From The Print Section :: Page 590
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May 26, 2011 Bulldog sports round up
May 26, 2011 Bulldog sports round up
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Joyce McCurdy retires — Imparting the complexity of past
When Joyce McCurdy left her teaching job in Springfield and took a pay cut to come to Yellow Springs schools, classes were still being held at Bryan High School, right next to the train that ran through town. That was 1968
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Morgan Fellow jobs to end in June— Antioch’s cultural presence, revived
It didn’t take long after Antioch College became an independent liberal arts college in September 2009 for the revived college’s presence to be felt in the village.
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A radical, rooted farm vision
Where can you learn how to repair a tractor, help move a barn, have chicks raised for you and eventually pick your own strawberries and buy fresh-pressed apple cider vinegar and hazelnut oil, all from a 29-year-old woman?
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Antioch College — An overflow of first students
For the first time in recent memory, the freshman class of Antioch College is over-enrolled.
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Why so many voters?
In last week’s special election, 1,088 local voters went to the polls out of 3,462 total registered voters in Yellow Springs, a turnout of 31 percent. But according to the 2010 Census, the village has a total adult population of only 2,799. How can the village have more registered voters than adults eligible to vote?
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Efficiency program benefits businesses in many ways
Local businesses looking to save money by cutting their fuel use now have an extra incentive to do so. Money that began as a fine against the Village for buying power from a polluting coal plant is coming home to help Yellow Springs businesses get energy-efficient.
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Seniors make meaning from tragedy
The loss of a young life is always tragic, but two local young people hope to find meaning in that tragedy. The meaning sought by Elise Giardullo and Gabe Amrhein is their attempt to save other lives by educating young adults on the dangers of texting while driving.
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Teachers Winks, Lemkau look back
Yellow Springs High School teachers Shanna Winks and Phil Lemkau are retiring this year.
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Investing in YS, making beauty
Call it the Miracle on Walnut Street. A dingy, dilapidated house — the eyesore of the neighborhood — is transformed into a stately, sleek modern home with a neighbor’s investment and a local couple’s vision.
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