Tuesday, August 11, 2015



Reports of McBane’s death have been greatly exaggerated

"The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated."

Author/humorist Mark Twain’s remark was prompted by an article published June 1, 1897 in the New York Herald with his obituary.

Retired BJ reporter Dick McBane, who left Ol’ Blue Walls in 1997 on the same day as the late, great rewrite guru Don Bandy, can say the same thing about the “Timeline of the Beacon Journal history” published Sept. 12, 2014, which finishes with:

“— Compiled by Beacon Journal librarian Norma Hill, and the late reporter Richard McBane.”

You can check it out for yourself by clicking on http://www.ohio.com/lifestyle/timeline-of-beacon-journal-history-1.524070

Dick didn’t find out he was dead till his son, Roderick, who lives in Texas, told him.

Here’s the email from Dick, very much alive in Lilburn, Georgia, and one of America’s expert reporters on minor league baseball parks (even writing a book about it and visiting many of them around the country):

“John --

You may be interested in this for the blog. I was alerted to it by my younger son, Roderick, who is located in Pearland, Texas. If you access the "Timeline of Beacon Journal History", and go clear to end (a long way) there is a credit line that names the BJ librarian and "late reporter Richard McBane."

“Two things should be noted about this. One is that I was completely unaware of this site until I was alerted to it by Roderick, and the second, which might be evident from the first, is that I had absolutely nothing to do with this site, nor with preparing a timeline for it. And, thus far, at least, rumors of my death are unfounded, although I will turn 80 in exactly six days.

My wife, Marilynn, and I have two sons, both married, and six grandchildren. Lachlan, the elder, is a violist with the Atlanta Symphony and lives about a block from us here in Lilburn, Ga. Roderick, the younger, lives in Pearland, TX, a suburb south of Houston. He is assistant head of the math department at Houston Community College. Four of the grandchildren are here in Georgia and the two youngest are in Texas.

I hope all is well with you and that the Mountaineers have a great football season.

            “Dick”
 
Everyone who has met me for 10 minutes knows what a WVU fan I am and how I have had season tickets to watch my alma mater play in Mountaineer Field for decades.

But apparently someone at the BJ doesn’t know Dick about McBane’s above-ground status.

When Dick came to the 50h anniversary reunion of his class at Hiram College in 2007 where he received a B.A. in history a half-century earlier, he stopped by Papa Joe’s for the monthly meeting of BJ retirees, which has since died out because too many who attended did die off, unlike Dick.

McBane got his master’s degree at Michigan State.

He came to the BJ from the Marietta, Ohio Times after a brief, youthful fling with the Garrettsville Journal during his Hiram College days.
 
He has a lively feeling for his Beacon years:

“At the old BJ we worked for the best newspaper in the country (and I really do mean that) at a time when it meant something.”

I second Dick’s definition of the BJ as one of the great newspapers in America when we both worked there (not that our being there was the ONLY reason that happened).
 
I put the credit squarely on John S. Knight, who was an editor in fact and at heart and knew there was more than bottom-line financial considerations to running a great newspaper. JSK valued the newspaper carrier as much as he did his editors, and everyone in between.

I ran to work every day because JSK, Ben Maidenburg and Pat Englehart made it so much fun. And was proud to tell my neighbors and those I met on the golf course that I worked there. It was, indeed, as Dick indicated, the best of times. We didn’t know newspapers were headed for the Internet iceberg.

Dick and Marylyn have been married 53 years. They moved to Georgia in 2004. Dick’s book, “A Fine-Looking Lot of Ball-Tossers: The Remarkable Akrons of 1881,” was published in 2005.

Dick and Don retired from the BJ June 11, 1997. Don wrote an article that day about Dick's retirement. Typical of Don, he didn't mention that he also was retiring that day. It was Don's last story for the BJ before he retired to Bradenton, Florida till his death in 2011.

Dick’s son, Roderick, who discovered that his dad was reported dead, married Cindy Wagner in Albany, Louisiana, amid the havoc of Hurricane Katrina. Cindy's hometown, 50 miles north of New Orleans, suffered relatively little damage, but electric power had not been fully restored by the time of the wedding at the original site, and was moved to a church which did have power. Dick and Marilynn flew from Atlanta to Houston, drove 3 ½ hours to Albany, then back to the Beaumont, Texas hotel before flying back to Atlanta.

Dick was among the five Guild retirees who won the healthcare class-action lawsuit filed by John Olesky that restored benefits to retirement day, the $2 prescription co-pay, plus Medicare primary and AARP secondary coverage, with all premiums paid by the BJ as part of the settlement. 45 printers also won the healthcare lawsuit restoring their retirement day coverage for prescriptions.

I’m far from the worse among retirees when it comes to how healthy or unhealthy I am, but I’m saving thousands of dollars every year that I live because the late Composing honcho Dave White began the lawsuit after running into a friend on the beach who was retired from a Minnesota law firm. That and Dave’s, $2,500 check got the ball rolling.

And 50 people owe Dave a great debt of gratitude.

It wasn’t OUR Tim Smith! Sorry!

 

Hoo, boy, is my face red. The Tim Smith I bragged about is NOT our Tim Smith, former BJ honcho.

1964-66 State Desk eagle eye Jerry Lee Bailey, who arrived at the BJ before I did in 1969, sets me straight.

It’s a different Tim Smith who chaired the selection of HP products for thousands of schools around the country.

Sorry, Tim, that it wasn’t an Ol’ Blue Walls guy.

John Olesky

 

 

BaileyJLee@aol.com
 

 
jo4wvu@neo.rr.com

 
baileyjlee@aol.com
Subject:
WRONG Tim Smith
Priority:
Normal
Date:
Tuesday, August 11, 2015 11:02 AM
Size:
4 KB
John--The Beacon Journal alumni item about Tim Smith is about another Tim Smith.  Looking at his bio pic, he could be our Tim Smith's son!   Here's the link to this other person's OSU info:
 
 
 
Jerry Lee Bailey
BJ State Desk, 64-66

 

 

Timothy Smith

Chief Information Officer

Staff

Timothy Smith is the Chief Information Officer for the College of Arts and Sciences at The Ohio State University.  He has over 20 years’ experience in Higher Education IT and has held multiple roles during his career.  In addition to his work at OSU, Mr. Smith is also active with the Midwestern Higher Education Compact as an executive member of the Technologies Committee.  Away from work, Mr. Smith enjoys travelling and spending time with his wife and two daughters.

 

Sunday, August 09, 2015



Retired BJ printer Hugh Downing and wife Sharon,  who live happily ever after in The Villages, Florida, are ending their Summer Visiting Relations Tour.

They have visited their son, Chris, in Hudson; son Jonathan in Erie, Pa.; sons Mark and Ben in Toledo and Vienna, Virginia, and Sharon’s sister in Galion, Ohio, where Sharon grew up.

Quips Hugh: “By the time we make the rounds of the children (all four sons and their wives and children), I’m pretty beat.”

Sharon’s parents live in Bradenton, Florida, which is 125 miles from The Villages, aka Fun City for Senior Citizens. There are 114,000 residents, all 55 or older in order to qualify to buy a home there, with 50,000 golf carts, which roam the streets like a city of pod people. Hugh and Sharon have two golf carts and an automobile. It’s simpler and cheaper to get around The Villages in golf carts. You save the automobile for road trips.

Hugh and Sharon have been in the city of 365/24/7 fun, with free concerts and dancing every night on several town squares, for about a dozen years.

Hugh has survived two heart attacks and a stroke, and cataract surgery in both eyes, but still manages to play a decent game of golf on the 47 courses in The Villages.

Another retired printer, Carl Nelson, has a father-in-law in The Villages.

Paula Stone Tucker and John Olesky got together with the Downings in December 2014, January, February and March 2015 and Paula in June 2015 in The Villages. John and Hugh golfed together every week for three months.

John and his late wife Monnie had a reunion with the Downings in early 2000 on Siesta Key, Florida, when the Oleskys were staying at Sea Castle on the beach and the Downings were in the late printer Bill Gorrell’s rentals just across the street.

Before migrating to The Villages, the Downings lived in the city of Medina during Hugh’s BJ days. They had three houses there, one at a time, including one they built on three-fourths of an acre.

Hugh is among the 45 retired printers who won the healthcare lawsuit against the BJ in 2012, which restored their prescription coverage to the retirement-day level of $5 per prescription. Five Guild retirees, including John Olesky, joined the lawsuit and won restoration to their retirement-day $2 prescriptions (generic or name brand) and Medicare plus AARP secondary coverage, all paid for by the BJ.

If you want to contact Hugh and Sharon, their phone number is (352) 789-7481. Their email address is Hudown@TheVillages.net Their U.S. mail address is 17900 S.E. 87th Bourne Ave., The Villages, FL 32159.

Saturday, August 08, 2015

Black Keys tour ends today in Frisco

The Black Keys, which includes retired BJ reporter Jim Carney’s son, Patrick Carney, will finish its Turn Blue World Tour today in San Francisco at the Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival in Golden Gate Park.

Hip-hop’s Kendrick Lamar and rock band Tame Impala also are in today’s lineup. Tickets were $411 AND UP on the SeatGeek web site.

Writes Patrick: “Thanks to everyone who came to see us and to our crew! See you all next time.”

Carney and bandmate Dan Auerbach had to cancel a ton of tour dates earlier this year while Patrick recovered from a giant wave slamming him and dislocating his shoulder. Not a good thing to happen to a drummer.

No word on when the Firestone High success story will take to the road again.

Friday, August 07, 2015


The Donald a major Trump card for ratings

24 million watched 10 Republican presidential candidates debate for two hours. In 2012, no GOP debate drew more than 7.6 million.

The Trump card worked.

Folks tuned in to see if brash billionaire businessman Donald Trump would get his comeuppance or chop down his opponents.

Tuesday, August 04, 2015

The Rice field of horror entertainment

Jeffrey Grant Rice died July 1. But it took an August article by Mark Dawidziak, PD and former BJ entertainment critic, to draw my attention to the immense role Rice played in TV horror entertainment.

Hollywood took what Jeff had created and cast him aside. So he died in obscurity.

It began with “The Night Stalker,” an ABC movie about a police detective investigating a serial killer who was a vampire. The ratings went throught the roof and the Stalker franchise was off and running.

Chris Carter said that being terrified by “The Night Stalker” when he was a child inspired Carter to create the “X-Files” series.

Jeff Rice’s disciples also spawned "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "The Walking Dead" and "Supernatural."


Cathy Strong, air miles queen, at it again

Maybe we need to put a GPS chip into 1970s BJ State Desk reporter Cathy Strong to keep track of where she is.

This week the journalism lecturer at Massey University in Wellington, New Zealand is in San Francisco, which is 6,741 miles from Wellington. Cathy has more air miles than astronauts, for a work conference. She met her sister, Linda Robinson Harbury, and long-time friend Judy Lynn.
Cathy Strong

She spent three years teaching journalism in Dubai, United Arab Emirate, mostly to the daughters of royalty.


 

She flew to Boston to jump in a hot tub with friend Pam McCarthy, retired North Canton Hoover High teacher, in a reunion that took 35 years to happen. 

She has given journalism seminars in Japan and Taiwan and traveled to Kenya and Tonga, not exactly next door to each other or Wellington.

With sister Linda Harbury
Last August she flew to visit her sister, Janet Mullins, who lives on Bainbridge Island, Washington. The previous February, Cathy saw daughter Penelope marry international patent attorney John Pint, originally from Minnesota, in New Zealand. In 2005 Cathy's daughter, Rebecca, and husband Dion, were married in Otaki, New Zealand. In 2013 Cathy’s daughter, Amanda, married Jeff Shima near Waiouru, New Zealand.

 

She also has taught snowboarding down New Zealand mountains. And water-skiied and kayaked. 

Cathy lives about an hour away from Wellington on the Kapiti Coast’s Te Horo Beach. 

She also collects more hardware than Betty Davis, like first prize in the Great Ideas For Teachers competition at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication in Washington, D.C.

Monday, August 03, 2015


A lot of people are grumpy about U of A’s spending spree on one home

Retired BJ political writer Abe Zaidan is so spot-on with his withering words on the University of Akron’s Taj Mahal for its president’s house that I just had to re-run it here.

Abe Zaidan
Grumpy Abe’s torrid response to the free spending as the university plunges deeper and deeper into debt:


The cost of  house renovations is going up. That's particularly true when it's the University of Akron president's house, as you are about to see.

Karen Farkas of the Northeast Ohio Media Group reported today that the bill has come to $950,000 so far.

University sources say some of the cost was covered by private donations.  Oh?  OK, let's have it.  Who are they?  Or in the  effort to rebrand, has the leadership forgotten that UA is a public entity.

As Farkas noted, UA officials said the repairs were much needed, having been neglected for 15 years.  Somehow, it's hard to believe that former president Luis Proenza, a fellow who always sought the very best, could have suffered such neglect  for so long.  But he didn't require the conversion of two bedrooms into a master suite for Scott Scarborough's  inlaws.

Farkas reported that Taylor Construction and Stathos construction "were paid a total of $375,000 for electrical, heating,  plumbing  and renovations including the conversion of two bedrooms into a master suite".

Lawrence Burns, the new UA vice president of advancement who, like Scarborough, came from the University of Toledo, attempted to justify the expenditures when  the university's internals were awash in debt..   Burns said the work was a 20-year investment.  In that case, perhaps the next' president's inlaws would also enjoy the updates without further investment .

Trustees chairman Jonathan Pavloff also approved the heavy spending, saying it would enhance  "university fund-raising and relationship building."

Relationship building?  Why do I feel that I'm  falling well behind in understanding such institutional terms?  My world turns  on leaky faucets and flickering light bulbs.


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

For Grumpy Abe's web site, go to

 grumpyabe.blogspot.com/

 

Sunday, August 02, 2015



The Cuyahoga Falls Amateur Baseball Association golf outing serves several purposes.

1. It’s a chance for long-ago partners in helping the youth of Cuyahoga Falls learn life lessons through baseball.

2. Money went to the CFABA itself to help future Falls youths.

3. A bunch of old codgers had reunions, some with people who worked with 35 years ago.

4. The golf was average, in the case of our 4-man scramble, but the fun was A+.

5. It’s a memorial to Joe DiGeroloma, an outstanding coach and greater person in the CFABA program history of fine folks who helped the young people develop into tomorrow’s citizens of society.

6. Brookledge Golf Course, Cuyahoga Falls, Aug. 1, 2015.