My first time at WSBA transmitter site when I was about 15, Dave Flenner showed me how to operate the audio board that was in the transmitter room. That was the first console I ever used at WSBA. When I became Explorer Post advisor of the WSBA post, we were given use of the old building. Dave spent many a night helping us get the a/c working in the mushroom farm under the studios. This was all on his own time. He became CE after John Shadle left and had a brain injury in the late 70's and nearly died, but pulled through and later worked under several DOE. He came to my rescue on the road several times and talked me through technical issues more than once. He'll be missed.
AL Wolfe, what a man. He would do anything for a joke. I saw him just several weeks before his death. He didn't look good, but I had no idea what he was battling. I ran into him more than once at Lowes in East York. The last time he was trying to get my two daughters to laugh. He kept telling them he was one of the teen rock stars (I can't remember the name right now). And the one liners and corny jokes didn't stop coming.
I remember one day in the late 70's, Ron Chubb and I were standing in the mailroom, discussing our plans for the weekend. Al walked by said good morning and made a few jokes and left. A few minutes later, coming from the same direction as before, he walked up to us and had the same conversation. A few minutes later, the same thing. He was walking by us, going up the stairs through sales and back down the sprial staircase in the lobby so he could pass by us again going the same direction....all for the gag.
I still have copies of the Al Wolfe joke book that were given away when he was morning man prior to Harry West. It will be hard to forget a talent such as Al.