Sep
01
2024

From The Print Section :: Page 309

  • Leon Holster Memorial

    Leon Holster

    A celebration of the life of Leon Holster will be held Thursday, Dec. 10, beginning at 2 p.m. in the Glen Helen Building.

  • The running of the ’dogs

    The start of the Bulldog 5k. (Photo by Audrey Hackett)

    The fourth annual Bulldog Jog took place the day after Thanksgiving, drawing 136 total participants for the 5K race, open to adults and kids, and the 1.1-mile race, open to kids 12 and under.

  • ‘Give local’ on #YSGiving Tuesday

    Black Friday. Cyber Monday. The days immediately following Thanksgiving have become the widely accepted kickoff of the holiday-shopping season, with nicknames that reflect their consumer focus: “black” for a profitable ledger sheet; “cyber” for online shopping.

  • Edward Vernon Willett

    Edward V. Willett

    Edward V. Willett, 95, an original member of the Tuskegee Airmen, died on Nov. 12, 2016, at Lane Park of Huber Heights, in the Memory Care Unit following an extended illness.

  • New NP joins local practice

    There’s a new team member in Dr. Donald Gronbeck’s medical practice at YS Primary Care. Nurse practitioner Sarah Teegarden isn’t a completely new face in the office, however.

  • Carol G. Ehman

    Carol G. Ehman

    Carol G. Ehman, 71, of Saco, Maine, passed away unexpectedly on Wednesday Nov. 23, 2016, at Southern Maine Health Care hospital.

  • Standing up for Standing Rock

    About 35 people gathered at the Yellow Springs Speedway last Friday to protest the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota, which cuts through the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. The local protest is one of several efforts in Yellow Springs to call attention to the issue and support protestors in Standing Rock. Speedway’s parent company, Marathon, is a major investor in the pipeline project, and local protestors plan to continue pressuring the company with demonstrations each Friday in Yellow Springs and each Wednesday at Speedway’s Enon headquarters. (Photo by Matt Minde)

    Recently, a number of Yellow Springs residents have been advocating on behalf of those demonstrating against the construction of an oil pipeline through the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North and South Dakota.

  • Village votes by precinct

    Forget all that weird election news from last week. It was just a bad dream! In reality Hillary Clinton swept the polls!

  • ‘Nagasaki’ author to speak at AUM

    Susan Southard, author of “Nagasaki: Life After Nuclear War,” will speak in the multipurpose room of Antioch University Midwest on Saturday, Nov. 19, from noon to 1:30 p.m. (Submitted photo by Susan Santi)

    Susan Southard, who will be awarded the Dayton Literary Peace Prize this week for her nonfiction book on the survivors of the Nagasaki atomic bomb, will speak in Yellow Springs this Saturday.

  • Carl Hyde: A habit of caring, and aging well

    Carl Hyde, who moved into the Friends Assisted Living Center a year ago, first came to Yellow Springs as an Antioch College freshman more than 70 years ago. After more than four decades as a town physician, he’s known to many as “Dr. Hyde.” He rides his bike regularly in good weather. (Photo by Diane Chiddister)

    Though he retired more than 15 years ago, Carl Hyde’s habit of caring for people remains.

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com