Comic book fans convene for Athens' 1st convention
Nowhere in rural Southeast Ohio looks anything like a scene out of Star Trek, but that doesn’t mean residents can’t pretend it does for a day.
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Nowhere in rural Southeast Ohio looks anything like a scene out of Star Trek, but that doesn’t mean residents can’t pretend it does for a day.
Uptown Athens has always been a haven for deep-fried “drunk” food on weekend nights, but with the influx of late-night meals on wheels, some are wondering whether food buggies are becoming too much.
In Ohio University’s final Spring Quarter, students are bonging beers at street fests and basking in the sun — but the laid-back scene does not include junior Kayla Hardimon as she pursues her dream of becoming a national pageant queen.
Three Ohio University students have attempted to soften the burden of studying with their new, award-wining mobile app.
Church by day, amphitheater by night, Carpenter Street’s former auto-parts warehouse has been transformed into a non-traditional contender in the Athens music scene.
One is a sanctuary for lost and abandoned pets while the other is an outlet for artists with developmental disabilities—combined two Athens nonprofits have teamed up for a collaborative cause.
Along a line of ordinary houses, a wooded one-acre lot at 147 Shady Lane in The Plains is now host to a two-story castle built of storage containers complete with a spiral staircase and crenellations sweeping the treetops.
Last year, Ohio University could barely offer its students a shot at pursuing their creative business plans. A new Center for Entrepreneurship and six student organizations later, OU has become a major player in the nationwide movement.
Part of the legacy of the Holocaust’s largest revolt is on display at Ohio University.
Almost 100 years to the day after the Titanic descended into the dark sea, killing most of its passengers, the event still captivates audiences around the world.
Athenians are buzzing about honeybees this spring, making money from their honey and healthy harvests.
Each morning, chef Amy Foster is in an apron by 5 a.m. to start her first batch of from-scratch biscuits for a new eatery that’s bringing Albany residents together.
When the Appalachian Hell Betties are at their day jobs — ranging from secretary to school counselor — they might seem harmless. After they don fishnets and festive knee socks, though, they are Hell on wheels.
With a large selection of “locavore” restaurants and a nationally known Farmers Market that stretches across the entire mall parking lot, it’s no secret that Athens knows a thing or two about living off the land.
Editor’s Note: This is the third in a three-part weekly series for the month of February exploring black history in Athens County.
In 1941, 33 men from Tuskegee, Ala., made history by forming the first African-American aviation unit in the United States armed forces.
Wednesday, Ohio University students will highlight the Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine’s diversity at “Multicultural Extravaganza.”
For more than 20 years, one group has united all sexes and skin colors at Ohio University through a shared passion for fashion and the catwalk. More importantly, though, the group has allowed its members to love the skin they’re in — whatever color it is.
Fresh out of high school, Jack Ley put his life on hold to enlist as a U.S. Army Air Force pilot. He soared over China during World War II with an emergency parachute strapped to his back, unaware that the woman of his dreams would wear it on their wedding day.
The Ohio University sophomore who dropped jaws with his powerful poetry at last month’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day brunch just received a book in the mail with his name in the author’s spot.