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Friday, October 30, 2020

49th wedding anniversary to remember

Anniversary interrupted for Char and Art

Retired BJ reporter Charlene Nevada and retired BJ chief artist Art Krummel were going to celebrate their 49th wedding anniversary. But Art wound up with emergency Pacemaker surgery. He’s home now so all went well, Char reports.

Their daughter, Beth Krummel Meese, posted:

“49 years and still smiles all around! Happy anniversary mom and dad. You make it look easy!!!!”

Thursday, October 29, 2020

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Derf’s mom passes away

Mary Anne Hamilton Backderf, mother of former BJ artist John Derf Backderf, passed away Monday, October 26.

She was another victim of COVID-19 pandemic.

Derf posted:

“She'd been in hospice for a few days, and in the ICU for a week, so it was only a matter of time.

 

“This is my favorite photo of her. She hated to have her picture taken, but this one captures her personality perfectly. She was extroverted and chatty, she enjoyed life. She was an Akron girl through and through. I'm going to miss her.

 

“Stay safe everyone. Don't get careless.”

 

Almost a quarter-million Americans have died in the pandemic  . . . so far.

 

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Trip down 44 E. Exchange Street memory lane

 

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There’s a lot of memories crammed into this old BJ reunion photo with identifications provided by newsroom retiree Roger Mezger.

Photographer Don Roese and wife Maryann Roese are in the photo. They visited former BJ State Desk reporter Cathy Strong, a journalism legend in New Zealand, and Paula and I met Don at the airport when they were leaving and we were arriving for our visit with Cathy.

Another photographer, Tom Marvin, who lives on a farm in southeast Ohio with wife Kaye.

Photographer Ron Kuner, famous for his apples in Stark County, I believe.

Photographer Ott Gangl, famous for his sinday photo shoot in the BJ photography studio on Sundays and skiing around the world with his late wife, Anne.

Photographer Denny Gordon, who has pedaled his bicycle a zillions miles, often 20 miles at a time.

Chief photographer Bill Hunter, responsible for the eccentric but talented crew.

Photographer Lew Stamp.

Betty Lammerding, in the Features Department when I was Television Editor and the late Joan Rice was at the next desk to mine.

Russ Musarra, with the famous temper and talented investigative reporting.

Ken Krause, who moved to Medford, Massachusetts with wife Maura McEnaney.  

Kathy Fraze, who proved me right when I told BJ management that this State Desk reporter would make a great editor.

Bill Hershey, who was the best digging reporter at the BJ during my time there, and quick-thinking when a union organizer put a gun to his head while Bill was talking to me. He told the guy, “They are saying a lot of lies about what you guys are doing and I’m here to prove that they aren’t true.” So the guy said, “Come along with us” as they burned tipples of non-union mines.

Chuck Ayers, whose remarkable political cartoons and “Crankshaft” comic series flashback in my mind when I look at the autographed food container that he signed for me. It’s still in my den, a shrine to my memories.

Former librarian Sandy Bee Lynn, who Paula and I run into regularly because he husband and Paula often play in the same bands or go to the same concerts.

Reporter Jim Carney, perhaps the nicest person I encountered during my 26 years at the BJ, who probably still has the scare from jumping his head into a street sign after crossing is hurriedly to escape traffic.

Pam McCarthy, who had a reunion with Cathy Strong in Ohio that included me.

The erascible Charles S. Montague, aka Chasm, who has even more memories than I do about Ol’ Blue Walls.

Susan Reynolds, newsroom secretary who could match whirling devish Pat Englehart is any discussion.

Roger Mezger, who has become a better chronicle of the old days at the BJ than me even though I publish the BJ Alums blog. Maybe he can take over the blog when I join Harry Liggett in that Great Newsroom in the Sky.

Charlene Nevada, who kept her nose to the ground to get the news and to help us keep track of what was going on at the BJ. As BJ Editor Paul Poorman once famously answered a question with: “I don’t know. Charlene hasn’t told me yet.”

If you’re old enough I’m sure you can conjure up even more memories of your own.

You know what they say: No one ever dies as long as someone has them in their memories.

Thanks, Roger.

 

 


Monday, October 26, 2020

BJ memory wall

 

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Sunday, October 11, 2020

45th wedding anniversary for Jeff Sallot

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Former BJ reporter Jeff Sallot and Rosemarie Boyle celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary today.

Jeff posted:

“Today is our 45th wedding anniversary. So much joy and happiness over the years. Jeff and Rosemarie.”

Previously, Kent State graduate Jeff, who had a major role in the BJ’s Pulitzer-winning coverage of the 1970 National Guard shooting of 4 Kent State students and wounding of 9 others as a BJ summer intern and campus stringer for the Beacon, told me:

“My marriage with Rosemarie is the most important thing that has happened to me. We live in Ottawa, Rosemarie's hometown, and have two wonderful grown children. Mike, our eldest, is two hours away in Montreal. Kate lives here in Ottawa.

“My son from my first marriage, Ken, is happily married to a wonderful woman. They live in Gainesville, Florida.

“I joined the reporting staff at The Toronto Star after leaving the Beacon Journal in June 1971. I was transferred to their Parliamentary bureau in Ottawa in 1972.

“I met Rosemarie at the Star. She's a journalist, too.

“By 1974 Rosemarie and I were both back in Toronto, working for The Globe and Mail, a remarkable national newspaper. I stayed at the Globe for 32 years.

“Most of those years were in foreign or national bureaus. At various times I was the bureau chief in Moscow, Ottawa and Edmonton. I figured once that I have covered stories in more than 30 countries and every province and territory in Canada.

“There were a couple of timeouts from daily journalism to do fellowships at the Canadian Centre for Arms Control and, in China and Japan, with the Asia Pacific Foundation.


“I retired from the Globe to join the faculty at the Carleton University School of Journalism and Communication. I teach multimedia reporting.” Carleton is in Ottawa.

 

It was Jeff who confirmed that only students were shot, and not National Guardsmen as other media incorrectly reported. The BJ went with Jeff’s version. Eventually, so did all of the media in America.

 

6th book for Steve Love

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Former BJ columnist has a 6th book published, “Football, Fast Friends, and Small Towns.”

 

One of Steve’s other five books is “The Holden Arboretum,” which I visit every year when the rhododendrons, the state flower of West Virginia, are in bloom in the spring.

Steve also wrote “Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens” (University of Akron Press) and co-authored with former BJ columnist David Giffels “Wheels of Fortune: The Story of Rubber in Akron” (University of Akron Press) and with former Akron U. and Notre Dame football coach Jerry Faust “The Golden Dream” (Sagamore).

Steve’s other book is “Don Plusquellic,” about the irascible and always-in-the-spotlight former Akron mayor.

He also had a hand in two BJ Pulitizers, for James Goldsmith’s greenmailing of Goodyear that cost the company millions and cost many workers their jobs, and for A Question of Color, about race relations in Northeast Ohio.

Steve got his college degree from California State University at Chico.

This is the email I got from Steve about his latest published work:

“John.

 

“Hope you can use what you think is useful and add to it as you will. 

 

“I consider your website an important conduit for ABJ information.

 

“Steve”

 

 

Here is the information that Steve emailed me:

 

In an effort to prove that while he may be gone and forgotten but is not yet qualified for the Wall of the Dead, former Beacon Journal columnist Steve Love has written a sixth book. (One of the previous five was written with the more famous David Giffels and another was written for the even more famous Gerry Faust; the writing rasps like Gerry.)

 

Steve’s new book is “sort of” a memoir. Sort of, because he set out to write a collection of linked essays about quarterbacks whose play and lives he admired but ended up writing not only about football but also friendship, small towns, like the one in which he (mostly) grew up, a journey in journalism and the really good and bad things in life. It got so bad at one point he thought he had been consigned to the Death Beat.

 

His previous five books were published by the University of Akron Press, with the exception of The Golden Dream, which Sagamore Publishing put out before turning into Sports Publishing and then . . . it has had a few other incarnations but lives on. That might be a good definition of Steve’s career if you believe the late Dale Allen. He hired Steve to write a metro notes column, lived to regret it and gave Stuart Warner the job.

 

In his spirit of good humor—or maybe laughing from the grave—Dale presented Steve with the portion of his unpublished memoir and it is now published in Steve’s Football, Fast Friends, and Small Towns: A Memoir Straight from a Broken Oklahoma Heart. Dale’s contribution—lamentation—explains how he came to bring Steve to Akron. 

Steve explains the hostility, not entirely unwarranted, with which he was welcomed.

 

It is all good fun, even if it hurt at the time, Steve said. Since the book did not fit the University of Akron Press, though there is a concluding chapter devoted to Steve’s Akron adventure, and the University of Oklahoma Press declined the pleasure of publishing the book, Steve did it himself with the help of 1106 Design, a Phoenix company. They provided editing, proofreading, cover design (ain’t it beautiful?), interior design, and a lot of hand-holding for which Steve says he is grateful. Hardly anyone wants to hold his hand since he got old and forgotten and deep into cranky land. 

 

In the publishing process—Steve’s publishing company is called Hawk Bookworks because Hawkins was his mother’s maiden name, his nickname growing up, and made for a damned fine logo—he also launched a website that includes a mostly football blog. It can be found at stevelovewriter.com and Steve welcomes visitors who play nice. (Seriously, how does a person write about this kind of thing without poking fun?)

 

Since the BJ Alums site is where Steve goes to learn important things, like who died, he thought he should submit this to John Olesky, to whom all of us should be grateful for taking the torch from the late founder Harry Liggett, who hated me before reconsidering. Thankfully, any number of Steve’s former colleagues—not all, of course—eventually came to accept him if not actually like him, and that is what he will always remember. 

 

(The book is available from your favorite bookstore, Amazon.com, my website or other online book sites. ISBNs: Trade Paperback $16.99—978-1-7351227-0-0; Hardcover $29.99—978-1-7351222-2; eBook $7.99—978-1-7351227-1-7)

 

If you want to contact Steve, you can go to steve@stevelovewriter.com His Hawk Bookworks, so named in honor of his mother, is:

 

Hawk Bookworks

P.O. Box 400

Uniontown, OH 44685

 

A Uniontown mailing address, as the late State Editor Pat Englehart often told his editors and reports, means someone who lives in Stark, Summit or Portage counties. So look it up! (That’s Pat’s voice in my head.)

 

 


Friday, October 09, 2020

39th wedding anniversary for Mark & Sara Dawidziak

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Former BJ and PD TV critic Mark Dawidziak and Sara Showman Dawidziak are celebrating their 39th wedding anniversary today.

 

Mark and Sara met when they were both in the cast of Neil Simon’s “The Good Doctor” in Tennessee. A year later, there was a Mark-Sara wedding in Johnston City, Tennessee, where Mark was working on the Kingsport Times-News.

 

To cement the courtship Mark showed “Psycho” during a film series he ran while they were dating. By comparison with Norman Bates it made Mark look so good that Sara took the bait.

 

Mark and Sara have been performing together, on stage and in private, ever since including with their Largely Literary theater company that takes on Edgar Alan Poe, Mark Twain, etc.

 

They have a photographer extraordinaire daughter, Becky.

The BJ plucked Mark in 1983 as irascible David Bianculli’s replacement for TV critic. Mark was best TV writer I had during my 16 years as TV editor and I had 3 good ones!

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.

Mark is justifiably in the Cleveland Press Club’s Journalism Hall of Fame and writes books more often than he changes underwear, which is NOT a comment on his hygiene.

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 are Joe, Jr., a Marine Corps Vietnam veteran; Jane, Aileen and Michael.Click on photo montage to enlarge it

Former BJ and PD TV critic Mark Dawidziak and Sara Showman Dawidziak are celebrating their 39th wedding anniversary today.

 

Mark and Sara met when they were both in the cast of Neil Simon’s “The Good Doctor” in Tennessee. A year later, there was a Mark-Sara wedding in Johnston City, Tennessee, where Mark was working on the Kingsport Times-News.

 

To cement the courtship Mark showed “Psycho” during a film series he ran while they were dating. By comparison with Norman Bates it made Mark look so good that Sara took the bait.

 

Mark and Sara have been performing together, on stage and in private, ever since including with their Largely Literary theater company that takes on Edgar Alan Poe, Mark Twain, etc.

 

They have a photographer extraordinaire daughter, Becky.

The BJ plucked Mark in 1983 as irascible David Bianculli’s replacement for TV critic. Mark was best TV writer I had during my 16 years as TV editor and I had 3 good ones!

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.

Mark is justifiably in the Cleveland Press Club’s Journalism Hall of Fame and writes books more often than he changes underwear, which is NOT a comment on his hygiene.

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 are Joe, Jr., a Marine Corps Vietnam veteran; Jane, Aileen and Michael.
 
 

Monday, October 05, 2020

Barb Albrecht passes away

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Barb Albrecht passes away

Barb Albrecht, who was a BJ Stark Country bureau clerk before switching to the BJ message center at 44 E. Exchange Street, passed away Friday, October 2.

She was rehabbing at Laurels Nursing Home in Massillon with a broken foot.

Barb and husband Donald Albrecht both graduated from Perry High School and raised their family in Perry Township in Stark County.

Survivors include her husband, daughter Dana Albrecht Hire, twins Daniel Albrecht and Abby Albrecht, 1 grandson and 3 granddaughters.

Barb was a prize-winning cross-stitch artist.

 

George Bing Davis, who has worked at the BJ and the Stark County bureau, posted:

“Merleen and I were notified by her son that Barb Albrecht, a secretary-receptionist for several years in our Stark Bureau and then in the BJ newsroom passed away during the night at the Laurels nursing home.

 “Barb was our neighbor and friend for 45 years.”

 

Barb’s obituary:

Barbara A. (Ball) Albrecht
On Friday, October 2, 2020, Barbara A. Albrecht of Massillon, loving and devoted wife, mother, and grandmother, passed away at the age of 72.

Barbara was born on February 24, 1948 in Canton, Ohio to Willard and Margaret (Merritt) Ball. She graduated from Perry High School in 1966. After graduation, Barbara moved to Washington D.C. to work at the Pentagon. She moved back home, and on October 28, 1972, married her husband of 47 years, Donald.

Barbara was employed by the Timken Company, Perry Local Schools, and Trinity United Methodist Church. She retired from the Akron Beacon Journal where she was a Message Center specialist at both the former Stark Bureau and the Akron newsroom.

Barbara was an award - winning cross-stitch artist and enjoyed crocheting blankets. She was named “Mother of the Year” from the Mother of Twins Club. She enjoyed growing flowers, watching Westerns, and spoiling her grandchildren.

Barbara was preceded in death by her parents, Willard and Margaret (Merritt) Ball.

She is survived by her husband, Donald, her three children, Dana (Andrew) Hire, Daniel (Amy) Albrecht, and Abby Albrecht (Santos Garcia); grandchildren Ethan & Meredith Hire and Isabel & Alisera Garcia; her brother, David (Bonnie) Ball and many nieces and nephews.

Visitation will be held on Thursday, October 8 from 6-8 p.m. at Paquelet Funeral Home and 10 – 11 a.m. on Friday. A Celebration of Barb’s life will be held on Friday, October 9 at 11:00 a.m. Interment to follow at Rose Hill Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research: www.michaeljfox.org

Paquelet Funeral Home & Crematory
(330) 833-3222

 

Saturday, October 03, 2020

Joe Rice passes away

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Joe Rice interviews President Reagan


Joe Rice, who was a BJ politics writer before switching to the PD, passed away on Wednesday, September 30. He was 78.

Joe left the BJ in 1973..

He lived in Richmond Heights, a Cleveland suburb, with wife Janet Barragate Rice. Their children are Peter and Chris.

Joe Rice was a PD police reporter 1964-68 and a PD politics writer 1973-91. He left the PD to become a consultant for  politics, business and other areas.

Joe interviewed President Reagan on Air Force One in 1981.

He recalled:

I will always remember my exclusive with President Ronald Reagan in the fall of 1981. A friend of mine who worked for Reagan arranged it. I was told that if I came to Cincinnati, I could fly to Washington on Air Force One. A few minutes after I boarded the plane, I was taken to the President’s cabinet and did a 30-minute interview.

“I reported that Reagan would not object to bringing striking air traffic controllers back to work. My story made national news.

“During the interview, Reagan said he had heard my wife was a good cook from then-governor Jim Rhodes. He called my home and spoke to my wife, who was very excited. I was the envy of a lot of reporters.”

Reagan’s assault on the controllers union was the beginning of the erosion of American strength and middle-class financial stability in America.

Joe’s obituary:

JOSEPH D. RICE, age 78 of Richmond Heights passed away suddenly Wednesday September 30, 2020. Beloved husband of Janet (nee Barragate); loving father of Peter (Karin) and Chris (Nicole); dearest grandfather of Krista; brother of Pam Maranto (Savvy), Walter (Myra), Thomas and the late Roberta; dear uncle and friend of many. Joe was the political writer for the Cleveland Plain Dealer for most of his career and retired as a political consultant. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in his memory to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis TN 38105, www.stjude.org . Private family service. A celebration of Joe’s life will be announced at a later date.