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iRhine Articles 2006: January
2006
February 2006
 CincinnatiUSA Heart the Carew: Vertical for Lung Health by iRhine
 All About Kids: Cincinnati Inner City Outings by Dyah Kartikawening, iRhine
 The Hip-Hop Elementz of Over-the-Rhine by Dyah Kartikawening, iRhine
March 2006
 Dub Furniture: Publico Features Cincinnati Artist by Luke Lewis, iRhine Contributor
 First Annual Opera Dogs by iRhine
 Second Sunday on Main by iRhine
 In Memoriam: Bob Manley by iRhine
April 2006
 iRhine 5th Anniversary by iRhine
 Great American Clean Up in Over-the-Rhine by iRhine
 Mantle Magic: What's on your wall today? by Sarah Tsai, iRhine
May 2006
 Uncommon Home: The HOME House Project at the Contemporary Arts Center by Dyah Kartikawening, iRhine

National Trust Historic Preservation Announcement
 The Over-the-Rhine We Love
June 2006
 French in Over-the-Rhine by Joan Kaup, iRhine
 Live Buy Design: Over-the-Rhine on Your Own Terms by Dyah Kartikawening, iRhine
 Northern Row Park: Communities of Gardens: Part 1 by Sam St. John, iRhine Contributor
July 2006
 Second Sunday on Main: Where Are You Now? by Joan Kaup, iRhine
 Opera Dogs: Thank You Cincinnati for a Great Event! by Jennifer Ries, iRhine Contributor
 Finding the Common Ground by Dyah Kartikawening, iRhine
 WAIF: First Person Story by Joe Wessells, iRhine
August 2006
 Urban Romance: [Redefined] by Ran Mullins, iRhine Founder
 You'll Say Tomato, I'll Say Economics by Joan Kaup, iRhine
Media Articles 2002:
Not your typical dot-com,
irhine.com mission expands, PDF By Chris Yeager,
Innovation Quarterly(iq)
Media
Articles 2001:
iRhine web site
develops sense of community By CincyTechUSA staff
Cincy's
Artists Feel Tech Squeeze By Brad King, WIRED News
August 20, 2001 After a survey ranks Cincinnati, Ohio, near the bottom
in tech job opportunities and online population, civic leaders take
action. As usual, it's the artists who suffer.
iRhine Aims
to Heal Wounds Riot led to early launch of community
forum
by Rachel Melcer, Cincinnati Business Courier, April
20, 2001
With a new multimedia mouthpiece known as
iRhine, a coalition of Over-the-Rhine interest groups vows to speak
louder than the breaking glass, wailing sirens and gunshots that
shattered their neighborhood a week ago.
iRhine originally was
set to start in a few months with a Web site, www.iRhine.com, where
people could exchange information about events, shops, restaurants,
community meetings, history and news of the neighborhood. It would be
followed by a monthly magazine, then maybe a documentary and festival.
The idea was to encourage people and businesses to come to
Over-the-Rhine. Continue
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