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Feb
22
2026

Articles From 2019

  • An Emergency Ordinance For The Issuance And Sale Of Refunding Bonds

    Ordinance No. 2013-06, Village Of Yellow Springs, Ohio

  • Public Meetings

    Village of Yellow Springs

  • Library Commission Ordinance, Amending Chapter 278.02

    Chapter 278.02 Library Commission is hereby amended.

  • Board of Education

    Meeting for Thursday, March 28 is Canceled.

  • School board honors girls basketball

    Over the weekend the YSHS girls basketball team won the Division IV sectional tournament title for the first time since 1987. They defeated Cincinnati Seven Hills 44–24 at Monroe High School. The team includes, from left, back row: Coach Tim Barga, Molly Hendrickson, Anna Mullin, Paloma Wiggins, Rachele Orme, Angela Allen, Assistant Coach Jack Hatert; front row: Brianna Ayers, Kennedy Harshaw, Keturah Fulton and Maryah Martin. (Submitted photo by Vince Peters)

    Watch our video on the girls basketball team: http://youtu.be/w-HMhlk933U

  • Sandra Creevey

    Sandra Davis Creevey of Port Charlotte, Fla. passed away on Friday, March 15. She was 71.

  • Yellow Springs Experience: Bronze Symposium— Casting for artistic collaboration

    As with many Yellow Springs initiatives, the upcoming Yellow Springs Experience: National Bronze Sculpture Symposium, to take place in October 2013, grew from a series of local conversations, of villagers talking to each other.

  • B & B for sale by innkeeper

    The Arthur Morgan House spent many more years as a home for visitors than it ever did as the home of former Antioch College President Arthur Morgan and his wife Lucy, who built the house in 1921. And though much of its charm is related to its history as a home of the college, it’s been humming as the town’s only sustained bed and breakfast for about 27 years.

  • Rosie Lee Jenkins

    Rosie Lee Jenkins passed away Monday, Feb. 18 at her home in Dublin, Ohio where she lived with her daughter, Helen Starks.

  • Our big appetite for consumption

    We humans hunger for many things, from food to knowledge to comfort. As Americans, by virtue of economics, we have been feeding those hungers since the post-war era. What effect that sustained and frenzied consumption has had on cultures across the globe is the subject of the new art exhibit, Appetite: An American Pastime, going up at Herndon Gallery this week.

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