Right on Ohio State University's famous Oval stands what some believe to be a spectral reminder of an unfortunate happenstance.
As the legend goes, a girl, staying late in Hopkins Hall to work on a project one night, got stuck in an elevator while attempting to return home. She screamed for help over and over again, slamming her hands against the walls of the elevator, doing whatever she could to make herself heard. She carried on like this all night, but apparently no one could hear her.
Supposedly, she was found the next morning, physically in perfect order, but emotionally imbalanced. By the time the elevator was up and running again, there was no indication that anything unusual had happened, save for the student's handprints, which covered the walls.
The student in question, name long since forgotten, is rumored to have died in a car accident later in life. Some blame her death on the depression which occurred as a result of that night spent in the elevator, and it is even said that she never forgave the university for what it did to her.
Today, the handprints in the elevator are long gone, but outside of the main entrance to the building sits a single black handprint, which, according to legend, cannot be scrubbed off. The obvious answer to this mystery is that it is the product of spray paint and a stencil (Hopkins Hall is one of the art department buildings), but the mystery will have to endure, regardless.