WHER is a Classic Country station serving the Laurel/Hattiesburg, Mississippi area. Eagle 99 is licensed to Heidelberg, MS.
Around 1994 WHER was located up the dial at 103.7 licensed to Hattiesburg.
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Fargo, North Dakota's KFGO began as a Country music station in 1986 after switching from Adult Contemporary as KRRZ. During the Garth Brooks-induced "New Country" craze of the early 1990s they began using the "Moose Country" slogan. After briefly being known as "K102," by 2002 they had flipped to Classic Rock as KKBX "The Box" and now go by the highly uncreative "Rock 102" KRWK.
WANN was a pioneering Rhythm & Blues station from Annapolis, Maryland. After working as a radio officer in World War II, Morris Blum started WANN in January, 1947. The station set out broadcasting Big Band music along with Sports and News but a year later Blum decided to start playing gospel and rhythm & blues, known at that time as “race music.” Blum had observed African-Americans serving alongside whites in the Navy and was “completely colorblind at a time when it was not popular to support civil rights causes,” according to a longtime friend. The station sponsored a weekend "Bandstand at the Beach" at Carr's Beach, a segregated beach for African-Americans where James Brown and Ella Fitzgerald performed. Following the assassination of Martin Luther King, Blum allowed demonstrators to use WANN to vent their outrage which helped avert rioting in Annapolis. WANN was an influential black music powerhouse for almost 50 years before switching to Country in 1992. Morris Blum sold the station in 1998 and passed away in 2005 at the age of 95.

"Eagle 97.7" WAFL is a Hot Adult contemporary station licensed to Milford, Delaware. The top sticker is from a previous Country format that they had in the early 1980s.
KMOM was a Classic Rock station in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Mom started rocking in 1999 but passed away from Led Zeppelin poisoning in 2004. An autopsy also revealed heart abnormalities due to a diet consisting exclusively of Cream, Hot Tuna, Humble Pie, Meatloaf and April Wine. KMOM was licensed to Fountain, Colorado.

KOKE was a Country music station from Austin, Texas. In 1973 they developed an experimental format called "Progressive Country" which included everyone from Willie Nelson to Janis Joplin to the Rolling Stones. It earned a "Most Innovative Station" award from Billboard magazine in 1974 but struggled to earn ratings despite a fiercely loyal audience. By 1977 they had moved toward a more mainstream format billed as "Sterling Country."
91.1 FM KWTS (K West Texas State) is an Alternative Rock station broadcasting from the campus of West Texas A&M University in Canyon, TX. The 6,000-watt station went on the air in 1972.
KRTX was a Tejano station in Houston, Texas. In December, 2008 they switched to a Spanish Contemporary Christian format. Tejano 980 was licensed to Rosenburg, Texas.
WNJO was an Oldies station in central New Jersey that lasted from 1998 to 2001. They focused mainly on late-1950s to mid-1960s songs with an occasional tune from the 1970s. By the fall of 2001 they had switched to a Classic Hits format as WTHK "The Hawk." The station was revived in 2006 as a commercial-free internet station at wnjofm.com. WNJO was licensed to Trenton, New Jersey.

