Joan Rice, a class act at the BJ from 1966 through her 2001 buyout, passed
away Friday, November 18.
She had been in Akron General Hospital for several weeks with cancer,
which she had battled over the years.
Joan’s funeral will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Newman Center Parish in
Kent, with calling hours beginning at 10 a.m.
Only 12 days before Joan’s passing, her husband of 36 years, Summit County
Sheriff’s Deputy Capt. Larry Momchilov, predeceased her.
Joan and I had desks next to each other in the BJ Features Department for
16 of my 26 years at Ol’ Blue Walls. She was always a great help to me in
dealing with the inevitable problems of putting out a newspaper.
Former BJ arts and culture critic Elaine Guregian, who
left 44 E. Exchange Street in 2008 to be Development
Officer for Corporate and Foundation Relations with the Summa
Foundation and later Northeast Ohio Medical University as
Assistant Director of Public Relations and Marketing, posted an eloquent
tribute to Joan:
“Joan had the highest ethical and journalistic standards, which she put to work every day in her job as Assistant Features Editor.
“She was also a deeply compassionate
and engaged person who was up on every social, cultural and political trend.
“Joan was one of the most fun
colleagues you could imagine, with a fashion sense that could put a much
younger person to shame.
“She was a consummate professional who
challenged all of us in Features to do our best work. I am proud to have worked
with her and will really miss her.”
You are on the mark in every
evaluation of Joan, Elaine. I would add that she is one of the reasons that I
ran to work every day because it was a joy to work at the BJ.
Retired BJ outdoors and parks writer
Bob Downing also nailed it:
“Joan was a great editor and an even
better person.”
Betsy Lammerding, in the BJ Features Department with Joan and me, wrote:
“My heart is aching
today. Joan and I sat within inches of each other for more than 25 years in
Features. I admired everything about her. She was a mother hen, big sister,
mentor, role model and friend. To know Joan was to love her.
“It was a pleasure to work with her for three decades.”
Indeed, Betsy. And with you, too.
PD and former BJ TV critic and pop culture writer Mark Dawidziak wrote:
PD and former BJ TV critic and pop culture writer Mark Dawidziak wrote:
“Just heartbroken.
Joan was a terrific editor but, more importantly, a wonderful friend. Take all
of the marvelous things being said about her, multiply it by a thousand, and
you'd still be in the realm of understatement. Godspeed, old friend.”
Elaine, Betsy and Mark, like me, worked side by side with Joan day after day. We knew each other as well as we knew our own families.
Joan was about as special as any person can be.
Roger Mezger, who was in both the BJ
and PD newsrooms, after calling Joan “one of the finest people I’ve ever known,”
also pointed out that Joan was classy with more than just her clothing and
personality:
“One really neat thing about Joan was
how much she loved to drive. She indulged in that passion by driving a Porsche.
Very classy.”
Notice than Joan and classy are
synonyms? That’s no accident.
Retired BJ TV and pop culture critic
Rich Heldenfels wrote:
“Joan
was always great to work with and a good friend.”
Former BJ Deputy Features Editor Lynne Sherwin wrote:
“So very sad. I’m sorry I’ll be out of
town this weekend but I will be wearing my fuchsia tennis shoes in her honor.”
Joan brought class to everything she
wore and to everyone she worked with.
“Joan was one classy woman and
journalist.”
Joan is survived by her identical
twin, Marie Rice.
They look and sound and dress so much alike that they spent a
lifetime of people calling one by the other’s name.
When I went to Kent’s Newman
Chapel for Larry’s calling hours and I couldn’t find Joan, I walked up to a
table where family members were chatting and said: “You must be the other Joan
Rice.”
Marie’s answer, after decades of dealing with this: “Why, yes, I guess I
am.”
You have to look really close to tell the difference: Marie has a small
beauty mark on her right cheek.
That explains a
lifetime of double-takes when both are in the same vicinity.
A Buffalo News article said the twins were born two
minutes apart in rural New Milford, Ohio, but Joan spent her entire life in
Rootstown, a few miles away. Joan was two minutes younger than Marie.
Joan’s brother, Michelin executive vice president John
Rice, passed away in 2012. Besides Marie, her other sister is Nancy Rice
Crouch. They are the children of Nancy and John Rice and grew up in Rootstown.
Larry was born in Barberton and was a Norton High graduate.
RIP, Joan. I will miss your infectious laughter, your heart-warming
smile and your Triple-A quality as a human being.
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