John F. Seiberling from Wikipedia

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John F. Seiberling

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John Frederick Seiberling, Jr.
John F. Seiberling 93rd Congress 1973.jpg
1973
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Ohio’s 14th district
In office
January 3, 1971 – January 3, 1987
Preceded by William Hanes Ayres
Succeeded by Thomas C. Sawyer
Personal details
Born September 8, 1918
Akron, Ohio
Died August 2, 2008 (aged 89)
Copley, Ohio
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Behr
Children three
Alma mater
Military service
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1942-1946
Battles/wars World War II
Awards Legion of Merit

John Frederick Seiberling, Jr. (September 8, 1918 – August 2, 2008) was a United States Representative fromOhio. In 1974, he helped to establish what later became the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, and served on the House Judiciary Committee that held the impeachment hearings against President Richard Nixon.[1]

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Biography[edit]

Born in Akron, Ohio, Seiberling attended the public schools of Akron, and Staunton Military Academy in Virginia. He received his A.B. from Harvard University in 1941. His parents, Lieut. John Frederick Seiberling (1888–1962) and Henrietta McBrayer Buckler (1888–1979), had been wed on October 11, 1917 in Akron, Ohio. He had two sisters: Mary Gertrude Seiberling (born 1920) and Dorothy Buckler Lethbridge Seiberling (born 1922). His paternal grandparents were Frank Seiberling, the founder of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, and Gertrude Ferguson Penfield. His maternal grandparents were Julius Augustus Buckler and Mary Maddox.

During World War II he served in the United States Army from 1942 to 1946. He was subsequently awarded theLegion of Merit for his participation in the Allied planning of the D-Day invasion.[2]

He married Elizabeth “Betty” Behr, a Vassar graduate, in 1949. They have three sons: John B., David and Stephen.

Seiberling received his LL.B. from Columbia Law School in 1949. In 1950, Seiblerling was admitted to the New Yorkbar and went into private practice. He became an associate with a New York firm from 1949 to 1954, and then became a volunteer with the New York Legal Aid Society in 1950. From 1954 to 1970, he was an attorney with Goodyear. He once took a leave of absence rather than cross the picket lines during a United Rubber Workers strike.[2][3] During this time he was a member of the Tri-County Regional Planning Commission in Akron from 1964 to 1970.

In 1970, Seiberling won the Democratic nomination for Ohio’s 14th congressional district, based in Akron. Running on an anti-Vietnam War platform, he then defeated 10-term Republican William H. Ayres by 12 points in a major upset. He would be reelected seven more times from this district,[3] He never faced substantive opposition in what became a solidly Democratic district. Indeed, he won each of his seven reelection bids with over 70 percent of the vote.

His political legacy in the House includes playing a key role in a number of successful major, bipartisan parkland and environmental protection legislative efforts, including enactment of the massive Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act of 1980.[4] He also participated in the 1975 Congressional delegation meetings in the Middle East that helped precipitate the 1979 Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty.[2] He did not run for reelection in 1986, and endorsed Akron Mayor Tom Sawyer as his successor.

After his time in Congress, Seiberling served as faculty at the law school of the University of Akron from 1992 to 1996.

On January 8, 2001, he was presented with the Presidential Citizens Medal by President Clinton.[5]

On Thursday, October 12, 2006, President George W. Bush signed into law H.R. 6051, which designates the Federal building and United States courthouse in Akron as the John F. Seiberling Federal Building and United States Courthouse.[6] Seiberling died of respiratory failure at his home in Copley, Ohio on August 2, 2008.[1]

John Seiberling’s cousin, Francis Seiberling, was also a U.S. Representative from Ohio (Republican). His mother, Henrietta Buckler Seiberling, was a seminal figure in Alcoholics Anonymous’ founding and core spiritual ideals.[7][8] His paternal grandfather was Frank Seiberling, founder of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company.[7] The family’s one-time home, Stan Hywet, is now a national museum.[7]

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References[edit]

Howard Metzenbaum from Wikipedia

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Howard Metzenbaum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Howard Morton Metzenbaum (June 4, 1917 – March 12, 2008) was an American politician who served for almost 20 years as a Democratic member of the U.S. Senate from Ohio (1974, 1976–1995). He also served in the Ohio House of Representatives and Senate from 1943 to 1951.

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Early life and education[edit]

Metzenbaum was born 1917 in Cleveland, Ohio, to a poor family, the son of Anna (née Klafter) and Charles I. Metzenbaum.[1] His paternal grandparents were Jewish immigrants from Poland and France, and his maternal grandparents were Hungarian Jews.[2] He attended Glenville High School, for whom he ran track, while also working odd jobs after hours.[1] He graduated from Ohio State University, receiving a bachelor‘s degree in 1939 and a law degree in 1941.[3] During the 1940s, he practiced law in Cleveland. After initially facing discrimination due to his Jewish heritage, he found acceptance representing large labor unions, first with the Communications Workers of America and later the International Association of Machinists.[4]

Business career[edit]

Metzenbaum became independently wealthy through investments, particularly in real estate near what became theCleveland Hopkins International Airport, which Metzenbaum and his partner, Alva “Ted” Bonda, correctly envisioned would make for extremely profitable, 24-hour, well-lit parking lots. The business expanded to become Airport Parking Company of America (APCOA), the world’s largest parking lot company.[5] By 1970, he had sold his interest in APCOA Parking for $20 million.[6] In the early 1970s, Metzenbaum also co-owned the Sun Newspapers chain of weeklies which covered the Cleveland suburbs, a venture undertaken after his first senatorial election defeat.[7]

Political career[edit]

Ohio legislature[edit]

Metzenbaum served in the Ohio House of Representatives from 1943 to 1947. He then served in the Ohio Senate from 1947 to 1951.[4]

In 1958, he served as the campaign manager for future U.S. Senator Stephen M. Young, who, in a major upset, narrowly unseated incumbent Senator John Bricker, the Republican Party’s 1944 Vice Presidential nominee. He returned to assist Young in a successful re-election campaign in 1964.[4]

U.S. Senate[edit]

220px-John_Glenn_Low_Res.jpg

John Glenn, former rival and later ally to Metzenbaum

In 1970, Metzenbaum ran for the Senate seat vacated by Young, who chose not to run for a third term. He defeatedastronaut John Glenn in the Democratic primary by a 51% to 49% margin, but narrowly lost to Robert Taft, Jr. in thegeneral election. In 1974, when Senator William B. Saxbe (R-OH) resigned from his seat to accept the nomination asU.S. attorney generalGovernor Jack Gilligan appointed Metzenbaum to serve the remainder of Saxbe’s term. Metzenbaum ran for election to the seat, but in a bitter Democratic primary, Metzenbaum lost to Glenn, who subsequently won the general election by a landslide.

In the 1974 Senate primary, Metzenbaum contrasted his strong business background with Glenn’s military and astronaut credentials, saying his opponent had “never worked for a living”. Glenn’s reply came to be known as the “Gold Star Mothers” speech. He told Metzenbaum to go to a veterans’ hospital and “look those men with mangled bodies in the eyes and tell them they didn’t hold a job. You go with me to any Gold Star mother and you look her in the eye and tell her that her son did not hold a job.” Many felt the “Gold Star Mothers” speech won the primary for Glenn, which he won by 54 to 46%.[5]

In 1976, however, Metzenbaum sought a rematch against Taft. The race was close again, but this time he won, riding on Jimmy Carter‘s coattails. Taft resigned the seat a few days before his term ended, allowing Metzenbaum to be sworn in a few days early and hence have a small edge in seniority over other senators newly elected in 1976. He was reelected in 1982, comfortably defeating Republican state Senator Paul Pfeifer. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Glenn and Metzenbaum had strained relations. There was a thaw in 1983 when Metzenbaum endorsed Glenn for president. In 1981 Metzenbaum was insulted on the floor of the Senate when Senator Ernest Hollings of South Carolinacalled him the “senator from B’nai Brith“.[8] Some interpreted this as a slur on Metzenbaum’s Jewish faith.[8] Hollings later apologized to Metzenbaum and the remarks were stricken from the record.[9]

In 1988 Metzenbaum was opposed by Cleveland mayor George Voinovich. Voinovich accused Metzenbaum of being soft on child pornography.[10][11] Voinovich’s charges were criticized by many, including Glenn, Metzenbaum’s old-time rival in the Democratic party and then-Senate colleague, who recorded a statement for television refuting Voinovich’s charges.[12] Metzenbaum won the election by 57 to 43%, even as George H. W. Bush won Ohio’s electoral votes by 11 percent.[13]

Issues[edit]

Metzenbaum did not run for reelection in 1994. His son-in-law Joel Hyatt was nominated by the Democrats to replace him, but Hyatt lost to Lieutenant GovernorMike DeWine, who had been elected as Voinovich’s running mate in 1990.

While in the Senate, Metzenbaum was a powerful liberal. He was known as “Senator No” (a nickname shared by Republican Jesse Helms of North Carolina) and “Headline Howard”[5][14] due to his ability to filibuster bills by offering scores of amendments as well as blocking hidden special-interest legislation.[14]Metzenbaum took a particular interest in antitrust and consumer protection issues, often threatening to repeal the antitrust law exemption given to Major League Baseball. Since his retirement, however, the issue has gone largely unaddressed. Metzenbaum became well known for his service on the Senate Judiciary Committee, particularly because of his dedicated efforts to keep stringent antitrust laws and his pro-choice stance on abortion.

Metzenbaum was skeptical of corporations and agencies promoting aspartame. An allegation was that the G. D. Searle & Company was trying to bring aspartame to market and get it approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) by submitting false data. Senator Metzenbaum berated Searle’s fabricated tests and also faulted the American Medical Association (AMA), whose Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reported, with some significant disclaimers, that aspartame was safe for most people. Senator Metzenbaum, referring to the report said, “I wish that this [JAMA] report could ease my concerns. It does not. It merely restates the FDA position, which relies solely on the Searle tests. As I have indicated these tests are under a cloud. In addition, the concerns raised recently by the scientists…were not even included in the report.” In 1985, the U.S. Senate heard testimony relating to an amendment by Senator Howard Metzenbaum which would require the quantity of aspartame in a product to be labeled.

Cleveland Stokers[edit]

In January 1968 Metzenbaum and Bonda purchased the Cleveland Stokers soccer club from Cleveland Indians executives Vernon Stouffer and Gabe Paul. Under their leadership, the team played one year in the North American Soccer League, and even won their division, before departing the league due to differences in business philosophy with the other owners.

Retirement[edit]

After leaving the Senate in 1995, Metzenbaum served as the chairman of the Consumer Federation of America. He died at his home in AventuraFlorida on March 12, 2008.[15] He was buried at Mayfield Cemetery in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.[16]

Refuting urban legends to the contrary, Metzenbaum asserted that he never represented the Communist Party.[17] When the National Republican Senatorial Committee suggested in 1987 that he had “Communist sympathies”, Chairman Rudy Boschwitz apologized for the insulting smear.[18]

Metzenbaum’s cousin, James Metzenbaum, was a prominent Ohio attorney who wrote a noted text on zoning law and once ran for a seat on the Ohio Supreme Court.

Legacy[edit]

220px-Old_Federal_Building_and_Post_Office,_Cleveland.jpg

The Old Federal Building and Post Office, now Howard M. Metzenbaum United States Courthouse

Metzenbaum was behind several important pieces of enacted legislation during his Senatorial career. These laws included the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, which required warning periods for large factory closures,[19][20] the Brady Law, which established a waiting period for handgun purchases,[5][21] and the Howard M. Metzenbaum Multiethnic Placement Act of 1994 (MEPA) (U.S. Public Law 103-82), which prohibits federally subsidizedadoption agencies from delaying or denying child placement on grounds of race or ethnicity.[22]

On May 27, 1998, the Old Federal Building and Post Office in downtown Cleveland was renamed the Howard M. Metzenbaum United States Courthouse in his honor.[23]

In popular culture[edit]

Metzenbaum was referenced in the Space Ghost Coast to Coast episode “Switcheroo”. Space Ghost mentioned him as a guest, but his staff had forgotten to book him.

Metzenbaum had a cameo in the 1993 film Dave. He was also referenced in numerous Cleveland-area advertisements.

References[edit]

30px-Commons-logo.svg.png Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Howard Metzenbaum
  1. a b Kroll, John (December 4, 1994). “Howard’s End: Metzenbaum was true to form through his last days in the Senate”The Plain Dealer. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  2. ^ “Ancestry of Howard Metzenbaum”. Wargs.com. Retrieved 2012-11-11.
  3. ^ Brudney, James J. (September 2008). “Memorial Service Honors Sen. Howard Metzenbaum ’41”This Month @ Moritz. The Ohio State University. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  4. a b c “METZENBAUM, HOWARD MORTON”The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Case Western University. July 24, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  5. a b c d “Howard M. Metzenbaum, 1917-2008: Ohio Senator was a champion of labor and master of rules”Los Angeles Times. 2008-03-13. pp. B9.
  6. ^ “Upset Time: POLITICS”TIME magazine. May 18, 1970. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
  7. ^ “Sun Newspapers,” Encyclopedia of Cleveland History, David D. VanTassel, ed., 1997. Retrieved 13 Mar. 2008
  8. a b Shanahan, Mike (November 14, 1981). “Prayer Issue Sparks Fiery Senate Debate”The Dispatch (Lexington, NC). Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  9. ^ “Hollings issues apology”Associated Press. The Augusta Chronicle. October 16, 1998. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  10. ^ Clements, Chase (September 8, 1988). “TV ad on child-porn legislation stirs up U.S. Senate race in Ohio”Toledo Blade. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  11. ^ Miller, Robert E. (October 20, 1988). “Metzenbaum Far Ahead Of Challenging Cleveland Mayor”Associated Press. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  12. ^ “In Ohio’s Senate race, the low road crosses the campaign trail. Negative TV ads roil Metzenbaum-Voinovich race but fail to stir voters”The Christian Science Monitor. October 6, 1988. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  13. ^ Hallett, Joe (November 9, 1988). “Metzenbaum scores a big victory over Voinovich”Toledo Blade. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  14. a b Sullivan, Patricia (March 14, 2008). “Ohio Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum, 90; Fought Special-Interest Bills, Tax Breaks”The Washington Post. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
  15. ^ Howard M. Metzenbaum, Who Battled Big Business as Ohio Senator, Dies at 90
  16. ^ “METZENBAUM, Howard Morton – Biographical Information”. Bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved 2012-11-11.
  17. ^ Personal correspondence, Jan. 5, 2006, from Harold S. Stern, Metzenbaum’s law partner after 1953
  18. ^ “American Notes: POLITICS”TIME magazine. August 10, 1987. Retrieved 2007-02-18.
  19. ^ “Bill Summary & Status, 100th Congress (1987 – 1988), S.2527”. The Library of Congress. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  20. ^ “29 USC Chapter 23 – WORKER ADJUSTMENT AND RETRAINING NOTIFICATION”Legal Information Institute. Cornell University Law School. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  21. ^ Associated Press, “Former Ohio Sen. Howard Metzenbaum dies,” 13 Mar. 2008. Retrieved 13 Mar. 2008
  22. ^ http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/23/Icons-mini-file_acrobat.gif); padding-right: 18px; background-position: 100% 50%; background-repeat: no-repeat no-repeat; “>”Multiethnic Placement Act: Submission of Recruitment Plans”. Administration for Children and Families. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. October 11, 1995. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  23. ^ “Howard M. Metzenbaum U.S. Courthouse”. U.S. General Services Administration. Retrieved May 9, 2013.

Ray Shepardson: The Man Who Relit Playhouse Square by John Vacha

ohio-theater-before-restpalace-restored-1988

top: Plain Dealer photo; bottom: CSU Special Collections

The pdf is here

Ray Shepardson: The Man Who Relit Playhouse Square

By John Vacha

“I didn’t have a clue as to what I was doing,” Ray Shepardson would recall many years later. Yet he had quit his day job in a quixotic attempt to rescue a row of shuttered movie houses on what Cleveland had once called Playhouse Square.

Tall and spare, with boyish looks of twenty-six, Shepardson was a bit young to be undergoing a midlife crisis. He had come to Cleveland from the state of Washington in 1968 to work for the Cleveland Public Schools as an assistant to the superintendent of schools and was looking for a place where teachers might gather in a social setting. Someone mentioned the four recently closed movie palaces on Euclid Avenue, so he decided to check them out and gained entry into the State Theatre on February 5, 1970. Even stripped for future demolition, it was unlike anything Shepardson had ever seen. One thing that remained in place, on the walls of a 320-foot lobby worthy of Versailles, was a series of colorful murals by James M. Daugherty dedicated to the arts of four continents. Four weeks later, fate placed a copy of the latest issue of Life magazine in Shepardson’s barber shop. On its cover, illustrating a feature on the vanishing “glory days” of Hollywood, was a full-color reproduction of Daugherty’s “The Spirit of Cinema” mural from Cleveland’s State Theatre.

“What did it was those wonderful murals,” recalls Elaine Hadden, who would become one of Shepardson’s staunchest supporters. “Ray took that as a message from heaven.” He moved into the Chesterfield Apartments, just a block or two from the State. By the end of the school year he had left the Board of Education. He doesn’t recall clearly how he supported himself at first, except that “It wasn’t easy.” For one stretch he actually lived in the State Theatre. “Buckminster Fuller was a major influence on me,” says Shepardson of the futurist architect. “He said, ‘Do something big enough to make a difference.'” Another early supporter, John Hemsath, once described Shepardson as “probably the most intense character I’ve ever met . . . .He had the personality of a pioneer, the self-confidence and perhaps the naivete to do what couldn’t be done.”

Shepardson, who had established relations with the area’s newspapers through his position with the schools, got the word out about the need to save Playhouse Square. “There was never anything but one hundred percent support from the media,” he says, making specific mention of William F. Miller of the Cleveland Plain Dealer and Herb Kamm of the Cleveland Press. School superintendent Paul Briggs, far from resenting his former assistant’s decampment, helped with his press campaign. By July Shepardson had formed a Playhouse Square Association, hoping to recruit supporters with memberships pegged at $120. Kay Halle, tireless promoter of causes both in Washington and her native Cleveland, introduced Shepardson to a largely feminine luncheon at the Intown Club. (In a flash of prognostication, he mentioned the possibility of installing a supper club in the lobby of the State.) Four months later he was telling the downtown Rotary Club that Playhouse Square could become another Lincoln or John F. Kennedy Center.

Saving the theaters was only half the problem – – and maybe the simpler half at that. In order to get some of the city’s heavy hitters on their team, Shepardson and his volunteers had to show there was a use for them. After all, the reason the theaters had gone dark was because people had stopped coming downtown to see movies. It may have started with a Supreme Court decision in the 1950s barring the big movie studios from theater ownership, which deprived downtown movie theaters of their former prerogative on first-run movies. A much larger and encompassing problem was the postwar rush to the suburbs, which soon acquired department stores, restaurants, and movie houses to rival those of downtown. Like a row of falling dominos, the theaters of Playhouse Square went dark: first the Allen in 1968, followed in short order by the Ohio, State, and finally the Palace. Little was left downtown but offices, which closed up shop at five o’clock, leaving the only lights to be seen at night the ones turned on in the upper floors by the cleaning crews. Suburbanites began bragging to one another about how many years it had been since they’d been downtown. Even Elaine Hadden, when she first heard Shepardson’s pitch, told him he was out of his mind. “Nothing can be done for downtown Cleveland,” she said. “It’s too far gone.” Still, his salesmanship overcame her resistance, and she signed on.

Another of Shepardson’s early volunteers was Zoltan Gombos, publisher of Cleveland’s Hungarian-language newspaper, Szabadsag. A European cosmopolite by birth, Gombos saw a lively downtown cultural and entertainment scene as a vital component of urban civilization. He and Shepardson decided to test the willingness of Greater Clevelanders to venture downtown by sponsoring a series of special events in Playhouse Square. To kick off the enterprise, they booked the touring Budapest Symphony Orchestra for a concert on November 21, 1971, in the Allen Theatre, the only one of the four houses then available. Putting his money where his mouth was, Gombos agreed to underwrite the concert against any loss. It couldn’t have set him back for much, as a capacity crowd of nearly three thousand turned out for the gala event.

Shepardson and his band of believers followed up this initial success with a wide range of attractions over the next few months. They included more hits as well as a few misses. A ten-night stand by the Sierra Leone Dance Company did well, but a Czech art film drew sparse audiences during a two-week run. A concert by the Prague Symphony Orchestra had to be cancelled after a breakdown in the Allen’s heating system. A concert by British actor Richard Harris, also underwritten by Gombos, produced another sellout.

From an improvised office off the Allen’s lobby rotunda, Shepardson directed an association grown to some four hundred members but expressed the need for more support “from the top.” It was said that the city’s business community, believing that Shepardson was too visionary about the theaters’ future, was reluctant to commit the millions required for their renovation. As outlined by Shepardson, his vision for Playhouse Square saw the Palace as a large concert hall and opera house, the Ohio as a venue for chamber concerts and experimental theater, and the State as a supper club-restaurant-night club complex. As for the Allen, it would be converted into three smaller movie houses of varied sizes.

Then, quite suddenly, it appeared more likely that the State and Ohio would become venues for the parking of cars. In May of 1972, the owners of the two theaters announced that they would be taking bids for their demolition. Though they talked of eventually redeveloping the site for an entertainment and retail complex, their immediate plans envisioned nothing more than an 88,000- square-foot parking lot. To Shepardson. the news created a “crisis situation” for his campaign to save Playhouse Square. Outcries against the threatened demolition also came from the community at large. “No one comes downtown to patronize a parking lot.” protested the Plain Dealer.

As in the westerns that once filled the theater screens. the cavalry came in timely fashion to the rescue, albeit in the uncavalrylike form of the Junior League of Cleveland. Founded by local clubwomen in 1912. the Junior League hitherto had been known for its promotion of volunteerism in women’s, children’s, and education causes. Shepardson had already met and lobbied many of its members through the salon conducted by Kay Williams, a Cleveland arts patron. Elaine Hadden, outgoing president of the Junior League. had also been the first president of Shepardson’s Playhouse Square Association. Earlier that year the Junior League had sponsored its first decorators’ showcase. Which produced a windfall of $65,000 for its treasury. At its annual meeting, only days after the news broke about the demolition plans, the League voted to devote $25,000 to the effort to save the theaters. “We could see what Ray was trying to do was a valid idea,” says Mrs. Hadden, who relishes the League’s initiative as an example of “the growing power of women.”

From the start, the League’s grant was viewed as a magnet to attract matching funds. Six individuals shortly came up with additional $25,000 contributions. To this day Elaine Hadden can call the roll without benefit of notes: Ray Armington of the Cleveland Foundation, Dick Baker of Ernst and Young, Don Grogan, R. Livingston Ireland, Alfred Rankin . . . She and her husband John gave a double pledge of $50,000. “Ray Armington said it was used over and over again,” observes Mrs. Hadden of those pioneering contributions. Various holding tactics were employed over the next few months, including a thirty-day stay negotiated by the City Planning Commission. By the end of the year a group of civic leaders formed a Playhouse Square Operating Company to lease the State and the Ohio. According to their spokesman, Hugh Calkins, “All that we have done is to buy some additional time in which we can try to decide whether something constructive can be done.”

To Ray Shepardson, the eternal optimist, it looked “like the ball has started to roll rather than swing.” He meant the restoration ball, not the wrecking ball, and without realizing it, he was about to give it a decisive shove. It started with a visit every bit as serendipitous as Shepardson’s initial discovery of the State lobby. This time he went to see a show at neighboring Cleveland State University called, in the long-titled vogue of that time, Jacques BreI Is Alive and Living in Paris. It was performed in the lecture hall of the Main Classroom Building. Shepardson caught it on the last night of its run in February, 1973, and was overwhelmed by its modern madrigals of love and war.

After the final bows, Shepardson sought out the director. Joseph J. Garry, Jr., head of Cleveland State’s theater department, had originally produced the show the previous year for the Berea Summer Theater before bringing it to CSU with the same cast. Something like the following exchange ensued:

SHEPARDSON. I want you to come and do it in our cabaret.

GARRY. I didn’t know you had a cabaret.

SHEPARDSON. We will.

At the time Shepardson didn’t have a theater ready, but over at the State he had perhaps the largest theater lobby in the world. He had a dais built in the center and filled the rest with tables and chairs. His stage was little more than a platform, but that and an audience were all that actors ever needed to put on a show. He had the cast from Berea and CSU. All he needed was an audience. He had built it, but would they come?

Jacques Brel Is Alive and Living in Paris opened in the Playhouse Square Cabaret during Holy Week on April 18, 1973. “It’s a collection of perceptions, truths, and insights into the human condition–a modern French counterpart to Moliere, Rabelais, and Voltaire,” says Garry of the show. Performing the songs of the Belgian composer Brel were Providence Hollander, David O. Frazier, Theresa Piteo, and Cliff Bemis – – four names as embedded in Playhouse Square lore as those of the original cast of Oklahoma! in the annals of Broadway. “On a small black stage that has been constructed on one side of the old lobby, four perfectly lovely people . . .made perhaps the most powerful contact with an audience I have ever experienced,” wrote Don Robertson for the Cleveland Press:

“I go to a lot of shows, and sometimes I become quite jaded.

But this production of “Jacques BreI” hit me smack in the

gut. If you care anything about theater, you absolutely

cannot afford to miss it.”

Before the days of the internet and social media, there were two paths to theatrical hits. One was the overnight sensation, in which a line would form from the box office completely around the block on the morning of rave reviews following opening night. The other took longer to catch on, depending, in the absence of Facebook, on word-of-mouth advertising.

Jacques BreI was the latter type, and it was a bit touch-and-go at first. John Hemsath went to work for Playhouse Square at that time, and in lieu of a salary was given the coat-check concession. Shepardson was greeting audiences by night and up on the roof by day, spreading buckets of tar. At the end of each night, according to Garry, they had to count the take to ensure that they could pay the waiters and barmen the next night. But Shepardson, says Garry, was “a genius at marketing.” Back in his college days at State Pacific near Seattle, he had inaugurated the school’s first cultural series, handling everything from booking to ticket sales.

Soon Jacques BreI grew from what began as a three-week stand into a show business phenomenon. Other than touring Broadway shows at the Hanna Theatre around the corner, Shepardson observed, “We were the only ballgame in town . . . .I can remember when we used to draw more than the Indians.” Joe Garry remembers it as “an extraordinary moment of the right people coming together at the right time.” Those involved were surprised at the close relationship between actors and audience. Patrons would come up afterwards to share their memories of those fabulous theaters in their heyday–coming with their parents . . . .on their first date . . . .on anniversaries and special occasions. Clearly they were returning for more than a show, no matter how good; they were also coming to recover pieces of their past. Before long repeat customers became noticeable, many for half a dozen visits or more.

After seven months, Jacques BreI passed two notable milestones. At the end of October 1973, it became the longest-running show in Cleveland’s theatrical history, eclipsing a record established in 1924. It was also said to be the longest-running dinner theater show in the history of the country. But Jacques BreI was just getting warmed up, as other milestones passed with mathematical regularity: 200, 300, 400 performances. It closed after two years and two months on June 29, 1975, having established a new Cleveland record of 550 performances. Not only had the show gotten national publicity, noted Shepardson, but “with it the restoration work in Cleveland was publicized, too.”

How does one follow an act like that? For Shepardson, that was a no-brainer: Put on more shows! Before BreI’s first anniversary, a revue with the even longer title of Ben Bagley’s Decline and Fall of the Entire World as Seen Through the Eyes of Cole Porter opened in the Grand Hall of the Palace Theatre. As Joe Garry said, “Every time we wanted to save another space, we created a show to put in that space.” For the show EI Grande de Coca-Cola they transformed the State’s auditorium into another cabaret. In order to receive charitable gifts and contributions for theater restoration, the nonprofit Playhouse Square Foundation was formed around this time.

Admission was free to The All Night Strut, another cabaret revue in the State auditorium, with Shepardson making a pre-show pitch for restoration contributions. “Where did, you get him? He’s good,” commented one patron to an association staffer. Taken in by the “slightly off” authenticity of his “rumpled gray suit,” she thought Shepardson was part of the show. Even as restoration proceeded in the State, a series of Vegas-style acts such as Sarah Vaughan, Mel Torme, Bill Cosby, and Sergio Mendes attracted 250,000 in attendance. Offstage, some of the stars such as Chita Rivera and Mary Travers of Peter, Paul and Mary, picked up paint brushes and joined volunteers in retouching the theater’s plaster decor. With the encouragement of Shepardson, restaurants such as the Rusty Scupper and Lucarelli’s Sweetwater Cafe began opening in the area, filling the void left by such former gathering places as Stouffer’s and Monaco’s.

In 1978 the Playhouse Square theaters gained the distinction of a listing in the National Register of Historic Places. They also came to the notice of Wolf von Eckardt, architectural critic for the Washington Post and at the time a visiting professor at CSU. “This is the story of a white elephant which has been stirring here for five years, and soon may be strong enough to pull Cleveland’s decrepit downtown out of its doldrums,” he wrote for the Post. He described how “four of the most garishly beautiful old vaudeville-and-movie palaces . . . . ever built” were narrowly saved by “Shepardson and friends” and were being lovingly restored. Cleveland had hitherto lagged behind other American cities in revitalizing its urban core, he concluded, “But if Playhouse Square, as seems more than likely, attracts large numbers of people downtown, a good many of them will decide to settle there.” People were beginning to connect the dots.

There had been one last “crisis situation” to overcome on the way to these testimonials. It came in the form of a renewed demolition threat from the owners of the State and Ohio. This time it was met by a formidable phalanx of opposition, led by a man Shepardson calls “one of the major forgotten people of Playhouse Square.” This was Gordon E. Bell, Shepardson’s college roommate, who came with him to the Cleveland schools and became one of his original Playhouse Square disciples. In 1977 he was serving as the foundation’s executive director, when the Loews Building with its two theaters again fell within the compass of the wrecking ball. Bell contacted Cleveland municipal archivist Roderick Porter, who was interested in historic preservation, and the two of them approached Cuyahoga County Commissioner Bob Sweeney, an advocate of downtown renewal. Together, they arranged for the acquisition of the Loews complex by Cuyahoga County, which undertook to renovate the four-story office building on Euclid Avenue for its own use and leased the two theaters to Playhouse Square for forty years. The city’s Kucinich Administration arranged for a $3.14 million grant from the federal Economic Development Administration to begin restoration work on the State auditorium. At the same time, Playhouse Square secured a lease on the neighboring Palace Theatre.

With three theaters under stable control, Playhouse Square began to attract the support of the city’s power structure. Under the aegis of the Cleveland Foundation, plans were made to renovate the theaters into suitable spaces for such performing arts organizations as Cleveland Ballet and Cleveland Opera. Early in 1980 Playhouse Square launched a capital drive of $18 million to implement those plans and establish a firm business basis for operating the theaters. “This is not a pie-in-the-sky program,” said Charles Raison, Playhouse Square executive secretary, “it can and must work if Cleveland is to have a night life after 5:15 p.m.” A year later Thomas E. Bier of Cleveland State’s College of Urban Affairs, in an op-ed column for the Plain Dealer, called on the city’s private sector to match the commitment of the public sector. “Redevelopment of Playhouse Square is not an ordinary opportunity,” he wrote. “It is, I suggest, in the category of those relatively few make-or-break points that come along in a city’s evolution.” Bier echoed von Eckardt in extolling an attractive downtown as a recruiting tool for bringing “educated young adults” to the city. In challenging the private sector to step up to the plate, he was also renewing Shepardson’s call for more support “from the top.”

By that time, however, Shepardson and Playhouse Square had parted ways. On Christmas Eve of 1979, a story in the Plain Dealer revealed that Shepardson was leaving the crusade he had preached and led to within sight of the promised land, and moving on “to where he can run the show again.” Ironically, his departure appeared to have been hastened by the very development for which he had been waiting: the belated support of the city’s movers and shakers, its banks, corporations, and foundations. “When the establishment began getting behind the project,” reported the Plain Dealer’s William F. Miller, “Shepardson began losing influence and power.” Specifically, a rift had opened up between Shepardson’s vision and that of the powerful Cleveland Foundation, with the latter pushing for the concept of a cultural center as opposed to Shepardson’s predilection for more popular entertainment.

“Given the sizes of the theaters and the needs of opera, ballet, and so on, the Cleveland Foundation thought we had too small a vision,” remembers Gordon Bell. “The feeling was that they wanted people with performing arts credentials.” Shepardson, too, “never dreamed it would become an arts center. I thought it would be an entertainment center where arts would be welcome; instead, it’s an arts center where entertainment is welcome,” he would note later. At the time, Shepardson moved on to work his restoration magic in other cities. His last ties to the city were cut in May of 1980, when his contract as booking agent for Playhouse Square wasn’t renewed by mutual consent.

According to Plain Dealer music critic Robert Finn, Shepardson had never had many fans in Cleveland’s boardrooms, which viewed him as “a starry-eyed nobody, and an outsider to boot.” Shepardson probably didn’t reassure them when he let his long sideburns and mustache expand into a full facial beard. He recalls that developers viewed visionaries such as himself as “broke f—–g idiots.”

Yet Shepardson carried no grudges. Returning within a year to see the restored State auditorium, he was moved to tears. “I just could not believe it was so beautiful and that I lived to see it actually happen,” he said. In 1984, when Cleveland celebrated the formal opening of Playhouse Square Center, he sent a tongue-in-cheek testimonial: “I told you if I left town you guys would get the money.” He would call Playhouse Square under the management of his successors “the best-run performing arts center in the U.S.”

Even before leaving Cleveland, Shepardson had become involved in a campaign to restore the Palace Theater in Columbus. “I’d been there [Cleveland] long enough,” he says. “I was getting involved nationally and became a sort of fanatical preservationist.” He moved on to Cincinnati and Louisville, then to St. Louis, Portland, and Seattle. “In 1985 I was living in five cities,” he recalls. He estimates that he has played a part in some forty to fifty theater restorations, including five in Detroit alone. “Saving Playhouse Square allowed me to do world-class entertainment,” he states. “I had credibility in the industry.”

Playhouse Square meanwhile pursued its own course to become what Variety, the show business weekly, would later call a “Cleveland arts juggernaut.” In 1982 it reopened the renovated Ohio Theatre as the new home of the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival, which moved downtown from its former home in suburban Lakewood. Two years later the restored State Theatre was unveiled as the new quarters for Cleveland Ballet and Cleveland Opera. The Palace soon followed as a sumptuous venue for touring shows and performers. Nearly lost in the stir was the Allen, the site of Shepardson’s initial ventures in bringing people back downtown. Almost at the last minute, the Cleveland Foundation purchased the entire Bulkley Building complex and leased the ensconsed Allen to Playhouse Square, which restored and added it to its collection of stages.

Indicative of Playhouse Square’s success was the drafting of its president, Lawrence Wilker, to run Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. He was succeeded by Art Falco, who expanded the foundation’s vision from theaters into a theater district. A garage was constructed on Chester Avenue, an office building on Huron, and a Wyndham Hotel on Euclid Avenue. When the Hanna Building complex came on the market, it too was snapped up by Playhouse Square, which saw itsreal estate ventures as both “a working endowment for the theaters” and a means of controlling the surrounding streetscape. “The hallmark of Playhouse Square is that they realized a successful theater district could only work if there was a successful neighborhood,” Joe Roman of the Greater Cleveland Partnership told the Wall Street Journal, which extolled the newly styled Playhouse Square as “a unique business model in downtown Cleveland.”

“You might call it a pioneer. Clearly it was in back at the beginning of Cleveland’s renaissance,” stated a press secretary for former Mayor Michael White. Former Mayor George Voinovich credited it with being the city’s first public/private partnership. “The Warehouse District, the Tower City project, Gateway, the Flats, the East Fourth Street district–they all followed Playhouse Square,” recently noted Arthur Ziegler, a historic preservationist from Pittsburgh. In awarding him an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in 2008, Case Western Reserve University testified that “The work spearheaded by Shepardson has been hailed by civic leaders as one of the top 10 successes in Cleveland’s history.”

No single individual had made it happen, but without one specific person it couldn’t have happened. Except for the timely intervention of Ray Shepardson, there would have been little left to save. “To imagine what would have happened to the city if the Playhouse Square theaters had been bulldozed . . . . is to shudder,” wrote Plain Dealer architecture critic Steven Litt.

There is a lingering perception of Shepardson as the original “forgotten man” of Playhouse Square, perhaps going back to the absence of his name from the foundation’s original souvenir book (the “Red Book”) in 1975. That omission, however, was by his choice, not Playhouse Square’s. “If it works,” he told editor Kathleen Kennedy, “they’ll know.” It does, and they do.

Back in 1879, inventor Charles F. Brush had attracted national attention by lighting Cleveland’s Public Square with his new electric arc lamps. Over the following century the lights gradually dimmed with the decline of the central city. Nearly a hundred years after Brush, Ray Shepardson was the man who turned the lights back on.

 

For more Cleveland Stores

 

For more on Playhouse Square

 

Howard Metzenbaum from the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

The link is here

METZENBAUM, HOWARD MORTON (4 June 1917 – 12 March 2008), a staunchly liberal U.S. Senator during an era of conservative political ascendency associated with the presidency of Ronald Reagan. Born in Cleveland to Anna and Charles Metzenbaum, Howard balanced school work with business by fetching his neighbors’ groceries for tips. After graduating from Glenville High School, Metzenbaum attended The Ohio State University, where he would earn both bachelors (1939) and law degree (1941). Metzenbaum was able to pay his way through college by selling flowers outside of Ohio Stadium and along High Street, the University’s main thoroughfare. He would use his time off school in the summers to travel the state selling personal hygiene goods.

Although he received his law degree in 1941, Metzenbaum found his Jewish faith prevented potential law firms from hiring him. Facing bitter anti-Semitism, Metzenbaum returned to Cleveland and found employment representing more open minded labor union. Metzenbaum represented and filed tax returns for the Communications Workers of America and the International Association of Machinists before entering politics in 1943 by winning a seat in the Ohio House as a Democrat. Metzenbaum married Shirley Turoff on August 8, 1946. Metzenbaum used his success to catapult him into the Ohio Senate in 1947, but left politics in 1950 to pursue wealth in private enterprise.

Metzenbaum and lifelong friend Alva T. (Ted) Bonda founded Airport Parking Company of America (APCOA) in 1949. In 1951 they secured a contract to operate at CLEVELAND-HOPKINS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, inaugurating the airport parking industry. Metzenbaum earned his fortune through APCOA, eventually selling the business to International Telephone & Telegraph (ITT) in 1966. His business success allowed Mezenbaum to settle in the Shaker Heights suburban community with his wife. Shirley gave birth to four daughters during these years: Barbara, Susan, Shelley, and Amy.

The world of politics, however, always beckoned. In 1958, Metzenbaum earned political capital as the campaign manager for Stephen M. Young’s successful challenge to Republican Senator and former Vice-Presidential candidate (1944) John Bricker. Metzenbaum returned as Young’s campaign manager, successfully earning his candidate re-election in 1964. When Young announced he would not seek a third term, Metzenbaum readied his own candidacy for the 1970 election. Metzenbaum, however, faced a stiff challenge in the Democratic primary when astronaut John H. Glenn, Jr. announced his desire to seek the office as a Democrat. Although he narrowly defeated Glenn in the primary (49%-51%), Metzenbaum lost the general election to Republican candidate Robert Taft, Jr., heir to the Taft political family.

Undaunted, Metzenbaum returned to private business in Cleveland, where he and David Skylar purchased the suburban Cleveland chainSUN NEWSPAPERS. Fate handed Metzenbaum a US Senate seat in 1974, when Ohio’s Democratic Governor, Jack Gilligan, appointed Metzenbaum to fill the seat vacated by Senator William B. Saxbe, who had accepted Richard Nixon’s offer to serve as US Attorney General. The turn of events proved a mixed blessing, for Metzenbaum was forced to immediately defend the expiring seat in the 1974 Democratic primary. Again he faced John Glenn, but after a grueling campaign that lead to a permanent rift between the two men Glenn prevailed and went on to win the general election.

Two years later Metzenbaum successfully challenged Robert Taft in a rematch of the close 1970 campaign, winning the general election. Although three decades removed from his first stint in politics, Metzenbaum championed issues familiar to aging New Deal Democrats. Metzenbaum played a prominent role in the passage of legislation requiring advance notice of plant closing, known as the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, various gun control laws, pension protection, safety standards for infant formula, and nutrition labels on food products. Metzenbaum’s staunchly liberal agenda attracted the ire of Republicans and even some fellow Democrats, but his fierce opposition to conservative legislation earned him a reputation as “Senator No.”

Metzenbaum was a master of the filibuster, often employing it to disrupt legislation he dubbed “Christmas tree bills,” decorated with pet projects or corporate loopholes. When his filibusters failed, Metzenbaum invented a new stalling tactic. When a two week filibuster against a bill to lift price controls on natural gas was broken, Metzenbaum loaded the bill with hundreds of amendments and demanded a roll-call vote on each one, effectively killing the legislation. Metzenbaum’s tactics earned him both respect and scorn from his colleagues on the Hill. While Senator Bob Dole referred to Metzenbaum as “the commissioner,” Senator Ted Stevens called him a “pain in the ass.”

Metzenbaum also attempted to bring a measure of culture to Washington, D.C. during his years in the Senate. His office was decorated with modern art and he often held mixers there where artists such as painter Robert Rauschenberg and folk singer Mary Travis were guests of honor for assembled lawmakers, lobbyists, and reporters. His frayed relationship with John Glenn soon thawed, too, when in 1983 Metzenbaum endorsed Glenn in his unsuccessful run for the Presidency. Glenn returned the favor, publicly defending Metzenbaum after Cleveland Mayor George Voinovich accused the Senator of being soft on child pornography during the 1988 election.

Metzenbaum continued to endure anti-Semitic remarks throughout his career. Metzenbaum?s fierce opposition to newly-elected President Regan’s nominees raised tensions on the Capital. Senator Ernest Hollings of South Carolina called Metzenbaum the “senator from B’nai Brith” on the Senate floor during the 1981 session, an astonishing insult in the otherwise sober , chamber. This and other events pushed Metzenbaum to advocate for anti-discrimination policy, such as the Howard M. Metzenbaum Multiethnic Placement Act of 1994, which prohibits federally-funded adoption agencies from delaying or denying child placement on the grounds of race or ethnicity.

Metzenbaum announced he would not seek a fourth term, making way for a run by his son-in-law, Joel Hyatt, who lost the general election to Republican Mike DeWine. Metzenbaum remained active during his retirement from elected office, serving as a part-time president of the non-profit Consumer Federation of America. He also served as a board member of the American Cancer Society, Northern Ohio Children’s Performing Music Foundation, Inc., and acted as a fellow at Brandeis University. He also spent much of his retirement with his family playing tennis, swimming, and travelling. He and his wife Shirley celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary in 2006, before his health began to decline.

He died at his family home in Aventury, Florida, on March 12, 2008. He was interred in Mayfield Cemetery in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.


Diemer, Tom, Fighting the Unbeatable Foe: Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio, the Washington Years (Kent: Kent State University Press, 2008)


 

Last Modified: 24 Jul 2012 10:40:15 AM

Retired Celeste reflects at 75 on his public career

From the Columbus Dispatch, 1/1/13

 

Retired Celeste reflects at 75 on his public

career

Ex-governor says he relished job, despite its wounds

By Joe Hallett
The Columbus Dispatch Tuesday January 1, 2013 7:16 AM

And now, finally, Celeste is retired. Well …A classic goatee, close- cropped hair and svelte healthiness; a pin- striped shirt, bluejeans and navy-blue sport jacket — it all says something about a man. Mostly this: He’s hip.

But when the man is 75, as is Richard F. Celeste, the look says mostly this: He’s comfortable in his own skin.

That much was evident during a recent hour- plus conversation with one of the most- accomplished and – consequential Ohioans of the past half-century: a Rhodes scholar, state legislator, lieutenant governor, director of the Peace Corps, governor, ambassador to India and college president.

celeste75-art0-gs4l0uca-1richard-celeste-5.jpg

FILE PHOTO

Then-Gov. Richard F. Celeste displays a copy of The Dispatch reporting his re-election victory over former Gov. James A. Rhodes in November 1986. Republicans say the Democratic governor was willing to work with them, and they praise his intellect.

Retired is the wrong word,” he said. “ Redirected is the right word. I call myself a senior adviser.”

More than a year out from his retirement after nearly nine years as president of Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Celeste is doing what senior statesmen do: serve on corporate and nonprofit boards, make a few bucks consulting, and find time to enjoy family and think deep thoughts, something the big-brained Celeste did even when he was crazy-busy.

On Nov. 11, Celeste’s birthday, his blended family and the cadre of “Celestials” he stirred to the cause of public service gathered at son Christopher’s house in Columbus to celebrate and commemorate the 30th anniversary of his election as Ohio’s 64th governor.

At age 21, Jan Allen was inspired to put law school on hold in 1978 and

At age 21, Jan Allen was inspired to put law school on hold in 1978 and

join Celeste’s first and failed quest for governor. Allen said the birthday party rekindled the esprit de corps of a once-youthful troop enticed by Celeste, a leader “who had the energy, the charisma, the communications skills and the incredible intelligence” on par with a famous peer, former President Bill Clinton, who was governor of Arkansas throughout Celeste’s tenure as Ohio governor, 1983-91.

“There is something about the Dick Celestes and Bill Clintons of the world,” said Allen, a senior staff member in Celeste’s first term. “They just create a ton of energy around them.”

Thirty years ago at this time, Celeste was assembling the most diverse and youthful cabinet the state had ever seen. It included a half-dozen women and four African-Americans, and the average age was 35.

Optimism abounded despite enormous challenges, including pushing a 40 percent income-tax increase through the legislature to close a $540 million state-budget deficit, and dragging Ohio into a technologically evolving world economy.

In the back of every Celestial’s mind, including the governor-elect’s, was the idea that a strong first term would lead to not only a second, but also a shot at the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988.

A John Lennon lyric — Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans — caught up with Celeste. Over the 30 years since 1982, life has come at him with its unpredictable fullness, a fury of ups and downs, of exhilarating highs and painful lows, dashing his hopes for the presidency but presenting vistas of opportunity and achievement that cause one to move forward without regret.

“I really don’t look back very much,” Celeste said. “I’m a what’s-ahead guy.”

What was ahead for Celeste after he left the governor’s office was a 1997 appointment by then-President Clinton to be ambassador to India, where, 34 years earlier, he had been posted as an assistant to Ambassador Chester Bowles, a cherished mentor.

In 2002, when Celeste was a finalist for the presidency of Case Western Reserve University in his hometown, Cleveland — a job he knew he wouldn’t get because the trustees thought he would serve only a few years and then run for governor or U.S. Senate in 2006 — a headhunter told him about Colorado College.

“I loved being a college president because I love being around young people, and throughout my career, part of what I tried to do — because it was what Chester Bowles did for me in the ’60s — was always look for young people to join me and to give them substantial responsibility.”

Celeste has 13 grandchildren, including two who are students at Colorado College. He and his wife, Jacqueline, who is about 27 years younger than he, still live in Colorado Springs with their 15-year-old son, Sam.

Calling Sam “a terrific young man,” Celeste said: “With him, I make up for some of the time I didn’t spend with my older kids when I was on my arc of ambition, trying to become governor of Ohio and all of that stuff.”

Celeste married Jacqueline Lundquist, a former Washington, D.C., public-

Celeste married Jacqueline Lundquist, a former Washington, D.C., public-

relations consultant, in 1995 after his 33-year marriage to Dagmar ended in divorce. Any wounds appear to have been healed by time. Celeste calls Dagmar “a good friend” and each year, he, Jacqueline and Sam go to a family reunion at Dagmar’s Lake Erie home on Kelleys Island with the six children from Dick and Dagmar’s marriage, who range in age from 49 to 35. Dagmar and all the kids were at the Nov. 11 party.

“We all talk regularly and don’t spend enough time together, and, as much as we try, it’s never enough,” Celeste said.

Reflecting on his career, Celeste said being governor is “probably the best job in public life,” and he relished his eight years.

“I loved every day of it, even when Mary Anne Sharkey was kicking my ass. My family didn’t always like it, but I loved every day of it. I felt enormously privileged to serve. I believe we made a big difference.”

Sharkey, now a Cleveland-area political consultant, was Statehouse bureau chief for The Plain Dealer and the co-author of a story in June 1987 alleging that Celeste had engaged in several extramarital affairs. Although Celeste acknowledged that the story “was certainly a consideration” in his decision not to run for president the following year, he said he had decided before then, after forays to Iowa and New Hampshire, that he had no appetite for the fundraising and time demands of a presidential bid.

“And my family had enough issues with me in public life, and me personally, that I didn’t want to put them through it,” he said.

Conceding that “it was hard not to like Dick Celeste,” Sharkey said his governorship failed to fulfill the “enormous potential” of the man. Although Celeste had promised to end cronyism in state government, stories abounded in the Ohio press about scandals and favoritism that marred his tenure, including criminal convictions of at least two high-level appointees.

“The Celeste administration brought Cleveland-style politics to the Statehouse, and they ended up making Cleveland politics a pejorative term,” Sharkey said.

To this day, some Celestials will not speak to Sharkey, but Celeste is not one of them. “He hugged me the last time he saw me,” she said. “People always thought it was personal, and it was not.”

Amid the bad was plenty of good, and in many areas, Celeste excelled as governor. He put the state on a sound financial footing and funded education and higher education at record levels, creating innovative programs such as Eminent Scholars to attract top research professors and the “ Edison program” to seed research that spurred the state’s growth in high-tech jobs.

Celeste was nationally praised for moving mental-health services to community-based care, boosting money for early-childhood education and creating the PASSPORT program to help elderly citizens receive in- home services. He fearlessly raised the state gasoline tax several times to fund vast improvements in the state’s highway system. Ohio’s unemployment rate was 14.4 percent when Celeste took office and under 5 percent when he left.

“He really was good to work with,” said Ohio House Speaker William G. Batchelder, R-Medina, who was in the House minority when Celeste was governor. “He had a first-rate mind. I think a lot of people just didn’t realize how bright he was.”

Celeste’s willingness to work across the aisle helped him handle Ohio’s 1985 savings-and-loan crisis, at the time the nation’s worst banking crisis since the Great Depression.

Stanley Aronoff of Cincinnati, a Republican who was the Senate president from 1989 to 1996, said Celeste’s creativeness and bipartisan approach ensured a solution that kept depositors from losing money in 69 privately insured savings and loans that the governor ordered closed until buyers for them were found.

“He thought beyond Ohio in some respects,” Aronoff said. “He found it very important to do some things that aren’t normally on a governor’s radar screen, and he had an ally in me. He didn’t mind calling me late at night. His mind was always buzzing in a positive way.”

Celeste said he was fortunate to govern in “a more-genteel time,” before government became paralyzed by hyperpartisanship. “Unyielding division is not healthy for the body politic,” he said.

“It’s a question of, how do you create a place where it’s safe to have real conversations and to think about compromise and ask the question, ‘Is there an Ohio interest that comes before a Republican interest and a Democratic interest in the process?’

jhallett@dispatch.com 

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