FINAL COUNTDOWN — Occupy Cleveland activist Peter Schanz leads fellow occupiers in a chant minutes before the City of Cleveland’s 5 p.m. deadline for occupiers to remove their long-standing tent on May 2, 2012. Occupy Cleveland’s permit, which allowed the group to maintain a tent on the corner of West Roadway and Frankfort Avenue, expired at midnight that day. Occupiers defied the order to take down the tent, causing authorities to remove the tent early the next morning. The Occupy Cleveland tent, erected on Oct. 6, 2011, had stood longer than any other tent in the nation’s Occupy movement. Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

FINAL COUNTDOWN — Occupy Cleveland activist Peter Schanz leads fellow occupiers in a chant minutes before the City of Cleveland’s 5 p.m. deadline for occupiers to remove their long-standing tent on May 2, 2012. Occupy Cleveland’s permit, which allowed the group to maintain a tent on the corner of West Roadway and Frankfort Avenue, expired at midnight that day. Occupiers defied the order to take down the tent, causing authorities to remove the tent early the next morning. The Occupy Cleveland tent, erected on Oct. 6, 2011, had stood longer than any other tent in the nation’s Occupy movement. Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

FAST ACTION — Activist and West Park, Ohio, resident Satinder P. S. Puri protests the planned demolition of John Marshall High School outside the 19 Action News studio in downtown Cleveland on April 16, 2012. Puri is calling for Mayor Frank Jackson to bar the scheduled demolition of the 80-year-old high school. He said the school is a community gem and should not be destroyed. “I will go on a hunger strike the moment they begin the demolition,” Puri said. “A hunger strike means a great injustice has been done.” Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

FAST ACTION — Activist and West Park, Ohio, resident Satinder P. S. Puri protests the planned demolition of John Marshall High School outside the 19 Action News studio in downtown Cleveland on April 16, 2012. Puri is calling for Mayor Frank Jackson to bar the scheduled demolition of the 80-year-old high school. He said the school is a community gem and should not be destroyed. “I will go on a hunger strike the moment they begin the demolition,” Puri said. “A hunger strike means a great injustice has been done.” Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

NATIVE AMERICAN — Robert Roche, executive director of the American Indian Education Center, protests the use of “Indians” as the name for Cleveland’s baseball team on April 5, 2012. Roche and a handful of others protested just outside Progressive Field prior to the Indians’ home opener. He said his group has been protesting the name of the Major League Baseball team for 40 years. “The country has changed, but Cleveland has not,” Roche said. “The Indians won’t win a pennant until they change their name.” Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

NATIVE AMERICAN — Robert Roche, executive director of the American Indian Education Center, protests the use of “Indians” as the name for Cleveland’s baseball team on April 5, 2012. Roche and a handful of others protested just outside Progressive Field prior to the Indians’ home opener. He said his group has been protesting the name of the Major League Baseball team for 40 years. “The country has changed, but Cleveland has not,” Roche said. “The Indians won’t win a pennant until they change their name.” Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

VOICE — A Cleveland boy holds a sign in memory of Trayvon Martin during a march at downtown’s Public Square on March 23, 2012. More than 150 people — many wearing hoodies — gathered for the march from Public Square to the Cuyahoga County Justice Center. Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

VOICE — A Cleveland boy holds a sign in memory of Trayvon Martin during a march at downtown’s Public Square on March 23, 2012. More than 150 people — many wearing hoodies — gathered for the march from Public Square to the Cuyahoga County Justice Center. Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

RATS — Carpenters near the downtown construction site at Cleveland State University’s Campus Village protest the employment practices of Winesburg Builders on March 22, 2012. More than 30 pickets upset with Winesburg’s wage and benefit standards marched up and down a small stretch of Chester Avenue hollering, “Who are the rats? Winesburg Builders are the rats!” Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE

RATS — Carpenters near the downtown construction site at Cleveland State University’s Campus Village protest the employment practices of Winesburg Builders on March 22, 2012. More than 30 pickets upset with Winesburg’s wage and benefit standards marched up and down a small stretch of Chester Avenue hollering, “Who are the rats? Winesburg Builders are the rats!” Photo by Brandon Blackwell @CapturedCLE