[5] The Tallabama Broadcasting Company, which owned WGSV in Guntersville and WGAD in Gadsden,[6] acquired WJHB in 1961, with the sale closing in 1962.
[5] Features on WEYY in 1975 included Auburn Tigers football, ABC Contemporary newscasts, a daily Swap Shop, and a Gospel Music Showcase program at midday.
[11] 1580's move made it the first locally based radio station in Oxford,[12] and Woodard gave it a second when Woodard settled with three competing applicants for a new FM station in the town in 1989—the first new FM for Calhoun County in 41 years[13]—which signed on the air as adult contemporary WKFN "K-98" on February 19, 1990.
[14] The FM move enabled Woodard to remain competitive; within 18 months, K-98 was described as having changed Anniston into a two-station market opposite WHMA-FM "Alabama 100", while both stations' associated AMs had switched to automated programming.
[15] By 2000, WOXR was airing a classic country format;[16] it changed its call sign to WARB on August 28 of that year.