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August 23, 2008

Convention coverage

For those who are going to be glued to convention coverage in the coming week, be aware that at the UDJ we have on our opening Web page all the coverage from our sister paper The Denver Post. Go to www.ukiahdailyjournal.com and you can click into the section and get the complete Denver Post coverage of the Democratic convention.
When the Republicans convene in Minnesota the week after, I believe we will have the same Web site access on our opening page from our sister paper in St. Paul.
So you can get all the convention coverage in the coming weeks right from www.ukiahdailyjournal.com.
We will also have stories from our own correspondent Tim Riley who will be attending both conventions on our behalf and will be looking to connect with Mendocino County residents there. If you know anyone locally who will be at either convention, email me their contact info at udjkcm@pacific.net and I'll make sure TIm gets it so he can talk to them while they're there.

August 22, 2008

Changes at the Daily Journal

As happens here at the Daily Journal from time to time, we are having a splash of turnover in our newsroom staff. Some of you may have noticed the byline of David Minton. He is our new education reporter. He will cover Ukiah Unified School District, Mendocino Community College and The Mendocino County Office of Education. Also he will cover a variety of other things like children and youth, health and transportation, and write features. His phone number is 468-3522 and his email will be udjdm@pacific.net as soon as I get it set up - which should be today.
Our law enforcement and courts reporter Ben Brown is leaving us Aug. 29 for San Jose and we have a Humboldt State journalism school about-to-be-graduate Zack Cinek coming in. Zack hails from Willits and will serve a five-week internship with us to fulfill his last semester of course work. We hope to make him a permanent part of our staff at the end of that time. He will takeover the police/court beat. That beat also includes agriculture and the environment. After Aug. 29 contact Zack at 468-3521 or udjzc@pacific.net
Our sports editor Anthony Dion is leaving us for a new job in Colorado. His last day is Saturday. On Sunday I will become sports editor for a time so expect the sports pages to be abbreviated until we find a replacement. I have interviewed six candidates from all around the U.S. this week and will offer the job to someone today. If I get an acceptance this weekend I hope to have a new sports editor in place by mid Sept. at the latest. In the meantime all you sports coaches, parents and players, please use our web site sports reporting feature or call up at 468-3518 to report scores or just email udjsports@pacific.net with your game reports. I will have a photographer out and about shooting local games but I won't always have the results right away unless people call in. I will have no one to actually cover games. Our part time sports writer position is also still open, so anyone locally who wants to write sports and can learn to lay out pages on our Quark desktop publishing system should come into the office at 590 S. School St and fill out an application.

August 13, 2008

Something new from "For Better or Worse"

Here's a press release we got today:

“For Better or For Worse” Sets Date to Start Over with New Material

Kansas City, MO (Aug. 13, 2008)—Calling the next phase of her comic strips "new-runs," Lynn Johnston announced that beginning Monday, Sept. 1, her immensely popular "For Better or For Worse" will start over again. Using new comic strips drawn in the style she used 29 years ago when the Patterson family first appeared on comic pages, Johnston will begin retelling their story from the beginning, eventually blending at least half of the classic original comic strips with new material.

Johnston explains her approach and talks about why changes in her personal life led her to back off from earlier plans to retire on a video posted on YouTube.com. Please copy and paste this url into your Web browser: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iUzkOxgmmc4

“Everything in September is new,” said Johnston, "the punch lines, the drawing, all are new. The only thing retro is the way I'm drawing everything. I want it to flow into the classic material seamlessly.”

“This first year, the ratio of old to new will be at least 50-50,” explains Johnston. “I want this to be the best thing I’ve ever done, and I’m having so much fun drawing Lizzie as a baby again and revisiting all the characters.”

“For a generation of new readers unfamiliar with ‘For Better or For Worse,’ it’s a chance to begin an exciting journey; for current fans, it’s a chance to relive their favorite episodes,” says Lee Salem, president and editor of Universal Press Syndicate, Johnston’s syndicate. One such episode is the adoption of Farley, the Patterson’s beloved dog. That will come in October.

For the past year, Lynn Johnston’s widely syndicated comic strip has been a blend of new and old storylines.

“At first I thought that I could segue back and forth from today to yesterday, but that became very confusing. Some people really enjoyed it and some just wanted us to get on with the story,” she says.

Johnston will select material from her collection of almost 10,000 archival strips to help retell the Patterson family's story as her longtime fans remember it, pausing in spots to update references that seem confusing or even to flesh out characters she didn't explore in the first telling.

"I'm starting right at the very beginning—when Elizabeth was a little crawling baby and couldn’t say too much, and Michael was in kindergarten,” she adds. “I’m a better storyteller now, and I want to … improve the storyline or take a piece of art and make it better. What a luxury to change, fix and to augment. I'm such a perfectionist; I want to put my hands on it and have it tweaked here and there.”

Johnston says that a change in her marital status changed her mind about retiring completely.

"At this time in my life I thought I would be on a cruise ship to Panama or the Mediterranean, retired with my Tilley hats, my sneakers. But I’m a single lady now, and I want to keep working,” she says. “Because I don't have to work 365 days of new material into a year, I can still take some time off to paint and travel.”

“I’m considering this a renewal, not a retirement,” she adds.

Over the years, not only did her characters age in real time in the strip, but Johnston’s art style changed, too.

“When I first started the strip, the comic’s style was fast and loose, probably because I was so busy and I had to get it out fast,” she says. “It had a happy freedom to it. What I’m experiencing now by redrawing, it’s almost like I’m drawing portraits. I'm changing John's jaw. And over the years, Elly's nose grew up to the size of a potato. Now, I'm drawing it smaller again, the way it was when I first started to draw. There is a huge difference between the earlier and the later styles.”

“For Better or For Worse” has been syndicated since December 1979. In 1985, Johnston became the first woman to receive the Reuben Award for Cartoonist of the Year from the National Cartoonists Society. She has also received the Order of Canada and claims a star on Canada’s Walk of Fame. This summer, Johnston was inducted into the "Giants of the North" -- the Canadian Cartoonists' Hall of Fame. She lives in Ontario.

"For Better or For Worse" now appears in more than 2,000 papers around the world. Read by people of all ages, the award-winning comic strip deals honestly with both the lighthearted and the serious, and has effectively brought families together for laughter, tears and dialogue. Johnston has produced 46 books about her strip, and her strip has been adapted into six animated television specials and a popular animated series.

Biographical information and more can be found at www.amuniversal.com/ups and www.fbofw.com . Daily strips are posted on www.gocomics.com .


What a surprise

I got back from a wonderful vacation at a beach house back east to find the surprising news about John Enquist, the long time Mendocino County Winegrowers Alliance director who went on to become the head of the newly formed Mendocino Winegrape and Wine Commission.
According to the press release from the Commission which we reported on when it came out the first week in August, Enquist allegedly misappropriated about $200,000 from the new Commission funds. The Commission and Enquist apparently came to a settlement after a state audit of the books as Enquist is not being prosecuted and the press release indicated he is not accepting any official liability. However he did repay the commission $217,803.82. What he was doing with that money will forever be a mystery to most of us I guess.
The Commission says it now has some new auditing procedures in place that will prevent whatever didn't happen from happening again.
The release also indicates that Enquist was terminated from his job last December, when at the time the public was told he was just moving on and they threw a big party for him.
I know that the business community hates bad news and a brand new commission already having a financial scandal doesn't help, but it also looks just as bad for the public to find out after the fact that all this was going on. I know everyone is always worried about someone suing someone and they have to be careful not to make a formal accusation in public against someone they weren't willing to formally accuse before the law.
They got their money back, so they just want to put it behind them.
Enquist obviously had the money on hand to give back to them and he was willing to pay the additional expenses of the recovery of the funds so he's no doubt glad to have the thing behind him too. Nothing has to go on his record or his resume. Unfortunately, Google will still be around and the reporting on this will be out there in cyberspace forever.
I assume the press release was approved by him or his legal representatives.
I am amazed at John. I worked with him on a couple of local projects and saw him several times a year and liked him when he was with the Winegrowers. He was always a good source for news on the local wine business. Why would anyone get tangled up in something like this? It makes no sense.