Veterans and families lined the route to the cemetery on Monday to remember Robert Bailey, a 21-year-old shipfitter in the Navy who was among the 429 killed on the USS Oklahoma.
From staff reports
COLUMBUS Members of the Herald-Star staff earned two second-place awards and a third-place award in the 2020 Ohio Associated Press Media Editors newspaper contest.
Executive Editor Ross Gallabrese finished second in the best editorial writer category. Ed Puskas of the (Ashtabula) Star Beacon finished first in the category, while Benjamin Lanka of The (Newark) Advocate was third.
Inside the Paint, our annual high school basketball preview edition, earned second-place honors in the best special sports section category. The Medina Gazette’s Fall Football Preview finished first in the category, while The (Celina) Daily Standard’s Fall Sports Preview was third.
Yes, Tin Lizzie Was An Alcoholic - Newly Updated
1911 Model T Touring - photo by Lars-Göran Lindgren Sweden
Correcting Bad Revisionist History About Ford s Multi-Fuel Model T Automobile
Great essay!
Douglas Brinkley, Professor of History, Rice University; author of Wheels for the World: Henry Ford, His Company, and a Century of Progress
By Marc J. Rauch
Marc Rauch
The most venerated automobile of all time is Henry Ford s Model T. Nicknamed Tin Lizzie, Leapin Lena, and sometimes Flivver, the Model T went into production
in 1908 and the last models rolled off the assembly line in 1927. The vehicle was a success everywhere in the world it was sold because it made owning a car affordable to the masses for the first time.
From staff reports
COLUMBUS Members of the Herald-Star staff have been selected as finalists in the 2020 Ohio Associated Press Media Editors newspaper contest.
Executive Editor Ross Gallabrese is a finalist in the best editorial writer category, and the newspaper is a finalist in the best special sports section and best daily sports section categories.
“We’re proud of the work performed by our entire staff,” said John Hale, publisher of the newspaper. “They are dedicated to their profession, and it’s good to see that their efforts and hard work have been recognized.”
Three finalists in each of the contest categories were named Tuesday. The actual order of finish will be announced during a virtual awards program planned for this spring. The Herald-Star competes in Division II, which includes newspapers with a daily circulation between 8,000 and 11,999.