Eastside Press 10/07/20

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With Card • Price valid until 10/14 YO U ’ L L B E Delighted

Will the pandemic hamper Halloween fun?

Meet The Enquirer’s 2020 Women of the Year Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

This year’s group of Enquirer Women of the Year honorees includes women who have had their hands in major organizations across the city, working behind the scenes to make Cincinnati a better place for everyone. The women will be honored during a virtual event in November. This is the 52nd Women of the Year awards. Introduced by The Enquirer in 1968, the program annually recognizes 10 area women who have supported philanthropic eff orts and who have improved civic life through their investment of time, energy and their belief in helping others. More than 500 women have been honored over the years.

Most Americans say they can't imagine Halloween without trick-or-treating, according to a Harris Poll. KAJAKIKI/GETTY IMAGES

We asked COVID-19 experts:

‘Would you do this, doc?’ Question: Would you hand out candy to trick-or-treaters?

Terry DeMio Cincinnati Enquirer

T

USA TODAY NETWORK

he exalted season of haunting is upon us, and soon, children will pull on costumes and trek through neighborhoods trick-ortreating after dark as candlelit jack-o-lanterns scare away demons (or so the legend goes). But, boo! COVID-19 is prowling streets and hovels this year, threatening a chilling eff ect on the frightful fun. We, at The Enquirer, know that Halloween is revered by children and adults alike, so we sought out some COVID-19 and infectious disease wizards on the subject and asked them, “Would you do this, doc?” Here’s who responded: h Dr. Jennifer Forrester, associate professor of infectious diseases at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine and associate chief medical offi cer at UC Health. h Dr. Brent Kinder, Mercy Health-Clermont critical care physician. h Dr. Joseph Bailey, pediatric medical director for TriHealth Physician Partners. h Dr. Robert Frenck, professor of pediatrics for the division of infectious diseases at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. Here’s what we asked – and what they said:

Forrester: “I go back and forth on this, but if we do, we’ll be trying some socially distanced options. I’d prefer to leave the candy out at the end of the driveway while we sit on our porch. That way we can still watch the ghouls and goblins go by!” Kinder: “I think it is OK to hand out candy. I’d probably just drop it in the kids’ buckets or bags and avoid any close contact. Another option would be to leave a bowl out with a request to ‘take just one,’ but it may not survive the fi rst hour.” Bailey: “Yes I would, ensuring that I am wearing a mask while doing so.” Frenck: “Yes. But, I would hand it out to them, not have them stick their hand in the basket, bucket, etc. I would not worry about putting on gloves. That only protects you or the child for the fi rst couple minutes. After that, you have touched so many things that the gloves are of no value.”

Q: If your child is trick-or-treating, what rules would you set for her on her way out the door? Forrester: “My kids will need to stick together (as usual) and will not be meeting up with others. I’ll ask them to keep their distance and wait their turn, 6 feet apart from others. I’d also suggest they wait until getting home to eat anything, so that they can wash their hands and clean the candy fi rst.” See HALLOWEEN, Page 2A

One expert says kids should keep their distance and wait their turn while trick-or-treating. GETTY IMAGES

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Here are the 2020 Enquirer Women of the Year: Delores Hargrove Young, of Evendale, embodies the spirit of Cincinnati, said those who work with her. Young, vice chairwoman for d.e. Foxx & Associates, Inc., has worked for nearly every big-name organization in the area, including the American Red Cross and Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Young also co-chaired the 2015 MLB All-Star Game community organizing committee. “Alongside these organization Delores is committed to inspiring and developing young female leaders, increasing supplier diversity, and improving the economic stability of Cincinnati,” her nomination said. Dr. Shelley Jeff erson Hamler, of Amberly, has “dedicated her entire life to educating, motivating, inspiring and empowering young people,” according to her nomination. Throughout her career, Hamler worked at school systems throughout Greater Cincinnati, mentoring and teaching students. She is President of the Cincinnati Chapter of The Links. The Links Leadership Academy for African American girls is a mentorship program for young women that makes a long-term commitment to the success of its mentees. Evelyn Laux, of Covington, is a “champion for children,” her colleagues said. A long-time employee of the United Way, Laux converted Cincinnati’s referral line to one of the nation’s fi rst accredited 211 call centers. She also led the expansion of the United Way to cover Northern Kentucky, Clermont, Brown and parts of Butler County. In retirement, Laux has volunteered for CASA for Kids in Northern Kentucky, working with children under the age of 18 as a court-appointed special advocate who has logged more than 2,000 hours since 2009. Helen O’Neal, of Anderson Township, is a long-time community volunteer who is co-founder and ambassador of the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. O’Neal has also served on boards of the Cincinnati Art Museum and Contemporary Arts Center. Colleagues say everything O’Neal does is with the “love and support for those who are underrepresented.” See WOMEN, Page 6A

Vol. 3 No. 38 © 2020 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED $1.00

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Halloween

on a mask, not come if they are sick and limit to the allowed number (10). This is going to make for a less than normal party, but I think the kids still can have fun.”

Continued from Page 1A

Kinder: “Reinforce the idea not to go indoors and avoid any touching of hands. No eating candy until they return home and candy wrappers are wiped down and hands thoroughly washed. No congregating with groups of kids, and try to maintain six feet of distance from others.” Bailey: “If I had a younger child, I would allow them to trick-or-treat, and the rules would be: to not take breaks in houses along the way, regardless if they are friends or not. Keep trick-or-treating groups to a minimum. Six or less.” Frenck: “Ask that the person put the candy in your bag. Ask that kids stay as separated as they are at school (assuming they are going to ‘real’ school instead of online). Ask that they wait to eat the candy until they get home.”

Q: Would you have your child wear a mask over or under her Halloween mask? Forrester: “Yes. The horrifying, illfi tting, odd-shaped masks haven’t been tested by an appropriate mad scientist. So, the child still needs a cloth face mask and it should be underneath the costume mask. I want to protect the kid, not the costume.” Kinder: “Yes, unless they happen to be wearing a surgical mask as part of their costume. I expect to see a number of Dr. Fauci costumes this year.” Bailey: “The mask should be worn underneath the Halloween mask covering the face.” Frenck: “They need to wear something that covers their nose and mouth. If their Halloween mask does that, I don’t think they need to double mask. Maybe everyone will go as a surgeon this year and the mask will be part of the costume!”

Q: Would you let your child trick-or-treat with friends? Forrester: “No. Kids will not reliably stay six feet apart.” Kinder: “Probably one carefully vetted friend would be OK, but I would avoid large groups.” Bailey: “Yes, as long as it is a small group as stated above (six or fewer).” Frenck: “Yes. I would ask that they remember social distancing, although I

Q. For the no-parties docs: What alternatives would you provide your child for Halloween? Forrester: “We usually hold a spooktacular costume party. This is obviously, and unfortunately, on hold this year. But we will have our own family eerie evening – just a little diff erent. We will still be carving pumpkins and making apple cider. We will also be doing some new things, like a Halloween scavenger hunt and making some cauldron slime (and some other crafty things). Plus, we will have to up the ante on our spirited meal, something a little more fancy than BBQ bat wings and zombie meatloaf.” Kinder: “I think dressing up in costumes at home, watching Halloweenthemed movies with family (and) backyard s’moresCQ are good options for this year.”

James Milburn, 14, wears a "plague doctor'" mask on May 3 at Waterfront Park in Louisville. SAM UPSHAW JR./COURIER JOURNAL

am sure that will be diffi cult for kids when they are out having fun.”

Q: Would you wash wrapped candy collected by your child? Forrester: “Yes.” Kinder: “I would probably wipe down (candy) with disinfectant wipes, even though available evidence does not suggest much transmission from inanimate objects.” Bailey: “No, I would not be concerned about washing the Halloween candy.” Frenck: “No. Remember, the virus does not live long on surfaces. If you wanted to be really safe, you could ask your kids to give you the candy and you put it away until the next day. By then, even if there were virus on the wrapper, it should be very weakened or dead. This is not an excuse for you to eat all your kids’ candy!”

Q: Would you let your child go to a Halloween party? Forrester: “No, no other parties than with mummy and daddy!” Kinder: “No. I suppose small outdoor gatherings with masked partygoers may be OK for some, but I don’t think it is worth the risk.” Bailey: “I would not allow attending a large Halloween party. However, if they decided to have a small gathering outside around a campfi re, for example, with a mask on, this would be acceptable.”

Frenck: “To me, this is, ‘Would you let your kids be in a group?’ Halloween just happens to be the occasion. People should maintain social distancing, have

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Fall days are perfect for apple dumplings Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist

I was in the mood for apple dumplings so I made a batch. It was the perfect fall day for making apple butter and applesauce, too. I’m sharing recipes for both the dumplings and apple butter. If you

want the applesauce recipe, check out my abouteating.com site. Judy M., a longtime reader, loves the apple butter from Nashville House in Nashville, Indiana. “My sisters and I want to get together and make apple butter and we’re looking for that recipe,” Judy said. She has great memories of going there as a family and eating fried biscuits with apple better. I called Nashville House and they don’t give out recipes, so I’m sharing one I like and which, I hope, comes close to what Judy wants.

Apple butter You can make this without any sugar or a substitute, but the real deal contains sugar. Use a big pot since butter sputters as it cooks. Ingredients

Apple dumplings with cinnamon syrup. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD/FOR ENQUIRER

6 pounds or so apples (anything but red delicious – a combo of tart and sweet is good), quartered and left unpeeled.

Apple dumplings with cinnamon syrup Ingredients for dumplings

Moisten to seal edges.

1 double pie crust recipe

Repeat with last two corners of pastry and moisten to seal last two corners.

1 cup sugar

2 cups apple cider

Place dumplings in sprayed baking dish.

1 tablespoon cinnamon

Sugar to taste – start with 2 cups or so and go from there 2 teaspoons cinnamon ⁄ 4 to 1⁄ 2 teaspoon ground cloves

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Pour syrup over (recipe follows) and bake 40-60 minutes until golden and apple is soft when fork is pressed into dumpling.

8 teaspoons butter

Ingredients for syrup

Instructions

1 tablespoon plus 1 1⁄ 2 teaspoons cornstarch

Instructions

Preheat oven to 375.

Cook apples in cider until tender.

Mix sugar and cinnamon together and set aside.

Press through sieve or food mill. Measure out pulp – you’ll have about 3 quarts. Cook on low, stirring frequently to prevent sticking, until it rounds up in a spoon. Add sugar and spices and continue to cook

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Place 1 peeled and cored apple in center of each square. Fill cavity with some sugar/cinnamon mixture. Dot with 1 teaspoon butter.

2 cups cool water 11⁄ 2 cups sugar or less to taste 3 tablespoons lemon juice Cinnamon to taste – start with 1 nice teaspoon Instructions

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Take opposite corner and overlap it over fi rst one.

Pour over dumplings. Proceed with baking.

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Doug Evans’ report-to-prison date now Jan. 8 Jeanne Houck Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Doug Evans’ attorney says his client is in poor health and could die if ordered to prison during the COVID-19 outbreak. Fort Wright lawyer Benjamin Dusing wants a federal judge in Cincinnati to allow Evans to serve his 21-month sentence for fraud at home. This week, U.S. District Court Judge Michael Barrett issued an order saying he would delay taking up the request un-

Women Continued from Page 1A

Heather Russell, of Loveland, runs Change Court, a specialized docket in Hamilton County Municipal Court and a restorative program that allows women who have been sex traffi cked to get help and reclaim their lives. Those backing her nomination said not everyone can look back and see the diff erence they’ve made in the lives of others, but “Judge Russell is one that can.” Her nomination said Russell “has touched and restored the lives of women who may have been considered untouchable and beyond restoration.” Dr. Samina Sohail, of West Chester, is a leader who “brings diverse cultures together” as a member of the Islamic Center of Greater Cincinnati. Her colleagues said Sohail has taken it upon herself to promote real conversations and civil and racial justice in her community. She does this, in part, through a program called Candid Community Conversations and through

til lawyers in the case arrange a hearing. But Barrett rescheduled Evans’ report-toprison date from Oct. 5 to Jan. 8. Evans Barrett sentenced Evans to prison in January after Evans, who founded Evans Landscaping, Inc. of Newtown, was convicted of charges accusing the businessman of creating a fake company to land public minority construction and demolition

bringing people into the center. Sohail has been a tour guide for ICGC for 10 years, taking countless visitors on tours, breaking down Islamophobia and building bridges in the community. Shawnteé Stallworth Schramm, of Westwood, is a neighborhood advocate who has been on the forefront of her community’s revitalization, her nomination said. Schramm has been a board member with the Westwood Civic Association for seven years, leading neighborhood cleanups and working with law enforcement and other community leaders to reduce crime throughout her neighborhood. In opening Muse Cafe and Wine Bar, Schramm fi lled a need in the community and created an environment to draw others in. Her application said that in starting her own business in her community, Schramm showed a “willingness to invest in her community before it was popular.” Stephanie “Stevie” Swain, of Kennedy Heights, is a leader with a “servant heart big enough to share with others,” ac-

cording to her nomination. Swain is the founder and president of the Cincinnati Collaborative Women’s Network that awakens and fuels the passion of aspiring women entrepreneurs, her nomination said. She is also a member of the Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky African American Chamber of Commerce, works with Talbert House and teaches fi nancial literacy to Macy’s Employees as a way to help community members invest in and improve their futures. Teresa Tanner, of Hyde Park, does not measure success by numbers but rather the diff erence one can make in people’s lives, her nomination said. Tanner’s young

contracts. Dusing says in court fi lings that Evans, 58, needs to avoid prison “because of his unique medical conditions that render him particularly susceptible to severe illness or death during this pandemic.” “(Evans) has a severely high body mass index. He has no spleen - an organ that is an important part of the body’s immune system,” Dusing said. “He has prediabetes, borderline hypertension, and likely fatty liver disease,

daughter was diagnosed with leukemia in 1994 and recovered. Later, Tanner went on to chair a $50 million campaign at Cincinnati’s Ronald McDonald House to make the facility the largest of its kind in the world. She is also a board member of ArtsWave and the Freestore Foodbank. In the wake of the 2018 Fifth Third Center shooting, Tanner oversaw the lobby reopening and has served on the Cincinnati Strong Victims Fund in an eff ort to help her co-workers heal. Michele Young, of Indian Hill, is an attorney for whom “no problem is too small or great to undertake,” her nomination said – from freeing a woman who was wrongly impris-

all of which are consistent with his obesity and important enough to warrant a sentence modifi cation.” Evans’ request is complicated by the fact that he has already appealed his conviction to the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, and that court has jurisdiction in his case. Dusing wants Barrett to issue an order saying Barrett would allow Evans to serve his sentence at home if the appelSee EVANS, Page 7A

oned to volunteering at the Kyle Plush Answer the Call Foundation after the death of her son’s friend. Many describe Young as an “angel” who has worked for inclusion in the community, opening doors for minorities like

managing the fi rst campaign for Hamilton County Coroner Lakshmi Sammarco and co-chairing the re-election campaign for Judge Nadine Allen. “She clearly thinks of others’ interests before her own,” her nomination said.

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Cincinnati is second-fastest selling housing market Randy Tucker Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Single family homes and condos are selling faster in the Cincinnati area than any other market in the country except one, according to the latest national housing report from real estate market tracker, Re/Max. In August, homes sold in the Cincinnati area stayed on the market an average of 21 days before coming under contract, ranking just behind Omaha, Nebraska for the shortest time on the market out of 53 metro areas surveyed, according to the report. The number of days on the market in Cincinnati was less than half the national average of 41 days in August – only the second time in the housing report’s 13-year history that the national number fell that low, according to Re/ Max. Seattle, Nashville, Miami and Des Moines, Iowa, rounded out the top 5 fastest-selling housing markets in the Re/Max report. "(Home) buyers are moving forward in record numbers, unfazed by inventory challenges and consistently higher prices," said Adam Contos, CEO of Re/ Max Holdings Inc. Nationally, August home sales rose about 4.3%, on average, while prices

Evans Continued from Page 6A

late court allowed Barrett to make the decision. But the U. S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio argued in court fi lings that Evans has not presented the “extraordinary and compelling justifi cation” the law deems necessary to support a request to serve his sentence at home. “The government acknowledges that the COVID-19 pandemic has created new challenges for the judicial system. However, these challenges are not expected

surged to a new record high median price of $290,000, according to Re/ Max. In the Cincinnati area, sales were up about 11% in July, compared to the same month a year ago, and the median price surged about 13% to $218,000, according to the most recent report from the Cincinnati Area Board of Realtors (CABR). An unprecedented shortage of inventory both locally and nationally has forced buyers to act fast and bid up prices for a dwindling number of available homes for sale, The Enquirer previously reported. In Cincinnati, housing inventory plunged 46% in July compared to the same month a year earlier, according to the local Realtors. And the dearth of listings is likely to become even more pronounced this fall leading up to the presidential election and a possible second wave COVID-19 infections that has already led some sellers to hold off on listing their homes, said Donna Deaton, vice president of Re/Max Victory in Liberty Township. “Historically, for whatever reason, anytime there's a presidential election the market always slows down,'' Deaton said. "As long as we have low inventories, prices are going to continue to increase because you just have more people bidding for fewer properties.''

to be permanent,” David DeVillers said. “Accordingly, courts exercise caution and restraint in considering extraordinary requests for relief. The most prudent course is to avoid permanent modifi cation to a judgment where a simple delay in execution of the judgment would suffi ce.” This is the third time Evans’ report-toprison date has been delayed since the onset of the pandemic. His initial date was April 7. That was delayed until July 7 and then until Oct. 5. Editor’s note: Information included refl ects this article’s original publication date – Sept. 26. Visit Cincinnati.com for possible updates.

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The Cincinnati Zoo’s baby eastern black rhinoceros has been named “Ajani Joe.” PROVIDED

Cincinnati Zoo’s baby rhino has been named ‘Ajani Joe’ Jeanne Houck Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The Cincinnati Zoo’s baby eastern black rhinoceros has been named “Ajani Joe.” Martha Wolf of Mount Lookout won naming rights after her name was drawn in a contest Oct. 1 during a virtual shower for the month-old rhino sponsored by Rhino Wipe, which makes reusable dry wipes. “My father’s name is Joe and I wanted to honor him but also to choose a name that was of African origin, since that’s the black rhino’s native land,” Wolf said in a press release from the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden. “Ajani means ‘he who wins the struggle’. My dad has been a rock recently as my mom’s primary caretaker, and I hope the little rhino will be strong like him.” The zoo raised $28,000 for rhino food and care from about 300 people who purchased items for Ajani Joe’s shower, Michelle Curley, zoo spokeswoman, told The Enquirer. Everyone who purchased a $100 shower gift was invited to the virtual shower and eligible to win the naming

opportunity in a random drawing, Curley said.

The baby rhino is ‘spunky and curious’

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The zoo’s press release said Ajani Joe’s keepers describe him as spunky and curious. He is not on a set schedule, but visitors may catch a glimpse of him jumping and playing while his protective mom, Seyia, keeps a watchful eye on him. “This little guy is an important ambassador for his species,” Christina Gorsuch, director of animal care at the zoo, said in the release. “Eastern black rhinos are critically endangered, and he is the fi rst of his kind born this year in North America. Only eight others, including his brother, were born in the three years prior.” The release said eastern black rhinos are native to eastern and central Africa and are critically endangered due to poaching and habitat loss. Only about 5,000 of the black rhinos, which can weigh as much as 3,000 pounds in adulthood, exist in the world, the release said.

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SPORTS DI seedings, match-ups set for OHSAA football tournament Lima Shawnee vs. Wapakoneta with the winner playing No. 2 seed Badin Oct. 16. Tipp City Tippecanoe vs. Dayton Ponitz with the winner playing the winner of Mt. Healthy vs. Fenwick Oct. 16. Celina plays Dayton Carroll with the winner against Trotwood-Madison Oct. 16. Dayton Dunbar vs. Aiken with the winner against Kettering Alter Oct. 16.

Scott Springer Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

COLUMBUS - Ohio’s pandemic playoff s are set to begin Oct. 9.

Here are the match-ups, starting in Division I (all games Oct. 9 at 7 p.m) Lakota West, the highest-ranked DI team in Southwest Ohio will open with West Clermont, who missed their fi nal two games due to COVID-19 infections. The winner will face the Lakota East/ Sycamore winner. Sycamore thus far doesn’t have a regular-season game for Oct. 2 due to the West Clermont situation. This would set up a possible Lakota West/Lakota East rivalry game. The district teams normally play during the regular Greater Miami Conference season but did not due to the shortened six-game menu mandated by the OHSAA because of the coronavirus pandemic. Mason will host Lebanon with the winner playing the victor of Colerain vs. Milford. Should the GMC schools prevail it would be the fi rst meeting between Mason and Colerain this season. Milford has an Oct. 16 game scheduled with Loveland, so an Eagles victory would change those plans. Teams eliminated from the playoff s are permitted to continue playing games through Nov. 14 to allow teams to get in the 10 games they would have normally played minus a pandemic delay. Princeton, who is in the GMC mix for a title with Lakota West and Mason, will host Oak Hills. The winner then faces the winner of Fairfi eld at Elder. St. Xavier will host Walnut Hills with that winner squaring off with the winner of Moeller at Hamilton. The Moeller/Hamilton game has some backstory as Hamilton’s Malik Verdon transferred from Moeller last fall. The Big Blue recently recorded a major win vs. Mason. Should the two Greater Catholic League-South schools advance, it would be a rematch of last week’s game won by St. Xavier 43-14.

Division II, Region 8 There are 25 teams in the DII playoff s, so this includes byes. Games on Friday, Oct. 9: New Carlisle Tecumseh vs. Xenia with winner getting top seed Winton Woods on Oct. 16.

Division IV, Region 16 (local games of note Saturday, Oct. 10 at 7 p.m.) Washington Court House plays Thurgood Marshall with the winner taking on No. 1 seed Clinton-Massie. Bethel-Tate vs. Urbana with the winner playing No. 8 seed Waynesville Oct. 17. Norwood vs. Shroder with the winner playing No. 4 seed Waverly Oct. 17. Chillicothe Unioto vs. Hillsboro winner plays No. 5 seed McNicholas Oct. 17. Oakwood vs. Batavia with the winner against No. 2 seed Indian Hill Oct. 17. Taylor vs. Springfi eld Northwestern with the winner against No. 3 seed Wyoming Oct. 17. A possible match-up of Cincinnati Hills League rivals Indian Hill and Wyoming would not take place until Halloween Night, Oct. 31 at 7 p.m.

Division V, Region 20 (games Oct. 10 at 7 p.m.) New Richmond QB Luke Lytle attempts a pass in the game between the Batavia Bulldogs and the New Richmond Lions at New Richmond High School. New Richmond defeated Batavia 35-7. JIM OWENS FOR THE ENQUIRER

Edgewood plays Columbus West with the winner taking on the winner of Troy/Columbus Franklin Heights. Talawanda faces Dayton Belmont with the winner getting No. 4 seed Kings Oct. 16. Fairborn plays Withrow with the winner playing No. 5 seed Turpin Oct. 16. Should Turpin and Kings win, they would play Oct. 23. Little Miami faces Loveland with the winner getting the No. 2 seed La Salle Oct. 16. Sidney plays West Carrollton with the winner playing Riverside Stebbins Oct. 16. Harrison takes on Lima Senior with the winner playing No. 3 seed Piq-

ua Oct. 16. Ashville Teays Valley plays Columbus Briggs with the winner getting No. 6 seed Anderson Oct. 16.

Division III, Region 12 (local match-ups Oct. 9) Chaminade-Julienne vs. Northwest with the winner getting top seed Bellbrook Oct. 16. Hughes vs. Goshen with the winner facing No. 4 seed New Richmond Oct. 16. Elida plays Monroe with the winner against No. 5 seed Ross Oct. 16. Ross and New Richmond could possibly meet Oct. 23 if both prevail.

Summit Country Day vs. Carlisle with the winner against No. 1 seed Roger Bacon Oct. 17. Taft vs. Meadowdale with the winner vs. No. 8 seed Greenon Oct. 17. Preble Shawnee vs. Clermont Northeastern with the winner against No. 4 seed Versailles Oct. 17. Madeira vs. Tipp City Bethel with the winner vs. No. 5 seed CHCA Oct. 17. London Madison Plains vs. East Clinton winner vs. No. 2 seed Blanchester Oct. 17. Middletown Madison vs. Finneytown winner vs. No. 7 seed Springfi eld Shawnee Oct. 17. North College Hill vs. Purcell Marian winner vs. No. 3 seed Brookville Oct. 17. Mariemont vs. Reading winner vs. No. 6 seed West Liberty Salem Oct. 17. See FOOTBALL, Page 2B

Hall of Famer Bench to auction memorabilia Beth Harris Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The recent deaths of baseball greats Lou Brock, Tom Seaver and Al Kaline got Johnny Bench thinking about the future and the prospect of unloading memorabilia from his Hall of Fame career. He had seen Bob Gibson and Ozzie Smith sell their collectibles. Bench checked out items from Hall of Fame broadcaster Vin Scully’s recent online auction. “You wonder, what is the best thing to do?” Bench recently said by phone. “Who does it go to?” Bench reaped the rewards of a 17-year career catching with the Cincinnati Reds: two World Series titles, 14 All-Star selections, two National League MVP awards, multiple Gold Gloves. He was leader of the Big Red Machine that won six division tiles and four NL pennants in the mid-1970s. “The memories are still there. I still am the MVP,” he said. “I’m blessed with what I’ve got and I’m enjoying my life.” He lives in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, with 30-year-old son Bobby and sons Justin, 14, and Josh, 11, from Bench’s fourth marriage. The younger boys are with him 38 weeks of the year, keeping Bench busy as a single father cooking, grocery shopping, helping with homework and shuttling them to activ-

Above, the National League championship ring that Cincinnati Reds catcher Johnny Bench received for the 1970 season. Right, the World Series championship trophy awarded to Bench for the 1975 season. PHOTOS BY HUNT AUCTIONS VIA AP

ities. They spend the rest of the time in California with their mother. “How do you divide it up when you have three boys and you got two things?” said Bench, who turns 73 in December. “If they had said, ‘No, Dad you can’t sell those,’ it would have made a diff erence. They’re two generations removed from what I did.” Bench’s items will be auctioned live

on Nov. 14 at the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory in Kentucky. A public preview will be held at the museum on Nov. 12-13. The sale is being handled by Hunt Auctions, the same Pennsylvania company that recently sold Scully’s memorabilia, which earned over $2 million. Bench’s trophies from the Reds’ World Series championships in 1975 and

‘76 carry an estimated price of $25,000 to $50,000 each. His National League championship ring from 1970 and his 1968 NL Rookie of the Year award are estimated in the same price range. The bat Bench used to hit his 389th and last home run in 1983 is estimated between $10,000 and $20,000. Among the over 150 lots are his Gold Glove awards from 1969-77, a Reds home jersey from 1983, his catcher’s mitt from the 1970s, and a painting of Bench by LeRoy Neiman. Bench’s son Bobby had already been in the process of tracking down and cataloging his father’s memorabilia, pulling items from storage in Cincinnati. The elder Bench has displayed items at his eponymous museum in his hometown of Binger, Oklahoma. “Bobby has decorated my offi ce with bats and sentimental items,” Bench said. “There are still things I’m going to hold on to.” Bench jokes that today’s players “make more in two weeks than I made in my entire career.” He plans to use the auction proceeds to fund his younger kids’ college educations. “I didn’t make that much money when I played. It’s been 37 years since I retired and the money doesn’t last that long,” he said. “The boys are the world to me. I want them to have a great education.”


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JV boys runners from Walnut Hlls, West Clermont, Princeton and Wyoming pace the pack at the Princeton Cross Country Invitational on Sept. 26.

Princeton cross country invitational Sept. 26

Troy Landers and Declan Montgomery of Milford fly to third and fourth place fi nishes for the Eagles in the JV boys race at the Princeton Cross Country Invitational.

Milford's Declan Montgomery and Michael Simon run the backstretch. PHOTOS BY GEOFF BLANKENSHIP FOR THE ENQUIRER

Jason Denbow of Milford leads Roger Bacon's Luke Dearborn and Mason's Ethan Sernoffsky past the fi nish line in the JV boys race.

Football Continued from Page 1B

Division VI, Region 24 (local games of note Oct. 10) Deer Park vs. Springfi eld Northwestern winner vs. No. 2 seed Mechanicsburg Oct. 17. St. Bernard-Elmwood Place vs. Rockford Parkway winner vs. No. 3 seed Frankfort Adena Oct. 17.

Division VII, Region 28 (local games of note Oct. 9)

Cincinnati College Prep Academy vs. Twin Valley South winner vs. No. 4 seed New Madison Tri-Village Oct. 16. Lockland vs. Manchester winner vs. No. 5 seed Riverside Oct. 16. No. 8 seed New Miami vs. No. 9 seed Fayetteville-Perry play Oct. 16 with the winner against the winner of top seed Maria Stein Local vs. the winner of Cedarville vs. Mississininawa Valley (Oct. 9).

Ticket information The OHSAA were set to send playoff ticketing guidelines and information to schools on Friday and meet virtually with all playoff schools on Monday

Reagan Hamm of West Clermont and Bernadette Peck of Roger Bacon run in tandem in the JV girls race.

morning to discuss. According the latest order from the Ohio Department of Health and the Governor, only 15 percent of the stadium’s permanent seating capacity are permitted to attend games, unless the site has been approved for a variance by the Ohio Department of Health. Note that the home team can have its band in attendance for its games, while both teams can have cheerleaders. All playoff tickets will be sold online through www.OHSAA.org/tickets and will be available starting Tuesday, Oct. 6. The Division I state championship game will be played Friday, Nov. 13. The specifi c dates and times for the

state championship games in Divisions II through VII will be announced at a later date but will be played within the Nov. 19-22 date range. Sites will be announced at a later date, as well, but it is unlikely that all seven games will be played at the same venue. There will be no state championship games that happen simultaneously, as each game will have its own time slot. The other divisions will be released separately. The Enquirer will update this story. Editor’s note: Information included refl ects this article’s original publication date – Oct. 1. Visit Cincinnati.com for possible updates.


EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

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A little one hitches a ride in a wagon. Many local farms are offering pumpkin patches and corn mazes. SCOTT ASH

HAPPY OCTOBER

Here’s a full month of Halloween events Luann Gibbs Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Halloween is gonna be diff erent this year, no doubt about it. Many of our favorite events and attractions have been canceled this year because of the pandemic, and those that are happening have been scaled back. We’ve compiled a handy list of creepy – and not so creepy – Halloween happenings around town to help you plan your next outing. And hey, look on the bright side. At least 2020 hasn’t canceled pumpkin spice … yet. If you’d like your event listed, email calendar@cincinnati.com with “Halloween” in the subject line and we’ll get it added.

Haunted attractions Through Nov. 6: Land of Illusion Haunted Scream Park: Haunted Nights, 7 p.m.-1 a.m. Friday-Saturday, Land of Illusion, 8762 Thomas Road, Middletown. $20-up. landofi llusion.com. Through Oct. 31: Sandyland Acres Haunted Hayride, 8 p.m.-midnight Friday-Saturday, Sandyland Acres, 4172 Belleview Road, Petersburg. $15. 859322-0516; sandylandacres.com. Through Oct. 31: Terror Town, 7 p.m.-2 a.m. Friday-Saturday, Terror Town, 1449 Greenbush Cobb Road, Williamsburg. Enjoy the sights and sounds of 19th century Old West town. $45 weekend pass, $35 ultimate horror, $25 one night. 513-304-0444;

allhallowsevellc.com. Through Oct. 31: Nightmare Manor, 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 1601 S. University Blvd., suite A, Middletown. Masks required of guests and workers. $17, $15 with canned good. 513-849-2021; nightmaremanor.net. Through Nov. 1: Brimstone Haunt, 7 p.m. Friday-Saturday, Brimstone Haunt, 472 Brimstone Road, Wilmington. Family-friendly Haunted Hayride and high intensity fright event Forgotten Forest, Psychosis and Zombie Assault. $5-$15, $27 combo, $47 fast pass combo. brimstonehaunt.com. Through Nov. 4: The Dent Schoolhouse, 7:30-10 p.m. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.-midnight Friday-Saturday, 7:30-10 p.m. Sunday, Dent Schoolhouse, 5963 Harrison Ave., Dent. Haunted attrac-

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tion. Movie quality sets and Hollywood animations. $20-$30. 513-445-9767; frightsite.com.

Pumpkin fun on the farm Through Oct. 25: Fall Fest, noon-10 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday, noon-7 p.m. Sunday, Kinman Farms, 4175 Burlington Pike, Burlington. Hayride, Great Pumpkin Express rides, 5acre corn maze, carnival tent, live bands, pony rides, lazer tag and more. Open during week for produce purchases. Tickets for Fall Fest must be purchased in advance, no walk-ups. 859-689-2682; kinmanfarm.com. See OCTOBER, Page 4B

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2020

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EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

October Continued from Page 3B

Through Oct. 31: Barn Market, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. daily, Greystone Farm, 15412 Wilson Creek Road, Lawrenceburg. Farmstand inside barn with pumpkins, seasonal produce, eggs, honey and more. 812-926-2132; greystonefamilyfarm.com. Through Oct. 31: U-Pick Apples, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday, 1-5 p.m. Sunday, A&M Farm Orchard, 22141 Ohio 251, Midland. U-pick apples, pumpkins, squash, jams, jellies, apple butter, cider and more. Masks required. Cash and check only. Curbside service available. 513-875-2500; facebook.com/am-farm-orchard. Through Oct. 31: Apples, Pumpkins and More, noon-9 p.m. Thursday-Friday, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturday, 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Sunday, Hidden Valley Orchards, 5474 N. Ohio 48, Lebanon. U-pick apples. Festival weekends feature fall foods, family fun and live entertainment. 513-932-1869; hiddenvalleyorchards.com. Through Oct. 31: Pumpkin Patch, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. daily, Burwinkel Farms, 4359 Hamilton Cleves Road, Ross. 513738-1145; facebook.com/burwinkelfarms. Through Oct. 31: Pumpkin Patch, 10 a.m.-7 p.m. daily, Kleather’s Pumpkin Patch, 90 W. Central Ave., Springboro. Pumpkins, gourds, apple cider and more. kleathers.com. Through Oct. 31: Pumpkin Patch & Fall Festival, 4-7 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 2-7 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Saturday, noon-5 p.m. Sunday, Country Pumpkins, 1835 Sherman Mount Zion Road, Dry Ridge. U-pick pumpkin patch, hayrides, chunkin’ pumpkin launcher, animals, kids’ corn maze and more. Rides only on weekends. 859905-9656; countrypumpkinsky.com. Through Oct. 31: Pumpkin Patch & Corn Maze, noon-9 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday, noon-6 p.m. Sunday, Wendel Farms, 8134 N. State Line Road, Brookville. Open weekdays for mum and pumpkin sales. 812-775-9051; wendelfarms.com. Through Oct. 31: U-Pick Pumpkin Patch, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. weekends, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. weekdays, McGlasson Farms, 5832 River Road, (Route 8) Hebron. 859-6895229; mcglassonfarms.com. Through Oct. 31: Fall Festival, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. daily, Shaw Farms, 1737 Ohio 131, Milford. Tractor or horsedrawn hayrides (weather permitting), 15-acre corn maze, interactive playground, farm animals. Free admission. Activities $3-$6. 513-575-2022; shawfarmmarket.com. Through Oct. 25: Fall Family Fun Weekends, 9 a.m.-7 p.m., Brown’s Family Farm Market, 11620 Hamilton Cleves Road, Hamilton. Pumpkin patch, hayrides, corn maze, straw maze, farm animals, picnic area and play areas. 513738-0404; facebook.com/brownsfarmmarket. Through Nov.1: Fall on the Farm, 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Monday-Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday, Blooms and

Tricks And Treats Fall Fest has begun at Kings Island. The seasonal family-friendly event will run Saturdays and Sundays through Nov. 1. PROVIDED/ KINGS ISLAND

Berries Farm Market, 9669 S. Ohio 48, Loveland. Pumpkin patches, hayrides, 5-acre corn maze, farm animals, play area and more. Tickets must be reserved online, no walk-ups. $12 Sat-Sun, $10 Mon-Fri. 513-697-9173; bloomsandberries.com. Through Oct. 31: Schaefers Farm Market, 5024 Jacksonburg Road, Trenton. Organic 15-acre pumpkin patch and farm market with home-produced jams, jellies, honey, eggs and more. schaefersfarmmarket.com. Through Oct. 31: Fall Festival, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. weekends, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. weekdays, Neltner’s Farm, 6922 Four Mile Road, Melbourne. Pick-your-own pumpkin patch, corn maze, petting zoo, pony rides, live music and more. $5 weekends ages 3-up, free weekdays. 859-496-7535; neltnersfarm.com. Through Oct. 31: Fall Fun, 10 a.m.-8:45 p.m.Tuesday-Sunday, Niederman Family Farm, 5110 Lesourdsville West Chester Road, Liberty Township. 4-acre corn maze, hayrides, climbing web and more. Purchase tickets online only, no walk-ins. 513-779-3228; niedermanfamilyfarm.com. Through Oct. 31: Pumpkins & Hayrides, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday, Iron’s Fruit Farm, 1640 Stubbs Mill Road, Lebanon. FC Cincinnati-themed corn maze, pumpkin patch, hayrides and more. No U-pick apples this year. 513-932-2853; ironsfruitfarm.com. Through Oct. 25: Fall Festival Weekends, noon-5 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, Barn’n’Bunk Farm Market, State Route 73 at Wayne-Madison Road, Trenton. Pumpkins, hayrides, corn maze, petting zoo and more. Open daily for shopping. 513-988-9211; barnnbunk.com. Through Oct. 31: Fall Fun at the Farm, Burger Farm & Garden Center,

7849 Main St., Newtown. Weekend admission includes hayride to pumpkin patch, giant jumping pillow, challenge course, vine climb, mini zip lines, live entertainment and more. $12, $ ages 65up. 513-561-8634; burgerfarms.com. Through Oct. 31: U-Pick Pumpkins, Monday-Saturday by appointment, Simmons Farm, 3020 Schaller Road, Bethel. 513-734-3117; simmonsfarms.us/events. Through Oct. 31: Fall Pumpkin Fest, noon-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, McMonigle Farms, 5490 S. Dixie Hwy, Franklin. U-pick pumpkins, hayrides, corn maze, cow train rides, farm animals and seasonal treats. 513-672-8248; fallpumpkinfest.com. Through Oct. 25: Fall on the Farm, 11-6 p.m. Saturdays, noon-5 p.m. Sundays, Jackson Family Farm, 6780 W. Alexandria Road, Middletown. Pumpkin patch, corn maze, pedal tractors, pumpkin cannon, petting zoo, giant pumpkin jump pad and more. $10. facebook.com/ jacksonfamily farmmadison.

Family-friendly events Through Oct. 31: Jack o’ Lantern Junction, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Saturday, noon-6 p.m. Sunday, closed Wednesdays, Entertrainment Junction, 7379 Squire Court, West Chester. Indoor, climate-controlled family Halloween celebration. No-scare ghosts, skeletons, cobwebs. $9.95-up. 513-8988000; entertrainmentjunction.com. Through Oct. 31: Weekday Hayrides, 1:30-5 p.m. Tuesday-Friday, Burger Farm & Garden Center, 7849 Main St., Newtown. Rides run every 30 minutes. $5 per person. 513-561-8634; burgerfarms.com. Through Nov. 1: Tricks and Treats Fall Fest, Kings Island, 6300 Kings Island Drive, Mason. Fall-themed food,

games, shows, activities and crafts. Costume contests and trick or treating spots throughout park. $55 bundle includes admission, parking and tasting card. 513-754-5700; visitkingsisland.com. Oct. 1-31: Howl-O-Ween, Great Wolf Lodge, 2501 Great Wolf Drive, Mason. Trick or treat trail, costume parade, monster bash dance party, storytime and more. All events require advance registration. greatwolf.com. Oct. 8-10: Operation Pumpkin, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Thursday-Friday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, Main and High streets, Hamilton. No pet parade or Lil Miss Pumpkin competition this year. operation-pumpkin.org. Oct. 9-24: Haunted Village, 6-10 p.m. Friday-Saturday, Heritage Village, Sharon Woods, 11450 Lebanon Road, Sharonville. Slight-fright event. Costumes encouraged. Reservations required, timed entry. $10. 513-563-9484; heritagevillagecincinnati.org. Oct. 10: The Great Pumpkin Fest, 2-6 p.m., Keehner Park, 7211 Barret Road, West Chester. Puppet show, costume contest for ages 0-12 and not-soscary haunted trail. Free. westchesteroh.org. Oct. 16-18: Fall Food Festival, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Findlay Market, 1801 Race St., Over-the-Rhine. Fall-themed food samples, live music, photo booth, scavenger hunt for kids and cocktails for adults. Advance tickets required. $10$20. fi ndlaymarket.org. Oct. 17-18 and Oct. 24-15: The Pumpkin Train, 10 a.m., noon, 2 and 4 p.m. Saturdays, noon, 2 and 4 p.m. Sundays, Lebanon Mason Monroe Railroad, 127 S. Mechanic St., Lebanon. 45-minute train journey with seasonal scarecrow hosts. $20, $15 child, $5 infants. Reservations See OCTOBER, Page 5B

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Information provided by Hamilton County Auditor Dusty Rhodes

$178,000 1551 Paddison Trails Dr: Niebuhr Jefferson A & Jeannie C to Kleinfelder James S & Jane T; $395,000 1842 Muskegon Dr: Wilson Susan L & David L to Lawson Daniel R & Mary R; $267,000 1970 Wolfangel Rd: Rogers Betty Tr to Mcowen Thomas B & Nancy M; $250,000

Anderson Township 1059 Baytree Ct: Blum Michael A to Cruz Obet Osorio; $195,000 1343 Rambling Hills Dr: Sparks Jimmy G & Janice S to Roesch Patrick; $245,000 1458 Verdale Dr: Kersey Jessica L to Petek Rachel;

PUZZLE ANSWERS A G O U T I

J O H N

A D I D OLIVE A R S

S O F A R A S

P R O T E S T

I G O T Y O U

S L A M O N

P I R A T E

A S K S T O

R O D I N

F U D D L S E N I E T P P E S F F F E R C E T E Z H E E R N S

P C P W A R N N O T D I E A G G R G E E Y E S A T R Y R I I N L A S E D O A S R O N U P E P P D P O E S R E

I T B H A I N E D S B B A O L T E S M L I A M P I C O T A T H O I

S H A W L T A T S B E V Y H O T E L

P O S E E N H L N K O F P R I A E N W A S A X H S E B A H E V A L E G O L I A N A N M E E L I R E D C I A L O P P E L A Y O E A R A R S R E

G A G R U L E

D R U M R O L L

A M P A S S E T O E I S D S A S Y T S P

R A P E E N A L Y A N A K I P A I N S N N I E A C A R D I N R E N N A L A T E P L I T R E N E E E G S S I D O A L A D M O R E W I N S A L E S Y O D A

2150 Flaxen Ct: Mccune Francis P Tr & Ellen J Paroubek-mccune T to Garrison Robert J Tr & Kristina L Tr; $354,200 2721 Blackbird Hollow: Wynn Barry D & Lauren C to Meyers Kurt R & Amanda; $563,402 2778 Caledon Ln: Meyers Kurt R to Berschback Brian R & Casey L; $445,900 7207 Anderson Woods Dr: Richards James B & Elizabeth G to Sievers Steven E & Rebecca A; $379,900 7370 Ridgepoint Dr: Thorbahn Todd & Mary to Huff Wayne & Tina; $124,900 7375 State Rd: Delfavero Brandy R to Brunker Joshua R; $300,000 7432 Heatherwood Ln: Doyle Jeffrey C & Molly A to Reynolds John W & Jennifer; $369,000 7613 Cathedral Hill Dr: Gilkey Jerome V Tr & Beverly A Tr to Kochoris Kelly; $309,000 7729 Stonehill Dr: Tri State Homes LLC to Hufstader Morgan S & William C; $275,000 7825 State Rd: Parker Gregory C Tr to Schneller Victoria & Ryan; $275,000 8208 Clough Pk: Lotz Sue

Ann to Wilson James K; $170,000 833 Laverty Ln: Bates Theresa to Schaefer Erin D; $158,000 851 Rosetree Ln: Janning John C to Rp2ham LLC; $155,000 8523 St Ives Pl: Osterfeld Jeffrey J & Sheri S to Crenshaw John Henry III &; $725,000 8636 Trillium Ridge Ln: Crawford Robin J & Carlton Hayes Chavis Jr to Kamen Beth & Edward; $474,900

California 5001 Kellogg Ave: Biser Robert & Charlene to Prather Wendall Mark & Connie; $2,600 5001 Kellogg Ave: Lecky Michael to Meyer Christopher O; $250

Columbia Township Indian Hill Rd: Sims Betty Jane & Louise Calloway to Murrer Daren; $13,500 2722 Ridgewood Ave: Wise Bradley S Tr to Moore Zachary S & Lane E Keating; $360,000 2747 Ridgewood Ave: Zelinskas Peter R to Hershberger Laura E &; $245,900 2767 Ridgewood Ave: Currin Tory to Metzger

Devin; $265,000 7250 Mariemont Crescent: Swoyer Hannah to Kennedy John Thomas III &; $254,000

Columbia Tusculum 3419 Golden Ave: Lane Christopher to Brenner Maureen & Sean Michael; $325,000 3836 Eastern Ave: Martina Robert C to Hollenbeck James M & Jane L; $295,000 440 Strafer St: Mezher Christine M to Gregorio Flavio & Tarzee Kadam; $678,000

Loveland Highland Ave: Loveland Community Improvement Corporation to Parkside Development Group LLC; $20,100 260 Sinclair Ct: Af Property Enterprises LLC to Arnhart Jacob M & Hannah; $220,500 5073 Bristol Ct: Poulsen Catherine T to Enda Lauren; $205,000 730 Mohican Dr: Stoney Run Acres LLC to Mora Steven; $167,000

Mount Washington 1275 Wayside Pl: Breitfelder Greg A & Heather R to Nutt Emily C & David B

Nut Jr; $300,000 1610 Alcor Te: Niederhelman Derek to Miller Regan; $219,900 1710 Marquette Ave: Selzer Brian P to 11b Rei Ltd; $35,000 1924 Rockland Ave: Parkhurst Matthew D to Carter Steven; $117,000 2478 Walnutview Ct: Wallace John to Radt Jennifer Marie; $150,000 5964 Wayside Ct: Hamersley Michael Grady @3 to Hamersly Michael Grady; $86,667 6483 Copperleaf Ln: Siegel William Mark & Claire Rhonda Stewart to Gjersvig Kara H & Tanner L; $320,000 6545 Copperleaf Ln: Wabler Brian M & Jessica A to Aquirre Cesar & Yomira; $270,000 6569 Ripplewood Ln: Newkirk Amy L & Kevin J to Greene Samuel & Karen; $217,000

Newtown 7126 English Dr: Weber Laurie to Krebs Shelby W & Connie M; $176,000

Terrace Park 822 Stanton Ave: France Bret G & Caroline H to Smyth William P & Natalia; $525,000


EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

October Continued from Page 4B

required. lebanonrr.com. Oct. 17-18 and Oct. 24-25: HallZOOeen, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Gardens, 3400 Vine St., Avondale. Advance reservations required. $7-$23. cincinnatizoo.org. Oct. 17-18: Harvest Festival & Gathering, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Caesar’s Creek Pioneer Village, 3999 Pioneer Village Road, Waynesville. Learn how the pioneers prepare for winter. $5 per person. caesarscreekpioneervillage.com. Oct. 19-O31: Fall Take and Make, all branches of Boone County Library. Visit local branch to pick up Fall-themed craft kits while supplies last. Oct. 24: The Maskquerade Ball, 2 p.m., Vevay Antique Mall, 108 E. Main St. Outdoor celebration of masks and fall with upcycled, retro crafts for kids followed by fashion parade of style. Oct. 24-25: Fall Festival, noon-6 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, Washington Park 1230 Elm St., Over-the-Rhine. Local vendors selling arts and crafts, baked goods, pet needs and more. Free. washingtonpark.org. Oct. 24: Playhouse Off the Grid:

Children of the Corn Maze, 6:40-10 p.m., Burger Farm and Garden Center, 7849 Main St., Newtown. A twisted tale unfolds as audiences walk haunted trail. Timed entries leave every 10 minutes. Ages 13-up. $20. cincyplay.com. Oct. 24: Playhouse Off the Grid: Pumpkin Party, 6:40-10 p.m., Burger Farm and Garden Center, 7849 Main St., Newtown. While grown-ups walk haunted trail, ages 4-12 attend 90-minute pumpkin party with excursion to Pumpkinland Maze, pumpkin crafts and Halloween-themed movies. $10. cincyplay.com. Oct. 25: The Dent Schoolhouse Lights On Tour, 4-6 p.m., 5963 Harrison Ave., Dent. $20. 513-445-9767; frightsite.com. Oct. 31: Cincinnati Pops Livestream: Halloween and Dia De Los Muertes, 8 p.m., simulcast on Fountain Square, 525 Vine St., Downtown. Conductor John Morris Russell leads Pops with music from Psycho, Harry Potter, La Llorona, the Legend of Sleepy Hollow and more. Free. cincinnatisymphony.org.

American Legacy Tours, 1332 Vine St., Over-the-Rhine. 90-minute walking tour. $25. americanlegacytours.com. Oct. 3-24: Newport is Haunted, 7 p.m. Saturdays, 18 E. 5th St., Newport. $25. americanlegacytours.com. Oct. 29-30: Aurora Ghost Walks, 7 p.m., Hillforest Victorian House Museum. 213 Fifth St., Aurora. Tour streets of Aurora after dark with historian Jim Waldon and learn about unseen inhabitants of town. $10. 812-926-1100; hillforest.org.

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2020

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5B

Monster Mash (Adults only) Oct. 24: The Maskquerade Ball, 5-11 p.m., Vevay Antique Mall, 108 E. Main St. Outdoor retro prom costume party with photo booth, lip sync, runway walk and craft beer from New Madison Brewing Co. Masks required. Oct. 31: Peek-a-Boo Halloween Sideshow and Burlesque, 9 p.m. and midnight, Newport Syndicate, 18 E. Fifth St. Featuring Cincinnati Circus. Ages 21-up. $50 VIP, $35, $25 advance. cincyticket.com.

Worship Directory BAPTIST

CHURCH OF CHRIST

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

Forestville Baptist Church 1311 Nagel Rd

GLEN ESTE CHURCH OF CHRIST

513-474-3884

937 Old State Route 74 (Behind Meijer) 513-753-8223 www.gecc.net

First Church of Christ, Scientist, Anderson Township

(Across from Anderson Post Office)

www.forestvillebaptist.com Sunday Services: Discovery Groups ~ 10am Morning Service ~ 11am Evening Service ~ 6pm Youth Group ~ 6pm

Spine-tingling tours Through Oct. 30: Queen City is Haunted, 7 and 9 p.m. Friday-Saturday,

Sunday Worship: 8:30 & 10:30am Bible Study: 9:30am & 6:00pm Youth Groups: 6:00pm

7341 Beechmont Avenue (Near Five Mile Road) Email: csandersontownship@gmail.com

231-1020 christiansciencecincinnati.com

Sunday Service & Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimonial Meeting 7:30 p.m. In Church Reading Rm/Bookstore Open after all services. Downtown Reading Rm/Bookstore 412 Vine Street, Cincinnati Open Monday - Friday 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.

Wednesday Bible Study & Kids Program ~ 7pm Nursery provided for all Services CE-GCI0394198-01

CE-GCI0394321-01

UNITED METHODIST GOSHEN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

Everyone is welcome!

513-722-2541

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. Worship Service - 10:30 a.m. GUM Youth - 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Every Sunday: 6 - 12th grades JR. GUMY - 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. 2nd Sunday of month: 3rd - 5th grades

Weekend Worship Saturday: 5 p.m. Sunday: 9 & 10:30 a.m. LIVE STREAMING

Email: goshenumc@fuse.net Follow us on

go to our website, epiphanhyumc.org and click the link Nursery, Children’s & Youth available 6635 Loveland-Miamiville Rd. Loveland, OH 45140 513.677.9866 • www.epiphanyumc.org

CE-GCI0394340-02

2010 Wolfangel Rd., Anderson Twp. 513-231-4301

CE-GCI0394150-01

The 2nd annual All Hallow’s Eve Terror Town, located on Greenbush Cobb Road in Williamsburg, Ohio, opened on Sept. 4 and runs through Nov. 14. Terror Town features haunted themes and trails, shops, restaurants, live music and many other attractions. Frank Drake, sheriff of Terror Town. JOE SIMON FOR THE ENQUIRER

Come, connect, grow & serve

Sunday Worship: 10:30 AM with

Childrens Ministry & Nursery PASTOR PAULA STEWART

www.cloughchurch.org

Handicapped Accessible Kyle Lanham, Senior Pastor Amber Blake, Children’s Pastor Tara McFerron,Youth Director Stephanie Lanham, Worship Director SUNDAY: Sunday School (all ages) 9:30 am Worship Service 10:30 am Children’s Worship (Age 4 - 5th Grade) Evening Activities for Children, Youth, & Adults 6:00 pm MONDAY: Ladies’ Bible Study/Prayer Group

10:00 am

WEDNESDAY: Choir Men’s Group (Grades 6-12) Children (Age 4 - 5th Gr.)

6:30 pm 6:30 pm 6:30 pm

THURSDAY: Celebrate Recovery 6:30pm New Hope Campus, 243 S. Fifth St., Williamsburg S. Charity & E. Water Streets Bethel, Ohio 45106 - 513-734-4204 Office: M-Th 9:00 am - 3:00 pm E-mail: bethelnazarenechurch@gmail.com www.bethelnazarenechurch.org www.facebook.com/BNC4me

To advertise, email: cbollin@localiq.com or call: 513.768.6014

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EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B

No. 1004 PLAYING WITH FOOD

1

BY ALEX EATON-SALNERS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

43 Subject of two squares on a 1 Partly open Monopoly board 5 Drug also known as 44 Hip-centric dance angel dust 45 It keeps a top up 8 ‘‘Maybe,’’ informally 48 ‘‘Good ____!’’ (shout 14 Window dressing to a batter) 19 Tyr, in Norse 49 Collectible item with mythology stats 21 Org. with both left54 Bacchanalias and right-wingers 56 Huge financial loss, 22 ____ arteries (what so to speak carry blood to the 57 First lady kidneys) 58 Memo opener 23 ‘‘Hmm … hard to 59 Elements of say’’ neighborhood watch 24 South American programs financial institution 62 Brewed beverage since 1965 63 Single historical 26 Reversed record 27 Warm up 64 QB stat: Abbr. 29 King of Troy in the 65 Fool’s gold ‘‘Iliad’’ 66 Lose stiffness 30 Currency of Laos 68 Fueled up, in a way 31 1985 thriller with the 69 California’s Point ____ tagline ‘‘A federal Peninsula agent is dead. A 71 Helpful contacts killer is loose. And the City of Angels is 72 Food depicted cryptically at about to explode.’’ 24-Across 35 Firmly establishes: 74 From Var. 75 Notes after sols 37 Part of a return 76 Consuming Tide Pods, address? once, inexplicably 38 Experienced network 77 At peace congestion 78 Food depicted 39 Used to be cryptically at 41 ‘‘I Love You, ____’’ 31-Across (book by Nancy 81 On, in a way Reagan) 83 Brain tests, in brief 42 Twilled fabrics 84 Significant periods Online subscriptions: Today’s 85 ____ ShermanPalladino, creator puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, of ‘‘Gilmore Girls’’ nytimes.com/crosswords and ‘‘The Marvelous ($39.95 a year). Mrs. Maisel’’

RELEASE DATE: 10/11/2020

86 Overhauls 88 Item creating separation 91 Nail polish brand 92 Viagra competitor 93 Bit of swearing in church? 96 ‘‘Pay attention!’’ 98 Food depicted cryptically at 49-Across 101 Refuge from a flood 102 Youngest Marx brother 104 Skin-care brand 105 Love, in Lucca 106 Food depicted cryptically at 59-Across 109 Romps 112 Riverbank romper 113 Book after Nehemiah 114 Places to collect prints 115 Garish signs 116 Adds more lubricant to 117 Good name, informally 118 Jedi who trained Luke DOWN

1 Central American rodent that resembles a guinea pig 2 TV host with two Peabodys 3 Sports brand with a three-stripe logo 4 Sculptor who said, ‘‘I invent nothing, I rediscover’’ 5 Completely defeat, as a noob

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Alex Eaton-Salners is an in-house attorney for Western Digital, a technology company headquartered in San Jose, Calif. He has been interested in puzzles and language since he was a child. He keeps a list of crossword theme ideas on his phone so that he can add to them wherever he goes. As a constructor, Alex says he likes to ‘‘subvert (responsibly) as many different crossword conventions as possible.’’ — W.S.

AC R O S S

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6 Deep-six 7 Kirsten Gillibrand, to Hillary Clinton, once 8 Connective tissue that runs along the outer thigh, familiarly 9 Prayer garment 10 Farm enclosure 11 Doing some menial duty, in old army lingo 12 Reinforces, with ‘‘up’’ 13 Puckish 14 Dramatic intro 15 Jedi trained by Luke 16 Jedi related to Luke 17 Grilled sandwich 18 Go by 20 State of drunken confusion 25 Media restriction 28 Goes quickly 32 Venture to state 33 Azalea with the 2014 No. 1 hit ‘‘Fancy’’ 34 Up to one’s ears 36 Caffeinated aspirin brand 40 A tool or a spray 42 Fit of pique 43 Parlor pics 44 Invite to one’s home 45 To the extent that 46 Black Lives Matter gathering, e.g. 47 ‘‘Let me pay for that’’ 49 Bundle of hay 50 ‘‘Twilight’’ protagonist 51 Silver-screen actress known as the British Bombshell 52 TV-MA’s film equivalent

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53 Has away with words? 55 Stand-up comedian Mike 56 Spam spewers 60 Many musical chords 61 Classic laundry brand 62 First-class 63 Church recess 66 Feeling amenable (found hidden in this clue!) 67 Bony projection found just behind the ear 70 Cause’s partner

72 Gaggle 73 V.I.P. above veep 75 Knowledgeable 76 Parody, say 79 Cold storage facilities 80 Where crumbs might accumulate during a meal 81 Summer Olympics usually take place in one 82 Thumb-twiddling 86 Kelly on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

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87 Op-eds, e.g. 88 Hit hard, as brakes 89 Hook, for one 90 Sends an invitation for 91 Be against 92 Sorted laundry load 93 Philippine port with a reduplicative name 94 Euphemistic ‘‘extremely’’ 95 The so-called ‘‘Pearl of the Black Sea’’

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97 Word before hand or jaw 99 Quarters costing dollars? 100 ____ Center, home of the Orlando Magic 103 Father of Anne Frank 107 Layer of farmland? 108 What yellowfin is marketed as 110 ‘‘People ____ talking’’ 111 Indy inits.

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2020

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EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

COMMUNITY NEWS

Eastern Hamilton County elected officials and fi re and police leaders stand together across the entire span of Columbia Township’s new US-50 crosswalk to accentuate the power of safe connections for cyclists and pedestrians. The new “Wooster Pike” crosswalk at Fifty West Brewing will provide a safer way for pedestrians and cyclists to navigate the eastern region’s network of sidewalks, bike lanes and the Little Miami Trail by providing a designated place to cross the busy 5-lane US route. PROVIDED

‘Come Together’: Beatles-themed crosswalk opening celebrates community connectivity and public-private partnerships Fifty-one years after the Beatles’ iconic 1969 Abbey Road album cover was shot in a London crosswalk in August, offi cials from Columbia Township and neighboring communities gathered to celebrate the opening of the new US-50 crosswalk at Fifty West in the same month and style of the famous photo. “We’re building Columbia Township as a place where people can easily come together and connect – to each other, to neighboring communities and to the region,” said Columbia Trustees’ president David Kubicki of the event’s “Come Together” Beatles theme. Built at the Fifty West campus, Columbia’s new US-50 crosswalk is a vital connection in a nearly $4 million series of coordinated projects built this summer on US-50 in eastern Hamilton

County to connect bike lanes, trails and sidewalks and improve road safety. Four public entities – ODOT, Columbia Township, Mariemont and Great Parks of Hamilton County – partnered to deliver the improvements. ODOT’s reconstruction of US-50 through Mariemont and Columbia Township included adding a new bike lane in Columbia’s Wooster Pike District anchored by Fifty West. Great Parks and Columbia partnered to extend Little Miami Scenic Trail from Newtown toward Mariemont. A future phase will connect the trail in in Mariemont. The timing of this summer’s US-50 public improvements supported Fifty West’s April launch of its successful family-friendly Burger Bar and beer garden concept within the newly renovated campus. Fifty West invested nearly $1.5 million in the project which created 100+ new jobs. The new concept is an homage to 1950s roadside root beer stands with menu items named for the 12 diff erent

states the U.S. route travels through. “Our vision for this corridor is amplifi ed by our successful public-private partnership with Columbia Township and Great Parks of Hamilton County,” said Fifty West Owner Bob Slattery. “Their investment in infrastructure and services, like the new US-50 crosswalk and extension of the Little Miami Scenic Trail, is a big win for our community and connectivity throughout the region.” Kubicki called the success of Wooster Pike’s growing entertainment and recreational district a “textbook public-private partnership” and praised the township’s project partners Fifty West and Great Parks of Hamilton Co. “Big things happen when businesses and communities invest in each other, and public agencies come together and get along,” said Kubicki. The US-50 Corridor, known in the eastern suburbs as Wooster Pike, features a linked “bracelet” of eastern communities starting in Fairfax and con-

tinuing through Mariemont, Columbia Township, Newtown and into Terrace Park. The Little Miami Trail extension in Columbia Township is the newest piece of a 100-mile regional “rails to trails” plan to connect Cincinnati’s riverfront and urban core to the region’s eastern suburbs - and beyond - through a connected system of bike and pedestrian trails. Regional plans call for Cincinnati’s Wasson Way to connect through Mariemont and Columbia Township to the Murray Bike Path and Little Miami Scenic and National Trail. The Little Miami Scenic Trail is a 78-mile path from Columbia’s neighbor Newtown that crosses fi ve counties to reach Springfi eld, Ohio. Melissa Taylor, Columbia Township (in Hamilton County) See COMMUNITY NEWS, Page 10B

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2020

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EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

COMMUNITY NEWS Continued from Page 8B

Stepping Stones to host annual Golf Classic Stepping Stones will host the 2020 Golf Classic on Monday, Oct. 19 at the O’Bannon Creek Golf Club in Loveland. The morning fl ight will tee off at 8 a.m. and the afternoon fl ight will tee off at 1 p.m. Stepping Stones and event chair Steve Mennen invite you to enjoy a beautiful fall day with great food, refreshing drinks, exciting hole challenges, raffl e prizes and more. Presented by Niagara Bottling, the Golf Classic benefi ts Stepping Stones’ mission to build pathways to independence and promote inclusion for people with developmental and physical disabilities. Show your support by starting a team or becoming a sponsor. Following the afternoon fl ight, dinner options will be available and event winners will be announced. Stepping Stones will be adhering to all State of Ohio COVID-19 guidelines and will have enhanced safety protocols in place for the event. “Stepping Stones plays such an integral role in our community” said event chair Steve Mennen. “I’m so glad that we were able to put together a socially distant version of this event to keep our golfers safe while raising money for a cause we all care so much about.” Event tickets are $200 for a single and $800 for a foursome. The O’Bannon Creek Golf Club is located at 6842 Oakland Road in Loveland, Ohio. To order tickets, visit SteppingStonesGolf.org. Volunteers are needed for the morning fl ight (7 a.m. - 1 p.m.) and the afternoon fl ight (1 p.m. - 6 p.m.). Visit bit.ly/GolfClassicVolunteer to sign up. For more information, contact Kelly Crow at 513-965-5148 or email Kelly.Crow@SteppingStonesOhio.org. h Who: Stepping Stones h What: Annual Golf Classic, Presented by Niagara Bottling h When: Monday, Oct. 19 at 8 a.m. h Where: O’Bannon Creek Golf Club h Why: To raise money for yearround programs benefi ting children, teens and adults with disabilities. Stepping Stones is a United Way partner agency serving more than 1,100 people with disabilities in day and overnight

Nick Goss, Steve Mennen (event chair), Tim Goss and Tom Tweedlie attend the 2019 Golf Classic fundraiser benefi ting Cincinnati-area individuals with disabilities. PROVIDED

programs that increase independence and promote inclusion. Founded in 1963, the agency provides educational, recreational and social programs at locations in Batavia, Indian Hill, Norwood and Western Hills. For more information, visit www.SteppingStonesOhio.org. Adam Hesselbrock, Stepping Stones

Martha Schueler honored for Planned Gift Anderson philanthropist Martha Schueler was recently honored by the Greater Cincinnati Planned Giving Council (GCPGC) as a Voices of Giving Award recipient, for her selfl ess generosity and foresight in contributing a lasting gift to Xavier University. Schueler is a lifelong Xavier basketball fan, however, she never dreamed

the University would play such a large role in her life. “I didn’t go to Xavier,” she recalled. “But my family is a big athletic family, and we always rooted for Xavier.” Her love for basketball grew after she married her husband Robb. When he died suddenly in 2005, the friends that supported her most were her Xavier friends. She and her Schueler husband had talked about giving back, so a scholarship in Robb’s name was started to go to an athlete in a sport that isn’t fully funded. Martha decided to do the same. Today, the Robb and Martha Schueler Scholarship benefi ts studentathletes and eventually a fi nal legacy gift from Martha’s estate will endow the head Swim Coaching position at the

University. In its 22nd year, the Voices of Giving Awards Event (this year held virtually) pays tribute to Greater Cincinnati philanthropists who represent the true spirit of giving. The Event also acknowledged professional advisors who play a pivotal role in cultivating planned gifts. The Greater Cincinnati Planned Giving Council is a professional association for people whose work includes developing, marketing, and administering charitable planned gifts. Members include persons who raise funds for nonprofi t institutions, consultants, and professional advisors who work in a variety of legal and fi nancial settings – people whose life work is helping others LEAVE A LEGACY through a planned gift to the charities they love. Lisa Desatnik

Time to Rally. support local. Now is the time to rally behind local business. USA TODAY’s Support Local initiative is sparking communities across the country to take action and make it happen.

Say ‘thank you’ to the local businesses you love by purchasing gift cards and online services, or add your own business to our free listings to receive support from your community.

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EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2020

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To advertise, visit:

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Classifieds

All classified ads are subject to the applicable rate card, copies of which are available from our Advertising Dept. All ads are subject to approval before publication. The Enquirer reserves the right to edit, refuse, reject, classify or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported in the first day of publication. The Enquirer shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from an error in or omission of an advertisement. No refunds for early cancellation of order.

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Risk Manager

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The City of Florence is accepting applications for Risk Manager. Applicants must have extensive knowledge of safety, loss control, insurance and risk management. Must have bachelor degree in Occupational Safety and Health or Public Administration, plus five years professional experience in the field of loss control/risk management and administration; Salary $69,436. Deadline October 21, 2020. Send resume with application (available online or in the Finance Department) to the Florence Government Center, 8100 Ewing Blvd., Florence, KY 41042 or our website, www.florence-ky.gov EOE

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2020

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EASTSIDE COMMUNITY PRESS

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