Articles From August 30th, 2019
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Toot sweet: a fundraiser to replace aging recorders
Mills Lawn School students will help offset the cost of replacing the recorders in the music room by performing for cash on the street in the MLS PTO Street Fair “Busking Booth.”
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Clay, straw take center stage at Glen Helen
Whenever Beth Holyoke begins planning a new exhibit for her artwork, she considers how the work will interact with the larger exhibit space.
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Yellow Springers take a first look at Obamacare
On Tuesday, Oct. 1, a newly-created healthcare marketplace opened with a slew of new private health plans for individuals to choose from, along with government subsidies to make them affordable. From his initial research, Chris Glaser could save a lot of money.
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Returned Schenck guns were legal
After this summer’s shootout, many villagers asked, why were Paul E. Schenck’s guns returned? Why was a man with several known risk factors allowed to have an arsenal in his home?
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Oct. 10, 2013 Bulldog sports round-up
Oct. 10, 2013 Bulldog sports round-up
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Constantine ‘Connie’ G. Pelekoudas
Constantine G. Pelekoudas, known as Connie, a long-time professor of economics and administrator at Antioch College, died on Oct. 4 at the Friends Care Center of complications resulting from Parkinson’s. He was 81.
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Leading Yellow Springs Schools a delicate balance
Maintaining a leadership team in the Yellow Springs Schools that always agrees is seldom possible; the schools struggle at times to balance the shared authority granted by the state to both the local school board and the school administration.
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State of the Little Art
About 1,500 people toured the newly renovated and reopened Little Art Theatre last Saturday and enjoyed a daylong celebration.
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Orme ruled girls and guys tees
A girl golfer who spent three years playing against boys, Rachele Orme got used to exceeding expectations.
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Richard Robertson
Richard Brooks Robertson passed away on Oct. 6 at the age of 66.
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