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May
03
2024

From The Print Section :: Page 202

  • Mary Donahoe

    Mary Donahoe passed away with beauty, grace and gratitude at midnight on Sunday, Nov. 4, 2018.

  • School ghouls

    Miserable Halloween weather couldn’t dampen the spirits (pun intended) of Mills Lawn School students, who displayed a wealth of creativity. (Photo by Robert Hasek)

    Miserable Halloween weather couldn’t dampen the spirits (pun intended) of Mills Lawn School students, who displayed a wealth of holiday spirit and creativity.

  • Senior rentals move forward

    Home, Inc. leaders recently presented plans and designs for their proposed 54-unit senior affordable rental housing project, to be located between East Marshall and East Herman streets and across from Friends Care Community. If funding comes through for the project, those 55 and older whose income is up to 60 percent of area median income, or about $27,000 for a single person, will be eligible to rent an apartment. (Rendering courtesy of Home, Inc.)

    A significant senior affordable rental project more than 10 years in the making is moving forward, according to Home, Inc. leaders at a recent community meeting.

  • Fleury Velie Mackie

    Fleury Velie Mackie and her roadster.

    Fleury Velie Mackie, 1926–2018, died Aug. 26, peacefully, after a year-long illness, at home in Princeton, N.J.

  • November 1, 2018 Bulldog Sports Roundup

    The YSHS girls varsity volleyball finished the year with an 18–2 record in the regular season and two tournament victories. Here the team gathered one last time, losing in the district finals. From left is Aaliyah Longshaw, Tyler Linkhart, Ateerys Wagner, Annlyn Foster, Alex Ronnebaum, Olivia Snoddy, Emma Ronnebaum ; front row, Angelina Smith and Ava Schell. (Submitted photo by Kasey Linkhart)

    November 1, 2018 Bulldog Sports Roundup

  • Home Groan

    Beware the yard of Drake and Lynda Love Highlander... (Photo by Carla Steiger)

    Beware the yard of Drake and Lynda Love Highlander…

  • Village Council — Site for Gaunt statue eyed

    Wheeling Gaunt will welcome those entering town from the north if the proposed location of a life-sized bronze statue of the generous 19th-century African-American resident is approved.

  • Faculty strike looms at Wright State

    With the threat of a looming strike, about 200 Wright State University faculty members and their supporters packed the most recent meeting of the university’s board of trustees Friday morning, Oct. 19, to express their frustration and anger about the ongoing impasse in contract negotiations.

  • YSTC’s scary-funny offering

    Robb Willoughby, left, and Troy Lindsey rehearse a tense scene from “Bro” over a pair of aging bananas in the Sunday school room at First Presbyterian Church. “Bro” is one of the short plays that will be performed as part of the YS Theater Company’s production of “W3 — Three Humorous Tales of Horror,” opening this weekend, Friday–Saturday, Oct. 26–27, at 8 p.m. and continuing the following weekend. (Photo by Lauren “Chuck” Shows)

    On a Tuesday night at the First Presbyterian Church, Ellen Ballerene held her script in her lap as Kayla Graham and Shekinah Williams rehearsed a scene from “Dirty Laundry,” one of three short plays that the YS Theater Company

  • YS Open Studios — An inside look at local art and artists

    A few of the 29 local artists opening their studios for a villagewide gallery sale this weekend are, from left, photographer Matthew Collins, potter Dianne Collinson and sculptor Brian Maughan. (Photos by Jeff Simons)

    Yellow Springs is increasingly becoming renowned for its own vibrant community of artists, and this weekend, art lovers can get a first-hand look at what some of the village’s talented artists are creating.

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