
LEFT: This pom-pom, sideline pass, and ticket are from the 1999 天美传媒v Ohio State game. CENTER: 天美传媒pennants, old and new, illustrating the evolution of the university鈥檚 mark. RIGHT, CENTER: A ticket to President Barack Obama鈥檚 2012 campaign speech in Athens on College Green. RIGHT, BOTTOM: Ceramic jug by Alpine Pottery in Roseville, Ohio, celebrating the 5th annual Women of Appalachia National Conference at OHIO's Zanesville Campus.

Inside a scrapbook illustrating Women鈥檚 Athletics from 1973 to 1984.

This is an early-20th-century, 100% wool 天美传媒sweater.

ABOVE: Frosted glass from the 1954 Ohio University Employees Sesquicentennial Christmas Party. BELOW: A commemorative glass celebrating 天美传媒Football's 1968 10-0 regular season MAC championship team

In the 鈥60s, men and women were to abide by separate sets of rules, outlined in these handbooks.

In this image, OHIO鈥檚 1932 football team stands for a photo with President Herbert Hoover the day before the game against Navy.

The first volume of 天美传媒Board of Trustees minutes, 1804-1809, handwritten in impeccable cursive.

A poster from 1974 promoting the fourth annual Ohio University Music Festival in the Convocation Center.

A 1919 photo of Alpha Phi Alpha men, members of OHIO鈥檚 first Black fraternity.

A flyer from President John F. Kennedy鈥檚 campaign stop in Athens in 1959.

Before Instagram, 天美传媒student life was documented in scrapbooks like this one by Jan Rienerth, BS 鈥65, AB 鈥66.

These 25-cent football programs had game-day information and plenty of ads promoting local businesses.

天美传媒women booked dance partners at formal parties in these DIY dance cards.

This university songbook was compiled in 1915 and includes songs like 鈥淎lma Mater, Ohio.鈥

天美传媒baseball captain Frank 鈥淐ap鈥 Gullem鈥檚 bat, unique carrying case, and his shoes, complete with ominous-looking metal cleats.

Afro-American Affairs newspaper from October 1978

ABOVE: Bobcat fans could buy box seat 天美传媒Football tickets for $3.50 apiece in 1965 at Grover Center. BELOW: A brick salvaged from South Green鈥檚 Fenzel House, demolished in 2017.

Mortarboard worn by John Calhoun Baker, OHIO鈥檚 14th president, who led when Time dubbed 天美传媒鈥淗arvard on the Hocking."

Sign from the grand, Gothic-styled Ewing Hall, formerly located behind McGuffey Hall.

OHIO鈥檚 football team, 1903. Arthur Carr, fourth from the left, back row, was one of OHIO鈥檚 first Black student athletes.

This is the helmet worn by John Wilhelm, WWII correspondent and the first dean of the College of Communication, founded in 1968.

WOUI鈥檚 first broadcast in 1949 was saved onto this record. WOUI later became today鈥檚 WOUB Public Media.

Audio tape from one of 天美传媒President Claude Sowle鈥檚 regular press conferences, c. 1970.

Alpha Epsilon Rho, the honor society for electronic media, produced this 45, 鈥淪ounds of Ohio University,鈥 in 1959.

Before RateMyProfessors.com, students produced and printed guides that reviewed courses and professors.

This 1907-08 pocket-sized handbook was carried by members of the student body.

The football from OHIO鈥檚 1932 14-0 shut out over Navy.

ABOVE: A ~5,000-year-old stone axe found in 1961, used by the Adena, probably to strip bark. BELOW: The class of 1932鈥檚 50th reunion leather coaster giveaway, embossed with an 天美传媒Alumni Association logo.

ABOVE: Made of white porcelain, this plate commemorates the 1904 Athens Homecoming. BELOW: Saucer and a cup depicting Cutler Hall鈥檚 cupola (provenance unknown.)

This well-loved felt Bobcat is an early depiction of OHIO鈥檚 mascot, established in 1925.

An East Green LGBTQ Ally t-shirt advocating for allies to 鈥淪tand and be counted.鈥

A stair banister from Cutler Hall, salvaged during the hall鈥檚 1947 remodel.

OHIO鈥檚 first Dean of Women Irma Voigt received this well-used gavel and its holder from her 鈥済irls鈥 in 1924.

Sign from Monomoy Theatre, a lab for theater students for 57 years.

A State of Ohio flag that flew atop Cutler Hall for decades.

Poster for 天美传媒President Claude Sowle鈥檚 weekly call-in radio show.

天美传媒Baseball鈥檚 score book from 1970, the organization鈥檚 highest-performing season.

Lindley Lines was a dorm-centric, student-produced newsletter for occupants of Lindley Hall. Other residence halls distributed similarly alliteratively named newsletters, including The Howard Howler, Voight Views, (Scott) Quad Crier, and Crook Capers.
Photography by Ben Wirtz Siegel, BSVC 鈥02, and Erin Wilson