EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL Your Community Press newspaper serving Columbia Tusculum, Hyde Park, Mariemont, Mount Lookout, Oakley and other Northeast Cincinnati neighborhoods
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS ❚ PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK
Madeira asks to reinstate suit against critic Jeanne Houck Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Law professor Mark Godsey at the Ohio Innocence Project’s workspace at UC. LISA VENTRE/UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
He prosecuted mobsters. Now he works to exonerate the innocent.
Sonia Chopra Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Hyde Park resident Mark Godsey was described as the “prosecutor’s prosecutor” during his tenure as an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. From 1995 to 2001, Godsey helped convict terrorists, mobsters, drug lords and corrupt high-level politicians. Making national headlines and receiving awards for “aggressively fi ghting crime” was all in a typical workday for Godsey. Today, Godsey is on the other side of the courtroom as an advocate for the innocence movement. He is a tenured professor at the University of Cincinnati and the co-founder of the Ohio Innocence Project (OIP). And he has written a book, “Blind Injustice,” which is a partly a confessional and partly a memoir. The book is the basis of a new opera that the Cincinnati Opera recently premiered. In the book, Godsey describes his transformation from an arrogant and hard-nosed federal prosecutor in Manhattan to his current job as a law professor and innocence advocate in his hometown of Cincinnati. “I look back, and I see that I did things that I don’t agree with now,” said Godsey, 51. Godsey said police and prosecutors are under great pressure and fall into a “tough on crime” stance, which all too often clouds the legal process with politics and leads to mistakes or overreaches. “I understand the law enforcement mentality because I had the same kind of tunnel vision, but once I took the blinders off , I could see the criminal
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justice system, which we are so arrogant about is unreliable, fi lled with human error and yet we confi dently stand by it,” said Godsey. As a prosecutor, Godsey had already begun to see how antiquated laws with long prison sentences were destroying lives. But he fi gured that he could not let his feelings ‘trump the very laws” he was supposed to follow. Eventually, the life of dealing with “anonymous, faceless defendants,” who were just more fi les on his docket to which he was to “apply the bureaucratic rules without awareness of the humanity around him,” got to him. So, just before September 2001, he gave up his prosecutor’ss job to pursue his dream of becoming a law professor and he moved back to Cincinnati. He never meant to be chief defense lawyer in a project to help the innocent. He started out as a law professor at Chase College of Law at Northern Kentucky University, and his boss asked the former prosecutor to supervise the Kentucky Innocence Project (KIP) along with the teaching because the director who was heading it, was on sabbatical. “As a former prosecutor, I was skeptical. I didn’t really believe that innocent people were sent to prison in this country. I didn’t want to do it but … wanting to please my new bosses, I couldn’t really say no. So, I grudgingly agreed,” Godsey said. At his fi rst meeting, two law students had just returned from their meeting with inmate Herman May, who was in prison for rape. See GODSEY, Page 2A
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Madeira has asked a judge to reconsider her recent decision to dismiss a lawsuit the city fi led to stop a resident from fi ling multiple unsuccessful suits against it. Alternatively, Madeira wants Hamilton County Common Pleas Court Judge Megan Shanahan to allow the city to amend its lawsuit in keeping with how Shanahan ruled the suit should have been fi led. Madeira law director Brian Fox fi led a lawsuit against Doug Oppenheimer on behalf of the city in May 2018 after Madeira City Council Oppenheimer members signed a proclamation stating their intent to direct Fox to explore suing Oppenheimer – as opposed to city council voting by resolution or ordinance to fi le suit. Fox said in court fi lings before the lawsuit was dismissed that state law, the Madeira city charter and Ohio court rulings gave him authority to fi le the suit without that legislative action. Shanahan disagreed. In the absence of legislative action, Shanahan said in her ruling, Fox could have fi led the lawsuit in his name as law director, but not in the name of Madeira. She also said Fox could have fi led the suit at the direction of Madeira City Manager Tom Moeller, but Fox off ered no proof that that happened. Now, Fox has off ered to change the original lawsuit to specifi cally state that the city authorized fi ling it. In support of the assertion, Fox fi led an affi davit dated Aug. 1 in which Moeller says he authorized Fox to fi le the suit. Madeira wants a judge to declare Oppenheimer a “vexatious litigator.” See CRITIC, Page 4A
Madeira has asked a judge to reconsider her recent decision to dismiss a lawsuit the city fi led to stop a resident from fi ling multiple unsuccessful suits against it. JEANNE HOUCK/THE ENQUIRER
Vol. 39 No. 32 © 2019 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED $1.00
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Godsey
Mark Godsey, a professor at the University of Cincinnati College of Law, wrote the book “Blind Injustice.” The stories of six people from the book are the basis of an opera getting its world premiere today by the Cincinnati Opera. JAY
Continued from Page 1A
“With great emotion and passion, they talked about how they ‘looked into his eyes’ and could see his sincerity, could feel his pain, and just ‘knew’ that he was innocent,” Godsey said. “I sat there and listened to their description and internally rolled my eyes. “ ‘ How naïve,’ I thought. What a bunch of gullible, bleeding-heart law students.” KIP moved the court for DNA testing of the semen using new scientifi c techniques, which had not been available at the time of May’s conviction. When it came back negative, May was exonerated and released from prison after serving 13 years for a crime he did not commit. Godsey was fl abbergasted. “It was eye-opening. It was a shock. I was confused as to how this could have happened,” Godsey said. He realized that there were problems in the system that he, as a prosecutor, should have seen, but about which he “had simply been in denial.” After coming to terms with the revelation, which challenged his life’s work so far, Godsey began his career as an innocence attorney, which he says is his true calling. It will be, both, he believes, his life’s work and his legacy.
Bringing innocence to Ohio In 2003, after accepting a tenured position at UC, Godsey met with a Harvard law school graduate and then city councilman John Cranley. Together, they created the Ohio Innocence Project. At that time, Ohio was one of the largest states in the country that did not have an innocence organization. Cranley envisioned the concept of OIP from his own experiences at Harvard as a student attorney. Law school offi cials had approved an innocence project if Cranley could raise the money for it. Cranley held a fundraiser, hoping for one big donor. He says he will never for-
YOCIS/UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
get that “life-changing day.” “The donors I was seeking came in, philanthropists Lois and Richard Rosenthal who pledged a $2 million endowment. And I met Mark for the fi rst time and since then, both relationships have bloomed,” Cranley said. Meanwhile, Cranley is currently serving his second term as Cincinnati’s mayor, Godsey has successfully exonerated and has had released from prison 28 people. The 28 had spent more than 486 years in prison, collectively, for crimes they did not commit. Godsey believes that the country is just starting the journey into a decadeslong movement that will revamp the criminal justice system because of advances in psychology, technology and the mindsets of prosecutors. “The innocence movement is new and, just like the civil rights movement, it is just beginning,” he said. “This is going to take people working and educating and talking for decades and decades.” Those who were exonerated by OIP, have become both Godsey’s “family” and his most dedicated team of volunteers. They show up at all his events to talk about their experiences and to push for the reform of the criminal justice system. “I have tried on occasion to break through the institutionalized dehuman-
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ization to help prosecutors see my clients and their families as suff ering beings. But it has never worked,” Godsey said. with one exception. OIP put its support behind Senate Bill 77, passed by the Ohio General Assembly in 2010. The law set standards for retaining biological evidence, taking DNA in felony arrests and establishing new procedures for police lineups.
Confronting a ‘mass disaster’ system Godsey’s aggressive leadership was the reason he was tailor-made for innocence advocacy. Barry Scheck, who co-founded the country’s fi rst Innocence Project at New York City’s Cardozo School of Law in 1992, said he has watched Godsey “evolve from a prosecutor to an extraordinarily eff ective innocence lawyer.” “Mark has always been a good friend to me and other colleagues in the innocence movement, but more importantly, he demonstrates many times over that he is a good person who passionately cares about justice,” said Scheck. Godsey said that the “discovery of thousands of wrongful convictions in the past 25 years should be viewed by the criminal justice system as indicative of a disaster. A mass disaster.” He doubts that the American public understands how the system is stacked against the defendants who don’t stand a chance when police, prosecutors and judges have a premature conclusion of guilt. “There is a huge disconnect between what the public thinks about our criminal justice system and the reality of it,” Godsey said. Prosecutors want to win every single time. “I did this as a prosecutor…Cutting corners, ignoring police misconduct, skewing forensics in our favor, bending witness statements to fi t our case, and not disclosing all exculpatory informa-
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From Fairfi eld High to Ohio State Godsey was born in Cincinnati. His middle-class parents taught him and his sister Amy, a high school teacher in Mason, the value of giving back to the community. At Fairfi eld High School, he was a student council president and at home, at the dinner table, the family discussed social justice and political issues. He graduated from Ohio State University’s Moritz College of Law, with the secondhighest grades in a class of 202. Godsey clerked for an appellate judge in Salt Lake City. Then he spent two years in Chicago and New York, working on multimillion-dollar cases for a corporate law fi rm, before becoming a prosecutor. He lives in Hyde Park with his wife Michelle Berry Godsey, 36, a criminal defense and civil rights attorney and their children Gordon, 5, and two-year-old twins Walt and Louie. His children from a previous marriage, Dana, 19, and Pete, 16, are at UC and in high school respectively.
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tion as the Constitution requires,” he said. “My career as an innocence lawyer shows how those same types of attitudes and actions cause wrongful convictions of the innocent,” Godsey said. The interim dean of the UC law school, Verna Williams, has known Godsey since they were beginning lawyer. “He’s a rock star, a gamechanger. It’s wonderful how he has built up the whole innocence project to where it is today,” Williams said. “His work as a former prosecutor gives him a special perspective.” At UC, when students either volunteer or intern for OIP, Godsey and his staff try to give them an accurate portrait of how both sides work. OIP operates like a law fi rm with students, staff attorneys and two administrative assistants. They get approximately 500 inquiries annually. In the majority of the cases, DNA testing confi rms that a client is guilty as charged. Eventually, OIP ends up with 10 clients each year. Godsey works constantly on his cases, emailing, texting and returning calls every day. He admits that those “Kodak moments” when he walks out of a courthouse with the exonerated are rare. “I give my heart to my clients and it helps win cases because judges feel it, everyone feels it when you are on the right side morally and you aren’t afraid to show it,” Godsey said. “Some of the most meaningful and spiritual relationships I have are with people who I have fought for and fought with and those are deep lifelong connections.” OIP staff ers get depressed when they lose a case. But Godsey reminds his staff that whether their incarcerated client wins or loses, they know that someone out there cares enough to fi ght for them. That’s worth something. “You have to live by those words when you do innocence work or you’ll burn out quickly from all the punches to the gut,” Godsey said.
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Critic
SCHOOL NEWS
Continued from Page 1A
The designation would prevent Oppenheimer from fi ling new court cases or appeals, continuing with any previously fi led cases or appeals and participating in cases fi led by others unless a judge fi rst deems the action reasonable.
Is resident watchdog or costly critic? Oppenheimer is a former Madeira city councilman who says he is looking out for Madeira taxpayers. The city counters that it is the taxpayers who are forced to shoulder Madeira’s legal fees as Oppenheimer fi les lawsuit after lawsuit against it with no court victories.
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Mariemont teen attends Advanced Space Academy HUNTSVILLE, Ala. – Liam Karlson, of Cincinnati, recently attended Advanced Space Academy at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, home of Space Camp, Space Camp Robotics, Aviation Challenge, U.S. Cyber Camp and NASA Marshall Space Flight Center’s Offi cial Visitor Center. The weeklong educational program promotes science, technology, engineering and math, while training students and with hands-on activities and missions based on teamwork, leadership and problem-solving. Liam spent the week training with a team that fl ew a simulated space mission to the International Space Station, the moon or Mars. The crew
Mairemont sophomore Liam Karlson excelled to Advanced Space Academy in his fi fth summer at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Ala. PROVIDED
participated in experiments and successfully completed an extravehicular activity, or spacewalk. Liam and crew returned to Earth in time to graduate with honors. Space Camp operates year-round in Huntsville
and uses astronaut training techniques to engage trainees in real-world applications of STEM subjects. Students sleep in quarters designed to resemble the ISS and train in simulators like those used by NASA. More than 900,000 trainees have graduated from a Space Camp program since 1982, including European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti and NASA astronauts Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger, Kate Rubins, Serena Auñón-Chancellor and Christina Koch, who is serving onboard the International Space Station. Interested in training like an astronaut? Visit www.spacecamp.com or call 1-800-637-7223. The U.S. Space & Rocket Center, a Smithsonian Affi liate, is home to Space Camp and Aviation Chal-
lenge, the Apollo 16 capsule, the National Historic Landmark Saturn V rocket and world-class traveling exhibits. To learn more, go to www.rocketcenter.com or visit facebook.com/ rocketcenterusa twitter.com/RocketCenterUSA. Liam has spent fi ve summers at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center and attended all levels of camps to reach the Advanced Space Academy. His goals are to attend two more specialized programs. He would like to attend the United States Naval Academy, MIT and eventually apply to NASA after college and service. If you’d like to follow Liam’s endeavors, you can follow his Instagram account @astro_liam. Margie Phillips (via mother Bridgett Karlson), U. S. Space & Rocket Center
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Mother arrested, ‘trying to get money for son’s birthday’ Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
A Loveland woman was arrested early Aug. 17 on multiple theft-related charges dating back to March 2019, according to court records. Kindal Kidd, 23, told offi cers that she was “trying to get money for her son’s birthday,” according to court documents. Kidd admitted to trying to cash a $685.26 fake check on May 7 and verifi ed that she was not the person on the I.D. she was using during the transaction at CheckSmart. On Aug. 17, Kidd was seen operating a stolen 2000
Toyota Corolla, according to court documents. In addition to these felony charges, Kidd is also facing misdemeanor charges in connection to a $311.90 purchase at Kroger with a stolen Capital Kidd One credit card in May, a theft at a Walmart from March and another incident of theft at Target that occurred the same day she was spotted with the stolen vehicle, according to court documents. Kidd was being held on a $10,000 bond at the time this article was originally published.
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Silverton’s pretty lucky to have its new brewpub High Grain Brewing Co.
Polly Campbell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
3 stars
The story of the revival of breweries in Cincinnati feels like a fi lm that starts in slow motion, then gradually speeds up until it’s fl ashing by. It opens in the ‘90s with a few brewpubs that made beer and served it in-house along with food. In 1998, there were fi ve brewpubs in the Greater Cincinnati area, all longgone by now. Then, after a long bit, new breweries start appearing, like Riverside and Mount Carmel, MadTree, Rhinegeist. There were bare-bones taprooms, then breweries teamed up with food trucks, or opened in-house pizza windows. Most started with bottles, then moved to canning. The fi rst few were followed by an ever-faster barrage of openings and expansions. Now there are so many breweries that there’s no room for new cans and bottles. Retail outlets are full-up with craft beer. These days, if you’ve always wanted to brew beer, you have to open a brewery in a neighborhood and include a restaurant. We’re back to the concept of the original brewpubs. High Grain, a brewery and restaurant that opened in Silverton in June, is not bottling or canning any of their beers (except for crowlers). They may appear on taps in restaurants around town, but mostly, if you want these beers, you’ll have to go to Silverton. Which is no hardship, the beers are good and there’s a nice selection of food to go with them. High Grain is in the former municipal building of Silverton, and it still has a bit of that midcentury public building look. The design elements that have been added complement what’s there. The logo has a sort of Scandinavian/midcentury feel to it that is repeated in the shapes of the sound-proofi ng on the wall. Internal walls have been taken down, leaving two big open spaces, both quite simple and plain.
Where: 6860 Plainfi eld Road, Silverton When: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 11 a.m.-midnight Friday and Saturday, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday Prices: $8-$20 (Sandwiches $10-$12) Vegetarian options: not bad: avocado toast, biscuits, tofu tenders, farro salad, chickpea HoP cakes Reservations: not taken Miscellaneous: outdoor dining, accessible by ramp to the disabled Phone: coming soon Website: highgrainbrewing.com
One side is the bar area, with hightop tables and the beer taps The other is the dining room with full service. There’s also a deck and a “beer garden,” which is unfortunately on the west side of the building, so a little hard to sit in until after the sun goes down. The menu is pretty casual. There are a number of things you can order just as a snack with beer, but there are some entrees, too, that might even inspire you to order wine instead of beer. I had a sampler of four beers. My friends gravitated to the Mexican lager, served with or without salt. That kind of lighter beer is becoming more common in local brewpubs, and this was a great example. Craft beer doesn’t have to be highly hopped or dark or fruit-fl avored to be better than commercial beer. It can feel like drinking Corona, but just better. It certainly went well with the wings, which were nice and crispy, with honey Buff alo sauce. They have plenty of other craft beer styles like ambers and stouts and IPAs. The wontons are fi lled with pastorstyle pork, topped with a shishito pep-
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Hungry? Order up a beer and pair it with the goetta meatloaf sandwich from Head Chef Lee Moeller, at the new High Grain Brewery in Silverton on Montgomery Road. The sandwich, which goes for $10, features a barbecue glaze, pimiento cheese, fresh jalapaños on a spent grain biscuit. LIZ DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER
per relish. Very beer-friendly. The biscuit appetizer can be ordered with various toppings, we had it with pimento cheese. Though I wouldn’t have gotten that if I had realized I was getting a meatloaf sandwich also built on a biscuit with pimento cheese. The biscuits were good by themselves: rich, big biscuits made with some of the spent grain left after brewing, tender and crumbly. Which makes them good on their own, but not good at all made into a sandwich. My goetta meatloaf sandwich immediately fell apart when I picked it up. I did enjoy it, with its pimento cheese and barbecue sauce, when I ate it with my fork. Entrees included ribs in a tasty barbecue sauce with good fries and a nice cucumber salad. Seared scallops were
perfectly cooked, served on top of a mixture of chewy, nutty-fl avored farro and edamame with a touch of citrusy sauce. Walleye was a nice light presentation on top of a fennel and arugula salad, crowned with crisped parsnip ribbons and a little bright-orange carrot emulsion. I kind of wish I’d tried the fi sh and chips because they looked really good. It was a bit loud in the dining room, despite the soundproofi ng panels. But conversation wasn’t impossible. My friend who grew up in Silverton told stories about rescuing his roaming dog from this very building. The police would pick him up and put him in a cell. The good old days. Silverton is still a nice small town in the midst of the city, and what’s a neighborhood these days without a brewpub? I’d say Silverton’s pretty lucky to have this one.
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6A ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
Two-way granola is great for back-to-school lunches Rita’s Kitchen
Two-way granola
Rita Heikenfeld
I’ve had a pretty wild week. It started with an email from Jude DeWitt, a Withamsville reader. “I have two elderberry bushes which I discovered have an abundance of fruit ripening quickly! I heard you lament you didn’t have any elderberries. Would you like some?” The answer was a swift “yes” since the birds devoured mine. Turned out Jude needed an elderberry pie recipe, so we swapped. I think I got the best of that deal. I’ll be juicing them to make elderberry jelly. Wild autumn olive berries are ripe, too. Now those of you who are familiar with this invasive shrub/small tree may know these berries are becoming popular with chefs. They’re a real chore to pick. But worth it as friend and neighbor, Erin, and I found out. Loaded with antioxidants and vitamins, autumn olive berries make a lovely jam. We also saw edible sumac berries about ready for picking. Sumac lemonade is so refreshing. Add to that, beautiful chicken of the woods mushrooms, that my friend Charlene’s grandson, Jacob, brought to my door. A wild bounty for sure! Check out my abouteating.com site for photos. What do these wild edibles have to do with today’s recipes? Not a darn thing, just something I wanted to share with you about my unorthodox life here on my little patch of heaven. OK let’s get down to the business of sharing recipes. Here’s a yummy granola requested for back-to-school lunches. And raspberry sorbet for Jordan, a Northside reader. “I need it for an upcoming dinner party,” she said.
Granola is an ever-changing recipe at my house. Pack some for lunch, sprinkle over yogurt. Tweak it anyway you like. Just keep proportions about the same. Make it with fruit, or without. Ingredients 31⁄ 2 to 4 cups old fashioned oats (these toast better than quick oats) 2 cups nuts, - I used slivered almonds, cashews, chopped walnuts and pecans 1 cup seeds - I used sunflower, pumpkin, flax and millet ⁄ 3 cup pure maple syrup
2
⁄ 2 cup light brown sugar, packed
1
⁄ 3 cup oil - I used olive but any oil works
1
1 tablespoon vanilla Up to 2 heaping cups dried fruit — I used cherries, golden raisins and diced apricots (optional but very good) Instructions Preheat oven to 325. Spray cookie sheets. Mix oats, nuts and seeds. Set aside. Cook syrup, sugar and oil until sugar dissolves.
Simple raspberry sorbet Use an ice cream maker. Sub in other berries, adjusting sugar if necessary.
Granola with fruit. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD
Stir in vanilla. Pour over oat mixture and coat. Pour onto sheets in single layers and bake about 45 minutes, stirring every 15 minutes. As you get toward the end, watch - granola should be just golden brown. Stir in fruit after cooling. Store in covered container.
Granola without fruit.
Ingredients
Instructions
1 pound fresh, or frozen raspberries, thawed
Put everything into food processor and blend. Strain, chill and then process in ice cream maker until thick. Transfer to container and freeze until fi rm, a couple hours.
⁄ 4 cup sugar
3
⁄ 4 cup lemon juice
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COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ 7A
COMMUNITY NEWS Dogs take dip in pool at the Dogfest and K-9 Kerplunk event Join the fun on Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 2, from 5-00 p.m. for the City of Montgomery’s annual Dogfest and K-9 Kerplunk event. The event will be held at the Montgomery Community Pool, 8075 Hopewell Road. Families and their canine companions can fi nish the summer with a dip in the pool. All breeds and sizes of dogs are invited. The event will feature on-stage contests and prizes, vendor booths, a rubber pup regatta and, of course, fun in the pool. At 5:45 p.m., there will be a Longest Jump and Best Doggie Paddle contest in the pool by the slide. Dogs can join in a short parade around the pool deck at 6 p.m. At 6:15 p.m. there will be a contest on the big stage to select the Most Talented, Best Looking Male, Best Looking Female, Best Costume and Waggiest Tail. The cost is $3 per dog for nonpool members and free admission for Montgomery Pool members. The Montgomery Community Pool features a zero-depth entry – perfect for any pooch! Dogs must be peoplefriendly, on a leash when out of the water, nonaggressive towards other dogs and under control. Bring a nonperishable pet food item to donate and you will be entered into a drawing for a prize. “Owners have the opportunity to have their pooch play in the pool before the pool closes for the season. Join us for great, doggone good fun with your best friend,” said Julie Machon, Montgomery’s recreation coordinator. This annual event is sponsored by Puppywood Pet Resort and Pet People. For more information, visit montgomeryohio.org or call 513-891-2424. Faith Lynch, City of Montgomery
Join Bea, Montgomery’s Top Dog, in the annual Dogfest and K-9 Kerplunk festivities on Labor Day, Sept. 2 at the Montgomery Community Pool. PROVIDED
American Legion NE Post 630 to collect old, tattered American flags As a community service, American Legion NE Post 630 in Blue Ash will be collecting old and tattered American fl ags for proper disposal Sept. 6-8 at the St. Saviour Church Festival in Rossmoyne. As a part of their civic outreach program, St. Saviour is providing the American Legion with booth space at their festival to collect the fl ags. The booth will be located on the east side of the festival grounds. Veterans will be on hand to take care of proper disposal of the fl ags. If replacement fl ags are desired, 3by-5-foot fl ags will be available for purchase at $25 each and 12-by-15-inch stick fl ags for $2 each. The fl ags are all American-made. Post 630 highly recommends that veterans stop by the booth to visit with fellow veterans. The Post 630 booth will be staff ed by veterans from all
Members of American Legion NE Post 630 will collect old, tattered American flags Sept. 6-8 during the St. Saviour Church Festival. PROVIDED
branches of service. Post 630 encourages schoolchildren to visit the booth so they can talk wtih veterans about patritoic duties. Veterans from World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War and the war on terrorism will be manning the booth. Joe Rettig, Blue Ash American Legion NE Post 630
Montgomery’s community-wide garage sale set for Sept. 7 Bargain-hunters and those who enjoy fi nding a curbside deal should check out the City of Montgomery’s community-wide garage sale from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 7. Montgomery households interested in hosting a garage or yard sale can register through Friday, Aug. 30. Households can sign up on the city’s website, montgomeryohio.org, or by calling 513891-2424. There is no fee to participate. A Garage Sale Treasure Map, with a complete listing of locations, will be available at Montgomery City Hall, 10101 Montgomery Road, beginning at 8
save up to
a.m. Thursday, Sept. 5 and on the city’s website to help shoppers prepare for the sales and map out deal-fi nding strategies. Treasure maps will also be handed out at City Hall beginning at 8 a.m. on the day of the sale. This grassroots public awareness campaign organized by the Environmental Advisory Commission promotes reuse, repair and resale opportunities in the city of Montgomery. For more information, please call Montgomery City Hall. Faith Lynch, City of Montgomery
Old cars, new venue The annual August auto show presented by the Untouchables Classic Car Club usually is staged at Hazelwood Park in Blue Ash. This year, Summit Park provided the setting. And with perfect summer weather on Aug. 10, hundreds roamed the old airport tarmac to enjoy the beauty of scores of vintage automobiles. Terrence Huge, Enquirer contributor
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Community Press Northeast
❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019
❚ 1B
Sports Veteran college, NFL strength coach Morton assists Moeller Crusaders Scott Springer Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
KENWOOD – When former Cincinnati Bengals strength and conditioning coach Chip Morton was not retained by Zac Taylor’s new regime, he took his 34 years of experience to a familiar place. With a third son, Aaron, on Moeller High School’s football squad, he off ered up his services as a volunteer on new coach Todd Naumann’s staff . Having served with Athletes In Action and had kids in a faith-based school, he proudly wears a Moeller shirt featuring Philippians 4: 13: “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me”. With that demeanor, he has a wealth of knowledge to dispense, along with the occasional water bottle to Crusaders in need. Coach Naumann has pulled in some heavy-hitters to share with his troops as NFL Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz, whose son Michael played at Moeller, has addressed the Crusaders. So has former Moeller safety-turned-Ohio State and Bengal defensive lineman Sam Hubbard. However, Morton’s presence might be the most valuable from those with Bengal ties as he’s seen the strength and conditioning game evolve. With stops at Ohio State and Penn State before joining the Bengals with Marvin Lewis, Morton has seen high school facilities now rival what many big colleges had in the 1980s. “In the 80s our program (Ohio State) was heavily infl uenced by the Nebraska teams,” Morton said. “They were one of the early proponents of strength training, the value of lifting weights for football performance.” Since then Morton has watched the profession blossom with current coaches growing up with an emphasis on strength and conditioning. When he started, some older coaches had to be
Chip Morton, Bengals strength and conditioning coach, gives a pep talk to a group of women at Football 101that supports the Marvin Lewis Community Fund Wednesday, October 21, 2015 at Paul Brown Stadium. THE ENQUIRER/MEG VOGEL
sold on the concept and the strength coach was usually just the biggest guy who could lift weights.
Every sport pumps iron No longer are the weight machines reserved for football, in today’s schools every sport from golf to soccer to volley-
ball to baseball and lacrosse makes time to train. “We’ve come a long way on programming and what’s appropriate for a swimmer versus what’s appropriate for a football athlete,” Morton said. “I think we’ve come a long way in really tailoring our strength programs for individual sports.”
The strength coach industry If you watch enough football there are usually a few segments a year on various strength coaches. Most head coaches have one that’s been with them. They become part drill sergeant/part See MORTON, Page 2B
Deer Park all-state guard transfers to Taft Mark Wise was Southwest District Player of the Year Shelby Dermer Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Mark Wise's lofty legacy at Deer Park High School will not extend to his senior year. Wise, who became the leading scorer in Deer Park history in February, has transferred to Taft High School. Wise said his family had to move out of the Deer Park school district, making him ineligible to fi nish out his career with the Wildcats. "It was pretty tough; I cried about it," Wise said. "Coach (Steve) Gentry and coach Reggie Revels have meant a lot to me. It's probably the best coaching staff I've ever had. I cried that I had to leave them. It was very tough. You have to live in the district to go to school; that's the rules. I no longer live in the district." Wise leaves Deer Park with the school record in points, assists, steals and fi rst-team all-conference selections. As a junior last season, Wise was fi rst-team all-Ohio, the Southwest District Player of the Year and the Athlete of the Year in the Cincinnati Hills League. Wise was instrumental in Deer Park's unprecedented rise into one of Greater
Deer Park's Mark Wise celebrates during the Wildcats win in the Division III State Championship game Saturday, March 24, 2018. TONY TRIBBLE FOR THE ENQUIRER
Cincinnati's prominent basketball programs. As a freshman in 2017, he averaged 14.5 points per game to lead Deer Park to an 11-win season after the Wildcats fi nished 1-22 the year prior. As a sophomore, Wise was again named to the CHL's fi rst-team and earned all-district honors. He averaged 17 points and six rebounds per game to
help lead Deer Park to a perfect 29-0 season and the school's fi rst-ever state basketball championship. Wise averaged 18.2 points and 7.3 rebounds per game last season to lead Deer Park to the district title game, where he scored a game-high 24 points in a loss to Dayton Stivers. Winning a state championship and
becoming Deer Park's all-time leading scorer were two of Wise's goals during his time with the Wildcats. The perfect season off ered a few of his favorite memories during his red and white tenure. Sitting at 18-0 during the fi nal month of the regular season in 2018, Wise fouled out of a conference game against Indian Hill with Deer Park trailing by double digits late in the fourth quarter. "I was crying," Wise remembers. "Damani McEntire came up to me and said, 'we're not gonna lose this game.' He ended up making a game-winning shot and I was just so excited to see that." Over a month later, Wise returned the favor. Trailing by double digits in the fourth quarter against Purcell Marian in the regional opener, it was McEntire who fouled out. "I was like, 'Damani, we're not gonna lose this game.' We ended up pulling it out in overtime," Wise said. "It was just a special season. Everybody played for each other." Wise added: "I couldn't fi nish it out, but I did everything I could for the Deer Park program. I just hope that everybody appreciates what I did and I appreciate everything Deer Park did for me. I'm gonna bleed Deer Park until the day I day."
2B ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
After World Cup, Cincinnati pro soccer players see growth in women’s soccer league Bobby Nightengale Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
After the U.S. Women’s National Team won a World Cup title, there’s been an immediate impact in the National Women’s Soccer League. Players have noticed more attention to the sport. There are more fans at games across the league. It’s certainly helped put a bigger spotlight on the success of Cincinnati-area players, particularly Rose Lavelle who starred during the World Cup. The Washington Spirit is in a nine-team league and feature four players from Cincinnati: Lavelle, goalkeeper Aubrey Bledsoe, forward Bayley Feist and midfi elder Tori Huster. “In the past, we’re just hoping that the league is going to be around for the next year, hoping that we have a job to come back to in the off season,” Bledsoe said. “Now, I can fi nally be confi dent that the league is stable and we’re moving in the right direction. It’s been fun to watch the growth.” On a visit back home, the Cincinnati Reds invited Bledsoe, Feist and Huster to throw out ceremonial fi rst pitches before a Sunday game. Huster and Bledsoe played together at St. Ursula Academy. Feist attended Oak Hills and Levelle went to Mount Notre Dame. They are all diff erent ages – Huster is the oldest at 29 and Feist is the youngest at 20 – showing how the sport has continued to grow locally. “I think that speaks volumes about Rose, Aurey, Bayley and myself to have kind of stuck it out and it shows the heart of Cincinnati in our work ethic,” Huster said. “We’re just really excited to be home and have this experience. Never in a million years would have I
thought this would’ve happened, but I’m really excited that it did.” They all paved their own path to professional soccer, but it helps they play together professionally. They bond over their love of Graeter’s and Skyline. If they didn’t have a chance to play with or against each other, they have mutual friends. In high school, Huster gave Bledsoe rides to soccer practice at St. Ursula. Huster was a senior with a driver’s license when Bledsoe was a sophomore. “I was, like, scared of Tori, just because she was a really cool senior and I was this really shy sophomore,” Bledsoe said. “The fact that I think we’re actually friends now and she likes me and it’s not just a chore driving me, I sometimes think to myself, ‘This is pretty cool. We’re still friends all these years later and still playing together.’ I really looked up to Tori and her class was really good back at our school. It’s cool that I still get to learn from her every day.” Celebrating the World Cup, Lavelle was honored at an event in Fountain Square and other ceremonies around town. Her teammates are hopeful that the NWSL and the sport will continue to attract more attention. “I think it’s defi nitely diff erent than the 2015 tournament,” Huster said. “There’s been a spike in our own attendance for our games and across our league. Hopefully, that’s here to stay. Hopefully, people keep coming out. I think we play a great brand of football. I think all across our league, it’s a competitive league – the most competitive in the world. I think you’ll see more and more people start to understand that and buy tickets.” Feist added: “Especially when Rose Lavelle is on your team. You’re going to get a lot of attention.”
Morton Continued from Page 1B
motivational speaker with some making big names for themselves. Chris Doyle of Iowa makes over $600,000 per year with Ohio State’s Mickey Marotti and Alabama’s Scott Cochran both over a half-million. “In the early days the strength coach may have been lower on the totem pole for staff importance,” Morton said. “Most coaches didn’t understand it. The profession has grown. Technology and education have supported young coaches who come in better equipped.”
Proper perspective on pectorals Those that have developed reputations and experience on-fi eld success have benefi ted fi nancially. More former athletes are turning to strength and conditioning for coaching work rather than Xs and Os. “Now you’re talking about strength and conditioning coaches that are some sort of athletic department head,” Morton said. “We’ve elevated titles, we’ve elevated salaries. It still comes down for me to preparing and serving the individual athletes.” Morton now sees schools with an army of strength coaches. If you’ve ever seen the guy that’s in charge of pulling the head coach back to the sideline (the get-back coach) that’s usually a member of the strength staff . “I hope we never lose sight of the service aspect of it,” Morton said. “It’s still about the athletes. Often times it can morph into, ‘We become important’. It’s still a teaching reality. You’re still pouring into athletes. I think that’s the essence of coaching, it’s teaching.”
Morton quick hits Are people getting bigger? “I think it’s more training, more education, more food available. We know
Cincinnati Bengals strong safety Taylor Mays (26) walks off the fi eld with strength & conditioning coach chip Morton after their 19-13 loss to the Houston Texans in the fi rst round of their AFC playoff game at Reliant Stadium in Houston, Texas in 2013 ENQUIRER FILE PHOTO
more, we apply more and young men and women are involved in training at an earlier age.” Supplements? “Let’s start with are you eating right. Are you eating breakfast, lunch and dinner? Are you eating servings of vegetables and fruit every day? Are you hydrating? Are you getting enough water? It’s eating a well-balanced diet, getting enough rest, then let things develop naturally.” Anything he’d change? “My warning is always to stay humble as a coach and a professional. It’s about the athletes, male and female, that you’re training. Be a lifelong learner and pour that into them and make them better for being involved with you. It’s a relationship-driven business, we should be pouring in and making people’s lives better.”
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COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ 3B
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4B ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
Our new Cincy Sports Catchup app is here The Enquirer
The Cincy Sports Catchup app quickly gets you up to speed in the morning and wraps up the day’s most exciting moments in the evening with two bundles of news stories. This double-dose is jam packed full of highlights from the Reds, Bengals,
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Avenger Aly: M/i Homes Of Cincinnati LLC to Leroy Robert & Lynn; $625,166 11129 Lebanon Ave: Ramchandre Shital to Hamilton Paulette S @3; $203,000 11154 Jardin Pl: Daniel Richard A Jr Tr to Fohlen Lindsey M; $222,000 4579 Cooper Rd: Storer David to Macleod Janelle; $217,500 4618 Miller Rd: Paul Zachary A to Wloszek Adam Thomas & Katelyn Ann; $290,000 9348 Towne Square Ave: Oltkorik Stephen M Tr to Sharpe Shane N Tr & Sarah J Davies Tr; $343,380 9479 Highland Ave: Doyle Patrick J & Linda Cheryl to Halchak Adam G; $220,599 9550 Waxwing Dr: Ryan Kathleen A to Kaanapali Renovations LLC; $120,000 9550 Waxwing Dr: Kaanapali Renovations LLC to Nicroy Investments LLC; $129,900
Columbia Township
In
9,186
Columbia Tusculum 270 Wortman St: Oh Co Holdings LLC to Rjk Property Preservation LLC; $44,335 3417 Golden Ave: Eger Donald L to Glandorf Alexander K & Michelle A Harpenau; $320,000 See TRANSFERS, Page 6B
Right
here in
This limited-time offer ends on August 31st!
Buy one window or patio door, get one window or patio door
5482 Hill And Dale Dr: Avm Investments to Smith Reyon & Kaneeta; $75,000 5820 Windridge View: Keller Gary P to Lekan Thomas; $320,000 6555 Ridge Ave: Bolden Jacob R & Bridget Sehlhorst to Muething Margaret A; $286,000 6827 Windward St: Mcconney Susan K to Heinsen Sean C; $170,000 6934 Buckingham Pl: Longbottom Lawrence J Jr to Van Treeck Kristine & Joshua; $96,700 6936 Roe St: Campbell Amy C to Mclean Hayden P; $220,000 7002 Cambridge Ave: Richardson Laura M to Miller Britta; $149,000
PLUS
30% OFF
1
Call now to schedule your FREE, no obligation Window and Patio Door Diagnosis
NO NO NO
Money Down Monthly Payments Interest
FOR A FULL YEAR1
513-268-1186 rbacincy.com
Renewal by Andersen Midwest is independently owned and operated. Offer expires 8/31/19. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Discount applied by retailer representative at time of contract execution and applies to minimum purchase of four (4) or more windows and/or patio doors between 8/1/19 & 8/31/19 with approved credit. Subject to credit approval. Discount applied to lowest priced window and/or door products in purchase. Interest is billed during the promotional period but all interest is waived if the purchase amount is paid before the expiration of the promotional period. APR is subject to change after promotional period expires. Financing for GreenSky® consumer loan programs is provided by federally insured, federal and state chartered financial institutions without regard to age, race, color, religion, national origin, gender or familial status. Financing not valid with other offers or prior purchases. All financing is provided by third-party lenders unaffiliated with Renewal by Andersen retailers, under terms and conditions arranged directly between the customer and such lender, which are subject to credit requirements. Renewal by Andersen retailers do not assist with, counsel or negotiate financing, other than providing customers an introduction to lenders interested in financing. Savings comparison is based on the purchase of a single unit at regular list price. See your local Renewal by Andersen location for details. All license numbers available upon request. “Renewal by Andersen” and all other marks where denoted are trademarks of Andersen Corporation. ©2019 Andersen Corporation. All rights reserved. ©2019 Lead Surge LLC. All rights reserved.
1
COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ 5B
Overhead Door Company of Northern KentuckyTM
Proudly Servicing Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky
FREE Keyless Entry
Control and Monitor your garage door from anywhere with
With the installation of any model garage door opener. Not valid with any other offer. Expires 8/31/19
GOOD Legacy® 920 24 Volt DC Chain Drive
$395 Installed
Includes one remote control and free keyless entry
WIFI Connectivity
BETTER
BEST
Legacy® 920 With Emergency Battery Back Up
Legacy® 920 with Battery Back Up and
Installed
Installed
$430
$480
Includes one remote control and free keyless entry
Includes one remote control and free keyless entry
UPGRADE TO THE ULTRA QUIET BELT DRIVE OPTION FOR AN ADDITIONAL $30 Above pricing assumes a 7ft. tall garage door. Additional charges will apply if the the garage door is taller than 7 ft. Limit one Free keyless entry per customer.
Family Owned & Operated Since 1947
CALL NOW! 513-394-6008 859-488-6150 Visit Our Showroom 2571 Ritchie Ave., Crescent Springs, KY 41017 Hours of Operation: 7:30am-4:30pm (M-F) 7:30am-Noon (Sat)
CE-GCI0242071-02
6B ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Continued from Page 4B
3450 Golden Ave: Magliozzi Andrew to Mitarai Etsuo & Kumiko Hara; $295,000 3594 Handman Ave: Donovan Sean M & Kimberly A to Mahon Monica; $785,000 3710 Creighton Pl: Wetzel Katherine E to Minter Anne Christine; $118,250 3721 Morris Pl: Policastro Joseph A to Warner Dane & Gretchen; $340,000 3823 Stites Pl: Murphy Elinor to Lawson Simon; $210,000 3948 Feemster St: A & P Twin Properties LLC to Kritz David C & Beth A; $70,000
$64,410 5513 Arnsby Pl: Currens Andrea Brooke & Daniel L Behnfeldt to Costello Tirza M; $325,000 6741 Hurd Ave: Resolve Properties LLC to Anderson Danielle & Brian; $222,900 6844 Britton Ave: Neighborhood Enrichment LLC to Hubbard George; $82,000
Mariemont 3837 Homewood Rd: Ziegan Alexandra K to 3837 Homewood LLC; $265,000
Montgomery
3733 Oleary Ave: Rohdenburg Farrell Donna Tr & Donald C Rohdenburg Tr to Thomas Robert P; $188,000 3784 Oleary Ave: Overmyer Mark D & Karen A to Smith Brennan K; $200,000 4049 Lansdowne Ave: Bearcat Ventures LLC to Carr Bradley Scott; $157,000 4126 Matson Ave: Cinda Development LLC to H Cubed LLC; $134,500 4131 Matson Ave: Deer Park City Of The Bd Of Education to Ohr Torah Cincinnati; $325,000 4318 Glenway Ave: Mcginnis Joseph P to Hoban Ian A; $196,900 7117 Delaware Ave: Mccormick Derrick M & Kara M to Crabill Victoria R & Barry A; $144,000
10298 Gentlewind Dr: Horan Christine W to Averill Adam; $750,000 10615 Thistlewood Ct: Burns James Gregory & Melvin D Burns to Corum Nichole L & Bradley T Brophy; $455,000 11047 Grandstone Ln: Leighton Gerald & Constance G to Duffield Christopher N & Ebru D; $600,000 7850 Campus Ln: Locke Julie A to Rousseau Lisa; $255,000 9813 Orchard Trl: Clayton C Daley Jr Investment Company LLC to Daley Design + Build LLC; $160,000 9815 Orchard Trl: Clayton C Daley Jr Investment Company LLC to Daley Design + Build LLC; $160,000 9822 Orchard Trl: Mstc LLC to Daley Design + Build LLC; $185,000 9824 Orchard Trl: Mstc LLC to Daley Design + Build LLC; $180,000 9864 Belleford Ct: Frazier Robert to Gilday Sarah E & Steven D; $415,000
Hyde Park
Mount Lookout
1120 Rookwood Dr: Booher Mark S & Eva C to Friedman Aaron D & Alicia; $1,235,000 1280 Morten Ave: Rice Melissa Lyn & Brian Edward Stuck to Fraser Henry J & Kerianne L Ruzicka; $398,000 1312 Meier Ave: Killingsworth Arthur K to Preuss Danielle & Roger; $315,000 2324 Madison Rd: Turner Kelsey to Benschoten Cortlynn Van; $130,000 2324 Madison Rd: Hoffman Erwin E Tr & Betty J Tr to Mitchell Judith; $176,000 2444 Madison Rd: Magobe Corporation to Trott Jennifer & Alexander; $450,000 2770 Observatory Rd: Laverty Joseph C Tr to Kereiakes Nicholas D & Dean J; $950,000 2874 Victoria Ave: Pusateri Angelo to Schiff Austin G; $592,000 3404 Delta Ave: Tracy F Lawrence & Linda M to Feldman Robert M & Emily A; $479,000 3545 Saybrook Ave: Gunning Family Properties LLC to Zhang Lulu; $690,000 3560 Pape Ave: Dubay Valerie to Westfall Jodi L; $284,500 3605 Burch Ave: Nagavi Amir S to Butler Ryan & Ashley; $350,000 3635 Brentwood Ave: Abdulla Zuhair Iskander & Colleen Chime Karkhang to Zukor Joseph; $387,500 3801 Country Club Pl: Patterson Susan & Juan Imeroni to Teiken Justin & Collen M Kelly Teiken; $615,000 3941 Red Bank Rd: Ag Real Estate Ohio LLC to Chemical Lane LLC; $2,395,000 3943 Red Bank Rd: Ag Real Estate Ohio LLC to Chemical Lane LLC; $2,395,000 4120 Allendale Dr: Forster Dean L to Barach David & Tracy; $510,000
1273 Crestwood Ave: Trautman Stephanie N to Pear Russell C & Kelly; $700,000 1273 Grace Ave: Costello James N to Erdmann Ronald R & Jennifer A; $35,000 3015 Griest Ave: Brannon David R & Amber Rose to Murrell Micahel & Melinda Marianna Csorba; $450,000 3036 Kinmont St: Freedman Brian to Jackson Benjamin H; $223,500 3202 Lookout Cr: Bledsoe Ryan A & Erin D to Perkins Isaac & Hillary Smith; $365,000 3253 Lambert Pl: Growe Jeremy Andrew & Samantha Joyce to Hackett Joseph & Katherine Cooper; $422,000 3303 Mannington Ave: Spaccarelli Janeth L to Fey Jarod A & Kathryn Heekin; $760,634 513 Missouri Ave: Gurunathan Arun C & Sanyukta Desai to Dwyer Sean P; $340,000 867 Van Dyke Ave: Broker Aggie to Aschendorf Jody L; $335,000
Deer Park
Indian Hill 7 Voorhees Dr: Breezy Hill Estates Ii LLC to Ianni Peter B; $775,000 7712 Ahwenasa Ln: Streit Susan Tr to Copfer Brian P & Elizabeth W; $1,399,000 8355 Indian Hill Rd: Matter Jean Paul & Kennedy B to Donovan Shea & Sarah Robyn; $650,000 9100 Shawnee Run Rd: Walker Brenda B to Cbny Holdings LLC; $3,650,000
Loveland 1101 Sunrise Dr: Mcconnaughey Sheila Tr to Pennington Rachel; $140,000 184 Cannonade Dr: Mccuistion Mark & Lynn to Redmon Jessica & Amanda; $275,000 414 Park Ave: Cdaw LLC to Dowd Patricia T; $308,000 510 Carrington Ln: Goldston Nancy L to Patil Gargi; $130,000 610 Carrington Ln: Kohlan Lorene K to Bross Dennis; $123,000
Madeira 6767 Woodland Reserve Ct: Vinson Benjamin T & Jennifer L to Upadhayay Niraj & Divya Sharma; $825,000 7235 Osceola Dr: Beech Joseph III Tr to Sullivan Adam G & Lauren A; $290,000 7255 Rita Ln: John Henry Homes Inc to Giorgiani Ryan R & Courtney R; $580,000 7279 Thomas Dr: Neighborhood Enrichment LLC to Nguyen Kay D; $248,000 7396 Dawson Rd: Mikerei LLC to Access Investment Holdings LLC; $115,000 7505 Miami Ave: West David S to Hlm Property Investments LLC; $237,500 8119 Maxfield Ln: Gavin Steven to Edgell Marci L & Justin L; $208,000
Madisonville Kenwood Rd: Brookstone Homes LLC to Poole Tera A; $510,425 4213 Watterson St: Moe Ad Properties Inc to Grohco LLC; $77,500 4604 Whetsel Ave: Aquarian Property Management LLC to A P Hill Properties LLC; $89,000 5209 Charloe St: Gist Jay H Sr to Sonoma Trails LLC;
Norwood 1740 Courtland Ave: Brockman Christina L to Lehmkuhl Brandi D; $130,000 1800 Courtland Ave: Childers Carolyn K to Naegele Thomas Matthew & Hannah Rebecca; $159,000 2018 Elm Ave: Elm Street Properties LLC to Roth David S; $154,000 2023 Crown Ave: Schirmer Thomas P & Caroline C to Nassar Ahmad O; $104,500 2037 Foraker Ave: Gordo Raymond to Chittum Bernard J & Victoria Perry; $130,000 2194 Glenside Ave: Ernst Charles R to Aton Sarah & Andrew T Vogelpohi; $180,000 2205 Drex Ave: Padgett Alex P to Persons Kendall & Lindsay; $185,000 2446 Lysle Ln: Rasch Deborah to Hoskins Mark; $120,500 2521 Lysle Ln: Witko Amy Marie to Smith Megan L; $156,000 2639 Marsh Ave: Crawford Michael & Cynthia to Dipuccio Maria & Steven; $120,000 3944 Forest Ave: West Lawrence C & Maxine to Anderson Zachary L; $199,000 4119 Forest Ave: Shivener Sharon A to Newsom Lori; $180,000 4239 Floral Ave: Riggs James F to Reynolds Marcy A; $225,000 4910 Wesley Ave: Hahn William D to Life Properties LLC; $95,000 5227 Parmalee Pl: Reese Bryan & Veena to Williams James Michael & Donna Jean; $254,900 5314 Moeller Ave: Bryant Timothy S & Theresa A to Borgemenke Justin; $185,000
2602 Ridgecliff Ave: Purdue Alyssa J to Schmidt Michael P & Larisa Durrenberger; $290,000 2631 Langdon Farm Rd: Messer Raymond G & Nancy Gardner-messer to Stieritz Anthony C & Jessica M; $320,000 2819 Langdon Farm Rd: Fennell Ashleigh C to Moeller Alisha Hanson & Paul Daniel; $368,000 2849 Cypress Wy: Pollitt Walker B Iv to Lakeville Remoldeling LLC; $85,000 5709 Doerger Ln: White Trevor S to Hamel Brady Elihu & Hannah Lynn Smith; $270,000 6118 Dryden Ave: 6118 Dryden LLC to Martin Communities LLC; $234,500 6132 Dryden Ave: 6132 Dryden LLC to Martin Communities LLC; $246,500 6162 Ridge Ave: Cloak Ryan Patrick & Margarett C Sampe to Mccormick Matthew Alexander; $231,000 6227 Bona Vista Pl: Leaman F Timothy to Jadan LLC; $85,000
Silverton 4224 South Ave: Jenkins Alverna E to Brockhaven Properties LLC; $110,000 6122 Plainfield Rd: Southside Properties Cincinnati LLC to Seymour Austin R; $255,000
Sycamore Township 10834 Lake Thames Dr: Goodman Ryan to Brock Karen Tr; $164,900 11913 Seventh Ave: Randolph Lois to Cooke Brian D; $88,000 11915 Seventh Ave: Randolph Lois to Cooke Brian D; $88,000 11983 Fourth Ave: Duong Hang to Nguyen Hung Van; $78,000 12010 Cincinnati Ave: Whitaker Patricia A & William M Butler to Grt LLC; $40,000 12010 Sixth Ave: Whitaker Patricia A & William M Butler to Grt LLC; $40,000 12157 Conrey Rd: Rose Ronald & Nancy G to Partin Tyler G; $118,000 1918 Chaucer Dr: Lutz Earl G to Oliver Elizabeth; $31,450 4113 Estermarie Dr: Etzkorn John J to Davin Shawn Christian; $187,000 4116 Jud Dr: Bunn Jared W & Kimberly J to Doemeny Emmerich John; $162,300 4593 Orchard Ln: Cdp Investments LLC to Stephenson Wilfred; $219,500 4662 Kugler Mill Rd: 4662 Kugler Investment LLC to Taghiof Sidney; $155,000 7540 Kirtley Dr: Us Bank National Association Tr to Ramos Carla Leonor & Jose Daniel; $130,000 7752 Montgomery Rd: Lowe Christine Maria to Mcfarland Karen E &; $108,000 7752 Montgomery Rd: Whaley Gregory Scott to N&p 7752 Propert LLC; $120,000 7752 Montgomery Rd: Wilson Charles W & Kathleen W to Anjari Tarek; $127,000 7894 School Rd: Randolph Lois to Cooke Brian D; $88,000 7995 Merrymaker Ln: Farmer Adalene to Hmun Lalsang & Hniang Sung Chin; $245,000 8062 Somerset Chase: George Samuel A Tr to Sweeney Geraldine Ann; $327,500 8089 Silkyrider Ct: Crider Lynn Ramsay Tr & Susan Ramsay to Breissinger Kirc J & Jennifer A; $525,000 8163 Lyndhurst Ct: Lajoie Richard J Jr & Mary Alice to Burns Sandra K; $389,000 8439 Wicklow Ave: Mitchell Ryan E to Brinkmann Keith R; $162,500 8476 Deerway Dr: Huelsman Cheryl M Tr to Chuang Janet & Jesse Yeary; $175,000 8576 Pine Rd: 8576 Pine Investments LLC to Aldas Diego F; $190,000 8657 Wicklow Ave: Feldman Tamara Lynne to Grossbart Stephen R Tr; $163,000
Symmes Township 10304 Richland Park Dr: Kelleher James J & Cheryle to Smith Jeff S & Rhonda C; $300,000 9550 Union Cemetery Rd: Leland Kevin & Deanne to Kidd Victor L @3; $375,000 9870 Farmstead Dr: Cocolin Thomas & Lia to Koehn Nathan D & Jacquelyn F; $536,455
Oakley 2840 Wasson Rd: Meinberg Properties LLC to Disalvo Gina; $245,000 3350 Marburg Square Ln: Bckp Aquisitions Corp to Richards Industrials Inc; $217,950 3559 Harrow Ave: Grant Linda to Baker Aaron Christian; $205,000 3757 Mt Vernon Ave: Arling Matthew Tr to Weathers Elizabeth; $292,500 3765 Marburg Ave: Feldman Robert M & Emily A to Perry Andrew; $285,000 4116 Thirty-third Ave: Cooper Danielle M to Kumar Ashish & Harriet; $265,000 4118 Jora Ln: Fletcher Mary Catherine to Marchant Benjamin F; $310,000 4165 Sherel Ln: Toennis Adam A & Kathryn to Calhoun Kathryn G & Christopher A; $296,000 4212 Eileen Dr: Martin Karen to Dall Angelica G & Nathan R; $399,900 4955 Charlemar Dr: Daugherty Robin N & Virginia Sarah to Reynolds Blaine & Kelly; $180,500 5225 Madison Rd: Anothen LLC to Tjr Development LLC; $800,000
Pleasant Ridge 2567 Ridgeland Pl: Steele Joshua T & Brooke A to Vogelsang Elisabeth H; $176,200
PUZZLE ANSWERS R I P E N
E C O L I
U R N S
B A I L
V E G A
B O X E R
G E T S T H E B L R O L L I N G
S T U B
A U T O
W R I T
I F T S S H E E T L A T C H E O T E U N S H O P S O R S A T A T E L L A S L R I O T C T O P I A S T M T A R O T S B R O A G E Y L E S E T H S T A K N T U R N C A S E O X H E
I T G R I O R O L M B A A P P A A R M A A T N E A D E T N A
D U A L
C H E C H E S U O E S F D E F N A L A T E N A T I L S T A O L A R B O K I O A S O N E N D S E N A G I O C A D B R A I R N T T E E E R
K Q U N U S O R A S C O N K O T B K I R M C A L O V B S A I N D A Z O O B E T Y S O S O M S R I A R T U R Y M I S A S M A M E R G I N S E
R E P S
A B I T
N Y N Y
S M A B U S I N E S S O W N E R
C E L L S
H O S E
R I N K
E A S Y
P A I N T
S T A T S
COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ 7B
Imagine Your Home, Totally Organized!
40 OFF %
1SP2 MONTH EC IAL FINANCING*
On purchases of $2 more made with ,000 or your Home Design credit ca rd.
CALL NOW TO SCHEDULE YOUR FREE IN-HOME DESIGN CONSULTATION.
513.394.6015
Design Center Hours: M -F 9 - 5 | SAT 10 -3 Independently Owned & Operated
11275 Deerfield Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45242 40% off any order of $1000 or more. 30% off an order $700 - $999. *Subject to credit approval. Minimum monthly payments required. See store for details. Free installation valid only on complete systems of $700 or more. Coupon valid on new orders only and must be presented at initial design consultation. May not be applied to a previously placed order. Financing available. Expires 8/31/2019.
8B ❚ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 2019 ❚ COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 6B
No. 0825 REVOLUTIONARY
1
BY DAVID STEINBERG / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
AC R O S S
93 Kind of salami 94 Pool components 96 Type units 97 Like going all in, maybe 98 Diamond pattern 100 Slowly, musically 102 Some are liberal 103 Meyers of late-night 105 Producer of brown eggs 107 Black ____ 110 Arborist’s tool 113 Laid, as a claim 117 “Spider-Man” director 118 Hit hard 119 1965 No. 1 Byrds hit … as suggested by this puzzle’s visual elements? 122 Australia’s smallest state 124 Upstate New York city 125 Topic of Article I, Section 3 of the Constitution 126 Up-and-coming 127 Wrinkle treatment 128 Shaman, for one 129 Newspaper sections that often fall out DOWN
1 Age 2 Romaine concern 3 Kicks things off 4 Land in the water 5 Mortgage org.
4
5
6
7
6 Mountains just south of Yellowstone 7 The Quakers and others 8 Celebrity socialite 9 Comedian Margaret 10 Mind 11 “____ quam videri,” state motto of North Carolina 12 Strike on the head 13 See 8-Across 14 Home of the Marine Corps University 15 ____ Constitution 16 Individual curls, say 17 Slightly 18 It contains M.S.G.: Abbr. 20 1973 play featuring a sign with a burnedout “E” 25 Part of a king’s guard 28 It charges to do some cleaning 32 Arrogant newcomers 33Rebellion leader Turner 35 Swagger 37 Freud’s first stage 39 Plays hard after working hard 40 Baker with the 1986 hit “Sweet Love” 42 Baker or dry cleaner, maybe 43 They multiply by dividing 44 Garden item that sounds like the plural of another garden item
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67 72
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45 Dispensers at banquets 46 Help (out) 47 Author of “The Lion, the Bear and the Fox” 49 Full of empty talk 50 Royals’ org. 54 Teleported, in the Harry Potter books 60 Drop-down menu in online shopping 64 I as in Icarus
79
80
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116
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92 96
97 102 106
117 121
124
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44
68
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43
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42 51
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18
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59 65
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14 22
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118 122
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126 129
66 Something you might take a bow for in the theater? 68 Unapologetic 70 Squeaky mice, e.g. 73 Chasm 74 Jabber? 76 Whirlpool subsidiary since 2006 79 Place to lace up 80 “It’s a snap!” 81 Summer Triangle star 83 The Notorious ____ 85 Six Nations tribe
87 Leave off, as the last word of a 89 Line just above a total, say 95 Squid’s ink holder 99 Latin rebuke 101 Accumulate 102 Up 104 Like a zero-star review 106 Savory taste 108 Coat that’s hard to take off 109 Sports page fodder
110 Paycheck go-with 111 A plane might be flown on it 112 Judicial order 114 Pad site 115 ____ Rosso (Sicilian wine) 116 Kind of citizenship 118 Kind of tea 120 Cpl. or sgt. 121 Fwy., e.g. 123 Virginia Woolf’s “____ Dalloway”
your
LOCAL ROOFING EXPERTS
S
NCY SERV I CE RGE E M
E
RELEASE DATE: 9/1/2019
Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
53 Idris of “The Dark Tower” 55 Ones or tens place 56 0 0 0 57 Wafer brand 58 Hockey-shot sound 59 Shots in the dark 61 Beginning of the Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet 62 Camera type, for short 63 Very funny person 65 Extremely cold 67 River through Pakistan 69 Sea creatures that may employ camouflage when hunting 71 Blood-type system 72 Ones generating buzz in the music world? 74 Play at full volume 75 Super ____ (game series) 77 Help with a job 78 Wrath 81 Eco-friendly car introduced in 2011 82 Something the nose knows 84 ____ Pictures 86 First name on the Supreme Court 88 Quits a program 90 Dennis the Menace, e.g. 91 Burnt barbecue bits 92 Shooting stars, some think
3
19
David Steinberg sold his first crossword to The Times in 2011, when he was 14 and just finishing the eighth grade. A prolific contributor since then, he has had 94 crosswords in the paper altogether. A 2019 graduate of Stanford University, studying psychology and computer science, David recently moved to Kansas City, Mo., to edit crosswords for Andrews McMeel Universal syndicate. — W.S.
1 Passes along, as a present 8 What 13-Down means in poker 14 Book in a mosque 19 Antarctic mass 21 Major British tabloid 22 Yogurt-container words 23 Celebratory Native American feast 24 Drives around awhile … as suggested by this puzzle’s visual elements? 26 If’s counterpart, in programming 27 “S.N.L.” alum Cheri 29 Military-alert system 30 Sow’s home 31 Small criticism 32 Baa-dly needing a haircut? 34 “Today” co-host Hoda 36 Challenges for infielders 38 “De-e-e-eluxe!” 41 Cherry brandy 45 Certain rideshares 47 Deposit box? 48 Morning hour 51 Many a Stan Lee film role 52 Capital NE of Casablanca
2
CALL TODAY!
FREE $200 OFF 10% OFF OR
ROOF INSPECTION & ESTIMATE*
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Offers valid thru 8/31/19. *Must mention coupon when appointment is set. Call for details. **Minimum Spend $5,000. Some restrictions apply, call for details.***Minimum purchase $1,000. Must mention coupon when appointment is set. Not valid on previous sales.
Classifieds
AUGUST 28, 2019 μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ 1C
cincinnati.com
Homes for Sale-Ohio
Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566 H.O.M.E. (Housing Opportunities Made Equal) 513-721-4663
Real Estate great places to live...
Anderson - SEM Manor Rent -Subsidized-Senior Apts 62 & Older Newly Renovated Studio & One Bed. New Appliances, including microwave, new flooring, new AC. Activities, Weekly Grocery Shopping. Onsite Laundry. Call for Application 513-474-5827 TTY 1-800-750-0750
Loveland: 9857 Union Cemetery Road - 3 BD / 1 BA Fireplace - 2.5 car garage w/ workshop on 1 acre Laundry hookups in basement - Completely painted and whole house carpeted 2018 - Loveland Schools - 1-year lease 1st mo. rent + 1mo. Sec. Dep. at signing - $1,150/month + utililites - 513-683-6812
Careers
Jobs
new beginnings... Milford SEM Villa Rent subsidized Voted Best of the East Senior apartments 62 + older Newly renovated apts Secure building Service coordinator Visiting physicians 513-831-3262 TTY 1-800-750-0750
South Lebanon - Union Village Apts Rent subsidized 30% of monthly income One bedroom, Senior 62 & older. Onsite laundry, Secured building, Pet friendly, Service coordinator. Call for application 513-494-1055 or TTY 800-750-0750
Cincinnati Low Income, Section 8 Apartments. Affordable Housing, Rent Based on Income. 2-3BR. Call 513-929-2402. Ebcon Inc. Mgt. Equal Opportunity Housing
DEPENDABLE, Honest & Hardworking
Medical Delivery Well established delivery company seeks FT and PT. Dependable, honest, nonsmoker, independent contractor with van or SUV. Great Pay and earning potential. Must pass background checks and drug screen. Call 513-841-1159 or email sjt1mds@fuse.net
LOVELAND-new bike trail. Quiet locked bldg. 55+. 2 BR 1 BA, 1st floor, 1100 sq ft. Equipped kitchen, wall to wall carpet, intercom, garage, $860. No pets. 513-891-0623
Macarthur Park is accepting applications for 1, 2 & 3 BR apts. 665 Park Ave, Unit K1,Loveland, OH, 45140, 513-683-5081
MT. LOOKOUT 1 & 2 BDRM Grandin Bridge Apartments 513-871-6419
NORWOOD: Furnished Clean, air, TV/cable, fridge, microwave, etc. No smoking! $110 weekly - 513-731-4008
Now Hiring ∂ Maintenance ∂ Room Attendant/ Housekeeper ∂ Restaurant Bartender / Server ∂ Kitchen Steward ∂ Line Cook ∂ Executive Chef ∂ Front Desk Clerk We offer full benefits, 401(k) with 50% match, PTO, and competitive wages. Apply online today and check out our fantastic benefits at atriumhospitality.com Equal Opportunity Employer—Veterans/ Disability and Other Protected Categories
Community
Announce
announcements, novena...
Bethel: Small 3BD / 1BA $950/month + $950/ deposit 1 year lease. Call 513-753-6334
Leather sofa, loveseat & ottoman. , Navy blue leather sofa, 79 inches long total. Also navy blue love seat & ottoman. All in very good condition., $$1,000 for set of 3 or best offer for individual items.. (513)574-4553 monica.p100@aol.com
For nearly 100 years CBT has been one of the most innovative Industrial Distribution companies in Cincinnati and the tristate region. Our mission is to be recognized by our customers and our suppliers as their best business partner. Our success comes from recruiting, hiring, and training the best people in the industry. We invest in our people and our business. The Belting Service Technician is part of a team that fabricates and installs conveyor belting and components both in the shop at CBT and on site at the customer
Responsibilities:
Trombone, Yamaha YSL-641 Tenor Trombone. Large Bore Pro Model. Red Brass Bell in Lacquer Finish., $700. (513)675-3522 sgeisband@aol.com
HANDYMAN Experienced, Reasonable, No Job Too Big or Too Small. Including electric & plumbing. Steve 513-491-6672
Requirements: • Prior millwright or industrial belting experience required • Must be able to work a variety of on-call hours (including nights and weekends) • Must have a stable work history, no more than two jobs within the past three years. • High School diploma or equivalent. • Valid driver’s license
Critical Skills: • Must have demonstrated mechanically ability in past employment. • Must be able to work flexible shift schedule and be on call. • Proficient in basic mathematics.
Working Environment: • The Belting Technician generally performs duties in a belt shop setting. The position requires the ability to lift up to 50 pounds frequently and 75 pounds occasionally. Often exposure to different environments while visiting customer’s facilities which could include; contaminants, hazardous situations, bright or dim lighting conditions, noise and sound levels may sometimes be distracting or uncomfortable. Works close to others. City of Reading The City of Reading will be accepting applications for Full Time Truck Drivers until 8/30/19. Applications are available at the City General Offices, 1000 Market St. M-F 9am-5pm. Applicants should view the official Job notice and testing requirements at www.readingohio.org
Physicians (Gastroenterologist, Pulmonologist) Worksite Crestview Hills, KY and surrounding areas. Send resume to Cathy Drennen, Summit Medical Group dba St. Elizabeth Physicians, 334 Thomas More Pkwy, Crestview Hills, KY 41017 CE-GCI0254398-03
Assorted
Put it up for sale.
Put it up for sale.
VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
Buying ALL Sports Cards Pre 1970. Please Contact Shane Shoemaker @ 513-477-0553
BUYING-Old guitars, & old musical instruments. Any Condition! The older, the better! Call/text: 937-767-2326 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!
I BUY STEREO SPEAKERS, PRE AMPS, AMPS, REEL TO REEL TURNTABLE, RECORDS, INSTRUMENTS, ETC (513) 473-5518
Stuff all kinds of things...
Antiques & Vintage Market Lawrenceburg Fairgrounds U.S. 50, Exit 16 I-275 Sept 1st 7 am - 3 pm Over 200 dealers 513-353-4135 lawrenceburgantiqueshow. com
Old Advertising/Gas Station Related Items, Pre-1970 | Signs, Gas Pumps, Air Meters, Soda Coolers, Etc. Call 937-321-7154
Holman Mini Conveyor oven, 210HX w/ 30 inch belt & 11 inch cooking height, used only 20 times, retail $2300 and asking $1,000. Call: 513-239-9772 (lv mssge)
Double burial plots: Resthaven Memorial Park, 10209 Plainfield Rd. 45241. Everlasting Love sec. 5-6. Incl. 2 vaults. 513-761-5571
Special Notices-Clas HARRIS DIATOMACEOUS EARTH FOOD GRADE 100% OMRI Listed-For Organic Use. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com
Musical Instruction
• Accurately perform assigned tasks in a timely fashion. • Interact with customers in a professional manner
CE-GCI0253553-02
SR 32 & I-275 at Eastgate
Pets Allowed 513-876-3590, TTY 800-750-0750
PETS & STUFF
To place your ad visit: cincinnati.com/classifieds or search: classifieds
Overview:
30+ yrs exp. Available 24/7.Call:51 3-658-1413, 513-704-5551.
FT. THOMAS. 1 & 2 BDRM APTS & 1 BDRM TOWNHOMES 859-441-3158
62 and over. Rent Subsidized, Free Utilities, Secure Building, On-site laundry,
RIDES
w/refs. Home Health Aide w/over
Cincinnati Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing
Garrison Place- Felicity Senior Apartments.
HOMES
Homes for Sale-Ohio
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.
Rentals
JOBS
Cincy Best Seasoned Firewood, 1/2 Cord $80 pickup. Delivery and stacking available. 513-795-6290
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
$$$ 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 to Buy- Riding mower & zero turn mower, in need of repairs. Will pay up to $100 - 513-707-2399
WAR RELICS US, German, Japanese Uniforms, Helmets, Guns, Swords, Medals Etc, Paying Top Dollar Call 513-309-1347
2C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ AUGUST 28, 2019
Find a home that fits your family in a neighborhood that fits your life.
Your dream home should come with a dream neighborhood. That’s why Cincinnati | Homes provides exclusive details on neighborhoods, lifestyles and area amenities with every listing.
cincinnati.com/Homes
AUGUST 28, 2019 μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ 3C
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
Kenner/Hasbro With our 50+ years of combined experience, no one knows toys like we do. APPRAISALS. AUTHENTICATION. CASH PURCHASES. CONSIGNMENT. We have a long list of Kenner referrals. Let us help you get the most out of your rare items. We also pay cash finder’s fees for any referral that leads to a completed transaction. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR! Here are just a few examples of the prices we pay: Kenner business cards - up to $200 Original artwork - up to $75K or more Toy sculpts - up to $100K depending on the line Prototypes -up to $50K Toys in package - Star Wars, Super Powers, Batman, Jurassic Park etc. up to $25K Kenner employee items - up to $2K Paper items - up to $30K If it has the word Kenner on it, let’s talk! thekennerguy@gmail.com (937)-361-8763
Attention Kenner Hasbro Employees!!
NOTICE OF SYMMES TOWNSHIP LAND USE COMMITTEE MEETING Notice is hereby given that the Symmes Township Land Use Committee will meet to discuss land use goals and objectives and make future recommendations for Symmes Township pertaining to the land use map. The committee meeting will be held at at 6:00 p.m. on September 10th at the Symmes Township Administration Building, 9323 Union Cemetery Road, Loveland, Ohio 45140. Carol A. Sims, Fiscal Officer Symmes Township LH,Aug28’19#3735558
The Creators of Kenner’s Star Wars ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü üü ü ü ü ü üü ü ü ü ü üü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü ü The toys are known around the world. Now, get to know the people who created them. To purchase a copy, visit us at engineeringanempirebook.com üüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüüü If you are a former Kenner or Hasbro employee and would like to tell your story in the next volume of Engineering an Empire, we would love to hear from you! Please reach out to us at info@engineeringanempirebook.com or call us at (513) 583-0276
Yellow Lab Pups P.O.P Females, shots & wormed! ûû Story Kennels ûû 513-293-6660 or 513-941-5935 YORKIE PUPPIES, vet checked, shots & dewormed, parents 7lbs & 3lbs, F $500, M $400 (513)525-3570
Your search ends here...
Automotive
Rides
Adopt Me
best deal for you...
Pets find a new friend...
Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk up $3000 Fair cash price, quick pickup. 513-662-4955
ADOPT- Animal Rescue Fund. Open Mon-Sat 11-5; Closed Sun & Holidays 513-753-9252 www.petfinder.com
Airedale Terrier Pups Standard - AKC Bred for temperament Micro-chipped - $1,000 CASH 812-620-1519
Dog. Puppies, German Shepherd puppies, Male and female , $550, 8 weeks, Black and tan, Great with kids Parent on site (513)320-0608 Mrdavidaroark@aol.com
Beagles, Shihpoos, Yorkies, Yorkiepoos, Pugs, Poodles, Shorkies, Havanese, & Teddy Bears. Shots, Dewormed & Vet Checked. Blanchester, OH. 937-725-9641
Chihuahua pups, CKC, short, long coat, small, tri colors, micro chipped, shots, wormed, $400. 937-515-0265
Like the leaves that fall from the trees fall in love with a lovable Ocherese. M/F starting at $675 812-8930281 or 812-582-0682 www.ocherese.com
We buy junk cars and trucks - CASH on the spot û†û 513-720-7982 û†û
1 BUYER of OLD CARS CLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s, Running or not. 513-403-7386
Our new robots won’t take jobs.
THEY’LL FIND YOU THE RIGHT ONES.
2016 H.D. Ultra Classic Limited Low, Dark Brown / Black, only 3,800 +/- miles. I have extras that come with this bike. I will text pics $17,900 Bob (859) 428-9265
Post your rental. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
Pug Puppies, vet checked, ready to go. $700. 513-305-5528
Service Directory 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 ±
DON’S TREE SERVICE, LLC
Trees Trimmed Topped & Removed Free Estimates - Insured
896-5695
Chevy 1992 Blazer, V6 4WD, 2 door. Good runner. Asking $1000. 513-288-0506
HAND OUT THE CIGARS! Celebrate with a announcement. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
Proprietor, Don Stroud
Experience data-driven recruiting on the only job network that automatically connects employers with the right talent.
Launching Aug 2017
CE-0000709510
Garage & Yard Sale VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD
Great Buys
Garage Sales neighborly deals...
ESTATE SALE Mason 202 Furbee Dr. Aug. 30, 31 & Sept. 1, 8a-3p Loads of items! Tooles of all kinds, crafts supplies, kitchen items, furniture, table saw, and much more!
CHECK OUT CLASSIFIED online at cincinnati.com
Friendship Flea Market, Friendship, IN Sept 14 - Sept 22, Open Daily 9am Southeastern IN, 45 mi. west of Cincinnati, on State Road 62. 859-341-9188 www.friendshipflea market.com Bring this ad for $1 off parking Monday - Thursday. WANTED ARTISTS & CRAFTERS Sharonville Kiwanis Arts & Craft Show. Sharonville Community Center. Sun Sept 29. 513-563-1738 email: patchancetaylor@gmail.com
Amelia - Fri 8/19 & Sat 8/20, 9-3pm, 1109 Twig Ln, (Off Merwin- 10 mile Rd) Misc. GARAGE SALE4 HOUSEHOLDS IN 1 SALE Thur. Fri. Sat. Aug 29-31, 9-1 6927 Whipporwill Dr. 45230 (Anderson Twsp). Vintage , clothes, lamps, books, furniture, kitchen & household, decoratives & holiday, bedding, old TV & range, golf bag, glassware, college stuff, & MUCH MORE!
Get started by visiting cincinnati.com
4C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ AUGUST 28, 2019
Your generous monetary donation provides shoes, coats, glasses and basic necessities to neediest kids right here in the Tri-state. With so many children living in poverty, it’s a great way for you to help the children who need it most. So, step up for Neediest Kids of All and send your donation today!
GIVE TO NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL Yes, I would like to contribute to NKOA. Enclosed is $___________________. Name______________________________________________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________________ Apt. No. ___________ City_______________________________________________________ State_________________ Zip___________ Please send this coupon and your check or money order, payable to: NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL, P.O. Box 636666, Cincinnati, OH 45263-6666
Make a credit card contribution online at Neediestkidsofall.com.
Neediest Kids of All is a non-profit corporation now in its 64th year. Its principal place of business is Cincinnati, and it is registered with the Ohio Attorney General as a charitable trust. Contributions are deductible in accordance with applicable tax laws.