Crowning Life's champs
Editor’s note: This is the second in a five-part philanthropic series profiling nonprofit organizations in Athens County.
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Editor’s note: This is the second in a five-part philanthropic series profiling nonprofit organizations in Athens County.
Starting Thursday, two former Uptown buggy owners are giving Athens a taste of paradise.
As the sun set in the west, a few brave men in the east would rise with the moon, head down to the Ohio River, and wade the waters in hopes of rescuing slaves from the prejudiced prison on the other side.
Squirrels and romantic smooches on the green have certainly made their mark on Ohio University’s quirky history — a history that began in a downtown Boston bar. OU’s strangest sagas are perhaps the most fascinating and yet to be explored.
Squirrels and romantic smooches on the green have certainly made their mark on Ohio University’s quirky history — a history that began in a downtown Boston bar. OU’s strangest sagas are perhaps the most fascinating and yet to be explored.
In the mid-1900s, student shoppers in Uptown Athens ambled in and out of Victorian-style shops decorated with cast iron and sunny, striped awnings.
Besides the few inches of snow that coated Athens just last week, Southeast Ohio has seen a rather mild winter thus far, and it isn’t good for the snow removal industry.
Editor’s note: The Glouster woman identified in this story is anonymous due to a possible custody battle over her unborn child.
On any given Friday, the cafeterias in Athens’ five elementary schools are crowded with giggling children hovering over lunch trays topped with grease-smothered square pizzas and cartons of chocolate milk.
Ohio University’s Black Student Cultural Programming Board (BSCPB) tweeted last night that it will hold its first Battle of the MCs, a competition for one student to perform during this year’s Sib’s Weekend concert.
At the end of every year, hundreds of Southeast Ohioans suit up in safety orange and hit the woods in search of a certain four-legged fall fare.
Of about 21,000 Ohio University students at the Athens branch, only 61 identify as American Indian, but many more share an appreciation for the Native American culture they carry.
African-American students at Ohio University will rock around the kinara tonight, filling Baker University Center Theatre with holiday cheer.
In less than five years, Southeast Ohio could lose a significant source of natural beauty and timber to the emerald ash borer.
A human body shows signs of decomposition as little as three hours after the heart’s final beat. Blood gathers, creating bruise-like blotches as it succumbs to gravity while the skin turns cold, producing an odor as it rots.
Argentinean stirrups, a Mexican bombilla and a quena made on the streets of Ecuador are among a roomful of Latin American artifacts from one retired Ohio University professor’s authentic collection.
On a fall day in 1947, Carol Lovejoy caught Robert Rader’s eye on a double blind date, but not with each other. The two Ohio University underclassmen commenced a college romance that is still alive today.
During the summer, The Help had moviegoers swooning over its Southern charm, even as civil rights buffs were clenching their armrests in fury and disgust.
Most people don’t sip their morning coffee out of a mug shaped like an alien or bird. There is, however, a place for creative cup lovers in Nelsonville.
Rev. Jesse Jackson visited Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, in hopes of reviving President Lyndon B. Johnson's war on poverty. "Appalachia is ground zero" in the war on poverty, said Jackson during his visit. He urged students and attendees to stand up for civil rights and peace.