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Monday, October 30, 2017


Former BJ chief librarian Cathy Tierney is enjoying three weeks in southern India and Dubai, United Arab Emirate.
She visited northern India years ago, but decided to tour the south, “which is very different in so many ways from the north,” Cathy writes.

When I asked Cathy for a photo showing HER on the trip, with the background proving that she was there, she was reluctant.
After I told her I needed her in a photo, she later replied:

“John, the Lord Ganesha was with you. Someone took a photo of me, mostly obscured, at the Brihadishvara Temple, with the elephant blessing me. Feel free to include any other photos of mine -- I've had a ball taking them all.”
Cathy also had a ball outside her hotel on the Bay of Bengal, “watching four cows stretched out, enjoying the sun, water and beach, like any other hotel guest -- so very Indian!”
She provided a Facebook video of the cows getting a suntan without wearing so much as a coverup bikini.
Cathy also has visited Vietnam and Cambodia. Paula and I made it together to Cambodia, Laos and Thailand, but not Vietnam and India.

Cathy has been to more than 75 countries, which makes my 55 countries visited pale by comparison.  When I inquired, she replied:

“I've been to more than 75 countries. I started in my 20s. Some of the countries don't even exist anymore.

“My next trip that is already booked for 2018 is to Burma & Laos -- both new countries for me.

“I think it's great that you and Paula love to travel as much as I do!”
Another BJ Cathy -- Cathy Robinson Strong, a 1970s State Desk reporter -- spent three years in Dubai teaching the daughters of royalty before returning to New Zealand, where she has lived for about a half-century when she’s not visiting America, as she is now, and other places around the globe.
Cathy Tierney “fully retired” from Ol’ Blue Walls in 2013.
Her early trips have included Cherry Blossom season in Japan, a 2,000-mile riverboat cruise from St. Petersburg to Moscow, Morocco . . . and an Amtrak trip to DC that began her retirement travels.

Sunday, October 29, 2017


The only people missing, but part of the topics of conversation, were Fran Murphey and Pat Englehart.

Cathy Robinson Strong, Pam McCarthy and John Olesky, once on the BJ State Desk in the 1970s, and retired BJ photographer Don Roese were there with Don’s wife, Maryanne, and Cathy’s friend and Pam’s friend.

We gathered at Papa Gyro’s in North Canton, one of the best Greek restaurants in the area. We must have enjoyed it because, when I left to drive home to Tallmadge so I could get up the next morning to go to the WVU-Oklahoma State game in Mountaineer Field, we had been there for 3½ hours.

And the rest of the party of seven remained there, chatting away. There were only two other customers still in the restaurant.
 
Pam agreed:
“I, too, enjoyed the evening. So nice to reconnect with friends I haven’t seen in a while. (Notice I didn’t say 'old friends.' Lol!)”

When I commented that Pam looked amazingly like my daughter, LaQuita, a teacher in Aurora, she said:

“I remember my students used to always tell me I looked JUST like the actress who played Jill on 'Home Improvement.' While there definitely is a resemblance, it was more her voice and facial expressions while talking, I thought. So probably the same with your daughter.”

Patricia Richardson played Jill on the “Home Improvement” TV series starring Tim Allen.

Cathy's reaction:
 
"Thanks heaps for the great evening."

Cathy is touring America on a sabbatical, doing research. She’s on the journalism faculty of Massey University in Wellington, New Zealand. Cathy has a beach house, a mountain home and a city residence. When she’s home, that is.


Pam is a retired North Canton Hoover High English and journalism teacher.

Ron and Maryanne do a lot of traveling. They know Alaska like the back of a bear’s paw.

I’ve done a bit of traveling myself, including to New Zealand to visit Cathy in 2013, where Paula and I ran into Don Roese at Aukland Airport. Don and Maryanne were leaving NZ after a visit with Cathy and Paula and I were arriving for a reunion with Cathy.
 
That’s one of 55 countries and 44 states I have visited, mostly with Paula, who has traveled decades longer and to more countries than I have.

Reminiscing is good for the soul. And makes Ol’ Blue Walls days come to life again.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Russ Schneider passes away

Legendary former PD sportswriter Russ Schneider, 89, passed away today.

Russ covered the Indians from 1964 through 1978.

And, for six years after the daily baseball grind became too difficult for him, the Browns.

Russ Schneider
As Bill Livington reported, when Schneider was named Browns beat reporter, Browns owner Art Modell spouted, "Welcome to the family."

Russ’ retort: "I'm here to cover the team, not to be part of your family."

After retirement, Russ remained a regular at the Indians’ Winter Haven spring training headquarters. Old habits die hard.

Russ was competitive. “The baseball writer for the (Cleveland) Press and I did not speak for 13½ years,” he once said, probably as a point of pride.

Russ was a former Marine and a former catcher in the Indians farm system. He kept both combative attitudes for the rest of his life.
He saw his first Indians game at old League Park in 1936. His mom took him. His love for the Tribe stayed with him.
Even after he left the PD, Russ wrote a sports column for the Sun newspapers for 10 more years. Just couldn’t stay away.
Schneider’s 14 sports books include a 630-page encyclopedia of the Tribe’s top players, published in 2013. Russ’ mind was an encyclopedia of Cleveland baseball.
After retirement, he had a second home at the Indians' old Winter Haven spring training headquarters. Just couldn't stay away.
Russ did have a soft spot: Catherine “Kay” Kilbane Schneider, his wife for 67 years. Other than that, it was rough going around Russ.
His obituary got it right: “A legend has passed.”
Russ’ obituary:
RUSSELL J. SCHNEIDER, SR., age 89.  A legend has passed.  

Beloved husband of 67 years to Catherine "Kay" (nee Kilbane); loving father of Eileen Raich (Eric), Russell Jr. "Rusty" (Susan) and Bryan (Tricia); dear grandfather of Jen Whisler (Rob), Leah, Ryan (deceased), Lynn Nissen (Eric), Sarah Wenzil (Aaron) and Meaghan; great-grandfather of Avery, Amelia, Jack, William and Elias; brother of the late Betty Botchick, Dorothy Stewart, Hazel Mould and Robert; uncle and great-uncle of many. 
Passed away October 24, 2017.  Proud U.S.M.C. Veteran - Korea.  Longtime sportswriter and columnist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer and was a Cleveland Indians historian.  Memorial Service Saturday, October 28, North Royalton Christian Church (5100 Royalton Rd., North Royalton, OH  44133) at 3:00 P.M.  
Burial private Ohio Western Reserve National Cemetery.  Friends may call at CHAMBERS FUNERAL HOME of NORTH OLMSTED, 29150 LORAIN RD. AT STEARNS RD., FRIDAY 2-4 & 6-9 P.M.  In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions in memory of Russ to your favorite charity.

I guess you could say that PD and former BJ pop culture critic Mark Dawidziak is a human bookend.

Let Mark explain:

Becky wanted to take a picture of dad with ALL of the books (including foreign editions). This was the Vincent Price-ish result of her efforts.

“Appropriate though, since I'll be talking about one of those books, ‘The Bedside, Bathtub & Armchair Companion to Dracula’ Thursday evening at 7 during The Vampire Talk (Cuyahoga Falls Library) and then I will be taking ‘Everything I Need to Know I Learned in The Twilight Zone’ to this Saturday's Books by the Banks in Cincinnati."

Clever segue, Mark.

Wonder when Mark finds time to work for the PD?

Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Dickens, Mark Twain and the Civil War also are on Mark’s tour, which includes Ohio counties and several states and the Center for Mark Twain Studies at Elmira College in New York.

Maybe he’s a bi-polar writer/actor.

Dawidziak came to the BJ from Tennessee in 1983 and grew up on New York City’s Long Island. He is married to Sara Showman Dawidziak, who often performs with Mark on the many occasions when they’re not in their Cuyahoga Falls home.

As for daughter Becky, she may become a more famous photographer than Civil War legend Matthew Brady.

Notice that scary shadow behind Mark's right shoulder? Well done, Becky.

 

Monday, October 23, 2017


Beth Thomas Hertz and David Hertz, a pair of BJ escapees, are celebrating their 24th wedding anniversary today.

Beth wrote:


Their wedding was at the Civic Theatre where their BJ friends showed up to applaud.

They will have a bionic celebration. David got a new hip in January. Beth had rotator cup surgery in 2015.

David was at Ol’ Blue Walls for 15 years, Beth for 4 years. The BJ meeting led to yet another BJ marriage. I've lost track of how many there were.
Or even long-term non-marriage same-domicile relationships that have lasted for decades, such as my 13 years with Paula Stone Tucker, who was one of my reporters when I was an assistant State Desk editor in the 1970s.

David came to the BJ after 5 years in Knight-Ridder’s Boca Raton, Florida newspaper. He is a vice president in the media relations department of Dix & Eaton in Cleveland.

Beth left the Beacon in 1995 to become managing editor in the Communications Department at the Cleveland Clinic. After six years, she left to be a full-time freelance writer.

They live in Copley. Their children are Josh and Alyssa, who is a counselor at the Akron Jewish Community Center day camp this summer.

Former BJ reporter Thrity Umbrigar, who left to become a best-seller of novels set in her native India, had a swimmingly good time on the shores of Lake Erie in her Conversation With Thrity Umbrigar at the Hagan hacienda while reading from her latest novel, “Everybody’s Son.”

Thrity wrote:

“Still glowing from the book club party thrown for me yesterday by Mary T. Hagan, Maggie Hagan, Denise Reynolds, Elaine Hagan, Jeff Hagan, Susan Hagan, Annie Hagan, Jim Hagan and Chris Hagan.

“Reading against the backdrop of the lake on a spectacularly beautiful day was pretty wonderful. And thanks to all you gorgeous people who showed up.

“But one of the highlights for me? Jeff Hagan walked in and handed me a box of chocolates and a long-stemmed rose, saying, "Everybody wants a box of chocolates and a long-stemmed rose," quoting the Leonard Cohen song, “Everybody Knows,” which is one of my favorites.
 It was such a generous, warm, unexpected gesture and it touched me deeply.

“And Susan Hagan sang so beautifully that I could barely concentrate on autographing books, so distracted was I.

“What an amazing family this is! And what a memorable event this was. Saying thank you doesn't begin to describe it.

“And special kudos and thanks to Suzanne from Mac's Backs-Books On Coventry for coming out on a beautiful Sunday afternoon with books.”

The Hagans have been big in Cuyahoga County and Ohio politics almost since Abraham Lincoln was a boy splitting logs.

In “Everybody’s Son,” young Anton Vesper shatters a window to escape into the arms of a rich judge’s white family. Thrity may shatter or solidify or alter your views on race, class, child welfare and the justice system with "Everybody's Son."

Monday, October 16, 2017


Leonidas Frank Chaney, “Man of a Thousand Faces,” is getting a run for his money from Mark Dawidziak.

Lon Chaney was “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” and the title character in “The Phantom of the Opera” nearly a century before Gaston Leroux’s novel was set to the music by Andrew Lloyd Webber that stirs my soul and emotions every time I see it – in Toronto, in Cleveland, in the movie -- alongside the woman I love.

Dawidziak, current PD and former BJ pop culture critic, has been the face of Charles Dickens, Edgar Allan Poe, Mark Twain, a Civil War character, Rod Serling “Twilight Zone” worshipper and, Tuesday, October 17 and Thursday, October 26, a vampire.

Even Mark’s email address is a tribute to two icons, savage humorist H.L. Mencken and frenetic comedian Groucho Marx.

Mark’s Facebook post:
“For those of you who have asked (and those who didn't), two chances at area libraries to experience the awe and mystery that is The Vampire Talk, a lively look at the changing face of the undead in history, folklore, literature and the pop culture.

“These are a few of the props I'll be bringing to the North Royalton Branch of the Cuyahoga County Public Library (5071 Wallings Road) at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 17, and the Cuyahoga Falls Library (2015 Third Street) at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26.
“As Count Dracula once said, time to think outside the box. Book signing after? Count on it.”
If you missed, that's coffin humor. The box. Get it?
The Vampire Talk is just part of Mark’s expansive resume. He did one in 2013 in Massillon at the Massillon Museum.
Some day I expect Mark to show up at one of the Largely Literary Theater’s Mark Twain performances dressed as Edgar Allen Poe. I don’t know how he keeps his characters straight, but he channels them amazingly accurately.
And I didn’t teach him any of that when he was my TV critic at the BJ for so many years, starting in 1983, during my Television Editor days at Ol’ Blue Walls.
I can't keep a straight face when I lie, let alone assume one of a thousand faces or, in Mark's case, close to a dozen faces.

Sunday, October 15, 2017


Former BJ reporter John Dunphy and Rebecca Allen Dunphy celebrated their 10th wedding anniversary on Friday, October 13 in California, where they live in Lakewood.

John is among Cincinnatians Harry and Angela Dunphy’s nine children.

Cincinnati Xavier University grad John at Ol’ Blue Walls, with the late Pat Englehart cracking the whip, was a key reporter in the BJ’s coverage of the four 1970 Kent State dead and nine injured by Ohio National Guard bullets that brought the newspaper a Pulitzer Prize and spawned Neil Young's "Ohio" with the words "four dead in Ohio" as sung by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.
America was killing its children and decided it was time to end the Vietnam War.

After moving to California, John became a reporter for the Orange County Register and contributing editor for Southland Golf magazine. John also worked for newspapers in Kansas City, Detroit and Seattle.

He’s retired and busy battling health problems. So is Rebecca, who also was at the Orange County Register.

Friday, October 13, 2017

NPR's Geewax to add teaching at UGA

Former BJ reporter Marilyn Geewax, National Public Radio senior business editor, also will teach at the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication in spring 2018.
Marilyn Geewax
 
She will be an Industry Fellow with the James M. Cox Jr. Institute for Journalism Innovation, Management and Leadership.

One-time Ohio governor, Congressman and the 1920 Democratic nominee for President James Middleton Cox founded Cox newspapers, beginning with the Dayton Daily News.

Cox’s vice presidential running mate was assistant Secretary of the Navy and future President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
The Democratic ticket lost by a landslide to another Ohioan, Republican Warren G. Harding, he of the Teapot Dome scandal, and vice presidential nominee Calvin Coolidge, who became President when Harding died while occupying the Oval Office.
So everyone on both tickets became President except Cox.

Marilyn wrote:

“Honored to join UGA Grady students in the Spring. I’ll be looking for future talent for NPR. Love working with tomorrow’s great journalists.”

Grady, founded in 1915, has more than 1,500 students.

Marilyn joined NPR in 2008 after 23 years with Cox Newspapers. She took a Cox buyout after Cox abandoned its Washington bureau, then joined NPR 10 days later.
She went from Cox’s flagship paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, where she was a columnist and editorial board member, to national economics correspondent for Cox’s Washington Bureau.

Marilyn went south to Atlanta after seven years at Ol’ Blue Walls (1985-92). She came to the BJ from the Poughkeepsie, New York Journal.

Marilyn’s parents live in Campbell, just east of Youngstown, and her younger brother and his wife live in Reminderville, at the northeast tip of Summit County.

Thursday, October 12, 2017


While dozens of people were dying and hundreds fleeing from California’s devastating wildfires the Arizona Republic ran a promo atop the front page about a food section article with this inappropriate headline: “Fiery Feast.”

Honest to God.

Isn’t anyone responsible for checking out the front page of the Republic, the Phoenix newspaper?

Explains former BJ management and columnist whiz Stuart Warner, who worked there until a few years ago:

“People who design the page work for a different division of the company ... that's the world we live in.”

The headline/montage for this article shows clearly how Ben Maidenburg would have reacted. He would have come thundering out of his office and shouting: "What idiot did this!”

The California wildfires are no joke. They have been raging for days, with people suffering horrible deaths and nearly 4,000 homes and businesses turned into ashes.

Ken Pimlott, chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said: "We are literally looking at explosive vegetation."

And apparently no one at the Arizona Republic was looking at its own front page.

Wednesday, October 11, 2017


Jane Gaab Scott, wife of former BJ regional issues reporter and deputy Business editor Dave Scott who left in the 2014 BJ buyouts exodus, is making her first run for elective office. She’s a candidate for Copley Township trustee.

There are five running for the two seats. The others are Copley trustees president Scott David Dressler, trustees vice president Dale Panovich, Naureen Dar and Bruce Koellner.

Jane is no novice to township doings, however. She has been on the Copley Zoning Board for 11 years.

She’s been around politics before, too. Jane’s father, Robert Gaab, was a councilman in Independence during the 1960s.

Summit County's general election is November 7.

Jane is manager of the Fairlawn-Bath Library, part of the Akron-Summit County Public Library system. She has a master's in Library Science from Kent State. She has been president of the Copley-Fairlawn Kiwanis and the Copley Historical Society.

Jane and Dave have been married 38 years and have three sons, including Franklin who, with the help of wife Natasha Kunin Scott, made Jane and Scott grandparents. Their granddaughter was born in Oakland, California.

Jane’s sister, Katie Gaab-Shaw, is married to another former Ol’ Blue Walls inhabitant, Webb Shaw. Webb retired in 2014 as Vice President of Editorial Resources at J. J. Keller & Associates in Neenah, Wisconsin. The Shaws live in Fremont, Wisconsin.

It was Katie and Webb, along with another former BJ staffer, Rick Reiff, and his wife Diane, who set up the blind date that led to Jane and Dave becoming wife and husband.

Monday, October 09, 2017

Thrity chat October 22

There will be “A Conversation with Thrity Umrigar” 2-5 p.m. Sunday, October 22 at the Hagan family cottage overlooking Lake Erie.

It’s by invitation only. So you have to RSVP if you’re on the preferred list.

The Hagans live at 1572 Redbird Road, Madison, Ohio.

The Hagans’ post:

“To celebrate autumn, friendship and our love for books and to support a local author.

“Thrity will sign her latest novel, ‘Everybody's Son,’ and her other books at the event. Get a head start on your holiday shopping! Drinks and light refreshments provided by the Hagan family.”

Hagans and politics are an inseparable match.

The late Robert Emmett Hagan was Trumbull County commissioner, in the Ohio State Legislature as its most liberal member and ran unsuccessfully for Ohio lieutenant governor.

Among his 14 children was Tim Hagan, Cuyahoga County commissioner for two decades and 2002 Democratic nominee for Ohio governor.

Another of Robert’s sons, also a Robert Hagan, is in the Ohio House of Representatives after servng as an Ohio State Senator.

Former BJ reporter Thirty’s other books, many set in her native India, include “The Story Hour,”  “Bombay Time,” “The Space Between Us,” “If Today be Sweet,” “The Weight of Heaven,” “The World We Found” and “First Darling of the Morning.” 

The Babe From Bombay came to Ol’ Blue Walls in 1987.

PD and former BJ pop culture critic and extraordinary author Mark Dawidziak and on-stage and off-stage co-star Sara Showman Dawidziak are celebrating their 35th wedding anniversity today – October 9.

When I did the research for this article I realized that, to do justice to this “run of the play contract” for life, it would rival the Encyclopedia Brittanica in length. Since, as a BJ editor, I didn’t allow my reporters to do write that long, I won’t.

The Love Story of Mark and Sara (without the “h”) began in Tennessee in 1981 when they appeared together in Neil Simon’s “The Good Doctor.” A year later, there was a Mark-Sara wedding in Johnston City, Tennessee, where Mark was working on the Kingsport Times-News.

Another year later that’s where the BJ plucked Mark in 1983 as David Bianculli’s replacement for TV critic. And Mark “lucked into” me as his editor. As Humphrey Bogart said to Claude Raines, “It was the beginning of a beautiful friendship” that, like Frankenstein’s monster, “It’s alive!” today.

Before the BJ & the PD, Mark's career took him to the Kingsport Times-News in Tennessee,
the Bristol Herald Courier in Virginia, the Associated Press’ Washington bureau and Knight-Ridder Newspapers’  Washington bureau.

The Cuyahoga Falls couple’s photos, in many instances, were taken by their daughter, Becky, who may have a career in portrait art.

Mark was born in Huntington, New York (think Long Island), on September 7, 1956, a son of World War II Army Air Corps captain/navigator Joseph Walter Dawidziak, buried in Calverton National Cemetery on Long Island, and Claire Dawidziak. Later, Joe married Bernie Dawidziak.

Mark’s siblings were Joe, Jr., Jane, Aileen and Michael.

When he’s not writing more than a dozen books about Mark Twain, Columbo, Twilight Zone he’s performing the works of Twain, who is the spitting image of Dawidziak, Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Dickens, Dashiell Hammett (who gave birth to detective Sam Spade, played so admirably by Humphrey Bogart) and the Civil War, with Sara often alongside him on the stage for their Largely Literary Theater Company productions.

He has been Mark Twain at, honest to God, the Twain House & Museum in Hartford, Connecticut, at the Center for Mark Twain Studies at Elmira College, McKinley Birthplace Memorial Auditorium in Niles and the famous Barter Theatre in Virginia. He gave Hal Holbrook a run for his money when it comes to Twain impersonation.

He gets around, locally and nationally:

"A Christmas Carol," the Kent Stage.
"Shades of Blue and Gray: Ghosts of the Civil War," Zoar. 
"Everything I Need to Know I Learned in The Twilight Zone," Broome County Forum Theatre, Binghamtom, New York.

"Twain By Two," The Thurber House, Columbus.
"A Force of Nature," scenic overlook at Ledges, Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

The Big Read in Wayne County at the Wayne Center for the Arts in Wooster. 
And Paula and I have witnessed Mark and Sara’s performances at libraries in Akron, Cuyahoga Falls, Massillon and Hudson.

Mark’s email address includes tributes to H.L. Mencken and Groucho Marx.

Mencken’s most famous quote trotted out today with Donald Trump in the White House: “On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at last, and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron.”

Current Secretary of State Rex Tillerson may have been channeling Mencken when he put the M label on President Trump.

Not to be out-done, Groucho said: “Behind every successful man, there is a woman. Behind her is his wife.”


That takes care of President Clinton, Monia Lewinsky and Hillary Clinton.

Despite his tremendous achievements, Mark will never need a larger hat size. He’s as comforting and entertaining as a Twain quote.

Mark is justifiably in the Cleveland Press Club’s Journalism Hall of Fame.
And it is impossible for the reports of his life and love of Sara to be “greatly exaggerated,” if I may borrow from Mark Twain’s denial of his demise.
Rod Serling, one of the many geniuses in Mark’s spotlight, once wrote: ““Every writer is a frustrated actor who recites his lines in the hidden auditorium of his skull.”
Dawidziak is a writer who performs his lines in the public auditorium. But his skull is crammed with amazing talent.
One of my great pleasures in life was to work with and, in retirement, enjoy reunions at Primo’s Deli and at area performances by Mark and Sara, with Becky’s camera always at the ready.
Lights, camera, action – for Act IV of Mark, Sara and Becky.