Buckeye offensive line improving together
Entering the 2013 football season, the Buckeyes offensive line was expected to be one of the team’s strongest units. With four returning starter…
Entering the 2013 football season, the Buckeyes offensive line was expected to be one of the team’s strongest units. With four returning starter…
A rape reported early Friday morning at Rhodes Hall was the sixth reported sex crime at the Wexner Medical Center since May. The incident allegedly …
A smartphone application created by two former Facebook employees may provide Ohio State students juggling classes and clubs with a little bit of h…
If you want to get in an early morning workout on a new piece of equipment, the RPAC can accommodate you. But you still might not have a locker to …
Two South Campus buildings were without water for about eight hours Friday due to a water main break outside of Pomerene Hall. The break happene…
The Ohio State men’s and women’s golf teams will be able to tee off come rain or shine soon, in part because of a donation from a local b…
A high-speed passenger rail could be in the works to connect Columbus and Chicago. The train would link 100 cities and create an estimated 26,800 full-…
College students who hated the SAT, beware: there is a new standardized exam offered in the spring to seniors with the intention of helping employers a…
The Ohio State vice president for Technology Commercialization has left the university after about two years, OSU officials said Friday. Brian C…
The man who was pulled out of Mirror Lake Aug. 18 was reported to still be in critical condition at the Wexner Medical Center in the Intensive Care Unit as of Tuesday afternoon, according to WexnerMedical Center spokeswoman Alexis Shaw. Tushar Shriram Kabre, age 28, was rescued from the lake after a 911 call reporting a “person in distress in Mirror Lake” was received at approximately 5 p.m., and other bystanders approached the Ohio State Public Safety Mobile Command Unit that was in the area to get additional help. The female OSU student who made the call has declined to comment on the situation. Police officers and Student Safety officers jumped into Mirror Lake to pull Kabre from the water and bystanders reported paramedics performed CPR and chest resuscitations for several minutes without any apparent reaction from him. OSU Administration and Planning spokeswoman Lindsay Komlanc said in an email that Kabre “received a masters of science in chemistry degree in Autumn 2011” and that he is not currently enrolled at the university. OSU Ph.D. candidate Krishna Patel, an acquaintance of Kabre’s from the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, told The Lantern Aug. 19 that Kabre was a student from India and he didn’t know of any relatives of Kabre’s in the area. Attempts to locate relatives of Kabre were unsuccessful. Jumping in Mirror Lake before the OSU football game against the University of Michigan is a university tradition, and University Police Chief Paul Denton said whether the incident will affect the jump, which is not a university sanctioned event, will not be determined by University Police. Student Life spokesman Dave Isaacs said he was not in the position to discuss the incident Aug. 19 because the details of what took place are not yet clear. How it will affect the jump is unknown. “Certainly the Mirror Lake jump will be discussed and, if appropriate, we will reflect on the unfortunate incident of another night,” Isaacs said. Isaacs said until the police investigation is completed it was “premature” to make any decisions. Isaacs said Monday there had not been any meetings that discussed the incident and its possible effects.