News Archive
Mwatabu Okantah, professor and chair of the Department of Africana Studies, was recently featured on WKYC-TV discussing how Black United Students helped turn Negro History Week into Black History Month in 1970, years before it became nationally recognized.
Former students, colleagues and educators from well beyond ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï are remembering Professor Emeritus Jerry M. Lewis, Ph.D., for his transformative teaching and significant contributions.
Meet Lettie Friona, a senior integrated social studies major with a concentration in history and minors in classics and mild to moderate special education from Steubenville, Ohio, whose leadership positions have helped shape her experience at ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State.
On a November afternoon in Merrill Hall, six women walk into a ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï classroom. They're not guest lecturers with advanced degrees. They're currently incarcerated at the Northeast Reintegration Center in downtown Cleveland.
"Something Rotten," presented the ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï School of Theatre and Dance opened on Feb. 20 and runs through Mar. 1.
Delrecco Gillespie, senior professional studies major and member of ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State’s men's basketball team, was recently featured in a recent NCAA article that detailed how setbacks like injury and grief fueled Gillespie’s drive to play as if it were his last chance to be on the court.
Poets and scientists from across the country – including current U.S. Poet Laureate Arthur Sze and other award-winning authors – will converge at ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï in November for the first-ever Poets for Science Gathering.
For many ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï students, college is about more than just getting a degree. It is about building something meaningful to take with them beyond graduation. Sometimes it’s a well of knowledge; sometimes it’s their first stream of revenue. Student entrepreneurs across campus are turning ideas into income. This is the story of five ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State student entrepreneurs.
It's 10:30 on a weeknight. Will Kalkhoff, Ph.D., a professor and graduate program coordinator in ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State's Department of Sociology and Criminology, has just settled in after a long day. Then his phone goes off. A possible drowning. A local lake. The clock starts ticking. Within minutes, he's on his way. And in that moment, everything he teaches in the classroom becomes something else entirely.
Many students walk past the Pepsi Leadership Center without thinking twice about it, unaware that inside, Fridays are more than just a celebration of the end of the week; they're being redefined. No business attire. No speeches. Just music and meaningful conversations defining what leadership looks like on campus.
A ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State student's plan to study abroad this spring also gave the opportunity to fulfill a longtime dream.
The ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State baseball team captured a 9-5 victory over #13 Tennessee on Sunday afternoon at Lindsey Nelson Stadium, clinching their first series win over a ranked opponent in the Jeff Duncan Era and their first since 2012.
In the middle of this winter at ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State, first-year finance major Mason Pranevich realized just how cold it could get and how unprepared some students were for the weather. Pranevich used his own savings to purchase 200 pairs of winter gloves to help keep his fellow Golden Flashes warm.
ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï’s Regional Campuses were the focus of President Todd Diacon’s Feb. 19 Talking With Todd town hall-style Teams meeting with the campus community.
The ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï Board of Trustees will hold its next regular business meeting at 11 a.m. on March 4 in the Center for Philanthropy and Alumni Engagement on the ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï Campus.
Solon High School art educator Jennifer Thompson, MA ’03, BA ’95, credits ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State with teaching her that art education isn't just about creating — it's about building critical thinking, empathy and self-expression skills that students carry into every career.
In December 2025, Francis Rubagumya, 37, walked across the stage at ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï State's commencement with a Master of Arts in Teaching English as a Second Language — and a plan to take every lesson he had learned back to the country he loves Rwanda.
ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï honors the memory of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and remembers his visits to our campuses over the years.
A call for entries from Main Street ÌìÌì³Ô¹Ï invites artists to showcase their talents on the iconic 3D KENT sculpture.
Meet Lily Stenroos, a member of the Honors College pursuing an environmental studies degree with minors in sustainability, environmental justice and political science, from Mayfield Village, Ohi0, whose academic path was forged from deep relationships between the natural world and humans.