Who the Heck is George Cathcart? |
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By way of a biographical page, and in keeping with the travel theme of this web site, I invite you to follow me on a recap of the journey of life, or at least this journey so far. Parts of it have been exciting, especially the travels themselves, like the Appalachian Trail and the Lewis and Clark Trail and hitchhiking Europe. Other parts have been frightening and desperate, as you'll see. Not much has been dull, and when it was, it was my own fault for not paying attention. Along the path of this journey, I've put some side trails in the way of links to other sites that might be of interest, too. I was born in New York City and grew up in a strange
After the Army I went back to school at George Washington University in 1969. I majored in journalism, having decided while in the service that what the world most needed was more good reporting. I have no comment on that decision now. It was an interesting time to be in Washington, with demonstrations and Nixon and tear gas. I had a good time, but I managed to be a good student, too. I made the dean's list and was an officer in the student chapter of what was then called Sigma Delta Chi. The journalism department at GWU taught me to write news, a skill that most journalism schools fail to teach, as I've learned in the years since. And even though I'm now more of a "recovering" journalist, the disciplined structure of news writing, combined with the ability to ask good questions, remains an important component of my professional skills The highlight of my post-Army college days was spending most
of the summer of 1971 hitchhiking around Europe, visiting England,
Scotland, France, Spain, Switzerland, Austria, Germany and Belgium.
I saw bullfights and concerts, slept in farmer's fields and city
parks, rode with German hippies and English families and ended
up in my ancestral homeland of Scotland, getting chills listening
to bagpipes at the Edinburgh International Festival. South Carolina Years I moved to I covered everything from bridge clubs to broken bridges for the Packet. I won a few reporting awards and helped the paper win some awards for overall quality. The award I've always been proudest of was for a story about the local high school track team that didn't even have a track to practice on but had won several state championships in its division. That story prompted the local Lions Club to raise the money and in-kind donations to build the school not only a state-of-the-art track, but a nice football stadium to boot. Living on an island, and finding myself surrounded by water, I did a lot of fishing and became convinced that I could make a living writing magazine features about fishing. I sold a story to SaltWater Sportsman about catching sharks in the surf right in front of the house Nancy and I lived in, which made me pretty unpopular with the local chamber of commerce. In 1977 I quit my newspaper job and wrote for outdoor rags like Sports Afield and Field and Stream. I had some success, but not much. Then Nancy developed cancer in 1978. I put everything on hold for two years, until her death in September 1980, then I went a little nuts for a while. I tried to write and sold a few things, but I was at loose ends. It was my first mid-life crisis. In 1982 I started to regain some sanity by hiking the Appalachian Trail Arizona Years Before moving from her native Florida to Hilton Head, Katie had wanted to study child drama at Arizona State University, so we talked about it, did some planning and tried without success to find jobs in Arizona. Finally we just decided to pack up and move to Phoenix. That was 1984. I got a job in the university news bureau as a writer that
year and became director in 1987, the same year my Well, as you might expect, that was too good to last. The university beancounters figured out they could hire someone full time for less than I was making part-time, so as of July 1997, I left academe. I got a job with a small ad agency in Phoenix, where the ethics were thin and the owner took on clients who paid with tickets and perks instead of cash. I was neither surprised nor disappointed to get laid off there, and I found that I had regained an interest in higher education. Maryland Years I found a job as director of university relations for the University of Maryland and moved to the Free State in August 1998. So I'm back in the shadow of the nation's capital, and I love it.
Katie, meanwhile, has done right well, too. She got that master's degree from the ASU Theatre Department in 1988 (365 days after Anna was born). She became famous all over Arizona as "Katie the Puppet Lady," and she'll soon be equally famous in the Mid-Atlantic, too. A parting thought: Doth the winged life destroy. He who kisses the joy as it flies Lives in eternitys sunrise. Send me mail |
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