Dorothy L. Scott

(Photo by Axel Bahnsen)

(Photo by Axel Bahnsen)

Dorothy (“Dot”) Loveland Scott was born on Nov. 21, 1917, in Randolph, Vt., and raised in Burlington, Vt. Dorothy died peacefully on Nov. 4, 2015, after a short illness. She was just shy of her 98th birthday.

Dorothy came to Antioch College in 1935 where she met her future husband, Douglas Scott. She graduated in 1940 and they were married in 1941, just before Doug was drafted into the army. During the war they lived in Fort Knox, Ky., where they started their family.

In 1952 they moved back to Yellow Springs with their children, Sherraid, Margie, David and Andy. Dorothy began working at Antioch College in 1961 in the extramural (co-op) department, where she spent more than 20 years before retiring. In 1962–64, she returned to school and received a master’s degree in personal counseling from Miami University at Oxford, Ohio.

After retiring from Antioch College, Dorothy earned a certificate to teach English as a second language and embarked on a post-retirement career as a teacher of ESL in Fairborn and Yellow Springs.

Dorothy had a knack for taking interest in others and developed long-lasting friendships with many students she worked with through the years. She enjoyed visits from Antioch alums returning to Yellow Springs and served as an advocate and supporter for many of the Vietnamese and Cambodian families whom she met through ESL teaching.

Dorothy was an avid reader and tennis player. She began playing tennis at age 10 and enjoyed playing until she was 75 years old. In 1959, the Scotts bought a house on Allen Street that had a lot large enough to build a tennis court, which they did in 1961. The court was used by the entire community for weekend doubles with all ages and skill levels participating.

111215_Scott_Dorothy_02Dorothy was very active in the community, teaching tennis and swimming. She was also active in local and regional organizations and was a member of the Glen Helen Association, American Civil Liberties Union, Cooperative Education Association, Antioch Environmental Studies Center, the YS Community Children’s Center Board and the Outdoor Adventure Girls.

She and Doug liked to travel to visit their far flung children in Florida, Oregon, North Carolina, Minnesota, Hawaii and Japan. She also traveled with friends and family to Japan, China, Wales, Scotland and Italy. Dorothy’s last trip to Hawaii was in 2013 at age 95 when she went to Hanalei, Kauai. She and Doug had spent many winters there, staying at Mahamoku, the historic vacation house owned by the Grove Farm Museum. After Doug passed in 2008, Dorothy continued to live independently at the house on Allen Street until last May, when she moved into Friends Care Community.
In addition to her children, Dorothy leaves her “honorary daughter” Kim Rohmann; her sister, Marian; three grandchildren; five great-grandchildren and many other relatives and longtime friends who loved her and will miss her.

There is no memorial service planned at this time. Donations to Antioch College or YS Library Association in her name would be appreciated.

Antioch housing project moves forward

The Antioch College Board of Trustees announced this week it will take the next step toward developing its vision for the Antioch College Village, an intergenerational housing project. Based heavily on the feedback of Yellow Springs residents and the college community, current plans call for the phased construction of 160 housing units open to the community for rent or purchase, likely at a mix of market-rate and affordable housing. The project requires a sizable upfront investment, but a feasibility study has suggested that it would provide the college with a consistent revenue stream in the future.

Antioch College Village units will further Antioch’s embrace of modern sustainability best practices. Houses will be connected units existing virtually off-the-grid with their own solar energy and water filtration systems. Units will be open to families and individuals representing all age groups. The Board will establish a task force with the intent of soliciting equity and development partners for this undertaking. The Board also intends to approach philanthropic entities that have expressed interest in projects of this kind to provide seed money.

Read more about the Campus Master Plan and Antioch College Village Charrette here.

A full story on upcoming developments will appear in the Oct. 29 issue of the Yellow Springs News.

A war inspires lasting peace activity

Barbara Reynolds, photo courtesy of Antiochiana

Barbara Reynolds, photo courtesy of Antiochiana

On the 70th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Japan, the 50th anniversary of the founding of the World Friendship Center in Hiroshima and the 40th anniversary of the founding of the Wilmington College Peace Resource Center, the PRC will hold an anniversary peace conference next week. The event, “Justice and Peace: a Call to Local and Global Communities,” takes place Thursday and Friday, Sept. 10 and 11, at the Peace Resource Center, directed by Yellow Springs resident Tanya Maus.

Both the Friendship Center and the PRC were founded by Barbara Reynolds, a former Yellow Springs resident. Barbara went to Japan in 1951 with her children and husband, Earle, who as an anthropologist was sent to study the effects of radiation on the bombing victims. They stayed three years before Earle built a boat, the Phoenix, which the family sailed to protest nuclear testing throughout the south Pacific and later to Vietnam in the 1960s.   h.

The PRC conference keynote speaker is Norma Field, the Robert S. Ingersoll Distinguished Service Professor of Japanese Studies Emerita at the University of Chicago, who will give the talk, “How Can We Say and Mean Peace Today?” at 6 p.m. at the Boyd Cultural Arts Center. The conference will also include plenary speakers and workshops on peace strategies and Kingian nonviolence, as well as a panel discussion on peace initiatives in local communities. For the schedule of events go to wilmington.edu and search “PRC 40th.”

See the full story in this week’s News.

Conference Schedule

Thursday, September 10

9:30 a.m.
Quiet Reflection
Dan Kasztelan, Pastor, Wilmington College
Jessica (Reynolds) Renshaw, “Birdsong Meditation”
World Friendship Center Choir: “Life of World, Spirit of Hiroshima”

10:15 a.m.  Opening Ceremony and Memory Sharing
• Remarks, Peace Resource Center Director, Tanya Maus
• Remarks, Peter van den Dungen, Professor Emeritus, Bradford
University
• Remarks, Michiko Yamane, Chair, World Friendship Center,
Hiroshima, Japan
• Memory sharing led by Terry Miller, Professor Emeritus,
Wilmington College and organizer for the 1975 conference.

1:00 Plenary Talk 1: Barbara Reynolds, Hiroshima,
and the Origins of a Transnational Anti-nuclear Movement
Elyssa Faison, Professor, University of Oklahoma

2:30 p.m. Plenary Talk 2: Dr. King and the Philosophy of Kingian Nonviolence
Kazu Haga, Director, East Point Peace Academy

6–7 p.m. Keynote Address: How Can We Say and Mean Peace Today?
Norma Field, Professor Emerita, University of Chicago

7:15
Workshop 1: “Hands-On Peace”: Kingian Nonviolence
with Kazu Haga, East Point Peace Academy
Kazu Haga, Director, East Point Peace Academy

Friday, September 11

9:10 a.m. Panel 1: Global Peace Initiatives in our Local Community
Chuck Watts, Wilmington AM Rotary, Empathy Surplus Project
Nicole Friend, Arcadia Learning Commons
Michael Kalter, RPCV, Southwest Ohio Peace Corps

10:40 a.m. Tour of the Peace Resource Center
Tanya Maus, Director, Peace Resource Center, Wilmington College

11:30 a.m. Panel 2: Peace Pilgrimages and Awakenings as Alternatives to Violence
Roy Tamashiro, Professor of Multidisciplinary Studies, Webster University
Kazu Haga, Coordinator, East Point Peace Academy
Stephen Potthoff, Associate Professor of Religion and
Philosophy, Wilmington College

11:30 a.m. Panel 3: Museums as Peacemakers: Harmonizing Institutional and Community Visions of Peace
Kazuyo Yamane, Vice Director, Kyoto Museum for World Peace at
Ritsumeikan University
Ruth Brindle, Director, Quaker Heritage Center
Jerry Leggett, Director, Dayton International Peace Museum

1:50 p.m. Workshop 2: Defining Justice and Peace on our Campus
Marcus Benson, Greek Life, Iota Phi Theta Fraternity
Riley Foley, Quaker Leaders, Gay Straight Student Alliance
Carly Pritchard, Active Minds, Faith in Action
Ja’Cole Tabor, Black Student Initiative
Montana McFarland, Delta Tau Alpha

1:50 Workshop 3: Defining Justice and Peace in our Local Community
Julie Brassel, Director, Alternatives to Violence Center
Mark Rembert, Director, Wilmington Chamber of Commerce
Dean Feldmyer, Pastor, The Wilmington United Methodist Church

3:20 p.m. Tour of the Quaker Heritage Center
Ruth Brindle, Director, Quaker Heritage Center

4 p.m. Workshop 4: Defining Justice and Peace for a Global Community
Michael Snarr, Professor, Wilmington College
Norma Field, Professor Emerita, University of Chicago
Joyce Apsel, Professor, New York University
Peter van den Dungen, Professor Emeritus, Bradford University

5:20 Closing Ceremony

For questions or further information, please contact the Peace Resource Center
(prc@wilmington.edu/937-481-2371)

Celebrate Antioch College Foundry Theater

The Antioch College Performance Program will present “The Skin of Our Teeth” by Thornton Wilder, beginning with a “pay-what-you-can” preview on Thursday, Aug. 27. The show opens Friday, Aug. 28, and runs through the weekend, Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 29–30. On Aug. 28, an open house will celebrate one year of the Foundry Theater, preceding that night’s performance at 6:30 p.m. All performances begin at 8 p.m., and tickets are $8 for adults and $4 for children, seniors and non-Antioch college students.

“The Skin of Our Teeth” was written in the years between the Great Depression and World War II. It narrates the story of the Antrobus family, who weather several catastrophes, including an ice age brought on by an encroaching glacier, a destructive flood and a devastating war. Wilder won the Pulitzer for this unique take on human history.

This is the second full-length play directed by a faculty member within the Performance Program since the re-opening of the college. Louise Smith, associate professor of performance, is directing a cast that includes students Sean Allen, Hannah Priscilla Craig, Jack Hassler, Cole Gentry, Alli King, Malka Berro, Soleil Sykes, Katherine Schule, Isabelle Segadelli, Marcell Vanarsdale, Meli Osanya, Alana Guth, Will Brown and Gaerin Warman-Szvoboda; visual arts faculty member Michael Casselli; and community member Abi Katz-Stein. Antioch alumna Dr. Jill Summerville is providing dramaturgical assistance. Amanda Egloff, Foundry Theater technical director, is designing the lighting and set.

Seeding a food revolution

Here in the heart of industrial agriculture, a quiet revolution has begun. It’s small-scale, and plans to stay that way. Its dimensions are measured not in acres, but millimeters. Some of the revolution’s most diminutive members are smaller than the period at the end of this sentence.

The revolution is seeds.

Seeds are a powerful “under the radar” aspect of the local food movement, according to Beth Bridgeman, instructor of cooperative education at Antioch College. This fall, she is leading an effort to raise area residents’ seed consciousness. In collaboration with the Rocky Mountain Seed Alliance, Bridgeman is organizing “Seed School,” a six-day introduction to growing, saving and sharing seeds geared to gardeners, farmers, chefs, students, activists, local policymakers and anyone at any skill level with an interest in local food and sustainable agriculture.

“We’re hoping people come from across the Miami Valley and beyond,” said Bridgeman in a recent interview. Seed School will take place Sept. 29–Oct. 4 at the Vernet Ecological Center in Glen Helen. Seeds used in the school will be harvested from the Antioch Farm across the street.

Why seeds?

“It’s where food begins,” said Bridgeman. Consider a locally grown tomato. It could be grown from seed ordered from a seed catalogue — or it could be grown from seed that has dozens or even hundreds of years of history in Miami Valley soil. In the latter case, said Bridgeman, the tomato would be well-adapted to local conditions. And it would carry what she calls “seed stories,” the histories of the people who’ve grown and saved that variety’s seeds through the years.

“There are lots of seed stories in the Miami Valley,” said Bridgeman, who previously worked as an educator in Greene County’s OSU Extension. “This is particularly true in immigrant communities. People who arrive from elsewhere want to eat their own food. They may have brought seeds from their native countries, or they may source and save seeds from plants that resemble their native foods.”

Local seeds have benefits beyond the cultural. “Here in the Miami Valley, we’re zone 5B/6A,” said Bridgeman, referencing the USDA’s regional Hardiness Zones — and noting that the shift in zones is underway because of global warming. “That’s the same zone as Denver!” Plants growing in our region will experience conditions very different from those of dry, mile-high Denver, despite the common zone designation, and seeds harvested year after year from locally grown plants will adapt, over time, to our particular climate. That means greater hardiness and potentially better natural defenses against pests.

To Bridgeman, another compelling reason to plant and replant from local seeds is food security. “I’m learning that you can’t have food security unless you have seed security,” she said. A food security committee she serves on in Dayton has been talking recently about the idea of “disruption” in food systems. “When food is coming from 500 miles away and there’s a breakdown in the grid or transportation system, that’s a problem,” she said. “The closer you grow to home, the better.”

Seeds themselves are under threat. “Ninety-seven percent of seed varieties have been lost since 1900,” said Bridgeman. This is a consequence of market dynamics, she added. “As seed companies have gotten larger and agrichemical companies have taken them over, research has increasingly focused on just a few varieties.” Rather than hundreds of tomatoes, many consumers have access to just half a dozen on grocery shelves. Currently, the six biggest agricultural companies own 85 percent of seed companies, she noted.

These companies are patenting seeds and — even more controversially — individual seed traits, such as drought resistance in corn. “Think about that,” said Bridgeman. “A company owns the idea of drought resistance in corn!”

Many traits are now introduced through genetic modification, she added. Different from the hybridization that happens in nature, and the breeding for specific traits that people have undertaken for centuries, genetic modification involves the insertion of genes from one variety or species (sometimes even crosses between plant and animal) into another. Seeds of genetically modified plants carry the new genome, representing a life form “unseen in nature,” said Bridgeman.

Saving and planting local seeds is one way — at a fundamental level, the way — to restore regional biodiversity and take back control of seeds from corporate producers. “I’m a big proponent of seed sovereignty and agricultural democracy,” Bridgeman noted.

This summer, she and five Antioch students, all of whom work on the Antioch Farm, attended the Seed Savers Exchange conference in Decorah, Iowa. Seed Savers Exchange is one of the largest nongovernmental seed banks in the United States, and the annual conference helps collect and disseminate thousands of heirloom varieties for preservation, scientific study and gardeners’ use.

“I learned how important it is to teach other people — how you need to grow gardeners as much as you need to grow gardens,” said Elaine Bell, ’16. “I’m interested in any opportunity to help change the direction of how we grow our food.”

Anthea Van Geloven, ’17, said she was amazed to realize how much the plant and animal breeds we rely upon for food have been manipulated by humans. “Nothing is anywhere close to what you would find in the wild,” she said.

Both students came back enthusiastic about seed saving, which is the heart, or germ, of Seed School. “We’ll teach people about winnowing, pollination, and harvesting. There will be accessible learning about seed genetics,” said Bridgeman. Her goal is to grow a seed-saving community — one that will flourish well beyond the course.

Seed saving is an art and science that’s as old as agriculture itself. Before seed catalogues and their online counterparts, people saved seeds from one planting season to the next, and shared them with their neighbors. In recent times, such informal seed-saving communities have been augmented by more organized efforts. Some public libraries are creating “seed libraries,” said Bridgeman, using old card catalogues to hold seed packets and information gathered about seeds’ origins. “Open drawer B, and you’ll find Detroit Red Beets.”

Seed banks, such as Seed Savers Exchange and others around the world (the USDA maintains a massive one), are the broadest and most formalized seed-saving communities. Two seed savers from Cleveland, whom Bridgeman met at the Seed Savers Exchange conference, are launching the Cleveland Seed Bank, the only such effort in Ohio.

But all it takes to start a seed-saving community is a few people — knowledgeably — swapping seeds. “Seeds should be available to everyone,” said Bridgeman. At Seed School, and in the communities it sows, the power of these tiny revolutionaries will be.

-To register for Seed School, visit: http://www.rockymountainseeds.org/attend/seed-school/144-antioch. For more information, contact Belle Starr at belle@rockymountainseeds.org or

Beth Bridgeman at bbridgeman@antiochcollege.org. Early-bird registration (before September 1) is $600, which includes all classes and meals. Partial scholarships are available.

Solar sheep come to Antioch Farm

Last weekend eight “self-fertilizing lawnmowers,” also known as sheep, arrived at the Antioch College Farm. The sheep, part of the college’s commitment to sustainability, are a pilot project to study how they behave around the solar array, how many are needed to manage the vegetative growth around the five-acre array, and their grazing patterns. The sheep are fed organic grain and fresh water each morning by students who work on the farm.

This is the third year that the college has had sheep on the farm, according to College Communications Director Matt Desjardins, and the length of the pilot project is not yet known, as it will be determined by how the sheep behave beneath the solar arrays. The sheep’s breed is Dorper-Katadin.