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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS ❚ PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK
Study: Rising rents, years of neglect threaten West End residents
Residents: We need parking for stadium Sharon Coolidge Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
After years of little to no investment in the historically black neighborhood, it has been thrust into the spotlight as the site of the new FC Cincinnati stadium. The study, paid for by the team as part of its written agreement to invest in the neighborhood, didn’t directly address how the stadium would impact people living there now. Instead, it’s a snapshot of
Cincinnati City Council will be begin discussing parking for residents in the West End, who are concerned about parking near their homes once the Major League Soccer stadium opens. The discussion isn’t a surprise – parking has been among the concerns expressed by residents as the stadium is being built – but residents made a specifi c request prompting the discussion, City Manager Patrick Duhaney said. A plan, fi led with the city, shows designated resident parking on Hopkins, Chestnut and Elizabeth streets, plus Weninger Circle. Along with portions of Ezzard Charles Drive and Clark, Mound and John streets. Duhaney said in the documents the plan is supported by the Betts-Longworth Historic District, which is part of the West End. The West End Community Council has not yet taken a vote, Community Council President Robert Killins told The Enquirer. The request comes as FCC is building its major soccer stadium in the West End. City zoning rules require the stadium to have 5,300 parking spaces. FC Cincinnati has cobbled together a plan with more spaces than that throughout Downtown, Over-the-Rhine and Queensgate, but they aren’t all within walking distance. Hamilton County Commissioners three times pledged to build the team a 1,000 space garage near the stadium, but the team and county have yet to come to an agreement on where it would be located. County offi cials have previously expressed concerns about the cost to build either, one 1,000 space garage or two 500 space garages. County Administrator Jeff Aluotto told Cincinnati City Council’s budget committee Monday, Sept. 16 the team is in negotiations with the city. The stadium is set to open in March 2021. “It’s very clear that we need to ensure people who live in the West End – knowing a stadium that holds 20,000+ people is coming – have parking options,” said Councilman Chris Seelbach. “I can’t believe we haven’t already been working on it. Obviously there will be a major parking problem.” Seelbach said he was concerned the county hasn’t yet said where the prom-
See HOUSING, Page 2A
See PARKING, Page 2A
An apartment building in the West End. The West End Housing Study found that 27% of neighborhood residents are low-income renters. PROVIDED Randy Tucker and Sharon Coolidge Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
More than 4 in 10 West End residents risk losing their homes as a result of rising rents and real estate prices as the neighborhood, adjacent to gentrifi ed Over-the-Rhine, risk displacement. The’s the result of a study released Thursday on housing in the Cincinnati neighborhood.
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2A ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
Sgt. Eric Sierra Way honors fallen offi cer
Housing Continued from Page 1A
current issues. And they’re numerous. All told, 1,592 West End households were at some risk of displacement, according the study. The solution: • There is a need for 550 rental units that a family of four earning $65,000 or less could aff ord. • There is a need for 148 homes for a family of four earning $100,000 or more. “Overall, this new study shows that, if the West End is going to retain its cultural legacy as a thriving center of economic and ethnic diversity... (it) requires all stakeholders at the table,” said Alexis Kidd-Zaff er, executive director of Seven Hills Neighborhood Houses. To help, the Port is investing $727,000 this year to stabilize six properties, four of them market rate, two for Habitat for Humanity families. It’s revitalizing the Regal Theater and using a $5 million loan fund to help small business thrive in the neighborhood. The study was initiated as part of a Community Benefi ts Agreement between The Port and FC Cincinnati and the West End Neighborhood Association. The study found the majority of West End residents live in subsidized housing, and therefore are protected from gentrifi cation. But those subsidized properties need to be protected. “If we just sit back and let things happen, we all know what that’s going to look like,” said Laura Brunner, president and CEO of The Port, alluding to the rapid pace of displacement that could occur if speculators were allowed to buy up most of the available housing. Brunner acknowledged a need for more aff ordable housing in the West
Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Tenants of a West End apartment building on Wade Street who were facing displacement because of the encroachment of the FC Cincinnati stadium protested in April. LIZ DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER
End. The Port, she said, is working to stem the tide of gentrifi cation by building more market-rate homes and apartments. “The study highlights what we have believed; that the West End has experienced disinvestment for decades,” said FC Cincinnati President Jeff Berding. “We recognized that housing was an issue in the neighborhood before we began out project, which is why we contributed $150,000 for this study to guide future redevelopment in an equitable way.” What the study found: ❚ Of all 3,579 total occupied housing units in the West End, about 27% of those households were “extremely threatened” by displacement. ❚ The households were comprised of low-income renters earning less than $31,350 a year who simply could
not withstand a major rent increase, according to the study. ❚ Another 17 percent of West End households potentially facing displacement were middle-income renters earning $31,350 to $50,150 a year, and homeowners with incomes ranging from $18,000 to just over $50,000 a year. ❚ Those households were labeled “very threatened” or “threatened” because they could better withstand an increase in rents or property taxes than the extremely threatened group. ❚ All told, 1,592 West End households were at some risk of displacement, according the study. The numbers in the fi nal report are slightly lower than preliminary fi gures reported in April by The Enquirer that showed 1,491 renters and 352 homeowners in the neighborhood were at risk.
Parking Continued from Page 1A
ised garage will be. “FC Cincinnati has been in active discussions with Hamilton County for more than eighteen months regarding its commitment made in three separate resolutions to build a 1,000 car parking garage adjacent to FCC’s $250 millionplus privately fi nanced West End stadi-
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Sgt. Eric Sierra was honored Friday, Sept. 13, with a street renaming in East Price Hill, according to a press release from Cincinnati Police. The dedication began at 10 a.m. at the corner of Warsaw and Considine, now known as Sgt. Eric Sierra Way. City leaders, Cincinnati Police, the Sierra family and other community members gathered at the street corner to honor Sierra and his commitment to District 3 and the Price Hill community. The Cincinnati Police Department posted photos of the event on Twitter. Sierra passed in 2014 at age 39 after police said he collapsed while washing his jeep in front of his home. Sgt. Eric Sierra Way is just across the street from the old District 3 Police Special Services Section.
Sgt. Eric Sierra Way was named Sept. 13. PROVIDED/CINCINNATI POLICE DEPARTMENT
um,” said attorney Brock Denton, who represents the team. “This garage was a key County commitment to not only FCC, but also to the City of Cincinnati as a key investment to alleviate growing parking challenges in the neighborhoods.” “We have had concerns as, to date, it’s been diffi cult to get the County to focus on this garage and to reach defi nitive terms but discussions remain ongoing,” Denton added. Still he’s hopeful a deal can be reached. Under the proposed residential parking plan for the West End, parking permits would cost $30 a year. There will be two zones, both running from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. One will have two hours limits for visitors, plus unlimited residential parking. The other for residents only, documents show. The city already has resident parking permits in nearby Over-the-Rhine and Pendleton.
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being held on separate $50,000 bonds; Swift on a $75,000 bond; and Caudill was released on bail Friday, the day she was arrested. Montgomery Mitchell was arrested in March in connection to another robbery, court records state. She was indicted alongside Dominick Lamont Durrett, 19, after a woman was knocked to the ground and her purse Mitchell stolen. Mitchell was found incompetent to stand trial and ordered to undergo outpatient treatment in June, according to court documents. She was scheduled to stand trial for that case within one Swift year. Montgomery, Mitchell and Swift are charged with aggravated robbery. Caudill is charged with obstructing justice. All four co-defendants were scheduled to be seen in court on Sept. 23.
Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Next generation hemp technology soothes joint discomfort, aches and sore muscles 5Xs better than hemp oil; now available in the U.S. without a prescription. WEST PALM BEACH, FL — Americans are rejoicing about a brand-new technology that gets the goods on the health benefits of hemp. A next generation hemp technology is now available across the nation and can be purchased without a prescription. And the best part, it comes with a new delivery system that’s 450% more absorbable than oil. So you can say goodbye grown the hemp in Canna to pills, oils and creams. LS at a 100% organic Canna LS contains pure American farm, under strict “full spectrum hemp,” agricultural guidelines. It’s which works to relieve grown without pesticides joint discomfort, restore or GMOs. And it’s grown to sharp memory, and sup- contain no THC.”
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Four women were arrested Friday, Sept. 13 after a cab driver was robbed at gunpoint, according to court records. Records state that at the end of a cab ride, Shamira Swift, 20, of Westwood, got out of the car and displayed a handgun while Dimiya Mitchell, 22, of Walnut Hills, demanded property and robbed the driver. Catherine Caudill, 27, of East Price Hill, used a police radio issued to her through her employment at Women Helping Women when she picked up Swift – her girlfriend – in her car after Swift fl ed the scene, the documents state. Caudill picked Swift up on Lafeuille Avenue after Swift came out of the woods. Caudill was stopped nearby with Swift in the passenger seat, according to court documents. Police said that a woman named Camille Montgomery, 21, of West Price Hill, “set up” the robbery. According to court documents, investigators confi rmed this information through text messages and witness/defendant statements. Montgomery and Mitchell are each
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COMMUNITY PRESS WEST ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ 5A
Documents: He robbed UDF stores for cash – and cigars Kevin Grasha Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
During a one-week span in 2017 police said Lorenzo Bratcher was involved in at least nine robberies. On Aug. 30, 2017, Bratcher robbed the United Dairy Farmers on Clifton Avenue, court documents say. The next day, he robbed UDF stores in Westwood, Pleasant Ridge and Mount Healthy, the documents say. During that Mount Healthy robbery, Bratcher displayed a handgun, asked for “everything in the drawers” – and then asked for “fi lter tip Black & Mild cigars,” according to court documents. Bratcher, 25, also targeted several Thorntons gas stations, according to
court documents. The robberies happened between Aug. 30 and Sept. 6, 2017. Bratcher was sentenced Monday in federBratcher al court in Cincinnati to 14 years in prison. Records show he pleaded guilty in May to two counts of using a gun during a violent crime. A second man accused of being involved in at least some of the robberies, 23-year-old Isaiah Buck, pleaded guilty last year. He is serving a sentence of more than eight years in prison.
PROVIDED/CINCINNATI POLICE DEPT.
Police: Woman run over while witnesses pleaded with driver Cameron Knight Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
A Green Township woman was arrested Monday, Sept. 16, after police said she intentionally ran over a woman in Cheviot while witnesses pleaded with her to stop. Carie Sicking, 38, is charged with felonious assault. Cheviot police said Sicking was arguing with Daya Wilson around 10 p.m. that Monday when she “backed her car up and sped at the victim, swerving to hit her.” Wilson was trapped under the car, police said. According to court documents, witnesses pleaded with Sicking
Surveillance video from August 2017 robbery at a United Dairy Farmers.
to back up. “Instead, she drove forward completely running her over,” police said. Sicking is accused of Sicking fl eeing the scene, but was arrested within half an hour. Wilson was sent to University of Cincinnati Medical Center. She has since been released. Sicking was released from jail to await trial after posting 10 percent of a $50,000 bond. A hearing in her case had not yet been scheduled when this article was originally published.
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6A ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
How Tracie Hunter has described her fi rst months in jail Kevin Grasha Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Tracie Hunter has spent the fi rst seven weeks of her six-month jail sentence in the medical unit, in a cell by herself. The former juvenile court judge is being housed in the Hamilton County Justice Center’s medical unit for her own protection. Hunter, who is a pastor, said she stays quiet and spends her time reading, writing and ministering to other inmates, according to one of the fi ve formal grievances she has fi led since being jailed. The handwritten documents provide snapshots into Hunter’s life behind bars. A sentence handed down in 2014 was imposed in July after years of appeals. Hunter has endured the indignities of being in jail. She spent nearly three hours last month listening to “crying, moaning and pleas for help” from a woman in an adjacent cell, according to one of the grievances. Corrections offi cers wouldn’t respond, she said, which led her to fi le the complaint. A captain who investigated said offi cers talked to a jail nurse who said there was no need to remove the woman from her cell. Hunter, 52, wrote in another grievance she has experienced back and hip pain “at increasing levels.”
Cleaning led to back pain On Aug. 16, she wrote that she had been mopping the fl oor and cleaning the medical unit every day for many weeks. The other women in the unit are physically unable, she said. She has cleaned up vomit and “other toxins.”
Former Hamilton County Juvenile Court Judge Tracie Hunter is taken into custody after her sentencing July 22. Shewas ordered to serve a six-month jail sentence. ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER
“If I didn’t clean the unit daily, I would certainly get sick, as would others, including the pregnant women who come down daily,” she said. But that cleaning, she said, further aggravated her back pain. Hunter severely injured her back in a car accident when she was in college and wears a back brace. She believes the constant pain has caused her blood pressure to increase signifi cantly. And getting blood pressure medication has been extremely diffi cult, state Sen. Cecil Thomas, a longtime supporter of Hunter, told The Enquirer. “She has been traumatized physically as well as mentally,” Thomas said.
Grievance fi led fi rst day Hunter’s jail term began with controversy. On her fi rst day, she fi led a grievance. It came after the July sentence hearing devolved into shouting from Hunter’s supporters. Sheriff ’s offi cials described it as “hostile.” Hunter allowed her body to go limp, forcing a Hamilton County sheriff ’s deputy to drag her from the courtroom. Hunter also blamed that incident for her back pain. Offi cials investigated and determined Hunter had been passively resisting, refused to be handcuff ed and that the deputy’s only option was to
drag her from the courtroom. In a response to the grievance, Hamilton County sheriff ’s Lt. Dennis Brogan wrote that Hunter had to be removed immediately because of the “very hostile and aggressive audience.” After leaving the courtroom, deputies placed Hunter in a wheelchair. Brogan said they pushed Hunter in the wheelchair for about 10 feet. Hunter, he said, then stood up without any assistance and said she was able to walk. When asked if she was OK, Hunter “replied she was fi ne,” according to Brogan. Hunter continued to walk without issue “and never complained of any injuries during this incident,” Brogan said. She wrote that she has been taking muscle relaxers for her back twice a day since then. Two weeks later, on Aug. 6, Hunter wrote at length about a plastic bag containing clothing and other items, which had been left outside her cell by one offi cer then apparently removed from Hunter’s cell by another offi cer, leaving the contents in a pile in the cell. Hunter said an offi cer “snapped” at her after she asked whether someone had been inside her cell. “To disrespect me by basically accusing me of having a plastic bag that another (offi cer) had to either give to another resident or placed (there) was accusatory and wrong,” Hunter wrote. A captain and a major reviewed the grievance, with both fi nding that the corrections offi cer was within her authority to remove the bag. Plastic bags are prohibited for safety and security reasons, they said. The major said the “topic of professionalism” would be addressed with offi cers at the next briefSee HUNTER , Page 7A
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Hunter Continued from Page 6A
ing. On Aug. 11, Hunter fi led the grievance about the woman in the adjacent cell crying for help. Hunter said she heard offi cers contact the woman by loudspeaker, and the woman told them she needed help. Despite that, according to Hunter, no one responded until more than 21⁄ 2 hours later. Hunter said when she off ered to help, an offi cer yelled at her. Hunter wrote that offi cers threatened to remove her from protective custody “and to put me in a location where people scream all day long.” Capt. Scott Kerr said he investigated and was told offi cers had talked to a jail nurse who said there was no need to remove the woman from the cell to examine her.
“If I didn’t clean the unit daily, I would certainly get sick, as would others, including the pregnant women who come down daily.” Tracie Hunter
talking about the medical unit in Hamilton County Justice Center
Kerr also said the deputy denied threatening to transfer Hunter. He noted that a deputy doesn’t have the power to do that without approval of a supervisor and/or medical staff . Then on Aug. 15, Hunter complained about male offi cers entering the women’s medical unit unannounced. In a response, Kerr said he instructed supervisors to inform offi cers that routine rounds should be performed by offi cers of the same sex as the inmates in the unit and that offi cers should announce their presence before entering a unit of the opposite sex.
Heritage Village Museum transforms into Haunted Village Heritage Village Museum will transform into a Haunted Village for a familyfriendly, slight-fright event. Our 19th century village inside Sharon Woods is the perfect setting for a spooky evening. Trick-or-treat through the Village meeting a headless horseman, a witch, a fortune teller, and a mad scientist. Take a horse-drawn wagon ride. Walk through the haunted cemetery. Enjoy face painting, balloon art, games, storytelling, and more! Enter through Sharon Centre. October 11,12,18, 19, 25 and 26 from 6-10 p.m. Entrance closes at 9 p.m. Admission is $10. Museum members and children under two are free. For information, call 513-563-9484 or visit www.heritagevillagecincinnati.org.
On Aug. 16, Hunter wrote a four-page complaint after she was reprimanded for going into a bathroom after leaving her cell to receive prescription muscle relaxers. She apparently had missed her scheduled opportunity to receive medication. She said it’s so cold in the jail that she sometimes goes into the bathroom to run warm water over her hands. “My fi ngertips have been turning blue from being constantly cold and literally freezing,” she wrote. After she returned to her cell, she
said an offi cer reprimanded her over an intercom. The grievance also details how a paid phone call shut off as she was talking to someone. That happened during dinner, and in response to the grievance, Capt. Kerr said “turning off the phones for dinner is part of our feeding procedures.” Kerr also spoke to the offi cer about the reprimand, and the offi cer “stated he was making the point that you should make sure to take your meds when the nurse is passing them.” Kerr said he reminded the offi cer about “remaining professional at all times when speaking with anyone, including the inmates he is supervising.” Hunter, a former Hamilton County Juvenile Court Judge, was convicted of a felony charge related to giving confi dential documents to her brother, a juvenile court employee who was in the process of being fi red. She is appealing the sentence.
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Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld
Yummy out of hand, as a salad or pumpkin pie garnish.
I had a somewhat desperate message on my phone machine from a reader who needed my recipe for honey-roasted almonds. “I can’t remember if you shared them in a class or in the paper. I’m having a party this coming Saturday and can’t fi nd my recipe!” “No worries,” I told her. That recipe has made the rounds both in print, my cable show and in classes and it’s front and center in my recipe hall of fame fi le so it’s always easy to fi nd. If you’ve never made these, try them. I think you’ll like the honey-roasted almonds so much that they’ll become a favorite at your house, too. I’m also sharing a recipe for country fair pecans. These are the ones you see being cooked in large kettles at fall fairs. Nuts are a perfect snack or light appetizer. Plus they can be made ahead. So you have my permission to, yes, go nuts in the kitchen!
Tip: Squirrel nuts away for holiday cooking Nuts should go on sale soon. Stock up and freeze for longer storage.
Cinnamon is a bark! ❚ Cinnamon comes from the inner bark of the Cinnamomum tree. ❚ Two popular varieties are Cassia/ Chinese cinnamon and Ceylon/Sri Lankan cinnamon. ❚ Most cinnamon sold in the U.S. is the cassia variety. ❚ Ceylon is slightly sweeter, more refi ned, more expensive and a bit harder to fi nd.
Ingredients 3 cups or a little more pecan halves, roasted (see above) ⁄ 3 cup evaporated milk
1
1 cup granulated sugar 2 tablespoons water 1 teaspoon vanilla ⁄ 4 teaspoon cinnamon
3
Instructions Bring milk, sugar, water, vanilla and cinnamon to a gentle boil allowing sugar to dissolve. Add nuts and continue to cook until nuts are completely sugared with no syrup left. Pour onto sprayed cookie sheet. Let cool and break up. Store at room temperature, covered, up to 3 weeks.
Honey roasted almonds. RITA HEIKENFELD/PROVIDED
Honey-roasted almonds Ingredients
Instructions
2 cups whole almonds, skin left on and roasted
Mix sugar and salt in bowl and set aside.
⁄ 4 cup granulated sugar
Stir together honey, water and oil in skillet and bring to a gentle boil. Turn heat down a bit, and immediately stir in nuts and continue to cook and stir until liquid is absorbed, about 3-5 minutes.
1
⁄ 2 teaspoon salt
1
2 tablespoons each: honey and water 2 teaspoons Canola, grape seed or favorite oil
Immediately transfer nuts to bowl with sugar mixture and toss until coated. Pour onto sprayed cookie sheet. Cool, break up and store, covered, at room temperature up to a month. Roast nuts: Pour in single layer on cookie sheet. Roast at 350 until fragrant, about 8-12 minutes. Don’t overbake.
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10A ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
Viewpoints No, that was not Brandon from Cleves behaving badly Byron McCauley Columnist Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
It would be one thing if the name of the guy who got caught getting into devilment in public was John Smith. But why did it have to be Brandon Glacken, who lived in the next town over and was just a year younger than you? You graduated from Taylor High School a year ago, the youngest of eight children. You have a great reputation and do honest work with your brother and his four-year-old landscaping business. You were minding your own business one night when the world went mad. Everyone read about the person they thought was you in a Sept. 3 story in The Enquirer and on Cincinnati.com. At least two teens were arrested at the Taylor High School football game Friday night, according to Cleves police. The arrests came the same night as the game between Withrow and Woodward high schools was stopped due to fi ghts. Cleves police said they were investigating a group of disorderly subjects during a home game against Lawrenceburg High School prior to the arrests. Police said Brandon Glacken, 18, of Delhi Township, inserted himself between an offi cer and another person, then shoved the offi cer and resisted arrest. An offi cer suff ered an injury to his elbow in the struggle, investigators said.
Only it wasn’t you. What are the chances? A guy with the same name as you, bucking up against law enforcement – and at your alma mater to boot. You are from Cleves. He is from Delhi. You are 19. He is 18. An update to the story added the arrested man’s middle initial, Brandon “J.” Glacken, but the damage was done. No one knows your middle name. Your sister called. “Are you OK? Do you need help?” she asked. “What are you talking about?” you said. “Your name was in an article and it said you got arrested.” You call the Cleves Police Department. It’s a diff erent Brandon, of course. But fi rst, you suspected identity theft. “I was thinking that I had lost my license a while back. I got new ones. What if someone stole my license,” 19year-old Brandon Glacken of Cleves told me. Your roommate’s mom called her son. She’d heard the news, too. Was her son keeping the company of outlaws? Hardly. If you’re from Cleves, you probably know the Glackens. Big West Side Catholic family. They roll 23 deep these days if you include the 13 grandchildren. In the late 1990s, Brandon’s older brother, Matt, was a star quarterback at Elder High School and then up the road for the Wittenberg University Tigers. The family once lost their home in a fi re. Ann Glacken, the mother of eight,
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Brandon Glacken MARIALYNNPHOTOGRAPHY
was headed to Florida when the news about Brandon (not her son) broke. The self-proclaimed “mama bear” could not rest. The family’s good name was being sullied. “It hit me hard then I left town. I said, ‘Wait a minute. I can’t let it all just happen,’ “ she said. The family was getting misdirected backlash. “I started thinking about how wide that scope was
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when you live in a small town.” She told the ladies in her prayer group to correct the record to anyone who would listen. She asked the school district superintendent, who knows the family well, to write a memo to the community. This wasn’t our Brandon, Taylor High School Class of 2018. Our Brandon was an exemplary student and would never do such a thing. Meanwhile, I chatted with Brandon of Cleves who was on his way to a job outside in 80-plus degree weather. He was thinking it would be great to correct the record, considering strangers are talking about the incident. “They think it was me, and I don’t have a chance to clear it up because I don’t personally know them,” he said. He met his buddies in a local burrito place, and they even wondered what had gotten into him. At the end of the day, the one thing mother Ann knows to do is to lean on her faith when things go haywire. “This blindsided us, but the Lord brings good out of everything if you give it to him,” she told me. So, for the record, Cleves police arrested the other Brandon. The one from Delhi. Not the one from Cleves. If only it had been John Smith. Byron McCauley is an Enquirer columnist writing about the intersection of race, politics, social justice and free enterprise. Email: bmccauley@enquirer.com. Phone: 513-768-8565. Social: @byronmccauley.
Carlos and his family owned a small business in Honduras until they witnessed gang members murder a man and a child meters away from their home and they reported it to the police. Because the gang and the police worked together, the gang began extorting Carlos’ family. Every week they demanded more, and the threats became more violent. Eventually, the gang took the business and the family’s home and car. They fl ed with nothing but the clothes on their backs and traveled through their own country and Mexico for years, homeless and desperate, until they arrived in Cincinnati with an asylum claim. Seven-year-old José was so cold he slept on his mother Eva’s chest on the concrete fl oor of a family detention center. Except José couldn’t sleep because his foot hurt so much. Eva explainedthat he’d rubbed a blister walking through the desert and it seemed to be infected. Clinic employees refused treatment because the injury hadn’t occurred in the detention center. Days later, after they traveled four days to Cincinnati by Greyhound, José spent three nights in Children’s Hospital’s with a systemic staph infection. When I asked the surgeon what would have happened had he been in detention for a few more days, she replied, “He would have lost his foot… Or worse.” As director of Transformations CDC, I listen to similar stories daily. The government claims indefi nite family detention will “keep families together.” Sixteenyear-old Marcos explained that three years ago, he had been wrenched away from his mother when ICE deemed him “too old” to remain with her. Instead, he was crowded in with other kids, some as young as 9, in a single room without enough beds. He told me he cried for
three days and nights, asking for his mother. Marcos and his mother fl ed Honduras after a rich landowner’s security guards killed more than 100 campesinos, members of an agricultural cooperative where she worked. The objective was to intimidate cooperative members into fl eeing so the landowner could expand his oil palm plantation. These asylum-seekers came to Cincinnati after passing a “credible fear” interview. Most are forced to await court dates in crowded, dangerous Mexican border towns. There extortionists kidnap them, demanding ransom from impoverished families. Vulnerable women and children are raped and traffi cked. Now our government is overturning the decades-old Flores Agreement prohibiting immigrant children from being incarcerated more than 20 days. President Trump has decried “catch and release,” when immigrant families who have passed a “credible fear” interview are united with other family members in the U.S. until a judge hears their asylum case. Despite the rhetoric, nearly all report regularly to the unmarked ICE building on Redhill Road in Blue Ash, or to their nearby contractor, BI, Inc. Children are prohibited from coming to the check-ins, so mothers scramble to fi nd child care and transportation. ICE fi ts adults with an electronic ankle bracelet which tracks their movements; they can immediately apprehend you if you miss an appointment or appear to be working. Agents make home visits. What are Cincinnatians doing to support these families? Many drive immigrants to their ICE check-ins or lawyers’ appointments. Others provide beds and clothes: the newcomers, not allowed to work, live with low-income relatives who can’t aff ord these extras. What are you doing? Nancy Sullivan is director of Transformation CDC, a Cincinnati-based nonprofi t that supports immigrants and U.S.-born children.
Community Press West
❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019
❚ 1B
Sports Cincinnati’s best all-time preps running backs Mark Schmetzer
Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Ray Nolting at Hughes in the 1920s and 1930s. Clem Turner at Woodward in the 1960s. Shaun Alexander at Boone County in the 1990s. Miyan Williams at Winton Woods right now. Greater Cincinnati’s heritage of speedy, rugged, multi-talented high school running backs goes back probably more than a century. Some were powerful enough to run over defenders. Others sped past them or juked around them. Ragged record-keeping from the early days prevents us from appreciating the forerunners – so to speak – of the ballcarriers we’ve applauded over the last 90 or so years. By no means, though, have we been cheated. Local high school football fans have been treated to transcendent talents and eye-popping achievements. The question we posed was which running backs are the greatest of all time – up to now. The key phrase in that sentence is “running backs.” You nominated several players with outstanding overall credentials as football players, but we are focusing on ballcarriers. We also were focused on their high school accomplishments, some of which no doubt were impacted by perhaps playing only in fi rst halves against less-competitive opponents. Still, you piqued our curiosity with your nominations, and after combing through the record books, we came up with our list. We can guarantee that it probably won’t fi t any of your lists.
Honorable mention Hosea Simpson, Winton Woods; Justin Frisk, Highlands; D’Juan and Hiawatha Francisco, Moeller; Steve Sollman, St. Xavier; D’Shawn Wynn, Reading; Scott Tackett, Beechwood; Jeremy Larkin, La Salle; Nick Wilson, Ross.
Our Top 10 (Years indicate seasons, not gradua-
CAPE’s Carlos Snow tries to shake the grasp of a Kenston defender in the Crusaders' 1986 title game. ENQUIRER FILE
tion):
No. 10 Jordan Scanlon, Clinton-Massie, 2006-2009 – Piled up 6,051 rushing yards while leading the Falcons to four straight playoff appearances.
No. 9 Casey
McGinness,
Covington
Catholic, 2013-2017 – Gained 5,127 yards and scored 74 touchdowns rushing, leading the Colonels to 2017 Class 5A state championship and 2018 runner-up.
No. 8 Donald Johnson, North College Hill, 1997-2000 – Finished his career with 6,353 rushing yards for the Trojans.
No. 7 Andre Barkley, Cincinnati Country Day, 1990-1993 – Gained 6,574 yards rushing and was a two-time Enquirer Division II-V Player of the Year while helping the Indians reach postseason play twice.
No. 6 See PLAYERS, Page 2B
‘Employee No. 1’ moving up in FC Cincinnati Pat Brennan Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Dan McNally will be director of soccer operations for FC Cincinnati. BRETT HANSBAUER/4TH FLOOR CREATIVE
The 2019 Major League Soccer season has been one of lessons learned on and off the fi eld for FC Cincinnati. Dan McNally, FC Cincinnati’s fi rstever employee, has been on the front line for one of the more complex lessons, and his role is changing as a result. McNally, 41, is transitioning to the technical side of the organization to serve as Director of Soccer Operations. He’ll report to General Manager Gerard Nijkamp. In this new role, McNally will be a link between the technical and business sides of FC Cincinnati while basing out of the club’s Mercy Health Training Center in Milford to oversee Team Administrator Satoshi Tatsumi, the training complex grounds crew, equipment,
player resources, and scheduling, among other things. “It’s been a long road for me because I was the assistant coach for the University of Cincinnati men’s soccer team and, fi ve years ago, I thought I was on a path to be a head (NCAA) Division I men’s soccer coach, no questions asked,” McNally said. “I had a great record as a very young Division II head coach (at Montana State), got a good job at the University of Cincinnati and I was on the path to a DI head coach, and maybe one day a professional coach. “My path took a right turn when FC Cincinnati started. For the last four years, just helping the club grow, I’ve stepped away from a lot of the soccer side just to help grow the business and the infrastructure. Now, as we’re growSee MCNALLY, Page 2B
2B ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
Marc Edwards, Norwood High School football, in August 1991.
Mount Healthy senior quarterback David Montgomery prepares for a Division III, Region 10 playoff game against New Richmond in 2015.
JOHN CURLEY/ /ENQUIRER FILE
ADAM BAUM/COMMUNITY PRESS
Players Continued from Page 1B
David Montgomery, Mt. Healthy, 2011-2014 – Montgomery rushed for 6,666 yards and 91 touchdowns with the Fighting Owls, leading them to four straight playoff appearances. He was named Ohio’s Division III Off ensive Player of the Year as a senior.
No. 5 Marc Edwards, Norwood, 1989-1992 – As a senior, Edwards was named Ohio’s “Mr. Football” by the Associated Press for the 1992 season, still the only local award-winner. He fi nished his career with 6,001 yards and 76 touchdowns rushing. “Marc led the city in rushing three straight years,” points out long-time local coach and athletic director Jim Barre, who coached Edwards with the Indians.
Shaun Alexander, Boone County, 1992-1994 – Alexander needed just three varsity seasons to pile up 6,657 yards and 110 touchdowns rushing. He was one of Sports Illustrated’s “Faces in the Crowd” as a junior and was named Kentucky’s “Mr. Football” as a senior.
No. 3 Richard Hall, Wyoming, 1994-1997 – Hall ranks only seventh on in Ohio with 7,386 rushing yards, but his 106 touchdowns are fi fth all-time.
No. 2 Carlos Snow, Cincinnati Academy of Physical Education, 1982-1985 – The Crusaders’ bellcow ranks fourth among Ohio high school running backs with 7,761 rushing yards and tied for sixth with 104 touchdowns on the ground.
No. 1
No. 4
Jason Bainum, Williamsburg, 1997-
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Williamsburg running back Jason Bainum (1997-2000) rushed for an astonishing 8,216 yards in his high school career. ENQUIRER FILE
2000 – Wildcats coach Ken Osborne recognized that he had such a special talent in the 6-foot-1, 200-pound Bainum that he installed the single-wing off ense to maximize his impact. It paid off as Bainum rushed for an astonishing 8,216 yards – the state career record when he graduated and still third alltime. Bainum’s 104 rushing touchdowns are tied with Snow for sixth all-time in the state. He also gained 100 or more yards rushing in 27 consecutive games, which ranks second all-time in Ohio. The 532 yards Bainum gained on Sept. 28, 2001, against Clermont Northeastern remain the state single-game record, and he is the only player to have three of the state’s top 10 single-game eff orts. He also ranks fi fth and ninth on Ohio’s single-season rushing totals. Best local running back? Bainum ranks among the best in the history of a state with a proud high school football
tradition. Some observers might suggest that Bainum’s records are tainted because of the mostly smaller-school competition he faced, but he was the focal point of Williamsburg’s off ense and every opposing defense knew it. Going 1-on-11 for most of each game is challenging on any level. He was prolifi c, durable and had tremendous stamina. “Anyone who can play both sides of the ball, get a direct snap and carry the ball 40 times a game and still run the ball down the opponent’s throat carry after carry is superhuman,” former teammate and nominator Brandon Jacobs said. “He would refuse to do TV interviews without his entire off ensive line standing behind him because would say it wasn’t possible without them. I am honored to have been on the fi eld with a man with such character and class, and he will forever be a hero at Williamsburg.”
McNally Continued from Page 1B
ing, I have the ability to step back onto the technical side and support Gerard, support the technical staff and players. My goal now is to help build a quality team on the fi eld.” McNally grew into an array of roles over the years and the club kept adding to them. McNally, who said FC Cincinnati has changed his life, was happy to take the roles on. Those included dayof-match operations at Nippert Stadium and soccer operations. The training center and the demands of Milford on top of everything else proved to be too much. “It just became apparent throughout the course of this year that not one person can oversee three things of that kind of magnitude,” McNally said. “It’s borderline impossible because you always need to be somewhere else.” McNally will still be a jack-of-alltrades taskmaster for the foreseeable future – he’ll continue to run day-ofmatch operations at Nippert Stadium next season – but the transition into the new post has already started. Part of the club’s training facility is already operational, and McNally will be a more visible presence there, Nijkamp told The Enquirer. Nijkamp described McNally’s job as facilitating success on the pitch. “He did all of this already, but from Downtown, and I think it’s an important change for him to be here now as part of the day-in, day-out in Milford,” Nijkamp said. “Dan was here at the beginning and so he knows where the club is now and where it wants to go. He has a great passion and that makes me very positive to have him on board.” McNally oversaw stadium operations once again Wednesday as FC Cincinnati fell to Atlanta United. It the club’s 22nd loss of its inaugural MLS campaign. As the club’s been battered and jeered this season, FC Cincinnati President Jeff Berding has overseen a be-
Dan McNally, FC Cincinnati's Director of Soccer Operations. , FC CINCINNATI
hind-the-scenes overhaul and build-up to help improve on-fi eld matters. Asked to refl ect on what his past achievements, McNally said he most proud of the environment he helped FC Cincinnati build at Nippert Stadium. Nippert was exclusively known as the home of UC football, but the horseshoe-shaped bowl has taken on new life as a recognizable soccer venue that McNally rates as one of the best in America. “For all the things we did, I think my proudest moment is making sure that when any fan walks into our stadium, they feel a soccer environment,” he said. “People here understand that we’ve made a lot of progress behind the scenes. It’s maybe not progress on the fi eld. That progress will happen as we move into our training facility, as we build our stadium. We’ll kind of see the results of that next year. The Mercy Health Training Center is going to transform the club.”
COMMUNITY PRESS WEST ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ 3B
COMMUNITY NEWS Roller-skating icon elected to Hall-of-Fame Lifetime west side resident Tony Kissing has been elected to the RollerSkating Hall of Fame in Lincoln NE, culminating 50-year career that produced numerous champions and catapulted an upstart local team to national prominence in the 1970s. Induction ceremonies were held in Spokane WA in August and Tony was celebrated locally at The Place, formally Colerain Skateland. A self-described marginal athlete, he combined a love aff air of skating with unconventional training techniques and natural knack to inspire younger athletes. “The key component of our success came from Tony,” said Pam Ivers-Perrino, whose family launched an upstart speed skating team in 1968. “He had already established a reputation of producing winners.” “He also had the unique capacity to create an environment to set goals and go after success at the highest level.” One criterion that paved the way to the Hall of Fame was developing innovating training regimens that helped rewrite the book on maximizing performance. “Many coaches used long-distance skating as their prime method of conditioning and training,” explained Tony, who worked at the United States Postal Service for 35 years following a stint in the military. “I felt that it if skaters could build explosiveness and endurance for sprinting, it would make them more effective in shorter races and relays.” The physics of skating were completely diff erent in the days of “wood and wheels.” Tony also preached the value of “staying on top of your skates” based on body type, strength and style, sacrifi cing speed for added balance in the corners for better overall success. In short order, this explosive, upstart team was dominating the podium at showcases throughout the country in
Tony Kissing with his winning 4-man relay team. PROVIDED
The German Heritage Museum. PROVIDED
Tony Kissing with his grand kids Mollie, Angelina, Maria and Alyssa. PROVIDED
the 1970s. Buoyed by national success, skaters from many other states such and New Jersey and Florida migrated to Cincinnati to take advantage of Tony’s tutelage. But the trophies only tell half the story of Tony’s legacy. Marcia Yager, a 1992 Hall-of-Fame inductee, symbolizes the lasting impact Tony left on his athletes. “There is a lifetime of awards in my life, but left an imprint of concern, kindness and generosity for a little girl that came from a broken home.” Lonely and lost after her father died,
Marcia became became a self-described rink-rat and eventually escalated to national championship status – backed by loans Tony had taken out for transportation, equipment, and a healthy dose of laughter and (sometimes tough) love. “We didn’t care about the national plaques. We wanted one from Tony Kissing. The inscription on mine read, ‘May God give you the strength in life as he did in these races.” Skating was strong in the family roots, as well. Daughter Kathy notched seven national championships, played with the Cincinnati Roller Derby team and coached the junior roller derby team. Son Mark traded in his skates for another avenue of pursuit, serving as a Hamilton County policeman prior to retiring. “I loved all of these kids and they are all winners,” said Tony, whose wife Sandy passed away in 2018. “She was the greatest champion of all, serving as transportation director, psychologist, nurse, and security director,” said Tony, who was often wedged
up against hotel suite doors to keep male members from visiting female team mates at night. In the end, life goes in circles … and some things never change. Gregory Haas
German-American Heritage Month Since October 1989, German-American Heritage Month has been sponsored by the German-American Citizens’ League, which was founded in 1895. The month takes place in October, since the fi rst permanent German settlement in America was established on Oct. 6, 1683 in Germantown, Pennsylvania. This year marks the 30th anniversary year of German Heritage Month. Many of the events will take place at the German Heritage Museum, which was established in 2000 by the GermanAmerican Citizens League, and is located at 4964 West Fork Road, Cincinnati, See COMMUNITY, Page 4B
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4B ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
COMMUNITY NEWS Continued from Page 3B
Ohio 45247. For further information call Kenny Burck, 513-260-0238. Sept. 27 - German-American Heritage Month Kick-off Party at the Sam Adams Taproom in Over-the-Rhine (OTR), 1727 Logan Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202 - 6:00 to 11:00 p.m. Oct. 2 - “German Immigration, Settlement and Infl uences in the Greater Cincinnati Area,” presented by Dr. Don Heinrich Tolzmann, 3:30 p.m. Location: Northern Kentucky University, Department of World Languages and Literatures. Oct. 5 - Annual Genealogy Fair, including the German Genealogy Interest Group, 11:00 to 3:00 p.m. (German genealogy questions answered noon to 2:00 p.m.). Location: Downtown Public Library of Cincinnati & Hamilton County at 8th & Vine Streets. Oct. 10 - “Finding and Translating German Church Records and Newspaper Articles” - Presented by Kenton County Library staff Cierra Earl and Abby Carney, 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. (Registration required at www.kentonlibrary.org/ events or 859-962-4070). Location: Covington (KY) Library (Local History Department), 502 Scott Blvd., Covington, KY 41071. Oct. 12 - “A Biographical Walking Tour of the Mother of God Cemetery,” presented by the Local History & Genealogy staff of the Kenton County Library, 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. Location: Mother of God Cemetery, 3125 Madison Avenue, Ft. Wright, KY 41015. Oct. 13 - “Gerhard Lammers: German Immigrant Church Painter in Cincinnati,” presented by Dann Woellert - 2:00 p.m. Location: German Heritage Museum. There will also be a Civil War encampment by the 9th Ohio Living History Regiment, 1-5 p.m. Oct. 19 - “Cincinnati Germans in the Civil War: The 9th Ohio Volunteer Infantry,” presented by Andrew Houghtaling, 1:00 p.m. Location: James A. Ramage Civil War Museum, 1402 Highland Ave-
nue, Ft. Wright, KY 41011. Oct. 20 - “German Heritage Book Talk & Signing with Dr. Don Heinrich Tolzmann,” 2:00 p.m. Location: German Heritage Museum at West Fork Park. Oct. 23 - “Lunch and Learn: German Immigration to Greater Cincinnati,” presented by Dave Schroeder, Executive Director of the Kenton County Public Library, 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. (Registration required at www.kentonlibrary.org,events or 859-962-4070). Location: Erlanger Brach of the Kenton County (KY) Library, 401 Kenton Lands Road, Erlanger, KY 41018, in the Twain/Clemens Combined Meeting Room. Oct. 24 - “Finding and Translating German Church Records and Newspaper Articles,” presented by Cierra Earl and Abby Carney, 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. (Registration required at www.kentonlibrary.org/events or 859-962-4070). Location: Covington (KY) Library (Local History Department), 502 Scott Blvd., Covington, KY 41071. Oct. 27 - (Sunday) - “Cincinnati’s Berlin Wall Memorial in a GermanAmerican Context.” presented by Dr. Richard E. Schade - 2:00 p.m. Location: German Heritage Museum. Dr. Don Heinrich Tolzmann, German-American Citizens League
Knights of Columbus Knight at the Races set for Oct. 5 The Knights of Columbus Most Holy Rosary Assembly will hold their 30th annual fundraiser on Saturday, Oct. 5, at the Woodlands Reception Center, 9680 Cilley Road in Cleves. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. and dinner is served at 6 p.m. Join the Knights for a fun evening that includes virtual horse racing, oral and silent auctions, split the pot, door prizes and more. Proceeds from this fundraiser will support the charitable projects of the Knights, which include care packages for military personnel, Honor Flights for veterans and outings for veterans in VA hospitals. The Knights also assist area youth by purchasing new fl ags for schools and by
Artist rendering of Price Hill renovation. PROVIDED
supporting Eagle Scout projects. To purchase tickets and for more information, please call Charlie Wilke at (513) 378-8623 or visit http:// www.mhra2170.org/dinner.htm. Tina Geers
Plans for Price Hill Branch renovation revealed It’s been more than a year since the Price Hill Branch Library was forced to close and relocate to the Price Hill Recreation Center due to a damaged ceiling. On Thursday, Sept. 12, was the fi rst time the public had a chance to view the fi nal design for the historic Carnegie branch renovation and the new addition recently approved by the Board of Trustees. Library staff and architects from Fishbeck, Thompson, Carr & Huber, Inc., an engineering, environmental sciences, architecture and construction management fi rm with offi ces in Blue Ash, were on hand to answer questions. This public event comes after many conversations during community forums held earlier this year to uncover
the needs and wants of the branch’s customers. Community input also was gathered last night about some of the design elements for the branch, such as opportunities for public art. “We are pleased to reveal our plans for the exciting new Price Hill Branch,” said Paula Brehm-Heeger, the Eva Jane Romaine Coombe Director of the library. “We’re looking forward to re-opening a renovated, fully accessible branch that can better serve our customers, with quiet adult areas, spaces for children and teens, and more meeting space, while still maintaining the legacy of the building and honoring the community.” The library hopes to break ground in November and to complete the renovation by late 2020. The renovation plans can be viewed at www.cincinnatilibrary.org/nextgenerationlibrary/capitalProjects.asp. Sixty years after its founding, more than 450 staff members in 15 regional offi ces have made Fishbeck one of the premier professional consulting fi rms in the nation. Its core mission is to help See COMMUNITY, Page 7B
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6B ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Camp Washington 2922 Colerain Ave: Odell G Richard Tr to Camper 22 LLC; $50,000 2926 Colerain Ave: Hamilton County Land Reutilization Corporation to Camper 26 LLC; $6,000 2929 Henshaw Ave: Odell G Richard Tr to Camper 29 LLC; $100,000 3077 Henshaw Ave: Equity Trust Co to Keith Jeff; $12,000
Carthage 160 North Bend Rd: Griffin Arthur Lee Jr to Baker David; $25,000
Cheviot 3430 Mayfair Ave: Kruthaupt Douglas C to Pressel Jennifer L; $94,000 3454 Alta Vista Ave: Horwath Michael & Tiffany Bell to Nagel Jacob & Maria L; $105,000 3607 Puhlman Ave: G W Investment Group LLC to Romelli Sophia M; $106,500 3617 Puhlman Ave: Bach Ann Alison to Durban Ryan E; $109,900 3910 Taft Ave: Wilford Jerome S & Catherine K to Bowling David M; $102,000 4002 Harrison Ave: Hlb Investments LLC to Hubbard George; $100,000 4106 Harrison Ave: 1019 Linn LLC to Sorensen Diane E; $60,750
Crosby Township Macarthur Ct: Fort Scott Project I LLC C/o Ddc Mgmt to Nvr Inc; $45,970 11693 Hawk Dr: Bauman Malinda to Carr Justin & Misty; $370,000
Delhi Township 201 Jupiter Dr: Harris Kayla S & Nicholas P Steins to Rardon Cole; $145,100 4392 Glenhaven Rd: Zeilman Brenda S to Conrex Ml Sma 2019-01 Operating Company LLC; $125,000 519 Greenwell Ave: Whited Jennifer M to Laird-kohner Victoria; $101,000 5504 Foley Rd: Hartig Barbara to Engel Chris M; $175,000 579 Judy Ln: Wagner Brian K to Cfaftsman Properties LLC; $55,000 6372 Timberhill Ct: Tracy Kevin O & Denise S to Dennett Mitchell J & Emily R; $279,500 6405 Simon Dr: Reher Esther B Tr to Moellinger Brian M & Maxine A; $195,000 956 Willow Lake Ct: Sutthoff Marie L to Dattilo Steven & Kathy; $215,000
East Price Hill 1108 Elberon Ave: Sonny & Associates LLC to Covington Sonya; $79,900 1256 Fairbanks Ave: Yolo Investments LLC to Cruz Damian & Belsi Perez; $32,000 2601 Eighth St: Tene Yair to Vogt Properties LLC; $155,000 3011 Murdock Ave: Save Me LLC to Lester Oliver P; $262,000 564 Fairbanks Ave: Richardson Brian S to Lasisi Wahab; $52,900 725 Woodlawn Ave: 725 Woodlawn Family Lp to Ndln Enterprises LLC; $22,000 729 Considine Ave: Slusser Helen Maureen to Turel Shir; $55,000 810 Matson Pl: Conn Ryann J to Knoppe Kim R Tr; $130,000
Green Township Mary Joy Ct: Inverness Group Inc to Tomlinson John A & Jane A; $343,190 1523 Anderson Ferry Rd: Cornett Andrea R Tr to Neville Aimee L; $265,000 1857 Leona Dr: England Denver to Hunt Vanessa; $51,000 1867 Sylved Ln: Weglage Mary Jane Tr to Smith Elizabeth A; $145,000 2077 Townhill Dr: Mills David P to Herdeman Alexander; $125,000 2109 Faywood Ave: Winch Stephen A & Kathleen A to Winch Andrew S & Dionne R; $75,000 2592 Westbourne Dr: Telles Mark C & Kathleen L to Mitchell Thomas R; $194,900 2592 Westbourne Dr: Telles Mark C & Kathleen L to Mitchell Thomas R; $194,900 2672 Ebenezer Rd: Schult Robert E & Carol L to Clark Robert Jr & Nicole; $330,000 3165 Anniston Dr: Flick Robert P to Sullivan Megan D & John; $250,000 3215 Bellacre Ct: Richmond Jeremy to Medellin Allison M & Harold D Guy; $219,900 3301 Boca Ln: Wolf Kenneth B & Debra L to Edwards Stephanie Constance & Robert John Iii; $255,000 3335 Emerald Lakes Dr: Mundstock Bradley A to Sant Andrew Franklin; $80,000 3483 Markay Ct: Fuller Marilyn M to Graber Justin M &; $177,500 3626 Krierview Dr: Leuenberger Eric Tr to Kern Dana A; $148,500
3643 Frondorf Ave: Benson Jessica L & Barbara L Jasper to Bricker Mark Ogden Jr; $148,500 3706 Monfort Heights Dr: Poulin Suzanne E to Vo Phung Kim; $168,500 3717 Meadowview Dr: Davis Jasmine M & Colin S to Stout Gregg Giovanni; $146,000 3750 Powner Rd: Gallo Richard M & Donna M to Riechman Eric; $274,500 3883 Virginia Ct: Kunkel Clifford H to A & N Property Solutions LLC; $48,500 3893 Weirman Ave: Medellin Allison M to Bowman Erica & Christopher P Reed; $133,000 4310 Regency Ridge Ct: Brown John W to Schmidt Jane Stacey; $121,000 5070 Sumter Ave: Gagnon Courtney M to Couch Jessica B; $125,000 5191 North Bend Crossing: Marois Marie to Tognozzi Elizabeth L & Albert R; $135,000 5332 Meadow Walk Ln: Mullikin Barbara to Danzinger Albert F & Mary Jo; $110,000 5340 Laurelridge Ln: Tidd Kevin M & Kristi L to Lane Brian P & Ashley R; $408,000 5448 Robert Ave: Kube Arden M to P & D Investments; $107,500 5564 Raceview Ave: Hoamtd Real Estate LLC to Guy Elazar Real Estate LLC; $45,000 5600 Biscayne Ave: Niemiller Kristin to May Marc R; $120,000 5687 Windview Dr: Pennymac Loan Services LLC to Stautberg Robert Joseph III; $113,500 5890 Calmhaven Dr: Cromer Timothy A to Cassidy Anne C & Edward L Badinghaus Jr; $225,000 5934 Harrison Ave: Kruse Matthew R to Kruse Ryan T; $65,000 6046 Flyer Dr: Mckenna Mary Sue to Visiliou John; $85,000 6076 Lagrange Ln: Schmidt Edward H & Connie L to Ruch Alyson; $169,000 6421 Bridgetown Rd: Volz Ann Ruth Tr & Pamela Lee Noe Tr to Burwell Robert R & Pamela S; $185,000 7082 Leibel Rd: Hoehn Mark J & Diane M to Schroeder Jodie P & Kristofer P; $252,900 7125 Tressel Wood Dr: Goodin Keith & Jeanine to Gold Joshua C & Jasmine N; $325,000 7180 Ruwes Oak Dr: Sullivan Megan D & John to Brauch Amy Marie & Jacob Warren; $279,900 7740 Bridge Point Dr: Friedmann Elizabeth A to Stephan Nicole L; $131,500
Harrison Springfield Dr: Welsh Development Co Inc to Nvr Inc; $52,532 Whitewater Trails Blvd: Welsh Development Co Inc to Nvr Inc; $68,291 10502 West Rd: Case Carrie L to Bojack James Matthew Tr; $99,900 1088 South Branch: Westhaven Development LLC to Nvr Inc; $67,478 1176 South Branch: Westhaven Development LLC to Nvr Inc; $67,478 1188 South Branch: Nvr Inc to Jeffrey J & Maureen D Elller Revocable Trust The; $333,140 1487 Deters Dr: Westhaven Development LLC to Nvr Inc; $53,000 225 Country Trace Dr: Slevin Connie to Stoner Karrie & Dennis Dick; $237,500 519 Clayton Ct: Carr Justin & Misty to Ross Timothy J Jr & Mackenzie C; $257,500 540 State St: Sumser Irene F to Ferneding Nikki Tr; $90,000
Harrison Township 10485 Lees Creek Rd: Stoinoff Robert A Jr & Barbara A to Re Rachel L & Kevin D; $374,900 10499 Sugardale Dr: Skeen Rikki L to Sharf Andrew & Kiley; $207,000 8021 Dry Fork Rd: Wenger Daniel J to Fiedeldey Darin B & Tonya M; $58,000
Lower Price Hill
5131 Zion Rd: Meister David to Stuteville Thomas E; $140,000 5200 East Miami River Rd: Mcmurray Walter E & Shirley A to Huff Jami J; $48,000 5418 Cowell Ave: Four50 LLC to Mullins Sheena L; $114,000 5459 Miamicrest Ave: Ross Anna B to Campbell Arthur G & Paula J; $15,000 7727 Wesselman Rd: Dennison Corey to Cole Calvin William Jr.; $65,000 7778 Jandaracres Dr: Ctr Partnership Lp C/o Altus Group to 3r Re Holdings LLC; $11,545,000 7800 Jandaracres Dr: Ctr Partnership Lp C/o Altus Group to 3r Re Holdings LLC; $11,545,000 7800 Jandaracres Dr: Ctr Partnership Lp C/o Altus Group to 3r Re Holdings LLC; $11,545,000 7800 Jandaracres Dr: Ctr Partnership Lp C/o Altus Group to 3r Re Holdings LLC; $11,545,000 8357 Macy Ln: Cittadino Mark E & Maggie M to Telles Mark & Kathleen; $380,000 8610 Bridgetown Rd: Sparks Robert A to Birhanzl John C & Stephanie A; $195,000 8610 Bridgetown Rd: Sparks Robert A to Birhanzl John C & Stephanie A; $195,000
North Bend Ridge Ave: Niehaus Douglas A & Beverly A to Mih Holdings LLC; $46,650 29 Ridge Ave: Kayser Jerry L to Emmett Patrick J; $26,000 9 Ridge Ave: Niehaus Douglas A & Beverly A to Mih Holdings LLC; $46,650
South Cumminsville 3828 Llewellyn Ave: Adams Realty Group LLC to 3828 Llewellyn LLC; $38,000
South Fairmount Radcliff Dr: Fraternal Order Of Police Queen City Lodge No 69 Property Holdings LLC to Cincinnati Museum Association; $139,947
West End 1106 Dayton St: Boudinot Real Estate LLC to Blackfoot Properties LLC; $90,000 1816 Baymiller St: Calloway Tyger to Khan Rameez R; $15,000 415 Court St: Moksin Holdings Plus to Echternacht Ryan & Grace Ooi; $289,000 443 Dayton St: Grax Holding Company LLC to Mecklenborg Jacob; $8,500
West Price Hill 1162 Morado Dr: Weiler Angela M to Bre Capital LLC; $73,100 1173 Morado Dr: Smith Joseph Howard to Courage Properties LLC; $62,000 1664 First Ave: Smith Sandra to Wilmington Savings Fund Society Fsb; $21,000 3903 Clerose Cr: Myers Clifford C to Suter Wallis Courtney; $80,000 3926 Clerose Cr: Daniel Properties LLC to Oaks Property Group LLC; $61,000 4109 Vinedale Ave: Daniel Properties LLC to Oaks Property Group LLC; $36,000 4116 Vinedale Ave: Daniel Properties LLC to Oaks Property Group LLC; $56,000 4124 St Williams Ave: Macke Michael to Wolf Kevin M & Meghan; $132,600 4318 Eighth St: Stroud Anthony W Tr to Vb One LLC; $48,000 4553 Midland Ave: Rehab to Rent Inc to Lockwood Jordan; $92,900 627 Trenton Ave: Daniel Properties LLC to Oaks Prop-
See TRANSFERS , Page 7B
2139 Storrs St: Davis Deborah to Rice Kevin; $16,790
Miami Township Buckridge Dr: Kma Westside Development Inc to Fischer Single Family Homes Iv LLC; $83,210 Bridgetown Rd: Ctr Partnership Lp C/o Altus Group to 3r Re Holdings LLC; $11,545,000 Bridgetown Rd: Ctr Partnership Lp C/o Altus Group to 3r Re Holdings LLC; $11,545,000 Rittenhouse Rd: Meckstroth Ralph W Tr to Sturgill Justin & Brittany D; $73,900 2656 Gallia Dr: Freeman Paul W & Dolores R to Emerson Scott & Elizabeth; $190,000 2676 Darke Ct: Lambers Robert J & Barbara E to Batsakis Panteleimon & Eleni; $245,000 2742 Buckridge Dr: Fischer Single Family Homes Iv LLC to Gadd Ronda S & Donald A Blair; $469,405 3510 Chestnut Park Ln: Heltman Sara J to Segbers Michael & Deborah; $135,000 3670 Chestnut Park Ln: Heis Melvin R to Davis Amy Kathleen; $142,000 3840 Bear Ln: Grove Mary Lucinda K Tr to Fox Laura Kaye & Drew Allen; $285,000 4653 Schinkal Rd: Moorman Michael C & Margaret L to Nash Matthew C &; $179,000
PUZZLE ANSWERS T H E T O P
B A Z A A R
M F I A C M A A B C S
L U L U
P I N T
A M O R
S T R I K E Z O N E S F R A M E R A T E
P E A L F O M I E S T T E S R E R D A N P I R N E Y E L G E E R E S
N O T I M E T O S P A R E
S H I N E R E A T E R S
E R S E A L T O
F W I O E R D N E W E L P P A I S N O O T E V V E A N P T I F N U G L
R A W D E A L T I E S I N E T E
U P P I N G
S P I N
A R E S L U M P V E I L R Y L I M E S I T E A G O D Z D I T E C I N C A E D P I L D U P E S C I T I F S E N T O U E T E N N R O A D G N S W I E R T E O V O I N O P A R T W I I G M A C N E A R E G S D
A S A P
L A N E C L O S U R E
P I S T O L
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O D E S S A
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COMMUNITY PRESS WEST ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ 7B
COMMUNITY NEWS
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Continued from Page 4B
Continued from Page 6B
people realize their visions while benefi ting society. Lisa Mauch, Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County
erty Group LLC; $53,000
Westwood 2879 Cyclorama Dr: Scales Orlando Jr & Ashley to Scharff Hellen O & Joseph; $205,000 2917 Westknolls Ln: Worthington Jeffrey P to Oaks Property Group LLC; $51,000 2923 Mignon Ave: Daniel Properties LLC to Oaks Property Group LLC; $59,000 3077 Glenmore Ave: Griffiths David J to Williams Michael A; $139,000 3084 Worthington Ave: Daniel Properties LLC to Oaks Property Group LLC; $46,000 3088 Worthington Ave: Daniel Properties LLC to Oaks Property Group
Tour guide to discuss the history of beer brewing in Cincinnati Michael L. Ward, an Over the Rhine Brewery District tour guide, will discuss the history of beer brewing in Cincinnati. Wednesday, Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. Westwood First Presbyterian Church (3011 Harrison Avenue - rear entrance and parking off of Koenig Avenue). All are welcome. Liz Kissel, Westwood Historical Society
The thirty-eighth season of the Westwood First Concert Series gets underway on Sunday, Oct. 13, with a debut performance by 5KBrass. 5KBrass began as a group of friends from two universities (UC-CCM and Miami University) coming together to play great brass music. The quintet’s name derives from the fact that the members’ hometowns are 5,000 (hence, 5K) miles apart and celebrates the role that music plays in bringing people together from all parts of the globe. 5KBrass will open our series’ 20192020 season with a fl ash of brass from composers Leonard Bernstein, Andre Previn and more. The Westwood First Concert Series was established to provide quality concerts in a variety of musical styles for the enjoyment and enrichment of our community. All concerts are off ered free and are held in the beautiful sanctuary of West-
Whitewater Township Bluejayvie w Dr: The Drees Company to Haenning Barry J & Elizabeth M; $286,150 Hamilton Cleves Rd: Two G Holdings LLC to Mea Brinkmann LLC; $165,000 8955 Bluejay View Dr: Drees Company The to Bookwalter Dianne; $257,472
5KBrass will open the 38th season of Westwood First Concert Series. PROVIDED
wood First Presbyterian Church, 3011 Harrison Avenue, 45211. Through the years, the series has grown in popularity and regularly attracts a regional Greater Cincinnati audience. The thirty-eighth season of the Westwood First Concert Series features the following performers in concert: ❚ Oct. 13, 3 p.m:. KBrass ❚ Nov. 10, 3 p.m.: Cincinnati Youth Choir ❚ Jan. 26, 2020, 3 p.m.: Stacey Woolley, violin and Michael Chertock, piano ❚ March 15, 3 p.m.: Westwood First Chancel Choir/Brahms’ Requiem ❚ May 3, 3 p.m.: Heather MacPhail, organ & piano and Friends For more information about the 20192020 season, visit wfpc.org or call 513661-6846, ext. 101. Diane Heilmann, Westwood First Concert Series
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LLC; $46,000 3268 Buell St: Stroud Anthony W Tr to Vb One LLC; $56,500 3308 Broadwell Ave: Stoud Anthony W Tr to Vb One LLC; $55,000 3334 Lakeview Ave: Gibson Dameisha C to Guerrero Catherine; $92,000 3337 Wunder Ave: Brunette Jane E to Burns Patrick; $80,000 3358 Hanna Ave: Papp Jordan to Richter Samantha M; $99,000
8B ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
SCHOOL NEWS Oak Hills soccer teams raise funds with Games for the Cause Oak Hills High School soccer teams are playing with a deeper purpose this fall as they host Highlander Games for the Cause. The varsity, JV and JVB teams are partnering with Pink Ribbon Girls to raise funds supporting patients with breast and reproductive cancers. At games against Elder and Mercy McAuley high schools, the soccer teams raised more than $6,500 through t-shirt sales, raffl e baskets and baked good sales. Oak Hills volleyball and football teams will also take part in the “Pink Games,” which help fund meals, transportation to treatment and family support for those battling cancer. During the games, the teams honor cancer survivors and the families of those who passed away from the disease. Krista Ramsey, Oak Hills Local Schools
Homework Help at Library locations important factor in students’ success The Library provides free homework help to students in kindergarten through eighth grades at select branch libraries in the afternoons during the school year. Homework Helpers at these locations assist students with homework assignments and provide skills-building assistance on any subject. In addition, homework help and skill building is available seven days a week at the Main Library in the William Hueneke Homework Center or online at http://bit.ly/cincylibraryonlinehomework. During the 2018-2019 school year, more than 10,000 students received homework assistance. The average age was 9 and the average grade level was fourth grade. The average amount of time a Home-
The Oak Hills boys soccer teams hosted a Game for the Cause on Aug. 24 and raised more than $4,000 to support patients with breast or reproductive cancers. PROVIDED
Oak Hills varsity, JV and JVB girls soccer teams honored cancer survivors and raised more than $2,500 for Pink Ribbon Girls at their Sept. 7 soccer matches. PROVIDED
work Helper spent with each student was 47 minutes. Sixty-one schools were served by Homework Help locations. Homework Help Schedule (September 2019–May 2020) Bond Hill Branch: Monday–Thursday, 3-6 p.m. Cheviot Branch: Monday and Wednesday 2:30-5:30 p.m.; Tuesday and Thursday 3-6 p.m. College Hill Branch: Monday–Thursday, 2:15-5:15 p.m. Corryville Branch: Monday–Thursday, 3-6 p.m. Deer Park Branch: Monday–Thursday, 3-6 p.m. Elmwood Place Branch: Monday– Thursday, 3-6 p.m. Forest Park Branch: Monday, 4–8 p.m.; Tuesday, 6-8 p.m.; Wednesday, 3:30-6 p.m.; Thursday, 4:30-8 p.m. Groesbeck Branch: Monday–Thursday, 3-6 p.m. Mt. Healthy Branch: Monday–Thursday, 3-6 p.m. North Central Branch: Monday– Thursday, 3:30-6:30 p.m. Northside Branch: Monday 3:30-7 p.m.; Tuesday 3:30-6:30 p.m.; Wednesday and Thursday 3:30-6 p.m. Pleasant Ridge Branch: Monday– Thursday, 3-6 p.m. Reading Branch: Monday–Thursday, 3-6 p.m. West End Branch: Monday–Thurs-
day, 3-6 p.m. Westwood Branch: Monday–Thursday, 3-6 p.m. William Hueneke Homework Center, Downtown Main Library: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 3-7 p.m.; Thursday and Friday, 3-6 p.m.; Saturday, 2-6 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m. Branches that are announcing their schedules soon are: Avondale Branch, Covedale Branch, Madisonville Branch, Miami Township Branch, Oakley Branch, Price Hill Branch, Sharonville Branch, St. Bernard Branch, and the Walnut Hills Branch. For more information, contact the branch or call 513-369-6900. Visit www.CincinnatiLibrary.org/ Main/HomeworkBranches.html. Lisa Mauch, Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County
Caldecott Medal-winning author visits Oakdale Elementary Caldecott Medal-winning illustrator and author David Shannon visited Oakdale Elementary School on Sept. 12 to talk about drawing and writing. His children’s books – including “No, David!” – are favorites of Oakdale students, and Shannon left signed copies of his new book, “Mr. Nogginbody Gets a Hammer,” in the school library. Krista Ramsey, Oak Hills Local Schools
Get fitted
Noted children's book author David Shannon was a hit with Oakdale Elementary students when he spoke to them about writing and drawing on Sept. 12. PROVIDED
Mercy McAuley senior Erin Toon National Merit semifi nalist Mercy McAuley senior Erin Toon has been named a Semifi nalist in the 2020 National Merit Scholarship Program. Erin is among the approximately 16,000 Semifi nalists across the country who now have the opportunity to continue in the comToon petition for some 7,600 National Merit Scholarships worth more than $31 million that will be off ered next spring. Erin was one of the over 1.5 million juniors in about 21,000 high schools who entered the 2020 National Merit Scholarship Program by taking the 2018 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test, which served as an initial screen of program entrants. The nationwide pool of Semifi nalists, representing less than one percent of U.S. See SCHOOLS , Page 9B
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COMMUNITY PRESS WEST ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ 9B
SCHOOL NEWS Continued from Page 8B
high school seniors, includes the highest-scoring entrants in each state. Erin participates in Academic Team, Campus Ministry Team, Global High School, and Student Library Assistants. She is also part of Mercy McAuley’s Women Lead Engineering Program. Erin plans to pursue a degree and career in engineering. Erin attended Bridgetown Middle School and belongs to St. Bernard parish in Taylor Creek. She is the daughter of Scott and Jamie Toon. Patty Thelen, Mercy McAuley High School
Delshire Elementary has bigger roles for dads It started in the drop-off lines before school, and now it’s spreading to Delshire Elementary School’s hallways, cafeteria and playgrounds – fathers and grandfathers greeting students, complimenting and encouraging them. It’s part of Delshire’s new WATCH D.O.G.S. (Dads of Great Students) program, a national initiative that gets fathers more involved at their children’s schools and puts more positive male role models in front of students. “We’re not here to regulate; we’re here to motivate – to give pats on the backs to kids who are polite or do good deeds,” says dad Tyler Oldham, a founding member. “We’ll be that presence in the school, in the hallway, volunteering wherever we can, and building a sense of community among dads.” Delshire WATCH D.O.G.S. kicked off their service Sept. 7 by welcoming i students to school and passing out fl yers to their fathers and grandfathers. Krista Ramsey, Oak Hills Local Schools
Mount class urges Congress to support global nutrition Students in Mount St. Joseph Uni-
Delshire Elementary School grandfather Lee Hill explains the new WATCH D.O.G.S program, which encourages males to be positive role models, to parent Marc Brown. PROVIDED
Mount St. Joseph students are writing letters to Congress in support of the Global Nutrition Resolution so more children can receive life-saving food aid. PROVIDED
versity’s Human Rights course are living up to Abraham Lincoln’s words “government of the people, by the people.” The class is urging Congress to support Global Nutrition programs that fi ght child hunger. The students are writing letters to Congress urging their representatives to support the Global Nutrition Resolutions (H. Res 189 and S. 260) that make fi ghting world hunger a top priority. They hope to encourage area representatives Steve Chabot and Brad Wenstrup, along with Sen. Rob Portman to support the resolution. Sen. Sherrod Brown cosponsored the resolution. Bread for the World is helping the students distribute their letters to Congress. With world hunger on the rise for the 3rd straight year, according to the UN, malnutrition is threatening millions of children. If small children do not gain access to enough food, they will suff er lasting physical and mental damage. Charities like Save the Children, UNICEF, Catholic Relief Services, the World Food Program, Mercy Corps, Action Against Hunger and others depend on this funding. Wars and climate change have caused so many hunger emergencies in Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Haiti, the Sahel of Africa, Afghanistan and many others. Infant feeding and school lunch pro-
grams are desperately needed to save children from malnutrition. The Human Rights course, which emphasizes the health of children and mothers, is taught by Dr. Jennifer Morris who authored the book “The Origins of UNICEF.” For more information contact the Mount Humanities Department. William Lambers
Rapid Run honor students learn how to lead Rapid Run National Junior Honor Society offi cers learned what it takes to be good leaders – and what it means to be a team – when they took part in a leadership workshop Sept. 9. Staff members from Camp Joy introduced the students to exercises that built trust, communication, cooperation and leadership skills. The NJHS offi cers handle many responsibilities at their school, including handling announcements, running their own meetings, and choosing and planning the school’s community service projects. Three student leaders – Josie Adamson, Lillian Hardesty and Ava Wildenmann – shared their training experiences and the honor society’s plans for the year at the Sept. 9 Oak Hills Board of Education meeting.
Rapid Run Middle School National Junior Honor Society members spoke on their leadership training and goals for the year at the Sept. 9 Oak Hills Board of Education Meeting. From left: NJHS advisor Meredith Stoller, Josie Adamson, Lillian Hardesty, Ava Wildenmann and Principal Geoff Harold. PROVIDED
“Not only are these students leaders of the school and get good grades, but they’re also kind,” said teacher Meredith Stoller, a NJHS adviser with colleague Marie Argo. “This community really cares about helping and doing good. I see it all the time.” Krista Ramsey, Oak Hills Local Schools
Mercy McAuley High School holds Grade School Volleyball Night on Oct. 8 Mercy McAuley High School, located at 6000 Oakwood Avenue in College Hill, will hold a Grade School Volleyball Night on Tuesday, Oct. 8. The varsity game begins at 6:30 p.m., when the Mercy McAuley Wolves will take on Mason. Grade school girls who attend will receive free admission, will enjoy snacks and giveaways, and will learn cheers with Mercy McAuley students. Any questions can be directed to Alli Miazga, Recruitment & Admissions Coordinator, at (513) 681-1800 x2272 or miazgaa@mercymcauley.org. Patty Thelen, Mercy McAuley High School
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10B ❚ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS WEST
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 6B
No. 0922 GET YOUR MIND OUT OF THE GUTTER
1
BY ANDREW KINGSLEY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Andrew Kingsley is a 2019 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania with a master’s degree in education. His thesis was on how ninth-grade boys learn to think about aspects of identity such as gender, class and race through literature. This month he began teaching middle and high school English at Riverdale Country School in the Bronx. This is Andrew’s 16th crossword for The Times, and his first Sunday. — W.S.
44 Zip 1 Cookbook amt. 45 “Way to go, team!” 5 “Careful where you 48 Fashion brand with a watch this,” in emails rhinoceros logo 9 Wonder Woman foe 49 Feature of many a 13 Canned brand state flag 17 “The ____ U Give” 50 Acclaimed 2017 (2018 biography subtitled film) “The Man, the 18 Pro Football Hall of Dictator, and the Fame locale Master 19 Sugar serving of Terror” 20 Claimed 51 Childish comeback 21 Pound who wrote 53 Diplomacy “Literature is news 55 Called for that stays news” 56 Major accidents 22 Piece of cake? 58 Taiwanese computer 23 Prop for a belly giant dancer 59 ____ bull 24 “As I Lay Dying” 61 Hoodwinks father 25 Something big in 63 “King Kong” co-star 1950s autodom 64 Quattroporte and 27 ____ Lane, home of GranTurismo the Muffin Man 66 Ballpark with the 31 Marine mollusks that Home Run Apple cling to rocks 68 Are loath to 33 Symbol of strength 70 Issued 34 666, perhaps 71 1980s TV ET 36 Mimic 74 Emperor who, in 37 Yahoo!, but not actuality, played the “Yahoo!” lyre, not the violin 38 Trig calculation 75 Suffix in Suffolk 39 It’s a first 77 Lady Vols’ home: 41 F.D.R.’s job-creating Abbr. agcy. 78 Sound investment? 42 Film monster 81 Let the air out? originally intended as a metaphor 83 Posted warning near for nuclear weapons mountains 86 Lead-in to bargain Online subscriptions: Today’s or deal puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, 87 Actress Foy of nytimes.com/crosswords Netflix’s “The ($39.95 a year). Crown”
90 Notable Nixon gesture 91 Guzzles 93 Fort ____ (where Billy the Kid was killed) 94 More streaked, as marble 96 Principles 97 Eight things that most spiders have 98 Barack Obama’s mother 99 Lacto-____-vegetarian 100 Black 101 Hole number 103 Vaulted 105 It’s bedazzling 107 Stopper, of a sort 110 N.A.A.C.P. ____ Award 112 It’s a tragedy when seen in close-up but a comedy in the long shot, per Charlie Chaplin 114 Co-star of 2011’s “Bridesmaids” 115 Home of The Herald 117 Memo taker 118 Flanged fastener 119 Promgoer’s concern, maybe 120 John of “The Addams Family” 121 Ring bearers? 122 It’s not a good look 123 Handbook info, for short 124 Doctors’ orders
AC R O S S
RELEASE DATE: 9/29/2019
DOWN
1 Upstart’s goal 2 Istanbul’s Grand ____
3 Perfect places for bowlers to aim? 4 Ring 5 Comment when you need a serious comeback at the end of a bowling game? 6 What a slug may leave behind? 7 Bygone cry of outrage 8 “You got that right!” 9 ____ Singer (“Annie Hall” protagonist) 10 French way 11 Estevez of “The Breakfast Club” 12 Whether to aim at 7 or 10, in bowling? 13 “Chop-chop!” 14 Disappointing news for a bowler? 15 Colt, maybe 16 City in Texas or Ukraine 26 Forces (upon) 28 Short end of the stick 29 Raising 30 Prepared 32 Smoky agave spirit 35 Big advertising catchword 37 Police rank: Abbr. 40 Like some poetry 43 “You didn’t fool me!” 46 Geographical anagram of ASLOPE 47 Bring on 49 Material found in countertops 52 Birthstone of some Scorpios 53 Close kin, casually 54 Lotus-____ (figures in the “Odyssey”)
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73 Pace at which bowlers complete their games? 76 “Wheel of Fortune” option 78 Hip bowling enthusiasts? 79 Go from one state to another? 80 “Family Feud” option 82 Like some car air fresheners 84 Action-packed 85 What people who agree speak with
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56 Stroked 57 Code for the busiest airport in Australia 60 ____ blanc 62 Niña companion 65 Projected, as a film 67 First word across in the world’s first crossword (1913) 69 Relates 70 Director Leone of spaghetti westerns 71 Pre-K group? 72 Knockout
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86 Like breast-cancer awareness ribbons 88 Three-____ (long movies, once) 89 Highland language 91 Mix up 92 Changed like Ophelia in “Hamlet” 94 Modern activity banned in most high schools 95 Rodeo activity 101 Ben & Jerry’s buy 102 Beloved: Lat.
116
104 Adele, voicewise 106 Quite a long time 108 Friendly femme 109 Bowlers’ targets … 10 of which can be found appropriately arranged in this puzzle 111 “Gosh!” 113 When Bastille Day occurs 114 Major operation? 116 Prefix with -morphic
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SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 μ WEST - COMMUNITY μ 1C
Classifieds cincinnati.com
HOMES
JOBS
To place your ad visit: cincinnati.com/classifieds or search: classifieds
Homes of Distinction
UA Test Consultant. Advantage Tech Resc, Cin OH and throughout US. Test ID & Act Dir creation, maintnce & trblshting w/ Access Reqs Tool, Web Admin Rpting Portal & brokerage database. Genrtng UAT quar test exec & utilization report by dvlpin Excel Macro & SQL queries on brokerage platform flwng to invstmnt mang platform. Data staging for order exec. Accts seeding & setup; Comms & tsting apps. Req BS in any STEM fld w/ / 5yrs exp or MS in STEM w/3. See full desc & apply online https://apply.Advantageresourcing.com/ (Search Job# 545898/ UA Test Consultant).
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DELHI TWP.
WESTERN HILLS
5311 RAWHIDE COURT
AV SP AIL AC AB E LE
BO BUY UG ER HT
The Deutsch Team just helped these first time home buyers purchase a home they fell in love with. Looking for just the right place to call home? Call us, we’ll help you find it. Tom Deutsch, Jr.
513-460-5302
CE-0000709895
OTR
3673 CHESTNUT PARK LN. #8
VA NEW LU E
The Deutsch Team just SOLD this condo. We have lots of buyers looking for condos, call us if you are thinking of selling soon.
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Homes for Sale-Ohio
The General Services Department for the City of Fort Thomas is currently accepting applications for MECHANIC; responsible for City fleet management as well as maintenance of mechanical equipment and supplies. Successful candidate will have H.S. diploma and experience in equipment operations, supplemented by extensive experience in auto mechanics; or any combination of education, training and experience which provides the desired knowledge, skills, and abilities. Possession of personal tool inventory is preferred. Applications are available online or at the City Building. Submit applications and resume to Kevin Barbian, General Services Director, 130 N. Ft. Thomas Ave., Ft. Thomas, KY 41075. Applicants must possess a valid drivers license. The City of Ft. Thomas offers excellent benefits including fully paid health and dental insurance, state retirement program, holiday and vacation leave. The position will remain open until filled. The City of Fort Thomas is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Stop by and see this loft style condo, includes a balcony and garage. You’ll love the location, convenience, and ease of living in the urban setting. Call Tom for more information. Tom Deutsch, Jr.
513-460-5302
CE-0000709900
NOW HIRING CITY MECHANIC
1150 VINE ST. #23
EN Y OP NDA SU
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Great small space available for lease, 600 sq.ft., used to be a salon, good start up opportunity for new business, off street parking & traffic visibility. Call today. Tom Deutsch, Jr.
West Shell
513-460-5302
CE-0000709897
513-460-5302
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Homes for Sale-Ohio
Homes for Sale-Ohio
Real Estate
Rentals
great places to live... All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap or familial status or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newpaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566 H.O.M.E. (Housing Opportunities Made Equal) 513-721-4663
CHECKOUTCLASSIFIED online at cincinnati.com
OPEN SATURDAY 12-1:30
Covedale - 5211 Highview 2 Bdrm/1 ba $103,900 Dir: Cleves Warsaw to Beechmeadow to L on st. H-1228
OPEN SUNDAY 12-2
Colerain Township: First time home-buyer or investor’s dream income = $1,000/month net after insurance property taxes and mortgage - NW local schools - 4-5 large bedrooms - 2 baths - Re-modeled Beautiful re-finished floors Newer major items with transferable warranties Home warranty offered by seller - Listed for $115,000 OPEN HOUSE: Sunday, 9/22 1pm-4pm - 9198 Pippin Road (Extra parking across street Stone Creek Kennels or Cornwall Street) 513-236-3406 // 513-608-2179
OPEN SUNDAY 1-2:30
Westwood - 3241 Stanhope 3 Bdrm/2.5 ba $138,500 Dir: Glenmore to Schwartze to Stanhope. H-1227
Harrison - 142 Timepiece 2 Bdrm/2.5 ba $199,900 Dir: Harrison Ave. to Lyness to Legacy Community to Timepiece. H-1165
PETS & STUFF
RIDES
Cincinnati Low Income, Section 8 Apartments. Affordable Housing, Rent Based on Income. 2-3BR. Call 513-929-2402. Ebcon Inc. Mgt. Equal Opportunity Housing
FT. THOMAS. 1 & 2 BDRM APTS & 1 BDRM TOWNHOMES 859-441-3158 HARRISON Remodeled Deluxe 1 & 2BR, $610-$685, d/w, a/c, balc, No pets. Sec. dep. 513-574-4400
Cincinnati Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing
Colerain, 2BR, heat/water pd. Carpet, balc, A/C, No sect. 8. No dogs. $300 dep. Rent $795. 513-304-5577
MT. LOOKOUT 1 & 2 BDRM Grandin Bridge Apartments 513-871-6419
GOT EXTRA STUFF? Put it up for sale. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
CHECK OUT CLASSIFIED online at cincinnati.com
Bridgetown - Outstanding 4 bdrm 3 ½ ba 2 sty on cul de sac st. Fin LL w w/o to ingr pool w/outside bar! Side entry gar! New mech! $369,900 H-9997
Bridgetown - Private wooded 2.6 acres on Benken Ln! Beautiful setting next to the new Green Twp park. Soil & site evaluation for sewer is att $69,900 H-9889
Cheviot - Exciting business opportunity to run a restaurant, bar or entertainment facility. Existing business up for sale with Real Estate. $179,900 H-9916
Cheviot - 2 Family in super convenient location. Separate furnaces, 1- 2 bedroom + 1 -1bedroom. Value Priced $72,000 H-1214
Jeanne Rieder
Mike Wright
Sylvia Kalker
Jeanne Rieder
Doug Rolfes
HoetingWisselDattilo
Mike Wright
Cleves - Move right in! 3 bedroom brick ranch.Updates include: kitchen,bath,hdwd flrs,A/C, roof and paint. Won’t Last! $116,900 H-1188
Colerain - Nice 2 stry, 2200+SF 4 bd, 4 ba, 1st fl porcln tile, FR w/custom concrt Faus fin/ bon rm. Lrg Mstr bd w/att ba. $199,900 H-1210
Covedale - Very nice 3 bdrm, 2-full, 2–half bath 2 sty.Renovated, open fl plan. Master Bath suite, 2nd fl laundry. Ready to move in. $159,900 H-1211
Delhi - Tudor style 2 sty with 3 bdrms, 2.5 baths, mast bd on 1st & 2nd flr. 1st flr FR & laundry. Den & office area. Lots of storage.1.5AC lot.$275,000 H-176
Delhi - Nice 3bd 2 full ba Ranch on cul de sac. Updates thru out. Lg eat-in kit, fin LL, priv fcnced yrd, ovrszd gar, winds 10, roof 15, HVAC 18. $134,900 H-1231
Delhi - Ranch on quiet culdesac! 3 bd, 1 car att gar, full bsmt, cov rear patio & lg yd. Near park, schools & shopping. One owner home.$125,900 H-1154
Delhi - Beautiful home. OHSD. 4 bd/2ba. Great bed/study on 2nd flr. w/vaulted ceil. Fin bsmt w/full ba. Newer roof & HVAC. Priv wooded yard. $149,900 H-1185
Dick Schneider
Jeff Obermeyer
Steve Florian
Steve Florian
Heather Claypool
Doug Rolfes
Winkler Team
1
Harrison - Like New! Level entry, no steps,2 car att gar,walk-out patio.New Hdwd and carpet, granite kit,bookshelves & FP upgrades.$224,900 H-1187
Harrison - 2 bdrm, 2 full bath 2nd flr condo in elevator bldg! Open flr plan! Wide doors provide disability access! 1 car det gar across from entry. $99,900 H-1229
Logan Twp - 3 Bd 2.5 Ba 2 Stry 2 car ga 1 acre lot fin LL. Well cared for home, large rms, level lot walkout bsmt.Close to highways and schools. $269,900 H-1114
Miami Twp. - 4 BD, 2.5 BA 2 Sty. 1st fl room addit. Fin LL. Many updates. Lg yd w/ab gr pool. Loc in Cul-de-sac. 2 car garage. $249,900 H-1223
Middletown South - 3 Bedroom, 1 ½ Bath Bi-Level. Cul-desac. New hardwood floors, kitchen/granite. Remodeled master bath. $154,900 H-1221
Monfort Heights - Great location ranch 3 bdrm, 2 bath, finished basement, hdwd floors, ss app, newer AC/ furnace, gas fp, 3 season rm. $219,000 H-1153
Sayler Park Super nice 3 bedroom/1.5 bath with hardwood floors. Newer roof & HVAC. Fully fenced backyard. Parklike setting. $104,900 H-1213
HoetingWisselDattilo
Lisa Ibold
Rick Hoeting
HoetingWisselDattilo
Karen Pangburn
Hamad - Doyle
Winkler Team
Springfield Twp. - 4 BD, 2 full-2 half ba 2 sty backs up to GC. Mstrbd w/ba, wlk-in closet, dress area. FR w/WBFP w/o to 3 tier deck. Parklike Yd $228,500 H-1208
Springfield Twp. - Large, open, end-unit, private entry! Cathedral ceiling, FP. Eat-in stainless kit; 1st fl laundry. 25’ versatile loft. Full bsmt, attach gar.$159,900 H-1047
Union Twp. - Right-sized brick ranch, level half acre. Covered porch/patio. Hdwd flrs, FP. Equip kit/laundry, picture windows. Rec room. Huge garage! $169,900 H-1170
Westwood - Great location. Separate entrances. 2 car detached garage. Old world charm. $64,900 H-1059
Westwood - Lang-blt 2 bd, 1.5 ba Cape Cod! Upstairs framed but not finished; cold be 2 more bedrooms and bath. $124,500 H-1207
Westwood - Ready to move in this 2 bd Cape. Home has an unfin 2nd flr, framed with bath, toilet set & working. Newer main stack for plumbing. $122,900 H-1209
Westwood - Great business potential. 5 priv offices,reception area, conference rm.Pkg for up to 8 cars. Great for Start up or growing operation.$149,900 H-1184
Art Chaney
Sylvia Kalker
Sylvia Kalker
Brian Bazeley
Steve Florian
Steve Florian
HoetingWisselDattilo
2C μ WEST - COMMUNITY μ SEPTEMBER 25, 2019
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SEPTEMBER 25, 2019 μ WEST - COMMUNITY μ 3C
Garage & Yard Sale VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD
Great Buys
Garage Sales neighborly deals...
Our Kentucky Warehouse Is Hiring!
250 Kinsman Ct., Delhi. üûEstate Sale in Delhi ûü Sat. Sept. 28th, 9am-3pm Furniutre, housewares, antques & collectibles, paintings & prints, Christmas, Something for Everyone! Facebook, Events, Estate Sale. Cincinnati, Caring Transitions Estate Sale, 2537 Moundview, Thur: 10-2, Fri: 10-2, Sat: 9-12 Vintage Furniture, Vintage & Modern Decor, and more. Estate Sale - Groesbeck Exceptional, clean, high quality f urniture, band saw, etc. 8843 Carosel Park Circle, Unit 18. Saturday Sept 28th 9am-3pm.
Princeton Sharonville Kiwanis Arts & Crafts Show. Sharonville Community Center Creek & Thornview, Sharonville, OH 45241. Sun, Sept 29, 2019 10am-4pm. 513-563-1738 email: patchancetaylor@gmail.com
Extensive benefits Competitive pay Career growth opportunities
Apply online at wayfairjobs.com/kentucky CE-GCI0272579-02
Business
Commercial
opportunites, lease, Invest...
Remke Markets - Buttermilk Town Center is now hiring part-time deli clerks and cashiers. Both positions require nights and weekends. Apply in store at 560 Clock Tower Way, Crescent Springs or online at www.remkes.com (go to about, employment, Remke Store #607)
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1575 sq. ft of Professional Office Space. 5 private offices, sunny reception room, central working/filing space, lower-level meeting room. Easy access, on-site parking lot, 1 mile from Ronald Reagan Hwy visible from Hamilton Ave. Utilities Included. Dutch Mushroom Properties (513) 541-7764
Assorted
Stuff all kinds of things...
announcements, novena... Special Notices-Clas
Need person to care for disabled woman. Live in only. More for home than wages. Need references and background check. 513-742-5512 or 851-8926
Antiques & Vintage Market Lawrenceburg Fairgrounds U.S. 50, Exit 16 I-275 Oct 6th 7 am - 3 pm Over 200 dealers 513-353-4135 lawrenceburgantiqueshow. com
Cincinnati: Garage Sale Dir: COLERAIN TOWNSHIP off Pippin & Springdale 2483 Tiverton Ln, Sept 27 & 28, 9a-4p, Multi-family. Tools, Avon Collectibles, old records, old beer signs, baby toys & clothes, stroller, Christmas.
Delhi N. Bay Ct. off of Foley. MultiFamily Street Sale! SAT/SUN 9/28 & 29, 8am-Noon. Household, yard, clothing, kids, toys, holiday decor.
Garage Sale! 3345 Harwinton Lane (behind Oak Hills High School). Saturday 9/28 1pm-3pm. Kids clothes, toys, outdoor Christmas decor, fireplace carpeting, lots of misc.!
Celebrate it. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
BUYING-RECORD ALBUMS & CDs, METAL, JAZZ, BLUES, ROCK, RAP, INDIE, R&B & REGGAE. 513-683-6985 CASH FOR RECORDS Private collector buying 45’s & LP’s Up to $10 per record, small & large collections. Roger 513-575-2718 I can come to you!
KENNER / HASBRO TOYS & HISTORICAL MEMORABILIA WANTED! SELL DIRECT TO LOCAL COLLECTORS! Help add to the largest private STAR WARS collection in Ohio! Did you or a family member used to work for Kenner? We are LOCAL paying up to $150,000 CASH for prototypes, packaging samples, displays, artwork, paperwork, and toys in all conditions. STAR WARS, M.A.S.K., Jurassic Park, GI Joe, Alien, Super Powers, The Real Ghostbusters, and most character lines. Let’s keep Kenner history here in Cincinnati! Call or text 513.500.4209
CincyStarWarsCollector@gmail.com. SEE OUR VIRTUAL MUSEUM AT WWW.TOYHOARDERS.COM INSTANT CASH PAID For Baseball Cards Coins, Gold,
TRAIN SWAP MEET O, S & Std Gauge With Operating Train Layout Ohio River TCA Sat., Sept 28th, 10:30a-2:00p American Legion (Greenhills) 11100 Winton Road Admis $5 Adult, 12 & Under Free
Burial Crypt Mausoleum St. Joeseph Cemetary. Original price $2,600 - will sell half price at $1,300 OBO. Call 239-543-6683 Two cemetery plots in Resthaven Memorial Park in Blue Ash, OH. Valued at $5,500. Make Offer. Details: 513-791-3224 Two graves in Arlington Memorial Gardens in Mount Healthy. Both graves are valued at $2500 each.Being offered as one unit for $4000. Contact Dale Holste 513-703-6887
PRIME SPLIT FIREWOOD Free delivery and stacked 513-275-8565
Cherry Armoire (for clothing or entertainment), Like new 60 1/2 inches tall; 21 inches deep; 39 1/2 inches wide, $Best Offer. (513)490-6172 Oak dining room table w/ 6 chairs and glass hutch - LIKE NEW - $900 - 513-325-9043
120-gallon Salt Water Aquarium - Complete filtration wet dry system $900 OBO - 513-546-0548
HANDYMAN Experienced, Reasonable, No Job Too Big or Too Small. Including electric & plumbing. Steve 513-491-6672
GRAND ANTIQUE MALL 9701 Reading Rd., Cinti,
OH 45215 513-554-1919 www.grandantiquemall.com
JOIN US FOR OUR ANNUAL TENT/ YARD SALE Multi-Dealers, DJ, concessions 9:00am-6:00pm Saturday, Sept. 28th Rain Date: Sept. 29th LARGEST EVER Annual Shady Lane Garage Sale 3282 Shady Lane Tools, furniture, and lots more! Something for everyone!Fri & Sat. Sept. 27/28; 8am-1pm Sharonville United Methodist Church Rummage Sale 3751 Creek Rd, 45241 Sat., Sept. 28, 9a-3p
STREET SALE! Werkridge Drive - 45248 Fri, 9/27 & Sat, 9/28 - 8a-2p
BUYING 35mm Photo Slides primarily railroad & transportation related 1940’s - 1970’s. *Comic Books 1940’s present*. 1920’s -1950’s Detective & Pin-up Pulp Magazines 513-325-4913
Perks Include:
Senior Manager Process Engineering. Schwan’s Shared Services, LLC, a subsidiary of Schwan’s, seeks a Senior Manager Process Engineering in Florence, Kentucky. Responsible for directing and managing the process development engineering process and new product execution to support existing and future business objectives, define and achieve long-range solutions/opportunities, and increase speed to market. Must have proof of legal authority to work in the U.S. Requirements: requires either a Bachelor of science degree (U.S. or foreign) in Mechanical Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Chemical Engineering, or closely related field or a Master of science degree (U.S. or foreign) in Mechanical Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Chemical Engineering, or closely related field is also acceptable. Candidates with a qualifying Bachelor’s degree must have (a) at least six years of experience in a process engineering position in manufacturing a product; (b) at least six years of experience in process engineering, testing, commissioning, and maintaining process operations in the food or pharmaceutical industry; (c) at least two years of experience performing sizing and specification of equipment, and reading and understanding piping and instrumentation diagram (pid) diagrams; and (d) at least two years of experience in applying process engineering techniques to take an idea for manufacturing a product from concept to business case. Experience requirements in (a), (b), (c) and (d) may be gained concurrently in the same six year period. Candidates with a qualifying Master’s degree are required to have four years of experience in (a) and (b) and two years in (c) and (d) and all experience requirements for Master’s candidates may be gained concurrently in the same four year period. Incidental travel required. Interested candidates should apply on-line at www.schwansjobs.com. This position is for full-time employment by Schwan’s Shared Services, LLC for employment in Florence, Kentucky. EOE
BRIDGETOWN GARAGE SALE 6255 Berauer Rd. Sat., 9/28 from 8a-2p Something for Everyone! Priced to Sell! Rain cancels!
Silver, Antiques, Old Toys, Watches, Comics, Case Knives Military, Trains, Autographs, Many Others! We Pick-up. 513-295-5634
$$$ PAID for LPs, CDs, CASSETTES -ROCK, BLUES, INDIE, METAL, JAZZ, ETC + VINTAGE STEREO EQUIP, DVDs & MEMORABILIA. 50 YRS COMBINED BUYING EXPERIENCE! WE CAN COME TO YOU! 513-591-0123 WANTED FREON: We pay CA$H. R12 R500 R11. Convenient. Certified professionals. 312-291-9169 RefrigerantFinders.com
WAR RELICS US, German, Japanese Uniforms, Helmets, Guns, Swords, Medals Etc, Paying Top Dollar Call 513-309-1347 Adopt Me
Pets find a new friend... AKC Boston Terrier Pups, 4wks old, Fawn Brindle and Brown Brindle $1200 obo wormed. Ready to go at 8wks old! 606-375-9236 or 606-375-0566
GOT EXTRA STUFF? Put it up for sale. VISITCLASSIFIEDS onlineatcincinnati.com
4C μ WEST - COMMUNITY μ SEPTEMBER 25, 2019
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held by the Hamilton County Board of Zoning Appeals on Wednesday, October 9, 2019 in Room 805, of the County Administration Building at 1:00 P.M. for the purpose of: Case Number: …... G r e e n 2019-12; 3997 Raceview Avenue (ZVGT201912) Subject Property: ... G r e e n Township: 3997 Raceview Avenue (Book 550, Page 111 Parcel 116) Applicant: ……… Cheryl Volk (appellant & owner) Request: …………. To request a variance for the construction of a six foot (6’) tall privacy fence to be located within the side yard in a “C” Residence district. Plans are on file and open for public inspection in: County Administration Building Room 801 138 East Court Street Cincinnati, OH 45202 Office Hours: Monday Friday 8:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. Office Phone: 513-946-4550 WHP,Sept25,’19# 3798965
LEGAL NOTICE DELHI TOWNSHIP BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS Notice of a Public Hearing by the Delhi Township Board of Zoning Appeals to discuss administrative matters will be held on October 8, 2019 at 6:00 p.m. at the Delhi Township Administrative Building, located at 934 Neeb Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 45233. Anthony S. Roach, Zoning Administrator Department of Community Development DP,Sept25,’19# 3797866 At its meeting held on 9/17 the Council of the City of Cheviot adopted the following legislation: Ord 19-24 An Ordinance To Amend Sections 150.03, 150.04, 150.11 and 150.13, And To Add Section 150.171 To The Cheviot Code Of Ordinances To Create An Overlay Zoning District For A Portion Of The Business "B" District. WHP,Sep25,Oct2’19#3800117
Beagles, Shihpoos, Yorkies, Yorkiepoos, Pugs, Poodles, Maltese, Havanese, & Teddy Bears. Shots, Dewormed & Vet Checked. Blanchester, OH. 937-725-9641 Cane Corso Italian Mastiff Female Puppies - 8 weeks old $800/each - 513-364-0441
Service Directory Golden Retriever Puppies Vet Checked - Shots Wormed - Ready to Go! POP - Papers on Hand $750 - 513-205-2949 Lab pups- AKC-6wks-yellow m/f $400 POP- shots and vet checked (859)588-6727
Automotive
Rides best deal for you... Chesapeake Bay Retriever, AKC. Great Family dogs, Champion Bloodlines. Vet checked, UTD shots, dewormed, house broken, 3 mos. old, 1 Male, 3 Females Must sell at 1/2 price $500. Call (513)325-8815
Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk up $3000 Fair cash price, quick pickup. 513-662-4955
CALL: 877-513-7355 TO PLACE YOUR AD
Hendel’s Affordable ó Tree Service ó Call today for Autumn & Discount Pricing! ± 513-795-6290 ± ± 513-266-4052 ±
LOW Cost Tree Service - Trim, Top & Removal. 35+ yrs exp. Free est. Sr disc. George 513-477-2716
Chevrolet 2017 Sonic LS, white, 21,044 mi, factory warranty, free oil changes, back up camera, OnStar, $20,000 OBO, 513-206-0632
Lincoln 1971 Mark III Dark Blue Excellent condition! Second owner Best offer - 513-485-3637
1 BUYER of OLD CARS CLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s, Running or not. 513-403-7386
CHECK OUT CLASSIFIED online at cincinnati.com
We buy junk cars and trucks - CASH on the spot û†û 513-720-7982 û†û
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