Ol’ Blue Walls reunions are never blue
BJ reunions happen all over the country every year. The latest was Aug. 6 at the joint convention of the National Association of Black
Journalists and the National Association of Hispanic Journalists at Washington
Marriott Wardman Park in Washington, D.C.
The Ol’ Blue Walls gathering was by former graphic artist Jemal R.
Brinson, former reporter and columnist Carl C. Chancellor, former reporter
Delano Massey, former reporter Andale Gross and current BJ executive news
editor Mark Turner.
Brinson is with the Chicago Tribune, Chancellor with the Center for
American Progress in D.C., Massey with Cleveland’s WEWS-Channel 5 and Gross
with The Associated Press in Chicago.
Massey had a couple of stays at the Lexington, Kentucky
News-Leader, including as Metro editor, after his BJ days.
Chancellor left Ol’ Blue Walls in 2008.
Gross went with the AP in Kansas City, 100 miles
from where he grew up in Mobley, Missouri, immediately after leaving the BJ in
2006 along with 14 staff members with 264 years of experience at 44 E. Exchange
Street. Later, he migrated to AP in Chicago. He started at the BJ in 1997 and was
Guild unit chairman.
For
years Siesa Key, adjacent to Sarasota, Florida, was the reunion place for BJ
folks. The late printer Bill Gorrell had a rental complex across the street
from what annually is on the list of top 10 or 20 beaches in America or the
world, so a lot of BJ types, particularly printers, would gather there for
poker and golf.
In my
20 years in Florida, I stayed all of February in Sea Castle, a vacation complex
across the street from Gorrell’s Poor Bill’s rentals, and had reunions with Dave
and Gina White, Terry Dray and Hugh Downing from Composing and Don Bandy and
Jane Snow from the newsroom.
Printers Dick Latshaw and Sid Sprague and
business department’s late Harold McElroy went even beyond that. They moved
into retirement together on Pawleys Island, South Carolina, for a couple of
decades. Dick and wife Pat live two blocks from Harold’s widow, Linda McElroy,
and Sid wasn’t far away till he moved to Loveland, California with his new
bride after Sid’s first wife died.
I
guess we had so much fun together at Ol’ Blue Walls that these reunions are
like a homecoming.
I’ve
been retired from the BJ for 20 years but, when I see Jim Carney in a Summit
County park or Joan Rice in a restaurant or former Features Department
co-workers at Primo’s Deli, or play golf every week in the winter with retired
printer Hugh Downing and former BJ State Desk reporter Bob Page (turned
pastor), it’s like I never walked out the door on 44 E. Exchange Street.
The
bonding lasts a lifetime.
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