Centre Market Spooktacular!

Wheeling's Centre Market will be ghoulish with activity for Spooktacular 2008! This year's event is produced by Centre Market and the Friends of Centre Market.

Centre Market Spooktacular 2008 will be held on Saturday, October 18, 2008 from 11AM – 1PM. The event is mostly for children aged 12 and under and all attendees are encouraged to wear their Halloween costumes.

Anyone dressed up for the event is invited to participate in the parade at 11:15 AM. The parade will begin at the corner of 22nd and Market Streets near Centre Cup Coffee.

Along with getting a free photo with Mini Horses in costume, each child will receive a treat bag. The WLSC Smart Center will be conducting hands-on science experiments and the Ohio County Library will exhibit either story time or an activity.

The event is Free and open to the public. For more information call Paula at 234-3878 or visit www.centremarket.net

Wheeling Jamboree Announces Summer Series

WHEELING, WV-- The Wheeling Jamboree will produce a summer series of shows beginning June 28th at Brush Run Park. The announcement was made during intermission at last Saturday's show at WesBanco Arena featuring the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Cherryholmes. "Brush Run Park, the site of Jamboree In The Hills from 1977 – 1989, offers The Wheeling Jamboree a venue for outdoor, family oriented shows for this summer," said Jeff McCamic, President of Wheeling Jamboree, Inc. "We will produce the first show of this series on the original stage at Brush Run Park on Saturday, June 28th, 2008," McCamic continued. The show schedule at Brush Run Park will include June 28th , August 2nd, August 16th and 30th, and September 13th and 27th. Ticket prices will be $15.00 per person for each show and all kids and students age 17 and under will be admitted free with adults for the Summer Series. Wheeling Jamboree, Inc.'s non-profit purpose is to support music education. "Exposure to great music provides young people with an appreciation and fosters inquiry and interest in traditional music for which this area is recognized the world over," commented Bud Forte, Operation's Manager for the Wheeling Jamboree. "Patrons are encouraged to bring their blankets, coolers, and lawn chairs to enjoy the show. Food and drinks will also be available at Brush Run Park," added Forte. "This is a family oriented show featuring traditional country and bluegrass music by familiar artists who are loved by many Jamboree fans. There will be some new and future Jamboree stars that will be on the stage this summer too."

Page 2 Kicking off the Summer Series season will be JoAnn Jones, JoAnn Thomas along with the Bluegrass Express. Local up-and-coming artist, Derrick McKee and the featured performer will be singer, songwriter, and guitarist--Roger Hoard. Prior to each show at Brush Run Park, the Wheeling Jamboree will resurrect the StarQuest Talent Search Contest. Local performers who would like to participate in the contest should be prepared to perform live for fifteen minutes at the venue. Contestants will be judged on voice and/or instrumental talent, stage presentation, originality, suitability for the Wheeling Jamboree show and audience appeal. Five contestants will be featured each week, with the winner selected to perform on a future Wheeling Jamboree show. For an application and additional instructions to enter, please go to www.wheelingjamboree.org. Wheeling Jamboree, Inc. has revived the show that has been part of the rich history of this area for seventy-five years. Thanks to a strategic alliance with Clear Channel Communications, WWVA-1170 Radio is broadcasting the shows live again on AM 1170. Jeff McCamic added, "We are very pleased to announce our affiliation with Virginia Alderman and the Alderman family at Brush Run Park. The Wheeling Jamboree is honored to be presenting our shows at this wonderful and historic facility." For more information about upcoming shows, StarQuest and sponsorship opportunities, please contact Bud Forte at 304-830-3479. Tickets for the shows will be available online at www.wheelingjamboree.org or can be purchased the day of the show at the gate.

Andy McKenzie is Wheeling’s new Mayor!

Andy McKenzie is Wheeling's new Mayor! Even though Sparchane's term expired it is still great to see someone new come in that might actually make a difference. Even if Nick Sparchane's term did not expire I would almost guarantee McKenzie would still have won. The City of Wheeling needed a new mayor more than ever, someone who really cares about the city and wants to make it a better place.

Although Sparchane did make some improvements, the development of the Highlands has essentially rendered the city of Wheeling dead and that will be the legacy Sparchane leaves behind, not to mention a lot of "speculation" as to just how beneficial some of his "deals" were. You can read more about that in my post Senator McKenzie Versus the Sparchane "Family". With the election of McKenzie into the Mayor's office I am hoping to see many improvements to the City. One of the first things on his agenda has got to be the Wheeling Tunnels, followed closely by keeping businesses in Wheeling.

With the exodus of businesses to the Highlands a plan has got to be put in place to keep them here in Wheeling. The Mayor and City Council need to look hard into incentives and tax breaks for area business to stay as well as to attract new businesses. Wheeling can be a great place, but a lot of work will need to be done to make it attractive. Wheeling is in a great location as far as the Ohio River and major highways are concerned. The city needs to leverage the City's location as a benefit especially to companies that do any kind of import/export. Tourism certainly needs to be looked at in much more detail as well.

The City of Wheeling along with The Wheeling Island Race Track should be attracting thousands more visitors alone. In my opinion the traffic to the Track should be much higher. The City needs to attract more tourists that spend more time here. The track is great but it does not bring in visitors who stay for more than a day. We need tourist and Gamblers to come in to town for several days at a time, stay at hotels in Wheeling, including the Hotel at the track. We need these visitors to stay 2 or 3 days and spend their money at local restaurants and gift shops, most importantly we need to convince the people coming to Wheeling that it is a GREAT place to live and work. Use the tourism traffic to increase our population. It's a two pronged attack, convince business on one front and convince people on another. While the tourist attractions are great, that alone will certainly not sway someone to want live here. The jobs have to be here as well.

Wheeling is dying a slow painful death and if someone does not bandage the wounds soon, there will not be much left to salvage. What McKenzie really needs to do is create a committee that will look into how to draw traffic from the Highlands. I am not saying steal the traffic, but use the Highlands to gain more traffic to Wheeling. The Highlands is growing in leaps and bounds and it is no wonder why Wheeling businesses want to move there, they want to go where the traffic is; not to mention the cost of dong business outside the city limits is just good business sense. Good business sense is what Wheeling needs and I hope McKenzie brings that to the Mayor's Office.

Congratulation Mr. McKenzie and good luck.

Wheeling Jamboree Signs Acts for Upcoming Shows

The Wheeling Jamboree announced two upcoming shows to kick off the 2008 season. On April 19th The Wheeling Jamboree will originate from John Marshall Center for the Performing Arts in Glen Dale, WV. The April 19th show will feature Bobby Osborne and the Rocky Top X-Press and our headliner, Earl Thomas Conley. Conley was a major force in contemporary country music in the 80s and has resumed touring after an extended break. He has a long list of hit records many of which were number one on the charts. "Fire and Smoke," "Holding Her and Loving You," "Love Out Loud," and "Right from the Start" are just a few of his most popular hit recordings. Tickets for this show are at www.wheelingjamboree.org or 1-800-875-8702. This event will be a fund-raising event to kick-start the Wheeling Jamboree to host future shows.

In addition, Wheeling Jamboree, Inc. president Jeff McCamic announced that the Wheeling Jamboree has signed the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band for their first Wesbanco Arena show scheduled for Saturday night, May 24, 2008. Nitty Gritty Dirt Band was selected to open the large venue show for the newly formed Wheeling Jamboree "because of their long standing prominence in the music industry" said Bud Forte, Wheeling Jamboree's Operations Director. The shows will air live on WWVA-1170 AM beginning at 7:00 P.M. "Cherryholmes, the International Bluegrass Associations Entertainers of the Year for 2005 will also wow the crowd on Memorial Day weekend in Wheeling," said Forte.

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is best known for their hit songs: "Mr. Bojangles," "Dance Little Jean," "Fishin' in the Dark," "Will the Circle Be Unbroken," and others. They have released over thirty albums in their 40 years together. The faces and names of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band may not always be immediately recognizable to the general public – vocalist/guitarist Jeff Hanna, drummer/harmonica player Jimmie Fadden, banjo/fiddle/mandolin/guitar player John McEuen, vocalist/keyboardist Bob Carpenter – but fellow musicians young and old know exactly who they are. It would be no exaggeration to say that much of what falls under the umbrella term of roots music these days bears the mark in some way of NGDB's influence, from folk-rock to alternative country, contemporary bluegrass to neo-hippie jam bands. "We've been fortunate that no matter what happened with our recordings, we always had people who wanted to come and see us play," says Carpenter. "And that's the thing that really kept us together. I know it may sound trite, but we really have our fans to thank for that. We've got a loyal fan base that comes out to see us make music."

"We've kept it alive, kept it a growing thing," McEuen explains. "With the Dirt Band, you think of certain integrity in the songs, not a single focus. What has connected our various work is the 'Americana' instrumentation and playing songs that are accessible to people. Our songs aren't just about one thing and neither are people's lives."

The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's pioneering spirit, its eagerness to experiment and desire to explore the by-ways and gravel roads of America's musical past, has exerted a profound effect on our present-day pop culture. They defied the conventional hit-driven approach to record-making by undertaking the ambitious three-LP set Will The Circle Be Unbroken, cut live to two-track in Nashville over six days, for the sum of just $22,000. Thanks to the band's unfettered creative energy and the palpable excitement of playing with their country and bluegrass music idols, the 1972 album became a landmark, genre smashing hit. Circle remains such a significant effort that it was one of 50 recordings honored this year – and to be preserved -- by the Library of Congress.

"The May 24th show is shaping up to be a very dynamic stage presentation with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and with the addition of Cherryholmes," added Forte. Until 1999 the dynamic family band known as Cherryholmes did not exist, and half of its youthful members had not even picked up an instrument. With-in five years they were named IBMA's Entertainer's of the Year and nominated for a Grammy Award in 2006.

Father, Jere (pronounced Jerry) Cherryholmes, and his mandolin-playing wife Sandy Lee have been able to mold themselves and their four children -- sons Smash and B.J. and daughters Cia Leigh and Molly Kate -- into one of the most cohesive, creative and soulful acoustic bands on the continent in the span of just eight years. "Rounding out the show will be additional great acts and possibly a few surprises," continued Forte.

Jeff McCamic said that tickets are on sale now through Ticketmaster at 304-233-3535, on line at www.ticketmaster.com or in person at the WesBanco Arena Box office. There is also a link to Ticketmaster on the Jamboree web site at www.wheelingjamboree.org.Reserved floor seats are $35.00 and all other seating is only $25.00.

"Even though the May 24th show is the first of our large arena presentations at Wesbanco, Wheeling Jamboree is set for a great season of performances at some other great venues in the area. We will premier April 19th show at John Marshall Center for the Performing Arts in Glen Dale also live on WWVA," McCamic continued. "This is an historic event because, to our knowledge, there has never been a Jamboree show that originated in Marshall County and we are very much looking forward to this event.

"We are absolutely thrilled with the support of a few of our more progressive community and business leaders who have contributed to Wheeling Jamboree, Inc. and who understand how important this is to our community. Their contributions have permitted us to achieve this great milestone in the restoration of the show. However, we need the financial support of others now. Wheeling Jamboree is a non-profit corporation and our primary purpose is to promote music education, performing arts, and tourism through the operation of shows and by support from the public," said McCamic. "We need others to step up to the plate and support this, including other community leaders who will help us and follow suit with those who have."

In addition to financial support, Wheeling Jamboree is seeking volunteers who want to be involved. "We are forming the Wheeling Jamboree "Mountaineers" Committee and anyone who can help is asked to call Cindy Hall, a local volunteer, at 304-336-3005 as soon as possible," said Forte. More information is available with show schedules and ticket information at www.wheelingjamboree.org.

John Doe - Sexual Lawsuit against the Wheeling Charleston Diocese and Rev Charles E. McCallister

Once again another allegation has been made about a "man of the cloth" sexually abusing a young boy beginning in 2003 and lasting for three years. Personally this is just sickening. How many times does this need to happen before SOMEONE out there comes to the realization that this is a serious PROBLEM.

The interesting thing in this case is the fact that when the investigation initially began Rev Charles E. McCallister was immediately suspended and an investigation began, but now he is dead leaving this individual with really NO justice whatsoever. The Wheeling Charleston Diocese spokesman, Bryan Minor said "Because there are so many unanswered questions, our investigation continues. It never ended.", also went on to say According to Minor, the second sexual abuse investigation is now complete. He said no criminal charges were filed, nor did the church come to a civil settlement.

To me this sounds like typical BS and nothing will ever come of it. This I just another reason why abuse victims are afraid to come forward. Justice never gets served, but at least the Diocese extended the victim outreach program to the alleged victim and his family. Yeah like that will do a lot of good.

Mt. De Chantal is Closing

We have followed this very closely and regret the Mount is closing. On February 1st the owners and administrators of Mount de Chantal Visitation Academy declined offers and options from the parents association to continue operating the school beyond May 31. It's a shame to see this happen.

Officials for Mount de Chantal cited a declining student base and overhead and maintenance costs as the main reasons for turning down the offer and closing the school.

One very confusing letter released though asked that "Mount de Chantal Visitation Academy" and "Mount de Chantal Academy" only be used in reference to the historic Washington Avenue complex. Also there was mention from the nuns that for anybody wishing to restart the all girls school that they do it under a new name and at a new location.

While I think it was great for the parents to ban together and try and find a solution, it's apparent that there is something else to this. It sounds to me that the owners and administrators of Mount de Chantal Visitation Academy have a planned agenda and plans for this building. I wonder if WJU is going to buy it up since it is so close?

McKenzie Seeking Answers To Wheeling Tunnel Delays

It's been well over a year and the tunnels are not completed, they are way over budget and now it is time for answers. Some may think it is nothing more than propaganda for Senator McKenzie's run for Mayor of the city of Wheeling, but I think it is great that someone is stepping up to the plate and trying to figure out who exactly is accountable for this mess.

The tunnel closing was only suppose to cost around 5 Million for both tunnels and as of right now the cost of the first phase has already exceeded 6 million. The WVDOH's budget as certainly been stretched thin but more importantly look at the impact the tunnel project has had on area businesses. With I-70 being essentially closed the businesses in the Wheeling area have lost substantial revenue and Senator McKenzie wants answers.

Senator McKenzie has requested an investigation take place to get this matter resolved and provide some answers to the residents and business community, which are LONG overdue.

Once again I smell a rat in city government. Why has Sparchane and company not pushed this issue? Does City Council and the Mayor of Wheeling not care about the impact this has had on the city or is someone profiting a bit to much once again. With traffic essentially bypassing Wheeling who stands to gain from this blunder? Businesses are leaving Wheeling and leaving behind "vacant" properties and retail business that was coming to Wheeling has shifted to the Highlands. What is left in Wheeling now? A lot of vacant properties to be "bought and renovated" by whom? More than likely WODA (Sparchane's buddy). The powers that be in the city of Wheeling are turning away the businesses or not helping them at all just to turn a profit somewhere down the road. All that will be left soon will be gambling facilities and entertainment venues. While this is probably not THAT bad, it still makes you wonder who is responsible on the inside for making all these decisions.

This all just seems way to convenient for City Council and the Mayor to just not make a big deal out of. Why is it that Senator McKenzie is the one stepping up to the plate to get answers? Why hasn't Wheeling been more involved for the wellbeing of the businesses? It does not take a rocket scientist to realize there is more than meets the eye here. We could speculate all day long and maybe stumble on the real truth to the matter, but unfortunately we will be kept in the dark and the rich will get richer.

Wheeling Island

Things just get worse and worse on Wheeling Island these days. The Island has had a reputation over the years as being a "rough" place but never really violent with shootings and beatings and drugs. In the past month shots have been reportedly fired twice, several robberies have taken place and people left and right are getting arrested for drugs and domestic violence.

So what is being done about this? Well very little it appears; maybe just a few extra patrols on the Island from the Wheeling Police Department. Well that does a whole lot of good. Nothing short of divine intervention is going to clean up the Island now. Between Norma Dorsch of the *excuse me while I laugh here for a minute * Wheeling Island Community Association, 2nd ward Councilman Vernon Seals (Who by the way should be on his way out of office this year FINALLY – time to get someone effective in office) and The Wheeling Island Racetrack, there is no way it will ever get cleaned up. Norma is nothing more than a slum lord on the Island who rents to the type of people who cause these problems, Vernon Seals, well not much to say there just time to get someone who is alive and INTERESTED in the ISLAND and last but certainly not least is the Racetrack – the 1000 pound gorilla who makes their own rules.

Now the Island was not always this bad off. Up until a few years ago it was still pretty descent, but when Vineyard Hills closed that's when it started to go down hill. The reputation of the Vineyard just worked it's way to the Island bringing with it all the drug dealers, violence and god knows what else. This was someone's plan that's for sure. Think about it, close the Vineyards and move the rift raft to the South End of the Island. These people have little respect for the property there and will destroy it thus plummeting the property value and making it even CHEAPER for the Track to buy up and expand. Sounds pretty simple and more than likely has some truth to it. I am just speculating and it's my own opinion, but it is a good one. More than likely someone in city government *cough Sparchane and company cough cough* made a fortune off of this and stand to continue to make a ton of money as this unfolds. The Race Track has expanded immensely, table gaming has passed and it won't be long now before River Boat gambling rears its head again. Keep and eye on the Island in the next year or so I bet it gets a little more interesting.

With Any luck, when Senator McKenzie takes office he will clean up all the damn corruption. If not maybe it's time to go back to the days of REAL organized crime.

Jamboree is Returning to Wheeling

Cow Bells RING out in Wheeling once again. Wheeling has had its fair share of ups and downs over the years and anything that can bring people back to Wheeling to experience the "Wheeling Feeling" is nothing short of a miracle; and it looks like that miracle is about to come true. Thanks to the hard work of Jeff McCamic, Terri Phillips, Bud Forte, Doug Paisley, Kathy Salsberry, Lee Paul and Roger Hoard the Jamboree is coming back to Wheeling and Wesbanco Arena. OhioValleyBlog.com, which is a part of the OhioValleyNOW.com network, has been involved with the new Jamboree initiative and was at the press conference today discussing details about their new website before the conference got kicked off. We have been fortunate to be selected to build there new website and be part of reviving the Jamboree and its return to Wheeling. As we discussed the new website we were also privileged to learn that several acts have possibly been lined up to perform at Wesbanco Arena. While these acts are not confirmed 100% we do know that the acts include Kathy Mattea, The Oak Ridge Boys, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Lee Greenwood.

Although the Jamboree board members recognize the huge significance of the Jamboree returning to Wheeling they have plans to extend the event far beyond the Ohio Valley using the Internet and XM Radio.

The Jamboree gets kicked off April 12th with a 3 hour show.

For those not familiar with the Jamboree and its significance to Wheeling we have reprinted an article originally published in the "Journal of County Music" below.

Brad Paisley didn't want to leave the concert, and begged his grandfather to let him stay. Paisley's grandfather had won tickets to see Jamboree USA, the venerable Wheeling, West Virginia, barn dance radio show and concert series, and John Conlee was performing that night. "I attended many shows at the Jamboree as a kid," said Paisley. "My grandpa was about to leave during the second-to-the-last song to beat traffic, but I wouldn't let him because John hadn't done 'Rose Colored Glasses' yet - so we stayed. My grandpa later said that I was right and that was the best song of the night." It was concerts like that--and live radio broadcasts--that drew Paisley to country music, where he has become a star. For seventy years, the Jamboree and radio station WWVA were the upper Ohio Valley's major link to country music, with performers as diverse and talented as Doc Williams's Border Riders, Hawkshaw Hawkins, Cowboy Loye, and "Crazy Elmer" commanding the stage and the airwaves. At night, WWVA's 50,000-watt transmitters reached radios throughout the Northeast, finding new fans in New Jersey, New York, New Hampshire, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland. In 2003, Jamboree USA celebrates its seventieth year of continuous broadcast; only the Grand Ole Opry has had a longer stage run. For millions of country music fans who come to the Capitol Music Hall every year, or who tune in the station on a Saturday night, Jamboree USA (known as the WWVA Jamboree until the early 1970s) is an important piece in the country music mosaic.

Radio station WWVA aired its first broadcast on December 13, 1926, and from that moment the "Friendly Voice from Out of the Hills of West Virginia" entertained its listeners with a combination of news and farm reports, original dramas and national programs from the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS). The broadcast facilities were in physics teacher John C. Stroebel's house; Stroebel had experimented with crystal radio sets for years, and this was his first foray into broadcasting. The fifty-watt transmitter was stored in his basement; the studios were in his parlor. Within a year, the station grew to 500 watts of power and found new lodgings in the Fidelity Investment Building in downtown Wheeling.

In the late 1920s and early 1930s the most popular country music performer, on radio or off, was Jimmie Rodgers, "The Singing Brakeman." Rodgers's yodeling and railroad-themed recordings struck a chord with rural American listeners, making him one of the most popular artists in the 1920s. And as many stations across the country added a country music program or "barn dance" broadcast to accommodate requests for Rodgers's music (as well as for recordings by the Carter Family and Vernon Dalhart), WWVA's own on-air talent also catered to their listeners' requests for yodeling songs. One of WWVA's earliest vocal groups, the Sparkling Four, added yodeling songs to their performances, and one of the Sparking Four's members, William Wallace Jones, went on to become "Silver Yodelin' Bill Jones," WWVA's first recurring radio soloist. WWVA joined the CBS radio network in May 1931, and local musicians often filled the station's non-network airtime. Those same musicians then used the exposure to advertise show dates at various clubs and theaters around the Wheeling area. Guitarist Slim Bryant performed on WWVA in the early 1930s, a short stop on his career as a successful guitarist and songwriter. "The money at that time was in personal appearances, not in radio-- you couldn't make money just being on the radio," Bryant explained. "You go into a place and get on the radio and play, and then you work in the area for about six or eight months in a year, and move on. We did that for ten years."

But the success of these live performances spurred WWVA owner George W. Smith toward an idea. In January 1933 Smith gathered several local musicians, set them up at WWVA's Hawley Building studios, and broadcast the program as a late-night Saturday Jamboree. The first Jamboree show featured Fred Craddock's Happy Five; the performing trio Ginger, Snap, and Sparky; the singing Tweedy Brothers; and announcer-harmonica virtuoso Felix Adams. Listeners within WWVA's growing 5,000-watt broadcast radius loved the program, and by March 1933, the occasional series of Jamboree specials became a regular Saturday night feature.

One month later, the Jamboree moved to the Capitol Theatre, as over 3,200 patrons paid twenty-five cents each to see the stars whose music filled the airwaves--and their hearts. The Capitol Theatre broadcasts were such a success that WWVA eventually moved the Jamboree to the more informal Wheeling Market Auditorium. A 1934 "Jamboree Harvest Home Festival" in the huge Capitol Theatre drew a capacity crowd, and the station knew their Saturday night concerts were here to stay.

Among the early performers on WWVA were Loye Donald Pack, professionally known as singerguitarist "Cowboy" Loye; "wandering minstrel" Elmer Crowe, who spent most of his performances searching for his "lost rib"; an African-American spiritual quintet called the Wheeling Weird Travelers; and Marshall Jones, a banjo and guitar player who would later achieve fame as Grandpa Jones. Although mainstream country music was a staple of WWVA's broadcast schedule, the station also aired music from the Croatian Junior Tamburitza Orchestra, Hawaiian music from the Royal Serenaders, and big band music from Earl Summers, Jr. and His Orchestra.

The success of the Jamboree broadcasts mirrored other "barn dance" programs aired throughout America. During the 1930s, it seemed every major city from New York to Los Angeles had a station with a country music variety program. Besides WWVA's Jamboree and WSM's Grand Ole Opry, there were the "Brush Creek Follies" at Kansas City's KMBC; the "Hoosier Hop" at Fort Wayne, Indiana's WOWO; and the "Iowa Barn Dance Frolic" at WHO in Des Moines. There was even a Dinner Bell Roundup broadcast from KXLA in Pasadena, California, as well as a Village Barn Dance broadcast from Greenwich Village in New York City. These radio programs and live simulcasts gave country music artists a chance to promote their records and concert appearances. By the end of the 1930s, there were over 600 daytime and evening country shows nationwide, catering to a combined audience of some 40 million listeners.

The March 1936 Wheeling flood temporarily suspended the Jamboree performances, as artists volunteered their services for disaster relief and public assistance. The wooden chairs at the Wheeling Market Auditorium were replaced with mattresses so families displaced from their flooded homes could find a place to sleep. WWVA broadcast live for over ninety straight hours, presenting news and vital information as the flood waters crested at over fifty-five feet above sea level. Six months after the Wheeling flood, however, a special "Wheeling Centennial" Jamboree concert drew 5,000 country music fans to a local football stadium, the biggest crowd to date for the fledgling Jamboree. In 1937 Doc Williams and his Border Riders, a new musical group from Pittsburgh, signed up with WWVA and instantly became one of the most popular acts on the Jamboree. Their leader, Doc Williams, was born Andrew Smik, the son of eastern European immigrants, and grew up on a small farm in Cowansville, Pennsylvania. A lifelong music fan, Smik would listen to Jimmie Rodgers 78s on a neighbor's phonograph. Within a few years, and with his father's help and guidance, Smik and his younger brother Milo could play several instruments, including cornet, banjo, and fiddle. By the early 1930s, the brothers and their band were performing on several radio stations throughout the Ohio-Pennsylvania-West Virginia broadcast area. By 1937 Andrew Smik had changed his name to Doc Williams, renamed his group "Doc Williams' Border Riders," and secured an audition for a 2:45 p.m. daily live broadcast over WWVA. In March 1938 Doc Williams' Border Riders were voted the most popular performers on WWVA. That year, the lineup of the Border Riders included Doc Williams on guitar and his brother Mio Smik ("Cy Williams") on accordion, as well as vocalist Harry McAuliffe ("Big Slim, The Lone Cowboy"), female vocalist Mary Calvas ("Sunflower"), and Hamilton Pincher ("Rawhide") as the band's resident humorist. In 1946 Williams's wife Wanda joined the Border Riders as "Chickie Williams." By 1947 the Border Riders had completed the ensemble with Marion Martin, a blind musician who could skillfully replicate a violin or a harmonica on his accordion.

Without question, Doc Williams's Border Riders were the most popular group on WWVA and on the Jamboree stage. As Brad Paisley put it, "Doc Williams is a legendary music figure where I come from. His contribution to music is greater than anyone realizes. He was like the Roy Acuff of the Jamboree." Indeed, Williams had solid sponsorship for his radio show from Coco Wheats Cereal, had his own record company (Wheeling Records, which still exists to this day), and later opened his own souvenir store in downtown Wheeling. His mixture of old ballads, songs of faith, uplifting homilies, and sprightly polkas kept the Border Riders the longest-performing act in Jamboree history. Even into the 1980s, Doc and Chickie Williams still made appearances on the Jamboree stage, performing to the children and grandchildren of their earliest fans. Another popular tradition-minded act on WWVA were the Clinch Mountain Clan, led by Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper. Both were originally part of the Leary Family vocal group (Wilma Lee's maiden name was Leary), but struck out on their own in 1940. After years of success on radio stations and stages from Nebraska to North Carolina, the Coopers joined the Jamboree in 1947. They stayed with the Jamboree for a decade, until they left for the Grand Ole Opry. Opting for an acoustic, Appalachian-based sound, the Clinch Mountain Clan combined Stoney's fiddle and Wilma Lee's guitar with sacred songs and traditional ballads, as well as a honky-tonk song or two. Their songs "Legend of the Dogwood Tree," "Walking My Lord up Calvary Hill," and "The Wicked Path of Sin" became popular standards. When Wilma Lee Cooper was inducted into the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music of America's Hall of Greats, biographer Frank Overstreet noted that although "The Wicked Path of Sin" was originally composed by Bill Monroe and performed with his Bluegrass Boys in 1946, they did not release it as a record until 1948. Before that record's release, Wilma Lee heard Monroe's band performing the song on the radio. She copied down the lyrics in shorthand and recorded it with Stoney Cooper. Their version was released weeks before Monroe's rendition hit the stores.

Each band also had a resident comedian who could bring levity or mirth to an audience whenever necessary. At one time or another, Doc Williams's Border Riders featured such musician-comedians as Dapper Dan Martin, Smokey Pleacher, and Hiram Hayseed, while Lazy Jim Day and Cy Sneezeweed were independent performers who also made Jamboree audiences laugh. Of all WWVA comedians, however, the most popular was born Anthony Slater. While he performed standards and yodel-filled ballads using the stage name Smiley (or Smilie) Sutter (he won the West Virginia state yodeling championship in 1938), he was best known as Crazy Elmer Squeezix, "King of the Country Comics." Every Saturday night Crazy Elmer treated the Jamboree audience to a hilarious twenty-minute sketch, often co-starring Monte Blake as his straight man. During one Jamboree show in 1941 Crazy Elmer performed a comedic rifle presentment drill that had the audience roaring with laughter. "Elmer taught himself how to yodel," said Doc Williams. "Onstage, he could place his feet into a slot on the stage, and, while still standing, would lean nearly forty-five degrees. He also had a rope trick, where he would pull on a taut rope, drag the rope offstage, and the audience would later see Elmer being pulled from the other end of the rope, from the other end of the stage!" The Jamboree broadcast also featured audience participation. During the show, production manager Paul Miller would allow audience members to say hello to the folks back home. The "Inquiring Mike" became a popular feature of the Jamboree, as WWVA officials could gauge their broadcast radius by how far people would travel just to greet their families and friends. "Song of the W.W.V.A. Jamboree," written by staff pianist Vivian Miller, added additional spice to the broadcast. At the beginning of each show, the Jamboree performers would take the stage and perform in unison with the enthusiasm of a college cheerleading team: "Now here's the Jamboree to greet you / In the good old fashioned way / We'll do our best top/ease you / and hope that you'll feel gay / We are more than glad to see you / and we hope you'll be carefree / So laugh and smile with us awhile / On the midnight Jamboree."

The WWVA Jamboree performers formed an extended family, and as new singers and musicians joined the cast, established artists helped show them the ropes. Sonny Davis, who with his sister Honey formed the popular Davis Twins, recalls his indoctrination into the Jamboree family. "We took first place in a talent contest out of a couple hundred contestants. This was in 1938, and we were twelve years old at the time. Somehow, Tommy Nelson and Blame Smith heard about us and talked to our parents and wanted us to go to WWVA in Wheeling and be fall-rime members of their show. Our parents thought us to be too young, and they would have had to have one of them with us, and they didn't want to do this at that time. Two years later, Tommy and Blame came back to see our parents, and they agreed at that time to let us go to Wheeling, with our mother as chaperone. This was a great thrill to my sister and me being members of the 'World's Original Jamboree.' Tommy and Blame thought we needed a name change that would be easy to remember in radio, and everyone called my sister Honey, so we decided to take the name Honey and Sonny, The Davis Twins. At that time WWVA rated with the top Jamboree shows, along with the Grand Ole Opry and the WLS Barn Dance in Chicago. Later, Honey and I were rated the number two duet in the country, with Lulu Belle and Scotty being number one out of WLS in Chicago."

Many Jamboree artists also performed during the week on WWVA. Each act had its own fifteen-minute spot on WWVA, on which performers would sing and interact with announcers Lew Clawson and Wyn Sheldon, who dutifully read advertisements for Cooey-Bentz Co., Pinex Cough Syrup, Coco Wheats Cereal, Sterling Insurance, and Hamlin's Wizard Oil. These fifteen-minute commercials-with-music filled WWVA's morning and afternoon weekday broadcasts, while network feeds provided the station with much of its evening fare.

The effect of World War II on the Jamboree was immediate. Because the U.S. Defense Department warned against radio broadcasts with an audience-accessible microphone, the popular roving microphone segment, the "Inquiring Mike," was discontinued. With many of WWVA's on-air talent fighting overseas, including singers Curly Miller, Sonny Davis, and Jimmy Hutchinson, WWVA's broadcast now featured a number of local female vocalists, including Shirley Barker, Sunflower, Honey Davis, and the Newcomer Twins. By 1942 the Jamboree stage shows were discontinued, a victim of gas rationing and travel restrictions. The performers instead sang live in the WWVA studios on Saturday nights, raising money for the USO and urging listeners to buy war bonds.

Surprisingly, some servicemen claimed they could still pick up WWVA--whether it was a Jamboree special aired on the Armed Forces Radio Network, or through their shortwave radios. "At that time," recalled Doc Williams, "Army convoys were making their way through our part of the state, and any information about their movements would, our government thought, be of help to the Germans who were monitoring our signals. I'm sure the German intelligence officers, who understood English, listened to our music, and I'm sure they enjoyed it, as did our GI's."

On July 13, 1946, after the war ended, WWVA returned to stage performances, as audiences packed the Virginia Theatre for the resumption of Saturday night broadcasts. Among the new performers joining the Jamboree in 1946 was Harold "Hawkshaw" Hawkins, a gregarious performer from Huntington, West Virginia, billed in a 1946 souvenir album as having "forty yards of personality" or, later, as having eleven and a half yards. Hawkins spent some eight years as a member of the Jamboree, quickly becoming one of its most popular stars.

"When Hawkshaw Hawkins first came to WWVA," said Sonny Davis, "they did not have a time slot open at the time, and they didn't want to lose him, so they came to us and asked if he could join our program until they could open up a time slot for him to have his own program. We agreed, and we worked with Hawk for some time, doing a lot of road shows with him even after he left our time slot and worked his own program." Hawkins left the Jamboree in 1948 but returned six months later to a standing-room-only "reunion" concert in his honor. He stayed with WWVA until 1954, joining the Grand Ole Opry a year later.

Hawkins was one of the few artists who recorded for a prominent label--the well-known, Cincinnati-based independent King Records--while still performing on the Jamboree. Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper recorded for the small but significant Rich-R-Tone Records before joining theJamboow; they would later release records on the Columbia and Hickory labels during their stay in West Virginia. Other artists, however, generally recorded for tiny independent labels with highly limited distribution, if they made records at all. For instance, Doc Williams pressed 78s and 45s on his own Wheeling label, while Lee and Juanita Moore recorded for the tiny Cross Country label. During the 1940s, WWVA executives preferred that their artists limit their musical output to live shows, including the Jamboree and other WWVA broadcasts. "That was a policy at WWVA at the time," affirmed bluegrass musician Mac Wiseman, who worked the Jamboree in the 1960s and 1970s. "WWVA's reason was if the artist became popular, they'd leave WWVA."

In 1947 Chickie Williams wanted to create a special Valentine's Day gift for her husband, Doc. She went to Harrison City, Pennsylvania, the hometown of Maxine and Eileen Newcomer, the blind Newcomer Twins who had retired from the Jamboree stage a year earlier. The Newcomer Twins never recorded professionally, but they owned a Webcor personal disc-cutting machine and often recorded their own performances from the airwaves. Using this machine, Chickie Williams read a poem, "Should You Go First and I Remain," while the Newcomers sang "I Love You Truly" in the background. Doc Williams was so impressed with the gift that he eventually recorded Chickie's recitation as part of a hymn, "Beyond the Sunset." "Beyond the Sunset," with Chickie's interpolation of "Should You Go First and I Remain," became a major hit for Doc Williams's Border Riders, and was covered by several artists including Hank Williams and, more recently, Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash.

By 1949 the Jamboree stage was once again filled with local soloists and bands. Because WWVA required artists to be available for the Jamboree every Saturday night, some nights there were more bands on the stage than the broadcast could accommodate. Doc Williams felt thirteen acts limited his airtime and hurt his wallet. "Some of the shows were good, some of them not so good," Williams explained. "So if you followed a bad performer, it would affect your show. I got to the point where I had eighty-seven dollars in my bank account, and I had an old beat-up car, about ready to collapse. I asked the boss, 'Could I leave here for one Saturday night?' "He said, 'What do you have in mind?' "I said, 'I've got three dates booked up in northern Maine, on the Quebec-New Brunswick border.' I went up there with six people in a borrowed car and eighty-seven dollars in my pocket for motels, eats, transportation, and not knowing if I was going to make a penny, because everything was on commission. I was in Maine for ten days. I made enough money--even though I missed one Jamboree--to buy a new car when I got home." During the Maine concerts, Williams discovered that WWVA's popularity extended far beyond the Ohio Valley. The station's 50,000-watt transmitters, perched on tall mountains in Sr. Clairsville, Ohio, were aimed northward. This meant WWVA could be heard in Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, New England, Ontario, Quebec, and Atlantic Canada--a combined territory teeming with millions of country music lovers who could pick up 1170 AM at night with crystal clarity. When the Jamboree artists traveled through the East Coast, they often packed such country music clubs as Toronto's Horseshoe Bar or the M-Bar-C Ranch in Carmel, Maine. "The first song that I wrote and recorded for Columbia was 'Hello Operator,"' said Dusty Owens, Jamboree member in the 1950s, "and we did a special promotion with Lee Moore, the all-night 'Coffee Drinking Night Hawk' disc jockey for WWVA. He would play that song 'Hello Operator' every thirty minutes, with the idea that the operator that would call from the farthest point out would get a record and an autographed photo of me. The farthest one that won it was living in St. John's, Newfoundland. At night, WWVA went into Newfoundland like a local station."

Eventually the entire nation received a taste of the Saturday night Jamboree. During the 1950s a thirty-minute block of the WWVA Jamboree was simulcast over the CBS radio network as part of the show Saturday Night--Country Style. That broadcast not only featured the WW/VA Jamboree, but also such other homegrown country music get-togethers as WRVA's Old Dominion Barn Dance from Richmond, Virginia; the Big D Jamboree from Dallas's KRLD; and Shreveport's Louisiana Hayride on KWKH. WWVA continued to feature guest stars on the Jamboree, mostly up-and-coming singers who worked the barn dance circuit to promote their first or most recent recordings. "I was there the night the Davis Sisters came to do a guest appearance on the Jamboree," said Dusty Owens, recalling the duo's performance in August 1953. "RCA had just released their song, 'I Forgot More than You'll Ever Know.' They had that song climbing the charts when they came over to promote it and do a guest shot on the Jamboree. They had a unique blend of voices at that time, and they were very good, very vivacious, and they entertained. I thought they had a great future ahead of them. After the midnight show, they left from the station and took off for home, and that was the night that Betty Jack Davis got killed in an automobile accident. We were all very saddened when that accident took place."

Skeeter, the other Davis Sister in the car that night, would eventually recover from her injuries. A decade later, in 1962-1963 she charted her crossover smash "The End of the World," and solidified her Grand Ole Opry stardom.

By the early 1960s, however, Jamboree audiences were shrinking. The Virginia Theatre, home to the show since 1946, was scheduled for demolition in 1962, and the Jamboree needed to find a new home. The program eventually moved to the 900-seat Rex Theater. David Richardson, a Wheeling resident, attended Jamboree shows in the early 1960s. "There were always seats open. They had footlights, and I remember the color was so vivid with those footlights off of the instruments and the costumes. It was a really nicely lit stage, as I recall. That whole Saturday afternoon, WWVA would play the songs of people that were going to be playing on the Jamboree, so that when you were driving down there at four or five in the afternoon, you could hear some of the previews. The announcer would say, 'Now, here's who our featured guests will be, and here's a song.' Back in those days, people that they would play on the radio would not be necessarily the Nashville people; it would be the local people."

Yodelin' Kenny Roberts recalled the time when one of his idols, Jamboree regular Elton Britt, asked him to return to the stage. "Elton Britt used to be a member of the Jamboree, and Elton was my hero when I was a kid. When I was just starting out in the business I never dreamed I would ever become famous. I was such a fan of his. My show had already been over on the Jamboree that night; he was on later. He called me out on the stage to yodel with him. I went out, and we did two impromptu yodels, because he knew I knew all of his yodels. Hardrock Gunter got a hold of the tapes from that night, and Longhorn Records put it on an album. It's the only time you'll ever hear Elton Britt and me yodeling together, and the industry considers us the two best yodelers in America." In 1965 the new managing director of the Jamboree, former Jamboree performer Lee Sutton, added more acts to the roster to revitalize the lineup. He also moved the show to the 3,000-seat Wheeling Island Exhibition Hall. The new performers, who included Mac Wiseman, Esco Hankins, David Houston, and Jim Greer's Mac-O-Chee Valley Folks, complemented the lineup of established stars like Doc Williams, Crazy Elmer, and Lee Moore, and crowds eventually grew. WWVA's new focus on the Jamboree, combined with a 1966 change in format to the "Big Country Sound"--essentially an assortment of current country hits, not just the local favorites--increased attendance and exposure tremendously.

More nationally known,, established country stars played the Jamboree, and eventually performers such as Johnny Cash, Buck Owens, Conway Twitty, and Merle Haggard made guest appearances. By 1969 WWVA's parent company, Basic Communications, had purchased and renovated the Capitol Theatre in downtown Wheeling, where the first Jamboree show aired in 1933. With an elaborate ribbon-cutting ceremony, the WWVA Jamboree moved to its permanent home in the Capitol Theatre (renamed the Capitol Music Hall), where the show - and WWVA's studios - remain to this day. The crowds at the Jamboree continued to build, as big-name, national country stars interacted with local talent every Saturday night. In October 1971 singer Charley Pride set attendance records with four sold-out shows at the Capitol Music Hall. Over 10,000 fans saw Pride, just named the Country Music Association Entertainer of the Year, perform his classic hits on the Jamboree stage with 1970s regulars Patti Powell, Slim Lehart, Dick Curless, and Bob Gallion. Mayor James Harzano presented Pride with a key to the city, and billboards in West Virginia proclaimed, "We Have Pride in Wheeling." During the 1970s the Jamboree expanded its performance schedule far beyond the Appalachian Mountains. Jamboree artists had undertaken some small package tours before World War II, mostly in clubs, concert halls, and gymnasiums throughout West Virginia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. These package tours resumed in 1968, covering not only the Ohio Valley but also the Northeast. In 1970 WWVA musicians appeared at Montreal's "Man and His World" exposition and represented West Virginia tourism at the Canadian National Exhibition fairgrounds in Toronto.

In turn, Canadian country musicians traveled south to Wheeling for an opportunity to appear on the Jamboree. In his autobiography Stompin' Tom and the Connors Tone, Canadian country singer Stompin' Tom Connors recalled his 1970 appearance on the WWVA Jamboree stage: "On more than one occasion I thought of what a great benefit it might be to my career if I could do a guest shot on the Wheeling Jamboree. Think of the exposure and the prestige it might bring, especially if I got to sing a few of my songs about Canada. . . . That evening I got to do my interview over WWVA, say hello to all the people up in Canada, and talk a little about my career up to the present time.... I was about the third act on. . . . When I got into 'Sudbury Saturday Night' they started clapping their hands and banging their feet spontaneously and even came out with a whistle or two. By the time I finished off with my wild version of the 'Mule Skinner Blues,' they were falling in the aisles from laughing so hard."

On Christmas Day 1971 a special Jamboree broadcast was held at West Virginia Maximum Security Prison. Another Jamboree special in 1972, a salute to truck drivers, became a successful yearly concert, and Dick Curless released a live album, Live at the Wheeling Truck-Driver's Jamboree (Capitol 11119, recorded September 2, 1972), in 1973. In May 1972 the Jamboree held its first "Homecoming Reunion," bringing back legends from the show's past for another appearance on the stage. Doc and Chickie Williams hosted the show, while Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper, Grandpa Jones, Crazy Elmer, Silver Yodelin' Bill Jones, Elmer Crowe, and Marion Martin took turns entertaining audiences one more time.

Beginning in 1977, a new series of Jamboree concerts, Jamboree in the Hills, drew thousands to an outdoor facility in St. Clairsville, Ohio. The first Jamboree in the Hills, in 1977, featured Johnny Cash, Asleep at the Wheel, Barbara Mandrell, Tom T. Hall, and Merle Haggard, and played to an overflow crowd of country music fans. Today Jamboree in the Hills is one of the largest and best-attended outdoor country concert series in the nation, as legends of country music's past and present share the stage for great performances.

In 1983 the Jamboree and WWVA honored the show's past, by embedding fifty bronze stars in the Capitol Music Hall sidewalk. Those fifty stars were named in honor of artists who performed on the Jamboree, and included both major country stars who visited the Jamboree for memorable guest appearances, and established regulars for whom the Jamboree was a long-time home and haven. Hawkshaw Hawkins has a star, as does Lee Moore. Doc Williams and his Border Riders are represented, as are Mac Wiseman and Elton Britt and Charley Pride and Grandpa Jones and dozens of other performers. During Christmas weekend 1984, a twelve-year-old Brad Paisley took the Jamboree stage to begin his performing career.

"I sang a song I wrote at a Rotary Club meeting; Tom Miller, the program director, invited me onto the show," Paisley reminisced fondly: "I remember getting up with just a guitar, and the audience was very receptive--probably because I was a little kid." Paisley became one of WWVA's regular rotating performers, warming up the crowd before the evening's headliner was introduced. "I opened for a list of performers like George Jones, Steve Warmer, Charley Pride, Jimmy Dickens, and so on. How did that happen? Where else does that happen? I can't imagine who I'd be without having that experience to lean on."

Eventually Paisley's career took off, and he was able to return to the Jamboree as a headliner. "I think I really felt like I'd made it when I returned there and headlined. Something about what your home folks think matters more. I know the Ohio Valley can attribute a large portion of its culture to the Jamboree. Country music is so big there--and it's due to that show."

Though WWVA has changed its format from country music to news-talk, Saturday nights are still reserved for live broadcasts from the stage of the Capitol Music Hall. The show's format hasn't changed much since Jamboree broadcasts began. The first forty minutes of each two-hour show begin with the Capitol Music Hall's house band, 11/70. In the 1 980s, 11/70 only provided musical accompaniment for the vocalists. Today the staff band, led by Ron Retzer, along with several alternating artists, is a featured part of each broadcast, performing and interacting with the 2,500 paying customers and the many of listeners who still tune in 1170 AM on their radio dial.

After 11/70 has sufficiently warmed up the crowd, the headlining artist performs. Every Saturday night, Jamboree patrons see performers such as Earl Thomas Conley, Bill Anderson, Loretta Lynn, Ray Price, and Neal McCoy in an intimate, close-to-the-stage atmosphere. There are special themed performances such as an all-gospel Jamboree, a bluegrass spectacular, and the "Starquest Talent Search." Fans are still encouraged to take photographs of their favorite stars, so long as they stay in their seats and don't block the view of others. Commercials are still read live over the air, and some jingles are still performed on the stage.

Jamboree USA is a major part of Wheeling tourism, drawing thousands of visitors to the Capitol Music Hall and to downtown Wheeling every year. "Saturday Night Jamboree USA broadcasts and live shows are Wheeling culture and tourism," says Ron Retzer, "and you cannot speak of Wheeling culture and tourism without Jamboree USA in the very same sentence. I have done many shows in the eastern U.S. and Canada. When I talk to people before a show and they find out I'm from Wheeling, the first question is, 'Have you heard of the WWVA Jamboree?' When they find out I'm with the Jamboree, they treat me like a star."

On any given night of the Jamboree there could be another young singer or guitarist, who has ridden with his folks from Morgantown or Huntington or Sr. Clairsville or McKeesport, to see their favorite country singer live, up close, and personal. The live concert and radio show that launched the careers of Hawkshaw Hawkins, Doc and Chickie Williams, Silver Yodelin' Bill Jones, Lee and Juanita Moore, Dusty Owens, and Brad Paisley can still make dreams come true. And if you turn your AM dial to 1170 on a clear Saturday night, you can pick up the Jamboree as clear as the day it first aired seventy years ago.

Senator McKenzie Versus the Sparchane "Family"

McKenzie Files For Wheeling Mayor Race

Current state Sen. Andy McKenzie started a new chapter in his political career recently when he officially filed to run for mayor of Wheeling.

THIS is GREAT NEWS! We can finally get rid of a mayor that is only interested in his own agenda and not the city's. Personally I believe the current mayor of Wheeling has done very little in his term of office.

McKenzie, as a seasoned politician, should be able to pursue the right avenues in making something actually happen in the city of Wheeling. Senator McKenzie has an outstanding record in the Senate and I believe he will carry on his career of excellence as Mayor. I have to commend him on "stepping down" from the senate to a local level. This move alone tells me it's not about his career, its not about the money but its about improving a city that he truly loves. I will be very interested to see what he does with county officials to achieve a harmonious relationship between city government and the county. There has been enough friction there long enough and I believe Senator McKenzie will bring a level head and strong ideas to the table that will allow the city to prosper in conjunction with the county and all the expansion it is undergoing. This is in vast contrast to the current Mayors agenda to use his position for financial gain.

Some of the comments I have come across on the net have been pretty detailed in how they feel about the current mayor, just take a look at a few: ============================================ As the saying goes," you can fool some of the people some of the time, but not all of the people all of the time". Glad to see that some people in the OV are aware of what is really going on in the City of Wheeling so called "government"...Should be called MAFIA as Sparchane is more like a Boss than an elected "Official".. you can bet your very last dollar that the one to profit most from this will by the "Mayor Sparchane" and his cronies. They Woda, Sparchane and the others use the city like a whore, take what they want and give nothing back, and then expect a smile and a "Thank You very much my Lord!". There should be a way to catch on some federal crime racqueterring charge or something. Can you spell "C-R-O-O-K-S"???? ===========================================

Anybody who can sell $173000 property for $52000 certainly shows their ability to handle money and invest. No wonder the downtown is empty. Who let the foxes guard the chicken coop? No chickens left,so they want to level the coop.mmmmmmmmm ===========================================

If downtown Wheeling is such a great place to be, then why is it that Undo's Restaurant is not located there? Does the Mayor's own business not have the "Wheeling Feeling"? I say to anyone in Wheeling, whats done is done, bend over, lube it up and take it from the mayor and his cronies one more time!!! Maybe you will be able to get a beer downtown after he has had his way with you...Oppps sorry, what downtown???

** Personal Note here: Undos actually does business in Wheeling but does not have a restaurant because they know it would not be profitable.

=====================================

And as a side note: the deal to buy back properties in downtown Wheeling by the city (which was spear headed by the Mayor) is nothing more than another deal to bring WODA. Jeff WODA to be exact a GOOD buddy and "associate of the Sparchane "Familia"– remember GREENSPACE and RIVERVIEW and the $8 Million in Federal Tax payers money WODA made off the deal. How much you want to bet Sparchane did not get a little "percentage of that transaction"

One day a new face will appear and bring that family down.

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