Thank you, Columbus Dispatch!
For your consideration, the names and photographs of four healthcare CEOs in the Central Ohio area. Do with this as you like.
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Thank you, Columbus Dispatch!
For your consideration, the names and photographs of four healthcare CEOs in the Central Ohio area. Do with this as you like.
ya so goncharov may be dead
but the ghost still haunts me.
found in my newspaper in my painting class. from the columbus dispatch. took me a solid 10 minutes to notice.
art by @elena-illustration
(via We Can’t Digest the Scum | History Teaching Institute)
(Download full-sized image here.)
Creator:
Billy Ireland
Publication:
Columbus Dispatch, reprinted in Billy Ireland
Publication Date:
March 4, 1919
Description:
"Following the end of World War I, in 1919 and over the next few years, the United States experienced an economic recession and a large number of labor strikes. Meanwhile, the 1917 Russian Revolution had brought the anti-capitalist Bolsheviks, or Communists, to power. The result was a “red scare” in which many Americans feared that radical immigrants and home-grown revolutionaries threatened the U.S. government and capitalist economy. There was a particular concern that immigrants would not fit into America. This fear was a reversal of the traditional American ideal of the “melting pot,” the view that American society and culture dissolved the differences among immigrants to create a unified society."
Source:
The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum at Ohio State University
My heart is full of love because of the news that Mike Faist is doing a musical written by Asa Somers💙💚💙💚💙💚💙💚💙
The Columbus DIspatch from November 7, 1918, announcing the surrender of Germany and the end of World War One.
If you wanted to see “Hamilton” in Columbus next year, you haven’t thrown away your shot, but it could cost you. The 16,000 season passes for Broadway in Columbus sold out for the first time ever Thursday, leaving only about half of the seats available for single-show sales for the Broadway hit’s three-week stop at the Ohio Theatre in 2019. [. . .] ″ ‘Hamilton’ is a phenomenon all over the country, and it’s no different here in Columbus,” said Chad Whittington, CEO of the Columbus Association for Performing Arts. Theatergoers who bought the six-show season pass for 2018-19 guaranteed themselves “Hamilton” tickets. Whittington said that spurred high demand for the packages, ranging in price from $215 to $750. Across 24 shows between Jan. 29 and Feb. 17, 2019, about 66,000 people will see “Hamilton” in Columbus. About 33,000 tickets will be released for single-show sales at a yet-to-be-announced date. To get updates on subscription availability and upcoming events, sign up for the Broadway in Columbus eClub at http://tickets.broadwayacrossamerica.com/col-eclub. “We expect demand that’s going to far exceed available single-ticket sales. That’s one of the reasons subscriptions have been so popular,” Whittington said. The opportunity to renew for season-ticket holders from 2017-18 runs through the end of March, so CAPA might have some limited availability for additional season-ticket packages. CAPA will notify people who sign up for alerts on its website about available packages. [. . .] Tickets to “Hamilton” in Columbus already have popped up on the secondary market under skyrocketing prices. The cheapest available on ticketnetwork.com as of Friday morning was $423 each to sit in the balcony Jan. 31. After that, tickets jump to more than $600 each at minimum. [. . .] Tickets on the secondary market for “Hamilton’s” six-week run in Cleveland are similarly pricey, easily cresting the $600 mark on ticketnetwork.com and StubHub. “People who aren’t typical theatergoers are aware of the show,” Whittington said. “When you have that kind of demand it also does seem to push up ticket prices. We’ll fill every seat. We want to give as many people access to see this important production as we can.”
‘Hamilton’ spurs sellout of season passes for Broadway in Columbus (The Columbus Dispatch)
Newark, Ohio, January 2017
image: AP/ The Columbus Dispatch
http://www.spiegel.de/panorama/usa-krebskrankes-maedchen-in-newark-darf-polizisten-tasern-a-1132498.html
http://www.dispatch.com/news/20170129/newark-police-fulfill-dying-teens-wish-to-use-taser-on-volunteers
The woman died after being attacked by two pigs who were roaming near her Mink Street home, according to Pataskala police.