From the MCRFB RADIO notebook: 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968 and 1971
WXYZ-AM
DETROIT (November 7, 1960) — Joel Sebastian, formerly KLIF, Dallas, has returned to his home town and WXYZ, Detroit. END
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DETROIT (January 20, 1962) — Joel Sebastian has returned to WXYZ, Detroit, in the 7:15 p.m. to midnight time segment, Monday through Friday, and from 7:00 p.m. to midnight on Saturdays. The jock left WXYZ some time ago to join WIND, Chicago. He replaces Lou Sherman and Fred Weiss at WXYZ. In addition to his daily chores he will conduct “Teen Bulletin Board” on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7:30 to 7:45 p.m. Coca-Cola sponsors the teen show. END
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DETROIT (March 31, 1962) — There has been a personnel shuffle at WXYZ, Detroit, but station program director Bob Baker reports that the station’s programming will remain the same. Marty McNeely is leaving the station, and Lee Alan is returning in the 7:00 p.m. to midnight slot. Joel Sebastian, heretofore night man, is taking over the 3-7 p.m. hours, and Paul Winters, formerly afternoon man, is moving into the 11:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. mid-morning-early afternoon drive. END
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DETROIT (March 2, 1963) — Paul Winter of WXYZ radio, Detroit, ran a promotion during National Electric Week that deejays can adapt to any time. Winter offered to pay the next electric bill of any listener who correctly estimated the number of electrical appliances in the average American home, as determined by the electrical industry. Listeners were also asked to name one electric appliance they did not own. END
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DETROIT (March 9, 1963) — WXYZ disc jockey Dave Prince, who recently joined the station from WKMH, Dearborn-Detroit, launched his new show by doing remotes from the sports car exhibition at the Henry Ford Museum in the Motor City’s famous Greenfield Village. Dave Prince began his first Saturday morning and afternoon show on 1270 last week (March 2) and will be doing a Sunday afternoon show on weekends as well. END
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DETROIT (August 31, 1963) — When it comes to televised teen-dance shows gaining popularity in several major cities across the country, local Detroit TV show “Club 1270,” aired Sunday afternoons on WXYZ-TV (local ABC-owned Channel 7) is one on top. The program is co-hosted by Joel Sebastian, and Lee Alan. Some 100 youngsters, all regular participants, sit around tables on the club-type set. Sodas and potato chips are served while teens whirl around the floor to the latest records. The talents on the show is outstanding of course . . . Trini Lopez, Freddy Scott, Stevie Wonder, etc., whether nationally popular acts or local. END
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DETROIT (January 11, 1964) — WXYZ Radio personalities Joel Sebastian, Lee Alan, Paul Winter and Dave Prince conducted a pre-Holiday campaign to get usable toys for hospitalized children at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Pontiac, Michigan. More than 300 toys were given to the youngsters at the hospital Christmas party. On a different note, WXYZ radio personality Joel Sebastian, and wife, Frances, proud parents of eight and a half pound baby girl, Laura Elizabeth, born Thanksgiving day. END
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DETROIT (May 11, 1964) — Lee Alan, popular night-time deejay on WXYZ 1270 in Detroit, leaves his weeknights 7:15 p.m. – midnight show to set up his own promotional and programming service. END
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DETROIT (February 13, 1965) — WXYZ’s deejay Marc Avery show was interrupted recently by a call that came in on the station’s “Hot Line” (a private phone number in the studio designated for pick-up for emergency calls, etc.). The caller said, “This is C. E. Hooper calling. May I ask you what radio station you are listening to?
At first Avery thought it was a joke, but when the caller persisted in the interview, he realized it was on the level and answered back, “The Marc Avery Show on WXYZ-Radio.” Avery than confessed to the caller why he was listening to the show.
On a lighter note, what Avery and the executives of the ABC-owned station are now asking Hooper whether they will still get credit for Avery taking and answering the call. END
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DETROIT (October 16, 1965) — Jim McQuary has joined the WXYZ personality roster in Detroit; he was formerly with WJBK in the same city . . . WXYZ also added Danny Taylor . . . David R. Klemm, formerly with WXYZ in Detroit, has been appointed station manager of WLCY, Tampa-St. Petersburg, Florida. END
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DETROIT (January 15, 1966) — Program Director Bruce Still at WXYZ, Detroit, reports that a campaign launched by air personality Marc Avery drew in roughly 20,000 books of trading stamps to buy toys for children at Christmas. END
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DETROIT (March 3, 1966) — Bruce Still has been named operations director at WXYZ, Detroit; Lee Alan was promoted to program director and will continue his nightly on-air show. END
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DETROIT (February 18, 1967) — The deejay team of Martin & Howard debuted January 30 on WXYZ, Detroit. Teams have worked well on Easy Listening format stations and if these two do well on a Hot 100 format station in a major market like Detroit, it might prove interesting for other stations. Also, Joe Bacarella, formerly program director and afternoon deejay with WCAR, Detroit, has shifted to WXYZ, Detroit, as director of operations. END
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DETROIT (June 3, 1967) — Dick Kernan has been promoted to assistant director of operations and Jim Nell to traffic director of WXYZ, Detroit. Perry Krauss has been named producer of the Martin & Howard show. Incidentally, Kernan will assist operations director Joe Bacarella with programming. Krauss joins from WCAR, Detroit; where he headed the Perry Krauss Orchestra. END
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DETROIT (November 23, 1968) — Mike Sherman has joined WXYZ in the 2-6 p.m. slot and Dick Purtan, who’d been doing both morning and afternoon drive-time show, will now just be heard mornings 6-10 a.m. Sherman was formerly WIBC in Indianapolis. END
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DETROIT (February 27, 1971) — William F. Lochridge has been named general manager of WXYZ-FM; he’d been with Katz in that city; Dick Kernan will continue to direct operations and programming of the station. END
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(Information and news source: Billboard Magazine; All excerpts culled as was first published from the dated editions as noted above)