Activities abound as organization looks to empower women
Empowering Women of Ohio is heading into its seventh annual Empowered Women’s Week, featuring panel discussions, volunteer activities and keynote speakers.
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Empowering Women of Ohio is heading into its seventh annual Empowered Women’s Week, featuring panel discussions, volunteer activities and keynote speakers.
This letter is a response to a column by Matt Farmer that appeared in the Feb. 17 edition of The Post under the headline "OU's history curriculum could use some diversity." You can read that column here.
As an integrated social studies education major, I have taken a number of history courses, and there seems to be a common denominator about most of the classes in the department:
Students and speaker activists across the globe will raise their voices during the Ohio University Women’s and Gender Studies Graduate Student Association conference to speak their mind on women’s issues.
President Barack Obama visited my home state of Michigan last week to do something I haven’t seen him do in a while: sign into law a significant bill that wasn’t related to a self-inflicted crisis, like the budget impasse of 2013, and was passed by a Democratic-controlled Senate and a Republican-controlled House.
Robert F. Williams was a civil rights leader who took a different path than most leaders at the time and advocated for armed self-defense in the face of violence and inequality.
A group of students spent ten minutes before a memorial, individually lighting tealight candles in glass vases, spelling the name of an Ohio University senior who died Tuesday night.
From social injustice to a lack of education, HIV and AIDS are caused by more than just sexual irresponsibility.
With 21 novels and four film adaptations under her belt, Jodi Picoult is bringing her legacy to Athens.
With only three actors, two chairs and a coffin block — an acting tool used to simulate a multitude of props — an entire production will be put on spearheaded by students.
“Knock, knock, knock,” emanates from the stage as a character in the Ohio University production of Macbeth knocks on a giant castle door.
After a semester of smaller projects with less involvement, Hip Hop Congress is back on track with a busy Spring Semester.
A Speaking Bobcat could spend multiple hours preparing for just one debate that could take only minutes to perform.
The streets of Athens and the Ohio University campus were peppered with more than 100 Athens residents, children and students of all races to march together to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream in 1963, and the MLK Jr. Celebration Committee is commemorating his dream by celebrating King’s legacy in Athens with a week’s worth of events.
As of Wednesday evening, Ohio University’s Student Senate is run by a woman — for the first time since 2006.
During several days from December 1959 to January 1960, Martin Luther King Jr. attended a conference at Ohio University, addressing the crowd on several occasions. Three years later, he led the famous March on Washington. Only five years after that, he was assassinated while standing on his hotel’s second-floor balcony in Memphis. Forty-five years after his death, the effects of his legacy are still felt on our campus and throughout the nation.
Athens Karma Thegsum Choling, the local Tibetan Buddhist meditation center, is starting off the year with a visit and talk from Tibetan Buddhist lama Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche in conjunction with ARTS/West.
Matt Fillmore’s
A local solar panel provider is making efforts to reach out to the community to answer questions and respond to concerns about alternative energy.