Monday, February 27, 2012

Double-U L S...in Chicago...Channel 89!

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Ben Frankllin Store on West Sullivan Grand Opening 1963

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Tennessee License Plate County Codes 1939-1965

This is from an eBay guide
1 - Davidson
2 - Shelby
3 - Knox
4 - Hamilton
5 - Sullivan
6 - Washington
7 - Madison
8 - Rutherford
9 - Maury
10 - Blount
11 - Montgomery
12 - Greene
13 - Gibson
14 - Sumner
15 - Robertson
16 - Wilson
17 - Obion
18 - Dyer
19 - Bradley
20 - Williamson
21 - Carter
22 - Weakley
23 - McMinn
24 - Giles
25 - Bedford
26 - Henry
27 - Hamblen
28 - Lincoln
29 - Anderson
30 - Tipton
31 - Campbell
32 - Marshall
33 - Roane
34 - Putnam
35 - Carroll
36 - Lawrence
37 - Franklin
38 - Sevier
39 - Dickson
40 - Loudon
41 - Coffee
42 - Lauderdale
43 - Hawkins
44 - Jefferson
45 - Warren
46 - Cocke
47 - Haywood
48 - Fayette
49 - Claiborne
50 - McNairy
51 - Monroe
52 - Hardeman
53 - Rhea
54 - Marion
55 - Smith
56 - Hardin
57 - Henderson
58 - Cumberland
59 - Unicoi
60 - White
61 - Chester
62 - Crockett
63 - Polk
64 - Wayne
65 - Macon
66 - DeKalb
67 - Hickman
68 - Cheatham
69 - Morgan
70 - Grainger
71 - Benton
72 - Fentress
73 - Johnson
74 - Humphreys
75 - Scott
76 - Lake
77 - Overton
78 - Union
79 - Stewart
80 - Cannon
81 - Jackson
82 - Grundy
83 - Decatur
84 - Trousdale
85 - Lewis
86 - Perry
87 - Hancock
88 - Bledsoe
89 - Meigs
90 - Houston
91 - Moore
92 - Clay
93 - Sequatchie
94 - Pickett
95 - Van Buren

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

Legendary WAKY-AM deejay Bill Bailey 1930-2012

(I wrote this column for the Louisville (Ky.) Times in October 1979.)


On behalf of WAKY 79 Radio (790-AM) and its employees, we publicly apologize for the statements made by Bill Bailey on Tuesday morning (between 5:30 a.m. and 10 a.m.), October 16, 1979, and on Thursday morning (between 5:30 a.m. and 10 a.m.) October 18, 1979. Mr. Bailey's views do not necessarily represent the view of WAKY 79 Radio, its employees or our company. - George R. Francis, Jr., General Manager, WAKY 79 Radio, Vice-Pres Multimedia Radio, Inc.

What did disc jockey Bill Bailey say that demanded a full-scale apology in the classified ads in Sunday's Courier-Journal and in yesterday's Times?

Even irregular listeners to Bailey's morning yammer-athon know that Bill Bailey is liable to say anything. That is his appeal. So surely it must have been something gosh-awful. A joke about the Pope? Queen Elizabeth II? Three of the Seven Dwarves? Or four of the Seven Dwarves?

George Francis, WAKY's general manager, declined to comment.

Bill Bailey, of course, never declines to comment.

"To tell you the truth, it (the newspaper ad) was a blanket apology. He (Francis) got several complaints for things I had said.

"I had stated that Bob Moody was here (at WAKY) under our rehabilitation-aid program.

"I said that the two-party system was ruining this country, that we needed more competition.

"I told a joke that I heard from a doctor over at Kupie's (a restaurant in downtown Louisville, near the radio station): 'There's good news in this morning's paper. The Polack boat people finally reached Vietnam.'"

Is that all? Isn't that just every-morning faire for Bailey?

The Polish joke is inexcusable, but the rest is just standard Bill Bailey. It's the kind of stuff that makes people want to listen to Bill Bailey.

The reason for the ad is that Bailey also made some comments about civil-rights leader Jesse Jackson and the Palestine Liberation Organization. A local resident has asked for equal time to respond to remarks.

WAKY will probably grant the equal-time request. But so what? That's what radio should occasionally deal with - controversy. There's more to life than "My Sharona."

In an interview, Bailey said, "People are too damned sensitive. It's just a matter of trying to have a good time. Trying to entertain people. I'm not permitted a personal opinion. I can't mention John Y. Brown. I can't mention Louie Nunn. So I simply stay away from it."

Bill Bailey should not stay away from it. Of course, the things Bailey says don't "necessarily represent" the views of WAKY, its employees or the company. They don't necessarily represent my views, either.

But they are a damned sight more interesting to listen to than the 1,327th playing of "My Sharona."