The Silver Circle honors media professionals who began their careers in television at least 25 years ago, either in a performing, creative, technical, or administrative role within the industry, or in a related field such as television journalism education, advertising, promotion, or public relations, with service connected to the San Francisco / Northern California Chapter.
Over the course of their 25-year career, honorees must also have made a significant contribution to the chapter.
Mitch Agruss: better known to thousands of children in the Sacramento area as Cap’n Mitch-has been involved in children’s programming for the past 26 years. For 15 years, his program “Anchors Away ” served the Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto area. Prior to his television activity, Mitch was a stage actor on Broadway, Off Broadway and with the American Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Connecticut He also performed on live television in New York in the 1950s.
CAL BOLLWINKEL is currently Program/Operations Manager at KTXL in Sacramento. Cal is also the editorial “voice” of TV/40 and has delivered more than 600 editorials. He has served as Corporate Program Manager of the BMA stations in Portland and Denver, as well as Sacramento. His television background also includes stints as Program Manager at KXTV, Sacramento, Executive Producer and . Assistant Program Director at KPIX. He was producer of “Contact” with Tom Snyder, Philadelphia. He has a back- ground in radio, as well, and was Program Manager of KYW, the second all-news radio station.
Belva Davis has spent more than 50 years in Bay Area journalism (print, radio and television). Among Belva’s accomplishments, she was the Bay Area’s first African-American female television news anchor and first on the West Coast. She has worked at KTVU, KPIX , KRON, and KQED. As a reporter, Davis covered many important events of the day, including issues of race, gender, and politics. In a career spanning half a century, she has reported many of the most explosive stories of the era, including the Berkeley student protests, the birth of the Black Panthers, the Peoples Temple cult that ended in the mass suicides at Jonestown, the assassinations of San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, the onset of the AIDS epidemic, and from Africa, the terrorist attacks that first put Osama bin Laden on the FBI’s Most Wanted List. Among Belva’s many honors, in addition to the Silver Circle and seven Emmy® statuettes, has been as a recipient of the 1995 NATAS Governors’ Award and many other Bay Area, regional, statewide and national honors; including numerous accolades from AFTRA, RTNDA, PBS, and BABJA. She was the host of KQED-PBS This Week in Northern California for almost twenty years and co-author of Never in My Wildest Dreams. Belva retired from KQED in November of 2012. Belva is married to former KTVU photographer Bill Moore (Silver Circle 1989).
General manager, KRCR-TV, Redding, began his broadcasting career at KIEM-TV in Eureka in 1955, following his graduation from Oregon State. He moved to KOTI-TV, Klamath Falls, Oregon, where he held positions as Operations and Sales Manager and General Manager. In 1964, he transferred to KRCR-TV and was elected President of Sacramento Valley Television, Inc. in 1967. He is now Vice President and Director of California Oregon Broadcasting, Inc.-the parent corporation with television, -radio and CATV holdings. He is actively involved in the community, including serving as President of the Chamber of Commerce, the Rotary Club and Shasta County United Crusade. He is currently a member of Mercy Medical Center’s Board of Trustees and various hospital committees.
WALT HARRIS began his radio and television career in 1954 as a free-lance announcer. His talent and love of sports over the past 35 years has given Walt involvement in station management and production. ·On the management side, he has worked at KFRC, KNTV, KOVR and KTVU. As a sports producer/director at Channel 2, his resume includes working with the Oakland A’s, San Francisco Giants, NHL Hockey, NBA Basketball, World Team Tennis and Pac 10 basketball. And many fondly remember Walt’s role as producer of Roller Derby in the early days of KTVU.
Executive Vice President, Golden Empire Broadcasting Co., has a long career in Northern California radio and television. He began as an intern at KGGC, San Francisco, in 1938. Following various announcing and production assignments in Merced and Sacramento, Charles served in the U.S. Army-in the Signal Corps, of course. He returned to civilian life as manager of radio stations in Merced and Chico, entering the television side at KHSL-TV in 1962, where he now supervises operations.
LES MALLOY started out at KGO-TV creating and emceeing San Francisco’s first daily variety show, featuring visiting stars, wild animals, amateurs and the Phil Bovero Band. Born in Watsonville, Les came to San Francisco and edged his way into radio via KOTT and KTAB. In the ’40s, he became the most-sponsored “deejay” in San Francisco, simultaneously working at KYA, KFRC and KGO, later taking his sponsors into television.
BILL MOORE, known as one of the best in the business by his peers, was one of the first employees at KTVU. Starting out as a professional photographer, Bill was sent to the Kodak Training School for News Journalists in the early 1970s. He remembers working with the old 16mm wind-up Bell & Howell silent camera, producing black and white news footage, working with his close friend and mentor, the late Will Silbey. Now he is expert with the latest state-of the-art electronic equipment, covering many of the big stories for the award-winning Channel 2 News.
JUDITH MORGAN-JENNINGS became involved in broadcasting when she was just eleven years old. She won a contest, placing her on a live TV program for children. She switched to radio when she was 13′, and was featured on WGAR’s Fairytale Theatre. At 15, she began a modeling career. Judith later went to work in the KYW-TV publicity department, working her way up to Assistant Publicity Director, before moving to San Francisco where she assisted on a talk show at KCBS; was Production Coordinator at KBHK-TV; worked for three years as a talkshow host for KOO Radio and then joined KTVU as Publicity Director in 1976. She is now Public Relations and Publicity Director at that station. She has been active with the TV Academy, serving on the Board of Governors and as program chair. She lives on a houseboat in Alameda, allowing her an enviable commute-a 10-minute rowboat ride.
DWIGH T. NEWTON, born in Ohio and educated in Canada, is best known as the long-time television columnist for the San Francisco Examiner. He began as a copy boy at the Los Angeles Examiner, later becoming librarian at the San Francisco Examiner, city columnist and finally TV columnist. He is remembered by many for his 22 years producing “Schoolcast” and other broadcast assignments on KYA, KGO, KFRC and the NBC Network. In addition to his columnist/critic writing, Dwight was featured in many on-air appearances for KGO-TV, KQED-TV, KBHK-TV and KPIX, including a regular appearance on the “Evening Show.”
JIM OSBORN has more than 30 years of experience in television, including positions as Vice President and General Manager for KGO-TV, San Francisco, and WXYZ-TV, Detroit. Prior to these assignments, Jim was General Sales Manager for CBS stations in Milwaukee, Sacramento, Los Angeles, and at KGO, Jim started his career at WMBV-TV in Green Bay, Wisconsin , and most recently was President/General Manager for the Bay Area Interconnect.
DIANE DONIAN , currently Deputy Director of the California Office of Tourism, was professional media person in San Francisco for ’25 years, handling press relations, promotion and marketing for personalities and organizations alike. As a producer and talent coordinator at KPIX, KBHK-TV and MGM, ABC and NBC in Los Angeles, her credits include such shows as Bell Telephone Hour, Frank Sinatra Show, Bing Crosby Specials and others. She is a founding member of the San Francisco/Northern California Chapter of NATAS.
WANDA RAMEY was the first woman news anchor in Northern California, Working at KGO-TV in 1951, later moving to KPIX in 1957 where she spent the next 10 years. She was also affiliated with KQED-TV and PBS as the San Francisco correspondent for a special weekly news magazine. Wanda also served as West Coast correspondent for Voice of America for 10 years during the 1970s. She has won many honors, including an EMMY, and she was a member of the AFfRA Board of Directors.
FRANK RODMAN recently retired from KQED-TV after 22 years of service as a master control engineer. Frank began his broadcasting involvement at the age of 15 as a sportscaster on a Merced radio station. The following years took him from KSAY, KKID, KRON-TV and KGO-TV to KQED-TV where he established himself as “Uncle Rod” to the more than 8,000 “kids”who called the station to talk to this unique master control engineer. “I told them that when they see their names on TV it means Uncle Rod loves them!”
A native New Yorker and graduate of San Francisco’s Galileo HS and San Francisco State College, Jim Scalem first came to KQED in 1958 as a volunteer apprentice Floor Director and, at the age of 16, started his long career in public television.
After doing such other ladder-climbing jobs as KQED Auction Warehouse Supervisor, Assistant Bookeeper , and night switchboard operator, where he answered viewer calls-mostly complaints!!, Jim then rose thru the usual lower-level production jobs to be a full-time Producer-Director by 1973. He was already the station’s On-Air Fundraising and Promotion Producer, and began directing national series such as World Press and David Littlejohn-Critic at Large.
One of Jim’s most memorable Production Assistant and AD jobs was working on KQED’s pioneering nitely one hour local news program NEWSROOM.
During KQED’s March fundraising drive in 1974, Bay Area resident Joan Baez asked if she could be a volunteer Pledge Nite host. Joan joined Newsroom reporter Bill Schechner and SANG her appeals for contributions from viewers.This lead to Joan agreeing to tape a one-hour studio concert that was used by KQED for... what else? – fundraising!
Jim co-produced and directed AN HOUR WITH JOAN BAEZ with his KQED colleague Leslie Miner and they were thrilled and proud to win a local Bay Area Emmy® for it.
In the 1970’s, Jim and Leslie again teamed to create and produce a series of about 150 one-minute biographies of famous people. These SPACES BETWEEN PROGRAMS were presented on the Birthdays of the people profiled, and again won Leslie and Jim a Bay Area local Emmy®.
Jim became Executive Producer of KQED Local & National Cultural Programming in the late 1970’s. With Roi Peers,Jim produced the yearly live telecasts of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music’s Sing It Yourself Messiah, as well as the San Francisco Opera in the Park concerts.
In the early 1980’s, Jim took over as KQED’s Third Program Manager in the station’s 30-year history, following in the footsteps of Nat Katzman and The Legendary co-Founder of KQED–Jonathan Rice. During Jim’s tenure KQED consistently had one of the largest viewerships of any public television station in the country. KQED’s local on-air fund raising drives averaged well-over one million dollars a drive.
Jim also found time in the late seventies and early eighties to produce some 50 national PTV telecasts of first class tennis tournaments in this country and in Italy, Germany, and even Dubai. These telecasts came as a result of Jim and KQED locally televising the San Francisco stop on the ATP Grand Prix tour, with the late Barry MacKay as Tournament Director.
Deciding to leave KQED in 1990 after 32 years, Jim and his wife Linda Cohen moved to Washington, DC where for 8 years he headed the Fundraising Programming Department at PBS. During that period, he was responsible for creating, funding, managing, and acquiring more than 350 national “pledge” programs for affiliates like KQED to program their on-air fundraising drives.These programs included: the Three Tenors Concerts from Los Angeles and Riverdance, Les Miserables in Concert, two Peter, Paul and Mary specials, three Victor Borge Then and Now shows, The Eagles Reunion Concert, Yanni at the Acropolis, Andre Rieu–the Vienna I Love, various classic commercial television specials with Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, Perry Como’s Irish Christmas, and five Lawrence Welk specials. Jim also pioneered the highly successful “self-help” genre of fundraising programming by commissioning and acquiring programs; featuring, John Bradshaw,mmenopause expert Dr. Judith Reichman and many others.
In 1998 Jim went independent, co-producing with the talented JoAnn Young national public television fund-raising specials ranging from Bobby Darin–Beyond the Song to Robert Mirabal-Music from a Painted Cave -a Native American concert/dance performance show – from a performance-driven tribute to The Legendary Liberace, to music-filled biographical tributes to The Mamas and the Papas, and The Kingston Trio. In addition, he produced an Ice Skating Special for NBC SPORTS entitled Divas on Ice, starring Katerina Witt.
Now at the age of 72, Jim is teaming with his old KQED Newsroom colleague Henry Kroll to produce an Indy documentary on 93-year old Bert Steinberg, a lifetime New York and San Francisco baseball fan who this year attended ALL 81 road games of the NL Champion San Francisco Giants, who named Bert and his wife Le Anne their Fans of The Year.
A GIANTS FAN himself for 65 years, jim,still attends most all of their home games and celebrates their Three National League Pennants in the last five years!
DAVID SEELY has served the technical and management needs of KGO-TV for 35 years. Dave went to work in 1950 as a cameraman, audio engineer, and video engineer on many local and network programs. He became Technical Director in 1959 and Technical Manager in 1969, a position he held until his retirement in 1985. Programs he worked on include Wide World of Sports, Tennessee Ernie Ford Show, Anniversary Game and pilots for Laugh In and the Gong Show.
THOMAS sold his first painting when he was 14 years old, and he was working as a surveyor at 18. His friends thought he was out of his mind when he resigned as a surveyor for the City of San Jose to talce a job (at a lesser salary) as an artist for KGO-TV. That was in 1950, and for the next 36 years Cal designed sets for many programs, including Jack LaLanne, Harry Owens, Science in Action, Albert Wilson, Korla Pandit and Don Sherwood’s “San Francisco Tonight”-for which he won an EMMY for Art Direction. He later served KGO-TV as Art Director, Production Manager, Program Manager and n Labor Relations.
FRED VAN AMBURG, VA Enterprises, Inc., graduated from San Francisco State in 1956.He worked the 1956 Republican Convention with H.V. Kaltenborn before taking a radio job in Merced. From there he moved to KSBW, and thence to KPIX as a Sportscaster. After a stint at KFRC and KNEW Radio he became anchor of KGO-TV’s NewScene 7, which won four Emmys for Best News in Northern California . He is currently doing freelance productions with his wife Loie.
JACK ARMSTRONG, long-time Administrator of the San Francisco/Northern California Chapter of NATAS and equally long-time Station Representative at TV Guide was the surprise addition to the Silver Circle Class of 1988. Since Jack produced the induction the committee had to keep it a secret. Many recognize Jack as the guiding force that has held the San Francisco NATAS chapter together over the years, through the lean years as well as the recent affluent times. He served as this chapter’s only administrator, and at no salary. In fact, his countless hours and unceasing effort of behalf of NATAS nationally, as well as from a local standpoint, are incalculable.
LES AVERY, KQED, started at KRE Radio in 1944 where he was responsible for building a ‘good music’ format.He moved to KSFR and in 1968 to KNEW television. When Ch. 32 was donated to KQED, Les moved to KQED and Master Control for the next 15 years,where his contributions to the success of that station were varied but consistent.
NANCY ‘Miss Nancy’ BESST graduated from Northwestern University. She started her broadcasting career in Baltimore as a staff teacher for Romper Room. She was the original Miss Nancy on KGO-TV before moving to KTVU where she stayed until 1969. She has also appeared on KRON-TV and KBHK. One of the founding members of NATAS, she has also served on the Board of California Press Women, SF Ad Club, Press Club and AWRT. She authored the children’s book “Milton and Matilda .”
DON B. CURRAN, Curran-Victor Co.,began his career in television at KGWA, Enid, Oklal10ma. He joined KTVI, St. Louis as Promotion Director and moved on to ABC New York in 1961. He became VP & GM of KGO Radio in 1962 and 1ater served in the same capacity at WABC Radio, KGO-TV and KABC-TV .He became VP of KBHK-TV in 1974, and served as President of Fie1d Communications through 1984.
ALDO H. ‘Al’ CONSTANT, KRON-TV, began broadcasting in pre-WWII days in Omaha. He came to KRON-FM in 1947 as Program Manager, and moved to TV in November of 1949 as jack-of-all trades. After a brief stint in Hawaii, and KBAK, Bakersfield he returned to KRON in 1959 and rose from Station Manager to Chairman and CEO before his retirement in 1977.
SHELDON ‘Shelly’ FAY, KPIX, producer, director, photographer, film editor, bon vivant and all round nice guy began his career at KPIX in 1962. From 1964 to 1970 he served as Vice President of Mendelson Productions.He left Lee to set up his own company for the next five years before returning to KPIX where he has worked on Evening Magazine, Impact, All Together Now, SuperKids and Hot Streak. He has won numerous Emmy® Awards.
BOB FOSTER, San Mateo Times, began covering television in late ’48 as a columnist/critic, making him one of the senior writers in the business. He started with CBC:: in Toronto where he worked with Lorne Greene and George Jennings. He has also done a stint with the Detroit Free Press and the Mountain View Register-Leader.
NICK HAMIL, KTVU, a native San Franciscan, entered television in 1954 as a production person with duties of scenic carpenter,/ painter, graphics and stage hand at KGO-TV. He was Art Director on the Tennessee Ernie Ford Show. In 1972 he went to KABC as Graphics Manager, but returned to KPIX two years later as Art Director. He joined KTVU in 1978 as a designer, and later Art Director.
RAY JACOBS, KTVU, began his television career at KOB, Albuquerque in November 1948, a month before television came to San Francisco. He joined KTVU in 1958 as a news reporter. He was promoted to Production Manager, then to Director of News and Special Events, Operations Manager and finally to Director of Administration. He is seen on Ch. 2 editorials.
JON S. KELLY, KCRA-TV, was born in Berkeley and graduated from UC. In 1960 he became VP and General Manager of the Corporation which owned KCRA-TV & AM and KCTC-FM.In 1962 he became a partner and owner of Kelly Broadcasting Co.Jon is active in civic and community affairs and has served on the Sacramento Chamber of Commerce, Boy Scouts of America and the Sacramento Symphony.
Fred LaCosse is well-known to San Francisco Bay Area television viewers as a veteran news anchor, reporter and talk show host. Since the beginning of his broadcasting career in 1956, he has worked at six television stations: WTTW, Chicago; WLWC, Columbus, Ohio; KNTV, San Jose; KRON and KGO-TV, San Francisco; and KICU, San Jose and held positions in almost every phase of the industry.
He co-hosted the daily morning talk show A.M. San Francisco on KGO-TV (ABC) from 1982 to 1987 with his wife, Terry Lowry. LaCosse also hosted the weekly syndicated program “Silicon Valley Business This Week” from 1995 to 2001.
In 1978, LaCosse received an Emmy® from the Northern California Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for his news feature reporting and was honored by UPI for the best news feature report in California and is a member of the S.F. NorCal Silver Circle (class of 1988). He has also received numerous awards for his community involvement.
Since 1981, Fred has been President of LaCosse Productions, which produces corporate videos; conducts communication seminars on handling the news media interview, making effective presentations, and performing on camera; and provides talent services.
Fred is now focusing his public speaking efforts on his presentation “Your American Freedoms: Protect Them or Lose Them.”
LaCosse has generously given of his time to community and charitable organizations such as: The Janet Pomeroy Center; The Salvation Army; Laguna Honda Volunteers, Inc.; The Community Music Center of San Francisco; St. Luke’s Hospital; Red Cross; He is also active in NATAS and the Broadcast Legends.
A native of South Bend, Indiana, he received a B.A. in Liberal Arts from Wabash College and an M.A. in Broadcasting from Northwestern University. Fred has two grown sons and lives in San Francisco with his wife, television & radio personality Terry Lowry. (Silver Circle ‘1996).
VERN LOUDEN served as a director and Production Manager of KRON-TV from 1950 to 1968. He worked on the highly acclaimed Science in Action series as well as Explorers of Tomorrow and Assignment Four. From 1968 to 1970 he was Executive Producer of Health Sciences Television at UC Med Center. After a stint in New Orleans, he returned to the Bay Area as a director at KGO-TV 7.
GEORGE LUM, KTVU, graduated from San Francisco State in 1954 and began his television career as a news and copy writer for NBC. He joined KPIX in 1955 as a floor manager and went on to become a producer/director . In 1959 he moved over to KTVU as a staff director, where he was subsequently named Production Manager and finally Senior Staff Director. He is an advisor to the Chinese Media Committee and speaks at Bay Area colleges.
CLAUD MANN, JR., KTVU, began his career at KPRC-TV Houston, while still in college. After a brief stint at Benton & Bowles in New York he returned to KPRC as an announcer / director/newscaster in 1950. He worked at KSBW, Salinas, KXTV, Sacramento, Gordon News Films and KTVU as a News Anchor /Reporter and News Analyst/Commentator.
HARRY MAR’il’IN, KCRA-TV, is a California native, a graduate of UOP and a TV veteran. He started his broadcasting career in radio, then moved to the original Ch.40 in Sacramento. He went to KCRA in 1956, where he has been an announcer, director, co-anchor, children’s host “Captain Sacto,” movie host and star of the 7:30 Show, the nation’s first magazine program, and the inspiration for Evening Magazine.
DAVE McELHATTON, KPIX, was born in Oakland! He started his broadcasting career in 1951 at KCBS Radio where he became a legend over the next 25 years, as host of Music ‘Til Dawn, Masters of Melody, Viewpoint, and McElhatton in the Morning. In 1977 he moved to KPIX as anchor of Eyewitness News. He has served on the Board of the San Francisco Lung Association, and has taught broadcasting at SF State for many years. He is also a pilot.
Lee Mendelson (born March 24, 1933) is an American television producer. He is best known as the executive producer of the many Peanuts animated specials. Mendelson, was born in San Francisco, California, grew up in San Mateo, and entered Stanford University in 1950, where he studied creative writing. After graduating in 1954, he spent three years in the Air Force where he served as a lieutenant. He then worked several years for his father, a vegetable grower and shipper.
Mendelson’s career in television began in 1961, when he started working at San Francisco’s KPIX television station, where he created public service announcements. A fortunate find of some antique film footage of the 1915 San Francisco World’s Fair led to Mendelson’s first production, a documentary entitled The Innocent Fair. The documentary was the first in a series on the history of the city, San Francisco Pageant, for which Mendelson won a Peabody Award. Mendelson left KPIX in 1963 to form his own production company. His first work was a documentary on Willie Mays, A Man Named Mays. Shortly after the documentary aired, Mendelson came across a Peanuts comic strip that revolved around Charlie Brown’s baseball team. Mendelson thought that since he’d just “done the world’s greatest baseball player, now [he] should do the world’s worst baseball player, Charlie Brown.” Mendelson approached Peanuts creator Charles Schulz with the idea of producing a documentary on Schulz and his strip. Schulz, who had enjoyed the Mays documentary, readily agreed. The 1965 documentary, Charlie Brown & Charles Schulz, was the beginning of a 30-year collaboration between Schulz and Mendelson. While Mendelson was attempting to find a market for the Schulz documentary, he was approached by The Coca-Cola Company, who asked him if he was interested in producing an animated Christmas special for television. Mendelson was, and he immediately contacted Schulz in regards to using the Peanuts characters. Schulz in turn suggested hiring animator and director Bill Meléndez, whom Schulz had worked with while creating a Peanuts-themed advertising campaign for the Ford Motor Company. Mendelson also hired jazz composer Vince Guaraldi after hearing a Guaraldi-composed song while driving across the Golden Gate Bridge.
WILLIAM ‘Bill’ OSTERHAUS, VariComNCI, started in 1955 at the top -in the News & Special Projects Department of NBC. From there he moved over to WNBC as a Staff Producer. In 1960 he joined Group W in Cleveland, and later served as Program Director at KPIX and KYW, before returning to the Bay Area as VP & General Manager of KPIX. In 1973 he went to KQED as President and General Manager. In 1979.
STEW PARK, KNTV, a native of San Jose, attended San Jose State where he majored in Radio & Television. In 1962, while still a sophomore, he joined KNTV as a floorman. Hehas since held many positions including production supervisor, operations manager, Program Director, Sales Manager and finally Station Manager. He has served NATAS as a Governor and Area Vice President.
MELVIN J. ‘Mel’ QUERIO, KCPM, began in broadcasting 36 years ago. During those years, he has served in many capacities from announcer, floor director, cameraman, and producer I director to General Manager and owner. Over the years he has been involved with KTVU, KOVR, KENS, KLOC, KTXL, KCSO, KDVR, and KPDX. He is currently General Manager of the NBC affiliate KCPM in Chico.
A. Richard (Dick) Robertson began his broadcasting career at KSL-TV in Salt Lake City in 1951. He remained there until 1956, when he took a job as the Advertising Manager for Television Age Magazine in New York City. In 1958 he became the Promotion Manager for KTVU in Oakland. A year later, KRON stole him away, and he remained at 4 for 18 years, until 1977.
That’s when he followed his wife, LaNore, to Flagstaff, Arizona, where she had obtained a professorship at the Northern Arizona University School of Dentistry. Dick became a professor in the university’s communications program, teaching journalism and public relations courses.
In 1979 Dick returned to the Bay Area, and worked for three years as KQED’s Director of Corporate Communications, before starting his own firm, Mother Lode Communications. For fourteen years he and his second wife Rose produced the Comedy Day Celebration in Golden Gate Park.
When he “retired” in 1996 he moved to Gold Country, and subsequently became the marketing manager for the Tuolumne County Film Commission, attracting film, TV commercials, and documentaries to the scenic foothills. Even now, in his second “retirement,” he did publicity work for his homeowners association in Henderson, Nevada.
Dick has served as the NATAS Chapter President, Executive Director, and represented us as Chair of the San Francisco Ballot Simplification Committee. He’s a past president of the Broadcast Promotion Association, the Sales Promotion Executives Association (NorCal), and has served on the boards of too many organizations to list here.
As well as in Arizona, Dick has taught at Golden Gate University, and at San Francisco and San Jose State.
DAVID M. SACKS, Electrovision, Inc., began his career as a studio engineer for CBS. Af ter a stint in the Navy during WWII he came to KROW Radio in Oakland where he became Sales Manager. In 1952 he moved over to ABC Spot Sales and then on to KGO-TV as Sales Manager. He served as VP & GM from 1960 to 1970, after which he became partners with Bing Crosby to launch The San Francisco Experience. He has since syndicated “Take My Word For It.” He is a consultant for Christian Science Publishing Society, and a past President of NATAS.
GORDON F. WALDEAR, Freelance writer/producer/consultant, has a newspaper background . He has worked in Washington, D.C.,Rockford, Illinois, Santa Rosa and Oakland . He joined KGO in 1954 to produce a 17 part series “FYI.” From 1955to 1960 he freelanced with KGO, KRON and KPIX working on sucli shows as “Success Story” and “People With A Past.” He rejoined KGO-TV in 1960 creating “Expedition California.” He also served as Special Projects Director, executive producer, producer and writer, and has garnered 36 awards. In 1972 he set up his own company and joined Dick Fernandez in 1982 in Location Video Services.
DICK WEISE, KTVU, has been in television 34 years. He started in Kansas, and came to KSBW-TV in 1956. He moved to KTVU in 1958 where he has been Art Director and Creative Services Director. He is founder and two time President of Broadcast Designers’ Association, and has served on the Boards of NATAS and BPME. He has won both an Emmy and Addy for his animation and on-air promotions.
IAN B. ZELLICK, KTVU, has been with the station since 1958. He began his career as Director of Art and Production, moved on to Special Projects, and in 1970 was named Director of Community Affairs and Assistant to the General manager and Vice President. He is a member of the Board of Governors of NATAS, and is active in 23 other community organizations.
Stan Atkinson remains a public figure and recognized personality in Northern California after 40 years in TV and decades on the air in the Sacramento area – delivering the news. As a TV news anchor, Atkinson traveled to some of the most turbulent places in the world including Afghanistan twice, El Salvador, Somalia, Vietnam and Cambodia, bringing viewers a close-up look as he reported breaking news from the war zones. He wanted to keep his community informed about the fight for Democracy.
Atkinson re-launched his Sacramento career as main anchor at NBC Affiliate KCRA in 1976 and was dubbed by The Sacramento Bee as “The Man Who Owns Sacramento.” In 1994, he became principal news anchor for KOVR until he retired in 1999. He remains one of the most popular news figures in the region.
Overseas reporting earned Atkinson three Emmy® awards – two for assignments inside Afghanistan and another for a documentary about Somalia. Atkinson was a principal fundraiser helping to raise money to build the $2.2 million California Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the State Capitol grounds.
Through his Stan Atkinson Foundation, Atkinson has partnered with various organizations including The Sacramento River Cats baseball team and the East Sacramento Rotary to raise money to build River Cat’s Independence Field – a multi-use sports and recreation facility for disabled youth and adults.
Before KCRA, Atkinson started a TV station in Santa Rosa. Channel 50 ended up folding and was a heartbreak. But Atkinson’s passion for TV news remained pure and ongoing. The feeling and philosophy continue. He says the night in 1999 when he left the studio for the last time, he was as excited and energized about the business as the first day he walked into a TV station.
Today, the personal license plate on his car reads – Old News. But Stan Atkinson remains a legend – a personality recognized for his service to the community and dedication to the industry of television.
LOU BELL, KNTV, started his television career in Wichita . Today he recalls the days of live black and white TV-pre video-tape. Having mastered the ‘microchip’ world of engineering, Lou now serves as the Director of Engineering for KNTY, where he has been since 1958.
LUCILLE BLISS, the “Lady of 1,000 voices,” was born in Manhattan and came to San Francisco at the age of 12. Her first national radio show was Professor Puzzlewit on NBC followed by such national shows as: Are These Our Children?, ABC; Pat Novak, ABC; Candy Matson, NBC; Morey Amsterdan, CBS; The Edger Bergen Show, NBC. Lucille went to Hollywood in 1950 to play Anastasia in Walt Disney’s Cinderella. She returned to San Francisco as the voice of Crusader Rabbit. She had her own children’s TV show, Happy Birthday to You, which ran for five years. She has done many Hanna-Barbera parts. She was Smurffette on the Smurffs. She still commutes each week to Los Angeles for work and does local voiceovers and voice coaching. Lucille has been active in the Broadcast Legends.
TOM BREEN, KTVU, is Program Director at Channel 2, a position he has held since 1966. Prior to that he was Station Manager at WKBS.’.f\l, Philadelphia, and Program Manager of KCRA.:rv.He produced entertainment programming for the USMC during WWII. He has served on the Board of Directors of NATPE.
RUSS COUGLAN, KGO.:rv, began his career as one of the original members of Armed Forces Radio. In 1945 he joined KROW radio in Oakland where he worked with Don Sherwood and Phyllis Diller. After rising to G.M. he left for KCBS and ultimately KGO.:rv as General Sales Manager. He became VP & GM in 1971-during the ‘great years’.Moving to New York in ’79, he returned to KGO in 1980 to re-join both radio and television.
DOREETA ‘Dee’ DOMKE, KRCR-TV, began as a receptionist/secretary at KVIP (now KRCR TV). She soon became an on-camera spokeswoman for many clients, she hosted movies and game shows. In 1961she entered Sales, and in ’63 added traffic and programming, taking over Operations in 1966. In 1984 Dee was honored as Outstanding Business Woman of the Year in Community Service.
FRANKLYN DOWD, KSBW.:r\T, began his career in 1942. After a stint in radio, he entered TV in 1952 as an engineer with KFEQ.’.f\l, St. Joseph, Mo. as a transmitter operator, control switch er and projectionist.In 1955 it was on to Great Falls and in 1960 to KSBW where he now serves as Maintenance Engineer and TD.
DICK FERNANDEZ, KDOl.rTV, joined KGO.’.fV in 1951as Technical Director. He took a leave of absence 8 years ago to assist the Oakland School District set up KOOL, a Regional Occupa tion Center for Broadcast Training. He left ABC in 1983 to work full time at KOOL. In 1976 he received the Board of Governors Award on behalf of the Broadcast Industry Community Serv ice Project. He is a partner in Location Video Services, Inc.
FLORENCE FOWLER, Vista Productions, Inc., was introduced to ‘Showbiz’ as Business Manager to Ginger Rogers. After various jobs in Hollywood, she moved to the Bay Area where she formed Vista Productions in 1959. She is a Charter Member of the Chapter and was also President of The Northern California Academy of TV Arts and Sciences in 1955-56-the fore runner of NATAS.
ALLEN T. GILLILAND, Gill Industries, Inc., graduated from Stanford in 1946 with a degreein Economics. He joined Sunlite Bakery in 1946 and soon became GM. In 1955 he built KNTY, and in 1960 became President of Standard Radio & TV. Got into cable inthe 60’s and sold off KNTV in 1978.He is Chairman of Gill Industries, past Chairman of CcrA and NcrA. He has endowed the Chair of Telecommunications at San Jose State University.
BILL HILLMAN, KPIX, has been a Reporter/ Anchor for Ch. 5 Eyewitness News since 1953. He got his start in radio in Boise, Idaho in 1942. In 1947, he moved to the Bay Area and worked as an Engineer/Announcer for KWBR and KSAN. He served as National President of American Federation of Television and Radio Artists from 1979 to 1984.
ROBERT M. ‘Bob’ HOSFELDT, Gill Industries, Inc., began his career as assistant to Fran Conrad at KNTV in 1959. He was promoted to Program Director in the ’60’s and eventually rose to Vice President and General Manager until the station was sold. He moved to Gill Industries as President in 1978. He is currently President of the California State Scholarship Assoc. and serves on the Board of CCTA.
ISAIAH ‘Ike’ HUNTER, Jr. KGO-TV, started at the top in 1949. Originally hired to oversee the ‘Sutro Mansion’ Ike was there when KGO-TV broadcast from the Ballroom. He joined the stage crew staff while on the mountain and stayed on with the ABC o&o until his retirement 33 years later.
BOB KELLY, KXTY, was Commercial Production Manager until his retirement.He began his career in Baltimore. In 1956 he came to Sacramento and joined KBET (later KXTV) and stayed with the station 29 years.As a writer/producer / director he created untold numbers of commercials as well as dramatic series. He is still active in freelance television.
LES KRAMES, KRON-TV, began his Bay Area TV career in 1951 when he joined Ch. 4. In 1966 Les was promoted to Art Director. He is a native of the Bay Area, graduating from San Francisco Junior College and the Academy of Art. He lives in Moraga with his wife Bonnie and three children, Kristen, Kurt and Mark.
PHILIP G. LASKY, KQED, started in broadcasting in Denver in 1922. He came to San Francisco in 1935 and took over KSFO. He put KPIX on the air, Christmas Eve 1948, and soon after televised the first East/West Game. He sold Ch. 5 to Group W in 1955 and stayed on as GM and West Coast VP, retiring in 1968. He is now serving his second term on the KQED Board of Directors. He was honored by the Academy in 1974 with a Certificate of Merit.
JACK MATRANGA, KTXL, began his career in 1945 with Armed forces Radio in Tokyo.After the war he worked as an announcer in Yreka, then returned to Sacramento to start KGMS Radio. He launched KTXL in 1968 and later KDVR, Denver, and KPDX, Portland. He is President of Camellia City Broadcasters, Inc. and GM of KTXL.
RUTH ‘Mickey’ McCLUNG, KHSl.-TV, put the station on the air in August 1953.It was the first station in the Northern Sacramento Valley and represented all three networks. Both the TV and radio station moved into new quarters on the 30th Anniversary in 1983. She has served on the NAB Television Code Review Board . Mrs.McClung lives in Pebble Beach.
CHARLIE MENG, KTVU, worked as a civilian radio operator for the military during WWII. After the war he was a photographer/cameraman for NBC at the White House.From D.C. to · L.A., for a while, then to KPIX and finally to KTVU where he worked on Roller Derby for many years. Walt Harris referred to him on air as ‘Blue-eyed’ Charlie. He is known as the ‘Gilbralter’ of Ch. 2 and has never been sick.
DOUGLAS B. MONTGOMERY, College of San Mateo, got his start with ABC in Hollywood in 1946. From there he was all over the map. Boise, Delta, Colo., Salinas, Pomona, KTTV, KOGO, San Diego and finally KSCM-TV where he doubled as an instructor of Broadcasting Arts and Station Manager of Ch. 60.
KEITH MOON, KSBW;J’V, began his television career in 1956 as a promotion writer for KBET (now KXTV).He served at the then Corinthian outlet as a Director, Creative Director and Promotion Director. In1967 it was off to KHOU, Houston and in ’68 to KIRO in Seattle. In 1969 he returned to California and KSBW Salinas. In ’79 he was made VP & GM of KSBW, and in 1981 President of Blair Broadcasting of California.
TERRENCE ‘Terry’ O’FLAHERTY was born in What Cheer, Iowa, and graduated from Beverly Hills High. After a stint in the US Navy and a fling at MGM he came to the San Francisco Chronicle as a copy boy but soon moved up the ladder to TV Columnist in 1953.He served on the Peabody Awards Committee from 1953 to 1984. In the ’60’s he hosted 170 shows for Group W called PM West. Terry worked on Garb’s last film.
RICHARD R. ‘Dick’ RECTOR is President and Executive Producer of Power/Rector Productions, Inc. and National Chairman of The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. He has been active in television since 1952 having produced network and local programs for over 33 years. He worked with CBS, Viacom Cable as West Coast Program Director and was Executive Director of Bi-lingual Children’s Television.
JONATHAN RICE, KQED, started in television over 38 years ago as a News Editor for KTLA in Hollywood. In 1953he switched to educational television, and is recognized, along with Jim Day, for having founded KQED. Jon served as Ch. 9’s Program Director until his retirement. He received the Governors Award in 1973.He still serves KQED as a consultant and fundraiser.
DOLLY RODGERS, KXTY, began her broadcasting career in 1955 as a bookkeeper with KBET. Through the years she moved from Office Manager to Chief Accountant, and on to Business and Financial Manager. p.s. KBET became KXTV... she remained Dolly.
CHARLES ‘Chuck’ ROGERS, KOVR, began his career as a freelance cameraman/producer. In the early sixties he shot and produced a documentary ‘Circus In The Sky’ for Four Winds to Adventure. He joined KOVR in 1970 where he has been shooting commercials and news events. He is working out of the Modesto office and News Bureau.
LEN SCHLOSSER, KPIX, has been Public Affairs Director at Ch. 5 since 1968. Prior to joining Group W, he was a consultant for the Mrs. America Pageant and worked with a PR Agency in Chicago. From 1956 to ’67 he did a stint as Program Director of WBBM Radio and moved over to WBBM.:rv as Public Affairs Director.
WILLIAM H. ‘Bill’ SCHUYLER, KSCH.:rv, entered the TV business 33 years ago at KHJ.:r\T as a local Salesman. In 1959 joined KTVU, and after the sale to Cox in 1963, he co-founded KMST in Monterey. The station was sold to Retlaw in 1979 and Bill decided to put KSCH.:rv, Ch. 58 Sacramento/Stockton on the air in Mid-March of 1986.
BARBARA SMITH, KNTY, started her Northern California career as a Media Buyer for BBD&O. She then moved to KSBW-TV as Office Manager, and for the past 16 years she has been Business Manager for KNTV. She has also taken on the unofficial role of ‘counselor-at large’ helping the new kids on the block.
HARRY SWEET was the first television cameraman hired in the Sacramento Valley in June 1953; five months before KCCC channel 40 went on the air. KCCC went dark three and a half years later. Harry was hired as Chief Photographer at KCRA Channel 3 by owner/operator Ewing C. Kelly because he had experience. He spent the next 33 years at KCRA.
Harry’s second career started on his retirement, when he convinced management to let him donate the entire 18 million feet of film he had saved for 30 years, valued at $9,000,000 to the Sacramento History Museum Collection Center. In June 1990, KOVR also gave their film collection to Sweet. With his wife Mauvis, they donated the collection to Sacramento State University. Harry donated over 3,500 hours to help catalog the now renamed, THE HARRY SWEET FILM COLLECTION, valued at $4,300,000.
Harry Sweet was named THE MOTION PICTURE CAMERMAN OF THE YEAR in 1968 by the California Press Photographers Association. He is a member of the first Silver Circle Class, 1986, and the owner of Studio 9 Film/Archive Productions.
JOHN WEAVER, KRON-TY, got his start in broadcasting in Yreka at KSYC Radio. He also worked for KGO Radio and as a Tech on the crew at KQED, all prior to joining Ch. 4 in October of 1955. He has worked as a Studio, Transmitter and Master Control Technician. In 1976 John became a News Photographer for NewsCenter 4.