From The Print Section :: Page 108
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					Crome Architecture brings new life to old church  Max Crome is nearing completion designing and renovating an architecture studio located at the former site of the predominantly African American First Baptist Church. 
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					Emergent Verse | Sensuality of loss  “I like to keep an open mind and see if poets can work naturally within their chosen forms so that nothing feels stiff or manipulated, the rhymes unpredictable, the whole pleasing and surprising, yielding a complete meal for the mind and senses.” 
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					COVID Update | July 14, 2022  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, last week moved Greene County from the prior week’s community spread level of “medium” for COVID-19 to “high.” 
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					COVID Update | July 7, 2022  After months listed at a “low” community level for COVID-19 by the Centers for Disease Control, Greene County rose to a “medium” level last week, according to the CDC’s website. 
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					Antioch alumni return to campus for 2022 Reunion  For the first time in two years, Antioch College alumni have returned to campus en masse to celebrate the college’s annual reunion this weekend. 
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					Township Trustees approve fire levy  At its June 27 meeting, the Miami Township Board of Trustees voted to approve a resolution of necessity to move forward with placing a 3.5-mill continuing levy on the November ballot. 
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					Perry League T-ball | T-ball sluggers find joy in the dirt  Although hitting, chasing and fielding baseballs are the primary activities for the participants, playing in the dirt ranks a close second. 
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					For the love of The Bard, the Shakespeare Reading Group returns  The Shakespeare Reading Group meets each Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the Senior Center. New members and drop-ins are always welcome. 
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					Glen Helen secures funds to improve trail accessibility  The Glen now has an additional $750,000 in capital funds to use toward improving accessibility for people with limited mobility on trails. 
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					Fourth of July, 2022 — mixed messages  In addition to the traditional reds, whites and blues, the village’s annual Fourth of July celebrations took on several other hues this year: anger and sadness swirled and clashed with jubilation to color the festivities. 









 




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