Columbus Airport gets new body scanner
Feb 8th
TSA Officials installed a body scanner at the security gate of the Columbus Airport Wednesday. Body imaging technology is slowly making its way in to airports across the country.
The millimeter wave advanced imaging technology machine installed at the Columbus Airport on Wednesday is safe for people of all ages, even pregnant women. We are told by TSA officials the machine gives off 1/10,000 of the amount of energy that is involved in a single cell phone call.
Columbus GM steamed by stopped clock
Feb 2nd
It’s been a tough enough season for the Columbus Blue Jackets. Wednesday night, it became even tougher.
Columbus Foods Strengthens Investment in Safety Tech
Feb 1st
Columbus Foods, the venerable San Francisco Bay Area maker of premium specialty meats, is raising the bar in food safety technology with a $7 million investment in a reconfigured ammonia refrigeration system at its South San Francisco facility. More >
Smokers need not apply to Columbus, Toledo casinos
Jan 26th
Smokers won’t be hired at new casinos in Columbus and Toledo, a ban that’s been adopted in other industries as employers try to hold down health care costs.
Job seekers who smoke, chew tobacco or even use nicotine patches won’t be considered for the 3,200 casino jobs in Toledo and Columbus when developer Penn National Gaming Inc. starts filling positions later this year, The Dayton Daily News reported (http://bit.ly/xNYotF ) Thursday.
Port Columbus gets small traffic boost in 2011
Jan 25th
Port Columbus International Airport saw more passengers pass through its security gates for the second year in a row in 2011, but the increase was less than 1 percent, Columbus Business First reports.
About 6.38 million passengers traveled through the airport last year, according to the Columbus Regional Airport Authority . That was about 0.2 percent more passengers than the 6.37 million the airport saw in 2010, the newspaper reports.
Edmonton loses Hall, two-goal lead in Columbus
Jan 19th
As doctors were stitching up the gruesome gash that stretched from the crown of Taylor Hall’s head to the top of his eyebrow, the Edmonton Oilers offensive sparkplug tried to convince all around him that he was ready to go. More >
Counterfeit money circulating in Columbus
Jan 12th
Fake $100 and $20 bills have been distributed recently at businesses in Columbus, and police are urging business owners to educate themselves and their employees on how to spot counterfeit money.
The fake bills are “very high quality” and have been called by one bank the most deceptive $100 bills that have come through the area, said Lt. Matt Myers of Columbus Police Department.
Some key identifying marks that usually would separate counterfeit bills from genuine currency have been mimicked perfectly, including the security strip inside the bills, Myers said.
Columbus signs Chile midfielder Mirosevic
Jan 5th
The Columbus Crew have signed Chile midfielder Milovan Mirosevic to a multi-year contract, pending receipt of his P-1 work visa.
Mirosevic, 31, has played 25 matches for Chile, most recently appearing in a pair of 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Uruguay and Paraguay.
He joins Columbus from Chilean first division side Universidad Catolica, where he served as captain and had 46 goals in 108 games over the last three years, which was his second stint with the storied club.
Columbus on the right track for passenger rail
Jan 4th
The Georgia Department of Transportation wants to create a passenger rail system through the state, and Columbus’ plans to be involved are right on track. More >
Columbus voyage tied to syphilis spread
Dec 29th
A new examination of the origin of syphilis supports the theory that the sexually transmitted disease was carried to Europe aboard Christopher Columbus’ ships as they sailed home from the New World.
The disease was not spread through sexual contact at the time, but adapted to survive once it got to Europe, Emory University researchers say.



