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52 The GUIDE to YELLOW SPRINGS 2019 – 20 YELLOW SPRINGS NEWS LOVE THE EXPERIENCE *According to Subaru’s retailer list of 2019 PROUDLY SERVING YELLOW SPRINGS AND THE SURROUNDING COMMUNITY SINCE 1966 9 TH OLDEST * SUBARU DEALER IN THE U.S. 5470 Intrastate Dr. | Fairborn | 937.878.2171 www.WagnerSubaru.com opposes. “You have to put your money where your mouth is,” she said. Guy Jones, a Native American from Standing Rock who lives in Dayton, was another leader of the Saturday morning action. “Collectively, we have the power to make changes to affect all of us,” he said. Closing an account is a small action, but it can have a ripple effect, he believes. “When U.S. Bank encourages pipelines and dependence on corporations to operate prisons, we have to act,” he said. According to Gentile, she has collected and mailed 60 letters from local depositors to U.S. Bank’s CEO stating their concerns with the bank’s lending activities. The local action takes its inspiration from a national “divestment” movement. Protes - tors targeted banks involved in financing the Dakota Access Pipeline, hoping to pres- sure them to stop lending to companies whose activities protesters oppose. More than a dozen large banks were identified as having lending ties to the DAPL. Other actions One energy company investor in the pipeline is Marathon, whose subsidiary, Speedway, has its corporate headquarters in nearby Enon. With a lot of people in Yellow Springs “sympathetic to the pro - tests” and the Speedway headquarters only 10 minutes away, villager Shawn Tulecke- Paulson felt it was a perfect opportunity to help raise awareness of the issue. Tulecke and his wife, Tashi Pahkrin, were also part of a group that paid a visit to the residence of Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine earlier this month, asking him to withdraw the 37 state troopers Ohio sent to Standing Rock. “As far as places we can actually have an effect and make a difference, it’s at the companies that have a stake in the pipe- line,” Pahkrin said. “And it’s important to show support from afar.” Around 30 people met at the entrance to the Enon Speedway headquarters on Nov. 9, 2016, and were in turn met by company security and a sheriff. But they were able to demonstrate, and stayed at the site for at least two hours. Following the event, they coordinated another demonstration in front of the Speedway gas sation in Yellow Springs. Ryan Stinson and Anna Burke were planning their own demonstrations at the same time and linked up with the groups demonstrating at the Speedway campus. The Enon demonstration got on the local news, Burke noted, a boon to getting the message heard. “Whether you agree or not, you see us out there, and that puts the issue in the forefront of your mind,” Stinson said. “No matter how large or small, actions speak louder than words.” DeLamatre, food service coordina- tor at Antioch College, is also making the NoDAPL protests a family affair. His young sons will help him ferry supplies out to Standing Rock demonstrators this week. DeLamatre, with his sons, will leave on Nov. 18 on a 40-hour roundtrip journey, and will be accompanied by Antioch media arts professor Kelly Gallagher. While the group will spend half a day with the protestors, the mission’s prime directive is to deliver much-needed goods, he said. “It’s important to support indigenous struggle wherever it’s happening, in any way I can,” DeLamatre said. “It is a political and moral obligation.”  ♦ StandingRock PHOTO BY MATT MINDE About 35 people gathered at the Yellow Springs Speedway in Nov. 2016 to protest the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota, which cuts through the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Speedway’s parent company, Marathon, was an investor in the pipeline. Continued from page 51

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