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News |
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| The
mother duck leads her babies through The Welsh Home. (West Life
photo by Larry Bennet) |
Mother
duck, ducklings travel
through Welsh Home to pond
ROCKY RIVER The pond in front of The Welsh Home is a natural body
of water, home to ducks, geese and snapping turtles.
On May 4, mother duck and her 14 babies who had nested
in the center's courtyard moved down to the pond in front of
the home. |
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Rematch
Baker, Brady vie for statehouse seat
in rematch of 2008 race
WESTSHORE
In a repeat of the 2008 state representative race,
two Westlake women Nan Baker and Jennifer Brady will
face each other again this November. Brady won the Democratic nomination
by defeating primary opponents Peggy Cleary, a Fairview Park councilwoman,
and Rosemary Palmer, a former educator and journalist.
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District
levy headed for August ballot
NORTH
OLMSTED Superintendent Cheryl Dubsky is recommending the district
place a 7.9-mill continuing operating levy
on the August special election ballot. The same measure
failed last week by a 10-percent margin in the May 4 voting.
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St.
Bernadette dedicates
memorial to teacher’s late son
WESTLAKE
Kevin Healey never attended St. Bernadette. Nevertheless,
the school now has a service club and now a memorial garden named
after the Fairview Park native, who died last April at the age of
20 after a two-year battle against bone cancer. |
River
graduate returns
to Northeast Ohio as TV reporter
ROCKY RIVER Following jobs in West Virginia
and Indiana, Shannon Davidson began working as a general assignment
reporter for 19 Action News in February.
Davidson believes the Web will become critical for
journalism in the years to come. |
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| Sports |
Rockets
rule the roost
River run ends as Bay takes WSC
tennis crown
Since
the West Shore Conference was formed, the Rocky River tennis program
has been the league’s flagship. The Pirates had never lost a regular
season league match, and had won every WSC tournament. But
River’s reign in the WSC ended last week.
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| Insights |
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Bay
Village offers classes on nutrition, food and fitness
At a time when many school systems struggle to cover
the bare minimum educational requirements, Bay High School offers
everyday “knowledge for real life” classes, columnist Thea Steinmetz
reports. Teacher Anita Bauknecht offers a sports nutrition class
in which the students plant their own herbs to later use for cooking.
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