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"Portraits of a Pandemic" juxtaposes the realties of frontline workers and those who are staying home.
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The public health directors of three Ohio cities and the surrounding counties have issued stay-at-home advisories to slow the spread of the coronavirus; Daily COVID-19 numbers were delayed on Wednesday, as the state said “thousands of reports are pending review” due to technical glitches; Aultman Hospital in Canton will be the first site in the 12-county region to distribute any upcoming coronavirus vaccines; and more stories.
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Cleveland, Cuyahoga County and three other counties have issued stay at home advisories in an effort to curb rapidly growing COVID-19 cases.
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Here are your morning headlines for Wednesday, May 20:DeWine lifts stay-at-home order;DeWine calls on National Guard to help nursing homes;Annie Glenn…
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Here are your morning headlines for Monday, May 11:Delta suspends service at Akron-Canton;State to randomly test for COVID-19 antibodies;Protests erupt…
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Here are your morning headlines for Tuesday, April 28: Kent State outlines pay cuts amid $110M loss;DeWine outlines reopening plan;Akron man is seventh…
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Here are your morning headlines for Friday, April 17:State to slowly reopen May 1;COVID-19 cases jump by nearly 600 in 24-hour period;855,000 Ohioans file…
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The Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) unveiled a plan Wednesday to resume spring sports – if Gov. Mike DeWine decides to reopen schools in early May. The governor’s current school closure order expires on May 1, with classes resuming May 4. In the update sent to Ohio high schools, OHSAA said the May 4 start is optimistic, but its plan would allow spring sports seasons to begin as early as May 9.
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Worship is different these days, no matter the faith.Most houses of worship have closed, some before the state’s stay-at-home order was issued March 23.…
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Updated: 4:59 p.m., Monday, April 13, 2020 A Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) survey found two-thirds of district’s families do not have a computer, laptop or similar device at home. CMSD issued the survey Monday to assess need for technological assistance as its 37,700 students take on remote learning. The school system could need as many as 25,000 electronic devices, said Superintendent Eric Gordon.