]

 

 

Everybody altogether now: NERRRRRRRD. Wonder how many times this ad earned him a beating from the greasers. Ah, if only there was some way we could track him down, find how out what happened.

Well:

Stand on the corner of Race and Liberty streets in Over-the-Rhine, and Tom Denhart is everywhere.


        On one corner is Hart Realty Inc., his management company. On another is Elm Industries, whose wares include furniture and iron bars for protecting windows. Turn to look north, and there are many of the apartments that house more than 1,000 low-income families in Cincinnati's most downtrodden neighborhood.


        Last week, Mr. Denhart's company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, blaming changes in the laws governing federally subsidized housing.


        Starting in the 1970s, those laws allowed Mr. Denhart to accumulate one of the largest blocks of low-income apartments in the nation, collecting millions of dollars in federal subsidies each year. Nearly 30 years later, he is Over-the-Rhine's largest apartment owner and low-income landlord.

Same guy? The age is right, and the article says he graduated from Hughes High School.