Friday, February 19, 2021

STROLLING DOWN MEMORY LANE WITH JERRY & ROER

 










The one face in this photo that brought back the most vivid memories for me was Jerry Van Sickle.

Jerry was the lord of the APS4 room where all of the BJ stories were churned out on film strips that Composing makeup people cut out, waxed and attached to the pages. The late Terry Dray was an expert at that, when he wasn’t killing us on the golf course.

Johnny Grimm’s super lackey in Advertising layouts, Mike Williams, supplemented my memories with this information:

Jerry and his late sister, Mary Ohlinger, both were reared and educated at the Mooseheart children’s home in Illinois.

John Knight, the best newspaper owner in history, hired both of them to work at the BJ, straight out of the Mooseheart home in Kane County, Illinois, which opened in 1913 for the orphaned children of Moose members.

Jerry went to Composing and Mary went to Retail Advertising.

Jerry was superficially cantankerous but under those eyeshades was a man who was extremely helpful to me during my Newsroom Makeup Man days.

You didn’t want to challenge Jerry on the bowling alley either unless you wanted to make yourself look foolish. I mean, this was a man who made the elusive 5-7-10 pins knockdown, akin to a hole-in-one in golf!

Jerry started at the BJ around 1934.  Not sure when he retired, probably by 1980 or so.  His address was still in the Christmas directory of retirees in Sidebar in December 1991.

He was an avid bowler, though he admitted he wasn't a top scorer.  He was interested enough in the game to gain office in several of the statewide bowling organizations and the Allied Printcraft League.

He liked taking vacations to Canada, but if you read of the tangled affairs they became, he might as well have stayed home.  I can still remember his high yet gravelly voice.  (Think actor Strother Martin.)

Another face and memory that popped out in my stroll down BJ Memory Lane was Roger Ellis.

Good guy Roger Ellis’ face almost made warmth rush through my heart and head. Not the New York Titans linebacker Roger Ellis.

I’m talking the Roger Ellis who was the father and founder of the BJ Credit Union.

Roger passed away in 2001. Maybe his favorite singer, Barbara Streisand, greeted him with “The Way We Were.”

Roger was treasurer of the Beacon Journal Credit Union from its founding in 1968 until his retirement in 1980.  It was his brainchild. 

Roger had 27 years at the Beacon Journal, was regularly on the Board of Auditors of Local 182 of the ITU.  He was a bowler, a horseshoe fan, loved to fish and wrote a regular column for Tower Topics. 

He and his wife Fairy vacationed at a home in Bradenton, Florida, moving there after his retirement. 

Their children are Barbara, Sandy and Warren. They have at least 7 grandchildren.

The late Don Bandy, superior rewrite man at the BJ, spent his final years in a home he purchased in Bradenton, north of the Gulf of Mexico coastline from Sarasota and Siesta Key, where the late printer Bill Gorrell had his Poor Bill’s vacation rental just across the road from the beach. A group of doctors bought the string of connected rentals and Bill managed them.

The late BJ Composing foreman Dave White often had reunions with BJ folks at Gorrell’s place because Dave and wife Gina White, also a Composing retiree, had a home in nearby Sarasota. They sold that house and bought one in Venice, Florida, about a 5-minute crow flight, where Gina still lives.

It’s funny how an old photo can trigger so many memories. Just like treasures in the attic of retired BJ clerk Sharon Shreve Lorensen did in an earlier article in this blog.

If you have any old photos, email them to me at jo4wvu@neo.rr.com and I’ll post them on this BJ Alums blog.

Tell me stories about them, identify the people in them and I’ll give you a bylined article on this blog. Use this style for your byline:

 

BY JOHN OLESKY, BJ Newsroom retiree (1969-96)

 

Together, we can share our memories and light up our memories like the old BJ Tower at night on 44 East Exchange Street.



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