Sunday, February 27, 2022

WAYNE PRESTON, BJ'S REQUISITION MAN, PASSES AWAY

 


Wayne Preston, the go-to-guy if you needed supplies at the BJ, passed away Thursday, February 24.

Thanks to Advertising retiree Mike Williams, Johnny Grimm’s right-man (Mike called himself Grimms Reaper), who dumped a truckload of tower topics articles and photos on me.

Wayne and wife Betty toured central Europe with Glen McCaulley and wife Joan for two weeks. Betty was born and grew up in Germany and they visited relatives in Germany every 3 years or so.

They rented a VW stationwagon and drove through Germany, Austria and northern Italy (where my mother and grandparents were born) and stayed at Bed & Breakfasts.

Wayne and Betty’s son, Eric Preston, is a Bowling Green graduate in computer science and a DJ on the campus FM radio station WBGU with an eye toward software systems analysis career.

Wayne was the BJ Requisition Man, including the time he had to get a rush order to print the spanking new Channels that I gave birth to with Jim Nolan, the man who never used a vowel in his memos, riding herd on me.

Wayne also had a hand in BJ’s mezzanine construction, which was between the first and second floors at 44 E. Exchange Street.

His title was Purchasing Manager but he reminded me of a movie character I can’t place at the moment who found anything his ship commander wanted.

The BJ almost lost Wayne and Mike Williams, Ron Clark, Don Baker and Bob Lewis permanently when their raft tossed them into the Gauley River, the meanest, toughest, roughest whitewater east of the Mississippi River, which is in West Virginia.

On another trip, Ken Wright wound up upside-down in The Gauley. As everyone who has experienced it, including me, knows, when you are underwater and can’t see anything you don’t know which way is up or down so you don’t know which way to swim. I damn near downed at Coal Hole, a fishing spot near Monongah, West Virginia, which I did a backflip and wound up UNDER a ledge. Not knowing, of course, which way was out from under the ledge or deeper into it. Obviously I guessed right because I’m still alive, but it’s one scary moment.

It cured Ken Wright, who sat alongside me for years while we coordinated computer problems for Composing and the Newsroom. He never went whitewater rafting again.

Probably had recurring nightmares of almost drowning while being tossed around under water like a rag doll till the day Ken passed away.

Wayne’s obituary:

 

Wayne Edward Preston

Wayne Edward Preston passed away on February 24th, 2022. He was 88.

He was born and grew up in Akron, Ohio and later served 20 plus years in the United States Air Force, rising to the rank of Technical Sergeant before his retirement in 1970 while stationed at Plattsburgh AF Base in upstate NY. Prior to that, he was stationed at US AF Bases in Turkey and Germany while also doing a tour of duty in South Vietnam.

He met his future wife, Elisabeth Trautner (1926 - 2009), while stationed at Fürstenfeldbruck, Germany. They were married in 1953 and raised four children: Bruce (1954 1968), Bernadette (Cleveland), Roger (Massachusetts, wife Sara, one son), and Eric (Cleveland, wife Marjorie, two children). After retiring from the Air Force in 1970, Wayne went to work at the Akron Beacon Journal as Purchasing Manager until his second retirement in 1995. He graduated from the University of Akron in 1979 with a degree in Industrial Management.

Funeral service will take place on Thursday, March 3, 2022, at 12:30 p.m. at the Billow FAIRLAWN Chapel, 85 N. Miller Rd., Fairlawn, OH 44333. Friends may call from 11:30 a.m. until the time of service. Interment immediately following in Ohio Western Reserve National Cemetery.

To Share a Memory, Leave a Condolence, or Light a Candle, please visit the Tribute Wall at www.billowfuneralhomes.com  (Billow FAIRLAWN Chapel)


No comments: