
ONN Daily: Wednesday, May 4, 2022
Nan Whaley makes history in Ohio’s primary election; Ohio GOP candidates benefit from Trump endorsements; tornado touchdown confirmed near Findlay; Yellow Springs resident Dave Chappelle attacked on stage.
Nan Whaley makes history in Ohio’s primary election; Ohio GOP candidates benefit from Trump endorsements; tornado touchdown confirmed near Findlay; Yellow Springs resident Dave Chappelle attacked on stage.
Primary election day in Ohio; police are warning of mail thefts near Cleveland; housing costs are skyrocketing; voting on whether Ohio’s high school athletes could make money off their name, image, and likeness.
Body found near a Columbus elementary school; Ohio senators fighting for Chillicothe’s VA hospital; an Ohio city has the highest home foreclosure rate in the country; the Cincinnati Reds start their season with a record they don’t
No new legislative maps before Tuesday’s primary; Cincinnati-area school board member in trouble for posting porn on Facebook; the state’s latest Covid numbers; Dolly could be in the rock hall after all.
Controversial comments about sexual assault from an Ohio lawmaker; Governor DeWine announces aid for areas hit by ice storms earlier this year; lawsuit against two popular Ohio amusements parks moves forward; a popular household item is about to
Ohio redistricting lawsuit; law enforcement grants; air fryer recall; Ohio farmers dealing with inflation
COVID cases are rising in Ohio, but hospitalizations remain low; Toledo tries a new strategy to lower homicides; Put-In-Bay is preparing for the busy tourist season; a businessman from Dayton has returned from the International Space Station.
Police in Cleveland are investigating two hit-and-run incidents that killed two young children; Columbus reported eight shootings over the weekend that left five people dead; troopers with the Ohio State Highway Patrol are reminding motorists that
Jury finds former Mt. Carmel physician William Husel not guilty of the murder of 14 patients, but Husel still faces civil lawsuits from the patients’ families; federal court gives Ohio Redistricting Commission until May 28 to produce a set
Ohio Supreme Court again rejects maps presented by Ohio Redistricting Commission, leaving fate of a second Ohio primary still uncertain; Gov. Mike Dewine tests positive for COVID-19, but is experiencing only minor symptoms; escaped inmates