  5. Robin Seymour (DJ) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Seymour_(DJ)

    Seymour's afternoon "Bobbin' with Robin Show" featured all the top records on the music press sales charts. He pioneered rock-and-roll on the Detroit airwaves before the Top 40 format emerged. In the mid-50s, Seymour was among the first of the nation's DJs to ask his listeners what they thought about new records.

  6. CKLW - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CKLW

    CKLW first came on the air on June 2, 1932, [3] as CKOK on 540 kilocycles, (which until 2013 was the long-time home of today's CBEF [4]) with 5,000 watts of power.The station was built by George Storer [5] and was sold to a group of Windsor-area businessmen led by Malcolm Campbell, operating as "Essex Broadcasters, Ltd." CKOK became CKLW (and moved to 840 kHz) [6] in 1933, when Essex ...

  7. Dick Purtan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Purtan

    Previous to coming to Detroit at WKNR "Keener 13" in 1965, Purtan worked at WOLF in Syracuse, New York and WSAI in Cincinnati; he began his radio career in his hometown of Buffalo, New York at WWOL under the station-mandated name "Guy King" [1] and also worked for a very short time at WBAL in Baltimore (only to be forced to leave the station ...

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