Former BJ Columbus Bureau Chief and Washington Bureau correspondent Bill Hershey has a new book
out, “Profiles in Achievement” – University of Akron Press, $24.95 in
paperback.
I’d bet my Social Security check that Bill was meticulous about assembling
it, as he always was during his State Desk reporting days when Pat Englehart
ran that exciting tornado and Harry Liggett and I reassembled the mess Pat left
behind.
It starts with Republican Ray Bliss being an errand boy in the 1931 Akron
mayor race to Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Ohio Republican
Governor Mike DeWine today. Almost a century of gosh-almighty reading.
Bill had 40 years of covering Ohio politics. You find a lot of skeletons when
you’re around that long . . . and gems.
Bliss worked quietly behind the scenes as party chairman to elect mayors,
governors and presidents. Bill and Akron U.’s John Green previously co-authored
“Mr. Chairman: The Life and Times of Ray C. Bliss.”
Democrat Howard Metzenbaum earned a reputation as a high-profile political
battler in the Senate.
His fellow Democrat John Glenn, already a world hero as the first American
to orbit the earth, preferred a nose-to-the-grindstone approach in four U.S.
Senate terms.
Democrats Eddie Davis from Akron and Louis Stokes from Cleveland made
history – Davis as Akron’s first black city councilman and Stokes as Ohio’s
first black U.S. House member.
Summit County’s Maureen O’Connor in 2010 became the first woman elected
chief justice of the Ohio Supreme Court.
Akron Democrat John Seiberling, the grandson of Goodyear founder F.A.
Seiberling, was a cerebral U.S. House member who could relate to rubber workers
and match up intellectually with expert witnesses.
And behind a lasting legacy, much of the land that today is the Cuyahoga
Valley National Park.
Republican Jim Rhodes, a coal miner’s son from southern Ohio, captured the
governor’s office four times with his unique earthiness before becoming forever
stained with sending the Ohio National Guard to kill 4 students and wound 9
others at Kent State.
Bill covered all the bases. He found plenty of goodies because Ohio has
always had its finger in the pie of national political power.
As usual, Bill is quick to credit others. His email to me:
“Most of the stories are profiles I wrote for the Beacon Magazine.
“We also got valuable contributions from Bob Dyer, Steve Hoffman, Michael
Douglas, Carl Chancellor, Doug Oplinger, Dennis Willard, Mike Cull, James C.
Benton and the late Brian Usher.”
This is just the tip of the iceberg of the Who’s Who of BJ newsroom
history. I remain astounded at how much talent was in the newsroom during my 26
years at 44 E. Exchange Street, mainly because the guy in the corner office was
a millionaire with a caring for everyone who worked for him that made him more
valuable to all of us than his financial assets.
People at the BJ, including me, would ram their bodies through brick walls
for JSK.
As for Bill, he dived right in for the coverage spearheaded by a Pat
Englehart protégé, Doug Oplinger, then the Business Editor, that won a 1987
Pulitzer for the BJ for its coverage of the Sir James Goldsmith greenmail
attack on Goodyear that shoveled a ton of money out of Akron to Goldsmith and
cost thousands of rubber workers their jobs eventually.
After graduating from Albion College, Bill got his master’s degree from
prestigious Columbia University School of Journalism.
Bill lives in Columbus with wife Marcia and his dog, Rocky.
Rocky can’t hold a candle to Rover. Hell, no dog in Ohio can.
Rover popped up at a Hershey picnic in Dayton in 1974. Rover knew he had a
soft target – so much so that Bill and Marcia took in Rover even though pets
weren’t allowed and they lost their security deposit when they moved because of
Rover, who became master of the household for 17½ years, in Dayton, Akron and
Washington, D.C.
Rover babysat Marcia and Bill’s children, Laura, born in 1971, and
Patrick, born in 1975.
Legendary “go to Hell” BJ columnist Fran Murphey once shared
a couch with Rover when she stayed with overnight in the Hershey home during a
Red Sox-Cincinnati Reds World Series game.
A photo of Rover and Fran tugging for the covers would
have been a picture more valuable than the Mona Lisa.
But you and I will have to settle for one Fran took of
Rover and young Patrick Hershey. If you aren’t charmed by it, Go to Hell! (Fran
made be repeat her famous phrase of love; first time she said that to me I knew just joined the “in” crowd at the BJ).
Rover died on December 7, 1990, a day that will live in infamy in the
Hershey family. Former BJ columnist Jim Ricci wrote Rover’s obituary for the
Detroit Free Press where he had joined former BJ Managing Editor Scott Bosley,
once the King of Keyser High School in West Virginia.
Rover was succeeded by, but never over-shadowed by Ike,
a rescue dog who lasted 16 years; and then the Golden Girls, for their ages, Shadow, Sam(antha) and Sambuca, all with double-digit
lives.
Maybe Bill should write a book about what they fed
their dogs to keep them alive so long.
After he revives his fingers from his latest
publication.
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