May
17
2024

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  • • Roosevelt tenure: healing wounds, raising the college

      When Mark Roosevelt was a newly elected Massachusetts state legislator in 1986, he was asked to be lead sponsor of a bill that would prohibit housing and employment discrimination against gays and lesbians. If passed, the state would become only the second in the nation to protect homosexuals.

  • • Conference on diversity— Seeing the whole person

      “Diversity is being invited to the party; inclusion is being asked to dance,” writes attorney and diversity consultant Vera Myers.

  • • BLOG— New home blues

      Life feels fragile when it’s bundled into boxes, especially when it’s bundled into boxes marked “FRAGILE,” a poignant convergence of packing parlance and metaphor.

  • • Disability conference in Yellow Springs

      “Valuing Diversity: Reframing Disability,” a conference on diversity and disability, will take place this Wednesday and Thursday, Dec. 9 and 10, at Antioch University Midwest.

  • • BLOG-Ease On Down The Road

      Now that a new sidewalk has been installed, we will be singing our newfound anthem from The Wiz along Xenia Avenue.

  • • Back to Now offers vintage clothes, jewelry, antiques

      Back to Now is a newly opened vintage clothing store in Kings Yard.

  • • Name Change Notice

      Elicia Victoria Harvey

  • • Antioch’s next president sees big promise in college’s challenges

      Antioch College’s next president, Thomas Manley, has a quiet, even gentle voice. He’s not afraid of the thoughtful pause, both before and after speaking. He weighs his words like the student of poetry that he is — Kenneth Rexroth is a particular love.

  • • Public Hearing, Planning Commission

      Monday, Dec. 14, 2015, 7:00 p.m.

  • • Feeding a family of 400

      This year’s Community Thanksgiving Dinner was the biggest one yet, according to organizers, with about 400 villagers sharing dishes and eating together on Thanksgiving Day.

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