Sunday, April 15, 2012

Tragic Titanic story never gets old

RMS Titanic departing Southampton on April 10,...
A seaman from Hawthorne saved others and then went down with the Titanic.


A moving homage to a North Jersey seaman who went down with the Titanic after saving passengers 100 years ago today is the only story you really must read on the front page of The Record.


Staff Writer Jay Levin employed old-fashioned leg work to find postcards and letters seaman William Cahoone Johnson Jr. wrote to his sister in Hawthorne, including one sent only 10 days before the ship hit an iceberg.


'Met death like a hero' is the headline over the photo-and-text package that dominates Page 1 today. A sidebar on Titanic's chief baker, who survived and lived in Paterson, appears on A-8.


Page A-8 is also where you'll find a paragraph that explains why the Titanic story is so much more compelling than today's other A-1 stories on politics and corruption -- themes editors overplay day after day.


People stories


" ... The sinking of an 'unsinkable' passenger ship [and] the terrorist destruction of twin skyscrapers are really a collection of intensely personal tragedies," Levin wrote.


They're stories about people who put others above themselves, who exemplify the best of the human spirit, not the worst.


Corruption isn't news


You'll find the worst of the human spirit in Staff Writer Jeff Pillets A-1 account of a federal audit of the Hudson River rail tunnels, which Governor Christie killed in October 2010.


I have a great deal of respect for Pillets, but he leaves unanswered several major questions, including:

  1. Why should commuters be penalized with loss of the tunnels -- forcing them to stand in the aisles of crowded trains and buses for the next decade -- because of cost overruns, including tens of millions paid to greedy landowners, lawyers and real estate consultants?
  2. What other public projects of the same scale were built without delays and cost overruns?



Road-rage victim


It's hard to believe what one 60-year-old Leonia woman went through at the hands of a maniac with a license (L-1).


The Road Warrior column describes the ultimately unsuccessful prosecution of an enraged pickup-truck driver, who was charged with reckless driving.


But Staff Writer John Cichowski doesn't put the blame where it belongs: an abysmal lack of enforcement.


Maniacs rule roads 


Where are the cops? Why are the maniacs getting away with speeding 20 mph to 30 mph over the speed limit, tailgating at high speeds and cutting off other drivers?


Cichowski should spend more time on the highway and less time on his padded rear-end in front of the computer. 


And when he gets only 1 out of 50 columns right, does The Record really need him at all?


News for yokels


Also on L-1 today, The Record continues its rabidly anti-Castro news coverage, which is so out of sync with the moderating views of an increasing number of Cuban-Americans.


Don't look for any Hackensack news today from head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes, who also spends an excessive amount of time on her well-padded derriere.


Sin of omission


In Business, consumer Columnist Kevin DeMarrais writes about a Consumer Reports poll on supermarkets.


He notes good finishes for Trader Joe's, Costco Wholesale and Whole Foods Market, all of which sell a lot of organic and naturally raised or grown items (B-1).


But DeMarrais doesn't explain why The Record's own monthly Marketbasket Survey -- which he compiles -- has never listed any organic food.


Senior moments


The Better Living editors rely on a cover story filled with mindless T&A to attract readers (F-1).


In Travel, Editor Jill Schensul suffers her own senior moments with her cover story on lists and a sidebar on Austin (T-1).


She forgets to mention in the list story that one reason people make lists is so they won't forget to do or buy something.


And in her Austin story, Schensul forgets to mention the Texas city is joining the international Formula 1 circuit in November with a race on the new Circuit of the Americas.
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