Conman Stalks Springfield

A widow living in the Rolling Road/Windsor Circle area of Springfield, Pa. was the victim of a conman who confronted her in her backyard and asked to borrow $50 to pay the tow fee for his car, last week. He identified himself as her new neighbor who had just moved in to a recently sold house a few doors down, apparently showing some knowledge of the neighborhood.

Springfield Police have been notified.

Wee Willie Weber R.I.P.

Bill “Wee Willie” Weber died Sunday morning. He was 81. Many of a certain age who grew up in the Philadelphia area will remember him showing afternoon cartoons such as AstroBoy on Channel 17. He was noted disc jockey for WIP in the late 1960s and early 1970s and for WPEN from 1989 to 2005.

He’d been doing a late-morning show, Second Cup of Coffee, on
WHAT (1340 AM).

Mr. Webber was chairman of the Broadcast Pioneers board. He is
survived by his wife, Constance, and children Bill Jr. and Wendy.

R.I.P. Wee Willie and thanks for the memories.

A Southern Swing

I just went due south a thousand miles to meet the lovely and wonderful Skyler Jane Lawrence who is even prettier than her picture, and who I suspect will turn out to bet every bit a pretty as older sister Kyley.

The South is an amazing place of 70 mph speed limits and clean roads. People seem to smile more south of D.C. Things happen that may seem funny to Northerners. The employees at a spotless Microtel in Walterboro, S.C. have orders to keep the lobbyTV tuned to either Fox News or the Weather Channel. The owner of a gift store on Jekyll Island — the one next to the “Rah” Bar — asks a woman she just met to watch her shop while uses the restroom.

And a billboard on I-95 a mile or so north of the Florda border asks in large letters “Who Is John Galt?”

Dixie gives you hope for the nation.

Herb Denenberg, A Great Pennsylvanian

Herb Denenberg died last night at his home. He was 81. The cause of death appears to have been a heart attack.

Mr. Denenberg  was born in Omaha, Nebraska but made his mark as a Pennsylvanian. He served as Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner, Pennsylvania Public Utility Commissioner and was an Emmy-winning  reporter and host at WCAU-TV from 1975-to 1998.  He was also a columnist for the original Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, the Philadelphia Daily News and numerous weeklies, and, up until his death,  for the new Philadelphia Bulletin.

He had degrees from Johns Hopkins University (B.S.), Creighton University School of Law (J.D.), Harvard University School of Law (LL.M.), and the University of Pennsylvania (Ph.D) and sought the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in 1974.

He was widely heralded as a consumer advocate. He was praised by Ralph Nader and co-authored the Social Protection Plan of Puerto Rico, the first no-fault law in a U.S. jurisdiction.

He was Loman Professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He also served as assistant professor of insurance at the University of Iowa, professor of law at Temple University, and adjunct professor at Cabrini College.

What he is most likely to be remembered for, however, is his investigative broadcast journalism. He was the subject of a story in Time Magazine  when people still read it back in 1976.  Besides the Emmys, of which he received 40, his reporting was recognized by
the National Press Club and he received numerous awards from the Philadelphia Press Association.

One story for which he will be long remembered concerned the sale of that Philadelphia staple the soft pretzel and forever changed the way it was sold and purchased. Vendors would buy the pretzels in bulk and sell them to motorists stopped at traffic lights throughout the city. These vendors would be on site all day and these sites really did not have any access to running water. Or any form of plumbing facility for that matter.

Mr. Denenberg’s crew filmed these vendors as they went about their work as they blew their noses and handled pretzels or spit on their hands to clean them and handle pretzels. The clinching scene was the man who returned from behind the bushes to resume his pretzel sales, obviously with unwashed hands. You see very few traffic light pretzel vendors today.

Mr. Denenberg’s curtain call concerning activism came with the Tea Party movement. He became disenchanted with the Democrat Party during the Clinton years and became even more outspoken during the Obama administration especially concerning health care matters.

He also became a harsh critic of dishonesty and leftist bias in the old media.

He was keynote speaker at the July 4 Tea Party event outside Independence Hall.

Mr. Denenberg served in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps of the U.S. Army.

He was a member of the board of Consumers Union and wrote popular consumer guides on insurance and health care.

Mr. Denenberg, who was Jewish, is survived by his wife, Naomi.

A Meeting With Amber Murphy

I just met the lovely Amber Murphy, who was out for a jaunt with mom, Holly, brother Hunter and sister Krista. Amber was born Feb. 6, the night of February Blizzard I.

When Holly went into labor Springfield emergency personnel gave her the option of having Amber at their home or taking a ride to the hospital. Holly chose the hospital. She says there  10 volunteer firemen with shovels had to clear a path for her to the ambulance.

Amber is a living doll and dad, Brian, has every reason to be proud.

Krista, if I misspelled your name, I apologize.

A Step Forward For Laura Nachman

The lovely Laura Nachman of Havertown has expanded her profile by having the Delaware County Daily Times carry her excellent TV and radio blog.  Laura’s column is  the best source of news and gossip concerning the broadcast community of the Philadelphia area.

Congratulations Laura.

The Second February Blizzard Of 2010

Andrew Schavello — I hope I got the spelling right, Andrew — is probably the most popular guy right now on Windsor Circle. Andrew is trying to keep ahead of accumulation as the snow continues to pile on his street in Springfield, Pa. He was the one who cleared the common driveway.


To each his own, I say.

Hello, Amber Murphy

Brian and Holly Murphy are the proud parents of a new baby girl with the lovely name of Amber. If I understood Brian correctly she was born Saturday on the day of the snowstorm.

Congratulations Brian and Holly.
Brian is one of the good guys who helped clear out the neighborhood with his snowblower, along with Andrew and a fellow I couldn’t identify. Granted, Brian did his service on Sunday but he did appear to have a commitment on the day of the blizzard.

Local People — Jim Waltzer’s Room Service

Jim Waltzer of Marple, the former sports editor of the County Press, has a short story published in the current New Jersey Lifestyle.

The title is Room Service and is to be a chapter of his novel, Atlantic City.