Republican Candidate for Ohio Treasurer speaks to Miami students
By Collin Finn | October 2, 2018Ohio Treasurer candidate Robert Sprague (R-83) visited Miami University's campus Wednesday, Sept. 26 to discuss and promote his platform.
Ohio Treasurer candidate Robert Sprague (R-83) visited Miami University's campus Wednesday, Sept. 26 to discuss and promote his platform.
The two-month-old recommendation that Talawanda School Board meetings be recorded and posted online was revisited in a recent meeting that took place on Monday, Sept. 17.
City Council voted unanimously against rezoning a parcel comprised of two areas between W. Spring St. and W. Walnut St. at the latest council meeting on Tuesday, Sept. 18, dealing a blow to the development company who intended to redevelop the area.
The annual Greek Week blood drive, Miami University's largest campus-wide event of the fall, marks its 40th anniversary this week.
Bird scooters are headed to Oxford in the next few weeks. The electric scooters (e-scooters), which have become popular in larger cities across the U.S., can be used as an alternative mode of transportation that can help improve access to public transportation, decrease Oxford's carbon footprint and are relatively easy to use.
Following a motion for continuance filed in August, former Miami professor Kevin Armitage's trial has been set for Monday, Jan. 7, 2019.
The City of Oxford plans to pursue bringing Bird scooters to town in the next two weeks, despite Miami University's reservations expressed in last week's cease and desist letter.
Kimberly Moore, Miami University's new dean of students, worked for 14 years at Loyola University Chicago where she had a bookshelf in her office.
10:53 p.m.
When Leah Sprock clicked on The Cincinnati Enquirer's recently-published video series on sexual assault -- for which she was interviewed about her experience as a victim -- she was shocked to learn the newspaper had given her explicit, revealing testimony equal footing with perspectives of accused rapists. The Enquirer defended the series as "journalistically sound"