Details about event

Saturday, June 24, 5pm, Columbus Square Bowling Palace, 5707 Forest Hills Blvd.

The Faith Thomas Foundation is hosting our eighth annual bowling fundraiser for Sickle Cell, Saturday, June 24, at the Columbus Square Bowling Palace. We hope to see you there.

• $25 adult bowling ticket: two games of bowling, shoe rental, pizza, and soda

• $15 child (12 and under) bowling ticket: two games of bowling, shoe rental, pizza, and soda

• $20 adult non-bowling ticket: pizza and soda

• $10 child (12 and under) non-bowling ticket: pizza and soda

The Faith Thomas Foundation raises funds and awareness to benefit and provide support to the transitional program, between Nationwide Children’s Hospital and Ohio State’s Comprehensive Cancer Center / James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute, to improve the care of patients as they transition from childhood to adulthood. This transition program will provide services that will make for a seamless transition.

Details about event

Saturday, June 24, 5pm, Columbus Square Bowling Palace, 5707 Forest Hills Blvd.

The Faith Thomas Foundation is hosting our eighth annual bowling fundraiser for Sickle Cell, Saturday, June 24, at the Columbus Square Bowling Palace. We hope to see you there.

• $25 adult bowling ticket: two games of bowling, shoe rental, pizza, and soda

• $15 child (12 and under) bowling ticket: two games of bowling, shoe rental, pizza, and soda

• $20 adult non-bowling ticket: pizza and soda

• $10 child (12 and under) non-bowling ticket: pizza and soda

The Faith Thomas Foundation raises funds and awareness to benefit and provide support to the transitional program, between Nationwide Children’s Hospital and Ohio State’s Comprehensive Cancer Center / James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute, to improve the care of patients as they transition from childhood to adulthood. This transition program will provide services that will make for a seamless transition.

Fadi, a Syrian teenager, with curly hair and an acne-covered face, has miraculously survived one of the greatest migrant boat disasters in the modern history of the Mediterranean. 

 Only 104 people have been rescued from a boat that carried an estimated 750 refugees after it capsized on June 13 in the open sea near the coastal town of Pylos.

 Scores of lifeless bodies have been pulled out from the water, and many more have washed ashore. Hundreds are still missing, feared dead, many of whom are women and children, as they huddled on the lower deck of the 30-meter boat. 

There’s a crucial, overlooked aspect of Daniel Ellsberg’s legacy that’s very much worth saluting, you might say: his transformation from a believer in the Vietnam war to a horrified opponent of it, ready to risk prison time to bring classified truth about its pointlessness into public awareness.

Ellsberg, who died on June 16 at age 92, had been part of the military-industrial establishment in the 1960s — a smart young man working as a Pentagon consultant at the Rand Corporation think tank. In the mid-’60s. he wound up spending two years in Vietnam, on a mission for the State Department to study counterinsurgency. He traveled through most of the country — witnessing not simply the war up close but Vietnam itself, and the people who lived there.

Bricker Hall

Since its inception and especially the time of the layout of the landmark campus The Oval, The Ohio State University senior administration occupied space near the top of the central area. Since 1924, they occupied Bricker Hall, beside the original University Hall of 1873 (demolished in 1970, replaced with the present structure—under renovation now—in 1976.)

The century-old building was named The Administration Building. In 1983, it was renamed for John Bricker, an Ohio racist and segregationist. Ohio Attorney General 1933-1937, Governor 1939-1945, and Senator 1947-1959, Bricker was a 1916 OSU graduate and member of the Board of Trustees for more than two decades.

With no public notice and, so far, signage on the unaesthetic cookie-cutter new structure only for the fast-food spots with outdoor patios that share the space on so-called University Square, the administration departed from The Oval and the OSU campus itself for a disconnected and isolated space on the east side of North High Street across the street from the university itself.

Dan’s incredible life of brilliance and service has us all in awe.

Beautiful tributes come from NORMAN STOCKWELL (publisher of Progressive.org), DOROTHY REIK (Progressive Democrats of the Santa Monica Mountains), DENNIS BERNSTEIN (KPFA’s “Flashpoints”), DR. RUTH STRAUSS, TATANKA BRICCA, WENDI LEDERMAN, ANNA GYORGY and many many more.

This is a deeply moving program about a truly great historic figure who will be deeply missed and never forgotten.  

People marching and holding Joe Motil banner

A report by WSYX-Channel 6 TV reporter Darrel Rowland with the title, “Ohio Issue 1 latest example of sliding government accountability, transparency” was published on social media today. Among other things, Rowland wrote, “A 6 On Your Side analysis shows that government accountability and transparency have been crumbling in Ohio for some time.”

The article refers to Gov. Mike DeWine’s refusal to debate Democratic challenger Nan Whaley in last year’s Ohio gubernatorial race. DeWine also rejected numerous interviews from media across the state of Ohio.

Rowland’s story also touches on one-party rule not only on the state-level but the “lack of accountability at the local level in the city of Columbus.”

He writes, “In places like Columbus, where Democrats dominate, incumbents often won’t debate or engage with lesser-known Republican opponents…For example, the campaign spokesman for Mayor Andrew Ginther would not commit to a debate with the Democrat’s GOP challenger this year.”

Details about event

Wednesday, June 21, 2023, 12:00 – 1:00 PM
Ohioans from across the state will convene for a large public rally to summon our collective strength and show unified support for prioritizing investments in the real needs of Ohio’s citizens, families, and communities as final state budget (HB 33) deliberations continue among legislative leaders.  

Location: West Lawn of the Ohio Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio.  More information here.  

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