Another 40,000 books are being given away this Saturday at Glass City Metropark
For the second consecutive summer, Glass City Metropark will host an event in which 40,000 books will be given away free of charge on a first-come, first-served basis.
For the second consecutive summer, Glass City Metropark will host an event in which 40,000 books will be given away free of charge on a first-come, first-served basis.
The city of Toledo continues to post updates and resources for Point Place residents cleaning up from last week's tornado.
So far at least four area school districts are canceling classes next year on the day a solar eclipse casts a shadow 124 miles wide across Ohio, but officials aren’t doing so purely so students can enjoy the once-in-a-lifetime occurrence in the state.
BEIJING — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met on Monday with Chinese President Xi Jinping and said they agreed to “stabilize” badly deteriorated U.S.-China ties, but America’s top diplomat left Beijing with his biggest ask rebuffed: better communications between their militaries.
Three people were stabbed early Saturday in West Toledo in what police said was a road rage-related dispute.
Two men showed up at ProMedica Toledo Hospital with gunshot wounds in separate incidents on Saturday, police said.
BOWLING GREEN — Todd Simon has spent a lot of time constructing Bowling Green State University’s men’s basketball team since taking over the program in mid-March.
We are well into an era when the outdoors no longer belongs primarily to men.
After nine years of overseeing the increasingly successful athletic programs at Toledo Christian, athletic director Tim Wensink will step away from that role at the end of June as he begins work in his new profession.
Tyler Rake was clinically dead when we last saw him at the end of Extraction, tumbling over a bridge in Bangladesh with a fatal, burbling bullet wound to his neck. But death is no match for Netflix.
Where does your food come from?
BOWLING GREEN — Silicone and other siloxane-based polymers are in countless consumer products, but their popularity comes with a catch: Almost all of them are thrown into landfills after one use.
When Marvin Miller and Kathy Kress decided their three children needed a stay-at-home parent, the choice boiled down to finances. As a lawyer, she had a higher-paying job. Though a man taking on full-time parenting responsibilities was rare in 1998, he told The Blade he appreciated the freedom to schedule his own time and watch his kids grow.
The truth that “personnel is policy,” was on vivid display at the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio Board meeting Thursday.
The best of times-worst of times dichotomy made famous by Charles Dickens in A Tale of Two Cities is alive and well in Ohio.
Frank L. Pile, a retired industrial engineer for a major glassmaker who brought a career’s worth of experience – and enthusiasm – to his second career as a high school math and science substitute teacher, died Tuesday at home in Perrysburg. He was 80.
Recently released inspections reports of Lucas County food-service operations.
LOS ANGELES — Wyndham Clark always carried the message from his late mother to “play big." Nothing was bigger than Sunday when he held off Rory McIlroy with one clutch shot after another to become a U.S. Open champion.
The Toledo Museum of Art invited the community to an outdoor celebration of culture and legacy in observance of Juneteenth.
SONOMA, Calif. — The relentless grind of the NASCAR Cup Series pauses this week, and just about everybody involved with the cars is looking to take advantage.
PHOENIX — Cleveland Guardians manager Terry Francona has a simple system that he uses to determine if Josh Naylor is hitting the baseball well.
ALLENTOWN, Pa. — The Toledo Mud Hens were shut out for the final eight innings Sunday in a 4-2 loss to the Lehigh Valley IronPigs that concluded their road series.
They are the best of college football, the worst of college football.
A single vehicle accident in Wood County Sunday afternoon has claimed the life of the driver, the Wood County Sheriff’s office said.
Leaving the Toledo Walleye organization was not an easy decision for highly-skilled forward Gordie Green who is fulfilling a lifelong dream of playing in Europe.