


A Buffalo Grazing: The Well-dressed Antiochian

Vanessa Cubano Hired as Vice President for Advancement

Earth Day 2022 Message from Dr. Kim Landsbergen

We have to solve multiple problems simultaneously

Antiochiana – Songs from the Stacks: Mann Library 1853-60 by Pat Aldred

A Buffalo Grazing

It’s never happened before and it may not last
Antiochiana: Songs From the Stacks

A herd of Lavender Rhinoceri still graze within!
Grounded Presence as an Expression of Integrity
“If you don’t believe it, no one else will believe it for you.”

Do Something! From the Sidelines to the Frontlines

WE HAVE TO LEARN WAYS TO BOND AS A COMMUNITY: Interview with Angel Harris ’24
A BUFFALO GRAZING: Adventures in Adventureland
Songs from the Stacks: Letter to the Central Committee of the Ohio Convention of Colored Freemen

Take a step back when you feel like you need to: An interview with Robyn McCoy ’24
“I’d probably tell people that it’s okay to worry about how you’re doing. But don’t put too much stress on yourself. Because when you put too much stress on yourself, that’s when you burn out and you feel like quitting. So just always take a step back when you feel like you need to take a step back.”
NOW WE CAN DO, BECAUSE WE ARE HERE: An interview with Rayy Graham ‘23
The Return of Steve McQueen
Parting is such sweet sorrow: Interview with April Wolford ’92
SONGS FROM THE STACKS: Emma Stebbins to Nathaniel Hawthorne 1861
A Buffalo Grazing: Sites for SOAR Eyes

STUDENT SPOTLIGHT: LOLA BETZ ’22
Lola Betz ’22 is a filmmaker, artist, musician, fashion-icon, and a true Antiochian. Lola is on the brink of completing a trilogy of feature-length films made at and about Antioch. Her work is rich, mysterious, and fun. Here is a student with great talent and potential. Enjoy this interview with Lola Betz ’22.
A Buffalo Grazing: Seasoned Greetings 2021 and A Chicken Sandwich! by Duffy ’77
Songs from the Stacks: How We Spend The Vacations At Antioch by Scott Sanders
2021 SOCHE STAFF EXCELLENCE AWARDS
2021 SOCHE Staff Excellence Awards in Student Success and Service
Campus Lighting Gets an Upgrade
As the holidays approach and the Fall term comes to a close Mike Fair, Maintenance Manager at Antioch College, springs into action with campus repairs and upgrade projects.
I FOUGHT THE LAW: An Interview with Terry Hempfling ’04
ACLU HONORS TWO ANTIOCH ALUMNI: ELEANOR HOLMES NORTON ‘60 & LARRY PEARL ‘55
Community Creativity and Commemoration: Remarks by RS Fogarty
“Next to mom, I love Antioch College best!”

DEEP KRITIK with Dr. NATALIE SUZELIS, Assistant Professor of Literature
The House of the Fiery Ferns

WHAT’S NEXT: THE FUTURE OF ART WITH MICHAEL CASSELLI ‘87

A Buffalo Grazing: Flower Children Come Home
ONWARD AND UPWARD: SHANE CREEPINGBEAR ’08, DEAN OF ADMISSIONS
WINNING VICTORIES FOR HUMANITY: an interview with Mary Evans ‘20

LoVerne Brown and Ed Ruscha
Two poems by LoVerne Brown, read by President Emeritus Manley between the ocean and the art of Ed Ruscha at the Museum of Contemporary Art.

Travel Edition
May 15th is nearly upon us. If plans hold, on that day my family and I plus two dogs, a cat and six suitcases will depart from Washington, Dulles International, for a long trip to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Poetry + Baseball = Haiku
Beyond the surging signs of spring, April is also national poetry month AND the beginning of baseball season. It’s a double header of the best sort.

Light, Fog, Fire: Ferlinghetti, Milosz, Ammons, Bashō, Komachi
At 101 Lawrence Ferlinghetti had outlived his era-mates by many years. That, it occurred to me, may have been bittersweet: the deepening saturation of truth and beauty “happily amid complexity and paradox” and the physical absence of those we write and make for.

Seeing Red: Williams, Sojun, Stevens
Poems that help us see red—these are what I delight in sending to you on a snow-blown afternoon from Yellow Springs.

A Quickish Story, Rimbaud, Wright (Again)
One of my most satisfying interludes with poetry involved “wrapping” an entire 65,000-square-foot building in a poem by Arthur Rimbaud.

Lorde, Wright, Sogi
The Japanese poet and diarist Sei Shonagon noted among the tricks of time and distance the deceptive proximity of the last day of the year and the first day of the new year: things that were near and far at the same moment.

Dove, Kooser, and Heaney

Safe, On Campus
Entering the final weeks of fall quarter, no Covid-19 cases on campus

Seamus Heaney and Louise Glück

Doorways: Thich Naht Nan, Mary Oliver

Dunbar, Giovanni, Jess
