Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-13 of 13
- The restoration of Rock Mill, a 200-year old water-powered grist mill located on the edge of the gorge near the headwaters of the Hocking River, west of Lancaster, Ohio.
- Techniques for dealing with an active shooter: run -- hide -- fight.
- A history and profile of the two oldest neighborhoods in Columbus, Ohio. Franklinton was the original pioneer settlement, established near the west bank of the Scioto River by Lucas Sullivant and named in honor of Benjamin Franklin. The city of Columbus was established a few years later across the Scioto River near its east bank, designed to become the state capital.
- April 11, 1945. 3:15 in the afternoon. Five miles outside of Weimar, Germany. The inmates of the notorious Buchenwald concentration camp rise up from the horror of their imprisonment and liberate themselves from their brutal Nazi captors. Shortly thereafter US Army troops and the Red Cross entered the camp to secure it and support those who survived. Beyond the Fence: Memories of Buchenwald examines the liberation of Buchenwald through the eyes of its survivors and those soldiers who helped to liberate them. Leon Bass, a 19-year-old black soldier, was among the first to enter Buchenwald. He enlisted in the army to fight for his country, but the US Army's policy of segregation denied him the rights he was fighting to protect. Mr. Bass was an angry, young, Black soldier when he entered Buchenwald where he came face to face with what calls 'the walking dead'. Among the thousands of inmates at Buchenwald was Robbie Waisman, a 14-year-old Polish Jew, who later discover that the his entire family had murdered at the hands of Nazi tyranny. Mr. Waisman eventually immigrated to Canada and slowly put his life back together over the next six decades. Later in life, Robbie Waisman and Leon Bass met again and fostered a great and lasting friendship that endures to this day. Beyond the Fence focuses on the shared history of persecution and suffering that Robbie and Leon experienced -- in essence, the reality that each could have found himself on either side of that barbed wire fence surrounding Buchenwald.
- A profile of artist, Dennison W. Griffith and his new body of work, "Another World"
- A history and profile of the Olde Towne East neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio, situated east of Downtown. Throughout much of the 19th century, Columbus' first "streetcar suburb" was home to many of the city's wealthiest and most influential residents, who spared no expense to build the finest houses in the latest architectural styles. The neighborhood suffered decline in the mid-20th century as homeowners moved outward to the newer suburbs and two Interstate highways cut the neighborhood off from the rest of the city. But programs such as the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 have aided the rehabilitation of many of the grand old mansions and led to a revitalization of the multi-ethnic community.
- A history and profile of the King-Lincoln neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio, situated around Mount Vernon Avenue and Long Street on the east side of town.
- A history and profile of the University District neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio, dominated by the "city within a city" known as The Ohio State University.
- A panel of local Ohio journalists, political activists and consultants discuss the current issues and news stories affecting Ohio and the nation.
- The story of one Somali woman's journey from her war-torn homeland to a new home in Columbus, Ohio. Nasro could not speak English, had no family for support, and had no job when she arrived in the states.
- World War II veterans fly from Columbus, Ohio to visit the World War Two Memorial in Washington, D.C.