November 21, 2005

Book TV Reruns "When the News Went Live" Texas Book Festival’s Author Panel with Dan Rather from Texas House Chamber

Program Also Available on DVD

C-SPAN-2's Book TV will rebroadcast When the News Went Live's Texas Book Festival author panel, moderated in October 2005 by Dan Rather in the Chamber of the Texas House of Representatives.

This second Book TV appearance of Bob Huffaker, Bill Mercer, George Phenix and Wes Wise is also sold on DVD through C-SPAN. Their vivid and compelling book is approaching its third printing since it was released in autumn 2004.

Reviewers unanimously praise the book for its authority and readability.

Cspanbooktv_3CSPAN will announce broadcast rerun times for this program at
http://www.booktv.org/

The program is available on DVD here.

The authors' BookPeople Book TV program is also available here.

 

October 25, 2005

Dan Rather to Moderate Texas Book Festival Panel on "When the News Went Live"

As a feature of the Texas Book Festival, C-SPAN's Book TV will
broadcast When the News Went Live's author panel, moderated by Dan
Rather, live from the Chamber of the Texas House of Representatives
Saturday afternoon October 29th.

This is the second Book TV appearance for Bob Huffaker, Bill Mercer,
George Phenix and Wes Wise, as their well-received book approaches its Wtnwl
third printing since it was released in October 2004.

CSPAN will announce broadcast and rerun times for this program at
http://www.booktv.org/

**********

Previous review of When the News Went Live: Dallas 1963 can be read here.

September 09, 2005

Wes Wise joins Co-author Bill Mercer in Texas Radio Hall of Fame

Former Dallas mayor Wes Wise, who pioneered baseball play-by-play with Gordon McLendon in the 1940s, will be inducted into the Texas Radio Hall of Fame on November 5. Wise joins his former colleague and co-author Bill Mercer, who has been in the Hall of Fame for several years.

Wise and Mercer, both famous play-by-play announcers, are co-authors of the nationally acclaimed book When the News Went Live: Dallas 1963, written with their old colleagues Bob Huffaker and George Phenix. The book is their compelling first-person account of covering the JFK assassination and its aftermath for CBS and KRLD News. These veteran broadcasters also discuss developments in today's broadcast journalism. The four will be featured at the Texas Book Festival in October, and they have won several regional honors, including Southwest Authors of the Year. The well-received When the News Went Live has been praised by Dan Rather, Jim Lehrer, Bob Schieffer, Walter Cronkite and other top journalists.

In the 1940s and 1950s, Wes Wise was a well-known baseball play-by-play announcer for the nationwide Liberty Broadcasting System. At Ameriquest Field, home of the Texas Rangers, the Legends of the Game Museum features a replica of the radio studio where Wise and Gordon McLendon re-created major league baseball broadcasts. Beside the antique microphone hangs the bat that Wise and the Old Scotsman struck for sound effects to accompany disc recordings of crowd noise. Historic audio of their early re-creations accompanies the radio exhibit, and high on a wall above the museum's entry room, a giant enlarged photo sets the mood for old-time baseball: a panoramic shot that young Wes Wise took from the roof of the old Polo Grounds in 1951 when he was still in the Army.

Wise was Southwest Correspondent for Sports Illustrated, and he wrote for Time and Life. As a journalist, Wise won numerous awards including three Press Club of Dallas "Katies" and the Southwest Journalism Forum award from Southern Methodist University for "continued excellence in journalism." 

Wise was elected Mayor of Dallas in 1971, serving five years in that  office after four as a councilman. He was President of the Texas Municipal League and a board member of the US Conference of Mayors. 

He lives with his wife, Sally, on Cedar Creek Lake and divides time  between there and Dallas, where he remains active in public affairs. 

Wes Wise touched more important developments of the assassination  Weswise_1story than most reporters. The month before Kennedy's ill-fated visit, Wise, as Dallas Press Club president, escorted Adlai Stevenson at the day's press conference before covering that night's fateful attacks upon the UN Ambassador. After capturing the only film of that fiasco, Wise helped federal agents prepare security for JFK's Dallas visit. 

Wise covered the presidential motorcade, played a double role at the  president's aborted luncheon, encountered Jack Ruby the day before he shot Oswald, waited at the county jail for the Oswald transfer that went wrong, and testified for both sides in the Ruby trial. 

In his five years as Dallas' mayor, Wes Wise helped the city overcome  its tarnished reputation.  He not only reported this segment of history; he made some of it himself.

As a reporter, he set records straight; as Dallas' first  independent mayor in decades, he helped the city toward racial equity, guided it through desegregation and the uneasy Sixties, fought to memorialize JFK's life and death, and with support of his fellow Dallasites, pulled the city  up from international disgrace. 

The Texas Radio Hall of Fame induction takes place November 5 at the  Dallas-Addison Marriott Quorum, near the Galleria. Individual tickets are $59. Tables for 10 are $650. The event is open to the public, and tickets are available at www.texasradiohalloffame.com.

August 25, 2005

Author Appearances: "When the News Went Live"

Updated 22 Aug 05

Aug 31 Wed            AUSTIN         

George Phenix speaks to Metropolitan Breakfast Club
7:30am University Club, University of Texas

Sept 8  Thurs    GRANBURY         

Tarleton State University: Huffaker, Mercer, Phenix & Wise
Langdon Weekend
1pm Langdon Center 308, E.Pearl St. Granbury, TX

Sept 8 Thurs    ARLINGTON         

Northeast Reading Group: Huffaker, Mercer, Phenix & Wise
7:30 pm. Arlington Public Library
NE Branch, 1905  Brown Blvd.

Oct 8 Sat                 DENTON      

Huffaker & Mercer Emcee Denton County Donkeyfest

Oct 12 Wed              DALLAS       

Bill Mercer Lectures at McDermott Library
3:30 pm. University of Texas at Dallas

Oct 21-22 Fri-Sat       BRYAN      

Bob Huffaker at  50th HS Class Reunion

Oct 28-30 Fri-Sun      AUSTIN       

Texas Book Festival: Huffaker, Mercer, Phenix & Wise
Featuring "When the News Went Live"
Panel  Presentations.

Nov. 3 Thurs DUNCANVILLE       

Huffaker, Mercer, Phenix & Wise:
Southwest Authors of the Year
7:00pm Banquet


Nov 5   Sat   DALLAS

Wes Wise inducted into Texas Radio Hall of Fame
Dallas-Addison Marriott Quorum near the Galleria
Tickets at www.texasradiohalloffame.com

Nov. 10 Thurs COLLEGE STATION

Huffaker speaks at Primetimers
10:30am


Nov 13 Sun  SAN MARCOS

Texas Author Day, San Marcos Public Library
1-4pm 625 E. Hopkins St. San Marcos, TX 78666


Nov. 14  Mon  FORT WORTH

Tarrant County College
South Campus: Presentation 7:30-8:50

Nov. 17  Thurs      DALLAS

Book Club: Mercer, Wise & Huffaker
Church of Transfiguration
Hillcrest N.of LBJ

Nov. 22 Tues            AUBURN, ALA

Auburn University: Huffaker, Mercer, Phenix & Wise
Communications Dept.
Q&A & Nationwide Online Chat

Dec 1-3 Thurs-Sat COLUMBUS

Veva Vonler & husband Bob HuffakerVonler's "The Movie Lover's Tour of Texas: Reel-Life Rambles Through the Lone Star State"
Released October
Thursday Dinner and Friday Luncheon
Authors' Panel

August 19, 2005

Good Review of 'When the News Went Live'

Compelling book reveals 'When News Went Live'

Originally published in The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

August 7, 2005

By William Kerns

I remember when my older sister, Sandy, arrived home early from school
on Nov. 22, 1963, her sobs continuous.

As I tuned my transistor radio to the news and watched television
reports with my family, a nation expressed shock at the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy and events that followed, including the
murder of an accused assassin on live television.

Not until I consumed a fascinating new book called "When the News Went
Live (Dallas 1963)" did I fully appreciate efforts made almost around
the clock by the Dallas newsmen who covered the fates of the president,
Lee Harvey Oswald, Officer J.D. Tippitt and Jack Ruby that week.

The book is a collaborative account by Bob Huffaker, Bill Mercer,
George Phenix and Wes Wise, all employed at the time by KRLD Radio (AM
and FM) and Television.

"When the News Went Live" is more than just a compelling read. It is an
account of incredible from-the-streets reporting of history.

This was, after all, an era when reporters carried 16 mm cameras and
lugged heavy sound equipment. Phenix - a Lubbock native who had been a
reporter less than six weeks - recalls telling a Secret Serviceman at
Love Field, "This is not a gun," referring to his long-barreled mike.

Forget about CNN, the immediacy of videotape or use of satellites.
Newsmen used low-tech equipment and were dependent on instincts,
shoeleather and sources. The book's first-person accounts explain
police decisions while recalling out-of-town reporters who arrived
smelling blood.

Phenix's sixth sense kicked in at the Dallas Trade Mart when he heard
an Air Force officer say he was headed to Parkland Hospital. "Me, too,"
said Phenix, as he jumped into the back seat with the officer.

Mercer recalls why news director Eddie Barker temporarily evicted Dan
Rather and his crew that were using KRLD as headquarters. He also
mentions the difficulty inherent in black-and-white film, saying, "I
had to describe the colors, the messages (covering the assassination
site), the sadness, the tears and choke back my own emotion."

Providing massive visual impact throughout are photographs loaned to
the authors by the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, many of which
were published in the Dallas Times Herald.

Each author has a chance to share individual memories, and readers will
appreciate the opportunity to read transcripts of live reports, such as
Huffaker confirming the assassination by saying, "This is one of the
quietest crowds that will ever assemble - the crowd with pity, sorrow,
horror and shame in its heart."

No less moving is Huffaker explaining to us 42 years later, "I hated
having to speak when I felt like weeping."

William Kerns' entertainment reviews and commentary can be heard at
8:15 a.m. Monday through Friday on KLLL (96.3 FM).

August 18, 2005

"Play-by-Play" Tonight: Bill Mercer Live at Gateway Center

Mercer to speak at Gateway Center

UNT to honor former broadcaster

Originally published August 18, 2005 in the Denton Record-Chronicle (registration required)

By Brett Vito / Staff Writer

Curiosity led Bill Mercer to the University of North Texas for the first time all the way back in 1957.

Mercer was a young sports broadcaster at the time in Dallas and decided to take a trip north to see where UNT was located and film a little bit of football practice. A few minutes and a few U-turns later, Mercer found what he was looking for and never really left the school behind.0818mercer

Mercer ended up teaching at UNT, helped start the campus radio station and spent more than 30 years as the voice of the Mean Green.

The campus community and broadcasters from across the country will honor the legacy Mercer left along the way with a dinner at 7 p.m. tonight in the Gateway Center.

Mercer will speak at the event that will also feature several media personalities, UNT coaches and administrators.

The cost of attending the event is $50 per person. All proceeds will go to Building Believers, Inc., a non-profit organization that serves youth in the Dallas-Fort Worth area through basketball training.

"North Texas will always be a special place for me," Mercer said. "I was the first sportscaster to show highlights of a UNT football practice when I came up in '57 and I will still teach a class there this fall."

Mercer broadcast a wide variety of sports from football games to professional wrestling during his career, but still found time to carve out a niche in Denton. He was the voice of UNT football from 1959-93 and had also broadcast basketball games from 1966-94, a career that earned him a place in the school's Athletic Hall of Fame.

The legacy Mercer built in Denton was one of the reasons former UNT basketball players Deon Hunter and Wendell Williams decided to ask him to headline an event to benefit Hunter's Building Believers, Inc., organization.

Hunter and Williams wanted to make it easier for families to afford the cost of their program that aims to instill a sense of purpose in young people through basketball.

When the discussion turned to a banquet, Mercer's name came to mind.

"We realized that Bill had not had an event to honor him and we felt he needed to be recognized," Hunter said. "This has been long overdue. When you look at the track record he has had, it shows that he has paid his dues."

Mercer's resume reads like a dream list of broadcasting jobs. Mercer broadcast Dallas Cowboys games for seven years, in addition to working Texas Rangers games. And those were not Mercer's most interesting assignments. He also worked Chicago White Sox games with Harry Caray and broadcast professional wrestling in Dallas.

Even with those duties on his plate, Mercer hung on to his job at UNT and chronicled some of the memorable moments and players in Mean Green history.

Mercer watched Abner Haynes develop into one of the first black college football stars in Texas during late the 1950s and saw "Mean" Joe Greene lead UNT to a pair of Missouri Valley Conference championships in the late 1960s.

Mercer also squeezed into the old men's gym on campus for basketball games.

"The old men's gym was great because about 5,000 people would come," Mercer said. "It was a great experience to broadcast games there."

Some of those fans joined Mercer a few years later in watching UNT win 11 straight games in the 1987-88 season to earn a berth in the NCAA Tournament.

Hunter and Williams were both members of the team that lost to North Carolina in the first round and came to be friends with a man they knew of long before they arrived at UNT.

"I remember Bill from when I was a kid and wrestling was big," Williams said. "When I came to North Texas and started playing basketball, he was doing all my games. We got to know him over the years and wanted to celebrate his career."

The number of games Mercer broadcast and great moments he chronicled are just a few of the ways Mercer left his mark at UNT. He also taught generations of students who followed him into broadcasting in addition to helping found KNTU.

Mercer retired in 1996, but was lured back to the university to resume teaching in 2001.

Mercer's UNT connections have helped him keep track of Hunter and Williams.

When they called Mercer and asked if he would be willing to headline an event to benefit Building Believers, Inc., he was more than happy to help a pair of former players from a university he has been affiliated with since the late 1950s.

"Those guys are great people," Mercer said. "Both are giving a lot back to the community."

August 12, 2005

Less than a Week Till Play-By-Play

Get your tickets now to "Play-By-Play!"

Come meet Bill Mercer, next Thursday, August 18th, at a dinner honoring this longtime Dallas TV and radio sportscaster. The event will begin at 7pm and feature Mr. Mercer's colleagues and associates who will be speaking.  Cost of the event is $50 per ticket.

For complete information, see "Play-by-Play" to Honor Bill Mercer.

Featured speakers will include:  Dave Barnett, ESPN's leading football and basketball play-by-play announcer, Craig Way, the voice of Texas Longhorn athletics, KTCK sports personality Norm Hitzges,  Bill Blakeley (most wins by an NT basketball coach), Jimmy Gales, who coached the Mean Green to the NCAA basketball tournament in 1988,  KOIT Radio manager (San Francisco) Bill Conway, Doug Adams, President and CEO of the Colorado Symphony, former pro wrestler Carl "Killer" Cox, former Fort Worth Ranger Bob Baillargeon,  former North Texas professor and current movie producer, Mickey Grant, KNTU Radio station manager Russ Campbell and former North Texas sports information director Fred Graham.

July 15, 2005

Bill Mercer in Muskogee Phoenix

Our own Bill Mercer had a nifty article written about him in the Muskogee Phoenix.

Go to "Legendary Voice of One of Our Own" to see some great old photos.  If you're a costume designer trying to capture  historic fashion choices and hairstyles, this would a good place to begin your research.

Brillcremebill_1

July 13, 2005

"When the News Went Live" -- Coming Appearances

Aug 18 Thurs            DENTON UNT Gateway Center: "Play-by-Play"
                                        An Evening Honoring  Bill Mercer
                                        Building  Believers Banquet. 7:00pm

Sept 8  Thurs           GRANBURY Tarleton State Univ
                                        Langdon Weekend
                                        1pm Langdon Center 308, E.Pearl St. Granbury,  TX

Sept 8 Thurs            ARLINGTON Northeast Reading Group
                                        7:30 pm. Arlington Public Library
                                        NE Branch, 1905  Brown Blvd.

Oct 21-22 Fri-Sat     BRYAN Bob Huffaker at  50th HS Class Reunion

Oct 28-30 Fri-Sun    AUSTIN Texas Book  Festival
                                                 Featuring "When the News Went Live"
                                                  Panel  Presentations.

Nov. 3 Thurs.         DUNCANVILLE
                                            Honored as SW Authors of the Year
 
                                            7:00pm Banquet

Nov. 10 Thurs.          COLLEGE STATION
                                            Bob Huffaker at Primetimers
                                            10:30am 30-40min w/Q&A

Nov. 14  Mon            ARLINGTON/FW Tarrant  County College
                                            Presentation 7:30-8:50

Nov. 17  Thurs          DALLAS  Book Club
                                           
Church of Transfiguration
                                            Hillcrest N.of LBJ

Nov. 22 Tues            AUBURN, ALABAMA Auburn University
                                            Q&A & Online Chat
            
Aug 18 Thurs            DENTON UNT Gateway Center: "Play-by-Play"
                                            An Evening Honoring  Bill Mercer
                                             Building  Believers Banquet. 7:00pm

June 28, 2005

"Play-by-Play" to Honor Bill Mercer

PLAY-BY-PLAY, AN EVENING HONORING SPORTSCASTER BILL MERCER
        Set for August 18th in Denton, TX

On the evening of Thursday, August 18th, a dinner honoring longtime Dallas TV and radio sportscaster Bill Mercer has been planned at the Gateway Center on the University of North Texas campus.  The event will begin at 7pm and feature Mr. Mercer's colleagues and associates who will be speaking.  Cost of the event is $50 per ticket. Valet parking will be available, and black tie is optional.

Featured speakers include:  Dave Barnett, ESPN's leading football and basketball play-by-play announcer, Craig Way, the voice of Texas Longhorn athletics, KTCK sports personality Norm Hitzges,  Bill Blakeley (most wins by an NT basketball coach), Jimmy Gales, who coached the Mean Green to the NCAA basketball tournament in 1988,  KOIT Radio manager (San Francisco) Bill Conway, Doug Adams, President and CEO of the Colorado Symphony, former pro wrestler Carl "Killer" Cox, former Fort Worth Ranger Bob Baillargeon,  former North Texas professor and current movie producer, Mickey Grant, KNTU Radio station manager Russ Campbell and former North Texas sports information director Fred Graham.

The dinner is a fundraiser for Building Believers, Inc., a non-profit organization that serves D/FW youth, both urban and rural, through fundamental basketball training.  Building Believers, Inc. enriches the lives of young people by teaching valuable life lessons and skills through basketball.

Former NCAA basketball players instill such core principles as hard work, determination , perseverance, patience, respect for others, self-confidence, self-control, desire and purpose.  Building Believers, Inc. is sponsoring the event.

Tickets to the dinner can be obtained a number of ways.  Orders can be made by telephone by calling 817-491-9602, by Internet at Hoophunter@hoophunter.com or can be purchased at two locations in Denton: Joe Holland's Denton Bicycle Center at 1700 N. Elm or at Denton Athletics at 908 W. University Drive.  Will call tickets will be available with prior payment.

Mercer was the Voice of North Texas Athletics for 35 years and broadcast games of the Dallas Texans, Dallas Cowboys, The Texas Rangers, Chicago White Sox, twenty years of minor league baseball, Southwest Conference football and basketball as well as professional wrestling.  He was instrumental in starting the university radio station, KNTU-FM.  He served as an instructor in the Radio/TV Department since 1966 and is currently teaching two broadcast classes at UNT.
Mercer started his sports broadcasting career in Dallas in 1953 at KRLD AM-FM and TV.  He with his partners founded the commercial frequency 99.1 in 1986.  He is the co-author of a book about radio-tv coverage of the Kennedy assassination and a history of a World War II ship.  He currently assists with broadcasts of the Round Rock Express and Frisco Rough Riders.  He is also a member of the University of North Texas Athletic Hall of Fame and the Texas Radio Hall of Fame.

INTERVIEWS WITH MERCER CAN BE SCHEDULED BY CALLING JIM HOBDY AT 940-391-6814 OR WENDELL WILLIAMS AT 940-206-8588.

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