Monday, November 30, 2020

Julie Wallace's husband passes away

 







Lewis Dunlap, husband of Julie Wallace, former BJ reporter who became Elyria Chronicle-Telegram managing editor, passed away.

Bowling Green University graduate Julie worked in the BJ’s North Summit bureau, switched to sports copy editing to avoid the 2001 layoff before covering City Hall. She was at Ol’ Blue Walls from 2000 to 2006.

They have two daughters.

Former BJ assistant city editor Arnold Miller retired from the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram as managing editor before Julie took over the position in 2008. Miller earlier was a BJ State Desk reporter in the 1950s.

You can send condolences to Julie at jwallace@chroniclet.com






Sunday, November 29, 2020

 







Retired BJ religion writer Colette Jenkins Parker, who helped the BJ win the 1994 Pulitzer for “A Question of Color” series, passed away Saturday, November 28.

Colette is survived by her husband, Darryl Parker, and their daughter, Angelica Parker.

 

Colette joined the Beacon Journal in 1992 as a reporter in the Stark County Bureau and was a staff writer until 2016.

 

Occasional columns by Colette, usually on the topic of race relations, appeared on the Beacon Journal op-ed page into 2018.

 

Gloria Irwin posted:

 

“I am so sorry for this post. Colette Jenkins passed away earlier today. She was recently diagnosed with cancer. No other details at this time.”

 

Colette was director of associates for the Dominican Sisters of Peace. I found a post on that web site by Colette in September 2020.

 

I also found this post from Colette:

 

We have thoughts of designing a curriculum for the schools here that includes the history of the civil rights movement and would include Dr. King's teachings and beliefs.”

 

Paula Schleis, BJ Guild chairman and reporter, posted about this gem:

 

“John, we asked Colette to be a special guest on our podcast Ohio Mysteries. Here's a direct link to the audio. Folks can jump ahead to 21:12 where we ask Colette to talk about herself. It's wonderful to hear her voice again.” You can hear the Ohio Mysteries episode by clicking on https://oembed.libsyn.com/embed?item_id=11674484

 

The Miracles of Rhoda Wise episode runs 42:35. Colette talks about growing up in an African Methodist Church with Catholic friends, then converting to Catholicism as an adult.

 

Colette said, “I believe you can only pray to God although you can ask saints to intercede for you with God.”

 

The Catholic Church has approved Rhoda Wise as “a servant of God.” The next level is “veneration,” achieved by only one Ohioan. Then comes “beaticification,” again only one Ohio hit that level.

 

Then there is sainthood. Only 13 Ohioans have ever achieved that lofty level. 

Colette’s obituary:

 

Mrs. Colette Marie (Jenkins) Parker left a legacy of love when she fell asleep in the arms of the Lord on Saturday, November 28, 2020 following a short illness. Colette was a humble person who wanted you to know her heart more than her accolades.

 

She started as a staff writer at the Warren Tribune. After starting her career in Warren, she transitioned to be a staff writer at the Akron Beacon Journal for 25 years.

 

Colette continued a journey of faith and was a current member of Elizabeth Ann Seton Church in Warren, Ohio. She served as a Dominican Associate and was the current Director of Associates for the Dominican Sisters of Peace in Akron, Ohio.

 

In addition to her parents; she was also preceded in death by brothers, Henry Jr., Willie Charles, and Carl Jenkins; and sister, Grace Broadway. Colette was an amazing wife and mother.

 

Left to cherish her loving memory are her husband, Darryl Parker; daughter, Angelica Parker, both of Ohio; sister, Valerie L. Jenkins and brother, Tommy Floyd Jenkins of South Bend.

 

Public viewing will be held on Monday, December 7, 2020 from 11:00 am until 11:30 a.m. at Monument of Faith COGIC, 2165 Highland Ave. SW, Warren, OH 44485. Words of reflection 11:30 until 12:00 noon. Funeral service will immediately follow. Interment Pine Knoll Cemetery. 330-836-2725



 


Friday, November 20, 2020

update on sid sprague

 

CATCHING UP WITH

Retired BJ printer Sid Sprague

 

Retired printer Sid Sprague, who lives in Loveland, Colorado, will have cataract surgery next month.

 

Sid will be 85 in March. And he keeps getting cancer-free test results after his prostate surgery a few years ago.

 

Sid says second wife Nancy “is doing well,” too. Nancy, who is from Canton, was neighbor and friend to Sid’s late wife, Sandra. After Sandy passed away, Sid and Nancy married and moved in 2005 from Pawleys Island, South Carolina to Loveland.

 

They’ve been back to the Carolinas 3 times since.

 

Nancy’s sister moved from the Carolinas to Virginia.

 

Sid’s granddaughter will be married in Connecticut in July. Sid hopes to make it for the wedding, depending on the pandemic and other things.

 

Sid had joined the late Dick Latshaw and Harold McElroy, also BJ retirees, in Pawleys Island.

 

Sid’s daughter, Suzanne Sprague Rutherford, lives in Costa Mesa, which is 37 miles southeast of Los Angeles. Sid’s son, Jeffrey Sprague, lives in Greenwich Township, on the southwest tip of Connecticut. Another son, Steve, passed away in Middleburg, Virginia at the age of 38 in 2010.

 

Sid’s phone number is (970) 613-1914. Call him and have a remote BJ reunion.

Monday, November 16, 2020

Dan Auxter passes away

 






Dan Auxter, Circulation zone manger at the BJ for decades, passed away Tuesday, November 10.

Dan started at the BJ in 1974 and was there for about 30 years. As a youngster Dan and cousin Steve Auxter delivered newspapers for a few years.

He supervised the outlying district warehouses.  Dan’s office was right around the corner from the PC tech department. 

When he left, Dave Green took his position.

He began his job at Rapid Start in Rittman in 2008.

His widow is Kathy Gasser Auxter. They have two daughters, Abbie Auxter Turbert and Emily Auxter Askew, a teacher at Jackson Memorial Middle School since 2015 who lives in Akron.

Dan’s obituary, which appeared in the Medina Gazette and the Wooster Daily News200:

Daniel C. Auxter, 68, of Creston, passed away peacefully on Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2020 at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.

Dan, who was known as Sarge to many, was born on Oct. 18, 1952 in Wadsworth to the late Eldon and Sylvia (Feesler) Auxter and was a 1971 graduate of Cloverleaf High School where he was the senior class president and has been the reunion organizer for the class.  He later graduated from Akron University. 

On May 26, 1978 he married the former Kathryn “Kathy” Gasser and she survives.

As a kid, Dan had a paper route in Seville, and as an adult, Dan was in the newspaper business for 38 years.  He had also worked at Pack Ship Logistics in Orrville and was currently working at Rapid Start in Rittman.  He always had an incredible work ethic which many admired. 

Dan was a true American Patriot having supported Veteran’s Organizations and helping with the laying of the wreaths at Ohio Western Reserve National Cemetery.  He was involved in Junior Achievement at Norwayne Middle School for 19 years having helped with fundraisers with the kids for the annual 8th grade Washington DC trips which he had helped chaperone for 19 years.  Dan also taught a newspaper class at Norwayne High School for several years.  Being a man of God, Dan attended Canaan Free Will Baptist Church where he had organized the food distributions at the church for a number of years.  Dan was a member of the Westfield Country Club and was a Seville Historian having always had an interest in local history and all history.  Dan will be forever loved and remembered by his family and many friends.

Surviving are his wife, Kathy, his two daughters, Abbey (Pat Turbert) Auxter and Emily (Jeff) Askew; grandson, Chase Askew and a grandson on the way; a brother, David Auxter and his 4 children and his beloved cat, Tippy.

In respecting Dan’s wishes, a private family service will be held at Murray Funeral Home in Creston with Pastor Jim McComas officiating.  Tributes may be shared at www.Murray-Funeral-Home.com   Memorial contributions may be made to the Wounded Warrior Project or to the American Red Cross.  Dan requested that instead of friends and family attending calling hours that they would volunteer in the community for two hours in his memory.


Steve Auxter’s memories of his cousin, Dan Auxter:

 

“I want to thank you for the BJ Alums of November 16 2020.  Dan was my cousin, born in the same year and grew up in the same small town Seville Ohio.  Both of us delivered papers in the 1960s and those memories are dear and fond to me.  Mr. Crawley was our circulation manager

 

“Dan’s work ethic , dedication and tremendous value system was incredible.

 

“In our later years before he married Kathy had some great experiences at the old Coloseum.

 

“After he married Kathy we continued our strong bond and told stories to our wives about our experiences in Seville.

 

“Dan was a success.”

 

Steve is with Kovack Securities in Brecksville, Ohio.


Sunday, November 15, 2020

Bob Carpenter health report

 

Bob Carpenter health report

Kent State graduate and former WKNT news director Bob Carpenter still is dealing with kidney stone problems.

Here’s his latest report:

“In late August I was bleeding from a 3/4” long kidney stone...they blasted with shock wave therapy called Lithotripsy. Next day I was in hospital for severe bleeding. I passed out twice at home due to loss of blood and got a transfusion. All is well now on that problem.

“At the same time I was having severe problems with eating and my stomach. I had an Endoscopy last week. They took two biopsies which I’ll know about this coming week. Monday I’ll be at the hospital getting an Upper GI Esophogram/Hiatal Hernia test. This could be the problem and is treatable. I can only eat very small amounts and drinking lots of Ensure Plus.

“I’ve lost about 30 pounds (now at 159) and am off a few of my heart meds for now. I’ve been so weak for two months. I haven’t had the energy to go on Facebook or go to Kiwanis, but hope too soon. Will let you all know.

“(Wife) Kaye has been so great in looking after me, Same for family and friends. Dang, we need a cruise real bad. We had 4 cancelled in 2020 and rebooked them in 2021. Thank you! Carp

 

Friday, November 06, 2020

Bye, bye, motorcyle license

 The cycle of life

I no longer have a motorcycle license for the first time in 50 years.

When I got my Ohio driver’s license renewed a week before my 88th birthday November 5, 2020, the clerk said:

“No more motorcycle on your driver’s license?”

I guess she figured an 88-year-old and a motorcycle were a bad combination.

So my new Ohio driver’s license no longer will have a “motorcycle” designation.

I was 38 when I rode a motorcycle for the first time, thanks to the late Gene Gray, a good-hearted electrician in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio who loved to share his toys with his friends.

He gave me some instructions and put me on his 250 cc Benelli, built by an Italian motorcycle company that began in 1911, sold shotguns first, then was taken over by Argentine owners and currently Chinese owners.

What a thrill it was when I rode that Benelli up the Gray farmland hill in Willard, Ohio and then soared into the air when I reached the top of the steep mini-cliff! I was hooked.

Gene sold me the Benelli. Hell, practically gave it away.

Eventually the Olesky home in Cuyahoga Falls had the Benelli, a 175 cc Yamaha, a 125 cc Honda, a Penton dirtbike and a 75 cc step-through Yamaha that I drove to work daily.

The baby Yamaha put me into a hospital ER when I crashed into a curb in the sudden rain on my way to work at the Akron Beacon Journal. Afterward, I showed up a work, then passed out. The late printer Terry Dray reached across the turtle where we were putting together a page of hot type to keep me from slamming into the floor.

The Olesky family rode those motorcycles with our “gang,” other parents with their children, in Ohio, in West Virginia, in Pennsylvania and in New York. On non-interstate roads, on logging trails.

Gene would be in the lead motorcycle and I would be riding shotgun (last bike in a line of up to 15 motorcycles) to protect the riders between Gene and me from auto traffic.

I once got the Benelli up to 85 mph on a straight road with no traffic in either direction. Wind whipping at the face protector on my helmet. If you haven’t done it, you just can’t understand it.

My personal Mona Lisa, my late wife, sold the motorcycles when the children were reaching the age where they could legally buy their own bikes. “If they kill themselves on a motorcycle,” Monnie said, “then at least it won’t be my fault.”

I’ve driven about everything that moves in my lifetime, including an elephant in Thailand that splashed gleefully into a water ride with Paula and me seated atop it. And horses at Blackwater Falls in West Virginia, till one tried to rub me off with a tree. Maybe he was prejudiced against a Polish-American in his saddle. And a camel with the Great Pyramids of Egypt in the background.

Motorboats. “Crew” member of a sailboat on Lake Erie. Trains between Virginia and Florida and Cass Railroad for tourists to the highest point in West Virginia.

Hot air balloon drifting above the land in Ohio.

Wrecked a few, too, in my youth.

Scooter, wagon, a child’s contraption that you sat on a seat and pulled the handle and shaft back and forth to get it moving, bicycle. Well, it was a reddog road, which meant there were a lot of rocks and few smooth paths. So over the holler I went on Thomas Street in Monongah, West Virginia, time after time. Once, Tom Retton who lived across the holler on Jackson Street saw my unconscious body 100 feet down the ravine from the road. He carried my lifeless form to our house, knocked on our door and told my Mom, “Here’s your son.” She fainted.

Mom fainted several times over my misadventures which required medical treatment.

I’ve also been on cruise ships more than a dozen times, in commercial jet passenger planes including one that was close enough to the North Pole to see the aurora borealis on our way to China.

I’d skied snowy slopes in Ohio, once almost sending one ski to one side of a tree and the other to the other side, stopping barely in time and preventing a split “personality.” And water-skied in the Ohio River and on Lake Erie.

I crashed a friend’s borrowed bicycle into a parked truck in Monongah. Learned some new curse words from the truck’s owner.

I rode wooden toboggans done commercial chutes in Ohio, wind blowing through my hair (I had hair then). I went sledriding on the hills around Monongah where we had to drag our feet at the bottom to keep from being scalped by barbed wire. One girl didn’t do it fast enough and lost a lot of hair and scalp.

When the 1950 snowstorm of 45.5 inches hit northern West Virginia I rode my sled down steep Swisher Hill because automobiles weren’t able to navigate U.S. 19. We were going so fast at the bottom that we had to drag out feet going UP the next hill to keep from flying off the curve and into injuries.

I’ve ridden miniature hot-rods on commercial tracks.

I hitch-hiked, between my freshman and sophomore years in college, from Monongah to Chicago to Philadelphia to Monongah. My mother gave me two $20 bills and had me put one in each sock. When I returned home after my 1,300-mile journey, I still have one $20 bill in one of the socks.

One of the drivers who gave me a ride told me how he was heading back to Montana to shoot the guy who stole his wife from him. I made sure not to irritate the driver the rest of my ride from Massillon, Ohio to near Chicago.

I took lessons to be an airplane pilot but never actually flew a plane. My mother-in-law said, with my penchant for running out of gas in automobiles, that I probably would run out of gas with the plane.

I never tried skydiving because I knew I wouldn’t be able to find the ripcord in time to keep my body from slamming into the ground.

I’ve used transportation to visit 56 countries and 44 states. Thailand was my favorite foreign country. Beautiful scenery, beautiful people (inside and out). We took a large rowboat to the water markets in Bangkok. We did our shopping without leaving the boat. The merchants just handed our purchases from their boat to our boat.

Lot of memories. They help sustain me during the stay-home pandemic year.

I’ve had plenty of varooms in my life. And not just on the motorcycles.

Monday, November 02, 2020

Sunday, November 01, 2020


Click on photo to enlarge the image

 

 

 

 

Nancy Yockey Bonar’s stepdaughter passes away

Julie Renee Bonar Baughman, 66, stepdaughter of Nancy Yockey Bonar, passed away Wednesday, October 28 in Florida.

BJ newsroom retiree Nancy posted:

BELOVED Julie Renee Bonar Baughman. age 66, gained her angel wings Wednesday at 4 pm and flew toward Heaven. She'd been in a West Palm Beach hospice with lung cancer.

Julie is the mother of Floridians John "Jay" Baughman, Jupiter Beach, and Jaime (Willie) Corzo, (children, Christian and Julian), Naples, and mother-in-law Edna Baughman, West Palm Beach; and the Ohioans, her stepmother Nancy Yockey Bonar, Medina, as well as her brother, Timothy Bonar (Erica), Cleveland Heights.

Julie was proceeded in death by husband John Baughman, Jr., West Palm Beach; father David Bonar, and mother Barbara Bunten Bonar, both of Akron, Ohio; uncle Navy Capt. Harry M. Yockey (Jackie), Louisville, Ky. , and many pets, including Tickles dachshund, and Grizilla moon cat.

Julie was courageous and resolute, a wonderful mother, a fantastic house keeper, and in recent years a manager of a nursery/landscape company. She was extremely creative and blossomed as a gardener who liked all flowers.

Julie/her ashes will be brought home to Akron in the future; other ashes will be spread in the Atlantic Ocean.

The photo is of Julie and me in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, between Akron and Cleveland.



The obituary version that appeared in the BJ on Sunday:

 

Akron native and Firestone High graduate, Julie Renee (Bonar) Baughman, 66, West Palm Beach, FL, met Jesus on October 28. Lovin g/courageous mother of Floridians, John B. Baughman III, Jupiter Island, and Jaime (William) Corzo (children Christian and Julien), and Ohioans, stepmother, Nancy Yockey Bonar, Medina, and Timothy Bonar (Erica), step-brother, Cleveland Heights. Proceeding Julie in death, husband, John Baughman Sr.; parents, David and Barbara (Bunten) Bonar, Akron; and grandparents: the Bonars and Buntens, Akron, and Yockeys, Dover, OH. Cremation has taken place. Memorials for Julie Baughman: American Cancer Society www. cancer.org (800-227-2345). Condolences: John Baughman, The Claridge,

19950 Beach Rd., Jupiter Island, FL 33469