The Kent State volleyball team swept their home tournament this weekend after battling Butler today. (0) comments
A tough week for the Kent State football team ended with a 34-14 loss to Iowa State. (3) comments
Kent State's Library and Information Science graduate program ranks 20th among graduate schools nationwide. (0) comments
Fundraising for Kent State's Centennial Campaign has reached $165 million, said Eugene Finn, vice president of institutional advancement. (0) comments
Deborah Barnbaum has taken a look at autism in a new way. Barnbaum, an associate professor of philosophy, studies the ethical questions facing research in autism today. Her book on the subject, "The Ethics of Autism: Among Them, but Not of Them" won a bronze IPPY award from the Independent Publisher Book Awards in the category of Health, Medicine and Nutrition this summer. (8) comments
After a week of disappointing news and uncertainty, the Kent State football team will try to move on at 7 tomorrow night against Iowa State.
Listen to sports editors talk about the Kent State vs. Iowa State football game.
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Abby McGinty got more than she bargained for when she decided to declare an Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender minor. "Not only has it helped me to find myself and understand who I am as a person, but it's uncovered the passion I've been looking for," the senior psychology major said. (0) comments
This fall semester, all seven regional campuses experienced an increase in enrollment, according to the Fifteenth Day Enrollment Statistics Report issued by Research, Planning and Institutional Effectiveness. (1) comment
Is it "What Values?" or "What? Values?" when it comes to online media and the new wave of citizen journalism? That was the question on deck at this year's fifth annual Poynter Kent State Media Ethics Workshop. "More and more people are getting some, if not all, of their news online today," said Jan Leach, Poynter Ethics Fellow and assistant professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication. (0) comments
The Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, translated as "head of the year," starts tonight and will be celebrated by Jewish students on and off campus. Jennifer Meinwald, sophomore psychology major, said Rosh Hashanah is more traditional than the New Year Jan. 1. (0) comments