Rita Fay Stapleton, who retired in 2011 after 42 years at the BJ,
is enjoying the scenery and exercise of being on Madeira, which is 1.5 hours by
commercial jet from Lisbon, Portugal.
She’s taking a break from helping with the USO in North Canton and
playing tennis in Stark County.
Madeira temperatures have hit 101 degrees in September, so hopefully
Rita has plenty of sunscreen. But she should have a rousing good time since
Madeira is famous for its Madeira wine, made famous in a 1981 Limeliters song, “Have
Some Madeira, M’Dear,” about an elderly rake seducing a teenage girl with
Madeira wine.
I still remember when I first heard it at a dinner-theater in
Dayton.
Glenn Yarbrough, Alex Hassilev, Louis Gottlieb, Red Grammer, Bill
Zorn, Rick Dougherty, Mack Bailey, Andy Corwin, Gaylan Taylor, Ernie Sheldon,
Don Marovich and John David all sat and played a spell as part of that group
from 1959 through 2012.
Rita visited 25 Fontes ("25 Springs" in English), a group of waterfalls in the Madeira Islands. The waterfall is almost 100 feet high, consisting of a group of different water streams lubricating the mountainside.
Rita began as a typesetter at Ol’ Blue Walls in 1968. She went from
job to job there for the rest of her career.
“It was a blessing to work for such a fine newspaper,” Rita wrote.
Madeira is in a Portuguese archipelago in the north Atlantic Ocean, southwest of Portugal, and 250
miles north of the Canary Islands.
Prince Henry the Navigator’s folks who
shipwrecked in a storm found the archipelago in the 1400s. Well, really, it
found them and saved their soggy butts.
The British occupied it from 1801-1814. The Germans attacked it
during World War I.
In 1976, following the democratic revolution of 1974, Portugal granted
political autonomy to Madeira.
Rita's email is riorita@neo.rr.com and her phone number is
330-699-4407.
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