Campusdistrictobserver vol 01 issue 02

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Join Us In The New Community Paper For The Campus District! Help Celebrate This Wonderful Neighborhood With Us, Your Neighbors

Proud Member Of The Observer Media Family Of Community Owned And Written Newspapers & Websites Volume 1, Issue 2, September 2011

Campus District Raises Their Voices by Rockette Richardson Alex Shorter, along with his fellow Tri-C student and friend TyKeisha Tucker, discovered that they both really cared about Cleveland’s young people. And they both wanted to make a positive difference, especially for those young people who live and go to school in the neighborhood surrounding Cuyahoga Community College’s Metro Campus.

With those good intentions plus the positive support of mentors like Dr. Michael Schoop from Tri-C’s Metro Campus and Case Western’s Terry Pim, Alex and Ty launched Project Edu-Tainment, a ten-week summer enrichment program for seventh, eighth and ninth graders. Using the arts and entertainment as the medium, the program focuses on citizen-

This Is Your Paper, You Write It by Betsy Voinovich Do you have ideas about what you’d like to have happen in this neighborhood? Do you have a favorite place to go or a favorite activity that you’d like to share with fellow residents? Write it up for the Campus District Observer. This is your newspaper. Use it to do what you want to have done. Get your word out. Propose your idea. Every story you see in this paper was written by one of your neighbors, who either lives, works, studies or creates in the Campus District, and decided that they would submit a story to the paper. Do you have an idea for an article? Would you like to describe your business, start an advice column to share your wisdom, or comic strip? Have you taken pictures of this beautiful neighborhood? Get going! Write it up, and send it in. Here’s how: go to www.campusdistrictobserver.com, click on Member Center in the left hand window, sign in, and start writing.

ship, entrepreneurship and creativity. The majority of this summer’s participants are students at nearby Marion Sterling and live in CMHA’s Cedar Estates or the surrounding neighborhood. As part of their summer activities, the students wrote a play, which they performed on Saturday, August 27th in at Tri C Metro in the Campus Center. The program, which included breakfast and lunch at Cleveland State University’s Student Center, came to a close

Photo by Archangel, Breaunte Davis

Project Edu-tainment - An introduction

Leader of the Archangels, Alex Shorter. with the peformance of the say about what they liked best play. See inside articles to read about the experience and what about what participants had to they learned.

Cleveland Boy Scouts Are Growing by James Dillon The Cleveland Council of the Boy Scouts of America is serving over 5000 youth in Scouting and in School Learning for Life programs. This is an increase of over 1000 youths in the past year. The scouts are working with CMHA- 6 program sites, CMSD- 51 program sites, churches and other organizations- 36 program sites. Cub Scouts is for boys

grades 1 to 5. Boy Scouts is for boys who have completed the 5th grade to 18 years of age. Venturing is for young men and ladies age 14 to 20. Youth join scouting for the camping, hiking, and racing pinewood derby cars but along the journey they are learning respect, responsibility, community pride, and other values. Our youth in Cleveland want to be in the Scouts, if

you desire more information, please contact Jim Dillon at james.dillon@scouting.org.

Scouts learn archery skills.

Councilwoman Cleveland Welcomes The Campus District Observer by Councilwoman Phyllis Cleveland

Congresswoman Fudge greeted some of the employers, which included a wide range of private companies, public and non profit agencies that are currently hiring or recruiting.

Many To Thank For Congresswoman Fudge’s Successful Job Fair At CSU by Congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge, 11th District of Ohio When I arrived at Cleveland State University on August 8th and saw thousands of people patiently awaiting entry to the job fair I hosted, I knew I had made the right decision to hold the event. The sight was both encouraging and deeply moving. How did we reach a point where so many of our friends, neighbors and fam-

ily are desperately searching for work or the opportunity to move from part-time employment to a full time job? Not knowing what to expect, my office initially projected attracting 1,000 jobs. I’m happy to say the 110 employers who participated offered more than 2,000 jobs. While Congress remains gridlocked, spurred by the intransigence of House leadership and some

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As the Councilperson for Ward 5, I’m very excited to welcome the Campus District Observer to this neighborhood. My ward, which spans Central, Broadway and Union Miles, includes the southern portion of the Campus District, with its major medical and educational campuses (St. Vincent’s Medical Center, Cuyahoga Community College and Cleveland State University), as well as residents living in Cedar Estates and Lupica Towers. This community newspaper is a wonderful way to forge closer connections between a diverse group of stakeholders (residents, students, employees, businesses and large institutions). The Campus District Observer encourages us to learn more about our neighbors. It gives us another venue in which to communicate with each other about our neigh-

Councilwoman Phyllis Cleveland, representing Ward 5. borhood’s priorities, successes, opportunities and challenges. One of the great things about the Observer is its accessibility. If you do not have a personal computer or Internet access, you can get a print copy of the newspaper in area libraries, stores and other public gathering places. If you prefer to get your news online, there’s a convenient online version. Either way,

the Observer makes it easy to be an informed and engaged citizen. For our community’s small businesses, the newspaper provides an opportunity not only to advertise products and services to a customer base that is near your business, but a chance for businesses to tell their own stories about what they do, and why they’re here. I have been fortunate to serve as the Councilperson for Ward 5 since 2006. My vision throughout my tenure has been to build a strong community with clean, safe and affordable neighborhoods. One of the ways of accomplishing this is by creating meaningful educational opportunities and career pathways for young people and adults. I believe the Campus District newspaper can be a valuable tool for sharing our progress and focusing our efforts, as the community works together to turn that vision into reality.


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