2024 Yellow Springs Giving & Gifting Catalogue
Nov
29
2024
  • West Nile Virus found in village mosquitoes

    Local mosquitoes tested positive last week for West Nile Virus, a potentially serious illness, prompting the Greene County Combined Health District to begin spraying insecticide in one village neighborhood.

  • Tour Lawson Place gardens

    Daniel Pearson planted a low-maintenance cover crop of violets in the backyard of his Lawson Place residence. The violets don’t need to be mowed, keep the ground from getting waterlogged and provide a tasty treat to Pearson, he said. Pearson worries herbicides will be used to kill the vegetation, which is out of compliance with the property owners, Greene Metropolitian Housing Authority. (Photo by Megan Bachman)

    Friends of the Lawson Place gardens invite the community to attend a garden tour on Thursday, Aug. 16 at 4 p.m.

  • Pat Olds

    Patricia Olds died the morning of Monday, Aug. 13 at Springfield Regional Hospital. She was 81. Her daughters, Claire Winold of Yellow Springs and Erika Werdal of Blaine, Wash., were with her. At her request, there will be no service. A full obituary will appear in the Aug. 23 issue of the Yellow Springs News.

  • Public Meetings

    Village of Yellow Springs public meetings

  • Public Hearing

    Council will hold a public hearing regarding the proposed Northern Gateway Project.

  • BLOG—Rainbows

    A rainbow butterfly made of scrap colored glass hanging from a porch on Limestone St. (photos by Suzanne Ehalt)

    The nooks and crannies throughout the Village that often get overlooked.

  • SPORTS SUNDAY — Girls soccer kicks off

    On a day when the U.S. women’s national soccer team won Olympic gold, the Lady Bulldogs of Yellow Springs took to the field for the first time this year.

  • BLOG-Adventures with Peanut Butter

    One of the joys of parenthood is how the magic of my children’s first encounters bring me back to the simpler days of my own childhood.

  • AU creates new change-makers

    Dr. Michele Dawn Kegley received her Ph.D. in leadership and change at the Antioch University’s commencement ceremony on Saturday. The doctoral program, unique in the nation for its emphasis on practical application, graduated 18 students this year. (Photo by Megan Bachman)

    For the 18 graduates from Antioch University’s Leadership and Change Ph.D. program, the degree was far more than an academic accomplishment.

  • Clifton to host music festival

    In celebration of the land and water that conceived the village, Clifton will host its first annual Clifton Gorge Music & Arts Festival the weekend of Aug. 24–26.

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