Wednesday, November 24, 2021

MARVIN KATZ PASSES AWAY

 


Marvin Katz, whose 40-year journalism career before his 1998 retirement included the BJ, passed away Friday, November 19.

 

Marv’s wife, Joyce, passed away seven months ago on April 20, 2021.

 

Their daughter, Liza Katz Pagel, passed away September 21, 2011 in Fort Lewis, Washington after enduring years of chemo to battle her cancer.

 

Marv went from Elyria High School to Kent State to his remarkable career and retirement in Portland, Oregon, where he watched Portland sports teams like the NBA Trailblazers, the Timbers and the Thorns.

 

I guess Portland must have a rule that team nicknames have to start with a T.

 

Marv and Joyce’s other daughter, Susie, a family practice physician in Portland, posted the news. Susie was an intern at the BJ during her Kent State years.

 

Three years after 40 years of journalism, public relations and freelance writing and PR consulting, Marv and Joyce moved from Rockville, Maryland, where they lived for 24 years, to a North Carolina mountainside home five miles north of Hendersonville and 22 miles from Asheville.

 

That’s where Marv and Joyce had their own version of the three bears and Goldilocks (in their case, four bears). I’ll let Marv tell the story:

 

“Joyce and I spotted what appeared to be four bears, probably a mother and three cubs, in trees adjacent to our front yard about 9:30 in the evening. The bears had removed two birdfeeders after bending the
shepherd's crooks holding the feeders. I'd forgotten to take in the feeders before we left for dinner.

“When I went into the yard to get the  feeders, I heard hissing and thrashing sounds from the trees on the right side of our lot near the road. I immediately retreated to the garage and closed the door. There was more hissing and thrashing when I walked out on the front porch.

“As Joyce and I watched from our bedroom window, we were able to make out
three forms come down one tree trunk and a fourth come down a second
tree. All headed into the woods. Apparently the bears had been working
over the feeders and retreated to the trees when our car approached the
house.

I'm not putting out our bird feeders for a while.”

 

Eventually, they moved to Oregon to be near daughter Susie.

 

Marv never suffered fools gladly, particularly former President Donald Trump. His Facebook page is filled with deserved shots at Trump.

 

My favorite:

 

“Super lyin’ fragile racist whiny braggadocious.”

 

Close second:

 

“Here’s to Donald Trump.

“May your Presidency be short and your prison term long.”

 

Marvin often tipped off Harry Liggett, founder of this BJ Alums blog, and me, who Harry trained for a year as his successor when he knew he was dying, to news he thought would be worth using in the BJ Alums blog. A slew of BJ articles were Marv’s doing, often Harry or me just rerunning the full article that Marv found.

 

Marv also joined a demand for the return of excellence to Knight-Ridder and named candidates for the KR board of directors.

 

Marv was at the Lorain Journal in 1958-60, in the Elyria bureau with Andy Cota. 

 

In 2018 Marv listed his BJ experience as “reporter” from 1960-1966 and his residence as Troutdale, Oregon, which is 16 miles east or Portland and only a few miles south of the Columbia River.

 

There will be a graveside service for Marv at 11 a.m. Monday, November 29 at River View Cemetery in Portland.

 

Marv met a young teacher named Joyce Moseley when she was chaperoning a school dance at Green High School. Marv was covering the dance for the BJ.

 

He saw her and talked with her got her phone number from the superintendent of schools if he could have her number.

 

Joyce, an Akron David Lipscomb Christian College graduate, and Marv  fell in love.

 

Marvin’s obituary, which despite my editing skills I cannot improve upon so I’ll just post all of it:

 

MEMORIAL SERVICE INFORMATION

The service for Marv will be held graveside on Monday, 11/29, at 11:00 AM. It will occur at River View Cemetery located at 300 S Taylor's Ferry Road / Portland OR 97219.

================================

Marv and Joyce met at a school dance at Green High School in Northeastern Ohio. Joyce Moseley was a young teacher, chaperoning the dance. Marv was a reporter, covering the event for the Akron Beacon Journal. He saw her and talked with her and, before leaving, asked the superintendent of schools if he could have her number. I guess that’s how things went back then. Anyhow, Marv, a nice Jewish boy from Elyria (Ohio), and Joyce, a prim and proper graduate of David Lipscomb Christian College from Akron, met and fell in love. Then they broke up over children and religion, then got back together and were married. Whew!

Their early life together included moves from Akron to Pittsburgh to Columbus to Rockville, Maryland as Joyce followed Marvin as new job opportunities came his way. It wasn’t always easy, particularly as they moved to Maryland, far from Joyce’s mother and sister in Akron. Their eldest child, Lisa Anne, was born in Akron in 1965. Susanne Lesley arrived in Pittsburgh in 1971. They were dedicated, loving, and strict parents.

Joyce volunteered in the classroom and with Girl Scouts and returned to teaching when they moved to Maryland. Susie has many fond memories of helping Joyce get her classroom decorated and set up each year. Joyce made birthdays and holidays special for her own children and the neighbor kids as well. She passed a love for baking to her girls. Joyce’s Christmas cookie plates were a much anticipated holiday treat. While she was known as a sweet, kind, and patient woman, she was a stickler about academics, manners, chores, and cleaning one’s plate. She wielded a wooden spoon like a ninja when she felt her kids needed discipline. 

Marv was the primary breadwinner and spent weekdays at work. For a couple of years, he worked in Akron and stayed at the (“swanky” by Susie’s four-year-old standards) Knights’ Inn during the week, returning home to Columbus for weekends. Marv taught the girls to swim, ride bikes, roller skate, and drive. He also taught them to be frugal and to take care of their things. From turning off the water in the shower while we washed up or using no more toilet paper than was absolutely necessary to do the job, he challenged them. He taught them to wash the cars, clean the windows, replace washers and think carefully before deciding on a purchase. He was always in attendance at Susie’s soccer games, developing a talent for being able to walk the sideline while simultaneously listening to Redskins and Steelers games on his Walkman and screaming at the ref for bad calls. 

They embraced the mates that Susie and Lisa chose and welcomed them as the sons they never had. For his part, Ralph can say he always felt an abiding deep affection from them. In their adult life, they became friends of Bill W. They made many dear friends in Maryland and then North Carolina, where they lived for ten years after retiring. After enduring the difficult and cruel hardship of losing their daughter Lisa to cancer in 2011, they moved to Portland to be closer to Susie and her family. 

As strict as they were with their own children, they were equally indulgent with their grandchildren, Alex and Adriana. They epitomized the phrase: “Who needs Santa? I’ve got grandparents.” They thrilled in spending time with their grandkids, whether they were baking, reading, or watching The Polar Express for the millionth time (Grandma) or tracking and reporting Santa’s progress (Grandpa) on Christmas Eve. Once they moved to Oregon, they were regulars in attendance at both kids’ taekwondo belt tests, Adriana’s CYO basketball games, and soccer games. Grandma had zero tolerance for referees who were not on the side of Adriana’s teams. They loved hosting the kids for sleepovers in Troutdale, usually including pie shakes at Shari’s in the evening. They were so proud of the kids for their academic achievements, Adriana’s singing, and both kids’ theatrical performances. They bragged about Alex and Adriana constantly. 

In the final years of their lives, each endured significant physical hardship. Joyce began dialysis in 2016 and endured these treatment sessions and all the associated complications for several years. In March 2021 Joyce had a stroke that left her with progressively worsening left-sided weakness and pain. Ultimately, Joyce died at their home in the Russellville Park Retirement Community on April 20, 2021 after making a difficult decision to stop dialysis five days earlier. Her greatest sorrow in this decision was leaving Dad, Alex and Adriana behind. Her death came mercifully quickly and we were able to share love, memories and laughter until just before her last breath.

Marv struggled without his Joyce. He often reflected on how much he missed her, “the love of my life” to Susie and his caregivers. He had struggled with dementia for several years and with loss of mobility in the years before Joyce’s death. His decline seemed to accelerate after the loss of his lifelong partner. He was content to stay in his apartment and watch TV, but could occasionally be drawn out to visit the cemetery. On Sunday, November 14, he developed aspiration pneumonia while in a rehabilitation clinic and progressed to respiratory failure over a matter of hours. He was admitted to Providence Portland Medical Center for comfort care and received excellent care from the team on the oncology floor until his death five days later.

Joyce and Marv were many things over the course of their rich lives. But perhaps most importantly, they were generous, good-hearted, and fair. They treated everyone from the grocery store clerk to the Governor of Ohio with equal dignity and respect. We miss them dearly.

We want to express special appreciation for the caregivers who invested so much of their time, energy, and love in helping Marv and Joyce feel comfortable in their final years, especially Jeanette, Dawn, Laura, Lavenita, Polly, Rebecca, Al, and Angela.

We invite you to share a brief remembrance, story, anecdote, or thought of your own below in the section labeled Leave a Tribute. If you have a lengthier story to share, feel free to leave it in the section labeled Stories.

Also, please take some time to look at some of the photos in the Gallery section. If you have any of your own to share, please feel free to upload them onto the site.

Instead of flowers, we ask that people consider making memorial donations to the scholarship fund set up in honor of my sister, Lisa, who passed away in 2011. You can send a donation by mail to:

The Lisa Katz Pagel Scholarship Fund at the Kent State University School of Journalism and Mass Communication, PO Box 5190, Kent, OH 44242

If you'd like to make a donation online, a link is provided below. If you are donating online be sure to select the option 'I would like to make my own designation' and designate the  'Lisa Katz Pagel Scholarship Fund' as the recipient.  
https://www.kent.edu/philanthropy/ways-give

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marvin Katz

Yesterday at 3:49 AM  · 

This is Marv and Joyce's daughter, Susie, posting. Joyce died on April 20, 2021 and Marv died on November 19, 2021. I'm sorry to be sharing such crummy news via Facebook. Please check out our ForeverMissed site below. It contains information about Dad's memorial service.

https://www.forevermissed.com/joyceandmarv-katz/about

 

Susie is a family-practice physician in Portland, Ore., and the mother of our two grandchildren.


 

 

 

 

Worked at Retired

Studied at Kent State University

Went to Elyria High School

Lives in Portland, Oregon

 

Marv never suffered fools gladly, particularly former President Donald Trump. His Facebook page is filled with deserved shots at Trump.

 

My favorite:

 

“Super lyin’ fragile racist whiny braggadocious.”

 

Close second:

 

“Here’s to Donald Trump.

“My your Presidency be short and your prison term long.”

 

 

 

Marv popped Trump with Mary Poppins!

 

Marv was an avid follower of the Portland Thorns and Portland Timbers and the Portland Trailblazers sports teams.

 

At Ohio State basketball game in 2015:

 

Ohio State-Arizona about to tip off. First time I I've rooted for the Buckeyes since Vic Janowicz was their Heisman-winning quarterback (look him up). You OK with that, Hank and Betty Janowicz?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marvin Katz, whose 40-year career included the BJ, was at the Lorain paper in 1958-60, in the Elyria bureau with Andy Cota. Marv retired in 1998.

 

Tom Moore crossed paths with Marv during that time. Tom's 41-year newspaper career included the Zanesville News, Columbus Citizen and Columbus Citizen Journal. All went belly-up.

 

Marvin often tipped me off to news he thought would be worth using in the BJ Alums blog. A slew of BJ articles were Marv’s doing, often just relying the full article that Marv found.

 

Marv also joined a demand for the return of excellence to Knight-Ridder and named candidates for the KR board of directors.

 

Friday, November 18, 2005

KR alumni take stand for excellence

Knight Ridder Alumni, in Open Letter, Take Stand for 'Excellent
Journalism,' Say They Will Name Candidates for Board


In an extraordinary "Open Letter from Knight Ridder Alumni" circulated to the media this morning, a long list of journalists declared, "We have watched mostly in silent dismay as short-term profit demands have diminished long-term capacity of newsrooms in Knight Ridder and other public media companies. We are silent no more. We will support and counsel only corporate leadership that restores to Knight Ridder newspapers the resources to do excellent journalism. We are prepared collectively to nominate candidates for the Knight Ridder board. We wish to reassert John Knight's creed."

The letter was mailed to the media by Jim Naughton, former editor at The Philadelphia Inquirer and former president of The Poynter Institute for Media Studies.

Naughton told E&P today he had organized the effort just this week and they hoped to nominate a "slate" of candidates for the Knight Ridder board that would include journalists at the next annual meeting. The company is currently the focus of an investor-led move to pressure a sale or break-up of the company, or other moves.

The blog is proud to list some familiar faces who were among the signers, including Dale Allen, Doug Clifton, David Cooper, Albert Fitzpatrick, Glenn Guzzo, Marvin Katz, Jan Leach, David Meeker, Phillip Meyer, Gene Roberts, Timothy D. Smith, William Vance, Debbie VanTassel and Abe Zaidan.

 

A 2018 update of BJ retirees had this information:

 

KATZ, Marvin. 1960-1966, reporter. Now in Troutdale, Ore., retired. marvkatz@frontier.com

 

 

 

 

Marvin Katz

Yesterday at 3:49 AM  · 

This is Marv and Joyce's daughter, Susie, posting. Joyce died on April 20, 2021 and Marv died on November 19, 2021. I'm sorry to be sharing such crummy news via Facebook. Please check out our ForeverMissed site below. It contains information about Dad's memorial service.

https://www.forevermissed.com/joyceandmarv-katz/about

 

Susie is a family-practice physician in Portland, Ore., and the mother of our two grandchildren.

Marvin’s obituary, which despite my editing skills I cannot improve upon so I’ll just post all of it:

 

MEMORIAL SERVICE INFORMATION

The service for Marv will be held graveside on Monday, 11/29, at 11:00 AM. It will occur at River View Cemetery located at 300 S Taylor's Ferry Road / Portland OR 97219.

================================

Marv and Joyce met at a school dance at Green High School in Northeastern Ohio. Joyce Moseley was a young teacher, chaperoning the dance. Marv was a reporter, covering the event for the Akron Beacon Journal. He saw her and talked with her and, before leaving, asked the superintendent of schools if he could have her number. I guess that’s how things went back then. Anyhow, Marv, a nice Jewish boy from Elyria (Ohio), and Joyce, a prim and proper graduate of David Lipscomb Christian College from Akron, met and fell in love. Then they broke up over children and religion, then got back together and were married. Whew!

Their early life together included moves from Akron to Pittsburgh to Columbus to Rockville, Maryland as Joyce followed Marvin as new job opportunities came his way. It wasn’t always easy, particularly as they moved to Maryland, far from Joyce’s mother and sister in Akron. Their eldest child, Lisa Anne, was born in Akron in 1965. Susanne Lesley arrived in Pittsburgh in 1971. They were dedicated, loving, and strict parents.

Joyce volunteered in the classroom and with Girl Scouts and returned to teaching when they moved to Maryland. Susie has many fond memories of helping Joyce get her classroom decorated and set up each year. Joyce made birthdays and holidays special for her own children and the neighbor kids as well. She passed a love for baking to her girls. Joyce’s Christmas cookie plates were a much anticipated holiday treat. While she was known as a sweet, kind, and patient woman, she was a stickler about academics, manners, chores, and cleaning one’s plate. She wielded a wooden spoon like a ninja when she felt her kids needed discipline. 

Marv was the primary breadwinner and spent weekdays at work. For a couple of years, he worked in Akron and stayed at the (“swanky” by Susie’s four-year-old standards) Knights’ Inn during the week, returning home to Columbus for weekends. Marv taught the girls to swim, ride bikes, roller skate, and drive. He also taught them to be frugal and to take care of their things. From turning off the water in the shower while we washed up or using no more toilet paper than was absolutely necessary to do the job, he challenged them. He taught them to wash the cars, clean the windows, replace washers and think carefully before deciding on a purchase. He was always in attendance at Susie’s soccer games, developing a talent for being able to walk the sideline while simultaneously listening to Redskins and Steelers games on his Walkman and screaming at the ref for bad calls. 

They embraced the mates that Susie and Lisa chose and welcomed them as the sons they never had. For his part, Ralph can say he always felt an abiding deep affection from them. In their adult life, they became friends of Bill W. They made many dear friends in Maryland and then North Carolina, where they lived for ten years after retiring. After enduring the difficult and cruel hardship of losing their daughter Lisa to cancer in 2011, they moved to Portland to be closer to Susie and her family. 

As strict as they were with their own children, they were equally indulgent with their grandchildren, Alex and Adriana. They epitomized the phrase: “Who needs Santa? I’ve got grandparents.” They thrilled in spending time with their grandkids, whether they were baking, reading, or watching The Polar Express for the millionth time (Grandma) or tracking and reporting Santa’s progress (Grandpa) on Christmas Eve. Once they moved to Oregon, they were regulars in attendance at both kids’ taekwondo belt tests, Adriana’s CYO basketball games, and soccer games. Grandma had zero tolerance for referees who were not on the side of Adriana’s teams. They loved hosting the kids for sleepovers in Troutdale, usually including pie shakes at Shari’s in the evening. They were so proud of the kids for their academic achievements, Adriana’s singing, and both kids’ theatrical performances. They bragged about Alex and Adriana constantly. 

In the final years of their lives, each endured significant physical hardship. Joyce began dialysis in 2016 and endured these treatment sessions and all the associated complications for several years. In March 2021 Joyce had a stroke that left her with progressively worsening left-sided weakness and pain. Ultimately, Joyce died at their home in the Russellville Park Retirement Community on April 20, 2021 after making a difficult decision to stop dialysis five days earlier. Her greatest sorrow in this decision was leaving Dad, Alex and Adriana behind. Her death came mercifully quickly and we were able to share love, memories and laughter until just before her last breath.

Marv struggled without his Joyce. He often reflected on how much he missed her, “the love of my life” to Susie and his caregivers. He had struggled with dementia for several years and with loss of mobility in the years before Joyce’s death. His decline seemed to accelerate after the loss of his lifelong partner. He was content to stay in his apartment and watch TV, but could occasionally be drawn out to visit the cemetery. On Sunday, November 14, he developed aspiration pneumonia while in a rehabilitation clinic and progressed to respiratory failure over a matter of hours. He was admitted to Providence Portland Medical Center for comfort care and received excellent care from the team on the oncology floor until his death five days later.

Joyce and Marv were many things over the course of their rich lives. But perhaps most importantly, they were generous, good-hearted, and fair. They treated everyone from the grocery store clerk to the Governor of Ohio with equal dignity and respect. We miss them dearly.

We want to express special appreciation for the caregivers who invested so much of their time, energy, and love in helping Marv and Joyce feel comfortable in their final years, especially Jeanette, Dawn, Laura, Lavenita, Polly, Rebecca, Al, and Angela.

We invite you to share a brief remembrance, story, anecdote, or thought of your own below in the section labeled Leave a Tribute. If you have a lengthier story to share, feel free to leave it in the section labeled Stories.

Also, please take some time to look at some of the photos in the Gallery section. If you have any of your own to share, please feel free to upload them onto the site.

Instead of flowers, we ask that people consider making memorial donations to the scholarship fund set up in honor of my sister, Lisa, who passed away in 2011. You can send a donation by mail to:

The Lisa Katz Pagel Scholarship Fund at the Kent State University School of Journalism and Mass Communication, PO Box 5190, Kent, OH 44242

If you'd like to make a donation online, a link is provided below. If you are donating online be sure to select the option 'I would like to make my own designation' and designate the  'Lisa Katz Pagel Scholarship Fund' as the recipient.  
https://www.kent.edu/philanthropy/ways-give


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