The Ada Schools volleyball, girls soccer and boys soccer teams kicked off Breast Cancer Awareness month with events supporting disease awareness, research and survivors. The annual Dig for a Cure event raised over $2,000 towards IBC research. In this photo by Mark Andreas for Ada Bulldogs Sports Photos Facebook page, "Pink Out" jersey showed can't-miss support for Senior mom Cathy Long.
New distracted driving law became enforceable on October 5
FINDLAY__Troopers from the Ohio State Highway Patrol’s Findlay District will focus efforts on curbing distracted driving this weekend, as Ohio’s new distracted driving law became enforceable on October 5. The northwest Ohio initiative started at 12 a.m. on October 6, and will end at 11:59 p.m. on October 8.
On April 4, Ohio’s distracted driving law became stricter and is now a primary offense. The new law gave law enforcement officers probable cause to pull over motorists if they witness them illegally using a cell phone or other electronic device. Since then, there have been 446 distracted driving-related crashes in the Findlay District, a 10 percent decrease over the same time frame in 2022. While these numbers are encouraging, distracted driving still occurs on a daily basis on our roadways. In an effort to reduce the number of distracted driving-related crashes, northwest Ohio troopers will be out this weekend looking for drivers violating the new law.
“The purpose of this initiative is to bring further awareness and education to the problem of distracted driving,” said Captain William N. Bowers, Findlay District commander. “Crashes involving distracted driving are preventable and choosing to drive distracted can result in devastating consequences.”
Institute for Civics and Public Policy investigattes opioid crisis in Ohio
Ohio Northern University students Kennedy Aikey, Carmen Mancuso, Alison Ringhiser, and Caleb Clayton delve into the opioid crisis in the Institute for Civics and Public Policy’s latest additions to the un-CAPP it! Podcast and the Critical Question series.
By Aaron Bain, MS
Medical Physicist, The Armes Family Cancer Care Center
You may have heard of an astrophysicist, nuclear physicist or theoretical physicist. Scientists like Einstein, Schrödinger and Newton revolutionized our understanding of the universe. But have you ever heard of a medical physicist? It is likely that you haven’t since there are only approximately 13,000 medical physicists in the United States. You may ask yourself, what role could someone who studies the physics of subatomic particles and planetary motions play in the medical field?