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Dayton Public Schools will invite community input on selecting a new superintendent through in-person and Zoom meetings.
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The Stoddard Avenue Pumpkin Glow has been a Dayton tradition for over 30 years. WYSO spent the week before Halloween in the Grafton Hill neighborhood, where a team of volunteers carve over 800 Jack-o-lanterns each year and display them on a hillside for the city to see.
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Kev Marcus and Wil Baptiste of Black Violin will speak to teens at the Fuse to the Music Workshop . They will teach kids about fusing music genres and pursuing their passions.
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The City of Dayton will sell wastewater plant biogas to a private natural gas firm, aiming for a 50% carbon reduction and $1M in annual net revenue.
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The City of Dayton is hosts a group of teens from Bosnia and Herzegovina who want to positively impact their communities.
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Downtown Dayton Partnership's new Executive Director Katie Meyer discusses the city's assets and potential for growth.
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East Dayton Catholic school closing due to structural issues of the 108-year-old building
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The Ohio Renaissance Festival is open now and runs till the end of October. WYSO traveled just south of Dayton to find out why thousands of people spend late summer and early fall traveling back to the 1500s.
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Two studies by the New American Economy and the Ohio Business for Immigration Solutions show that immigrants make up a significant part of the STEM, healthcare, education, and manufacturing industries.
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In this edition of Bulletin Board Diaries, on the lengthy stretch of bulletin boards near the front of Dot’s Market in Belmont, a flier offers digital transfers for old VHS Tapes and cassettes.
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The Dayton Dragons ranked second in Minor League Baseball for attendance, averaging 7,885 fans per game over 66 home dates.
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The Boston Public Library, which opened in 1854, is generally considered the first public library. Its statement of purpose basically says: Every citizen has the right of free access to community-owned resources. That’s still the founding principle among today’s public libraries, but their role has also changed to evolve with the current needs, as Renee Wilde found out during a chat with three Dayton Metro librarians