Governor Tina Kotek has appointed Ellen Waterston of Bend to a second term as Oregon's poet laureate, Oregon Humanities ...
After 44 years at the practice, Dr. Greg Noll of Noll Veterinary Hospital will retire at the end on June. The hospital, 2725 Selma Road, opened in 1982 and treats cats, dogs and large animals. After ...
Thousands crowded Courthouse Square in downtown Dayton Saturday for a “No Kings” protest, in what organizers claim to be the largest day of protests across the country in U.S. history.
The Champaign County Board of Elections deputy director faces two federal child pornography-related charges. Chris J. Creamer, a Democrat, was booked into the Butler County Jail March 10 and is still ...
It may not have the strength of depth of Texas but there's still lots at stake at IRONMAN South Africa a day later.
It was quite a week at Ohio State University. In the span of days, Ohio State held a board meeting with President Ted Carter, scheduled an emergency meeting on a Saturday to accept Carter's ...
Former Ohio State football player Marcus Williamson pleaded guilty to nine bank robberies. The robberies occurred over a two-month period across Franklin County. Williamson stole approximately $22,000 ...
Disgraced Ohio State President Ted Carter urged a private nonprofit to sponsor a failing podcast hosted by the woman at the center of his “inappropriate relationship” – but the business partnership ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Receivers Jeremiah Smith and Brandon Inniss, safety Jaylen McClain and linebacker Garrett Stover were named Iron Buckeyes by Ohio State football on Friday. OSU names Iron Buckeyes ...
The New Scientist Book Club had a change of pace in March, moving from the science-fictional visions of the far future that have been our fare in recent months to some excellent popular science with ...
Michigan hockey skittered through 40 minutes of a too-close Big Ten Tournament final at Yost Ice Arena before pouring on the offense in the third, with four goals to make it a 7-3 final on Saturday, ...
The U.S. Department of Justice launched investigations into Ohio State University's College of Medicine and two other medical programs to determine if they racially discriminated against applicants.