Doug Balz seriously ill
Doug Balz, BJ reporter in
the 1970s, is having major health problems.
Both former BJ Columbus Bureau reporter Bill Hershey and Doug’s
brother, Dan Balz, said it might help Doug if his former BJ colleagues send him
prayers and best wishes.
Doug with grandson Jack Florin on Jack’s 7th birthday in Missoula, Montana. |
Doug’s address is:
Doug Balz
800 25th Street NW
Apt. 302
Washington, DC 20007
Doug left the BJ to go to Miami to work on the magazine with Lary
Bloom, another former BJ editor. Doug edited the daily feature section for a
couple of years, divorced his first wife, remarried wife Jane Scholz, who later became the publisher at the Gary, Indina paper. Doug
worked nearby with the Chicago Tribune, where he became Sunday Arts section
editor.
Doug’s music critic at the Trib? John von Rhein, former BJ music
critic.
Doug advanced to features copy desk chief before he retired in 1998
and moved to Washington to be with wife, Jane, who had become the head of
Knight Ridder-Tribune features.
Later, Doug took a part-time job at a bookstore and taught
beginning reporting for a year at George Washington University.
Doug and Jane live at the Washington address.
He has two daughters, both born in Akron, from his first marriage.
Sarah, who was born in 1975, lives in Bellingham, Wash. and works for the
university there. Annie, who was born in 1978, lives in San Francisco, works
with retarded children and is married.
Bill Hershey wrote this tribute to Doug:
“Doug combined the depth and understanding of an intellectual – he
really was one – with the curiosity and drive of a good reporter to turn out
great stories for the Akron Beacon Journal in the 1970s.
“For some unknown reason, I gave him the nickname “Dugout” and Doug
seemed to enjoy it. He took his work seriously but could laugh at himself.
“After Doug got his doctorate a group of us marched through his
house to the accompaniment of Verdi’s ‘Triumphant March from Aida.’
“Doug liked to do investigative work but could crank out daily copy
and cover a beat when needed. He made life uneasy for the Akron School
Superintendent but still got along with him. The superintendent respected Doug
because his work was good and accurate.
“He and I were part of an unofficial group of reporters who often
worked for an editor, (the late) Pat Englehart, who was known as the 'Mad Man.'
Pat smoked awful smelling Italian cigars (DeNobili), sometimes had a few drinks
at lunch (Rolling Rock) and still could come back to the office to lead coverage of a major
fire, train derailment or other catastrophe. No story was ever good enough for
Pat.
“He drove all of us crazy and Doug and the rest of us loved it.
Doug also worked with Pat on some major investigative pieces that I think won
prizes.
“Most importantly for me, Doug was a good friend and I remember our
times together with great fondness.
“Bill Hershey”
I second Bill’s emotion about Patrick T. Engehart, the Tasmanian
devil on the State Desk. Pat was put in charge of the BJ’s coverage of the 1970
Kent State killings of 4 students and wounding of 9 others by the Ohio National
Guard, sent there by Gov. James Rhodes.
Pat herded reporters as obsessively as collies guarding and guiding sheep, gathered boxes and boxes of notes, photos and other evidence
that threatened to overwhelm the BJ storage area.
The result? The BJ won its first Pulitzer Prize, if you don’t count
the one that went to John S. Knight. I think 3 more came along, but the first I the one you remember most fondly.
By the way, I endorse Doug’s 2005 opinion of the BJ during the JSK
days: “It's a great place, even if that office in the corner is no longer
occupied by the man himself (so what if he paid his trainers more than his
reporters).”
JSK's love of thoroughbreds was imbedded deeply. He had a horse, Fourth Estate, in the Kentucky Derby, and left Miami for Churchhill Downs for the Derby every year, then came to Akron for the summer.
Indeed, Doug. I worked on six newspapers, including the Dayton
Daily News and the legendary Nelson Poynter’s St. Petersburg Times, and Jack Knight was the
best owner I worked for during my 43-year newspaper career.
Ben Maidenburg was the best publisher during my career and Patrick
T. Englehart, with the late Harry Liggett cleaning up after the PTE hurricanes,
was the best editor and assistant editor I ever worked under and with (as State Desk assistant editor).
While I’m at it, Scott Bosley was the best of the 13 managing editors in my
life, and not because he was a fellow WVU graduate. But because he let you give
your opinion, and everyone else at the table, considered it, took the best from
each of us, and made a decision.
Scott didn’t want “yes” men. He wanted a great newspaper. And he
got it.
When Scott left the BJ for Detroit, I was his man Friday who handled the details of projects for him, including saving the BJ 300K (management estimates, not mine) by phasing out typewriters requiring frequent, expensive repairs and hustling the BJ into the computer age as the newsroom electronic coordinator.
Scott is retired in Michigan.
By the way, I ran into a guy from Keyser, West Virginia, in The Villages, Florida. He didn’t know
Scott but he did know former BJ sports editor and columnist Tom Melody, retired
in Akron.
Sorry, Scott, but you came in second to Tom this time. Both Scott
and Tom are in the Keyser High School Hall of Fame. Scott spoke at Tom’s
enshrinement.
Keyser, for those who are not Mountaineers, is in the eastern
panhandle of the state.
little Bill H.
Bill Hershey added this thought about
former BJ sports columnist Tom Melody:
John:
Forgot to second your emotion on T Melody.
He wrote my favorite sports lede:
"It was Halloween and the Browns came to the stadium dressed as
football players."
He also let me work on Friday nights taking scores to make extra $ when
we had
little Bill H.
Indeed, papa Bill, Tom could be very Grantland
Rice-ish. His writings are a melody (sorry, couldn’t help it) that play it
again, Sam (sorry, again), in my mind.
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