City officials hold conference, discuss fests
By Allan Smith | Mar. 13, 2013One major difference fest-goers can expect to notice this upcoming season is a much stricter enforcement of the nuisance party ordinance.
One major difference fest-goers can expect to notice this upcoming season is a much stricter enforcement of the nuisance party ordinance.
Recruiting websites arm giddy fans with knowledge and, at best, a murky photo of what the future holds for their respective teams. Player ratings shouldn’t be taken at face value because one who doesn’t receive high marks could turn out better than expected. The opposite can ring true as well.
The Kennedy Museum of Art has a new exhibit from an artist who helped bring art back to a more common experience.
After two voting sessions in Vatican City that resulted in black smoke billowing into the sky, the third vote brought the desired result — white smoke spewing from the Sistine Chapel’s chimney, and a new pope.
Five past midnight, Monday, March 11. I had ventured back to Ohio from an ethereal week in St. Augustine, Fla., and even though the cats of the town made me ill with their dander, spring break could’ve stayed with me until May and my life wouldn’t have been unlived. But my girlfriend made this return trip with me, so suddenly I felt I could be here without simultaneously being lost in a sea of nostalgia.
Ohio diving coach Russ Dekker called the NCAA Zone Championship a great learning experience for his young diving squad last season. His expectations for his team have risen in the 370 days since.
So much of our entertainment and culture is centered on violence. It is shown in almost every form of media we have — music, movies, television, advertising and books among the group — yet video games are made the scapegoat.
Students might not begrudge taking general education courses if they have relevance to their majors, which is one of the goals of a new Ohio University committee.
The notorious day that colors Ohio University students green both inside and out had students opening bar tabs instead of books Wednesday.
One month ago, while others were smelling fragrant bouquets of roses and unwrapping boxes of heart-shaped sugar, I was still struggling out of the humiliating mire of pubic rejection from my one true love.
A few weeks ago, we ranted and raved about one of the beer world’s greatest treasures, Bell’s Hopslam. And we noted that it definitely slammed you with hops. Maybe you just like hops, or even like-like them. But you don’t love them like us or don’t appreciate being slapped in the face by them. Does that mean that you can’t enjoy a good IPA every once in a blue moon? Not if you can get your hands on one of Bell’s other fantastic beers: the Two-Hearted Ale.
By Will Ashton | wa054010@ohiou.edu
Ohio’s fan contingent for this weekend’s Mid-American Conference Tournament will feature a fervent collection of Reggie Keely supporters, as he calls Cleveland — the site of the tournament — home.
Editorial cartoons represent the majority opinion of The Post's executive editors.
A local prisoner who was convicted of murdering his wife in 2011 has filed for an appeal through the Hocking County Common Pleas Court.
Let’s get nostalgic.
By Meryl Gottlieb| mg986611@ohiou.edu| @buzzlightmeryl
Here is a list of when some Athens' bars open for Green Beer Day.