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The Heights August 21 - September 4, 2014 Volume 4 :: No. 17 Community News Standard More articles at www.TheHeightsStandard.com G a r f i e l d H e i g h t s a n d M a p l e H e ig h t s Garfield Heights 95th Birthday Party Set for Aug. 24 Mark your calendar for the Garfield Heights 95th Birthday Bash Party scheduled for 1-6 p.m., Sunday, Aug. 24 at the Civic Center, 5407 Turney Road. Event activities include music, food, birthday cake and balloons, children’s games, a magic show, Cleveland Metroparks Nature Tracks, a pony ride and more. Eddie and the Edsels will perform from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the main dining room of the Civic Center. Members of the Garfield Heights Historical Society will have their annual Ice Cream Social at the museum and will be available for tours from 1-6 p.m. There will be a Community Tent where groups will share information and do some fundraising. For information, please call (216) 475-1100. Fall brings changes, Boo at the Zoo tickets to Cleveland Zoo Some people lament the lack of hot days this summer in Northeast Ohio, while others are more than happy to not have to endure the mercur y’s upper register. Either way, the fact remains that summer is flying by and the cooler temps make for perfect weather to visit Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. This summer marked the inaugural season of the new Circle of Wildlife Carousel and Nature Discovery Ridge play area. Thousands of guests have already taken a spin on their favorite animal from among the 64 different hand-carved figures to choose from. Single ride tickets for the carousel are $3 and $2.50 for Cleveland Zoological Society members. All day ride passes are available for $8 or $6 for members. Adjacent to the carousel is the new Nature Discovery Ridge play area, free with paid Zoo admission, which engages children’s imaginations and inspires them to come out and play through the use of wild habitats and natural elements like rocks, water and trees. Kids explore, climb, and best of all, have fun reconnecting with nature and letting their imaginations run wild. The last few weeks of extended summer hours make it easy to visit the Zoo. From now through Labor Day, September 1, the Zoo is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. After Labor Day, the Zoo is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Labor Day also brings an end to the Zoo’s CPP Power Pass Bundle offer, camel rides and Professor Wylde’s Live Animal Show for the season. The colorful show in the Zoo’s Savanna Theater features an all-star cast of critters, lots of fun animal facts and a few jokes, too. It’s an engaging and entertaining show for all ages. The seasonal transition means it’s time to get ready for the 25th annual Boo at the Zoo! Advance sale tickets for the annual sell- out event, scheduled this year for October 16-19 and 23-26, go on sale August 19 for Zoo Society members and August 27 for the general public. Admission is $8 for the general public and $7 for Zoo Society members. Tickets will be available at the Zoo’s Box Office, or online at 14-4272 Take advantage of the lowest tuition in Northeast Ohio. Easily transfer your credits to a four-year university. For more information, go to tri-c.edu, or call 216-987-6000 Eastern Campus | 4250 Richmond Road | Highland Hills, Ohio 44122 Enroll now! Volunteer Gardeners Needed for Green Up Project Additional volunteer gardeners are needed for the Garfield Heights Green Up project, an important effort to improve and maintain public areas throughout the city. Individuals and groups can adopt specific sites. So far, generous volunteers have joined the effort and beautified areas throughout the community, including the Civic Center, Fire and Police stations and the Veterans and Safety Forces memorials. Volunteers maintain the areas throughout the summer and fall on their own schedules with their own tools. Ongoing maintenance includes weeding, watering and picking up trash when necessary. Anyone interested in volunteering can contact Chris Piazza, Green Up project coordinator, at 216-587-2786.

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The Heights August 21 - September 4, 2014 Volume 4 :: No. 17

Community News

StandardMore articles at www.TheHeightsStandard.com

Garfield Heights and Maple Heights

Garfield Heights 95th Birthday Party Set for Aug. 24Mark your calendar for the Garfield

Heights 95th Birthday Bash Party scheduled for 1-6 p.m., Sunday, Aug. 24 at the Civic Center, 5407 Turney Road.

Event activities include music, food, birthday cake and balloons, children’s games, a magic show, Cleveland Metroparks Nature Tracks, a pony ride and more.

Eddie and the Edsels will perform from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the main dining

room of the Civic Center.Members of the Garfield Heights

Historical Society will have their annual Ice Cream Social at the museum and will be available for tours from 1-6 p.m.

There will be a Community Tent where groups will share information and do some fundraising.

For information, please call (216) 475-1100.

Fall brings changes, Boo at the Zoo tickets to Cleveland Zoo

Some people lament the lack of hot days this summer in Northeast Ohio, while others are more than happy to not have to endure the mercury’s upper register. Either way, the fact remains that summer is flying by and the cooler temps make for perfect weather to visit Cleveland Metroparks Zoo.

This summer marked the inaugural season of the new Circle of Wildlife Carousel and Nature Discovery Ridge play area. Thousands of guests have already taken a spin on their favorite animal from among the 64 different hand-carved figures to choose from. Single ride tickets for the carousel are $3 and $2.50 for Cleveland Zoological Society members. All day ride passes are available for $8 or $6 for members.

Adjacent to the carousel is the new Nature Discovery Ridge play area, free with paid Zoo admission, which engages children’s imaginations and inspires them to come out and play through the use of wild habitats and natural elements like rocks, water and trees. Kids explore, climb, and best of all, have fun reconnecting with nature and letting their imaginations run wild.

The last few weeks of extended

summer hours make it easy to visit the Zoo. From now through Labor Day, September 1, the Zoo is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. After Labor Day, the Zoo is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Labor Day also brings an end to the Zoo’s CPP Power Pass Bundle offer, camel rides and Professor Wylde’s Live Animal Show for the season. The colorful show in the Zoo’s Savanna Theater features an all-star cast of critters, lots of fun animal facts and a few jokes, too. It’s an engaging and entertaining show for all ages.

The seasonal transition means it’s time to get ready for the 25th annual Boo at the Zoo! Advance sale tickets for the annual sell-out event, scheduled this year for October 16-19 and 23-26, go on sale August 19 for Zoo Society members and August 27 for the general public. Admission is $8 for the general public and $7 for Zoo Society members. Tickets will be available at the Zoo’s Box Office, or online at 14

-427

2

Take advantage of the lowest tuition in Northeast Ohio.

Easily transfer your credits to a four-year university.

For more information, go to tri-c.edu, or call 216-987-6000

Eastern Campus | 4250 Richmond Road | Highland Hills, Ohio 44122

Enroll now!

14-4272 East Educational Awareness Bedford Stand 5.25x6.5 Ad.indd 1 8/12/14 11:24 AM

Volunteer Gardeners Needed for Green Up Project

Additional volunteer gardeners are needed for the Garfield Heights Green Up project, an important effort to improve and maintain public areas throughout the city.

Individuals and groups can adopt

specific sites. So far, generous volunteers have joined the effort and beautified areas throughout the community, including the Civic Center, Fire and Police stations and the Veterans and Safety Forces memorials.

Volunteers maintain the areas throughout the summer and fall on their own schedules with their own tools. Ongoing maintenance includes weeding, watering and picking up trash when necessary.

Anyone interested in volunteering can contact Chris Piazza, Green Up project coordinator, at 216-587-2786.

Page 2: Ths aug 2 2014 mock2

2 :: 17 of Iyyar, 5768 :: May 22, 2008

www.thenewstandard.com The New Standard

P.O. Box 31244Independence, Ohio 44131

(216) 410-4062www.theheightsstandard.com

PublisherDoug Smith

[email protected]

Advertising RepresentativeMatt Trafis

[email protected]

Calendar [email protected]

Circulation ManagerRobert Brown

[email protected]

Advisory Board

David GoodmanOhio Senate

Larry Levinewww.artbrands.com

Doug SmithThe Heights Standard

Matt TrafisBlue Streak Strategies, llc

The Heights Standard is published and distributed by Blue Streak Strategies, llc twice every month and distributed

through group and individual requests and through drop off points in the

Garfield Heights and Maple Heights, Ohio area. The publication is paid for by benefactors, advertisers, and voluntary

subscribers.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Heights Standard

893 N High St, Ste HWorthington, Ohio 43085

Views expressed by guest columnists, in letters to the editor and in reprinted

opinion pieces do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Heights Standard.

The Heights Standard owns the rights to allpublished articles.

The Heights Standard provides the Garfield Heights and Maple Heights, Ohio area with

a quality community newspaper that covers local interest in the journalistic tradition of

insightful, fair and balanced reporting.

Additional copies of The Heights Standard can be ordered through our offices at

(614) 371-2595© 2013 All rights reserved.

Reproduction or use of any content within without prior consent is prohibited.

StandardThe Heights

2010 Publication Dates:

March 25 - Health Guide April 8 April 22 - Home Improvement Guide

Editorial and advertising deadline 7 days prior to publication date.

The Heights Standard

www.The

HeightsS

tandard.c

om

Help for Garfield Heights families is just a phone call away. The new Family Resource Center at the Garfield Heights Civic Center, 5407 Turney Road, has information to assist families with drug treatment, counseling and

prevention services, support groups, and other needs. Office hours vary, so it is best to call and make an appointment.

Call the Help Line, 216-475-1103, or e-mail [email protected] for assistance.

Help Available Through Family Resource Center

The HeightsStandard

Buyers no longer will be required to put repair funds into an escrow account for violations cited during the point-of-sale inspection. Repairs still must be made by the deadline set by the city’s building

department. Buyers will receive a one-year family recreation pass, limit one per family. Members are still required to purchase an identification card at the recreation center.

Garfield Heights New Homebuyer Incentives

www.TheHeightsStandard.com

Kindly send all announcements to

[email protected]

The Believable Lie: Heinecken, Polke, and Feldmann on view at the Cleveland Museum of Art

The Cleveland Museum of Art presents The Believable Lie: Heinecken, Polke, and Feldmann, an exhibition focusing on relationships among the photographic work of three artists active during the 1970s that drew on ideas of surrealist/Dada culture of the 1920s and 1930s and influenced succeeding generations of photographers and media artists. The artists— Robert Heinecken, Sigmar Polke and Hans-Peter Feldmann— hail from different backgrounds: two

Germans and one Los Angeles native who all matured in the decades following World War II. The exhibition is on view now through November 30, 2014 in the museum’s Photography Galleries.

A corrective to the egocentric model of the 1950s artist was due; hence the photograph, pervasive and democratic in its accessibility, became a lightning rod for artists seeking new forms of expression. The Vietnam era provoked a certain skepticism toward the media by artists in America and

Europe that extended into a prolonged investigation of the photograph as truth, questioning its documentary nature. The barrage of popular imagery – from lush magazines to color television – became fodder for work aimed at exposing the cultural hegemony. As a time marked by underground political dissent, the 1970s was a decade when artists began working small, working privately and working beyond the boundaries of commercial gallery system.

“A l t h o u g h the three artists each have

significant exhibition histories, this is the first exhibition to bring their photographic work together, shedding light on the iconographic and formal choices they made when photography ascended into the contemporary art arena,” said Lisa Kurzner, The Believable Lie guest curator. “Each embraced photography as one element of an artistic practice guided as much by literature, philosophy and an attention to popular culture as by classical formal concerns of the medium. Yet, photographic process and context remained important to them.”

August 21 - September 4, 2014

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May 22, 2008 :: 17 of Iyyar, 5768 :: 3

Celebrating 5 Years of Award-Winning Journalism in Central Ohio www.thenewstandard.com

The Heights Standard August 21 - September 4, 2014

University Hospitals Bedford and Richmond medical centers welcome urologists Riccardo Autorino, MD, and Humberto Laydner, MD

This month, University Hospitals (UH) Bedford and Richmond medical centers, campuses of UH Regional Hospitals, welcome urologists Riccardo Autorino, MD, PhD, and Humberto Laydner, MD, to their facilities.

The fellowship-trained specialists will consult with patients two days per week at each hospital and their services include laparoscopic (minimally invasive) surgical procedures. In addition to laparoscopy, Dr. Autorino’s and Dr. Laydner’s fellowship training encompasses robotic surgery for complex urologic conditions. The physicians will also be performing advanced robotic procedures at UH

Ahuja Medical Center in Beachwood

“There is a need for the latest approaches to urological care in the communities served by UH Bedford and Richmond medical centers,” says Dr. Autorino. “We are very excited to provide leading-edge techniques to patients in the area and offer them

outstanding treatment for routine and complex urologic pathologies.”

Drs. Autorino and Laydner will bring their diagnostic, surgical and nonsurgical expertise to patients with a wide range of conditions including elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA); benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH); male incontinence; urinary stones; erectile dysfunction;

hematuria (blood in the urine); adrenal tumors and masses; kidney cancer and cysts; and bladder, prostate and ureteral cancer.

The urologists will closely collaborate at UH Bedford and Richmond medical centers. “Initially, we plan to work together on all of our surgical cases to develop a unified approach that complements our individual skills and techniques on behalf of each patient,” says Dr. Laydner. “This includes our commitment to understanding every aspect of a patient’s condition, well-being and quality of life.”

The urologists will begin seeing

patients on August 18. “Drs. Autorino and Laydner bring years of diverse medical training and experience to the Bedford and Richmond Heights communities,” says Robert G. David, President, UH Bedford and Richmond medical centers. “Their presence at our hospitals means our patients will have close access to exceptional care from the nationally-ranked UH Urology Institute.”

To schedule a convenient urologic consultation with Dr. Autorino or Dr. Laydner,

call University Hospitals Urology Institute at UH Richmond Medical Center at 440-516-8700, or call UH Bedford Medical Center at 440-232-8955.

Riccardo Autorino, MD Humberto Laydner, MD

NeedHome Repair?

Call

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4 :: 17 of Iyyar, 5768 :: May 22, 2008

www.thenewstandard.com The New Standard

Columbus & Ohio4 The Heights Standard

The HeightsStandard

August 21 - September 4, 2014

1-866-UH4-CARE UHhospitals.org/UHOrtho

To schedule an appointment at a location near you, call or visit:

Amazing strides in orthopaedic care --

are one step away.

At University Hospitals, we have Northeast Ohio

covered with expert orthopaedic care. Our nationally

recognized orthopaedic services include a broad

spectrum of surgical and nonsurgical treatments for

patients of all ages – from the simplest to the most

complex conditions.

With locations including UH Bedford Medical Center,

a campus of UH Regional Hospitals, you can take

comfort knowing that an active and pain-free life –

is well within reach.

Cuyahoga County Council tonight approved legislation introduced by County Executive Ed FitzGerald to add a Voting Rights Amendment to the County Charter.

“Over the years, our state has established a long tradition of preserving and expanding the right to vote for all of its citizens,” said FitzGerald. “While I am disappointed that some in our state government are trying to make it harder for working families to vote in 2014, I take great pride in the fact that Cuyahoga County is standing strong today to ensure that all of our constituents will be able to exercise this most essential democratic right. And make no mistake – we are going to continue doing everything we can to get this ballot measure approved in November and guarantee that the right to vote is protected in Cuyahoga County.”

FitzGerald’s legislation places a question on this November’s ballot that will ask Cuyahoga County voters to approve a new Charter amendment asserting that the right to vote is fundamental and authorizing the County to take action to protect and promote the right to vote, including official actions to promote voter registration and early voting in Ohio’s most populous county.

The Voting Rights Amendment was submitted to Council by FitzGerald last May after Governor John Kasich, Secretary of State Jon Husted, and members of the Ohio General Assembly took a series of

actions to eliminate early voting days, prohibit local boards of elections from sending vote-by-mail ballots to registered voters, and impose tougher restrictions on casting provisional ballots.

Republicans in the General Assembly initially threatened to eliminate as much as 10% of the funding for Cuyahoga County’s Local Government Fund after FitzGerald proposed the Cuyahoga County Voting Rights Law to ensure all registered voters continue to receive vote-by-mail applications regardless of state government restrictions. However, state lawmakers backed down from their threat after FitzGerald requested a Department of Justice investigation into allegations of voter suppression in Ohio. County Council subsequently approved FitzGerald’s Voting Rights Law.

As the debate over early voting has continued, FitzGerald directed the Cuyahoga County Law Department to file an amicus brief to support the NAACP’s lawsuit to restore early voting and the “Golden Week” that allows citizens to register and vote early in the same day. Just two weeks ago, the Justice Department also announced that it would support the NAACP’s suit to ensure the protection of voting rights in Ohio.

Cuyahoga County Council Approves Voting Rights Amendment

Nursing and Rehabilitation Center

Page 5: Ths aug 2 2014 mock2

May 22, 2008 :: 17 of Iyyar, 5768 :: 5

Celebrating 5 Years of Award-Winning Journalism in Central Ohio www.thenewstandard.com

Columbus & Ohio The Heights Standard

Please Support our Advertisers

August 21 - September 4, 2014

Bygone Days at Cedar Valley Settlers Celebration at Rocky River Reservation

Come out and celebrate the life of Northeast Ohio’s early settlers and enjoy live bluegrass music at the Cedar Valley Settlers Celebration and Music Festival on Sunday, September 14 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Experience the sights, sounds and tastes of Ohio’s frontier days at this free festival located at the Frostville Museum and adjacent Apple Field in Cleveland Metroparks Rocky River Reservation.

Bring a lawn chair or blanket and listen to live music all afternoon. Enjoy folk and Americana music by Mike Gorrell beginning at 11:30 a.m., Border Ride performs at 1 p.m. and headliner Dale Ann Bradley takes the stage from 3 – 5 p.m. Bradley is a five time winner of the “Female Vocalist of the Year” award by the International Bluegrass Music Association.

Spend the day discovering what life was like for an Ohio pioneer. Try candle making, rug braiding, stenciling and rope making. Learn how children made their own toys by making a cup and ball toy and “buzz saw craft.” Pioneer children would take a “tree cookie” and thread a string through it. By spinning the tree cookie on the string, it would make a “buzz” sound.

Find out what types of activities pioneers did for fun and entertainment.

Listen to a tall tale in the storytelling tent, watch a performance by a colonial magician, and join in a contra dancing lesson (a style of partnered folk dancing) led by local contra dance band, Mud in Yer Eye. Watch in amazement as members of the Ohio Wheelmen ride high wheel bicycles from the late 1800s.

See how apple butter and apple cider were made long ago and enjoy samples, too. Watch ongoing pioneer cooking demonstrations and find out what’s cooking over an open fire whether it’s soup, corn bread or other tasty treats. Learn how pioneers lived at the Frontier Encampment and kids can help raise (and tear down) a barn.

Explore the Frostville Museum historic village and experience the living history of 19th century Ohio. The museum consists of six historic buildings including: Prechtel House, Jenkins Cabin, Briggs House, Carpenter House, Stearns Carriage House and Frostville Village Church. Museum and event volunteers are dressed in period attire giving guests the feeling of going back in time.

For more information, visit clevelandmetroparks.com or call 440-734-6660.

Parking is available at Rocky River

Nature Center and the Lagoon Picnic Area. Premier parking is available for $2 per car at Little Cedar Point parking area. Free shuttles are available between Lagoon Picnic Area, Frostville Museum and Rocky River Nature Center.

Frostville Museum is located off Cedar Point Road in Rocky River Reservation,

between Valley Parkway and Columbia Road/Route 252 in North Olmsted, just off the I-480/Clague Road exit (westbound) and I-480/Columbia Road exit (eastbound).

Dear Valued Patients,

We are pleased to announce that we have added two new providers to our practice! Come to our office to meet them or call our office to schedule your next ap-pointment.

Dr. Davis, a lifelong Clevelander, graduated from St. Ignatius High School, Ohio State University and Meharry Medi-cal College. He has practiced family den-tistry in this area for the past twenty-eight years. Over the course of his career, Dr. Davis has received numerous awards and certifications. His particular areas of inter-est within general dentistry are smile en-hancement and treating snoring and sleep apnea. In his spare time, Dr. Davis enjoys traveling, bowling, sports, and spending time with family and friends.

Debra worked with Dr. Dodson eighteen years ago and is happy to rejoin her and her new associate Dr. Davis. She graduated hygiene school from Tri C and has been practicing dental hygiene for nineteen years. Debra’s professional af-filiations include the ADHA, The Acad-emy of Dental Hygiene Studies and Man-chesters Who’s Who for Professionals. She resides in Broadview Heights with her husband, Barney. She has a daughter, Danielle, who is a DMD in Boston; Brit-ney who is a nurse anesthetist at CCF and an eleven year old step-son Sean.

Jane L. Dodson DDS & Associates, Inc.

Jane L. Dodson DDS & Associate, Inc.88 Center Rd. Bedford, 44146 (Next to Bedford Medical Center)

In the Bedford University Hospital Complex Medical Building - 3rd Floor

www.clevelandgentledentist.com

CALL 440-439-2230 for an appointment!

New Patient Exam, X-rays and Basic Teeth Polishing Special $69.00 ($280 value)

Jane L. Dodson DDS

CALL 440-439-2230 for an appointment!Present this coupon at time of service. Cannot be combined with other coupons.

Expires Sept. 4, 2014 - TBS

*Bring this letter into your first visit with us

and receive $25 OFF treatment!!

MychaelDavis, DDS

DebraLeonardi,

RDH

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6 :: 17 of Iyyar, 5768 :: May 22, 2008

www.thenewstandard.com The New Standard

Columbus & Ohio6 The Heights StandardAugust 21 - September 4, 2014

Ellen Augustine, M.A.

What’s up, America?

Too Big to Pay Taxes?

A tenet of American values is fairness. Right or left, conservative or liberal, we all want a level playing field. So why doesn’t that apply to our largest multinational corporations paying their fair share of taxes?

The New York Times wrote a scathing editorial on August 5 detailing the blatant tax dodging of many of our largest corporations. (http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/06/opinion/the-tax-dodge-goes-on.html?_r=0)

“Evidence of excessive corporate tax avoidance keeps piling up. And so do Congress’s excuses, mainly from Republicans, for not doing anything to curb it.

“Shortly before Congress recessed last week for a month long break, the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations issued a report and held hearings on ‘basket options,’ financial products created by Barclays and Deutsche Bank and used by prominent hedge funds to dodge billions of dollars in taxes, according to the subcommittee. The inquiry follows earlier subcommittee investigations into rampant tax-avoidance tactics at Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, Apple and Caterpillar. The hit to the United States Treasury is severe: According to a study cited at an Apple hearing last year by the subcommittee chairman, Senator Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat, 30 of the largest American multinationals, with more than $160 billion in profits, ‘paid nothing in federal income taxes over a recent three-year period. Zero.’”

“The congressional summer recess also came before lawmakers took action on either of two Democratic bills to stop a rising wave of ‘inversions.’ That’s the process whereby an American corporation acquires a company in Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands or elsewhere in order to reincorporate abroad and cut its American taxes — even as its headquarters, officers, most of its shareholders and much of its business remain in the United States.”

“Inversions completed to date are expected to sap the Treasury of nearly $20 billion in taxes in the next decade. And that’s just the beginning. At a recent hearing of the Senate Finance Committee, the Democratic chairman, Ron Wyden, said that up to 25 companies, encouraged by big banks that earn lucrative fees on the deals, are currently considering relocating overseas to cut their tax bills.”

The Times concludes: “Congress could stop today’s most egregious tax avoidance tactics if a majority of members wanted to.”

This shameless and greedy tax evasion is all the more offensive considering that corporations already pay lower rates than you and I. Remember, our Supreme Court affirmed that corporations are “persons.”

Dave Johnson points out that these persons “get all kinds of tax deductions, subsidies, exclusions, etc. that regular persons do not. A huge benefit and protection shareholders of corporations (including their CEOs and top officers) get is something called the ‘capital gains tax rate.’ When one of these owners of corporate stock sells the stock the profits from that sale are not taxed at the same rate as the income of working people. That sale is called a “capital gain.” (That tax rate just went from 15% to 20% as part of President Obama’s budget compromise.) The reason that the wealthiest people get most of their income from capital gains is because the capital gains tax rate is lower – and the reason the capital gains tax rate is lower is because the wealthiest people get most of their income from capital gains. Makes sense, doesn’t it?” http://ourfuture.org/20140805/

Jonathan Alter has come up with a novel and powerful idea to curb these unscrupulous practices that gut our national treasury: make corporations take loyalty oaths to stay in this country.

“2014 will be remembered for the plague of “corporate inversion,” which the news media should start routinely calling “corporate desertion.” So far, 47 American-based companies have renounced U.S. citizenship and bought foreign subsidiaries in order to dodge American taxes.”

“This past month, Heather Bresch, the CEO of Mylan, a Pittsburgh-based generic drugmaker, announced that the company is, on paper, becoming Dutch. Mylan is now just another unpatriotic firm like Medtronic or Chiquita, but with a difference: Bresch’s father happens to be Sen. Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat. Manchin claimed implausibly that he knew nothing in advance. When pressed, he announced that he backs legislation making his daughter’s decision illegal.”

Walgreens had announced its intention to go Dutch, but rescinded their decision in early August after 160,000 customers signed a petition saying they would stop patronizing their stores if Walgreens stopped paying their fair share of US taxes.

“That bill, sponsored by Sen. Carl Levin in the Senate and by his brother, Rep. Sander Levin, in the House, recently won the backing of President Obama, who made a good speech in Los Angeles blasting these companies as ‘corporate deserters.’ Of course, the p r e s i d e n t ’ s s u p p o r t means that all R e p u b l i c a n s

must now oppose it.”“So the bill is going nowhere. When

angry constituents ask why, legislators answer that ending corporate desertion should be subsumed under comprehensive tax reform. But that’s a mirage. Waiting for tax reform is like waiting for Godot—no one shows up.”

“So it’s time for red-blooded Americans to take matters into our own hands. My answer is to make every corporation sign something.”

“Sign what? If Republicans cared about this issue, which most don’t, they would revive McCarthy-era loyalty oaths. Remembering those dark days, Democrats don’t like oaths, or even pledges, which have proven enormously effective. Grover Norquist’s ability to get nearly every Republican in Congress to sign a no-new-taxes pledge is one of the most successful political gambits of recent decades—and a big reason for today’s gridlock.”

“Because oaths and pledges are a little creepy, this effort needs something else—something that comes out of the legal and business worlds: a contract. More specifically, an NDA.”

“Non-disclosure agreements are common in corporate America, where tens of thousands of senior managers and employees sign contracts promising to keep all sorts of information confidential. It’s often a condition of employment.”

“Now it’s time to change the ‘D’ and expect the same from boards of directors—a ‘non-desertion agreement’ with the John Hancock of every board member and CEO in the United States.”

“The president should issue an executive order that says any company that wants to keep its federal contracts must sign an NDA. It’s reasonable to expect federal contractors to be American companies. Obama has already used that leverage to raise the minimum wage for companies doing business with the government.”

“This executive order would get the attention of major corporations, most of which receive federal contracts. Mylan and Medtronics, for instance, are deserting even as they receive hundreds of millions

of dollars in taxpayer money through Medicare and Medicaid.”

“That’s where the rest of us come in. Under my scheme, companies that sign non-desertion agreements would embed a tiny American flag or some other Good Housekeeping-type seal in their corporate insignia for all to see, just as companies during the Great Depression that agreed to Franklin Roosevelt’s recovery plan hung an emblem of a blue eagle in their windows with the words, ‘We Do Our Part.’”

“Companies that fail to sign non-desertion agreements would face the kind of public shaming that has gone out of fashion but could come back with a vengeance: boycotts, petitions, angry shareholder meetings full of the language of patriotism.”

Alter ends with this assessment: “Efforts to stop desertion aren’t populist or socialist but nationalist, a much more powerful force in American politics. Unbridled nationalism is a menace; it leads to trade wars and, all too often, real wars. But properly channeled, nationalism and patriotism are matters of the heart that cut to our deepest ideas of who we are. The idea of non-desertion agreements could spread quickly.” http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/08/04/the-united-states-needs-corporate-loyalty-oaths.html

If American corporations want to continue to reap multimillion and even multibillion dollar profits from American citizens, they need to pay their fair share of taxes, just like the rest of us. Give Republican Senator Rob Portman a friendly call and ask just why isn’t he leading the charge for tax justice (866-220-0044)?

Ellen Augustine, M.A., is a speaker and author on national currents and the emerging sustainable economy. She may be reached at [email protected], 510-428-1832, www.storiesofhope.us. Questions, feedback, and topic ideas for future columns are welcome.

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May 22, 2008 :: 17 of Iyyar, 5768 :: 7

Celebrating 5 Years of Award-Winning Journalism in Central Ohio www.thenewstandard.com

Columbus & Ohio The Heights StandardThe Heights Standard August 21 - September 4, 2014

Stop by Cleveland Metroparks Zoo on Saturday, September 13 for Teddy Bear Day and discover what it takes to maintain one of North America’s largest bear collections.

Kids ages 2-11 who bring their favorite teddy bear, or plush toy of any species, along for a trip to the Zoo on Teddy Bear Day will receive FREE Zoo admission with a paid adult.

Special Teddy Bear Day activities are scheduled from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and guests will get the 4-1-1 on all things bears. Taking care of all bears, whether it’s a 500 pound grizzly bear or a fluffy little teddy bear, requires a lot of hard work and dedication. Meet-the-Keeper talks will provide visitors with opportunities to learn about bears’ diets, exercise routines and daily training sessions and special plush pet “vets” will be ready to

award the plush pals with a “beary” good health certificate.

Kids and their stuffed toys can spend some special time bonding at the craft station before proceeding to Northern Trek to visit the bears their pals are modeled after. New this year, kids can take their stuffed animals for an exciting ride on the Circle of Wildlife Carousel, and find out if one of the 64 hand-carved figures resembles their stuffed animal buddy. Don’t forget to hold on tight!

Northeast Ohio’s most-visited year-round attraction, Cleveland Metroparks Zoo is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily

with hours extended to 7 p.m. on weekends and holidays from Memorial Day through Labor Day. Admission is $12.25 per person, $8.25 for kids ages 2 to 11 and free for children younger than 2 and Zoo members.

Parking is free. Located at 3900 Wildlife Way, the Zoo is easily accessible from Interstates 71, 90 and 480.

Metroparks Zoo’s Teddy Bear Day Shares ‘Bear’ Necessities of Top Notch Care

Linda J. How, Elder Law Attorney “Making Sense of the Law”

MOST PEOPLE DON’T THINK ABOUT CARE IN A NURSING HOME UNTIL A CRISIS HAPPENS. WILL YOU BE CAUGHT OFF GUARD, OR WILL YOU BE READY WITH A LEGAL PLAN?

WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW TO PREPARE FOR MEDICAID IN THE FUTURE: Save your complete financial records for a full five years. Keep a diary of when in the hospital or a nursing home. Get your legal documents updated. Find out about other ways to plan ahead for Medicaid.

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Learn more at my FREE, educational Workshops, “Seven Threats to Your Family Security”

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All Workshops held in a convenient location near Downtown Bedford, Ohio. Call to find out more!

Cleveland Zoo and the Cleveland Zoological Society contributed to the nationwide 96 Elephants campaign in commemoration of this year’s World Elephant Day by joining the effort to send at least 96,000 messages to public officials in the U.S. in support of a ban on the sale of ivory.

More than 1,000 elephant illustrations created by kids in the Zoo’s Summer Day Camp program were presented to State Rep. Mike Dovilla (House District 7) today as a message to the state legislature in Columbus to enact a statewide ban on the sale of ivory.

“The Zoo has the potential to reach hundreds of thousands of guests per year with our conservation messages,” said Executive Zoo Director Chris Kuhar. “World Elephant Day gives us the chance to re-focus on one very specific message, about banning the sale of ivory, and driving that message home.”

96 Elephants is so-named because of the sobering fact that on average, 96 elephants are killed in Africa for their ivory every single day.

The Zoo and the Zoo Society are

dedicated to the conservation of elephants in the wild and are involved in several field projects in Africa, including the creation of elephant corridors across political boundaries that connect national parks, and educating local populations on the benefits of ecological tourism as an economic driver and a deterrent to poaching. The Zoo uses its African Elephant Crossing exhibit to connect guests with elephants and help inspire them to care about conserving the animals’ wild counterparts.

African elephants, the species exhibited by the Zoo, are classified as “Vulnerable” in the wild by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Asian elephants are classified as “Endangered.” In addition to threats from ivory poachers, elephants face pressure from habitat loss and fragmentation due to human encroachment into their environment for agriculture and other development.

Cleveland Zoo Marks World Elephant Day with 1,000 Messages for Ohio’s State Legislature

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The Heights StandardAugust 21 - September 4, 2014

Digital X-Rays for PetsDr. Scott Leffler has taken

the Animal Medical Center of Streetsboro to the next, advanced, and digital level through various new technologies involving X-rays.

Dr. Leffler has recently applied a new $48,000 system into his veterinary practice making the X-ray process faster, more cost-efficient, and easier to access. X-raying the animal on the Innovet by Centura X-ray Radiation is the first step to the process.

“After an image is taken via the Innovet, a digital cassette is uploaded into the digitizer. My images are transferred to my computer screen and stored in my hard drive,” said Dr. Leffler. “I can

then transfer images to my iPad via an app called OsiriX HD and walk into the exam room to show my client what is right or wrong with their pet.”

The compactness, accessibility and speed of the CR 10-X are what make this equipment worthwhile. With the readiness to throughput 34 plates per hour with measurements of 14”x17” and without compromising any images, this system expedites X-rays and allows for the prompt iPad viewing of the pet’s body part.

Not only does the CR 10-X digitize X-rays, but they can also be printed via the Drystar 5302 Imager with the correct film. However, because

the CR 10-X can digitize, this eliminates the necessity of purchasing f i l m , t h e r e f o r e , making X-rays more affordable.

Dr. Scott Leffler of the Animal M e d i c a l Center of Streetsboro is changing the traditional methods of veterinarians, and he is remaking the world of veterinary needs.

For more information, please visit http://animaldogtor.com/.

New Workbook Educates on Proper Crime Scene ProcessingAuthor N. Leroy Parker spent more than

30 years as a crime scene investigator and analyst and has taught numerous workshops on shooting reconstructions. He now shares his highly-specialized expertise through his new book “Shooting (Trajectory) Reconstruction Workbook: 2nd Edition” (published by AuthorHouse).

“Shooting (Trajectory) Reconstruction Workbook” provides step-by-step procedures to assist crime scene analysts, technicians or investigators in the analysis and reconstruction of shooting scenes. Parker stresses the importance of proper documentation, collection, preservation

and report writing to the analysis and reconstruction of such events.

“I would like to emphasize the section on shooting or trajectory documentation,” Parker says, “because if this specialized crime scene is properly documented by someone in the local agency who is not knowledgeable or experienced enough to do a reconstruction or analysis, then one can be done at a later date by someone who has the knowledge and training.”

Targeted at law enforcement investigators and technicians, “Shooting (Trajectory) Reconstruction Workbook” provides practical examples and solutions to 15 cases

to help guide law enforcement at crime scenes as well as during reconstructions. In a simple manner, Parker teaches how to process the specialized areas of a crime scene, from beginning to end, to aid readers in acquiring the necessary and relevant skills to processing a trajectory incident.

“The investigator or technician has one chance at doing the crime scene correctly,” Parker says. “The verdict rendered in a court, in most cases, depends on the documentation and presentation of the properly processed shooting or trajectory crime scene.”

N. Leroy Parker has a Bachelor of Arts in biology from the University of the United

States, Virgin Islands. He worked for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) as a crime laboratory analyst. He was certified by the FDLE in crime scene processing and analysis, bloodstain pattern analysis, and gunshot residue analysis, and he is a state certified instructor in crime scene procedures, bloodstain pattern analysis and shooting (trajectory) reconstruction.

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Cleveland Clinic welcomes Baidehi Maiti, MD, PhD.Providing world class cancer care at Beachwood Family Health & Surgery Center and South Pointe Hospital

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