to put together a film. And it was a lot of fun on top of that:' he said. "We hope the new school will help us tap into the state's new film industry, but we're also closely watching the budget developments in the state Legislature he adds. Some legislators have threatened to cut the 42 percent tax credit made available to moviemakers because they claim the corn- panies have not created enough local jobs as they promised. Assisting Liebman as he did Specs for more than 37 years is Dick Kernen, vice president of industry relations. "We have a great environment here among our students, which Specs cultivat- ed over 40 years," he said. "Twenty of our 80 employees have been here longer than 10 years and several of our employees are former students." Added Howard: "People start here at the entry level — they learn from the bot- tom up. They just don't quickly become a national radio anchor. We put about 800 students a year through here. After more than six decades in the industry, I still find it most rewarding to help aspiring profes- sionals to learn and embark on productive careers:' Becoming Specs Running a broadcast school was probably the farthest thing from the mind of young Jerry Liebman when he was growing up in the late 1920s-early 1930s in one of about 50 Jewish families in Kittanning, near Pittsburgh. Despite a bout with polio that left him with a weakened leg, he graduated from Allegheny College with a degree in his- tory and political science and considered attending law school. "But I also took speech and dramatics classes and chose a radio career, starting as an announcer on a small Kittanning sta- tion:' he says. "Then I got the same type of job in Sharon, Pa., before moving on to an NBC-owned station in Cleveland. "Celia was making public service announcements there and a station execu- tive practically ordered me: 'This girl is pretty. You should date her. So I did and we got married a year later" Still known as Liebman, he auditioned for both radio and TV jobs and admits he did "fantastically bad" in TV, but was hired for the combination position by program director Lawson Deming, also known as Sir Graves Ghastly, who later brought his popular horror show to Detroit. "I was really a soprano compared to those deep- voiced announcers:' he recalls. "The executives didn't think Liebman was an announcer's name and, because Specs Howard in a familiar seat — in the broadcast studio. of my eyeglasses, they changed it to Specs Liebman:' he says, "but not for long. A vice president stuck his finger in a phone book and pointed to any name — and it happened to be Howard. From then on, 52 years ago, I was Specs Howard. I was among a staff of announcers who did everything at all hours of the day or night — station breaks and commercials, intro- ducing national music shows and soap operas, anything that came our way on a shift. I even hosted a late-night movie' There also were some on-air incidents along the way, better known as "bloopers': that Howard laughs about now, but weren't so humorous at the time. Doing a commercial for Roman Cleanser Bleach, he pronounced it "Roman Bleanser Cleach." Another time, he purposely dropped a supposedly unbreakable radio and it smashed into pieces. There also was the time he just couldn't remove "easily removable doors" to clean an oven. "We had real stern executives in those days and I got called on the carpet by the station boss after the 'Roman Bleanser' incident; I thought I was a goner and I'd better start looking for a new job': Howard recalls, "but he actually supported me. He told me those things just happen and to forget about it:' When Jewish disc jockey Alan Freed of Cleveland became famous by coining the term rock 'n' roll for the new form of music sweeping the country, Howard's station, having been purchased by Westinghouse, switched to a music format. One of eight announcers, he was the only one to audi- tion and win a DJ job. He worked with some unknowns who later became such TV favorites as Phil Donohue, Mike Douglas and comedian Tim Conway. "Then came the payola scandal that rocked the nation's disc jockeys, including many in Cleveland': Howard says. DJs accepted under-the-table compensa- tion from record companies for playing their recordings. "A guy would come in, have coffee with you, then just leave an envelope with cash on the table. But I never accepted anything. I was so clean they nicknamed me the kosher disc jockey." A few years later, Howard teamed up with Harry Martin to form the morning "Martin and Howard" program, playing records, chitchatting and interviewing such music stars as Barbra Streisand, Tony Bennett and Chuck Berry and athletes like Muhammad Ali. The show garnered close to 50 percent of the station's revenue. In 1967, the team was enticed to WXYZ radio in Detroit. "We didn't do too well in an all-talk for- mat and we lasted only two years," Howard laments. "Other obstacles at that time were the '67 riots and a newspaper strike." Howard returned to Cleveland for a year, commuting to another job,"but my family loved Detroit and wanted to stay here he says, "and that's when a friend suggested I open a hands-on radio training school. Back then, there were only cor- respondence-style schools. After that first small location, we moved to a building at Northland Shopping Center for 24 years, then here in Southfield in 1995. We have 56,000 square feet of space and three ten- ants." Success Rate Through the years, the Specs Howard School of Media Arts fashioned a rate of 80-90 percent in placing students in jobs, which has surprisingly held up well for an economically depressed state. Both Howard and Jonathan Liebman point out a number of laid-off workers in other industries are trying to switch careers by turning to broadcasting. "Detroit's unemployment rate is about 25 percent and our placement rate continues at about 70 percent': Liebman says. Hoping to fulfill his childhood dream of being a sportscaster for TV's ESPN, Michael Fenkell, 22, of West Bloomfield, joined the school in September. He broadcast hockey on Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook High School radio and got a communications and pub- lic relations degree from Michigan State University "The Specs Howard school [www.specshoward.edu ] is well known around the world, and I want to be close to home and also learn from its graduates. Also, I can use broadcast industry equip- ment there right away': he explains. "Like other students, I'm passionate about radio and TV, and I'm sure Specs Howard himself and everyone at the school feel the same way." December 24 • 2009 13