Sunday, March 19, 2023

Kindness


 












Kindness is the quality of being friendly, generous, and considerate. It is something I always noticed about the woman I married. Lynn always made an effort to recognize people around her everywhere she went. Her kindness was felt by grocery store personnel, restaurant staff, healthcare workers, teachers, police and countless others. She let people know they were appreciated – especially the people that are too often taken for granted. This note carefully crafted on airline cocktail napkin by a flight attendant in 2021 speaks volumes. The message is genuine and an unsolicited testimonial. Lynn shared it with me upon returning to Saint Louis from a trip to visit with family in New Jersey in the Fall of 2021. Just a few months later she was gone 2/3/2022 RIP Lynn. 


  

 



Thursday, March 16, 2023

Easter Week in Cleveland - Janie part 5


April showers bring May flowers, or so they say. I confess it has been 75 days since Janie and I sat courtside at the Cavs – Bucs game in Cleveland and 311 days since she met Dan and I at the Pier W restaurant on my birthday. (We’ve been together in August in Cleveland, October in Columbus and again in January in Cleveland. We have a comfortable chemistry and just enough mutual admiration to fuel daily text messages. It also supports my own ongoing campaign to keep the U.S. Postal Service in business.)

My wife Lynn has been gone 417 days. I have been blessed with remarkable kids (Lindsey and Ben) who have families of their own – each with caring spouses and each with boys born in the vintage year 2016.

A huge, and somewhat unexpected, bonus is Toby, my mother-in-law, of whom I have always known to be a courageous stoic. We talk on the phone weekly.  Recently she offered this amazing bit of encouragement. "It’s important to turn the page…and you have," She says. This amazing woman (now in her 90s) lost her husband in 1993 and her daughter (my wife of 41 years) in 2022. “Stay busy, it’s important,” she advises. I love the Matriarch!









My trip to Cleveland is driven by the desire to see Janie again but tempered by the window of low airline fares. I land on April 6-9 and my brother Dan negotiates the special rate at the Winton Place in Lakewood. It’s Easter Week. Janie apologizes about a variety of family plans she has with her grandchildren. (Janie reports: Well they are going to have to make a traditional nutroll, and there is an Easter Egg hunt… She's back from a drive to visit her youngest (Luke) and his fiance (Meredith) in Charlotte. She added a side trip to South Carolina to watch some professional tennis...before returning to Cleveland.

Janie is good at staying busy herself. She's been divorced for 9+ years and navigates family occassions with her four children, here former husband, her three brothers, a bundle of cousins, a former sister in law, five granddaughters and another one by former daughter-in-law's previous marraige. All the while she remains a Soccer mom at heart, a basketball fan and a devoted reader of the Sunday New York Times. She maintains a robust schedule of trips to the theater, concerts, comedy shows and movies. She has been a nurse for 42 years and, in spite of declaring retirement, she takes a pretty regular number of shifts at University Hospital. (Needless to say, I feel fortunate when she can any make time for me.)












Berthe Moriset about 1869-73 by Edouard Manet

My brother Dan agrees to greet me at Cleveland Hopkins airport and I've got a pair of ticket to see Noises Off at the Beck Center on Thursday evening. An outline and some highlights of this vist:

April 6 (Thursday) - Southwest STL to CLE. Winton Place. Panera (w/Janie), Noises Off at the Beck Center ("Hang up the phone, Leave the Sardines."). 

April 7 (Friday) - Museum of Contemorary Art (MOCA) and Cleveland Institure of Art with Dan. The Winking Lizard with Dan and Netti. Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA) evening event CMA Mix 5:30-10:30 with Dan. It's opening day for the Baseball Guardians, 

April 8 (Saturday) - Dan's working at CMA but I ride to University Circle. CMA 10:00 to 2:30. Ace Cab to Winton. Old River Tap and So in Rocky River with Janie. Mac & Cheese and Quesadillas. Winton Place with Janie until 11p.m. 

April 9 (Easter Sunday) - return to Saint Louis on Southwest Airlines via Atlanta.   

Note: No rain at all but I feel like Spring is still the beginning of so many things.


























































Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Andrew Morgan

 














Andrew Morgan in action: Photos by Evelyn Seiden at the University of Miami. These three iconic images appear on page 116 of the 1978 Ibis Yearbook. 

I don't get enough opportunity to brag about my Uncle Andrew. He passed away in March of 2011 at age 89. It has only been in hindsight that I credit him as a significant mentor to me. I was most fortunate to have spent time with Andrew while I attended the University of Miami in pursuit of my own double major BA (Art and English) and MBA degrees. 

Andrew Morgan was president of the Kansas City Art Institute (KCAI) in the decade of the 1960s. Somewhere early 2014, I arranged to visit to KCAI with a a crew of docents from the Laumeier Sculpture Park in Saint Louis (I was co chair of the docents then). We had the pleasure of visiting Michael Wickerson's sculpture class and we got a a healthy tour of the campus. I was presented with a book authored by Milton S. Katz Ph. D. entitled The History of the Kansas City Art Institute, A Century of Excellence and Beyond (c) 2005. Chapter IV of that book devotes several pages to The Vision of Andrew W. Morgan, the 1960s. Katz credits my uncle with guiding the school to a respectable credibility for degree seeking college students. Andrew even hosted Mr. Walt Disney in 1963 so KCAI could bestow Walt with an honorary degree. Andrew announced he was leaving to return to teaching in the fall of 1970 just as the school was doubling its enrollment in the decade he was in charge. The students hosted a day long retirement party on campus for Andrew that included an Elephant ride, ticker tape confetti, bands and a helicopter ride. 

Andrew was heading to the University of Miami (UM) where he was Chairman of the Art Department and a member of the teaching faculty. He was persuasive enough to convince me that my interest in Graphic Design would be well served in Coral Gables, Florida. (It also became pretty clear to me that the weather would be more palatable than my other college consideration - Syracuse University.) So my brother and I enrolled as Freshmen at UM in 1974. 

Note: The board of governors at KCAI decided to recruit its next president from outside its own ranks and thereby considered the recommendation of David Strout at the Rhode Island School of Design who once had Andrew as a student at Kenyon College. Strout maintained a friendship with Andrew (who was artist and chairman at the art department at the University of Missippi). Strout recommented Andrew as the right guy for the job.


     










Above: South Truro and Two Fine Horses by Andrew Morgan in 1955

Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Dr. John Bejamin Morgan












I never got to know my paternal grandfather John Benjamin Morgan because he died before I was born. My son is named for him. The following highlights from the Kinmundy, IL newspaper tells you a bit about my grandfather.

Sept. 23, 1943: A home front casualty in the war in which 3 of his sons are serving in the Army, Dr. John B. MORGAN, vice chief of staff and director of urology at St. John’s Hospital died of a heart ailment early today at his home in Lakewood, Ohio. He had arisen early to perform an operation when he suffered the attack.

Dr. MORGAN attended the St. Louis University School of Medicine and went to Cleveland, Ohio about 33 years ago to intern at St. John’s Hospital. Since the absence of so many doctors in the armed forces has meant double time work for those at home, relatives said Dr. MORGAN had been working day and night. Surviving him besides his wife, the former Bertha AMERSBACH, and his parents of Kinmundy, are 4 sons, Lieut. John MORGAN, with Army Air Forces in England; Lieut. James MORGAN stationed in South Carolina; Cpl. Andrew MORGAN of Pasadena; and David, is 14.

Dr. MORGAN was a Kinmundy boy and was born on a farm 8 miles northwest of here on Oct. 5, 1887. He was the eldest of 10 children, the son of Wesley H. and Cora DOOLEN MORGAN. He attended school in Mont Rose, Colo., and resided with his uncle John and Mary MORGAN. Later he attended Kinmundy High School from which he graduated in 1906. He received his degree from St. Louis University School of Medicine in 1910. He specialized in Ohio in urology and in 1937 went to Czechoslovakia to take a special training in this subject.

On Jan. 7, 1914, he married Miss Bertha AMERSBACH of Cleveland and they were the parents of 4 boys. Ben was a great doctor and a skilled surgeon. Services were held from the St. Luke’s Church with interment in Cleveland, Ohio. 

Note: Lieut. James Morgan is my dad - son of  great man and a great man in his own right. (Below photo of the four boys and Bertha maybe around 1953 or later - David, Andrew, Bertha, John and James)










Sept. 9, 1943: Our community received a shock Tuesday when the news reached here that Dr. John B. MORGAN (we knew him as Ben), had died that morning from a heart attack at his home in Cleveland, Ohio. Services will be held in Cleveland with interment made there. Dr. Ben was the eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. W.H. MORGAN of this city, and was here on a brief visit with his parents last week.

June 2, 1910: Kinmundy Boys Honored: J. Ben MORGAN and Harry CRAIG, both of this city, who have been in St. Louis the past four years studying medicine, have successfully passed the examinations and are graduating; Ben from the St. Louis University of Medicine on Tuesday May 31, and Harry from the Washington University June 9. A few days ago, the St. Louis City Hospital gave a very rigid examination to the graduates of the different schools in the city, and these two boys were among the number to pass and gain places in the hospital, which Harry expects to accept. These examinations given by the City Hospital are so thorough that only a small percent of the applicants pass it, and our boys are above the average in their studies to gain these honors. Ben has been offered a position in St. John’s Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio, as House Physician, which he expects to accept about July 1st. There are 68 members in his class of which he has the honor of being Secretary. These two young men have both worked faithfully for the honors they are receiving and both are to be complimented upon their success


 

Friday, March 3, 2023

AMA Art of Storytelling 2023












The Art of Storytelling 2023 AMA

The American Marketing Association, Saint Louis Chapter presented it’s annual conference this year with an umbrella theme of The Art of Storytelling hosted at Webster University with 8 featured speakers on March 3, 2023 from 7:30 am to 12:00 followed by agency tours hosted by Beanstock and ITC. 

The Art of Storytelling was a half-day conference of networking, conversation and participation to craft a compelling story and connect better with your audience featuring (8) industry leaders on Friday, March 3, 2023 at Webster University, St. Louis

Dr John Lewington  was our Master of Ceremonies. Speakers: Lee Anne Mathews of COCA Biz; Michael McCormick, Chief Creative Director, Rogers Townsend Agency; Bill Ellis Brand Architect and Host of “What’s the Point” podcast; Sydney Nagorsky, Senior at Washington University; Mitch Hancock, CEO at 100th Monkey; Anya Covington, Founder/CEO of Human2Human LLC; Mason Aid, Media Relations Strategist – Content and PR Division, Intero Digital Columbia, Missouri

Agency Tours: Beanstalk Web Solutions 54 W. Moody Ave, Webster Groves, MO 63119
and: ITC Production Agency 523 Hanley Industrial Court, Brentwood, MO 63144