Articles About Antioch College :: Page 23
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A public reading of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring
A public reading of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring will be held Saturday, June 22, 8 a.m.–noon at the Farmers Market.
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New York Radiohole artists to lecture, perform
Antioch College will host two multimedia performance artists for a lecture and workshop on non-hierarchical creative collaboration and New York’s Radiohole.
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WYSO, college are reunited
Antioch College will get back its longtime local radio station WYSO as part of a tentative agreement approved this week with Antioch University, which had retained control of the FM station when the College was purchased by alumni in 2009.
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Charitable funding shift to affect local nonprofits
Over the past 10 years, the Morgan Family Foundation has quietly donated substantial sums of money to local nonprofits. But last week the foundation notified past grant recipients that, at least for the next several years, it is changing direction.
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Antioch School 90th anniversary— A school that runs like a family
Elsie Hevelin remembers clearly the tall front pillars and marble fireplaces in each room of Judge Mills house where she attended the Antioch School as a child.
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New college dines responsibly
Antioch college’s innovative approach to food was born partly of the need to recognize the ecological demands of food service and also to honor the experience of eating in community.
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Goat mowing at Antioch
To clear weeds at the Antioch College farm, the college has turned to four-legged help.
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Optimism at Antioch College, and hard work ahead
On Friday evening, Antioch College President Mark Roosevelt gave an update on the college’s progress to an overflow crowd of college and Yellow Springs community members.
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New students to arrive at Antioch College
The 35 members of the first class of the revived Antioch College will arrive on campus this Saturday,
Sept. 24. After a 10-day orientation, classes begin on Tuesday, Oct. 4. -
A farm takes root at Antioch College
Antioch College has announced that it has begun work on the Antioch College farm, its first major sustainability project, which organizers hope to incorporate into many aspects of campus life and curriculum. Local organic farmer Kat Christen has been hired to develop the farm’s first phase.
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