Sharon Shreve Lorentzen, the famous Farkle who put sparkle in BJ
blue, at my request, followed up the article about how she got the Farkle label
with her memories of the BJ.
She did such a good job that I wonder why the BJ didn’t turn Paul
Lorentzen’s wife into a reporter. Some damn good writing here. I didn’t change
a word. Oh, a minor grammar fix here and there, but not much of that even.
A far cleaner copy than a lot of the reporters turned over to me
during my 26 years at Ol’ Blue Walls.
Here are Sharon/Farkle’s memories, which are impressive even though
she didn’t name me among those she remembered during her BJ years:
Memories - Sharon Shreve/Farkle
I started at the Beacon Journal in Sept. of 1969, two
months out of high school. I went in, knocked, and walked into Ben Maidenburg’s
office, asked if I could have a job. He hired me. He knew I wanted to write,
but with no experience at all, I started with lowered expectations.
I first started in the phone department on the
mezzanine, plugging in to take a call when a call came through, and plugging it
in for the department it went to. Very interesting. When that system ended, I
was offered either a secretary for the managing editor, or a copy kid. As I
only wanted to write, I thought that copy kid would somehow get me closer to
that goal. Foolish youngster. There was a certain person of authority who told
me he would never let that happen. And he meant it.
I was the first female copy kid, and an official grunt
- getting coffee, bringing up every edition of the 7 editions for checking,
clearing and working on copy machines, rushing changes back to composing,
filing pages, hustling and bustling. Bob Goins, Frank Casey, and Bill Chaney
came along, too. I was literally in every department of the paper, nearly every
day.
Then I was ‘promoted’ doing obits, having to go to the
families’ houses to get pictures of accident victims. That was hard for an
18-year-old, with one death being a girl I had gone to high school with. Hated
that part.
I was a great typist. So, long before computers, I was
the typist for the reporters calling in their stories. That was so interesting
and exciting. Charles Buffum, who I still see, let me write a section of an
article series he was doing, about marriage. I wrote about my best friend, who
had gotten married very young. Thrilling to see it on the front pages of the
Community section.
I wrote the weeky columns about what was happening in
town. One was - every week - Dave and Diana Neff will be playing traditional
old-time music at Hale Farm Sat.-Sun. I can remember thinking, ‘who the
hell are Dave and Diana Neff, and what is traditional old-time’? Boy, did I
come to learn that.
When I first started dating my husband, one of our
weekly dates was to go to Boulder Junction in Green, and listen/play along with
a dozen others, playing banjos, fiddles, dulcimers, mandolins, etc. It was
magical. That was Dave and Diana. We became very close friends, even to this
day, and played in an Irish/French Canadian/Appalachian band for 11 years. We
played at Hale Farm, Yankee Peddler, May Day, Nat’l Parks., even a bar mitzvah.
We had monthly contra dances in Greentown. I played dulcimer (which I made),
and now the bohdran - an Irish drum.
When the paper got to computers, I was the second
person that was trained, because I did all the typing. I believe a composing
room guy was the first. That was amazing! I have loved them ever since.
I got to work at 5:30 a.m. One of my first tasks was
for Pat Englehart. “Copy” he’d bellow
(before Farkle became a thing), “Cigars!” I had to go the Western Drive-In
across the street and get his stinky, beloved DiNobli cigars, and a coffee. I
also had to get John Knight’s lunch, and put it on ceramic dishes, coffee in
the silver pot, all on a silver tray, and leave it on his desk. He couldn’t be
there when I did it. Sometimes he’d be talking to his sec’y - Shirley Follo.
I did phone work for the Sports Dept., off and on,
especially during the time Mohammad Ali had the some of his biggest fights
- Fight of the Century, the Rumble in
the Jungle and the Thrilla in Manila.
The phones would go crazy with people wanting the results. Tom Melody, Ray
Yannucci, John Seborn, Sheldon Ocker, Paul Bailey and the rest. Great guys,
great experience.
Betty Jaycox would come in around right before 6 some
mornings, to write her column - no makeup, no hair done, no fancy outfits. I
would get her coffee. The first time I saw her like this, I think my jaw
dropped. It was made clear that this was not to be shared. She would return
several hours later, in full glory, to start gathering her society news for her
next column.
Fran Murphey - wow. That’s all I could think. What a
marvelous whirlwind. I have a signed Cotswold Outhouse book she gave me. I
marveled at her complete disdain for anything she didn’t want. She was one of a
kind and gave a young woman quite a life lesson.
I still wear overalls because of her.
Mickey Porter - the best there. I worked for him for
about 3 months, when he was at his peak. Funny, sardonic, so intelligent. He
was ahead of his time. And a pretty good bowler, too.
Pat Englehart was a marvel - gruff, sarcastic, funny. The
ideal image of a newsman. Luckily he had a soft spot for me. He was patient and
encouraging.
On May 4, 1970, I was on the phones with our staff at
Kent State. I’m sure it was Don Roese that came in to the ‘press room’ there,
to give a report. As I’m talking to him, he stops, says - ‘they’re shooting!
They’re shooting here.’ I yelled for Pat. He got on the phone, too. As I’m
typing, he’s listening, shouting orders to staff, typing himself. The place
exploded! It is one of the most amazing things to happen in my life. I still
get goose bumps. It was unbelievable and continues to be.
I was also the first female permitted to wear pants -
when they were redoing the newsroom, version 1, I think. We had to headquarter
behind the Green Room. I was constantly running my stockings. On a copy kid salary,
I just couldn’t afford it, and discussed it with - yes, again - Ben Maidenburg.
I was allowed to wear slacks, no jeans, after that. After the Advertising and
Sales dept. got a view of that, it was opened to all.
The Beacon Bombers - I wanted to play softball. I
asked repeatedly. Jim Ricci said ‘if you let Farkle play, I’ll quit’. As I
recall, he was one of their good players. So, I went to John Knight’s condo
(with an appointment), asked if we could use the name “Ladies of the Knight”
and start a female team. He loved it so much, he bought us uniforms, and sprung
for some equipment! That did not go over well with the Bombers, although I
think they got t-shirts then. Wonderful, loving Jim Derendal signed on as our
coach. We were horrible - a tomboy and a bunch of secretaries who had never
played. But we got better, winning a trophy in our 3rd year.
I got married in 1985, and I’m still living in
Highland Square, on the same street since 1965. My bonus kids are in Virginia,
Atlanta, and North Carolina - 3 kids, 4 grandchildren. Paul and I have had
international students from the Caribbean, England, Australia, Egypt, Denmark,
Italy, and Norway. We had a wondrous trip to Norway to visit our student’s
family for 18 days. We’ve gone to England, several times, including a canal
boat trip through mid-England, in which we worked 91 locks ourselves. We’ve
cruised through all of the West Indies and Bahamas on Windjammer ships, and the
Italian Rivieria on a large cruise ship.
I ride a Harley trike, and we have done several
motorcycle trips to Georgia, New Hampshire, and all points closer. We know all
the ice cream places.
I started the Family Council at Rockynol, for the
advocacy of the seniors there, specifically those with dementia. For eleven
years I was there nearly every day with my parents, making sure everyone was
getting what they deserved. A special passion and place in my heart.
I have become the unofficial secretary for the
Prostate Cancer Support & Education Group, which meets monthly, a very
informative group.
Paul was an architect for his whole career, and
retired in 2007. He is a great Santa, and we do Mr. and Mrs. Claus every year
at local churches and restaurants.
People I remember:
Julius Greenfield and all the photogs
Don Gaynor
Don Bandy
Loren Tibbles
Don Fermoyle
Tom Ryan
Pete Geiger
Chas Montague
Larry Froehlich and Janis
Abe Zaidan
Ted Gup
Mark Faris
Joan Rice
Jane Snow
Bob Giles
Peggy Rader
Kathy Frazee
Charles Buffum
Kathy Goforth
Harry Liggett - sweetest guy, good boss
Doug O., when he first started. Wow, did he go far.
All these names flooding back.
Thanks John, for stirring up the memories.
Sharon
OLESKY NOTE: With such clean copy, I'm puzzled that no one made Sharon a reporter. I've handled a LOT of copy that was not as well-written as Sharon's memories.
She, indeed, put the sparkle in Farkle at the BJ.
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