SUBSCRIBE TODAY
ONLY $20 per subscriber
plus get a $50 Spa Walden gift card

Signup for our monthly enewsletter

CBC Cleveland Business Connects
Share |
Click on the slide!

Following stints in local news and consulting, Loree Vick now shares UH’s medical miracles

MORE
Click on the slide!

University Hospitals, Philips Healthcare align as charter tenant of global center for health innovation

MORE
Click on the slide!

Twenty years on, MS society president still leading fight against the disease

MORE
Click on the slide!

Sam Erickson spends her days planning RTA’s routes while biking a few of her own to and from work

MORE
Click on the slide!

Cleveland Clinic physician Kathryn Teng targets disease with personalized healthcare

MORE
Frontpage Slideshow (version 2.0.0) - Copyright © 2006-2008 by JoomlaWorks

Editor's Letter


Unlike at least one popular consumer magazine, CBC doesn’t publish a Most Beautiful People issue. But if we did, I know whom we’d focus on.

read more...

Wellness Inside Out


Successful entrepreneurs know that an innovative product or service, solid business plan, and dependable financing are necessary to launch a company. In today’s fast-paced and challenging world, however, many owners are discovering that it takes more than business acumen to sustain and grow a venture.

read more...


Making The Scene

Happenings Calendar

Thursday, May 23, 2013, 7:30am
Cleveland Society for Human Resource Management
Thursday, May 23, 2013, 8:00am
Mentor and Painesville Chambers of Commerce
Thursday, May 23, 2013, 8:00am
Heights-Hillcrest Regional Chamber of Commerce
Thursday, May 23, 2013, 8:00am
Stow-Munroe Falls Chamber of Commerce
Thursday, May 23, 2013, 11:30am
Rocky River Chamber of Commerce

Tom's Blog

A short description about your blog

Aug 03
2009

Recognizing the genius of libraries

Posted by: Tom

Tagged in: Publishing , Editor , CBC Magazine

One of Hollywood's more intriguing characters is the lead in the movie "Phenomenon." Exposed to a mysterious flash of light on the night of his 37th birthday, John Travolta's ordinary, average guy suddenly acquires a ravenous yearn to learn. In just a few days, after absorbing vast amounts of information, he becomes the town genius. No one will ever confuse me with Albert Einstein, even if the local Holiday Inn invites me to take up permanent residence. I'm always looking for that strange burst of brilliance, but I just don't see it. Except when I'm in a library. Once inside the Berea branch of the Cuyahoga County Public Library, just 5 minutes from my home, the potential seems limitless. As Samuel Johnson, an 18th century English author, put it, "No place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human hopes than a public library." We, as residents of Northeast Ohio, have it better off than most. The CCPL is currently ranked No. 1 in the nation for libraries that serve populations of 500,000 or more. As a card-carrying member, I have direct access to more than 11 million items, including, no doubt, a few of Samuel Johnson’s works. Not that I get to the library often enough. My latest trip resulted in me having to update my otherwise pristine membership card. But it saved me 60 bucks that I would have spent at the bookstore on two of Michael Roizen's nutrition hardbacks. Far more frequent patrons are my wife and sons. The boys, ages 3 and 1, have practically grown up in the Berea, Strongsville, and Middleburg Heights libraries. They play there. They sing. They listen - and learn - as library staffers read aloud. Free programs have instructed my wife how to knit and make chocolates. While I may be a literary slacker, I can’t imagine them not being able to call the library their second home. And apparently I’m not alone. Fearful of a proposed $227.3 million cut to the state's Public Library Fund, thousands of Ohioans have been writing, calling, and emailing their state legislators and Gov. Ted Strickland. Their voices, it seems, are being heard. As of July 14, the budget cut was rumored to have fallen to $84.3 million over the next two years. Cleveland Business Connects makes it a point to shy from politics. But as we put the finishing touches on this education issue, we are thrilled that the state may spare our libraries to a degree. Hope does thrive inside these institutions, and it shouldn’t take a genius to realize we have to continue to support these linchpins of community life.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy