KANG went on the air in 1961 at 88.1 MHz, moving to 89.9 in January 1968. The station's call letters later changed to KPRN (1981 to 1983), KCDS (1983 to 1998), and KNDL (1998 to 2011). Throughout most of this time, the frequency and station were owned by the Howell Mountain Broadcasting Company, then a subsidiary of
Pacific Union College. Howell Mountain operated the station as "user supported
Christian" with no commercials. The station also broadcast on the Internet. The KNDL call letters represented the station branding as
The Candle. This is a reference to themes from the Bible such as "Jesus is the Light of the World", and "We should not hide that light, but should put our light where it is visible to the world." On January 18, 2011, KNDL ceased operation of its
religious format upon the announcement of the purchase of the station by the
University of Southern California (USC)'s
Classical Public Radio Network. That same day, the group switched KNDL and its translators to a simulcast of
KDFC-FM in San Francisco, which moved to the
90.3 MHz signal also acquired by USC. On April 5, 2011, the deal closed, and KNDL officially changed its call sign to KDFC. On May 1, 2017, the radio station swapped its call sign with 90.3 FM in San Francisco to become KOSC. The San Francisco station became KDFC. == Programming ==