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Originally the Lorain Journal, it was an afternoon paper which was historically more popular in an industrial town like Lorain, but switched to morning publication in the 1980s. It is the primary paper in the city of Lorain, but also serves the wider area of Lorain, Erie, and Huron counties, and the western Cleveland suburbs. [1]
Schroeder was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Florence Ella (Endebrock) and Louis Arthur Schroeder. [2] [3] He had an older sister, Nancy, and a younger brother, Rudy.. Schroeder moved with his family to Lorain, Ohio, when he was in elementary school and graduated from Lorain High School where he was an honors student and an outstanding athlete.
RAOGK has won many awards [5] and has been featured in smaller local papers such as The Daily News, Jacksonville, North Carolina, [6] The Morning Journal, Lorain, Ohio, [7] and the St. Petersburg Times, Florida, [8] – as well as AARP Magazine and The New York Times, [9] for the unique service it offers to researchers.
Both stations were owned by the newly created Elyria-Lorain Broadcasting Co. The station's early years were spent fighting for its very survival. In the 1930s and 1940s, the Lorain Journal (today known as The Morning Journal) enjoyed a monopoly in news coverage and advertising revenue in Lorain. With the establishment of WEOL, however, the ...
More than 800 people have lost their lives in jail since July 13, 2015 but few details are publicly released. Huffington Post is compiling a database of every person who died until July 13, 2016 to shed light on how they passed.
Jeffrey Manning (died February 13, 2004) was a county prosecutor and a member of the Ohio House of Representatives.. Manning was born in Elyria, Ohio. [1] He earned a bachelor's degree from Kent State University and a PhD from the University of Akron.
Good Morning America. Recipes for fried chicken, buffalo chicken dip and more from Taste of the NFL. Food. Southern Living. The 'cheap' snack I grew up on — and still love to this day.
Over the next year and a half, Porambo joined and left several newspapers, including the Morning-Journal in Lorain, OH; the Suffolk Sun in Deer Park, NY; and the Toronto Telegram. He eventually returned to New Jersey, to work at the Camden's Courier-Post. Porambo's reporting primarily covered the black slums of nearby Philadelphia and poverty. [2]