Greetings from Munich, Germany, ya'll!! My name is Monte Jones. I stumbled upon this forum while searching for information about stations from my distant past. I started at WQBC, Vicksburg, in 1955. Bored with my weekend shift riding the Mutual network I took another part-time offer from WVIM, Vicksburg. I left Vicksburg for WRBC, Jackson, after high school, and did the night shift. I was at WRBC when owners McCarty and Wright brought in account executive Chuck Stewart from WTIX, New Orleans, to be the GM to get serious and make money. Chuck announced talent would be paid based on ratings. I didn't think I had a chance against more talented and experienced on-air personalities. I returned to WVIM as PD. I soon after got from a friend at WRBC a copy of a market rating survey (Hooper or Pulse, don't remember which), which showed the only number one rating the station had during that surveying period was at 7 PM when yours truly was on the air. Moving was a mistake. I later got a call from the new GM at WRBC who offered me the PD's job and I took it. I was very tired of listening to Jack and Mary Shea yelling and screaming at each other everyday at WVIM. I was in Vicksburg every weekend to visit a girlfriend and after we decided to get married, I returned to WVIM so my new bride would not be far from her mommy. I think it was during this last gig at WVIM that Kramer Hass came on board. Jack Shea, owner and GM, told me he had found a kid from Port Gibson who wanted weekend work and I should talk to him and decide if we should hire him to do a weekend shift. Kramer impressed me as being a great and smart kid and he was hired. I worked with Roy Harris at WVIM a couple of times; also Larry Parks. Jack Shea fired the station manager every January after business dropped off. Mary Shea started doing the books and selling. She was selling spots for 50 cents and that meant business would forever be dismal because no merchant would be willing to be bumped back up to the rate card after the slow season ended. The Shea's screaming matches got to the point where I could hear them in my headphones when I was live. I finally had enough and walked out, headed for the coast. The WVMI gig in Biloxi lasted until the time when I was about to be drafted. In 1962 I took the advice of an Army recruiter and enlisted to be an information specialist and spent most of my Army years doing radio-TV in Germany (several times), Korea and Japan. After the Army I worked at WOAI, San Antonio; WNDE and WIBC, Indianapolis, the Voice of America, Washington, DC; and then returned to my favorite city in the world, Munich, Germany. While at the VOA in DC I received a job offer to work at the Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Inc., headquarters in Munich. That was in 1988 and I have been here since. RFE/RL closed its Munich headquarters in 1995 and moved to Prague in the Czech Republic. I declined an offer to move for more work and less money. So, I stayed in Munich. When I was doing the first WVIM stint while in high school, i often listened to George Florence and Jeff Hester (the record man) on WSLI. I visited George at the station a couple of times; took Kramer Haas to Jackson out to WSLI one Friday night to meet George and to see a radio station in the big city. I heard Kramer on the air in Washington after I arrived there to work at the VOA. I phoned him and we chatted, vowing to get together but we never did. I was sorry that we didn't because I later found out that he had passed away. He was one of the nicest people I ever met. I saw Bob Rall a couple of times when he dropped by WRBC to visit his friend there, Ron Fraser. What became of Al Simmons, PD at WSLI? Sorry to hear about the passing of radio legends in Jackson. Would be happy to hear from anyone. [email protected] Best to all!! Monte