Saturday, December 17, 2011

Globe trotting Armao wins award

Former Plain Dealer reporter and University at Albany journalism professor Rosemary Armao
was recently part of the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, which won the Daniel Pearl Award for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting for a piece entitled "Off Shore Ink."
The piece provides a look at how organized crime and shady businesses have used corruption procedures in places like the Caribbean and Cyprus to elude accountability.

The project's website explained:

A series of stories documenting offshore tax havens, the criminals who use them and the millions of dollars in lost tax money has been awarded the top prize by the The International Consortium for Investigative Journalists.

The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project assembled a team of reporters throughout Eastern Europe and the United States to track the burgeoning network of offshore companies used to hide ownership and assets, launder money and create secret businesses that elude law enforcement agents worldwide.

The award was announced in Kyiv, Ukraine at the 2011 Global Investigative Journalism Conference. The prize is named in honor of Daniel Pearl, a Wall Street Journal reporter who was murdered in Pakistan in 2002 while attempting to interview members of the Al Qaeda terrorist network.

Over the course of six months, OCCRP reporters investigated offshore tax havens including the U.S. state of Delaware, the Cayman Islands, Seychelles, New Zealand, Romania and Ukraine. The project, Offshore Crime Inc. included OCCRP reporters going undercover posing as businessmen looking to cheat on taxes with impunity.

OCCRP was selected the top project out of 70 entries from 30 countries.

To see the University of Albany's student press story go to: http://www.albanystudentpress.org/news/ualbany-professor-recognized-for-international-reporting-1.2678414#.Tu1jGJhE670

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Pass the nuts

Dan Coughlin serves up a second rollicking collection of stories about colorful characters and memorable events from his four decades covering sports for Cleveland TV and newspapers. Meet the gun-toting fanatics of Morgana Park–once home of “the most intense slow pitch softball league in the world.” Sit in on a star-studded night in the legendary Theatrical Restaurant alongside Don King while Dan flips a coin for a $500 bar tab with Ted Turner. Ride along on a series of death-defying, top-priority helicopter trips to report on . . . high school football. Reading Dan’s stories is like dipping into a bowl of bar nuts–easy to start and hard to stop!

Here's a link to his blog and book ordering info:
http://dcoughlin.wordpress.com/books-by-dan/

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Holiday Book Sale

Craving the new Steve Jobs biography? The definitive $75 coffee-table tome "Harry Potter: Page to Screen"? Or Annie Leibowitz's new photography collection: "Pilgrimage"?

All will be among the thousands of books for adults and children on sale in the Community Room on the Plain Dealer's second floor. The inventory includes hundreds of audiobooks, videos, CDs and a mix of miscellany.
Dec 8, Thursday, 3-6 p.m.
Dec. 9, Friday, 9 a.m. to noon

Checks and cash to the United Way. Prices remain steady: $3 hardcovers, $2 paperbacks & CDs, $8 audiobooks and $10 coffee-table books. Children's books will be limited to 10 per person on Thursday.

Karen Long

Monday, November 14, 2011

Terry Oblander dies


PD's obit by Grant Segall

Medina -- An official once called a press conference at the Akron-Canton Airport to announce that he'd fly to Texas to promote the airport.

A small story, to be sure, but reporter Terry Oblander made it a little bigger. He learned that the official would fly out of Cleveland Hopkins International.

Oblander, a long-time area journalist and Public Squares puzzle maker, died Sunday, Nov. 13, at the Cleveland Clinic about two weeks after a heart attack. He was 64.

His life was fairly short and challenging. He nursed a dying wife in 1992, then raised their three boys, including an infant. He brought the boys to some meetings he covered and somehow attended all their ballgames.

There were triumphs, too, at Ravenna's Record-Courier, the Akron Beacon Journal and The Plain Dealer. Among several prizes, he shared a first place from the Associated Press of Ohio for coverage of a murder and a 1987 Pulitzer for coverage of a threatened takeover of Goodyear.

Through the ups and downs, the big, shaggy-haired Oblander told memorable stories with memorable laughter. It would start as a little wheeze. Then look out.

For the past 10 years, he tickled Plain Dealer readers six days a week with Public Squares, a puzzle of scrambled words and homegrown puns:

"Q. What did tipsy sailors say when they returned to the USS Cod from a bar?"

"A. Down the hatch."

The generous author made a few free puzzles to help readers commemorate birthdays or anniversaries.

Over the decades, he covered politics, labor, suburban news, the Kent State shootings and much more. He was also president of the Beacon's Local 7 for journalists and janitors.

Plain Dealer Editor Debra Adams Simmons said, "Terry Oblander was a thoughtful, dedicated journalist who spent his career chronicling the stories of Northeast Ohio. He was creative and quirky and always looking for new ways to push Public Squares to the next level."

Steve Luttner, a former Plain Dealer reporter, said, "Terry Oblander was a pure, battle-tested newsman.... He was totally honest and unflinchingly direct."

Oblander was born in Cleveland and raised in Olmsted Falls. He graduated from Cuyahoga Community College and attended Kent State University.

He spent 13 months with the Record-Courier, partly as religion editor and farms editor. He lived with some colleagues in a Ravenna home they called the "Lock Street Rock Festival."

Then came 19 years at the Beacon, mostly as a reporter, but also a copy editor, assistant metro editor and assistant state editor. He also wrote a puzzle called Groaners and a column of short news items called Ideas and a citizens band radio column called CB Break.

He tried to be objective but never dull. A Republican leader once complained that Oblander had registered as a Democrat. Oblander retorted that Ohio wouldn't register voters as Socialists.

Bob Downing, now the Beacon's environmental reporter, teamed with Oblander for a couple of years to cover Portage County. Said Downing, "He'd come back so excited about what he'd seen at government meetings. He'd chase little stories down. His passion rubbed off on everybody."

In 1990, Oblander wrote a folksy application to The Plain Dealer: "I like being a reporter. A lot." He mentioned his "lousy grades" at Kent State but said, "I'm sure we could stick it to any competition."

He warned that he'd need comprehensive health insurance for his wife, the former Mary O'Neill, who went blind from juvenile diabetes. Her father, Dan, moved in with the family in Stow to help out. In 1992, she bore her last child and died five months later.

Oblander took a leave of absence for a time. He raised the children with help from Dan. In 1996, he married the former Linda Monroe and moved the family to Medina.

He spent most of his PD career at bureaus in Summit and Medina counties. He also planned and oversaw reports of election results at the main office in Cleveland.

As a young boy, he could instantly unscramble words. He won many Scrabble tournaments over the years and organized a few. He started freelancing Public Squares in 2001.

Oblander moved to the PD's downtown office in 2007 and left the paper in 2008. In his final years, he kept freelancing Public Squares. He also wrote features for the Beacon, babysat his grandsons, competed in a fantasy baseball league and helped start and run bookstores for Project: LEARN of Medina County, a literacy program.

He always wrote Public Squares a few weeks ahead. The last one is scheduled to run on Dec. 3.

Terence Leroy Oblander

1947-2011

Survivors: Wife, the former Linda Monroe; father, Jacob Leroy of Parma Heights; sons, Terence Jacob of Montville Township, Medina, Christopher Daniel of Middleburg Heights, Nicholas Patrick of Medina and two grandsons.

Memorial Service: 10:30 a.m. Friday, Nov. 18, at Waite & Son Funeral Home., 765 N. Court St., Medina, Ohio.

Contributions: Project: LEARN of Medina County, 105 W. Liberty St., Medina, OH 44256, projectlearnmedina.org.

Heart attack takes Terry Oblander

Former Plain Dealer and Beacon Journal reporter Terry Oblander died Tuesday, Nov. 2 of a heart attack at the Cleveland Clinic, according to the BJ Alums blog. Terry was a reporter for the Medina bureau and also did the pun-based Public Squares Puzzle that appears on the PD's comics page.

Follow this link to read the entire post:
http://bjretirees.blogspot.com/2011/11/terry-oblander-dies.html"

Sunday, October 09, 2011

Lunch time

PD Editorial Retirees & Expatriates
The Casual unstructured lunch troupe (cult) gather for lunch on the last Fridays of January, April, July and October.
Spouses and guests always welcome

NEXT LUNCHEON: Noon, Friday October 28

PLACE: Stancato's ,
7380 State Road at Pleasant Valley Road

COST: Buffet
$7.99


RSVP by Friday, October, 21
Janet Beighle French (216) 221-2318, or jabfr519@sbcglobal.net or
JoAnn Pallant (440) 734-1923, or japallant@sbcglobal.net

Friday, October 07, 2011

George Condon, RIP, 1916-2011

George Condon chats with Doris O'Donnell at a PD retirees lunch in 2006.


Michael Heaton's obit on George Condon:

George E. Condon celebrated Cleveland.


No writer did more to advance this area's reputation as a colorful and desirable corner of the world than journalist, author and historian George E. Condon.

Condon died today, Oct. 7, in his sleep at Huntington Woods, Westlake. He was 94.

The writer, originally from Fall River, Mass., began his career at The Plain Dealer in 1943 as a general assignment reporter. He became the paper's first television and radio critic in 1948. After 14 years on that beat he moved to the editorial page, where he wrote a daily column until his retirement in 1985.

Besides covering the city for The Plain Dealer, Condon wrote nine books, among them "Cleveland: the Best Kept Secret," a portrait in essays in 1967; "Laughter from the Rafters," a collection of columns in 1968; "Stars in the Water: the History of the Erie Canal," in 1974; and "Yesterday's Cleveland," a photographic history, in 1976.

Condon was a dogged reporter, an astute critic and a self-styled, proudly Irish philosopher. Above all, he was a graceful wordsmith.

"A Cleveland winter ordinarily is an angry, temperamental creature, lashing its tailwinds and looking out darkly underneath low-lying clouds. A Cleveland winter stalks the streets with an icy breath that buffets you when you turn a street corner and makes you dig your chin harder against your chest," he wrote.

He knew the city and its people, from the mayors and civic philanthropists down to the bartenders and cops who walked a beat. His columns were both witty and wise. Taken as a whole, they provide a picture of Cleveland in both its high and low periods. He had a love for the old ways of doing things, for a time when the shoe repair guy was known as a "cobbler" and for the fading art of penmanship.

When Condon was a boy, his family lived in a powder blue up-and-down double house on West 32nd Street. It wasn't far from St. Patrick Catholic Church. Of course, Condon quickly became the foremost authority on the church's origins.

"The parishioners themselves built the church," he once told a reporter. "Some generous benefactor told the founding pastor they could have all the stone they wanted, but they would have to go to his quarry in Sandusky and cart it back here. Parishioners took turns on horse and wagon. That's a lot of work they put into this church," Condon said.

Condon put a lot of hard work into his career. He wrote seven days a week as a television critic and then five days a week as a general columnist.

"He took TV lightly. He was very wry, a very funny writer," the late Bill Hickey, who took over The Plain Dealer's TV column from Condon, said in 2006. "There was no pretension. He wrote for Everyman. All the Condons grew up poor West Side kids who scrambled their way to success."

Condon's parents immigrated from Ireland. His father was a foreman at a textile mill in Fall River. After they moved to Cleveland, his mother was a maid at the Clevelander hotel downtown. Condon attended St. Patrick Catholic School and West Technical High School. After graduating, he majored in journalism at Ohio State University. It was there he met his future bride, Marjorie Philona Smith. They married in 1942 and moved to Cleveland the following year, when Condon joined The Plain Dealer.

The couple had seven children in 15 years. Condon outlived two of them. His wife, Marjorie Condon, a teacher in the Cleveland public school system for 20 years, died in March of 2001.

Mary Brereton said, "My father always complained to us that every day he had to stare at a blank piece of paper and create something seven days a week, but I think he enjoyed going to the office and the company of the people he worked with. He always talked about the 'characters' in his business. I think he loved it."

George Condon Jr., who covers the White House for the National Journal, remembered early on his father having a different sort of job than the fathers of other kids on the block.

"Other kids' dads went to work every morning," Condon Jr. said. "My dad watched television for a living. I remember him during the new TV season trying to watch three shows at once changing stations by hand and taking notes. And he was always surrounded by interesting people."

Neither George Jr. nor Susan Condon Love, the Plain Dealer's Inside & Out editor until this year, ever felt pushed into journalism. Their father led by example.

"When he wrote the first Cleveland book in 1967, he'd come home after work, have dinner, then disappear upstairs until 1:00 in the morning," said Condon Jr. "If you ever drove around with him he could point out history on every corner."

Plain Dealer Reporter Michael K. McIntyre did just that for a piece during Cleveland's Bicentennial. He got an earful as well.

Condon pointed out the spot on West 25th Street where gangster Shondor Birns was blown up. He talked about the steel mills in the industrial valley and how John D. Rockefeller fled to Cuyahoga County with a father leaving a sex scandal back in New York. The circus used to set up shop on a vacant lot on East 9th Street and Lakeside where the North Point office building now stands.

When asked why he knew so much, Condon replied, "It's the stories."

Condon never stopped writing stories about the city he loved. And during the Runyonesque era of journalism, he was a tireless reporter. He liked to tell the story of the day he covered the opening of a television station and wound up helping program the first hour's entertainment, which he became part of. Then he filed his story.

He left the station, noticed that the Central Market, where Jacobs Field now stands, was on fire and called the city desk. They told him to cover it. He wrote the first edition story but not before getting soaked by fire hoses. Afterward, he retired to an after-hours club on Short Vincent for a drink. Just after he got there, the police raided the place and arrested everyone. After leaving the police station, he wrote that story, too. It was a long night.

Condon won numerous awards during his career. He was given the Ohioana Award for history, the Women's City Club of Cleveland Award for Literature, the Burke Award for Literature as well as the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Distinguished Service He is also in the Cleveland Journalism Hall of Fame.

In his acceptance speech for the Ohioana Award, Condon wrote, "What I oppose is the hushed, carpeted fearful approach to history and those who made history. There is the air of the funeral parlor in most of our history books, and perhaps the sound of some rinky-tink piano is what we need to break the sad spell and bring history to its feet again. Only in life is there any hope for history."

Susan Love said, "Even after retirement, my Dad couldn't stop writing. He always had a book in progress --- and it would be about some aspect of Cleveland history, his passion."

But Condon was never blinded by nostalgia. He wasn't afraid to write about the town's weaknesses as well as its strengths. When a politician once declared that no building should be erected taller than the Terminal Tower, Condon called him on his lack of vision.

Like the man himself, he wanted the city to keep evolving.



Survivors: Theresa Ann Condon of Silver Spring, Md., George Jr. of Silver Spring, Katherine Elizabeth Condon of Catonsville, Md., Mary Philona Brereton of Alexandria, Va., and Susan Condon Love of Lakewood; four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Funeral: Funeral: 10 a.m. Monday, St. Angela Merici Catholic Church, 20970 Lorain Rd., Fairview Park.

Arrangements: Chambers Funeral Home, Cleveland.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Ted Mellow dies

Theodore J. Mellow, long-time editor/slotman at the PD, died Aug. 21 in San Diego.
Ted moved West with his wife, Alida, in the mid-90s. Previously, they lived in Hinckley and Medina.
Ted was born in Missouri on Oct. 7, 1921. He was raised in China, the child of missionaries. At 16, he returned to the U.S., attended school, served in the military and married his first wife, Jan. She died in 1984.
Ted was a smart and gentle man who always kept a calm demeanor, even on election night.

Alida's address:
3007 Orleans East San Diego Ca 92110

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Former Press Columnist Bob August dies

Bob August, popular Northeast Ohio sports columnist, dies at 89
Published: Saturday, September 10, 2011, 3:49 PM Updated: Saturday, September 10, 2011, 3:58 PM
By Mark Gillispie, The Plain Dealer




WOOSTER, Ohio -- Bob August entertained Northeast Ohio newspaper readers for decades with his gentle wit and eloquent prose as a columnist for the Cleveland Press and the News-Herald in Lake County.
August died Friday in Wooster, where he had lived since the 1980s. He was 89.
"He was an incredibly talented writer," said Bob Sudyk, an award-winning sportswriter and columnist for the Press and Hartford Courant. "He was the Red Smith of the Midwest. He had such a skill with words. It was a great pleasure to read him."
August later wrote a nationally syndicated column titled, "The Wiser Side of 60," that was distributed by the United Press Syndicate from 1982 until 1986.
He was inducted into the Cleveland Journalism Hall of Fame in 1988.
August was born Oct. 6, 1921, in Ashtabula. He grew up in Cleveland and graduated from Collinwood High School, where he was a star baseball player. He continued playing baseball at the College of Wooster, where he graduated in 1943.
He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and commanded a ship that participated in the invasion of Normandy on D-Day. He ended the war in the Pacific Theater, preparing for the invasion of Japan.
August began his journalism career in 1946 as a makeup and copy editor for the Cleveland Press. He became a sportswriter and was promoted to sports editor in 1958. He wrote a sports column for the Press from 1964 until 1979, when he became a general columnist and associate editor.
After the Press folded in June 1982, August joined the News-Herald as sports editor and a columnist. He retired in 2003.
A collection of his columns, "Fun and Games -- Four Decades of the Best of Bob August," was published in 2001.
Sudyk said August had the ability to criticize sports figures without them knowing they had been eviscerated.
Said Paul Hoynes, The Plain Dealer's longtime Indians beat writer who worked for August at the Press and News-Herald: "Art Modell had a great line. He said, '[August] could you cut you up and you wouldn't even know you were bleeding.' "
Hoynes, like most of Cleveland's sportswriting community, admired August greatly.
"He was a writer's writer, a columnist's columnist," Hoynes said. "You just loved reading him. You weren't just getting hit over the head with the facts. You were getting a writing lesson."
Longtime friend Dick Feagler, who worked with him at the Press, said August liked but was never infatuated with sports. The act of writing was a different matter.
"He could be sitting there writing a funny line and be grimacing," Feagler said with a laugh. "He was the best I've ever read, and I've read many sports columnists from around the country."
It was only a few years ago, Feagler said, that August revealed that he had long had multiple sclerosis. Feagler said he remembered when August began to have trouble getting to and from the press box and locker room at the old Cleveland Stadium. Effects of the disease troubled August the rest of his life, although Feagler said his friend never complained.
August's daughter, Alison McCulloch, said her father was first diagnosed with the disease when he was in his early 40s. He refused to take the medicine prescribed to him, but was dutiful about continuing his regimen of swimming until just a few years ago.
McCulloch said her father's interests went far beyond the world of sports.
"He was an intellectual person," McCulloch said. "He had very strong feelings about the world and what was going wrong with it."
In addition to his daughter, August is survived by his wife of 66 years, Marilynn, and two granddaughters. A memorial service is being planned in Wooster sometime in the next few weeks.

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Lake bureau nostalgia



Roy Gutterman, former Lake County bureau reporter, was in town recently and dropped in to a PD alumni lunch.

Roy, now Associate Professor of Communications Law and Journalism Director, Tully Center for Free Speech at the S.I. Newhouse School at Syracuse, posed with his former colleagues Pete Copeland and Doris O'Donnell.

Sunday, September 04, 2011

PD Sweeps

The Plain Dealer was named the Ohio's Best Daily Newspaper in the large-circulation category in the annual 2011 Ohio Society of Professional Journalist Awards. The newspaper won a total of 25 awards including Best Page One Design.
Also honored among the newspaper's 19 first-place awards were:
Margaret Bernstein and Stan Donaldson, Best Minority Issues Reporting. Their stories focused on four men whose mothers were found dead in and around convicted serial killer Anthony Sowell's home on Imperial Avenue in Cleveland. The series detailed how the sons decided to break the cycle of drug abuse, neglect and tragedy in their lives and in the lives of their children.
• Tom Breckenridge, Best Business Profile, for "Leading the Way: Frank Douglas." The story centered on Douglas, from his humble beginnings in Guyana to his prominent position as head of the Austen BioInnovation Institute of Akron and being chosen to help make Akron a leader in research for joint, bone and would healing.
Sharon Broussard, Best Editorial Page Campaign, for "Children's Campaign." The series brought to light the weaknesses and failures of the Cuyahoga County Department of Children & Family Services, under the leadership of former Director Deborah Forkas, in protecting the lives of children who eventually died at the hands of their mothers and caregivers. Forkas was eventually fired from her position in February.
Gabriel Baird, Henry J. Gomez and Mark Puente, Best Government Reporting, for "A Question of Values." The months-long investigation revealed, among other problems, that about 2,200 county tax records had been altered inappropriately with pens, fluid and erasures, whacking $145 million in property value from tax rolls.
Diane Suchetka, Best Human Interest Writing, for "A Spirit That Won't Break." The story focused on Connie Culp, the first person in the country to undergo a near-total face transplant. Culp had no right eye, lower eyelids, top teeth, upper lip and nose after her common-law husband shot her in 2004.
The Plain Dealer Staff, Best Political Reporting, for "County Reform." The series focused on how voters, who were fed-up with county corruption under a government with three county commissioners, choose a new county government that included one county executive and 11 council members.

• The Plain Dealer Staff, Best Deadline Reporting, for the newspaper's coverage of the corruption-related charges filed last September against former Cuyahoga County Auditor Frank Russo.
The newspaper swept some categories, winning both first and second place. Reporters Amanda Garrett and John Caniglia won the Best Criminal Justice Reporting award for "Presumed Guilty." The series looked into a number of cases that were prosecuted in the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court with little or no evidence.

Reporters Rachel Dissell and Leila Atassi won second place in the category for their look at sexual assault crimes. Those stories, following the discovery of the bodies of 11 women at Sowell's home, examined how the city of Cleveland handled missing-person and rape cases.
Connie Schultz and Phillip Morris finished first and second, respectively, in the columnist category. Features writer Debbi Snook finished first in the Best Critic category, followed by colleague Steven Litt in second place.
Other first place winners were Tony Brown, Best Arts Reporting; Thomas Ott and Edith Starzyk, Best Education Issues Reporting: K-12; Ted Diadiun, Best Media Criticism; Brent Larkin, Best Political Commentary; John Soeder, Best Rock and Roll Feature Writing; Andrea Levy, Best Graphic Designer; and Business Staff, for Aviation Coverage.
Second place winners were Mary Ann Whitley, Best Headline Writing; Michael O'Malley, Best Religion Reporting; and The Plain Dealer Staff, Best Sports Reporting, for "Cavs: Team in Transition."

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Mark reports to God


Former Columbus bureau reporter Mark Rollenhagen, of Cleveland Heights , will be ordained and installed as mission pastor on Sept. 10. at Faith Lutheran Church, 16511 Hilliard Road, which has an aging congregation and dwindling membership, according Alana Baranick on LakewoodPatch.com

HERE"S THE REST OF THE STORY:

Nearly 90 years ago, a mission pastor arrived in Lakewood to start a new Lutheran church in the southwest corner of the city.

The mission was accomplished. Faith Lutheran became a thriving congregation that built a large worship facility at Hilliard Road and Woodward Avenue.

Each of the subsequent ministers, who led the congregants through the 1990s until a few years ago, were called senior pastor, as a mission pastor was no longer needed.

Until now.

At 10:30 a.m. Sept. 10, seminarian Mark Rollenhagen will be ordained and installed as mission pastor at Faith Lutheran Church, 16511 Hilliard Road, which has an aging congregation and dwindling membership.

“(The term) mission pastor reflects the congregation’s interest on engaging the community here in new ways,” said Rollenhagen, who began ministering at Faith in an unordained capacity on July 1. “It was a big, bustling place 50 years ago. They’re hoping for it to be a bustling place again.”

What remains of the congregation hopes the new minister will revive the church by reaching out to inactive, disinterested or distracted members, young people and working people, who think they don’t have time for church.

Rollenhagen can empathize with such folks.

He was raised in the church – a Presbyterian church in the Grand Rapids area of Michigan – and became Lutheran-by-marriage through his wife, Alison, whom he met while attending Alma College in central Michigan.

The couple joined but didn’t become active in Lutheran churches as Rollenhagen’s career as a journalist took them to Harrisburg, PA, Toledo and finally Cleveland, where he was a reporter for The Plain Dealer for 18 years.

They moved to Cleveland Heights and became members of Bethlehem Lutheran Church, but didn’t attend regularly until their children approached confirmation age.

“They quickly tried to get us involved in all kinds of things (at Bethlehem),” the father of two said. “I became president of church council within two or three years.”

He coordinated the Interfaith Hospitality Network, an interdeominational project providing temporary shelter to homeless families.

As he became more caught up in the business of the church, the curious journalist began thinking more deeply about his own faith and taking theology classes.

“I recognized I had something to offer the church beyond the lay role - to articulate faith and how it relates to life,” he said.

In the fall of 2003, Rollenhagen began taking one class at a time at Trinity Lutheran Seminary in Columbus, while continuing his newspaper work. He worked on Sunday afternoons, so he could spend a day off during the week to drive to Columbus for class.

“Things just seemed to work out,” he said.

When he ran out of classes he could take that met only once a week, an opening occurred at the paper’s Columbus bureau. Rollenhagen seized the opportunity to relocate, enabling him to take at least two classes a week.

“You can go part-time and take several years, but a point comes in the ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church of America) process where you have to do 10 weeks chaplaincy in a hospital as part of preparation (for ordination),” he said.

Providentially, that point aligned with the Plain Dealer’s announced downsizing of its newsroom staff in the fall of 2008. After much prayer and discussion with his wife, Rollenhagen accepted a buyout offer from the paper that allowed him to take the unpaid chaplaincy and a yearlong pastoral internship at Hope Lutheran Church in Cleveland Heights.

As Rollenhagen approached the completion of classes for his master of divinity degree and wanted to stay in Northeast Ohio, he was given the names of three congregations in the region that were looking for pastors.

“The other two were traditional congregations – normal operating congregations,” Rollenhagen said. “Then they gave me the information on Faith, a small inner-ring (suburb) church, in a lot of ways very similar to Bethlehem and Hope – congregations that are struggling to continue to exist.

“Part of the emphasis at Faith: It’s been in decline. They haven’t had a fulltime pastor in three years.”

The Faith congregation decided to put its money for two years into the mission project to more or less plant a new church in an existing pot (building).

“We have a building; We have lots of space,” Rollenhagen said. “On the other hand, it’s not like you can do everything new. We still have traditional services on Sunday morning. We’re trying not to throw that away, while we engage people (in new ways). It’s a fascinating challenge.”

Gaumer news flash


We received this news release on the PD alumni's own Tom Gaumer. Pretty impressive!


Thomas H. Gaumer of Olmsted Falls was one of 10 volunteers from around the country recognized by the U.S. Administration on Aging for his efforts to educate seniors about Medicare fraud and abuse.

The recognition came during the 2011 Senior Medicare Patrol (SMP) National Conference held earlier this month in Washington, D.C.
Gaumer is a volunteer for ProSeniors which runs the SMP program in Ohio. Gaumer, a retired former editor and reporter for The Plain Dealer, has volunteered for the Ohio SMP project for more than three years. He was presented with a trophy by Cindy Padilla, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Aging during a luncheon at the conference whose theme was “Leading the Grassroots Fight Against Fraud.”
Gaumer, formerly of Berea, speaks to senior groups and others around Ohio about how to detect fraud in Medicare, which is estimated to cost this country $60 billion a year. He also helps train other volunteers how to detect and combat fraud.
ProSeniors, founded in 1975, is a non-profit organization that provides free legal and long-term care advice to older adults. Pro Seniors offers Ohio residents age 60 and older the advice and information they need to solve their legal and nursing home, adult care facility, and home health care problems. Pro Seniors is dedicated to helping older adults maintain their independence by empowering them, by protecting their interests, and by helping them access resources.
Among the services offered by ProSeniors is the Ohio SMP project which educates older Ohioans how to stay safe from Medicare fraud and identity theft.. Those interested in working with the Ohio SMP project should contact Jane Winkler, volunteer coordinator, at ProSeniors. The toll free number anywhere in Ohio is (800) 488-6070 and the Cincinnati number is (513) 345-4160.
The SMP program was established in 1997 under the Older Americans Act and is administered by the Administratoin on Aging AoA.
AoA’s volunteers work in their local communities educating Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries how to recognize and report suspected cases of deceptive health care practices, such as overbilling, overcharging or providing unnecessary or inappropriate services. This training also empowers beneficiaries to be better health care consumers. More than 4 million beneficiaries have been educated directly by SMP volunteers or staff since the program’s inception, while more than 25.3 million people have been reached during community education events.
Gaumer was one of 10 SMP volunteers nationally recognized for their work.







Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Reservations needed for Scott memorial

Only 500 people will be allowed in for the Jane Scott memorial at 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 28 at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum because of the way the stage is going to be laid out, the Rock Hall emailed.

if you want to go ,reservations are required:
e-mail education@rockhall.org
or call
1-216-515-8426
(this is a special line that is being installed for this event;
if busy or not connected when you call, call back, says the Rock Hall.)

Jane died at age 92 on July 4, 2011.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Bob Finn died

http://www.cleveland.com/obituaries/index.ssf/2011/07/robert_finn_longtime_classical.html


Robert Finn, longtime classical music critic of The Plain Dealer, dead at 81
Published: Monday, July 25, 2011, 12:20 PM Updated: Monday, July 25, 2011, 8:27 PM
By Grant Segal
Robert Finn 1930-2011
Survivors: wife, Mary; children, Laurence of Mayfield Heights and Elaine of Audubon, N.J.; and three grandchildren.
Funeral: 10:30 a.m. Thursday at Catholic Church of St. Clare, 5659 Mayfield Rd., Lyndhurst.
Contributions: Rainey Institute, 1705 E. 55th St., Cleveland, Ohio 44103, raineyinstitute.org, or Cleveland Chamber Music Society, 2532 Lafayette Dr., University Heights, Ohio 44118, clevelandchambermusic.org.
Arrangements: Fioritto Funeral Home.


Lyndhurst-- The bow-tied Robert Finn, who died Saturday, was an award-winning music critic, a widespread cultural leader and a calming influence in a profession not know for calm.
He once saw a young colleague, Karen R. Long, visibly stewing. In his modulated but resonant voice, Finn said, "There's always another story."
Finn, 81, was diagnosed with cancer about three months ago. He died at Hillcrest Hospital from complications.
"He was always a gentleman," Gary Hanson, executive director of the Cleveland Orchestra, said Monday. "He had an extraordinary balance. In a negative review, he would remain respectful. In a positive review, he would be enthusiastic without being a cheerleader."
Tom Feran, Plain Dealer reporter and former features editor, said, "He was a gracious man and a graceful writer. When you were with Bob Finn, you were in civilized territory."
Finn was a past president and a 45-year trustee of the Rainey Institute, which teaches arts to children on E. 55th St. Lee Lazar, Rainey's executive director, said, "As the voice of reason, he always brought us back to reality."
Finn critiqued classical music for The Plain Dealer from 1964 to 1992. He was president of the national Music Critics Association for two terms.
He co-founded the International Charles Dickens Fellowship's local chapter and chaired it for 22 years. In 2009, he spoke to a global gathering of that literary fan club here.
Finn won four awards from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. He won the first Friends of Music Education Award from the Ohio Music Education Association. He accepted an invitation from President Carter to hear classical guitar genius Andres Segovia at the White House.
Finn wrote as he spoke: fluidly, with a gentle wit.
"The eerie moon and mist-laden trees lent a romantic charm to the magic of the program," he wrote about a Cleveland Orchestra concert at the Blossom Music Center in 1968. "But, alas, the whippoorwill did not sing."
In a rare mistake, he was once locked inside Detroit's Cobo Hall.
Finn was raised in Winthrop, Mass., and became a lifelong fan of the Boston Red Sox. He studied piano privately for 10 years and flute for four.
In high school, he was a copy boy and scholastic sports freelancer for the Boston Record-American. At Boston University, he edited the newspaper and helped create a discussion series featuring Eleanor Roosevelt and Norman Thomas.
During the 1950s, Finn served with the U.S. Army Security Agency in Hawaii, helping to crack Russian codes. He reported for the New England Newspaper Service and the New Bedford Standard Times. He continued with the Akron Beacon Journal from 1959 to 1964.
For The Plain Dealer, he covered many musical groups, including the Cleveland Orchestra from Severance Hall to Australia. At Severance, he chose seats toward the rear of the orchestra level for the best acoustics. He put the scores in his lap and followed the concerts with his ears and his eyes.
At first, Finn phoned in reviews of nighttime concerts for the next day's paper. One morning, the surname of composer Gabriel Faure became Foray. Finn began to deliver his typically impeccable copy in person the next day.
He strained to be fair but could not like all music equally. He hated some of the program at the popular July 4 concerts.
Finn wrote two books: "Exploring Classical Music" and "Symphonic Journey, Con Amore," a history of the Cleveland Philharmonic Orchestra. He also taught fellow critics in seminars around the country.
He loved crosswords and was often a finalist in the North American Championship Crossword Puzzle Tournament in Connecticut.
Finn retired in 1992 but hardly faded. He led the daily "Thanks for Listening Show" on WCLV-FM from 1992 to 1995. He taught for years at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland Institute of Music, Music School Settlement and elsewhere. He wrote program notes for the Cleveland Chamber Music Society and gave talks before performances by the Chamber Society, the Philharmonic and the Cleveland Opera.
He reviewed books on history and other subjects for The Plain Dealer. He reviewed a couple of concerts each summer at the Chautauqua Institution for its daily newspaper.
He freelanced for Opera News, American Record Guide and many other publications. He took up the Internet and wrote columns for publications on line. He served on several nonprofit boards.
Finn liked liberal politics, chocolate ice cream and short-wave radio. He scoured stores for used books, rare opera scores and more. He seldom drank liquor but had milk with most meals.
He steadily alerted The Plain Dealer to newsworthy figures for obituaries. Last July, in good health, he volunteered a resume for use in his own obituary when the time came.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Retirees to lunch at 1 pm July 29

PD Editorial Retirees & Expatriates
Gather for lunch on the last Fridays of January, April, July and October
Spouses and guests always welcome

NEXT LUNCHEON: 1 p.m., Friday July 29
Note the change in the luncheon time.

PLACE: Sterle’s Slovenian Country House,,
1401 E. 55th St., Cleveland
(south of the Shoreway and St. Clair and north of Superior)


COST: Order from the menu
Change in luncheon time makes this possible.


RSVP by Friday, July 22
JoAnn Pallant (440) 734-1923, or japallant@sbcglobal.net
Let’s make this luncheon our own tribute to Jane Scott.

Thursday, July 07, 2011

Aug. 28 memorial Jane Scott

A memorial service for Jane Scott, The Plain Dealer's pioneering rock 'n' roll writer, will be at 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 28, at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. An earlier graveside service will be private.

She died July 4 at age 92. Her family suggests donations in her name to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, 1100 Rock and Roll Blvd., Cleveland, OH 44114.

Monday, July 04, 2011

Legendary Jane Scott dies at 92



Jane Scott, the legendary journalist who covered four decades of rock 'n' roll for The Plain Dealer, died early Monday after a long illness, said Linda Scott, Jane Scott's niece. She was 92. Details of the funeral services, to be held in Ann Arbor, Mich., are pending. A memorial service will be held at a later date in Cleveland.

Her byline appeared in the newspaper thousands of times, above music features, concert reviews and her long-running "What's Happening" column in Friday! magazine.
Scott was on a first-name basis not only with music fans throughout Northeast Ohio, but with most of the luminaries in the rock 'n' roll universe.

For the rest of the PD obit, go www.cleveland.com/popmusic/index.ssf/2011/07/jane_scott_legendary_plain_dea.html"

Obits were in newspaper far and wide, from the New York, L.A. times to a paper in Newfoundland. Jane would be happy.



The photo, by Rosemary Kovacs, was taken at Jack Hagan's going away party in December 2005. She was still dancing.

Former copy editor Steve Esrati points out that the obit neglects to mention that Jane was a lieutenant commander in the Navy during World War II and that she was a tee-totaling Christian Scientist who held great (alcohol included) parties near Christmas every year in her tiny Gold Coast apartment.

Jane, a member of the Rock Hall of Fame, attended Steve's 70th birthday party at Sergio's in 1997. All other PD attendees preceded her in death, he says.

Former PD photographer Bill Wynne recalls:
Jane family name was Sapp. The Family decided to change the name to Scott, in her young years because of ridicule the family faced through the years. Jane's brother was a high executive at Ford Motors and Pres of Philco in his later years.
I spent my first 11 years covering almost exclusively the Sunday Features Dept. 1953--'64. I chauffeured Scotty, (kids and Golden agers.) Esther Brightman, (Women's Clubs) Jane Artale (Woman's Golf) Cecil Relihan (Home Decorating, ) Bess Howell, and Irma Winkle Bartell Dugan ) (Gardens) ( Paul Metzler and Helen Borsick Cullinan (Art) Helen Robinson ,and later a little of Janet Beigle French, (Home Ec) some of Bob Finn ( Music) ,Mary Strassmeyer, (Society and Features.)
Those were busy years, some Sundays had 24 photos published and there were many mid week. It was easy to exchange stories of our family lives with each other with the frequency of assignments and long drives . l Ioved all of those gals but I was glad finally to get off the bicycle with less rushed usually, news stories. Another Scotty revelation. Scotty's dad worked on the far Eeast Side. They lived in Lakewood. Her dad grew tired of driving into the sun in the mornings and coming home into the sun in the evening. so the family moved to Chagrin. One of the funniest assignments Jane dug up was going to cover her piano teacher in Lakewood who was now aged. The teacher sort of didn't recognize Scotty , but began to tell us about this little girl peppy little girl named Jane Sapp that hustled into her parlor for lessons and hustled out, flying down the street.
Scotty didn't mention anything about it on the way back. Neither did I.


From Roldo Bartimole

My step son was in charge of the radio program "Wait, wait don't tell me"
when it came to this area (Akron actually) for a live show.

The area guest of the show in the early 2000s: Jane Scott.

Saw her nodding off in the audience as she awaited
her call. However, she was awake and funny when she got her
chance on stage. An excellent guest.

Greg Stricharchuk did a front page piece on her when he was
at the Wall St. Journal.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

PD Summer Book Sale June 30, July 1

Not too many perks in journalism remain, but I like to share this one with newsroom retirees:
The sale runs 3-6:30 p.m. Thursday, June 30, in the second-floor community room of The Plain Dealer, and half-price 9 a.m. to noon Friday, July 1. Checks or cash to United way.
We feature thousands of novels, mysteries, kids' books, nonfiction, biography, memoir, poetry, books on CDs, coffee table volumes, classics and one copy of Tim Burton's collector's edition art book, normally $125, priced at $50. Almost everything else is $3 hard copy and $2 paperback, $10 oversized books. Music CDs and other swag also appears.
Lots of folk manage to check off a chunk of their holiday purchases, and smart family shoppers often match the book on CD with the hardcover for the reluctant young readers on their lists.
Karen Long

Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Jane Scott turns 92

Jane Scott, the legendary journalist who covered four decades of rock 'n' roll for The Plain Dealer, turned 92 on Tuesday, May 3. Her byline appeared in the newspaper thousands of times, above music features, concert reviews and her long-running "What's Happening" column in Friday! magazine.

Her first day at The Plain Dealer was March 24, 1952, three days after the world's first rock concert -- Alan Freed's Moondog Coronation Ball at the old Cleveland Arena. She retired 50 years later on March 28, 2002. She lives in Lakewood.

For the complete story click on the following:


http://www.cleveland.com/music/index.ssf/2011/05/happy_birthday_jane_scott_reti.html#cmpid=v2mode_be_smoref_face

Tuesday, May 03, 2011

See anyone familiar?

Quite a crowd appeared at the Wild Mango at Great Northern Shopping Center for the April 29, 2011 Pd retirees luncheon. We got some of them to give us some notes on what they've been doing since leaving The PD.

Jim Strang reports: "When I was in high school, I thought I would be a history teacher - even in retirement, I'm trying the "road not taken" and subbing in Avon schools - Grades 3-11, all subjects. I love it. The kids seem to like it, too, since they've built me two facebook tribute pages and give glowing reports on ratemyteacher.com. Life is good, so far -- hortator45@yahoo.com."


Jim and Marianne Hatch were in town for Hatch's sister's funeral. " We love 'California'. The sun shines everyday. The women are all beautiful and the wine is cheap," he said.










Pat Gessler is ready for baseball after attending spring training.

We still go to see the Cleveland Indians play in March. But this year was especially good -- we found the best spring training facility we've seen to date, the newly opened Salt River Fields at Talking Stick, which is on the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. It puts the Goodyear park to shame. Goodyear is sterile with the exception of the entrance and a few palm trees behind center field; Salt River has panoramic views of the Camelback and McDowell mountains and beautiful desert landscaping. And where else can you buy Indian fry bread at a ballpark! There were only lawn seats available the day we went, but the tickets we bought allowed us to roam the stadium, where we found an umbrella-covered table big enough for our party of five to sit (and watch the Indians beat the Diamondbacks). Salt River is also the spring training home of the Colorado Rockies. If you go to Phoenix this stadium and very fan friendly site, is a must see. p.s. There is no more baseball in Tucson, where Hi Corbett (Cleveland's old spring training home) was the first Cactus League ballpark.


Tom Gaumer joined Alana Baranack and Tom Quinn. Gaumer is a docent at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and a volunteer on the Cuyahoga National Park Railroad. Alana continues her obituary work while Quinn is an editor at an ecology newspaper.




Stu Abbey, with his wife Bobby, has been doing artistic things and has a website: ArtofStuartAbbey.blog.com, called Paintings and Ponderings.



Wilma Salisbury, Janet Beigle French who organized the soiree and Bob McAuley were there.
Janet says: "I keep busy in The West Shore Unitarian Universalist Church -- singing in the choir, knitting shawls, etc in the knitting group, helping with the gardening. And I make necklaces and earrings to sell at the church auction, and at a small shop. And send many for gifts. As I have time, I'm also mending and indexing my old PD food dept. scrapbooks and giving them to the CSU special collections library. (A Stark County librarian
found me this week and asked fo
r dates of a special series that ran in 1983. ")























Brian and Terry (Considine) Williams and their daughter Katy now live in Hudson, Oh, "having returned to the 'North Coast' after living on both the Pacific (San Diego) and Atlantic (Long Island) for 30 years. Brian was an editor and sometimes columnist for Newsday and Terry reported and did features for the Long Island desk of the N.Y.Times. We've been back about five years. Our email address is go minnie@bigplanet.com." Brian worked on the PD's city desk and left about 1969.


Finally,Doris O'Donnell and John Coyne say "Hi".

Wynne's WWII mascot Smoky honored

This item was from Steve Esrati et al
On April 25, 2011, (former PD photographer) Bill Wynne, along with two grandsons (Will and Andy 
Tabar) flew to Liverpool, England to receive a special British honor for
Smoky. The "guys"
were indeed in England for the Royal Wedding but weren't in London. They
watched the pomp along with about 2,000 other people on a big screen TV
in a park in Liverpool. They are flying back May 2nd and will probably
be a bit jet lagged. Congratulations to Bill Wynne and Smoky!
(billsmoky@aol.com)
Regards,
Marcia Wynne Deering



News Release: UK

Date of issue: 27 April 2011

www.pdsa.org.uk

British honour for American soldier dog, Smoky

Smoky, a Yorkshire Terrier who became an American World War II mascot,
today (27 April 2011) received the PDSA Certificate for animal bravery.

The presentation of the posthumous award to Smoky took place at the PDSA
PetAid hospital in Liverpool. Smoky’s owner, Bill Wynne (age 89), a
United States veteran of the war in the Pacific, who had travelled from
his home in Cleveland Ohio for the ceremony, said he was delighted and
honoured: “Smoky was not just my dog she was a friend to everyone who
served alongside us in the Pacific conflict. She was an inspiration to
everyone she met during her wartime career and later in civilian life
too. For her bravery to be recognised in Britain is very special.”


The act of bravery that earned the courageous little dog the PDSA
Certificate took place in January 1945. Bill and Smoky were part of the
150,000 strong US fighting force taking part in the Southwest Pacific
Theatre of Operations in the Philippine Islands. As the Battle of Luzon
raged, Corporal Bill Wynne of the 26th photographic Reconnaissance
Squadron, 5th United States Air Forces, was approached by Sergeant Gapp
of the Communications section with a request: could Smoky, the
Squadron’s mascot, take vital communication cables through an eight inch
wide, 70 foot long drainage culvert under the airstrip? If she could,
the airstrip would not have to be dug up or the men and ‘planes exposed
to the constant enemy fire.


Smoky, who was only seven inches tall and weighed just four pounds,
delivered the cable with huge encouragement and praise from her devoted
owner Bill. In doing so she protected the lives of 250 men and saved 40
US war planes from being destroyed by Japanese bombers.


“When Smoky was faced with her moment of truth, her ultimate test of
character, this brave terrier did not shy away from her duty or
disappoint her master,” said Jan McLoughlin, PDSA Director General, who
presented Smoky’s posthumous Certificate for animal bravery. “Even if
Smoky felt fear, did not stop her, nor prevent her from succeeding at
the very moment it mattered most to her friends and colleagues.”


Smoky’s reward that day in 1945 was the biggest steak the canteen could
find. She also won the recognition that she was no longer just a mascot:
from then on she was regarded by her fellow soldiers as a serving war
dog. With Bill at her side, Smoky served in the Pacific until the end of
the war.


After the formal instrument of surrender was signed on 2 September 1945
on the battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, Bill and Smoky began to
prepare for demob and the journey home to Cleveland. By this time
Smoky’s coat, which Bill made from a green felt card table cover,
bristled with military honours including Wings for 12 combat missions,
the Asiatic Pacific campaign ribbon with eight battle stars, the
Philippine Liberation Ribbon with two battle stars, and two Presidential
Unit Citations (equivalent of the UK’s Distinguished Service Cross).
Smoky died peacefully in her bed in Bill’s home, on 21 February 1957.
There are six official memorials to Smoky in the US.


The PDSA Certificate for animal bravery was instituted in 2001 and each
winner’s story is a unique account of inspiring bravery. Smoky is the
eleventh recipient, and the first animal that served in WWII to be
awarded the Certificate. Smoky has six Memorials nationally in the U.S.
Smoky is the heroine of a memoir by Wynne titled " YORKIE DOODLE DANDY,
or The Other Woman Was A Real dog."


PDSA - founded as the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals of the Poor
in 1917 by Maria Dickin - is now the UK's leading veterinary charity.
PDSA provides over 2 million free veterinary treatments for sick pets of
needy and eligible owners each year. The charity does not receive
government funding but relies entirely on donations to carry out its
work. Maria Dickin CBE introduced the PDSA Dickin Medal in 1943 to
recognise animal gallantry during WWII and its aftermath. .The PDSA Gold
Medal for animal bravery, the Certificate and Commendation were
introduced in 2001.

For more details go to www.pdsa.org.uk/about-us/animal-bravery-awards

ENDS

Notes to Editors

PDSA is the UK’s leading veterinary charity, providing free veterinary
care for the sick and injured pets of people in need and promoting
responsible pet ownership. For further information, photos and
interviews, please contact Emily Malcolm or Isabel George in the Press
Office on 01952 204 767, or e-mail malcolm.emily@pdsa.org.uk or
george.isabel@pdsa.org.uk. For more information about PDSA visit
www.pdsa.org.uk/mediacentre

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

And popcorn plant too

Message from Richard Ellers (geerichard@aol.com):

If you miss Friday's PD editorial retirees lunch (April 29 Wild Mango, 362 Great Northern Mall, North Olmsted )then you will miss getting a free grow-your-own popcorn planting/growing kit from Richard Ellers who said:
“Here's a chance for you or some other popcorn lover to grow and learn. I developed these kits for school teachers when I was an OSU Extension Master Gardener and a volunteer environmental educators.”
Each kit comes with full instructions, a gardening glossary, and enough seeds for a three by four feet plot.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Cartoonist Dick Dugan dies

DUGAN JAMES RICHARD "DICK" DUGAN, 85, passed away Saturday, April 16, 2011 at Hospice of the Western Reserve surrounded by his family.

For 39 years his cartoons, especially Chief Wahoo and Cleveland Brownie, were a fixture on the editorial and sports pages. If a colleague left the paper, he would draw a caricature that friends would sign as a going away present.

For the obituary by Grant Segall:

Monday, April 11, 2011

Luncheon on April 29 in North Olmsted

PD Editorial Retirees & Expatriates

Casual unstructured lunch troupe

Gather for lunch on the last Fridays of January, April, July and October

Spouses and guests always welcome

NEXT LUNCHEON: Noon, April 29

PLACE: Wild Mango, 362 Great Northern Mall, North Olmsted

Enter restaurant from parking lot behind Red Lobster, next to Sears.

Visit Wild Mango website for directions.

MENU: Order from menu on separate checks. Menu items include:

Asian Chicken Salad, $8

Bar-B-Q Ribs (Hawaiian style) $8

Roasted Duck Breast $12

Ginger Soy Glazed Salmon, $9

Chicken Cheese Cake, $7

RSVP By Tuesday April 26

Janet Beighle French (216) 221-2318, or jabfr519@sbcglobal.net or

JoAnn Pallant (440) 734-1923, or japallant@sbcglobal.net

Please notify if you want to be removed from list.

A review of Naughton's book

Tales of a serial prankster: Turning the boss’s office into a fun & inviting place

In the sweet leisure of his retirement — if you don’t count the chemotherapy — former Poynter president Jim Naughton has penned a 257-page opus titled “46 Frogs: Tales of a Serial Prankster.”

Without the help of WikiLeaks or Romenesko, sources at Poynter have gotten their hands on one of the few available copies produced by Naughton himself. In spite of its playful title, Naughton’s professional memoir describes his experiences in such influential jobs as White House correspondent for The New York Times; managing editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer; and president of The Poynter Institute.

From his earliest days in journalism to his retirement four decades later, Naughton has littered American highways and byways with the detritus of his practical jokes. Some cost hundreds of dollars. Others tiptoed up to a line labeled “Against the Law.” And almost all involved animal husbandry, a circus cavalcade of dinosaurs, gorillas, elephants, camels, goats, sheep, chicken, crabs, and, of course, frogs.

The stories are entertaining enough. As beast fables they carry real lessons, about journalism and leadership, about life itself. Members of the Poynter faculty have mined this material and come up with a handful of gems. Over the next four days, Poynter.org will share some of Naughton’s stories in his own words. We will also explore what contemporary leaders can learn from such eccentric parables.


For the rest of the story go to http://www.poynter.org/how-tos/leadership-management/118951/tales-of-a-serial-prankster-turning-the-boss-office-into-a-fun-inviting-place/