Radio Rose Bowl

Who remembers the sound of Seattle, which was 91.7 KTOY FM radio?
Way back when used to listen to a radio station FM 91.7 KTOY urban, when my dad for use in driving to work when we lived in Seattle who had a big influence on my taste in music especially Jazz I use to hear George Duke WAR, Faze-O, Roy Ayers in it and many other artists in it and I always remember hearing "the sound of Seattle KTOY" and I'm sort of old now over 4 years I will be fifty at the time in 1978 I was a teenager. If you remember KTOY because I left Washington in 1979 and went to live in Great Britain for the next two years and what happened to KTOY 91.7 FM in 1978 the University of Western Australia Huskies won the Rose Bowl Seattle I'm still a fan of Husky. Also remember the true "House Party" in Tacoma and Seattle in 1978 and saw my first concert in Tacoma KC and The Sunshine Band. Dixie Lee Ray WA was the first lady governor, I was there. And my CloverPark SA Yearbook was KLAHOWYA
I enrolled in the LH Bates Voc-Tech. in '83 / '84, when I was a student of the class of radio broadcasting. never I keep reading the news on the air, but still tell stories of people daily. We were Top-40 at the time. Although the school was closed from 15:00 Friday, until 7 or 8 am on Monday, the "Station Manager" allowed students to continue running the station on weekends, only if an "official" PD present at the scene. At the time I was there, it was almost like "a part of the course." It was then Hip-Hop (or "R & B" as we called it, back then) was played, otherwise it was Top-40 radio. Many remember our "signature" as KTOY, FM 91.7. R & B is the best in the Pacific Northwest. " I think I actually recorded one of these companies for use in the weekend. Here a bite – then a certificate from RTO was … FREE! You just sign in at the post office. He was allowed to talk on the air and dust blow off the head tape or needles (yes, you read correctly!). Otherwise, a licensed engineer had to turn knobs for you. Need a General Class license its own twist knobs. I was part of the class is the last test given in Seattle GCL. April, 1984. Then it was a formality and does not really matter if they passed or not, because that was (thanks, Ronald Regan). He was given a more in Spokane, a few weeks later. Now, the RTO permit is like $ 40, the last I heard.
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1923 in Radio $64.8 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The year 1923 saw a number of significant happenings in radio broadcasting history. January 1: In the United States the well-known American Football Rose Bowl Game is broadcast for the first time, on Los Angeles station KHJ. March 13: Production of the first radio set incorporating a loudspeaker. All previously produced sets had required the use of headphones. |
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Bob Reynolds (American Football) $80.4 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Robert O’Dell “Horse” Reynolds (March 30, 1914 – February 8, 1994) was an American football player and businessman in radio and professional sports. He has been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame and is the only player ever to play in every minute of three consecutive Rose Bowl games (1934-1936). Reynolds was an All-American tackle who played for Sta |
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Empire & Victory $0.99 Used – The story of a Detroit Free Press paperboy from the workingclass neighborhoods of Hamtramck, Michigan. On his twelfth birthday, November 20, 1971, Joe Pakotas bolts an angry household and escapes to Ann Arbor to watch the great Billy Taylor, hero of Saturday radio broadcasts, play in the Michigan-Ohio State game. The game takes on a transforming resonance, in which flight from hopelessness becomes a trip to the Rose Bowl. Working across the country with a wildcat crew of magazine subscrip |
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Empire & Victory $32.95 New – The story of a Detroit Free Press paperboy from the workingclass neighborhoods of Hamtramck, Michigan. On his twelfth birthday, November 20, 1971, Joe Pakotas bolts an angry household and escapes to Ann Arbor to watch the great Billy Taylor, hero of Saturday radio broadcasts, play in the Michigan-Ohio State game. The game takes on a transforming resonance, in which flight from hopelessness becomes a trip to the Rose Bowl. Working across the country with a wildcat crew of magazine subscript |
