News
Local organizers are reviving a local tradition of civil discourse with a new Friday Forum event, “What Happens When Voices Are Silenced?” set for 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 22, in McGregor Hall, Room 113, ...
The Clifton Gorge Music and Arts Festival returns Friday and Saturday, Aug. 22–23, bringing two days of food, music, dancing and handmade art to the small Greene County village.
Founded in 1946 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Troop 162, which includes members from Yellow Springs, has a long tradition of building youth leadership skills, encouraging ethical decision-making ...
On Friday, Aug. 15, the Little Art Theatre will unveil its new marquee with a free community event from 8–10 p.m. at the theater and in the community space on Short Street.
Joy Christine Bartenstein, of Yellow Springs, Ohio, passed away Aug. 8, 2025, surrounded by four generations. Some years ago, she chose the epitaph “Friend, Sweetheart” for her tile at the Yellow ...
The Village of Yellow Springs Public Works Department has an immediate opening for a full-time Utility Service Worker in the Streets, Parks, Sewer Department. The hourly pay rate is $21.90–$27.98 per ...
Despite all the existential threats to public media and WYSO losing its federal funding, station General Manager Luke Dennis told the News in an interview last week that the Yellow Springs station’s ...
Yellow Springs-based funny guys Charlie Cromer, Elliot Cromer and Adam Zaremsky will perform approximately 12 comedic vignettes in their forthcoming “Smaller and Worse: A Nonsense Show” at the Foundry ...
Beloved mother, daughter, sister and friend, Meaghan Alice Lenke, 46, of Rochelle, Illinois, passed away suddenly July 23, 2025.
This year marks the 100th anniversary of Helen Birch Bartlett’s death — the namesake of Glen Helen. In her lifetime, she was a writer, musician, collector and tastemaker.
June was National Pollinator Month, and replacing invasive plants with native plants is one of the easiest ways to help our declining pollinator population on your property.
At high noon on July 4, a steady stream of village organizations, youngsters, golf carts, firetrucks and horses filtered through the downtown avenues for the Fourth of July parade.
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