Ohio State students stage sit-in protesting university’s relationship with Columbus Police
More than 30 people gathered for a sit-in at Ohio State’s Moritz College of Law, calling for the university to sever ties with Columbus Police Friday.
More than 30 people gathered for a sit-in at Ohio State’s Moritz College of Law, calling for the university to sever ties with Columbus Police Friday.
Ohio State Newark failed to notify the campus of a scheduled police training, creating confusion when fake guns were pointed in the direction of a student and research staff member Thursday.
Students have crossed this semester’s finish line after an unprecedented and exhausting year, and some feel more burned out than ever before.
Attorneys representing 121 victims of former university physician Richard Strauss filed a statement condemning Ohio State’s proposed settlement program in the U.S. Southern Ohio District Court Wednesday.
A night at the casino isn’t strictly fun and games but rather a mainstay fundraiser for local cancer research.
A former Columbus milk production and delivery company has opened its doors for the first time since 1967 and is now specializing in more than dairy, according to its website.
The work and inspirations of impressionist painter Vincent Van Gogh will come to Columbus in two exhibitions this fall –– one showing life-size, digital works, and another with some of his original paintings.
Ohio State has proposed a program to offer individual settlements to at least 100 victims of former university physician Richard Strauss across five active legal cases against the university, according to a notice of intent filed Monday in the U.S. Southern Ohio District Court.
Among a list of demands, tiny, colorful butterfly hair clips were passed around a protest of around 150 people outside City Hall Saturday in honor of Ma’Khia Bryant, a 16-year-old girl who was shot and killed by Columbus Police April 20.
Students typically enter college around the age of 18 but for some, party culture cannot wait until they come of drinking age. Fake IDs, described by one student as ‘very versatile social tools,’ allow them to circumvent drinking laws, entering bars and purchasing alcohol before they turn 21.