News Aggregator Archive 8 (7/6/13 – 12/28/13)

Ohio’s Utica Shale Spurs Job Growth (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Top Ohio Republicans Face Down Intraparty Critics (Associated Press/ABC)

 

In Blue-Collar Toledo, Ohio, a Windfall of Chinese Investment (New York Times)

 

Governor Kasich Seeks More Tax Cuts to Get Ohio Moving Faster(Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Ohio’s Major Cities Making Big Play for 2016 Political Conventions(Huffington Post)

 

Pepper’s Persistence Propels Him Into Ohio Attorney General’s Race(Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Few Cases of Voter Fraud Pan Out in Ohio (Lancaster Eagle Gazette)

 

Mysterious Clean-Energy Initiative Heading for Ohio Ballot in 2014(Associated Press/Business Week)

 

Communities Surrounding University Circle Look at Merging Economic Development Districts (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Colleges Have Eye on Future Drone Jobs (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Cincinnati Streetcar Plan Pits Desire For Growth Against Fiscal Restraint(New York Times)

 

A Leader Emerges in Ohio House Speaker Race (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Northeast Ohio Maufacturing Exports Better Than Before 2008 Recession Levels (Plain Dealer)

 

Use Cleveland-East Cleveland Merger to Build a Regional Approach to Problem-Solving: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)

 

Slay Ohio’s Gerrymander: Editorial (Toledo Blade)

 

To Flee Ohio Oil Boom, Some Amish Cash Out by Selling Royalties(Reuters)

 

State Auditor Dave Yost Questions East Cleveland’s Future; City Audits Sound Alarms (Plain Dealer)

 

U.S. Economy (GDP) Expands at 4.1%; Fastest Pace Since Late 2011(Associated Press/Toledo Blade)

 

Job Promises Unfulfilled By Many Companies Getting State Aid(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Yes Virginia, There is No Clause: Jack Robinson (Plain Dealer)

 

University Hospitals and UnitedHealthcare Collaborate on Accountable Care Organization-ACA (Plain Dealer)

 

Governor Kasich Outlines 2014 Wish List (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Cleveland City Schools Next to Last in U.S. Tests (Plain Dealer)

 

Move Silicon Valley to Cleveland (Slate)

 

How Serious is Todd Portune About a Run For Ohio Governor (Plain Dealer)

 

Democrat Ed FitzGerald May Have a Primary Opponent in Race for Governor (Plain Dealer)

 

How the Common Core is Changing How Kids Learn in English Class(StateImpact)

 

Fate of Air Base in Mansfield Ohio Reflects Larger Battle Between Active Duty and Reserves (Washington Post)

 

General Motors to Invest Nearly $1.3 Billion at 5 Plants in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio (Detroit News)

 

Ohio Medicaid Expansion Ballot Initiative Withdrawn (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Political Opposites, Senators Sherrod Brown and Rob Portman Come Together for Ohio (Mansfield News Journal)

 

Pittsburgh’s Convention Center Opened 10 Years Ago. It’s Gorgeous. And Expensive. And Underperforming (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Cuyahoga County May Resurrect Contracting Advantage For Minority and Women-Owned Businesses (Plain Dealer)

 

The Next Ohio Legislative General Assemby Session May Be a Doozy: Tom Suddes (Plain Dealer)

 

Ed FitzGerald Still Has a Chance to Become Governor, But It Just Got Slimmer: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)

 

County Elections Officials Split on Merits of Ohio’s Early-Voting System(Plain Dealer)

 

Cincinnati is Close to Overtaking Cleveland as Ohio’s Largest Metro Economy (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Fifth-Third Bank Could Shift One-Third of Branches to Self-Serve(Cincinnati Business Courier)

 

At Least 25% of Students Risk Failing Test to Get to Fourth Grade(Dayton Daily News)

 

Reading Scores Drop Across Ohio as State Changes Third-Grade Test(Akron Beacon Journal)

 

More Than 31,000 Ohio Students Receive Private-School Vouchers(StateImpact)

 

1.3 Million Will Lose Unemployment Benefits After U.S. Congress Adjourns For the Year Without a Vote (Plain Dealer)

 

Federal Cuts Increase Concerns About Hunger and Homelessness in Cleveland (Plain Dealer)

 

Obamacare Enrollment Up, But Still Slow in Ohio (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Falls to 40th in U.S. Health Rankings (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Ranks Among the Least-Healthiest States (Dayton Business Journal)

 

Eric Kearney Out as Ed FitzGerald’s Running Mate (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Lieutenant Governor Candidate Eric Kearney Quits Ticket(Politico) 

 

Tea Party Leader Takes First Step Towards Challenging Gov John Kasich in GOP Primary (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson Endorses Armond Budish For County Executive (Plain Dealer)

 

8 Northeast States Sue Over Pollution From Midwest (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Civil Rights Journalist Up for Congressional Gold Medal (Plain Dealer)

 

Average Dominion Gas Bills May Be Lower This Winter (Plain Dealer)

 

Kent State Study Shows Students Always on Phones Less Happy, Do Worse in Class (Plain Dealer)

 

As School Districts Attempt to Implement Mandated Teacher Evaluations, Ohio Legislature Toys With More Changes (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Anatomy of Detroit’s Decline: Interactive Feature (New York Times)

 

Detroit Ruling Opens Door to Potential Pension Cuts Across the Nation(Los Angeles Times)

 

With Armed Forces Scaling Back, Pennsylvania Youths are Often Disappointed (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

In Pennsylvania, Shale Job Numbers are Hard to Pin Down (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Happy Birthday: Cincinnati Celebrates its 225 Years (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

10 Things That Put Cincinnati on the Map (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Ohio Battles to Care for the Mentally Ill (Toledo Blade)

 

Cleveland’s Renewal Begins With the State: Thomas Bier (Plain Dealer)

 

Art and Commerce Collide at Detroit Institute of Art as Collection is Held Hostage by Detroit’s Bankruptcy (Detroit News)

 

Ohio Pulls Plans to Comply With Federal ID LawOhio Drivers Licenses May Not Be Good Enough Identification For Airplanes or Federal Buildings (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Sports Economists Weigh In On Cleveland Browns/FirstEnergy Stadium Deal (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Shale Gas Boom Closer Than Many Realize (Plain Dealer)

 

Nelson Mandela is Dead (Associated Press)

 

Nelson Mandela, South African Icon of Peaceful Resistance, is Dead(New York Times)

 

Comparing the Midwestern States…from Michigan’s Perspective(Detroit News)

 

Is the “Opportunity Corridor” a Missed Oportunity? What Must Happen For the New Roadway to Live Up to Its Name (Freshwater)

 

10 Questions With Dr. Steve Nissen, MD – Cleveland Clinic(MedPageToday)

 

What Happened to Ohio’s Economic Rebound? (WKYC)

 

Having More College Graduates is Critical to NE Ohio’s Prosperity, University of Akron’s President Says (Plain Dealer)

 

Worst Rollout of the Year? Ohio Candidate Owes $1 Milion in Back Taxes(Washington Post)

 

Ohio Republicans Offer Alternative to Failed Gov. Kasich Plan for Oil and Gas Severance Taxes (Columbus Business First)

 

Report: Seven in 10 Students Graduate From College With Loans; Average Debt on the Rise (Washington Post)

 

Cleveland Startup Hopes to Shape Today’s Kids into Tomorrow’s Scientists (Plain Dealer)

 

Jobs Numbers Show “Troubling Trend” and Eric Kearney Meets the Press: Henry Gomez-Ohio Political Roundup (Plain Dealer)

 

If Affordable Healthcare Act (ACA) is Overturned, a Case Western Reserve University Professor Gets the Credit (Plain Dealer)

 

Lorain Avenue on Cleveland’s Near West Side Becoming a Key Battleground Over Clashing Visions of the City’s Future: Steve Litt (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Considers: Is Energy Efficiency Worth the Money? (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Bill Revamps Ohio Teacher Evaluations (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Texting While Driving Law Presents Challenges to Police, Courts (Plain Dealer)

 

Messy Running Mate Rollout Tests Ed FitzGerald’s Political Mettle: Analysis (Plain Dealer)

 

Eric Kearney, Ed FitzGerald’s Lieutenant Governor Pick, Should Quit the 2014 Campaign: Mark Naymik (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Laws Headed for a Vote(Plain Dealer)

 

Fracking Industry Wants to Move Its Waste Down Ohio River on Barges, But Faces Opposition (Plain Dealer)

 

U.S. 15-Year Olds Slip in Global Rankings (Wall Street Journal)

 

Euclid Council Supports Wind Energy Project (News-Herald)

 

Solar Firms Prove Costly Investments in NW Ohio. Tens of Millions Wasted on Fledgling Industry (Toledo Blade)

 

Ohio Auto Dealers Seek to Stop Tesla From Selling Direct to Consumers(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Kearney Pick Heaps Scrutiny on Ed FitzGerald’s Campaign For Governor and More: Henry Gomez (Plain Dealer)

 

Early Voting Legislation a Disservice to Ohio Voters: Ellis Jacobs, Miami Valley Voter Protection Coalition (Plain Dealer)

 

Early Voting Legislation Would Bring Relief to County Elections Boards: Ohio Sen. Frank La Rose (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio College Students Face Rising Debts (StateImpact)

 

Ohio Republicans Target Common Core (Marietta Star)

 

The Dirty Stadium Deal is Done: Roldo Bartimole (Cleveland Leader)

 

Browns Should Rebate $30 Million to Cleveland: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)

 

FirstEnergy Stadium Lease: Bad Deal For Cleveland or Better Than Most? (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Municipal Income Tax Reform Proposal Wins Praise and Scorn(Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio’s “Smartest” Colleges Revealed (Dayton Business Journal)

 

Global Cities are Prosperous Cities; Researchers Say Cleveland Must Welcome the World (Plain Dealer)

 

Peter B. Lewis Challenged Others to be Their Best (IdeaStream)

 

Cleveland City Council Approves Financing For Upgrades to Browns/FirstEnergy Stadium (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Job Numbers Put State Behind Remainder of Nation (IdeaStream)

 

Right vs. Left in the Midwest: Opinion (New York Times)

 

Ohio Politics Roundup – 11/25/13 (Plain Dealer)

 

YouTube Videos Critical of Toledo Create Angst and Calls For Action(Toledo Blade)

 

Since 2005, Cincinnati’s Airport Has Lost More Flights Than Any Other Major U.S. Airport (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Peter B. Lewis Dies, One of Cleveland’s Most Successful Business Leaders (Plain Dealer)

 

Get Going on Redistricting Reform: Editorial (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Urban Decay to be Replaced With Farmland in Detroit (FoxNews.com)

 

Historic Ohio Village to be Spared (Columbus Dispatch)

 

The JFK Assassination 50th Anniversary: Front Pages From the Plain Dealer and Other Newspapers (Plain Dealer)

 

Save Thanksgiving From Commercial Creep: Sheryl Harris (Plain Dealer)

 

How Shoppers Will Ultimately Decide if Retalers Keep Opening on Thanksgiving (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio’s Common Core Opponents Vent Their Concerns at Statehouse Hearings (Plain Dealer)

 

Growth in Ohio Cities Slowed During 2013 (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Research Collaborative Finds Shale Oil and Gas Jobs Exaggerated(Youngstown Business Journal)

 

Port of Cleveland Seals Deal to Bring Container Shipping to the Great Lakes (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio House Approves “Stand Your Ground” Gun Legislation (Toledo Blade)

 

Great Lakes Water Levels Rise, But Not Enough to Ease Concerns(Associated Press/Plain Dealer)

 

Black Leaders Cool Towards Ohio Democratic Candidate For Governor Ed FitzGerald (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Mayor Asks Council to OK $2 Million a Year For 15 Years to Fund Browns Stadium Project (Ideastream)

 

In Ohio, 95% of Kids Have Health-Insurance Coverage (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Former City Council President George Forbes Says Cleveland Should Merge With East Cleveland (Plain Dealer)

 

Merger With East Cleveland Could Add 17,000 People to Cleveland(Plain Dealer)

 

Cuyahoga County Councilman Jack Schron Expected to Run in 2014 for Cuyahoga County Executive (Plain Dealer)

 

William Howard Taft Gets New Respect From Dorris Kearns Goodwin in Her New Book (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Study Finds Lakewood is the Most Walkable Large City in Ohio (Plain Dealer)

 

Can Ohio Governor Kasich Win Again? (Marietta Times)

 

Pittsburgh Suburbs Suffering Poverty at High Rate (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Ohio’s State School Board Shifts Emphasis From Traditional Public Schools to Parent-Driven Choice (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

How Chicago Debt Exploded (Chicago Tribune) 

 

In Ohio, Business Groups Lead the Crusade for Immigration Reform(Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Browns Need to Reveal Stadium Financing Game Plan: Mark Naymik (Plain Dealer)

 

Debate Heating Up Again Over Voter ID in Ohio (Ideastream)

 

Redistricting Changes Are Crucial, Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted Says (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Secretary of State Makes Pitch For Overhaul of Ohio’s Redisctricting Process (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio House Passes Municipal Income Tax Reform Bill (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Clinic to Help Former National Football League Players With Brain Health (Plain Dealer)

 

Sequestration Could Cause Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton to Lose 6,000 Jobs in Next Year: Congressman Mike Turner (Dayton Daily News)

 

Ohio’s Role Key in Likely Record Corn Harvest (Toledo Blade)

 

Demolition Underway on School Where Protestor was Crushed by Bulldozer in 1964 (Plain Dealer)

 

November 12, 1913: Great Lakes Storm Batters Greater Cleveland(Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Colleges Attracting More International Students (Associated Press/Toledo Blade)

 

Greater Cleveland RTA is Riding Wave of Momentum (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Legislative Fix Not in Sight For Ohio’s Redistricting Controversy(Lancaster Eagle Gazette)

 

They Gave an Election and Almost No One Came: David Kushma, Editor(Toledo Blade)

 

More and More, Students Having Trouble Paying Back Their Student Loans (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Ohio Task Force Focuses on Lake Erie’s Toxic Algae (Toledo Blade)

 

Lake Erie Algae Bloom Crisis Challenges Agribusiness to Change (Eye on Ohio)

 

Ohio Students’ Reading, Math Scores Not Improving (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Financial Ratings Agency Standard & Poor’s Downgrades Cuyahoga County’s Credit Rating (Plain Dealer) 

 

Economy a Messy Issue in Ohio Governor’s Race (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Kevin Kelley Will Replace Martin J. Sweeney as Next Cleveland City Council President (Plain Dealer) 

 

Gund Foundation Awards $2 Million to Kickstart Completion of Towpath and Lake Link Trails (Plain Dealer)

 

New “Common Core” Standards Forcing Changes in Ohio Schools (Plain Dealer)

 

Inside the Common Core English Classroom: Showing the Evidence(Plain Dealer)

 

GOP Lawmakers in Ohio Under Fire For Supporting Medicaid Expansion(Los Angeles Times)

 

The Passion of Young Cleveland (Atlantic)

 

Ohio Voters Approve 60% of the 192 Schools Levies on Yesterday’s Ballot; the Highest % Since 2009 (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Greater Cleveland School Districts Win Half Their Requests For Tax Increases (Plain Dealer)

 

Cuyahoga County Election 2013 Results For Local Races and Issues(Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson Beats Challenger Ken Lanci For City’s Top Job (Plain Dealer)

 

Voters Approve All Three Cuyahoga County-Wide Levies (Plain Dealer)

 

Voters Soundly Defeat Columbus School Levy (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Part Time, Full Load; A Glimpse Into the Struggles of Cleveland State’s Part-Time Faculty (Cleveland State Cauldron)

 

Big Things Are Starting in NE Ohio, Thanks in Part to Accelerators(Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Ohio’s Political Process Has Been Stolen From Us. It’s Time to Take it Back: David Kushma, Editor (Toledo Blade)

 

Want to Be Ohio Governor? Here’s How (Columbus Dispatch)

 

The Flaws Behind the Issues That Confront Voters on Ohio Ballots: Thomas Suddes (Plain Dealer)

 

Shipping Containers at Center of New Retail Strategy for Downtown Cleveland’s Warehouse District (Plain Dealer)

 

Food Stamp Cuts a Major Setback for Some (Toledo Blade)

 

Cleveland Entreprenuership Week Aims to Spread the Start-Up Scene(Plain Dealer)

 

“Skills Gap” Crippling Ohio Business, Prospective Workers (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

The Cleveland-Cuyahoga Port Authority is Asking for a Levy Renewal — So What Does the Port Even Do? (IdeaStream)

 

Ohio Among the Leaders in Using Student Performance to Evaluate Teachers (Akron Beacon Journal) 

 

Cleveland School District Expects to Fill Still-Open Teaching Positions After More Than 350 Hopefuls Pack Job Fair (Plain Dealer)

 

Chicago Innovations That Changed the World: “Reversing the Chicago River” (Chicago Tribune)

 

Cleveland Clinic Moving 700 Jobs to Beachwood; Will Cost Cleveland over $1 Million Per year (Plain Dealer)

 

Enormous Lowering of NRG Power Plant’s Valuation Will Cost Avon Lake School Millions (Lorain Chronicle Telegram

 

Ohio Sen. Tom Patton Testing the Waters for a County Executive Race(Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Traffic Deaths Could Hit Record Low (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Berea Teen First Republican to Announce Run for Cuyahoga County Executive (Plain Dealer)

 

Consol Energy Ready to Expand Natural Gas Production in Utica/Marcellus Fields; Sell Off 1/2 of Coal Production (Youngstown Business Journal)

 

First Evidence of Grass Carp Reproduction is Found in Great Lakes(Plain Dealer) 

 

Shaker Heights Looks to Crack Down on Drivers Using Cell Phones(Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Governor Defies G.O.P. With Defense of Social Safety Net (New York Times)

 

Fish Farming a Growth Industry for Ohio? (Mansfield News Journal)

 

Public College Enrollment Drops in Ohio (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Cleveland Transit System Points Way For Detroit Rail Project (Detroit Free Press)

 

Natural Gas Knocking Other Energy Sources Off Perch (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Clueless on the Detroit Mayoral Campaign: Nolan Findley (Detroit News)

 

Double Dipping Ignores State Budget Reality: State Sen Rex Demschroder (Plain Dealer)

 

Botanical Garden’s Use of Wade Park Land Draws Legal Ire of Jeptha Wade’s Ancestor (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Why the Ohio General Assemby’s Erosion of Home Rule Rights Matters on Main Street: Thomas Suddes (Plain Dealer)

 

Welcoming Refugees is Paying Off For Cleveland (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Senate GOP Leaders Seek Income Tax Cut Using Savings From Medicaid Expansion (Plain Dealer)

 

Mary Rose Oakar Isn’t on the Ballot, But She’s Campaigning Hard Against Cleve Councilman Joe Cimperman: Michael K. McIntyre (Plain Dealer)

 

By a Two-to-One Margin, Columbus Voters Want Armed Police in Columbus Schools: Poll (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Port of Cleveland to Offer First Scheduled Cargo Service Between Great Lakes and Europe (Plain Dealer)

 

Cuyahoga County Judges Sending Far Fewer Felons to Prison (Plain Dealer)

 

4-Point Agenda For New Cincinnati Mayor: 1. Create Jobs – Editorial(Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

4-Point Agenda For New Cincinnati Mayor: 2. Attract More Residents – Editorial (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

4-Point Agenda For New Cincinnati Mayor: 3. Fix the Budget – Editorial (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Apple Co-Founder Wozniak Inspires at Annual Knight Lecture at Univ of Akron (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Common App Glitches Causes Issues For Some University Applicants(Ohio State Lantern)

 

College Tuition Increases Have Slowed, But Families Still Paying More, Report Says (Plain Dealer)

 

Lawsuit Filed to Stop Medicaid Expansion in Ohio (Dayton Daily News)

 

New Little Italy-University Circle RTA Station Seen as Transit-Oriented Development Spark (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Governor Puts State Politics Before Presidential Hopes(Washington Post)

 

Public Officials Working to Save 1000+ Jobs at Ben Venue Laboratories in Bedford (Plain Dealer) 

 

Port of Cleveland Sees Strongest September in Years as European Shippers Seek Midwestern Markets (Plain Dealer)

 

Vote Expands Medicaid; Opponents Vow to Sue (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Controlling Board Votes to Expand Medicaid (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio OKs Medicaid Expansion (Politico)

 

Plain Dealer Endorsements and Discussion About the 4 Cuyahoga County Charter Amendments (Plain Dealer)

 

To Fill Euclid Avenue “Gap”, Cleveland Planners Pin Hopes on County Headquarters, Hotels and Heinen’s (Ideastream)

 

Both Cleveland Mayoral Candidates Grew Up on Woodland Avenue, But Couldn’t Be More Different Today (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Ohio Officials: Shale Drilers, Report Your Chemicals (Cincinnati Enquirer) 

 

It’s a Fair Bet The Ohio Controlling Board Will Expand Medicaid: Tom Suddes (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Gov. Kasich Hopeful That Controlling Board Will OK Medicaid Expansion (Toledo Blade)

 

“Hell With the Lid Off” to Most Livable – How Pittsburgh Became Cool(Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Ohio Pushing Local Governments Toward Self-Reliance (Marion Star)

 

Some Top Ed Fitzgerald Aides Already Planning Their Next Move (Plain Dealer)

 

Stormwater Concerns Swell in Northeast Ohio (Plain Dealer)

 

Flats East Bank Developers Secure $92 Million Loan From Citibank(Plain Dealer)

 

UPS Continues Switch to Natural Gas For Its Trucking Fleet; Announces 9 New Liquified Natural Gas Fueling Stations Including One in Toledo(Toledo Blade)

 

House Republicans May Sue Over Gov. Kasich’s Medicaid Expansion(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Will Never-Ending Cycle of Ballot Tax Issues Wear Down Voters? (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Gov. Kasich is Doing the Wrong Thing For the Wrong Reasons in Wrong Way: Kevin O’Brien (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Police to Suspend 63 Officers After Fatal Car Crash (Reuters)

 

Fate of Ohio Medicaid in Hands of Seven Men (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

In Struggle With Weight, President William Howard Taft from Ohio Used a “Startlingly” Modern Diet; It Didn’t Work in 1905 Either (New York Times)

 

CWRU Professor Creating Free Online Course For Entreprenuers (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Seeks Stream Pollution Limits to Fight Algae (Canton Repository)

 

Algae Blooms in Lake Erie Becoming a Threat to Drinking Water(Associated Press/Plain Dealer)

 

30 Years: Pittsburgh Moves From Heavy Industry to Medicine, Tech, Energy (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Out-of-State Students Drive Michigan University Enrollment (Detroit News)

 

Many Teens Taking a Pass on a Driver’s License (USA Today)

 

Cleaner, Greener Cuyahoga River has a new Problem: Popularity (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Medicaid Expansion Move Angers Opponents (Plain Dealer)

 

Geis Brothers Plan for Ameritrust Complex is Rescuing Two Cleveland Architectural Landmarks (Plain Dealer)

 

Gov Kasich Announces That He’ll Bypass Legislature in an Attempt to Expand Medicaid in Ohio (click on newspaper)

     Plain Dealer

     Columbus Dispatch

     Canton Repository/Associated Press

 

Plain Dealer Voter Guide for 2013 Election (Plain Dealer)

 

Big Lagoons Could Hold Ohio’s Fracking Waste (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Activists to Fight Ohio’s Wastewater Rule Allowing Storage Pits (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Why We Endorse in Political Contests: Editorial (Plain Dealer)

 

Is Obamacare Really to Blame for Cuts at the Cleveland Clinic and Other Hospitals? (Plain Dealer)

 

Government Shutdown’s Consequences Creep Into Ohio (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Effects of Government Shutdown in Ohio Scattered (Dayton Daily News)

 

Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson Tested by Years of Dysfunction or Scandal in Police, Fire and Water Departments (Plain Dealer)

 

Libertarians and Others Criticize Bill Outlining Ohio Ballot Rules(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Bill Would Ban Red-Light Cameras (Toledo Blade)

 

Name Game in Judicial Contests Does a Disservice to Ohio Voters: Maureen O’Connor, Chief Justice Ohio Supreme Court (Plain Dealer)

 

Judge Approves Federal Class Action Deal to End Jailing of Suspects Without Bond, Court Appearance (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Sec. of State Husted to Send Absentee Applications to All Voters for the 2014 Election (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Suburbs Let Regionalism Enter Through the “Back Door”(Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio’s Law Schools Draw Fewer Students in Lawyer Glut (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Cleveland’s Climate Action Plan Boils Down to Conservation and Efficiency (Plain Dealer)

 

Improving Cleveland’s Lakefront Part One: The Toronto Model (Inside Business)

 

After Years of Hurdles, Cleveland’s Medical Innovation Center Opens(Plain Dealer)

 

30 Years of Change: A Portrait of Pittsburgh in 2013 and How Much it has Evolved Since 1983 (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) 

 

30 Years of Change: Locals Say Pittsburgh’s Problems Still Seem the Same (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Guarding Ohio’s Referendum Process: Marilou Johanek (Toledo Blade)

 

Expert Praises Cleveland Plan For Climate Change Action; Climate Change is Real: NREL Director (Plain Dealer)

 

What Governors Can Do About Jobs, Kasich Could be Doing Better: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio OKs Electronic Filing For Businesses (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Universities Battle For Students in Northeast Ohio (Plain Dealer)

 

The $100 Million “Western Reserve” Cuyahoga County Government Economic Development Fund. What is it? How Does it Work?: An Analysis (Plain Dealer)

 

Three Cleveland Medical Innovations Bound for Great Things (Fresh Water)

 

Opportunity Corridor Plan Rolled Out in First Public Hearing (Plain Dealer)

Ohio House Bill Seeks Tougher Rules on Young Drivers (Plain Dealer)

 

Parks Closed, Michigan Tourism Takes a Hit as Federal Government Shutdown Begins (Detroit Free Press)

 

Ohio: “Ground Zero” For Nation’s Obamacare Debate (Politico)

 

Westlake Residents and Businesses to Face Steep Fees For City’s Defection From Cleveland’s Water Department (Plain Dealer)

 

St. Clair Avenue is Poised For Revival as Cleveland’s Next Example of “Creative Placemaking”: Steve Litt (Plain Dealer)

 

CSU’s Wolstein Center Still Struggling; Losing $1 Million Per Year (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Area Federal Workers Brace for Government Shutdown (Plain Dealer)

 

Government Shutdown: What You Need to Know (CNN)

 

Shale Drillers Must Report Chemicals Used (Columbus Dispatch)

 

A Plentiful Harvest of Voter Issues May Be About to Come Ohioans’ Way: Tom Suddes (Plain Dealer)

 

How the Affordable Healthcare Act Will Affect Ohioans (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Insurers in SW Ohio Are Jumping at the Chance to Compete in New Health Insurance Marketplaces (Dayton Daily News)

 

Toledo Misses the Boat on Great Lakes Cruises (Toledo Blade)

 

Is Ohio’s Economic Recovery Slipping? (Toledo Blade)

 

Construction Industry in NE Ohio is Back on Solid Ground (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Cincinnati Facing a Fiscal Reckoning; Not Many Budget Balancing Tricks Left (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Competition Keen For Open President’s Chair at Three Ohio Universities (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Detroit’s Bankruptcy: Broken City, Broken Management (Detroit Free Press)

 

Federal Government Shut Down Would Have Serious Repercussions (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

 

Scant Ohio Dept of Insurance Information on Obamacare; Rollout on October 1 (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Expanding Use of Portable Traffic Cameras to Catch Speeding Drivers (Plain Dealer)

 

Speed Limits Go Up on Some State Roads Next Week (Columbus Dispatch)

 

West Side Market’s Shortsided Venders: Mark Naymik (Plain Dealer)

 

Interactive Maps Show Fallout From Financial Crisis on Downtown Cleveland (Plain Dealer)

 

Can Cleveland Realize the Benefits of Opportunity Corridor?: Steve Litt (Plain Dealer)

 

More Ohio High School Students Receive College Credit From AP Classes (Columbus Dispatch)

 

The Cleveland Schools Have Made Progress, Just Not Enough, Says District CEO Eric Gordon (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Debates Keeping Its Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Mandates (Plain Dealer)

 

Healthcare Exchanges Set to Go on October 1; Cleveland Area Will Have 45 Options (Plain Dealer)

 

Health Insurance Exchanges Offer Plenty of Choices (Columbus Dispatch/Chicago Tribune)

 

Best Cleveland Mayor in Past 50 Years? 4 Journalists Weigh In: middle of page (Plain Dealer)

 

Charter Schools in Ohio Performed Far Worse Than Traditional Schools on Most Recent State Report Cards (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio’s Gas Boom is Still in the Future, Says CSU Economist (Plain Dealer)

 

Slavic Village, Devastated by the National Housing Crisis, is Fighting its Way Back (Plain Dealer)

 

Whose Team Is It? Cleveland Sports and Sinful Taxes (Belt Magazine)

 

West Shoreway Conversion to Boulevard Gets Funding, is Set to Begin in the Spring (Plain Dealer)

 

Bike Trails Could Be Hub of Activities and Economic Growth in Cincinnati (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Underground Silos For Missile Defense Could Bring Jobs to Portage County (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Cleveland Based Startup Accelerator Helps Usher Ideas to Market (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland HealthLine Gives More Development Payback Than Other Transit Corridors, Study Finds (Plain Dealer)

 

The Debate Over Immigration as Seen From Cleveland Over the Years: Edward Miggins (Plain Dealer)

 

Embracing the Middle Ground on Immigration Reform: Andrew Doehrel and Tim Burga (Plain Dealer)

 

Lake Erie Wind Turbines Viable, Say Engineering Firms With North Sea Experience (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio State University Sets Up Recruiting Center in Terminal Tower (Plain Dealer)

 

Cuyahoga Count, MMPI Grew Apart; Coming Split Reflects Divergent Paths (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Ohio City is Home to Market Optimism (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Ohio Insurance Market to Open; Turmoil Abounds (Toledo Blade)

 

Cleveland Schools Deserve a “Z” for Dismal on Latest Report Card: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)

 

Interview With Toby Cosgrove (9.20.13) Who Discusses the Affordable Healthcare Act -5 minutes (CNBC)

 

Conservative Groups Cry Foul Over Ohio’s New Restrictions on Referendum Petitions (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Job Numbers: What Gov John Kasich and Challenger Ed FitzGerald Are Saying About Them (Plain Dealer)

 

Oil, Gas Case Challenging State Authority Over Drilling Goes to Ohio Top Court (Youngstown Repository)

 

University Hospital Breaks Ground For $30 Million Proton Therapy Center (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Toxic Algae Strike Ottawa County Water System; Threat Prevalent Across Ohio (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Celebrating Charles F. Schweinfurth, Premier Architect of Cleveland’s Gilded Age: Steve Litt (Plain Dealer)

 

Most Ohioans Believe in Global Warming, But Fewer Think Humans are Cause: Survey (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Incomes Stay Flat in 2012, Census Data Show (Mansfield News Journal)

 

Lorain Land Bank Called “Wildly Successful”, Awaiting More Money (Lorain Journal)

 

 

Florida Developer Hopes to Start Construction on 177-Unit Apartment Building at East 97th and Chester; Calls Supply and Demand “Totally Out of Whack Right Now” (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson and Challenger Ken Lanci Trade Verbal Jabs at City Club Debate (Plain Dealer)

 

How Chattanooga Beat Google Fiber by Half a Decade (Washington Post)

 

Cleveland School District Faces Tough Choices to Reduce the Cost of its School Construction Project (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Clinic Budget Cuts Will Result in Early Retirements, Possible Layoffs (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Cleveland Clinic to Cut $330 Million From Next Year’s Budget; May Cut Jobs (Plain Dealer)

 

Toledo Area Poised to Double Exports by 2014 According to Brookings Institution (Toledo Blade)

 

Shaker Heights is Getting First “Fiberhood” in Northeast Ohio (Plain Dealer)

 

Utica, Marcellus Shales Are Ripe With Natural Gas to Benefit Ohio, Pennsylvania (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Who Should Pay to Spiff Up FirstEnergy Stadium for the Browns?: Editorial Board (Plain Dealer)

 

Bowling Green City Council Unanimously Passes Ban on Fracking; Ordinance Strength Untested (Toledo Blade)

 

Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson Vows He “Won’t Be Burned Again” in His Efforts For Oversight of Charter Schools (Plain Dealer)

 

Ed Fitzgerald: MMPI to be Out as Convention Center, Medical Mart Operator (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Student Performance Tied to Poverty (Canton Repository)

 

Plastics, Including Microbeads From Beauty Products, Might Pose New Threat to Great Lakes (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Hundreds of Ohio Bridges Deficient (Associated Press/Elyria Chronicle Telegram)

 

Partnership to Boost Local Construction Talent is Created (Plain Dealer)

 

Athletics Cost Colleges, Students Millions (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Should JobsOhio be Viewed as Public or Private? Some Points and Counterpoints in the Debate (Plain Dealer)

 

How Detroit Went Broke: The Answers May Surprise You (Detroit Fr. Press)

 

Ohio Soybeans, Corn Could Set Record High Yields (Mansfield News Journal)

 

Medicaid Expansion Clears First Hurdle For 2014 Ballot (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Higher Fracking Tax Would Protect Communities From Infrastructure Costs of Oil and Gas Drilling: State Rep Bob Hagan (Plain Dealer)

 

Increased Fracking Tax Could Send Gas Companies Packing: Thomas Stewart, Oil and Gas Assoc. (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Chief Justice O’Connor Pitches Ideas to Reform How the State Chooses Judges (Plain Dealer)

 

Great Lakes Program Inspires Rare Bipartisanship (ABC)

 

Cleveland Clinic Hopes to Build Hotel on Euclid Avenue Church Land (Plain Dealer)

 

Heinen’s Plans Downtown Grocery Store in Former Ameritrust Complex at 9th and Euclid (Plain Dealer)

 

Local Manufacturers Have Jobs They Can’t Fill Because of Skills Gap (Plain Dealer)

 

Camp Revenna in Portage County is Being Considered as Missile Defense Site (Plain Dealer)

 

Hispanic Roundtable Chair Bemoans Primary Defeats of Cleveland’s Only Hispanic Council Candidates (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Puts 5 On List of Power Plants For Worst Carbon Dioxide Emissions(Columbus Business First)

 

Study Says Ohio Power Plants 2nd-Most Polluting in U.S. (Elyria Chronicle-Telegram)

 

Cleveland Schools Hiring “Superstar” Teachers Who Get Urban Students (Plain Dealer)

Opportunity Corridor, 2nd Innerbelt Bridge Projects Get Go Ahead From Turnpike Commission (Plain Dealer)

 

Millenials Slower to Leave the Nest (Canton Repository)

Ohio Gov. Kasich Wants Able-Bodied Adults to Work for Food Stamps (Columbus Dispatch)

High School Dropouts Struggle to Find Jobs in Ohio; Earn Less Than High School Graduates (Canton Repository)

Efforts to Brand Milwaukee as Water Technology Hub Reach Milestone (Milwaukee Journal)

Volunteers Go Door to Door to Help Public Understand Healthcare Law (Plain Dealer)

While Pittsburgh’s Produce Terminal Shutters, Other Cities Are Ramping Up (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Cleveland’s Economy May Get Boost as International Students Flock to CWRU (Plain Dealer)

Federal Requirement to Get Health Insurance Kicks in January 1, 2014 (Akron Beacon Journal)

Toxic Algae Blooms Moving East Into Lake Erie’s Central Basin; Unhealthy Levels Found in Drinking Water (Akron Beacon Journal)

School Districts to Get Shorted (Plain Dealer)

A Transcendent Vision For the Continent’s Greatest Fresh Water Asset: Editorial (Plain Dealer)

Drillers in Ohio Increasingly Shifting to Southern Counties (Akron Beacon Journal)

Ohio Legislators to Pursue U.S. Balanced-Budget Law (Columbus Dispatch)

Can the Cleveland Clinic Save Its Hometown? (Forbes)

70 mph on Ohio Rural Highways Helps Ohio Companies Compete: Ohio Sentator Tom Patten (Plain Dealer)

70 mph on Ohio Rural Highways Will Result in More Pollution and Fatal Accidents: Jack Shaner-Ohio Environmental Council (Plain Dealer)

Report: U.S. Fish Won’t Survive Warmer Water (Columbus Dispatch)

Ohio’s Construction Industry Sees Shortage of Skilled Workers (Dayton Business Journal)

Process to Get Medicaid Expansion on Statewide Ballot Begins (Columbus Dispatch)

Retirement Boom in Columbus Area Paves Way For New Teachers (Columbus Dispatch)

Medicaid Covered 38% of Births in Ohio in 2011 (Toledo Blade/Akron Beacon Journal)

Cleveland Lakefront RFQ Documents Reveal Details About Potential Projects, Development Teams (Plain Dealer)

In the Battle of Lake Erie Re-Enactment, Bet on the Yanks to Win Again (Plain Dealer)

50 Years and Counting: Mansfield Frazier (Cool Cleveland)

After Firestorm, Michigan Right-to-Work Law Has Had Little Spark (Detroit Fr. Press)

Ohio Charter Schools’ Failed Promise (Columbus Dispatch)

Elementary School Whose Construction in 1964 Led to Demonstrations and the Death of Rev. Bruce Klunder Will Be Torn Down (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor Presses For Court Reforms (Plain Dealer)

 

Avon Lake Ponders Deer Overpopulation Problem (Plain Dealer)

 

Group Gathers Signatures For Medicaid Expansion Ballot Initiative(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Prisons Facing Inmate Population Spike (Associated Press/Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Thousands of Greater Clevelanders Pledge to Pay a Little More for Wind-Fueled Power From Lake Erie Wind Turbines (Freshwater Cleveland)

 

Ohio Medicaid Expansion on Backburner; No Legislative Sessions Scheduled Until October (Plain Dealer)

  

Akron Artists, Filmakers, Musicians Use “Crowdfunding” Websites to Find Patrons (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Highest-Scoring High School in Northeast Ohio is Early College at John Hay (Plain Dealer)

 

Cuyahoga County Executive FitzGerald and Prosecutor McGinty End Turf War Over Law Director (Plain Dealer)

 

Martin Luther King, Jr. “I Have a Dream” Speech April 28, 1963 Lincoln Memorial Washington D.C. (YouTube)

 

Michigan Senate Passes Medicaid Expansion After Compromise (Detroit News)

 

Finally Some Ohio Politicians Are Taking About Creating Civility: Editorial(Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio School Report Card Results Again Trend With District Income(Plain Dealer)

 

Columbus Wants In on the Midwest Rail Renaissance(StreetsBlog.org)

 

Cleveland Scene Magazine Put on the Selling Block By Parent Company(Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

“Guerrilla Stripers” Add Bike Lanes to Detroit Avenue in Cleveland to Protest Slow City Action (Plain Dealer)

 

Former Gov. John Gilligan of Cincinnati Dies at 92 (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Former Gov. John J. Gilligan Dies (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Project Revives Debate in Buffalo on Lake Erie Wind Turbines(Buffalo News)

 

Memories Still Vivid For Cleveland Area Women Part of 1963 March on Washington (Plain Dealer)

 

Coal Contributors Target Ohio GOP Legislators, Governor (Huntington Herald-Dispatch)

 

Columbus as a Tech Magnet Has Strong Draw (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Sales Tax Set to Rise Statewide on September 1; 0.25% Increase(Toledo Blade)

 

Cleveland State University Freshman Class 15% Larger Than Last Year(Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur at Cleveland City Club: August 16, 2013(Cleveland City Club)

 

High-Performing School Districts Face Tough Challenges on New State Report Cards (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Ohio Shale Still Not Creating Promised Jobs (Plain Dealer)

 

Extending Sin Tax for Stadium Improvements is Unfair: Alan Glazen(Plain Dealer)

 

Sin Tax Extension is Vital to Preserving Cleveland’s Sports Venues: Carol Caruso (Plain Dealer)

 

Just 26 Percent of ACT Test-Takers are Prepared for College(Washington Post)

 

Cleveland’s Tow-Truck Law Raises Home-Rule Questions (Columbus Dispatch)

 

School Districts Worry About Today’s Report Card Release (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Ohio School Districts Brace For New Report Cards (Associated Press/Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Five Groups Throw Hats Into Ring to Redevelop Cleveland’s Lakefront(Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Cargill Stops Mining Under Lake Erie Out of Safety Concerns (Plain Dealer)

 

Kasich, FitzGerald Nearly Tied in Race for Ohio Governor, Survey Finds(Plain Dealer)

 

Political Analysts Upgrade John Kasich’s Re-election Chances Againat Ed FitzGerald (Plain Dealer)

 

Wildcatter McClendon Bets Big on Ohio Shale (Wall Street Journal)

 

Clifton Blvd Project a Go; Groundbreaking in September (Plain Dealer)

 

Average Bill For Natural Gas in Ohio Last Year Lowest in 10 Years(Toledo Blade)

 

3 New E-Schools OK’d After State Ban is Lifted (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Politicians to Address Their Own Divisiveness With Help of National Civility Group (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Cuyahoga County Safety Forces Move Cautiously Towards Regionalization (Plain Dealer)

 

Columbus Mayor Coleman Demands Changes to Boost Police and Fire Diversity (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio’s Last Indian Tribe Was Forced Out in 1843 (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Changes in Store as Ohio Warms (Marion Star)

 

Cleveland Again Favored as a Headquarters Town (Plain Dealer)

 

Northeast Ohio Grows as a Base for Headquarters (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Term Limits Make Legislative Supremacy an Almost-Impossible Dream: Tom Suddes (Plain Dealer)

 

How Obama’s Health Plan Will Affect Ohioans – Four Real Cases (Plain Dealer)

 

Health Insurance Exchanges in Ohio to Offer Plenty of Choice(Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Strapped For Money and Staff, Hundreds of Ohio School Districts Unprepared For Third-Grade Reading Guarantee (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Ohio Gains 5,300 Jobs in July; Unemployment Rate Stays at 7.2% (Plain Dealer)

 

Court: Michigan Right-to-Work Law Must Cover Unionized State Employees (Detroit Fr Press)

 

Ohio’s Kasich Seeks a Softer GOP (Wall Street Journal)

 

State of Ohio Still Unsure What This Year’s High School Freshmen Will Need to Pass to Graduate (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio State University’s Record Class of Out-of-State Students; Out-of-State Revenue Set to Equal In-State Tally (Columbus Business First)

 

Ohio Could Save and Expand Medicaid, Study Says (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Analysis: Medicaid Expansion Cheaper Than Current Ohio Plan(Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Blackout Affecting 50 Million People Less Likely Today (Plain Dealer)

 

Port of Cleveland Saw Business Jump in July as More International Ships Arrived (Plain Dealer)

 

The More We — as Small Communities — Get Together, the Happier We’ll Be: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio is Only State in U.S. to Not Require Immunizations for Preschoolers(WKYC)

 

Rocky River High School Students in Line for Wireless Access From Personal Devices (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Teachers Face New Challenges This School Year (Associated Press/News Herald)

 

Toledo Named Top Minor League Baseball Market (Toledo Blade)

 

“Reset” By Plain Dealer is Puzzling to Many in Industry (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Cleveland’s Apathetic Politics: Brent Larkin (Plain Dealer)

 

Times Are Changing For Local University Presidents (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

University of Akron’s Graduation Rate is Awful: Bob Dyer (Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Great Lakes Positioned to Be “Ground Zero” in Water Conflicts(Minneapolis Star Tribune)

 

Ohio State Senator LaRose’s Proposal Would Allow Ohioans to Register to Vote Online (Plain Dealer)

 

Arms Race in Ohio (Sandusky Register)

 

Political Analysts Upgrade John Kasich’s Re-election Chances Againat Ed FitzGerald (Plain Dealer)

 

Honda to Invest $215 Million to Expand Ohio Engine Plant, Build Training Centers (Detroit Fr Press)

 

Euclid to Dedicate New Million Dollar Fishing Pier, First Phase of Lakefront Development (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Absorbed Federal Cuts to Health Programs, But Fears Many More Cuts Ahead (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Gov. Kasich and His Opponent for Governor Ed FitzGerald Differ on State of Ohio’s Economy (Coshocton Tribune)

 

Fighting Ohio’s Algae Problem (WOSU)

 

Chicago Sees Pension Crisis Drawing Near (New York Times)

 

Ohio Farmers Hoping For Late Fall; Land Prices Strong (Mansfield News Journal)

 

Appraisal Ordered of Detroit Institute of Art Collection, Raising Fears of Liquidation (Plain Dealer)

 

Immigration Road Show Hits Cleveland, Pushing For Reform (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson Feels Betrayed by Ohio Department of Education Over Charter School Approvals (Plain Dealer)

 

“Captain America” Pays Cleveland More Than $210,000 For Movie Shoot(Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Won’t Promote Obama Health Plan, So Advocates, Polticians Say They Will (Plain Dealer)

 

The Blackout, 10 Years Later: Could it Happen Again? (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Ohio Economy: Comeback or Train Wreck? (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

How Cleveland Lured Young Professionals Downtown (Atlantic)

 

Castro Horror Story Ending: Editorial Cartoon (Plain Dealer)

 

Immigration Reform Would Boost Ohio Economy, White House Says(Plain Dealer)

 

Megabus Now Operates Out of RTA Transit Center Near CSU (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Legislators Try to Repeal Common Core School Standards(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Plain Dealer Executes Layoffs as Era of Daily Delivery in Cleveland Nears End (Plain Dealer)

 

Ohio Gov. Kasich Has Big Fundraising Lead Over Challenger Ed FitzGerald (Plain Dealer)

 

U.S. House Restores $150 Million in Great Lakes Cleanup Money at Request of Rep. Dave Joyce (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Plain Dealer “Eliminated the Jobs of Approximately 50 Journalists” (Poynter)

 

Columbus Bike-Share Program Up and Running (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Third Federal Profits Increase by More Than 16-Fold as Mortgage Industry Continues to Improve (Plain Dealer)

 

Motown’s Financial Blues Don’t Ring True in Cleveland (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Plain Dealer is Delivering Bad News to Small Advertisers (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Natural Gas Use by Power Plants Helps Keep Smog Down (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Cancels Property Tax Rollback (Toledo Blade)

 

Franklin County (Columbus) Heading for Financial Squeeze, Experts Say(Columbus Dispatch)

 

National Great Lakes Museum in Toledo Expected to Open Next Spring(Plain Dealer)

 

Taking Back Our Streets: Mansfield Frazier (Cool Cleveland)

 

Kasich is Widening His Road to Re-Election: Thomas Suddes (Plain Dealer)

 

Megabus Adds More Cleveland Arrivals, Departures, Becomes Vital Midwest Hub (Plain Dealer)

 

Making Sense of Cleveland’s Good and Bad News (NPR)

 

Advocates for Poor Fear Congress Will Kill Tax Credit Used For Developing Low Income Housing (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Healthcare Startups Lead Midwest in Investments (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Cleveland the Leading Target for Healthcare Investment in Midwest(Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland’s New Convention Hotel Could Bring Life to the Mall and Connect a Disconnected Downtown (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Needs One More Thing to Get More Movies Filmed Here(WKYC)

 

Remembering the Past – The Stature and Statue of Tom L. Johnson(Cool Cleveland)

 

Ohio to Be Hands-Off in Spreading Information About Federal Healthcare Law (Associated Press)

 

Cuyahoga County Council Talks Charter Amendments (Plain Dealer)

 

Great Lakes Cleanup Money is Slashed by U.S. House Spending Panel(Plain Dealer)

 

A Growth Strategy For Detroit, Post-Bankruptcy (Detroit News)

 

Gov. John Kasich Says Opportunity Corridor in Cleveland Should Get State Cash (Plain Dealer)

 

School Voucher Programs Expand, Giving Ohio More Programs Than Any Other State (Plain Dealer)

 

The Glenville Shootout – 45 Years Ago But Somehow Today: Roldo Bartimole (Cleveland Leader)

 

RTA’s Joe Calabrese: Transit Can Drive NE Ohio to a Denser and More Prosperous Future (Plain Dealer)

 

A Matter of Opinion: The Future of Coal (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Families Forced to Cope With the Rising Cost of College (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Kasich Says Ohio Medicaid Expansion Inevitable (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Feds Showing Little Enthusiasm For Detroit Bailout (Detroit News)

 

Ohio House Resurrects “Stand Your Ground” Bid (Toledo Blade)

 

John Kasich, Ed FitzGerald and the Politics of Ohio’s Jobs Numbers(Plain Dealer)

 

Report: Ohio’s Fracking Protections Fall Short (Cincinnati City Beat)

 

Billions In Debt, Detroit Tumbles into Insolvency (New York Times)

 

Detroit Files For the Largest Municipal Bankruptcy Case in U.S. History(Detroit News)

 

Nuclear Energy Too Expensive to Compete, Independent Economist Argues (Plain Dealer)

 

Merger of Moreland Hills, Orange, Pepper Pike and Woodmere Off the Table For Now (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland is Rare City With Two Honor Roll Hospitals; an Honor Shared By Only Four Other U.S. Cities (Plain Dealer)

 

Algae Threatens Lake Erie Tourism (Toledo Blade)

 

Lake Erie Algae Content Expected to Double Over Last Year(WCPN/Ideastream)

 

Proposed Passenger Rail Line Between Columbus and Chicago Would Cost $1.3 Billion to Build (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Oil, Gas Industry Shell Out Big Money to Defeat Ohio Fracking Tax(Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Cleveland’s Startup Community is Growing Into Something Big, Study Says (Plain Dealer)

 

Detroit Bankruptcy Clock Ticking (Detroit News)

 

Cincinnati City Leaders Worry That 872-Room Millennium Hotel is a Drag on City’s Convention Business (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

With Richard Cordray’s Future Now Set, Ed Fitzgerald Now Controls His Own Destiny in Ohio Governor’s Race: Analysis (Plain Dealer)

 

Groups Say Ohio Missing An Opportunity on Electric Cars (Midwest Energy News)

 

Displaced Kentucky Elderly Moving to Ohio Nursing Homes (Associated Press/SF Chronicle)

 

Ed Jerse, Cuyahoga County Regionalism “Czar” announces For Ohio State Senate (Plain Dealer)

 

More Heartland Cities See Immigrants as an Economic Force They Need(Plain Dealer)

 

Welcoming America Brings It’s Pro-Immigrant Message to Depopulated Cleveland (Plain Dealer)

 

Great Lakes Play Crucial Role in Global Water Needs (Toledo Blade)

 

Ohio Health Care Insurance Exchanges Take Shape (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Does Cleveland Mayoral Candidate Ken Lanci Have Any Relevance?: Philip Morris (Plain Dealer)

 

Cleveland Schools About to Break Ground on New John Marshall, Max Hayes and Cleveland School of the Arts High Schools (Plain Dealer)

 

Is the “Rust Belt” a Dirty Word?: Richey Pilparinen (Cool Cleveland)

 

Columbus Bike-Share Program to Launch By End of July (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Gov. Kasich Bolsters Ohio’s Rainy-Day Fund; Now at $1.48 Billion(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Charter Schools Will Get More Money Next Year (StateImpact/NPR)

 

Today is Property Tax Day For Cuyahoga County Communities; Compare Tax Rates (Plain Dealer)

 

Akron Beacon Journal to Expand Home Delivery Turf (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Gov. Kasich Calls For Summer Legislative Session to Extend Medicaid(Columbus Dispatch)

 

Ohio Amish Weigh Tradition and Temptation in Debate Over Fracking(Akron Beacon Journal)

 

Case Western Reserve Univ. Free Online Courses Exceed Expectations(Plain Dealer)

 

Opportunity Corridor Project Receives $29 Million For Planning (Plain Dealer)

 

Shale Boom Creating Shortage in Affordable Housing in Eastern Ohio(Akron Beacon Journal)

 

FirstEnergy to Deactivate Two More Coal-Fired Power Plants (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

Detroit’s Greek Tragedy (Washington Post)

 

When the Civil War Hit Ohio (Cincinnati Enquirer)

 

Taxes Axed Even as State Budget Bulges under Gov. Kasich (Crain’s Cleveland Business)

 

How Best to Save a Neighborhood? The case for Rehabilitation: Jeffrey Johnson (Plain Dealer)

 

How Best to Save a Neighborhood? The case for Demolition: Jim Rokakis(Plain Dealer)

 

Experts Worry as Ohio Amphibians Vanish (Columbus Dispatch)

 

Legislating by a Gang of Six: Tom Suddes (Plain Dealer)

The Voinovich Collections from Cleveland State Univ and Ohio Univ

The link is here

Summary

Throughout his career in public service, George V. Voinovich has lived and led by the belief that “together we can do it.” Voinovich has been elected to more offices than any other person in Ohio and is the largest vote getter in Ohio history. From his time as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives, Cuyahoga County Auditor and Commissioner, Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, Mayor of Cleveland, Governor of Ohio and US Senator, he strove for more than 45 years to make all levels of government “work harder and smarter and do more with less.”

Over his long career in public service his first priority has always been serving his constituents. As he said as governor,

“I believe the government’s highest calling is to empower people and galvanize their energy and resources to help solve our problems, meet our challenges, and seize our opportunities. I also believe it’s a leader’s role to reach deep into every individual, draw out the goodness that’s inside and inspire people to use that goodness to help themselves, their families and their communities.”

Every decision George V. Voinovich has made and every policy he’s crafted, although not always the easiest or most popular at the time, has aimed to improve the lives of every Ohioan.

Curated by

Melanie Furey- Research Project Coordinator, Cleveland State University

 

Dorothy Fuldheim from Wikipedia

The link is here

Dorothy Fuldheim (June 26, 1893–November 3, 1989) was an American journalist and anchor, spending the majority of her career for The Cleveland Press and WEWS-TV, both based in Cleveland, Ohio.

Fuldheim has a role in American television news history; she is credited with being the first woman in the United States to anchor a television news broadcast as well to host her own television show. She has been referred to as the “First Lady of Television News.” [1]

Contents

 [hide

Early life and early career[edit]

Cleveland Pressgraphic of Dorothy Fuldheim from 1929

Fuldheim, an American of Jewish descent, was born in Passaic, New Jersey. She spent her childhood in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prior to working in broadcasting, she was an elementary schoolteacher.

During the 1920s, after her first marriage, Fuldheim moved to Cleveland, Ohio where she began her theatrical, lecturing and broadcasting careers. She started in radio hosting a biography program for WTAM, and eventually the ABC Radio network, where she was their first female commentator.[2] Fuldheim was then approached by a representative fromScripps-Howard-flagship The Cleveland Press about taking a role in journalism. Despite a lack of experience in the field, Fuldheim soon traveled around the world, even conducting rare interviews with both Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler prior to World War II.[2]

Television career[edit]

Fuldheim began her television career at age 54 when she joined the staff of WEWS-TV Channel 5 in Cleveland, also owned by Scripps-Howard, in 1947. At that time, it was the only television station between New York and Chicago. Despite spending her entire broadcasting career based in Cleveland, she traveled widely to cover a variety of news stories, and was regarded as a broadcaster of national importance.

In 1959, Fuldheim, who had been with the station before it even went on air, began to formulate her own newscast in response to the new Eyewitness News onKYW, which was the first half-hour newscast in the country. Fuldheim centered her newscast around her interviews, a general overview of the news, and her commentaries (during which the very opinionated Fuldheim frequently inserted her own opinions about the stories). Fuldheim was the first woman in the United States to have her own television news analysis program.

While the format of her show, “Highlights of the News”, consisted primarily of news analysis, it also included commentary, book reviews and interviews. In the years that “Highlights of the News” aired, Fuldheim interviewed a number of diverse notable persons including the Duke of WindsorHelen KellerBarbara Waltersand Martin Luther King Jr. She also interviewed several 20th century American presidents.

Dorothy Fuldheim with Bill Gordon on the set of “The One O’Clock Club”

In the 1960s, Fuldheim teamed with Cleveland radio personality Bill Gordon to host “The One O’Clock Club” on WEWS, a mix of entertainment, news, and interviews. This show eventually inspired KYW to launch a similar show hosted by Mike Douglas that eventually eclipsed “The One O’ Clock Club” in popularity en route to becoming nationally syndicated. At this same time, Fuldheim was also frequently lampooned and skewered on WJW-TV’s Shock Theater with Ghoulardi.

Fuldheim, recognizable for her fiery red hair, was well known for her sometimes controversial opinions. She was not shy about supporting unpopular causes, nor in voicing her opposition if she disagreed with a guest. On one program, she interviewed 1960s activist Jerry Rubin about his book Do It. In the interview, Jerry Rubin started to quiz Fuldheim, asking her if she drank. Fuldheim said, “I have the damn best liver in Cleveland.” He then took a picture of a nude woman and showed it to her. Fuldheim responded by asking Rubin, “How is [the photo] germane to the topic?” He then referred to the police as “pigs” and offended Fuldheim, who replied, “I’ve got a shock for you. Some of my friends are policemen”. Rubin then muttered “Well, I’ve got a shock for you. I’m good friends with the Black Panthers.” At which, Fuldheim threw his book and kicked Rubin off the set saying “Out! Stop the interview” as the cameras rolled.[3] [1]

At times, Fuldheim could offend some members of her audience. A month after ejecting Rubin from her television show, she found herself in the controversial hotseat. On May 4, 1970 while live on the air, Fuldheim made the following statement regarding the actions of the Ohio National Guard during the Kent State shootings, “What is wrong with our country? “We’re killing our own children.”[4] Due to her reference to the shooting of the four students as murder, there were numerous calls from viewers for Fuldheim to resign from her position at WEWS. However, she had the backing of station management and did not resign.[3]

In 1980, Fuldheim was inducted in the Ohio Women’s Hall of Fame[5] and went on to cover major 1980s events: She traveled to London to cover the 1981 royal wedding of Prince Charles and Diana, the funeral of assassinated Egyptian president Anwar Sadat and to Northern Ireland to interview the family of IRAactivist/hunger striker Bobby Sands.

Death and posthumous recognition[edit]

Dorothy Fuldheim (center) with the WEWS news team in the early 1980s

Fuldheim’s long and distinguished career – where, at age 91, she still conducted interviews and read commentaries on-air three times every day – ended when she suffered a stroke on July 27, 1984, shortly after interviewing U.S. PresidentRonald Reagan via satellite. The station received so many phone calls from viewers asking about her condition that an automated answering machine service was set up, devoted to providing updates about her health.[6] She never again appeared on television and died in Cleveland five years later at the age of 96.[2]

In 2003, Fuldheim was posthumously awarded an Ohio Historical Marker for her contributions to journalism, which is displayed in front of the WEWS studios.[7][8] [9]

Famous quotes[edit]

  • “This is a youth-oriented society, and the joke is on them because youth is a disease from which we all recover.” [10]
  • “It takes a disciplined person to listen to convictions which are different from their own.”[citation needed]
  • “Every American carries in his bloodstream the heritage of the malcontent and the dreamer.”[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Patricia M. Mote (1997). Dorothy Fuldheim: First First Lady of Television News. Quixote Publications. ISBN 0-9633083-5-1.
  2. a b c “Dorothy Fuldheim, 96, A News Commentator”The New York Times. Associated Press. 4 November 1989. p. 10. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  3. a b O’Dell, Cary (1997). Women Pioneers in Television: Biographies of Fifteen Industry Leaders. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland and Company. ISBN 0-7864-0167-2OCLC 35646616. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  4. ^ Gregorino, Tony Ryan (15 August 1997). “Doyenne of TV news “returns”: Program celebrates the legendary late broadcaster Dorothy Fuldheim”Sun News(Cleveland, Ohio). Archived from the original on 29 October 2007. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  5. ^ “Ohio Women’s Hall of Fame Bio: Dorothy Fuldheim”Ohio Women’s Hall of Fame. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio Department of Job & Family Services. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  6. ^ Barron, James (29 August 1984). “The Talk of Cleveland; Trying to Select an Image for a City Whose Mayor Once Set His Hair Afire”. The New York Times. Retrieved 18 June 2010.
  7. ^ Shaw, Judy (12 September 2007). “Dorothy Fuldheim Honored with Ohio Historical Marker”NewsNet5 (E.W. Scripps Co.). Retrieved 1 August 2009.[dead link]
  8. ^ http://www.flickr.com/photos/cbustapeck/3437445481/in/photostream/
  9. ^ http://www.flickr.com/photos/cbustapeck/3437445915/in/photostream/
  10. ^ Famous Quotes and Authors – Dorothy Fuldheim Quotes

Viktor Schreckengost from Wikipedia

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Viktor Schreckengost

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
 
Viktor Schreckengost
ViktorSchreckengost2006NationalMedalofArts.jpg
First Lady Laura Bush, 100-year-old industrial designer Viktor Schreckengost, and U.S. President George W. Bush at the presentation of the 2006 National Medal of Arts in the Oval Officeof the White House on November 9, 2006
Born June 26, 1906
SebringOhioUnited States
Died January 26, 2008 (aged 101)
TallahasseeFlorida
Occupation Industrial designer

Viktor Schreckengost (June 26, 1906 – January 26, 2008) was an American industrial designer as well as a teacher, sculptor, and artist. His wide-ranging work included noted pottery designs, industrial design, bicycle design and seminal research on radar feedback. Schreckengost’s peers included designers Raymond LoewyNorman Bel GeddesEva Zeisel, and Russel Wright.

Contents

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Early life[edit]

Born and raised in SebringOhio, Schreckengost was one of six children. His father worked at a ceramics factory from which he brought home material for his children to model. Every week he held a sculpture contest among the children, the winner of which accompanied his father on his weekend trip into the local big city, Alliance, Ohio. Only years later did Schreckengost realize that his father systematically rotated the winner. His younger brothers Donald and Paul Schreckengost also went on to careers as ceramicists.[1]

Schreckengost graduated from the Cleveland School of the Arts (now the Cleveland Institute of Art) in 1929, at which time he earned a partial scholarship to study at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Vienna. To make the trip, he borrowed $1,500 from two owners of Gem Clay, an industrial ceramics manufacturer in Sebring. When he returned six months later, Schreckengost paid back his loans—a lucky event for the men from Gem Clay, since separate bank failures during the Great Depression would have otherwise wiped them out.

Career[edit]

Schreckengost taught industrial design at the Cleveland Institute of Art (CIA) for more than 50 years and was a professor emeritus at CIA until his death. He was also the youngest faculty member ever at CIA (then known as the Cleveland School of the Arts). Schreckengost founded CIA’s school of industrial design, the first of its kind in the country.[citation needed] His notable students include Giuseppe Delena, chief designer at Ford Motor Co.; Larry Nagode, principal designer at Fisher-Price (father of Ryan Nagode); John Nottingham and John Spirk, founders of innovation firm Nottingham Spirk, inventors of the first Dirt Devil handheld Vacuum;[2] Joe Oros, head of the studio at Ford that designed the 1965 Ford Mustang, Sid Ramnarace, designer of the 5th generation Ford Mustang and Jerry Hirschberg, designer of the Infiniti J30 and the 1971 boat tail Buick Riviera.[3]

Schreckengost enlisted in the Navy at age 37 to help the Allies in World War II. He was flown on secret missions to Europe where he used his modeling knowledge to help improve the radar used in the Battle of the Bulge. Later he helped design prosthetics for wounded soldiers. He retired from the Naval Reservesas a Captain. Schreckengost was also good friends with Cleveland safety director Eliot Ness.

Designs[edit]

The Viktor Schreckengost Foundation homepage indicates:

Every adult in America has ridden in, ridden on, drunk out of, stored their things in, eaten off of, been costumed in, mowed their lawn with, played on, lit the night with, viewed in a museum, cooled their room with, read about, printed with, sat on, placed a call with, enjoyed in a theater, hid their hooch in, collected, been awarded with, seen at a zoo, put their flowers in, hung on their wall, served punch from, delivered milk in, read something printed on, seen at the World’s Fair, detected enemy combatants with, written about, had an arm or leg replaced with, graduated from, protected by, or seen at the White House something created by Viktor Schreckengost.[4]

Schreckengost designed the Jazz Bowl for Eleanor Roosevelt during his association with Cowan Pottery. He created (at the time) the largest freestanding ceramic sculpture in the world, Early Settler at Lakewood High School in Lakewood, Ohio. He designed bicycles manufactured by Murray bicycles for Murray and Sears, Roebuck and Company. With engineer Ray Spiller, he designed the first truck with a cab-over-engine configuration, a design in use to this day. And he created simple, modern dinnerware designs that became popular throughout the United States.

Tributes and legacy[edit]

Schreckengost lived in Cleveland Heights, Ohio with his second wife Jean, and he celebrated his 100th birthday in June 2006. The Viktor Schreckengost Foundation planned more than 100 exhibits of his work, with at least one in each US state, to celebrate the milestone.[5] The exhibits opened in March 100 days before his 100th birthday. Schreckengost attended an exhibit in New York City to open the shows. The night before his birthday he was honored at Cain Park in Cleveland Heights by a large and appreciative crowd. Also in 2006, Schreckengost was awarded the National Medal of Arts, the highest honor the federal government can bestow on an American artist. He and the nine other winners were feted in an Oval Office ceremony by President George W. Bush and the First Lady Laura Bush on November 9, 2006.[6]

Schreckengost died on January 26, 2008 at age 101 while visiting family in Tallahassee, Florida[7] — predeceased by his three sisters, Pearl Eckleberry, Ruth Key, and Lucille Jackson, and his two brothers, Paul and Donald Schreckengost.

In 2000, the Cleveland Museum of Art curated the first ever retrospective of Schreckengost’s work. Broad in scope, the exhibition included sculpture, pottery, dinnerware, drawings, and paintings. The centerpiece of the exhibit was the Jazz Bowl. The industrial design portion included many of his famous designs such as safer and cleaner printing presses, economical pedal cars, cab-over-engine trucks, banana-seat bicycles, electric fans, and lawn chairs. Then in his 90s, Schreckengost made many personal appearances at the exhibit. In April 1991, Schreckengost traveled with Henry B. Adams, then curator of the CIA, to Norfolk, Virginia to address the Hampton Roads chapter of the American Institute of Architects at age 93.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ “Related links”. East Liverpool, Ohio: The Museum of Ceramics.
  2. ^ “The Ferchill Group”. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
  3. ^ Makovsky, Paul (4 February 2008). “Industrial Designer Viktor Schreckengost dead at 101”Metropolis Magazine.
  4. ^ “Viktor Schreckengost Foundation”. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  5. ^ Rohrlich, Marianne (11 May 2006). “Belatedly, Stardom Finds a 20th-Century Master”The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-28.
  6. ^ “Viktor Announced as 2006 Medal of Arts Recipient”. Viktor Schreckengost Foundation. 2006-11-10. Retrieved 2008-01-27.
  7. ^ Litt, Steven (2008-01-27). “Viktor Schreckengost has died at age 101”The Plain Dealer. Retrieved 2008-01-27.

Hough Riots from Wikipedia

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Hough Riots

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hough Riots were race riots in the predominantly African American community of Hough (pronounced “Huff”) in Cleveland, Ohio that took place over a six-night period from July 18 to July 23, 1966. During the riots, four African Americans were killed and 30 people were critically injured. In addition, there were 275 arrests, while more than 240 fires were reported.

They shared underlying causes of social problems with other racial riots. The riots caused more people (and jobs) to leave the area, which suffered decades ofdisinvestment. Since the late 1990s, there has been some redevelopment.

Contents

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The riots[edit]

A mural painted on the side of the African American Museum depicts the Hough riots, the civil rights movementand a family looking towards a bright new future for the city and the community.

On July 18, 1966, at dusk, someone posted a sign outside the 79’ers bar, situated on the southeast corner of E.79th Street and Hough Avenue. The sign read, “No Water For Niggers”. Adding to the volatility of the situation, the bar manager and a hired hand, both white, patrolled the front of the bar, armed with shotguns.[1] An African American woman described as a “prostitute” was seeking money for charity. An altercation occurred and she was told to leave.[citation needed] Later, an African American man entered the building and bought a bottle of wine. When he asked for a glass of water, he was told that blacks were not being served.[2]

Soon after, a crowd of about fifty people gathered outside. The Cleveland Police Department arrived, in force, to defuse the situation. The presence of the CPD only intensified the crowd’s anger.[1] As angry crowds gathered over a 23-block area, chants of “Black Power” were followed by the throwing of rocks and Molotov cocktails[citation needed], bringing more than 300 police and firemen.

Racial tension was high between Cleveland’s police and African American community. The arrival of police precipitated gunfire, as well as brick-throwing by angry residents. The police shot out some street lights and asked drivers to turn off their car lights to limit possible targets by snipers.[citation needed]

Joyce Arnett, a black 26-year-old mother of three, was shot dead when she called from a window, as she was trying to get permission to go home and check on her children.[1]

The next day, Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes activated 1,600 local members of the National Guard, but they did not arrive in Cleveland until 11:00 p.m. The Hough area became quiet after the troops were deployed. An attempt by Cleveland Mayor Ralph S. Locher to limit potential violence by closing local bars and taverns at 6:00 p.m. did not succeed. Arsonists attacked abandoned houses and commercial buildings.[citation needed]

Percy Giles, a black 38-year-old divorced father of two, became the second victim of the violence. He was shot and killed while on his way to help a friend protect his business. In all, 77 people were arrested that night. Fire alarms kept firemen busy through the night.

On the third night of violence, the heavy presence of police and guardsmen helped push the rioting to the southern and northeastern parts of the area. Five people were wounded, including a woman and her two young children.

On the fourth night, Sam Winchester, a 54-year-old black man, was killed while walking to a bus stop. While he lay dying, Winchester told police that he had been shot by whites who targeted him from a passing vehicle.

As the uprising was winding down, rumors fostered tension in the Mayfield Road-Murray Hill section, known locally as “Little Italy“. Though the section was located some 40 city blocks from the Hough epicenter and already covered by heavy National Guard patrols, Little Italy’s residents had armed themselves and organized a system of patrols. Fears were projected in rumors. There was a rumor of a “sniper” on a roof just outside the neighborhood. When two youths injured themselves by accidentally firing a shotgun, it was reported as “two white boys shot by Negroes”.

A trio of white men shot 29-year-old Benoris Toney, a black man sitting in his car in a nearby Euclid Avenue lumber yard. During the ensuing investigation and trial, triggerman Warren LaRiche claimed that Toney had pointed a gun at them. LaRiche was acquitted of murder charges by an all-white jury on the grounds of self-defense.[3]

Heavy rains on July 24 helped put an end to the violence, though it did nothing to end the animosity between area residents and police. In addition, during the most heated moments of the uprising, Cleveland Chief of Police Richard Wagner had claimed that countless bombs had been built by a Hough area group. Mayor Locher did not support the claim.

During the riots, police and city administrators believed they noticed an increasing level of organization. Police Chief Richard Wagner stated that the rioting of the third night “definitely seemed more organized than the last two nights.” In the later stages of the riot, police were ordered to record out-of-state license numbers to try to identify outside agitators.[2]

Post-riot commentary[edit]

The underlying cause of the riot, which occurred during a period of racial riots in major cities across the United States, was a failure by Cleveland city government to address a combination of local issues, resulting in the area’s nickname as “Rough Hough”. Loss of jobs due to restructuring of heavy industry had begun, undercutting the economic gains of many Blacks. The loss of jobs and businesses reduced the city’s tax base and its ability to respond to social needs.

The city had been slow to begin to integrate its police department, which had few black officers. Recently there had been incidents of alleged racially motivatedpolice brutality. As only 165 of Cleveland’s 2,200 police officers were African American, the Black community tended to distrust the police.[4]

Middle-class blacks had begun to move out of the city, as they took advantage of new freedoms in housing due to civil rights legislation. While freedom in housing was positive, the migration of middle-class blacks from the city also meant a loss of density in population, and often a loss of jobs and businesses that had formerly been an integral part of Black neighborhoods.

Persistent poverty and unemployment among those who remained in Hough, an associated high crime rate, and poor living conditions contributed to the rioting. Landlords increasingly lived outside the neighborhood and took little interest in maintaining their properties. The city had no means to enforce maintenance of properties. The area’s tax base began to erode, as did city services.[5]

Earlier in the year, Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, who was serving as a commissioner on the United States Commission on Civil Rights, had stated that conditions in the area were “the worst I had seen”. The commission had urged city leaders to be more understanding of the needs of the community, but Cleveland mayor Ralph Locher disputed its findings.

Alleged Communist Party involvement[edit]

On August 10, 1966, a grand jury reported its findings as to the root causes of the riots. The jury stated:

“The jury finds that the outbreak of lawlessness and disorder was both organized, precipitated and exploited by a relatively small group of trained and disciplined professionals at the business. They were aided and abetted, willingly or otherwise, by misguided people of all ages and colors, many of whom are avowed believers in violence and extremism, and some of whom are either members or officers of the Communist Party.”

Although the findings of the grand jury satisfied many in the city, the editor of the Cleveland Press wrote that its conclusions were “dangerous to believe”…”because once the community assigns the Hough looting, shooting, burning, and hell-raising to a traveling band from Havana or Peking, the door will be open for another riot.”

Another panel, however, determined that the underlying causes of the riots could be found in the social conditions that existed in the ghettos of Cleveland. Many African-American residents in this part of Cleveland believed that the city, state, and Federal government officials were not meeting their needs. It also found that the residents of Little Italy had strong feelings of territoriality and overreacted to rumors of violence, leading to their own murder of an innocent black man.[4]Contemporary historical analyses of the causes of the riot do not find evidence for claims of communist influence.[6]

Bertram Gardner stated that the conclusion of Communist influence was an attempt by city leaders to distance themselves from contributions which they may have made to the conditions precipitating the riot.[citation needed] Extensive investigation by the FBI, Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach and U. S. Attorney Merle McCurdy determined that no outside agitators instigated the disorder.[citation needed]

Since the early 1960s, J. Edgar Hoover had directed the FBI to pursue Communist links to the Civil Rights Movement.[7] In the FBI’s annual 1967 annual the FBI persisted in drawing general links between Communists and urban unrest:

“Exploitation of racial unrest in the United States continues to be a major program of the Communists. During the year, the party issued numerous directives through its National Negro Commission instructing members to participate in the civil rights movement and to be alert to the provocation of militant action among Negroes.”[8]

In 1967 the FBI also released a report titled “Report: W.E.B. Du Bois Clubs of America.” In the report, they stated that during the riot in the Hough area of Cleveland, four members of the Du Bois Club, a communist youth organization, were detained by the Ohio National Guard. Communist literature was found in a search of their automobile. Later, two of the four were arrested by Cleveland police and charged with obstructing police officers.[9] In 1967 Phillip Abbot Luce, a former member of the Communist Party of America (CPUSA), published his book “Road to Revolution”, in which he claimed a role by the Communist Party in the Hough Riots, as well as other riots in the United States during the same time period.[10]

Afro Set involvement[edit]

Following the arrest in 1968 of several of its leaders on suspicion of instigating a Cleveland-area riot, the Nationalist Party for Self Defense of New Libya was forced to disband. A Cleveland-based Black nationalist organization, Afro Set was considered extremist and violent by the FBI. The FBI was of the opinion that Afro Set “advocated hatred of white people and ‘outside’ authority and had as its main goal the complete takeover and control of Cleveland’s black community.” The FBI therefore considered Afro Set a “threat to the internal security of this country.” [11]

In December 1970, the FBI initiated a formal investigation of Afro Set based on information that the organization was “making plans to foment[ ] or stimulate[ ] racial disturbances.” Second Superneau Decl. WW 9, 12. In particular, the FBI suspected Afro Set of violating 18 U.S.C. §§ 2383 (rebellion or insurrection), 2384 (seditious conspiracy), and 2385 (advocating overthrow of the government).[12] Contemporary commentators do not attribute Afro Set with a role in sparking the Hough Riots, although it is documented that Afro Set was active in Cleveland at the time.[13]

Ahmed Evans, one of the Afro Set leaders gained publicity in a Wall Street Journal report on racial tensions in Cleveland, published in spring after the Hough riots. The article started “To Ahmed, the high priest of Negro militancy here, the white man is the ‘beast’ to be overcome.” The article continued “He predicts May 9th will be the ‘terrible day’ that the anger of the city’s black ghetto erupts into violence.” Carl Stokes described Evans as a petty hustler who spouted revolutionary nonsense in order to build a following.[14]

Effects[edit]

The Hough Riots left the community with physical and emotional scars that would take a long time to begin to heal. The stigma of the riots depressed property values for decades below those found in surrounding black neighborhoods.[15] The attempts of residents who remained to redevelop their neighborhood were stymied by public and economic policies that led to further disinvestment.[16]

As in many American inner-cities, both black and white residents fled the area, causing depopulation through the 1970s, 80s and 90s.[5] The riot served as a wake-up call. The Hough Area Development Corporation was formed to stimulate investment in the neighborhood, but it did not survive long.[17] It would take another generation before social and economic forces played out enough for a revival to begin. Not until the late 1990s did the Community Development Corporations (CDCs) begin to play an important role in redevelopment of the neighborhood.[18]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. a b c The Night They burned Old Hough By Walter Johnson.
  2. a b http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/23/Icons-mini-file_acrobat.gif); padding-right: 18px; background-position: 100% 50%; background-repeat: no-repeat no-repeat; “>Hough Riots By Lakritz. Published 1968
  3. ^ Race, Violence, and Urban Territoriality: Cleveland’s Little Italy and the 1966 Hough Uprising Todd M. Michney Journal of Urban History, Vol. 32, No. 3, 404-428 (2006)
  4. a b “Hough Riots”., Ohio History Central
  5. a b Hough Heritage
  6. ^ Race, Violence, and Urban Territoriality: Cleveland’s Little Italy and the 1966 Hough Uprising Todd M. Michney Journal of Urban History, Vol. 32, No. 3, 404-428 (2006)
  7. ^ Diane McWhorter, Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama, The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001.
  8. ^ Congress. House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). “Subversive Influences in Riots, Looting, and Burning”
  9. ^ “CIA, FBI, and Government Documents – FBI Documents, African American Involvement in the Vietnam War
  10. ^ “Road To Revolution: Communist Guerrilla Warfare in the USA” by Luce, Phillip Abbott, 1967, Viewpoint Books, San Diego, CA.
  11. ^ See Second Declaration of Regina M. Superneau 12 [hereinafter Second Superneau Decl.]http://www.ll.georgetown.edu/federal/judicial/dc/opinions/94opinions/94-5373a.html
  12. ^ Williams Donald v. FBI
  13. ^ see, Julian Gladstone, Never climbed his mountain, Infinity, 2002, pg.235
  14. ^ Diana Tittle, Rebuilding Cleveland: The Cleveland Foundation and Its Evolving Urban Strategy, Ohio State University Press, 1992, pg.172-173
  15. ^ A neighborhood-level view of riots, property values, and population loss: Cleveland 1950–1980 Explorations in Economic History Volume 44, Issue 3, July 2007, Pages 365-386
  16. ^ Daniel Kerr, “We Know What the Problem Is”, Oral History Review, Winter/Spring 2003, Vol. 30, No. 1, Pages 27–45
  17. ^ Hough Cleveland.com
  18. ^ http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/23/Icons-mini-file_acrobat.gif); padding-right: 18px; background-position: 100% 50%; background-repeat: no-repeat no-repeat; “>W. Dennis Keating, “The Dilemma of Old, Urban Neighborhoods”, 1999
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