Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
FILE - Former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, center, walks into Potter Stewart U.S. Courthouse with his attorneys, Mark Marein, left, and Steven Bradley, right, before jury selection in his ...
Judge Advocate General Ohio, judge of the Superior Court of Cincinnati, and Ohio Senate: James G. Johnson: 1880 Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court and mayor of Springfield, Ohio: Sharon L. Kennedy: 1991 Supreme Court of Ohio Justice Joseph P. Kinneary: 1935 Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio: Laura Liu: 1991
Thomas Donaldson is The Mark O. Winkelman Professor of Legal Studies & Business Ethics at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. He is an expert in the areas of business ethics, corporate compliance, corporate governance, and leadership. [1] He is Associate Editor for the Business Ethics Quarterly (2015-).
Coingate is a nickname [1] for the Tom Noe investment scandal in Ohio revealed in early 2005 in part by Toledo, Ohio newspaper The Blade.The Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC) invested hundreds of millions of dollars in high risk or unconventional investment vehicles run by people closely connected to the Ohio Republican Party who had made large campaign contributions to many senior ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Sen. JD Vance will be inaugurated as vice president in six weeks, and several Republicans are eager to take his place representing the Buckeye State in the U.S. Senate. But Ohio ...
CLEVELAND — Fresh off a comfortable re-election victory in 2018, Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, considered running for president on a populist message aimed at the many working-class Midwest voters ...
David Goodman (born February 13, 1967) is Republican politician who serves as the director of the Ohio Development Services Agency, the state's economic development department. He served as the director of the Ohio Department of Commerce from January 2011 until March 2013. He has also served in both chambers of the Ohio General Assembly.
Issue 1 would cheat Ohio voters in three ways: Since 1912, Ohioans have been able to ratify a proposed state constitutional amendment with a simple majority — 50% plus 1 — of those voting on it.