Friday, February 29, 2008

When the president comes to town


When former President Bill Clinton came to town. The editors (That's Local Content Editor Jamie Steven to my left) got to sit in a little room down the hall and make updates on the Web site while the reporters and photographers got to hobnob with the Prez.

Weight loss progress


Get your own graph at skinnyr


I am 15 weeks into my weight loss program and closing in on the 10 percent mark. I started at 250 pounds on Nov. 16. I am seven pounds away from my short-term goal and 28 pounds away from my long-term goal. I am 68 pound away from my impossible goal. Hurray for me.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

this seemed like a worthwhile thing to post

Beating Joe Klein

Here is a story that encapsulates the decisions and consequences a small town newspaper editor faces.
Most of the hard decisions are not about news. News decisions are easy. The hard decisions have to do with resources.
In January of 2006 we got word that Paul Hackett was coming to Marion to talk to constituents at Buffalo Wild Wings.
Hackett, you probably don’t remember, was the Marine veteran just back from Iraq that was running in the Democratic primary for United State Senator against Sherrod Brown.
Because of resources we rely on the reports from the Associated Press for most of our statewide coverage. Our local reporters and photographers need to concentrate on local news to keep our pages filled with the things the Associated Press cannot cover.
So, when a statewide story comes to town, we have a decision to make.
I really can’t remember all the details of Hackett’s visit. I seem to remember that we heard about it at the last minute and that everybody on staff already had assignments on their schedules.
Normally, what we would do in a case like this, is send a photographer and then pick up something off the wire to run with the picture. None of the writers on our staff would have enough background information and expertise to write anything more than we could tell in picture.
Ideally, what we would have liked to have done was to promote the fact that he was coming. If we had something in the newspaper prior to his visit we could have gotten a crowd out to see him and have something to report - Big crowd for upstart politician.
We decided, reluctantly, to give it a pass and move on.
A few days later I got an anonymous phone call.
“Time magazine is covering events in Marion better than you are,” the caller said.
I visited Time magazine online and found Hackett’s story in Joe Klein’s “In the Arena” column.
I didn’t see that coming.
I never expected to see a national columnist covering something in Marion.
Last Saturday night I was lounging on the couch watching a movie with my wife when my phone rang.
Governor Strickland, the caller said, was going to be at a restaurant in Marion on Sunday at 1 p.m.
Sunday is a day when we have very light staffing. We cover planned events and we respond to breaking news, but we don’t have someone sitting in the bullpen waiting for news to happen.
This was another political race story. Strickland was making a tour in support of Hillary Clinton.
Again this would be a case when a photo and a wire story would be perfect, but I had to decide if I wanted a photographer to start racking up overtime hours during a week when we would have more last-minute political assignments and high school basketball playoffs.
In the end, I decided to attend the event myself with a camera. The Governor is an important person and he doesn't stop in Marion often (he came here when he was running for office, but this was his first visit as Governor).
I went to Perkins at 1 p.m. on Sunday, sat in a room full of loyal Democrats and waited.
The Governor arrived with his entourage and began to circle the tables talking with and charming diners.
You could tell the staff members. They all, even the women, wore dark blue suits and had Hillary Clinton buttons on their lapels.
There was one guy that was obviously with the group but, also obviously, not part of the group.
One of the local Democrats introduced me to him.
“Tom, have you met Joe Klein?”
“You’ve been here before,” I said.
“People keep telling me that,” he replied. “I don’t really remember.”
“Oh, I remember,” I said.
In the next day’s paper we ran a picture of Strickland talking with a couple of local guys about the election. I got a rare photo credit and beat Joe Klein on a story in Marion for the first time in my life.


Tom Graser/The Marion Star

Ohio Governor Ted Strickland talks with Eric Johnson, left of Harpster and his father Robert Johnson of Marion, at Perkins Sunday afternoon. Strickland was in town in support of Hillary Clinton's campaign for the Democratic Presidential nomination. The Ohio primary, which is Tuesday, March 4, is thought by many to be crucial for Clinton to stay in the race.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Based on Lucy's idea


Lucy had an idea for a cartoon using pi. This is the rough draft. I had to do it early in the morning because her plans were way too elaborate for my meager skills. Hopefully, she will be happy with this and we can work to make it just a little better. She is an unyielding task master.

Why the line is so long at the face painting booth



It used to be that little girls got a rainbow painted on their cheeks and boys got a spider. Now, it is the full face mask. Boy's are all getting their entire faces painted like Spiderman and girls - if you are like Lucy - go for the dog look. It takes a lot longer than a rainbow.
I hadn't realized what Lucy had asked for and was a bit surprised when I saw the artist start to apply broad brush strokes of burnt Sienna. Knowing Lucy, she could have asked to be painted like one of her African-American friends at school. It might have sounded OK to the high school girl doing the painting but I wasn't sure how well it would play in the rest of the mall. I breathed a sigh of relief when I saw the whiskers being applied.
It turns out that she wasn't a dog either. She was a puppy. Which means I was treated to high pitched yips for the rest of the day. Fortunately, the full face mask paint job gets itchy after awhile and she removed it before we went absolutely bonkers what with a new puppy in the house.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Friday, February 15, 2008

another lunch note


Lunch note


I have done a series of lunch notes drawn on teabag wrappers. Lucy has not been impressed.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Valentine's Day Shirts


Don't worry, Lucy doesn't read this blog. The one on the left is hand painted with paints Mary gave me for Christmas. The one on the right is a t-shirt transfer I made from a bad design I drew myself.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

The colors of cancer

Lavender-General Cancer
Gold-Childhood Cancer
Pink-Breast
Brown-Colon
Kelly Green-Kidney
Orange-Leukemia
Clear-Lung
Lime Green-Lymphoma
Black-Melanoma
Burgundy-Multiple Myeloma
Teal-Ovarian
Purple-Pancreatic Cancer
Blue-Prostate Cancer
Light Yellow-Sarcoma/bone
Peach-Uterine Cancer
Gray-Brain

Friday, February 08, 2008

Girls Rock!


I have to admit it.

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

still obsessed with this


It's up for an Academy Award.


It is Relay For Life time! Actually we have been meeting since October but now it is getting serious. I went to a big training session in Columbus over the weekend and am now primed to start raising money for the American Cancer Society.

You can help me out by visiting my Relay For Life page



My lofty goal is to make a difference in my daughter's life. I know I do that every day by being the goofiest dad on the block. But, I want to do it in a good way too. Lucy will grow up facing a battery of tests beginning as a young adult because of her father's history. My hope is that if she ever needs treatment, the treatment would not be as extreme as mine. My hope is that the screening will be easier. My hope is that we will not be talking about treatment in hope of a cure, but just about cures. The only way to do that is with money.
I have chosen to go along with the American Cancer Society because they provide more money for cancer research than anyone else besides the government. And, it is their advocacy work with the government that helps keep that money flowing.
Please forgive me for bugging you about this. If you give to an American Cancer Society event in your community, that's great - keep doing it. If you want to donate money through me, that's great too. If you already have your charitable dollars planned for something else, that's not a problem. We need money to beat cancer but I will settle for awareness.
Most of you that read this page are my friends. I can't prevent you from getting cancer - unless I talked you into a colonoscopy (colon cancer can be prevented) - But, maybe I can prevent your children from getting cancer. That is something I want to be a part of.

Monday, February 04, 2008

How Asheville plays in Cleveland


From the Monday Plain Dealer.
Click on the pix to see it in its glorious largeness.

weekend excuses


I didn't do much with Lucy this weekend for various selfish reasons. To make myself feel better I took a picture of the story board of the first act of the Emily Woods movie. We are still sporadically working on the script for the next project. I have to get it finished soon before Lucy makes it too elaborate.

Saturday, February 02, 2008

watch your back

Ralph in 08


Finally a candidate I can get behind!

sketchy results


I know these spring scales are wildly inaccurate and sometimes when you move on the scale you can alter the weight a pound or two, but I have been pretty consistent with this one. I stand in the same place at about the same time every day. I expect this to go up tomorrow. Still I will celebrate this milestone today! It marks a 20 pound loss in a 11 weeks.