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The Village Squire, 1981-10, Page 18Profile by Susan White Ken Larone : a man with drive With his tweedy, casual clothes. his pipe, a soft, low voice, and a grin that lights up his warm brown eyes, he looks like a college professor, or perhaps a gentleman farmer. If you stretch it a bit you might guess he's a with -it, small-town store owner. Which he is, but just part of the time. It's unlikely, however, that you would slot Kenneth Larone, 46, R.R. 3. Seaforth, into the role of managing editor of TV Guide, the 1 million, 100,000 circulation little magazine that tells Canadians and Americans what's on the tube each week. He just doesn't come off as a media heavy. Ken Larone looks more country (sophisticated country) than city, and that's just where he is once again, living in a new house set on more than one hundred acres of native Huron County soil. About three years ago he and his wife Nancy took over the store (gifts, clothes, stationery and books) that was started by Larone's parents on Seaforth's Main Street years ago. Nancy runs it day-to-day while Ken travels back and forth to Toronto or wherever TV Guide business takes him. The journalistic journey that propelled him from Seaforth into the competitive world of glossy magazines has been long and tough, but fascinating. for Ken Larone. "You need a sense of drive." he says. "You must be prepared to sacrifice, to fight for your principles .... journal- ism'i a good profession." Larone insists that coming from a small town was ideal preparation for his career because he had learned about com- petition. "Small towns are very, very competitive, far more than most people perceive," he says. He remembers playing on Seaforth High School's football team in the 1950's and winning a western Ontario championship by beating much bigger schools. Off the football field teachers like Nan Taylor, Arch Dobson, Rena Fennell and Jean McIntyre instilled "a pride of excellence" into the young Larone and his classmates. "I was encouraged, pointed well," he says. In the summers, Larone worked for Seaforth's weekly paper, The Huron Expositor. After Grade thirteen he enrolled in journalism school at Ryerson Poly - PG. 18 VILLAGE SQUIRE/OCTOBER 1981 technical Institute where he was still an inspiration and a bit of a cult figure to students there in the sixties. Ten years or so before he left school without graduating and had become publisher of the biggest and best community paper in the country, the Don Mills Mirror. His abrupt departure from Ryerson "kicked out", he grins, in third year quite close to graduation was the result of a conflict with principal H. H. Kerr, a respected educator who also hails from Seaforth. Twice Larone, as editor of the school's paper the Ryersonian, ran stories that caused problems for the administration. "We felt we had to be not toy journalists. but the real thing," Larone remembers. Ken Larone moved on to the Vancouver Sun where he worked with a host of topnotch Canadian journalists that in- cluded Alan Fotheringham and Sandy Ross. The Sun bought a community paper in Garden Grove, California. "Some friends went down to run it." Printed offset and using photo composition that was to revolutionize newspaper technology, that paper "really intrigued me." He transformed his interest into action and for the next thirteen years he published the Mirror in Don Mills. In short order he made it the most successful suburban paper in the country. It was also Canada's first photoset, offset printed Kenneth Larone with his wife Nancy paper. Ken didn't make it home for the three days before that first historic run, remembers his wife. and when he finally climbed slowly up the stairs he said, simply, "We've finally done it." The movement of people to the suburbs and the technological revolution in newspaper production came at the same time. The Larones were pioneer settlers in Don Mills. Nancy says the community had to build churches, schools, and a hospital in an area that in the fifties was simply "a mud field." Five years later, the Toronto Star, which had slid profitably into the suburban I� newspaper market, bought fifty per cent of Larone's interest in the Mirror. "We felt pressure" Larone says, and the Star money provided an influx of capital. Then the Star asked him to streamline its string of papers under the chain name Metrospan. (Earlier this year Metrospan bought out the Inland chain to give the Star control of all Toronto area community papers) The Metrospan job meant putting nine papers "of varying quality" into one organization and Larone says. "I liked the change. It was a step up, working with the best in the business." The steps continued up for Larone and soon he was the Toronto Star's assistant managing editor, overseeing an editorial staff of more than three hundred. He helped the paper design its Sunday