Archive for the ‘Colin Flaherty’ Category

Hocking County real estate transfers | News | logandaily.com – Logan Daily News

For Dec. 2023. Listed prices do not necessarily reflect actual property values.

Brittany A. and Chad E. Stevens, 26840 Darl Road, to Kyle Terry Alfriend, $549,900.

Norman K. and Sharon V. Miller, 1253, 1254, 1263 and 1264 Zuni Lane, to Lisa Humphrey and P. Malhotra, $479,000.

Timothy J. Jubach, trustee, 34.677 acres, Brown Road, to Harry and Mary Beth Kiefaber, $1,202,126.

Kenneth B. Ackerman, 1255 Zuni Lane, 1256 and 1257 Taos Lane, to Prashant Malhotra and L. Humphrey, $8,200,

Roger Thompson, 444 Springwater Trail Drive, to Danny M. Massie, $12,000.

The Arnett Housing, LLC, 46 Furnace St., to Mikel A. Norton, $64,000.

Gregory W. McCune, 16741 Collison Road, to Kevin D. and Teresa A. Weaver, $55,000.

Gertrude M. Bateson, trustee, 5348 Sheets Road, to Phillip M. Zanko, $415,000.

Gene Dougherty and Paula Bing,, 20 acres, to Gene A. Dougherty, et. al., to or from a person when no money or other valuable and tangible consideration readily convertible into money is paid or to be paid for the real estate and the transaction is not a gift.

Garry Anders and Carolyn Green, 485 and 486 Kusa Lane, to Colin O. and Elizabeth H. Flaherty, $280,000.

Matthew and Jennifer Mellinger, 156 E. 2nd St., to M&A Home & Property Sol., LLC, $127,500.

Brad, Richelle and Deakin Marr, 885 W. Hunter St., to Crystal Lynn Strawser, to or from a person when no money or other valuable and tangible consideration readily convertible into money is paid or to be paid for the real estate and the transaction is not a gift.

John C. and Devon C. Gaydosh, 27621 state Route 56, to Dejo Partners, LLC, to or from a person when no money or other valuable and tangible consideration readily convertible into money is paid or to be paid for the real estate and the transaction is not a gift.

Martin F. Hammar and S. Corbett, 11559 Voris Road, to Thomas M. Helmick, Jr., $78,600,

Michael T. and Joseph D. Boles, 114.4106 acres, Walnut-Dowler Road, to JBH Investments, LLC, $525,000.

Shannon P. Robinson, Jr., 17135 Hartsough Road, to Korey L. Robinson, $14,000.

Sandra L. Johnson, trustee, 4.308 acres, to Jacqueline and Todd Vorhees, $25,000.

Jacqueline Reiber and T. Vorhees, 15275 Mount Olive Road, to Todd and Jacqueline Vorhees, to confirm or correct a deed previously executed and recorded.

Brenda S. Graham, 8.603 acres, to Myriah M. Davis, o or from a person when no money or other valuable and tangible consideration readily convertible into money is paid or to be paid for the real estate and the transaction is not a gift.

Elliot Hembree, 548 Henrietta Ave., to Canyon K. Stufflebeam, $94,000.

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Hocking County real estate transfers | News | logandaily.com - Logan Daily News

RedsXtra: Where do the Cincinnati Reds project in the NL Central next year? – The Cincinnati Enquirer

The Cincinnati Reds were the first team outside of the playoff picture last season, falling seven games short of the St. Louis Cardinals in the wild-card race with an 83-79 record.

After a very quiet offseason to this point, the question is what does the Reds ceiling look like for the upcoming season after several notable departures on their roster.

More: Evaluating Jake Bauers and the 10 non-roster players the Cincinnati Reds signed

The Reds havent gained any ground in the winter on the Cardinals, who were propelled by a franchise-record 17-game winning streak in September, and they were 12 games back from the National League Central champion Milwaukee Brewers. Will the Reds be better than a third-place team in 2022 or will they even fall below the Chicago Cubs?

With the sport in an ongoing lockout, heres a look at all the changes in the division:

In: RF Hunter Renfroe, INF Mike Brosseau, C Pedro Severino, RP Trevor Gott, RP J.C. Meja.

Out: RF Avisal Garca, 3B Eduardo Escobar, 1B Daniel Vogelbach, C Manny Pia, LHP Brett Anderson, RP Brad Boxberger, RP Hunter Strickland, CF Jackie Bradley Jr., C Luke Maile.

The Brewers ran away with the division last season and the core of the roster remains in place. Corbin Burnes, the NL Cy Young winner, Brandon Woodruff and Freddy Peralta will continue to highlight the rotation. There is Josh Hader and Devin Williams in the bullpen. Christian Yelich struggled throughout the 2021 season, but hes still a mainstay near the top of their lineup.

Milwaukee replaced Garca, who signed a four-year, $53 million deal with the Miami Marlins, when they completed a trade just ahead of the lockout for Boston Red Sox outfielder Hunter Renfroe, a guy who hit 33 doubles and 31 homers last season. They dealt Bradley to acquire Renfroe, but theyre covered in center with Lorenzo Cain.

More: From Joey Votto to Amir Garrett, 7 of the biggest surprises from the 2021 Reds season

It was a short stay in the postseason, losing in four games to Atlanta, but the Brewers should remain the division favorite with the strength of their pitching staff.

In: LHP Steven Matz, RP Ljay Newsome, manager Oli Marmol.

Out: RP Luis Garca, RHP Carlos Martinez, LHP J.A. Happ, LHP Jon Lester, RP Andrew Miller, LHP Wade LeBlanc, LHP Kwang Hyun Kim, INF Matt Carpenter, OF Austin Dean, manager Mike Shildt.

One of the biggest surprises in the offseason was the Cardinals decision to fire Shildt following a loss in the Wild Card Game to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Marmol, 35, was their bench coach, so there is still a lot of continuity on their staff.

The Cardinals addressed some of their big roster decisions in the second half of the season, signing catcher Yadier Molina to a one-year, $10 million contract extension for what he says will be his final season and signing starter Adam Wainwright to a one-year, $17.5 million extension after his dominant year.

More: Depth is a major issue for the Cincinnati Reds' roster following the lockout

After their rotation was ravaged by injuries last season, the Cardinals opened the winter by signing Matz to a four-year, $44 million deal. Theyre hopeful for healthy seasons from Jack Flaherty and Dakota Hudson, which would be a boost to their postseason hopes next year.

In: N/A

Out: RF Nick Castellanos, C Tucker Barnhart, LHP Wade Miley, RP Michael Lorenzen, RP Mychal Givens, RP Cionel Prez.

The Reds are one of three teams without a Major League free agent signing, along with Cleveland and Oakland. Payroll was a driving factor for their inactivity and why they were set to decline Mileys $10 million club option before placing him on waivers.

More: RedsXtra: Cincinnati Reds seeing returns from investments in international scouting

Once the lockout ends, the Reds will weigh trade offers for Luis Castillo, Sonny Gray and Tyler Mahle. Dealing one of them signals at least a short-term rebuild, but the Reds are without arguably their top hitter (Castellanos) and top pitcher (Miley) from last season.

In: RHP Marcus Stroman, LHP Wade Miley, C Yan Gomes, OF Clint Frazier, OF Harold Ramirez.

Out: RHP Zach Davies, INF Matt Duffy, RP Trevor Megill, C Austin Romine, C Robinson Chirinos, RP Jason Adam, RP Dillon Maples.

Its a new era for the Cubs as they no longer have guys like Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant or Javier Bez, but they showed theyre not entering a long-term rebuild after signing Stroman to a three-year, $71 million deal.

More: Hot Stove goes cold: Cincinnati Reds radio show not talking players during lockout

The Cubs are still at least a few moves from being legitimate playoff contenders. The rotation has a solid core with Stroman, Miley and Kyle Hendricks, but its a light lineup outside of catcher Willson Contreras. They reportedly have interest in shortstop Carlos Correa, which would be a commitment to a competitive team next year, but its one thing to have interest and another to pay a star player a contract of around $300 million.

In: LHP Jos Quintana, C Roberto Prez, RHP Zach Thompson.

Out: C Jacob Stallings, RHP Trevor Cahill, UTIL Wilmer Difo, LHP Steven Brault, RP Chasen Shreve, RHP Chad Kuhl, 1B Colin Moran.

The Pirates will continue their rebuilding efforts, hoping to build around some of their young talent like third baseman KeBryan Hayes, shortstop Oneil Cruz and possibly outfielder Bryan Reynolds if he aligns with their next wave of prospects.

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RedsXtra: Where do the Cincinnati Reds project in the NL Central next year? - The Cincinnati Enquirer

Jared Taylor – American Renaissance

December 5, 2021

Civil rights in the 21st century.

December 3, 2021

Speech at 2021 American Renaissance conference.

November 26, 2021

Very. And the more you know about the case, the worse it looks.

November 24, 2021

Only one out of three.

November 22, 2021

Reactions to Rittenhouse help wake up white people.

November 19, 2021

Abolishing family privilege is one more assault on standards blacks cant meet.

November 18, 2021

Rittenhouse verdict expected soon.

November 9, 2021

It takes an unusual person to be a race realist.

November 8, 2021

Firm to triple BIPOC execs in two years.

November 4, 2021

Why Brittney gets away with it.

Mtis or not Mtis?

October 29, 2021

Because you cant teach a machine to think like ReNika.

October 27, 2021

3,000-strong caravan on its way.

October 24, 2021

Was Taylor a little over-optimistic?

October 22, 2021

If Europeans wont save themselves, maybe someone else will.

Thaddeus Stevens and the fight against whites.

October 20, 2021

But they are here anyway.

October 17, 2021

Interview with Jason Kessler.

October 15, 2021

And who gets the blame?

October 14, 2021

Then turn yourself in and catch a connecting flight to LA.

October 12, 2021

I propose a new name for the holiday and it's not Indigenous Peoples Day.

October 9, 2021

Happy eightieth birthday to the former Mississippi Senator.

October 7, 2021

Whites better keep moving.

October 6, 2021

Killer of three is Arab, so for the murder statistics hes white.

October 1, 2021

Jared Taylor talks to a sceptic.

September 28, 2021

Dallas schools cure for bad students.

September 24, 2021

What to do about it.

September 23, 2021

Thousands at a clip.

September 17, 2021

How about the Jan. 6 defendants?

September 15, 2021

Should we legalize bigamy?

September 12, 2021

Hint: The answer has to do with intelligence.

September 10, 2021

Have we learned anything?

School song from a racist context' has to go.

September 9, 2021

What good is activism if you cant blame whitey?

September 7, 2021

Not even doctors are immune to diversity rubbish.

September 5, 2021

Welfare encourages reckless procreation and is a massive transfer of wealth from whites to non-whites.

September 3, 2021

A conversation with Colin Flaherty.

September 2, 2021

T-shirt says it all.

September 1, 2021

Blacks are twice as likely as whites to commit them.

August 27, 2021

And the white man has got to go.

August 24, 2021

Britain breaks into the lead.

August 23, 2021

No deception is too degrading for the Los Angeles Times.

August 19, 2021

More blowback from a failed war.

August 17, 2021

They made the same mistakes in Afghanistan they make at home.

August 12, 2021

Call 911, then shoot officers who show up.

August 6, 2021

And what to do about it.

August 5, 2021

Chicago's astonishingly poor record on mass shootings.

July 30, 2021

More than you'll learn from a year of reading the New York Times.

An idea whose time has come.

July 25, 2021

Disparate impact and affirmative action.

July 23, 2021

More anti-white rubbish.

July 21, 2021

Interview with Jared Taylor.

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Jared Taylor - American Renaissance

San Diego roads that have disappeared, vanished movie palaces – San Diego Reader

1925 map

In 1944, the land between Midway Drive and Sports Arena Boulevard (then Frontier Street) became combed with the short streets of a wartime housing project. After the war, transients lived in the area. One was Barbara Wood Graham, a party girl who died in the electric chair in 1955 (Susan Hayward won an Oscar for playing her in I Want to Live!). Another was the German scientist Arthur Rudolph, whose Saturn rockets took us to the moon.

By Margot Sheehan, Nov. 5, 1992 | Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3

Life magazine story, March 1972

The scandal that ultimately cost San Diego the GOP convention broke on February 29, 1972, with syndicated columnist Jack Anderson reporting that he had obtained a confidential internal memo from ITT lobbyist Dita Beard that stated the $400,000 convention contribution would favorably influence the federal antitrust action. The story made headlines in papers across the country the following day, while the Union buried it in the fifth paragraph of an article on local convention fundraising.

By Thomas K. Arnold, Jan. 26, 1995 | Read full article

When Pappy acquired part of the estate of actor Leo Carrillo, it inflated his hoard beyond the museum's capacity, so he made a deal with Old Town State Park in 1972. He'd contribute a chunk of money to help build what is now Seeley Stables if the state would take over the management of the Hazard collection. If you go upstairs into the loft, you'll find a couple of those photos of an Old West hanging.

By Matthew Alice, Nov. 7, 2002 | Read full article

Starr lets former councilmember Valerie Stallings off easy for accepting gifts from Padres majority owner John Moores. Starr says Stallings invested in an initial public offering of a stock "recommended to her" by Moores. Actually, Moores put her on the exclusive friends-and-family list of a new issue. That means she got in at the offering price of $15 while others paid much more. It soared, and she made 267 percent in less than a month.

By Don Bauder, Sept. 23, 2004 | Read full article

Mission

The years preceding Americas entry into World War II introduced more neighborhood theaters like the Roxy (1939) in Pacific Beach, the Strand in Ocean Beach, and three in the Logan Heights area: the Coronet (1939) at 1792 Logan, the Metro (later renamed the Corral) at 2175 Logan, and the Victory (1941) at 25th and Imperial. The Victory and Coronet have vanished, the latter razed to make an entrance/exit for I-5, but the Metros building is still up.

By Rick Geary, June 2, 1977 | Read full article

There are 29 Cedar streets, 28 Elm variations, 12 Eucalyptus, 18 Acacias, 15 Oaks, and 27 Palms.

Weve got twenty-nine Cedar streets, avenues, roads, lanes, and ways; fourteen Evergreens; twenty-eight Elm variations, twelve Eucalyptus variations, eighteen Acacias, fifteen Oaks, and twenty-seven Palms. Because olives were the principal orchard trees in San Diegos salad days, there are now thirty-six Olive variations. And sixteen Avocado streets seasoned with several varieties of Haas and Fuertes. Weve got approximately a hundred varieties of Vista and approximately fifty varieties of Hill, including Hillsides, Hillcrests, Hill-views, and Hilltops.

By Sue Garson, Oct. 20, 1983 | Read full article

It's not easy staying green

Tree specialist Bill Nelson has been retained to oversee the trees new fitness program. Although other arborists claim the tree can live another 100 years, Nelson believes it has only another 20 to 30 years left. He says the best way to maintain the tree is to establish a system of absorbing roots beneath the canopy, rather than allow them to remain out under the asphalt. Hes doing this through a regimen of watering, feeding, and mulching.

By Neal Matthews, June 20, 1991 | Read full article

By the time you hear the noise, it's too late to sue

When the first lawsuits were filed against the port in 1986, 1200 families in 12 legal actions were claiming damages for airport noise. By the following year, a judge dismissed 500 of the complaints and the rest were consolidated into a single suit. Mates and others who live under the flight path claimed that airport noise was damaging to their health and to the value of their homes in Point Loma, Golden Hill, and Mission Beach.

By Colin Flaherty, April 16, 1992 | Read full article

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San Diego roads that have disappeared, vanished movie palaces - San Diego Reader

Norwalk Democrats appoint retired teacher to fill Board of Education seat – Thehour.com

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Mary Ellen Flaherty-Ludwig will serve the remaining term of Mike Barbis on the Norwalk Board of Education. Barbis' seat was left vacant after he unexpectedly died in September.

The Norwalk Democratic Town Committee District E members voted to appoint Mary Ellen Flaherty-Ludwig to fill the Board of Education seat left vacant after the unexpected death of Mike Barbis.

NORWALK With only one nomination from District E members at the citys Democratic Town Committee meeting on Monday, Mary Ellen Flaherty-Ludwig has been appointed to the vacant Board of Education seat.

The party was charged with filling the seat left vacant by board member Mike Barbis, who unexpectedly died in September. Since it was a district seat, only District E members of the Norwalk Democratic Party could nominate and vote for his replacement.

Kevin Tepas nominated Flaherty-Ludwig, while his fellow District E members Nora Niedzielski-Eichner and Colin Hosten seconded the nomination. Flaherty-Ludwig was recommended by members of the Norwalk Democrats District E committee who met last week.

Flaherty-Ludwig is a retired math and science teacher who taught at the middle school, high school and university levels for 44 years. After retiring from Darien Public Schools, she mentored teachers for four years in a Manhattan public school.

My intent is to bring my experience as a teacher and teacher mentor to the Norwalk Board of Education, the Norwalk native said in her letter of intent for the board position.

Flaherty-Ludwig is set to be sworn in by the school board and serve the remainder of Barbis term, which expires in November 2023

Democratic Town Committee Chair Eloisa Melendez chose to delay the appointment due to Barbis sudden passing and to wait for the results of the 2021 election.

emily.morgan@hearstmediact.com

I'm the education reporter for The Hour. I'm a native of Ohio and a graduate of Quinnipiac University. I wrote for my hometown newspaper in Wooster, Ohio for five years, winning several Ohio Associated Press Media Editors' awards, and previously worked as an entertainment reporter for multiple outlets in New York City. I enjoy spending time at the beach, watching crime dramas, and rooting for the New York Mets.

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Norwalk Democrats appoint retired teacher to fill Board of Education seat - Thehour.com