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Apr
26
2024

Articles by Matt Minde :: Page 8

  • Orchestrating support

    A capacity crowd turned out for the annual Friends Music Camp benefit concert for Glen Helen, which took place last Saturday, July 29, at the Foundry Theater. Both campers and camp staffers performed a varied program ranging from Wagner to Gershwin, including American folk music, jazz and original compositions. The event raised more than $2,140 for the Glen, with checks still coming in. (Photo by Matt Minde)

    A capacity crowd turned out for the annual Friends Music Camp benefit concert for Glen Helen, which took place last Saturday, July 29, at the Foundry Theater.

  • Fourth of July: Crowds, not clouds

    The 2017 Fourth of July Parade, from the back. (Photo by Matt Minde)

    Clouds threatened rain, but that didn’t stop hundreds of villagers who lined Xenia Avenue downtown Tuesday for the annual Fourth of July parade.

  • Not your stereotypical flip book…

    Students Ellery Bledsoe, Greta Kremer and Aza Hurwitz peruse as PBL project, “Flipping Stereotypes: A Mix-and-Match Book of the American Teenager.” (Photos by Matt Minde)

    Yellow Springs High School and McKinney Middle School students held their Spring PBL Exhibition last Wednesday, May 10.

  • Music al fresco at YSHS

    Eliza Minde-Berman, above, took to the podium for performance of a piece she had worked on with the 6th-grade orchestra for the all-school orchestra and chorus performance May 15. (Photos by Matt Minde)

    A glorious Monday evening was backdrop to the all-school orchestra and chorus performance, which featured music makers from 5th and 6th grade, McKinney Middle School and Yellow Springs High School.

  • April 6, 2017 Bulldog Sports Round-up

    April 6, 2017 Bulldog Sports Round-up

  • Political climate change galvanizes Antioch College’s mission

    Antioch College students were called to action by changes in the current political climate. (Photo by F. Stop

    Antioch College, the stalwart clarion of human, social and environmental rights, has been galvanized to action by the vast changes in the current political and cultural climate.

  • Big small steps

    An impressively attended Sister March to the Women's March on Washington, D.C. made its way through Yellow Springs Saturday, Jan. 21. Among the many young, determined marchers, from left, were Oskar Dennis, Malaya Booth and Vivian Bryan. (Photo by Matt Minde)

    At least 250 villagers took to the sidewalks in downtown Yellow Springs last Saturday, Jan. 21, marching in solidarity with the Women’s March on Washington and hundreds of other marches around the country and world.

  • Walking the walk

    Several hundred community members marched in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Monday to the Foundry Theater on the Antioch College campus. (Photo by Matt Minde)

    Several hundred community members marched in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Monday to the Foundry Theater on the Antioch College campus.

  • String theory

    An informal cello technique forum at the Rockford Chapel social room on Monday evening. (photo by Matt Minde)

    The 2017 Cello Springs Festival continued Monday evening with an informal cello technique forum at the Rockford Chapel social room, with participating cellists of abilities ranging from beginner to world-class.

  • Eco-sattva: Climate compassion, action

    The Dharma Center and Community Solutions are partnering to offer an “eco-sattva” training beginning Jan. 12 to help villagers take mindful, effective action in response to climate change. Pictured outside the Dharma Center are, counterclockwise, course facilitators Saul Greenberg, Dione Greenberg and MJ Gentile, with Dharma Center Board Member Katie Egart. (Photo by Audrey Hackett)

    Eco-sattva, a blend of “ecology” and “bodhisattva,” the term refers to a person working for the well-being of all life in the face of environmental harm.

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