E-MAIL MEMORIES, PAGE 21




SAM DE PINO:
At least somebody is continuing a history of broadcasting in New Orleans! This is Sam DePino. I've told Gary Straub about your website and you could be hearing from him soon. You might remember he was my co anchor at WVUE TV for a year or so. I was also exec producer until Gifford came to the station. Alec appointed me the first "Action Reporter" in New Orleans and possibly the first in the nation because he ripped the concept off from the Washington Post. Gary was the guy who put himself in jail for April first, April Fool's day, because he allegedly was very fearful of any tricks that might be played on him! LOL. I'm sure he'll get a kick out of your remembering that if he doesn't tell you about it himself. Me, well, I also co produced and hosted a weekly remote broadcasts for public broadcasting in New Orleans called "Ever on Sunday." We visited a lot of pride locations, including the Cabildo, a Canadian Aircraft Carrier and much more.

I was also a stringer for UPI and independent correspondent/producer for the ABC News Network which led to being offered a full time contract with them, based in New York and Washington. Many of my newscasts there are in the Library of Congress now. I'm afraid I'm so much a part of history now that I don't get paid for any reuse of my works, including my documentary on the Woodstock Music Festival.

I went on to freelancing in Chicago and even had to resort to writing film scripts. Nothing outstanding. A couple years at WLS and a government job for 14 months (docs, etc.) and finally retirement to my old 1871 house in town and a small farm to help keep the wolves away.

I miss New Orleans and it's nice to see my name attached to it again! Thanks!

BOB:
What a treat to hear from one of our very high profile TV newscasters from back when. You've had quite a career, Sam, and we're all richer that one of your stops was in New Orleans. Enjoy your retirement and keep watching for those residuals...I'm positive the checks are in the mail!



PAUL YACICH:
Bob: When I was in school we made an annual trek to the John McDonogh statue in Lafayette Square. Every kid in every school walked past the statue and dropped flowers at its base. Many of the school bands performed in the square in the celebration that honored a man who did so much for the schools of New Orleans. I don't believe he or his statue gets any attention these days. I wonder how many of the visitors to the Radio Shrine remember the words to the McDonogh Day song we all sang as we passed the statue?

BOB:
Hmmm...no one has stepped forward with the words yet. But I'll post them if someone passes them along. They're probably too busy dancing around the May Pole.



DAVID NEBEL:
Hey Bob. Just discovered your web site. What great fun and memories. Norm Willy gave a pretty good snap shot of what I've been doing since leaving WTIX and WSMB. It's nice to see that Norm and Richard Knight are still kicking. There was a picture of Charlie Ray (he was News Director at TIX at one point) and me with Jerry Vale, the singer, at the Blue Room that was run by the Times Picayune in their Pictures from the Past section recently. The picture was from 1964. I hope that other WTIX and WSMB alums are still around and doing well such as Roy and Jeff, Keith Rush and Richard Fahey. Other WTIX jocks left New Orleans around '63 such as Ron Martin, who went to Kansas City; Lan Roberts, who went to Seattle; and Danny Dark, who went to Los Angeles. I have no idea what became of them.

I did return to New Orleans at one point in 1988 as the General Manager of Metairie Country Club. I left there in 1990 to become G.M. at Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra, FL. Right now I'm semi-retired living in Howey in the Hills, FL and working for a country club management company called Pinnacle Golf Services. I miss the fun that was radio in the 50's and 60's but love my current job. Howey in the Hills is a charming small town suburb of Orlando. I have a home on Little Lake Harris, which Howey overlooks, and love to fish and cruise the Harris chain of lakes in my pontoon boat.

I'd love to hear from any of my old radio buddies so you can post my email address for them if you wish.

BOB:
I still remember listening to the melodious voice of Dave Nebel on 'TIX in the early 60's. It was that fun sound that enticed me into radio broadcasting. Write to Dave Nebel at: nebels2@comcast.net



JOEL HARO:
In response to your answer regarding Dusay's Pet Store. This was my grandfather's (Richard Dusse) store. Around the early 80's they changed from a pet store to a catalog pet supply company. My grandparents moved out of New Orleans to Picayune, Mississippi, where the company was based until the mid 90's. My grandfather sold his business and retired. They now live in Georgetown, Texas. I'm not sure who bought their business but it is no longer run under the Dusay name.

BOB:
Thanks for the update, Joel. The building is still there on Carrollton Avenue across from the Seminary, but it's no longer a pet store. Dusay's Pet Store was an icon and we hated to see it go, but best wishes to your grandparents in their retirement. They brought a lot of pleasure to us when we were kids and we bought so many hamsters, goldfish, rabbits and other pets at Dusay's.



BOB PRIEZ, HAMMOND, LA:
Hi Bob...enjoyed very much browsing your great website; it brought back a lot of my own memories of days as a teenager in Algiers and New Orleans. I recognized quite a few of the bands and players listed on the page and wanted to call your attention to one of the early rock & roll bands from the Westbank that was popular from about 1955 - 1960, the "Syncopaters." It consisted mostly of Behrman HS & Behrman band guys, but had other members from around the west bank, and was the band where Frankie Ford honed his rock & roll chops. We played a lot of the HS sock hops and dances around Algiers, Gretna, Marrero & Westwego, including Behrman HS and Immaculate Conception, as well as the usual 'joints' [clubs - many of which are listed on your page] and picnics. The band had a pretty regular schedule at the Lafitte Grill and the Moose lodge in West End in the late '50s.

The "Syncopaters" was started by Dale Wattigney, on trumpet, and Joe Riemer, on alto sax/clarinet, at BHS and also included: Tony Licata, drums; Bob Priez, trombone; Buck Baker, tenor sax; and Frank Guzzo, piano/vocals. A few other guys 'subbed' or played occasionally through the years; but by 1960 the band started to dissolve. Frank was getting busy with touring after his "Sea Cruise" hit, most of the other guys went off to college or to jobs with other bands in the area, and it became difficult to keep it all together. By the mid-60's, the band no longer worked on a regular basis.

Keep up the great work with your website; I hope this bit of nostalgia adds to your enjoyment of the New Orleans music scene.

BOB:
Another great page in the New Awlins Rock & Roll scrapbook. Thanks for sending it, Bob!



MOVIE MIKE HURLEY:
OMG- Lenny Samuels & I were great friends years ago and have lost touch. I just saw his post on your site. I used to hang around Lenny's Music Center in the 70's. It may be a long shot, but if you know his e-mail address, could you send it to me, or send mine to him? I'd be forever greatful if we got back in touch through your site

Also, I saw that several posts on your site refering to a pizza place next to the Tiger Theatre on Franklin Ave., but the name was not mentioned. It was Artista Pizza Parlor. It was owned & operated by the sons of the owners of the United Bakery, on St. Bernard Ave. The pizza was excellent, and great salads, and I can still remember the smell of pizza as I went to work at the Tiger in 1972 & 1973.

Thanks again for the memories

BOB:
Unfortunately I lost Lenny's email address but if I hear from him again I'll send it to you. From all the folks who have written, Artista Pizza must have been great. I used to have a route for Tom's Peanuts & Candies in 1966 and the warehouse was a couple of blocks away on Treasure Street by the Claiborne overpass and the tracks but I never took the time to visit Artista for a pizza. One would really hit the spot with a cold beer right now!



JOE TOM EASLEY:
An earlier post from someone asking about Leon Kelner and Peter Toma, the leaders of the house bands at the Roosevelt Hotel, got me remembering late night radio on WWL as I was a child growing up on the Mexican border. Clear channel WWL 870 came in loud and clear, and I went to sleep at night listening to Dick Martin and his Moonglow With Martin jazz show. It came on at midnight right after the live broadcast from the Blue Room of the Roosevelt, a broadcast featuring either Kelner or a travelling band, and at that time hosted by Charlie Lake. Do you know what happened to Dick Martin and Charlie Lake? And thanks for a great web site!

BOB:
Writers often ask about Dick Martin and Charlie Lake. Since I didn't know them I have no idea what happened to them, but check back here from time to time and I'm sure someone will let me know and I'll post it.

How ironic...about the same time you were DX'ing WWL near the Mexican border at night, I was here near WWL and I was DX'ing XERF right over the Mexican border and listening to Wolfman Jack at night in the early 60's!



DON PRIETO, TORRANCE, CA:
As a born and raised Nuawleanian I move to Los Angeles in 1963 and miss it terribly. I'm 66 and I want you to know that I enjoyed many a romantic night while listening to the Golden tones of Dick Martin at WWL's midnight to one slot aptly titled Moonglow with Martin.

I later met Dick when was the host and greeter at the newly opened Playboy Club in the Quarter.

I was born in 1936 at Mercy hospital and lived in the Carrollton section of town. My first recollection of radio was an Atwater Kent that was taller than me---in the living room. We listened to the Pelicans play by play broadcast by "the ol' redhead" Ted Andrews. He also wrote a column in the Rider's Digest that you got free on the bus and streetcar. Jill Jackson also had a radio show and a gossip column at the same time in the same throw-away Rider's Digest, courtesy of NOPSI.

My mom and dad were avid radio fans. She stayed home and listened Stella Dallas --Helen Trent--Pepper Young's Family and all of the soaps. My memory is filled with commercials for things like Lux toilet soap--Octagon soap--Cream o wheat---- My dad, he worked for Cloverland Dairy for 42 years and then was the bookkeeper at Ponchatrain Beach and City Park---for the Batts. He and I would listen to One Man's Family---Lowell Thomas ---Jack Smith---Beulah---Lux Radio theater---Lemac quiz show---Burns and Allen---Fibber Mcgee and Molly---Great Gildersleeve---Our Miss Brooks---Fanny Brice as Baby Snooks---Inner Sanctum---Lights Out and My childhood favorite Spike Jones and the City Slickers.

I listened to the Top Twenty on WDSU religiously after school and remember Too Young by Nat Cole battling My Truly Fair for first place on that list.

Your Hit Parade was always a week late with the latest hits and I could never figure out why.

My Introduction to R&B, which made my mother crazy, was from a black bar on Washington Avenue and Galvez that backed up to the body shop where we were working on a friend's car.

Shirley and Lee---Fats Domino---and others blared from the juke box in the bar and we couldn't help ourselves. We had to move to the rhythm.

The car radio became the source of choice in high school and it was tuned to Dr. Daddy O and Poppa Stoppa when we were not in class.

Did a stint in the Air Force 54 to 58 and was stationed in Shreveport. My radio in the Barracks was hooked to the big antenna at the radar site and I picked up WWL and KMOX in St. Louis--WCKY Cincinnati--Ernie's record shop in Memphis and got exposed to the Louisiana Hayride in that town.

We hung around a small daytime-only 5000 watt station KJOE in Shreveport and one of our guys in the squadron was on the air as a DJ--you may have heard of him His name was George Carlin. THE George Carlin as it turns out. He often had us on the show (my friend John Scully and me) to talk about pool. Billiards actually. We were the local hotshots and he loved the game.

His irreverence showed even then because he was always in trouble with the comments he made about the Second Air Force and its officers.

But I digress. Spent lots of time at the College Inn necking in the drive in portion when we could get a spot---maybe Delicate Jerrys down on Carrolton where the onramp leading on to I-10 toward downtown---always with the radio blaring. For some reason I vividly remember listing to Gay Batson on WSMB when it was in the Maison Blanche Building broadcasting live about a huge fire that was burning in the quarter--I think it was a coffee company that burned.

We usually skipped art class and went to Tujaques, now Domilies's, for sandwiches and go to Audubon Park and eat and listen to jazz---Billy Eckstine---June Christy---Stan Kenton---Billy May and for the life of me I can't think of the station.

I've gone on far too long. I leave some for another chapter. Love your site.

BOB:
Always a pleasure to hear from another Carrollton kid. Thanks for sharing.



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