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Village Squire, 1976-03, Page 11The staff, Mr. Langridge recalls, stood around hopelessly watching firemen battle the flames for a while, then began to gather in various homes to discuss the problem and what to do. The fire was still at its height when a convoy of trucks, cars and station wagons arrived from CFPL in London with all the spare equipment that could be rounded up by that station. It was just the beginning of the tremendous co-operation that other people in the industry were about to show. The record collection of the station was destroyed so records came from other stations and record suppliers Suppliers came through with emergency equipment. National adver- tising agencies came through with duplicates of commercial materials lost in the fire. By nightfall with all this help, CKNX television was back on the air, telecast from the new high school building across the way. The newscast included film of the fire which had been shot and processed through the co- - operation of CFPL. A Toronto newspaper headlined its story on the tragedy "Death knell for a station" but Doc Cruickshank was on the air telling his listeners that the people at CKNX would rebuild "bigger and better than ever." As Dick Lewis in a recent article in That's Show Business pointed out:•"Everthing went up in smoke. Everything, that is except the indominable spirit of Doc Cruickshank and his staff, who, as soon as the frenzy was over, started methodically and with determination - along with their friends in the industry and the area - to rebuild CKNX_." Within 18 months after the fire, the two stations were located in a new building on the site of the old. Those intervening months were rough as the stations made do in temporary makeshift quarters but it proved again the staying power, the sheer determination of this little broadcasting business in this little town. But there were some battles which were much harder to win. The old game of economics was hard on a small rural -based television station. National advertisers, on whom television stations in particular depend for the bulk of revenue, like to see big audience figures. They are used to big city population's and so the relatively small numbers who watch a station in a rural area don't interest them. Cable television began to seep into the area, fragmenting the small population base even further. CKCO television had applied for a repeater station at Wiarton to improve coverage in the Georgian Bay area. The television station, at best a touch-and-go situation financially, began to lose money. Even the profit from the radio operation couldn't match the loses. Rumours were rampant over the future of the station. John Langridge recalls that rumours on main street had nearly everyone involved in broadcasting buying the station at one time or another, including John Bassett, the multi -millionaire Toronto broadcaster and former newspaper publisher. But then in December 1970 Doc Cruickshank and Walter J . Blackburn chairman of the board of CFPL Broadcasting Limited and main owner of the London Free Press announced the sale of the business to Mr. Blackburn's group. The sale was subject to Canadian Radio -Television Commission approval which came in March 1971, after the A studio in 1951 when live entertainment was a big part of radio. THE • STOP FOR •A complete line• of lumber •Building supplies • Hardware Estimates on all types of buildings with no obligation. HAYS LUMBER and Pro Hardware Listowel Ph. 291-2610 VILLAGE SQUIRE/MARCH 19-b, V