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Apr
20
2024

From The Print Section :: Page 352

  • Tuiton makes partial comeback

    The fifth class of the revived Antioch College started classes this week. The 66 students, including, from left, Emily Langhardt, Kaitlin Staggs, Jonas Mufson, Rachel Isaacson and Helena Balcerzak, were attracted to the college because of its commitment to social justice, international co-op, small-town feel and unparalleled financial support. (Photo by Lauren Heaton)

    The newest crop of Antioch College students, 66 strong, arrived on campus last week as the fifth class of the revived college.

  • Join last Artist Studio Tour

    Artist Jenny Mendes will exhibit ceramic works such as her Salt and Pepper herb shakers at the 15th (and final) Yellow Springs Artist Studio Tour on Oct. 17 and 18. Eight area artists across Yellow Springs will have their studios open to the public, and each studio will host two or three artists from out of town. (Submitted Photo)

    The art world sometimes carries the reputation of pretentiousness. Art appreciation is considered outside the purview of regular folks, and artists and collectors go out of their way to live up to the sophistication expected of them.

  • Gwendolyn Delores Coles

    Gwendolyn Delores Coles, 57, passed away peacefully Saturday, Oct. 3, 2015, with family by her side.
    Gwen was born July 25, 1958, in Riverhead, Long Island, N.Y., to Henry and Betty Coles.

  • Game takes teens to new time, space

    In the role playing game Stars Without Number, players explore alien landscapes and outfit themselves with gear befitting a space adventurer. The game blasts its way into the Yellow Springs Library every second Thursday, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. (earthtime). (“Landfall,” Illustration by David Reddington, from the game)

    Twice a month in a back meeting room of the Yellow Springs Library, students gather to shed their earthbound identities and adopt the personae of psychics and mercenaries.

  • Bulldog sports round-up — Oct. 8, 2015

    YSPN News Sports Dept. presents: “Inside the Mind of an Athlete: Volleyball edition.”
    The Yellow Springs High School volleyball team’s only game last week was cancelled. However, the Bulldog team did not hesitate to respond to a recent conversation on the disposition of a volleyball player.

  • Postmaster glad to serve in village

    Postmaster Ken Hensley joined the Yellow Springs post office this summer, working alongside longtime local postal clerk Molly Panstingel. (Photo by Lauren Heaton)

    The U.S. Postal Service has instituted a Sunday delivery of Amazon packages, even in Yellow Springs, according to Kenneth Hensley, the new postmaster of the local post office.

  • David Luttrell

    Obituary

    David Huston Luttrell, age 79, of Xenia, passed away Tuesday morning in Xenia. He was born in Xenia on Nov. 22, 1935, the son of Edwin H. and Martha Gay (Lampert) Luttrell.

  • Cassandra Hill Courtney

    Cassandra Hill Courtney, 66, of Yellow Springs, passed on Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2015.

  • Eileen Webb

    Eileen Whalen Webb died peacefully on Sept. 25.

  • New tech finds old graves

    At a Miami Township Board of Trustees meeting a few weeks ago, Trustee Chris Mucher and Cemetery Sexton/Township Road employee Dan Gochenouer discussed recent events in the Glen Forest Cemetery that caught this writer off guard but are apparently business as usual in the running of an historical cemetery.

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