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Monday, November 20, 2023

ART "MADE IT" AFTER HEART ABLATION SURGERY

 

Art Krummel has surgery; up to 3 months to recover

 

Scary situation but hopeful post about former BJ art department chief Art Krummel from his wife, former BJ reporter Charlene Nevada:

“Art is out of the heart ablation surgery. Healing can take up to 3 months. But he made it."

Art and Charlene lived in Tallmadge, as I do, but in 2010 bought a 2nd home in Garden City, South Carolina and in 2014 and later use it as a retreat from Ohio winters.

Garden City is 13 miles from Pawleys Island, South Carolina, where retired BJ printer lived till he passed away and BJ business department retiree Harold McElroy did before Harold also passed away.

Let’s hold and breath and pray for Art’s steady recovery.

For who didn’t know, as I didn’t till I looked it up, heart ablation tries to fix atrial fabulation (Afib).

Sometimes medications can help. Blood thinners lower the risk of blood clots of strokes.

When those aren’t good enough, then Afib becomes an option. And also involves a Pacemaker, which I’ve had for years and it works quite well.

Sunday, November 19, 2023

JOHN SEABURN, GREAT PERSON AND EXCELLENT SPORTSWRITER, PASSES AWAY AT AGE OF 88

 




John Seaburn, 88, passes away

 

Former BJ and Canton Repository sportswriter John Seaburn, who spent 41 impressive years at his craft, passed away November 4.

John covered the PGA, LPGA, Masters, NCAA basketball Final Four, PBA championships.

John is in the Greater Canton Amateur Sports Hall of Fame, Summit County Sports Hall of Fame.

He is survived by his wife of 48 years, Patricia Seaburn.

John was part of the amazing BJ Sports Department that included Stuart Warner, Tom Melody, Paul Bailey, Jim Derendal, Ken Krause, Bob Nold, Sheldon Ocker, Larry Pantages, Jack Patterson, Dick Shippy, Dan Thom, Ray Yanucci and Milan Zban.

The State Desk during my time as an assistant like Harry Liggett under the legendary Pat Englehart we were next to that department and we regaled by their activities and fun.

They helped make it such a pleasure for me at the BJ that I ran to work every day for 26 years of my 42-year newspaper career.

John Seaburn was a quiet and amazing talent in that pool of crazy, talented writers and editors who brought Northeast Ohio sports to live for the BJ readers.

John’s obituary:

MOGADORE - John R. Seaburn, 88, passed away on November 4, 2023. Born in Beaver Falls, PA, he was a resident of Akron.

 

He graduated from Beaver Falls High School and completed 2 years at Geneva College in PA.

 

John served 8 years in the Air Force and was employed as a Sports Writer for both the Canton Repository for 10 years and for the Akron Beacon Journal, where he retired with 31 years of service.

 

He enjoyed covering all sporting events: outdoors, pro bowling, college & pro basketball, baseball, football, PGA & LPGA Tours. He covered the Masters, NCAA basketball final four, PBA Championships and many other major events.

He won numerous writing awards. He researched and discovered the first black football player from 1904 named Charles Follis in Shelby, OH.

 

In 1967 he was inducted into the Greater Canton Amateur Sports Hall of Fame after the Stark County Federation of Conservation Clubs chose him as Conservationist of the Year for helping get the organization started.

 

He organized the Summit County Senior Golf Association in 1983. He was inducted into the Summit County Sports Hall of Fame when presented with the Andy Palich Award in 2002, in recognition for outstanding contributions to the betterment of sports in Summit Co. He achieved other accomplishments that are too numerous to mention.

 

Outside of sports he enjoyed reading, fishing and writing his autobiography, “Out of Tank Alley.”

John was preceded in death by his parents, John J. Seaburn and Ruth (Anderson) Seaburn; brother, Gerald Seaburn (survived Cathryn).

 

He is survived by his wife of 48 years, Patricia Seaburn; children, John L. (Cindy), Jeffrey, Joni, Jim (Darlene) Seaburn; grandchildren, John O., Todd, Stephen, Justin Seaburn, Jillian (Mike) Zucosky, Allison (John) Pickering, Michelle (Nick) Marcellus; 8 great-grandchildren; brother, Jim (Jane) Seaburn.

 

Cremation has taken place and a private ceremony will be held at Western Reserve.

 

Memorials are suggested to the Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America, 290 Turnpike Rd, Suite 5-315, Westborough, MA 01581 or your favorite charity.

 

(Hopkins Lawver, AKRON, 330-733-6271) www.hopkinslawver.com


Thursday, November 16, 2023

DECEMBER BJ GATHERING CANCELED. TOO MANY NO-SHOWS MAKE IT A NO-GO!

 

             KIMBERLY BARTH, JOHN OLESKY, DAVE SCOTT AT NOVEMBER BJ GATHERING



No-shows means

No-go in December

For BJ Gatherings

 

The first revival BJ Gathering in September drew Jim Carney and wife Katie Byard, retired reporters; Dave Scott, BJ regional issues reporter and deputy Business Editor before the April 2014 BJ buyouts exodus; Rich Heldenfels, TV critic when John Olesky was TV Editor at the 44 E. Exchange Street site of the BJ; Betty Lin-Fisher, BJ consumer reporter now doing the same job at USA Today while still living in Summit County; and John Olesky and his lady friend Joan Salisbury who moved into his Tallmadge condo from Glen Burnie, Maryland.

A lucky seven showed up.

 

 

At the 2nd BJ Gathering in October, former columnist/features writer Bill O’Connor and Advertising Department page layouts expert and slave of Johnny Grimm, Mike Williams, showed up along with me, John Olesky.

Three’s Company is a good title for a TV sitcom, but the drift-awaying began.

 

At the 3rd BJ Gathering Nov. 16 only Kimberly Barth, who with Katie Byard, decided to renew the monthly BJ gatherings that once brought as many as 40 into one room at Papa Joe’s Restaurant in the Merriman Valley; Dave Scott again; and John Olesky again, showed up.

 

So we’re stuck on 3.

 

That won’t cut it. Kim decided to cancel the December 3rd Thursday of the month BJ Gathering.

 

And maybe find a venue better suited to people who just want to chat with each other.

 

The first 2 BJ Gatherings were held at a table outside the room where the Missing Falls Brewery bar is so we could chat in comfort and hear each other.

 

Someone appropriated that one long table this time, so the 4 of us  -- Kimberly Barth, Dave Scott and John Olesky (John’s lady friend, Joan Salisbury of Maryland and Massachusetts, was there, too) couldn’t hear each other sitting THREE FEET away across the table.

 

As I see it, the solution is to find another venue. Missing Falls Brewery is popular . . . too popular and too loud if senior citizens want to talk to and hear each other.

 

So, from my viewpoint:

 

1. Find a venue like Papa Joe’s where BJ folks can hear each other talk across the table from each other.

2. If at least 8 people don’t say in advance that they WILL positively be there, cancel that month’s BJ Gathering.

 

If you have any suggestions, contact Kimberly Barth or Katie Byard. If you contact me I’ll relay your suggestions to Kimberly and Katie.


GO CHIN TO CHIN WITH KIM KIM AT BJ GATHERING!!!!

 






           THE SIGN SAYS IT ALL WHEN IT COMES TO KIMBERLY BARTH




KIMBERLY BARTH WITH HER SPICY RELATIVE



               KIM READY FOR A SWIM WITH TRACEY HENRY

KIM IN PARK IN 2019

                                          KIM WITH EXUBERANT FRIENDS, MAYBE IN SCIOTO VALLEY CHORUS, IN 2019



Here’s your chance to meet the amazing Kimberly Barth!!!

 

If you attend tonight’s monthly BJ Gathering at the Missing Falls Brewery, 540 S. Main Street in downtown Akron, you will click with Kimberly Barth.

 

She’s Kent State University adjunct professor and once was Director of Photography at the BJ during her 1998-2018 time there, arrived 2 years after I retired after 26 marvelous years at 44 E. Exchange Street.

 

Ohio State graduate Kim previously was a Elyria Chronicle-Telegram photographer. She lives in Akron but spent earlier time at Greenhills, Ohio.

 

And has been known to make her singing voice show up in musical groups, mainly choruses.

 

It's the 3rd monthly Revival BJ Gathering that inherits the role held for decades at Papa Joe’s Restaurant in the Merriman Valley till too many participants passed away.  6:30 p.m. See you there.

 

In my day (in the age of dinosaurs) that important role was held by great guys like Julius Greenberg, with crews that included Bill Hunter, Ott Gangl, Ed Suba, Don Roese (Don and I had a reunion in New Zealand when we both visited former newsroom reporter Kathy Strong, a major Kiwi in journalism famous around the world), and supplemented by artists like Chuck Ayres, wild and wonderful Derf Baclderf, Ted Schneider who later became page layouts drawer and actually meet the famous Ann Hill (of the famous “I didn’t come here to do” letter) in California.

 

The late Chasm, Charles Chuck Montague, went out to dinner with Ann Hill when Chasm was in California visiting his son, the chef.


Tuesday, November 14, 2023

ANN SHELDON MEZGER'S FATHER PASSES AWAY AFTER A REMARKABLE LIFE.

 


                     KEITH MALCOM SHELDON, WHO SURVIVED DIRECT HIT ON HIS WORLD WAR II SHIP THAT KILLED MORE THAN 100 TO PLAY JAZZ IN NEW ORLEANS CLUBS


           ANN NEXT TO HER FATHER (RED CLOTHING) AT 2015 HUGE FAMILY GATHERING FOR CHRISTMAS


Ann Sheldon Mezger’s amazing father passes away

 

The father of Ann Sheldon Mezger, my Features Department chief when I was Television Editor at the BJ, passed away.

His life would make an enthralling, mesmerizing movie!

Minnesota native Keith Malcolm Sheldon played in his high school band as a prelude to joining the U.S. Navy Band!

And served on the U.S.S. Wasp in the Pacific Ocean during World War II. And survived a Japanese boming that killed 102 of those aboard!

Keith married New Orleans lady Ruth Elaine Thomas in 1948 when he wasn’t playing jazz in one of my favorite cities in the world. Their six children included Ann, Jane, Robert, Mary, Laura and Margaret.

Keith retired in 1983 after a career with Eastern Airlines that began in 1948.

Keith’s wife Ruth and daughter Mary Hyatt predeceased him.

Besides Ann and husband Roger Mezger, another brilliant BJ retirees, who live in Akron, Keith’s survivors include daughters and sons-in-law Jane and Henri Baile of St. Ismier, France; Laura and Sandy Olevitch of Minneapolis; and Margaret and Jack Kukura of Columbus; son Robert of Woodstock, Ga; son-in-law Rob Hyatt of Santa Rosa, Fla.; 12 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and brother Doug of Fallbrook, Calif.

Calling hours will be 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 15, at Jenkins Funeral Chapel, 2914 Dover Center Road, Westlake, OH. His funeral Mass of the Resurrection will be celebrated at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 16, at St. Raphael Church, 525 Dover Center Road, Bay Village, with burial to follow at Lakewood Park Cemetery.

Keith’s obituary:

Keith Malcolm Sheldon, a loving husband, father, World War II veteran, musician, genealogist and retired sales executive for Eastern Air Lines, died in Akron, Ohio, on Nov. 11. He was 99.

He was born on Aug. 5, 1924, near Nelson in rural Douglas County, Minnesota, and in 1936 he moved with his parents Robert and Emmalyn, younger sister and two younger brothers to a farm in nearby Alexandria Township.

He played trombone with his high school band, and after graduation in 1942, he enlisted in the Navy. He then auditioned for and was accepted as a member of the U.S. Navy Band. Following months of training at the U.S. Navy School of Music in Washington, D.C., he was assigned to the newly launched U.S.S. Wasp (CV-18), where he was part of a gun crew and played in the aircraft carrier’s band.

Aboard the Wasp, he served in the Pacific Theater of Operations in 1944 and 1945 and survived a direct hit on the carrier by a Japanese armor- piercing bomb, an attack that killed at least 102 of his crewmates.

After the war, he played with the Navy Band in postings on the West Coast and finally in New Orleans, La., where he met Ruth Elaine Thomas. The couple were married on Oct. 23, 1948, and over the next 20 years had six children — Ann, Jane, Robert, Mary, Laura and Margaret.

Also in 1948, Mr. Sheldon began work as an Eastern Air Lines ticket agent in New Orleans. Subsequent promotions to management positions led to transfers to Toledo, New York City, St. Louis and finally Cleveland, in 1966. He retired from Eastern Air Lines in 1983.

After his transfer to Cleveland, the family moved to Bay Village, where Mr. Sheldon lived until moving to an apartment at Ohio Living Rockynol in Akron in 2015.

Throughout most of his life, Mr. Sheldon pursued his love of music. During his early days in New Orleans, he occasionally played with jazz ensembles at clubs in the French Quarter. He sang in and directed church choirs. He played trombone in community bands and orchestras. He served as president of Bay High School’s Band Boosters.

During the 1970s, Mr. Sheldon developed an interest in genealogy, tracing his own roots, as well as those of his wife Ruth. Ancestors he discovered included a Quaker who became a prisoner-of-war during the American Revolution after the ship he captained was captured by the British, the 17th century British poet John Dryden, and a knight who rode with William the Conqueror during the Norman conquest of Britain in 1066. He published two books: Sheldons at Bicentennial (in 1979) and John Sheldon of Providence (in 1984). For a number of years, he served as national president of the Sheldon Family Association.

Mr. Sheldon was preceded in death by his wife Ruth and daughter Mary Hyatt. His survivors include daughters and sons-in-law Ann and Roger Mezger of Akron; Jane and Henri Baile of St. Ismier, France; Laura and Sandy Olevitch of Minneapolis; and Margaret and Jack Kukura of Columbus; son Robert of Woodstock, Ga; son-in-law Rob Hyatt of Santa Rosa, Fla.; twelve grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and brother Doug of Fallbrook, Calif.

Calling hours for Mr. Sheldon will be 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 15, at Jenkins Funeral Chapel, 2914 Dover Center Road, Westlake, OH. His funeral Mass of the Resurrection will be celebrated at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 16, at St. Raphael Church, 525 Dover Center Road, Bay Village, with burial to follow at Lakewood Park Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Rockynol Employee Appreciation Fund, Ohio Living Rockynol, 1150 W. Market St., Akron, OH 44313. Please write “Rockynol Employee Appreciation Fund” on the check memo line.

 


Sunday, November 12, 2023

MONTHLY BJ GATHERING IS THURSDAY, NOV. 16. BE THERE OR BE SQUARE! LET US KNOW IF YOU'RE COMING SO WE CAN ADD YOU NAME TO THIS ARTICLE.

 

Will you be at monthly BJ Gathering 6:30 pm Thursday, Nov. 16?

 

Will YOU be attending the every 3rd Thursday of the month BJ Gathering at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, November 16 at the Missing Falls Brewery, 540 S. Main Street, Akron on the third Thursday of every month?

 

If you plan to attend, email John Olesky at jo4wvu@neo.rr.com or Kimberly Barth, Katie Byard or John Olesky on their Facebook pages.

 

I will publish the names of everyone who says they WILL attend in this article. And take photos of everyone who shows up for the post-BJ Gathering article on Friday.

 

As we were at the BJ we are a team. If not enough show up then the monthly BJ Gathering wlll die for lack of attendance as the ones decades ago at Papa Joe’s did. At least the Papa Joe’s missing weren’t there because they passed away.

 

If you haven’t passed away, join the crowd Thursday!

 

Bill O’Connor, Mike Williams, Jim Carney and wife Katie Byard, retired reporters; Dave Scott, BJ regional issues reporter and deputy Business Editor before the April 2014 BJ buyouts exodus; Rich Heldenfels, TV critic when John Olesky was TV Editor at the 44 E. Exchange Street site of the BJ; Betty Lin-Fisher, BJ consumer reporter now doing the same job at USA Today while still living in Summit County; and John Olesky and his lady friend Joan Salisbury who moved into his Tallmadge condo from Glen Burnie, Maryland, can tell you how they enjoyed earlier monthly BJ Gatherings.

As Bill O'Connor, who made my October BJ Gathering so memorable about our BJ memories, put it:

Hope there's a good turnout of the Beacon Bunch. Those were the days, my friend. We thought they'd never end. No need to end the camaraderie we had. In the words of that famous philosopher Russ Musarra, are we having fun yet?


Unfortunately, Bill "will be in Cleveland Thursday with family for a birthday celebration (mine - although date is 17th)."


Why be a party-pooper? Chat with your BJ friends again as you did when you worked at 44 E. Exchange Street.

 

Notify John Olesky, Kimberly Barth or Katie Byard NOW so that John can add your name to the I’M COMING list!

 

Thank you. See you there because I’ll be there as I have been at every BJ Gatherings revival so far.

And Kimberly Barth said she'll be there, too.