I wrote that Clewer's program "moved to KFAC in 1969, then to KSRF in 1989 and continued until 2005." I was unable to determine which stations carried his program from 1995 to 2005. I discovered that 1997 radio page only this morning, so now I know that Clewer was also heard on KYPA. Every day I learn more and more so I can always say that "I'm not as dumb as I was yesterday." The World Wide Web makes research easy...but there are still many details that are impossible to find. Today, LARadio.com noted the death of longtime race announcer Bill Garr. Don said that Garr managed the UC Davis radio station at one time but I can't verify that he did. KDVS didn't go on the air until 1964, five years after Garr began his daily race reports from Santa Anita. And I've been unable to determine which television station Garr was on in the '60s. Ya wanna see what I wrote about Garr for a radio fanzine? Of course it has absolutely nothing to do with this thread, but.....
Bill Garr died on March 28 after years of declining health. He was 98. For nearly 40 years, Garr covered horse racing in southern California. He began on December 26, 1959, broadcasting live via telephone from the Santa Anita racetrack in Arcadia. He also broadcast races from Del Mar, Hollywood Park and the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds in Pomona and from 1962 to 1966 hosted a racing program on television. In the morning he would announce each day's scratches, at noon he would announce the Daily Double, and at night he would call the feature race and then recap the day's results. Many of his sponsors, including Canada Dry beverages and Kitty Queen cat food, stayed with him for several decades, Garr also hosted a Saturday morning show, Call About Racing. He was noted for his corny puns. On one call-in program, a listener asked, "Who do you like in the sixth race?" Garr quipped, "I like Hot Dog. He's a weiner." When a horse named Forty Winks finished first in a race, Garr called him "a real sleeper." When jockey Jerry Bailey was riding, Garr wondered aloud, "If Barnum runs a horse, does he have to put Bailey on him?" For most of his career, Garr was heard on KIEV but he was also heard on KNX in the 1990s. Born in San Francisco, Garr worked as a newscaster at NBC affiliate KNBR in the 1940s, wrote an autobiography in 2002 and wrote a racing novel, Dancer Boy, in 2005. William Radkovich, a contractor and horse owner who had installed the original turf course at Hollywood Park in 1938, named one of his horses "Bill Garr" in 1959 but after a few months changed his mind and renamed the horse "Ronnie's Ace," after Radkovich's son.