Blade staff wins 13 awards in 2022 Ohio APME contest
COLUMBUS — The Blade won 13 awards, including three first-place honors, Sunday in the annual Ohio Associated Press Media Editors newspaper competition.
COLUMBUS — The Blade won 13 awards, including three first-place honors, Sunday in the annual Ohio Associated Press Media Editors newspaper competition.
Ohio Senators have introduced a bill that would provide $3 million to the University of Toledo to create an institute within the school’s College of Law with the purpose of fostering diverse viewpoints through academic debate and discussion.
With everything from food to housing costs on the rise these days, it's almost unimaginable to conceive of anything being free.
NEW YORK — The first big live awards show to air during the current screenwriters' strike has retreated to a pre-taped event as the MTV Movie & TV Awards tries to chart a celebratory course through a turbulent Hollywood.
The Arts Commission is holding an artist information session on Tuesday for those interested in submitting designs for signal boxes around downtown Toledo.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — This Kentucky Derby ended just after 7 Saturday evening with Mage the first horse across the finish line.
When an author or an illustrator wins a major literary award, it’s life-changing.
BOWLING GREEN — Animal lovers have a new destination to check out starting this week, as Tabby and Fidos Cat Cafe gets ready to debut its unique contribution to this city’s business scene.
Sunday Chat is a weekly feature appearing in the Blade’s print and digital platforms each Sunday.
Reptiles are the Rodney Dangerfield of the animal kingdom — they often get no respect. But the Toledo Zoo is aiming to change that.
SAN FRANCISCO — Geoffrey Hinton, an award-winning computer scientist known as the “godfather of artificial intelligence,” is having some serious second thoughts about the fruits of his labors.
DALLAS — Airbnb is making a renewed push into renting single rooms in a nod to its beginnings and a realization that renting an entire house is too expensive for many travelers, especially younger ones.
Tod Kowalczyk, head coach of men’s basketball at the University of Toledo, is set to speak Monday at St. John XXIII Catholic Church. Mr. Kowalczyk will discuss how he lives his faith on and off the court as part of the executive speaker series for Young Catholic Professionals.
Amy Dukett shops at several markets to get the most for her dollar when it comes to buying groceries.
When parents bring their children to the ProMedica Urgent Care for Kids facility in Perrysburg, deeply concerned about the possibility of a tick bite and the ominous specter of disease that the tick might be carrying, the first thing Stephanie Showers wants to do is put them at ease.
BRITTON, Mich. — Kathryn Mohr’s suggestion as we were leaving her office near Britton, Mich. was perfect timing.
Credit card rewards help our family save money on groceries, gas, and other necessities. We also use rewards for airline tickets, hotel rooms and airport lounge access.
PAINT the Town Pink, a gala celebrating the 30th anniversary of Susan G. Komen Northwest Ohio presented by Hylant and Savage, was April 29 at the Glass City Center in downtown Toledo.
In her essay (“Abortion amendment harms women, unborn, parents,” April 29), Sen. Theresa Gavarone (R., Bowling Green) states that pro-life laws reflect the values of Ohioans and that extreme special interest groups want to enshrine radical abortion policies into Ohio’s constitution.
For those interested in news concerning Toledo Public Schools, there is one observation that cannot be disputed: the TPS administration is enamored of its specialty high schools.
The mystery of who caused the drone attack on the Kremlin may never be solved.
The Washington battle over the national debt ceiling seems far removed from day-to-day money matters in northwest Ohio.
Twenty-nine families, many of them northwest Ohioans and one of them my own, lost a loved one this week.
[1931-2023] Dr. Neil R. Thomford, a surgeon and medical educator recruited to be surgery department chairman at the Medical College of Ohio, where he remained until he retired, died April 25 in the Manor at Perrysburg nursing facility. He was 91.