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(01/30/23 2:57am)
The stained glass windows of Mount Zion Baptist Church feel magical, and for good reason. Situated at 32 W. Carpenter St., Athenians walk past the aged church each day, often without knowing the work a local group has dedicated to preserving the building, and with it, Black history in Athens.
(01/18/23 3:48am)
Martin Luther King Jr. would have turned 94 last Sunday had he not been assassinated in 1968 at 39 years old. In memory for all he accomplished and could have done, Ohio University celebrated Martin Luther King Jr. Day this year with a week of events.
(01/17/23 1:05pm)
(01/17/23 3:30am)
The first person from Gen Z was elected to Congress this past November, but Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.), among other newly elected officials of the 118th Congress, was not able to be sworn in until the Speaker of the House of Representatives was decided, which didn’t happen until Jan. 7.
(11/09/22 3:03am)
The phrase “small world” can be used to coin various things. Whether it’s naming the animatronic ride at Disneyland or an expression when strangers find out they know the same people, it is a long accepted idea that the world is not all that big. On Tuesday afternoon, David Butcher and Hans-Peter Rosenberger proved this sentiment true.
(11/07/22 4:36am)
On Friday, Ohio University’s Black Student Communication Caucus hosted its annual Slam Poetry contest, providing book nerds and magical realists an excuse to ditch Court Street and experience something thoroughly genuine.
(11/04/22 2:47am)
The Athens chapter of the Philanthropic Educational Organization, or P.E.O., hosts ample fundraisers throughout the year to provide scholarships to women for their academic goals.
(11/04/22 12:54am)
The adoption of morals is like getting a cut. You experience something and it leaves an open wound. You take care of it, you clean it and check for infection, impurities. Eventually it heals and leaves fortified skin, a thick scar, a reminder of what you had been exposed to and why it changed your mind.
(11/03/22 1:00am)
On Sept. 30, the Ohio University Physical Therapy Board of Alumni had incredible news come their way. A generous donor wanted to support the program that changed everything for him and the love of his life.
(10/27/22 2:40am)
Friday, Oct. 28:
(10/24/22 3:51pm)
The event wristbands resembled official hospital bracelets, the photo backdrop bore the Nationwide Children’s Hospital logo and upon tables sat 3D models of human anatomy. Before even entering the Baker Ballroom, attendees could feel the effort Phi Delta Epsilon Ohio Eta Chapter had put into planning its first annual Anatomy Fashion Show.
(10/10/22 2:58am)
On Oct. 6, the Virginia Hahne Theater, 19 S. College St., was tightly packed with an audience eagerly awaiting the opening night of Julius Caesar. As the first show put up by the School of Theater this academic year, it took the stage by storm.
(10/10/22 2:30am)
Local reproductive rights group Athenians for Bodily Autonomy, or ABA, held a rally on Sunday to promote abortion access.
(10/04/22 3:50am)
While the leaves are changing, it is getting colder and greyer outside and terms like “winter depression” are used with a very broad brush.
(09/29/22 12:59am)
Friday, September 30
(09/19/22 7:14pm)
Hosts Claire and Hannah have finished up their classes and are heading out to their internships. Listen to them reflect on the speakers and experiences they had these past four weeks in D.C.
(09/09/22 3:18am)
Ric Sheffield never had any intention of writing his book “We Got By: A Black Family’s Journey in the Heartland.” Nonetheless, the professor emeritus of legal studies and sociology at Kenyon College began to write down his family’s stories when he couldn’t visit his mother in the summer of 2020.
(09/01/22 3:44am)
Correction appended.
(08/29/22 3:10am)
As summer slowly creeps to a close in Columbus, Ohio, the incoming transition into cooler temperatures and colorful leaves seemed to be frozen in time as thousands of music fans crowded into The Lawn at CAS this past weekend.
(08/24/22 2:45am)
Throughout history, adaptations have defined media. Some of the earliest stories of oral tradition relied on retellings and additions created by a new speaker. This interest in stories, formed from old and new elements, has fascinated audiences. In a period of oversaturation in media, adaptations proliferate.