My friend Ron died a couple of weeks ago. College roommate my senior year, a pal long before and long, long after. I was a sports journalist. He was a real journalist, a 30-year veteran of Voice of America, reporting on people and issues that really mattered.
While I was busy chronicling self-important jocks scoring touchdowns and muscling slam dunks, Ron was covering the likes of Madeleine Albright, the first woman to be U.S. Secretary of State. He reported on doings in Eastern Europe and with NATO, his bylines on such events as the trial of Libyan suspects in the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am flight over Scotland and the bloody dissolution of the former Yugoslavia.
Back in college, I could name Heisman Trophy candidates and various sporting heroes. Ron knew all that, too—we both worked in the sports department for The Maneater, our student newspaper at the University of Missouri—but he also could recite the names of every single member of Congress. During his sophomore year, he was a member of the four-person Missouri team that twice appeared on the televised College Bowl quiz show. A big deal; the victory over New Jersey State College and loss to the University of Pittsburgh were covered by the New York Times.
He hailed from Falls Church, Va., just outside Washington, D.C., and paid attention to what was going on in the real world. I recall his description of Richard Nixon—“nefarious prevaricator”—a characterization that certainly could apply to the Current Occupant.
Ron possessed a terrific chuckle and an appreciation of the little foibles in this big old goofy world. Given that the third person in our college apartment was a bit unkempt and appeared to have many girlfriends, Ron referred to him as “the family dog.” Also, he clearly understood my status as anything but a ladies’ man in college. I had a date—sort of a date—with a lass who was another member of the student newspaper, to attend an informal concert on campus. Things were wrapping up when she approached and announced, “I’ll get a ride with the drummer.”
After which there were various occasions—when he and I were together at some event or other—that concluded with Ron deadpanning, “I’ll get a ride with the drummer.”
The man always was on the mark, his superpower a keen observation of situations. So it was a treat, over the years, when we could get together—sometimes with his wife Ann (another Maneater alum) and sometimes at the most unlikely locales. I was lining up a trip to Eastern Europe in 1990, just after the fall of the Berlin Wall, partly to cover a pair of the U.S. national soccer team’s pre-World Cup matches in East Germany and Hungary and to report on the dramatic political changes affecting international sports.
Ron was based at the time in Vienna, so we arranged to meet for a couple of days in Budapest and, one evening, with Hungary just days away from its first free election in 45 years, Ron invited me to join him at a “meet the candidate night.” He schooled me on the fact that Hungary had been edging for two decades toward a Western economy through so-called Goulash Communism, which the locals considered “cheating the Russians.”
I was told the joke that the reason for an old Communist law banning alcohol sales 24 hours before an election was to “guarantee that no Hungarians were seeing double—and therefore thinking there were two political parties from which to choose.” That there suddenly were 52 parties—52!—when I attended that candidates’ night was surreal enough, especially when a woman in the back of the room stood to address the potential politicos. “The Communists,” she informed them, “gave me a job showing French tourists around Budapest; the last thing I want to do is show French tourists around Budapest. What are you going to do about that?”
And I think it was the next afternoon that Ron and I were walking along the banks of the Danube and came across a Budapest spring festival that included a man in a straw boater singing, “Just a Gigolo” (with two mini-skirted background singers echoing “Gigolo! Gigolo!”). Could have been in New York City or Lincoln, Nebraska, rather than on that side of what had been the Iron Curtain.
I’d love to know what Ron would think now of the latest developments in Hungary, where—from a distance—it feels like reverse whiplash from 1990. Right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a close ally of fellow autocrats Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump, has just been voted out of office after 16 years during which he eliminated checks and balances and stacked his nation’s judicial system and nominally independent agencies with his loyalists. (Which sounds a little too close to home.)
Of course, earlier this year, Trump moved to dismantle the Voice of America. And now Ron Pemstein, among VOA’s most knowledgeable veteran reporters before his retirement, is gone. Just when we’re in need of hearing some good news.
I keep thinking of how Ron often answered the telephone: “Is this somebody with good news or money?”










