Hate in Corporate Over-The
- Rhine
No Way buddy gray
Commentary by Berta Lambert
Marge
Hammelrath and Jim Tarbell have for nearly 20 years represented the
under-the-rock persona of the anti-poor and anti-buddy gray attitudes of the
art-bar corporation speculators of Main Street.
For several
years, the old guard conservatives have been supplanted by the overt guerrilla
activities of Chris Frutkin, Jennifer Sizer, and Peter Calloway.
For nearly two years these folks along with their greed-ideology friends
have disrupted the meetings of the 30-year-old Over-the-Rhine Community Council
(ORCC). It has been necessary in
recent months to: move its meeting place, appoint a sergeant-at-arm, tighten its
still very open meeting process, video tape its meetings, and on several
occasions request additional police presence at its meetings.
Chris Frutkin
is the nephew of the wealthy Ed Burger. He
is in his 30’s and an owner of several properties in the neighborhood.
As a yuppie-entrepreneur he is a board member of the Over-the-Rhine
Chamber of Commerce and its clean-up subsidiary Impact.
Jennifer
Sizer’s mother is a recent president of the Over-the-Rhine Chamber.
She is the public relations
person for the infamous Damon Lynch III’s so-called ULI coalition and she is
the P.R person for both the O.T.R Chamber and Jim Verdins Pendelton Art Center (Verdin
is responsible for the 13th St. phallic Corporate Bell Tower vis-a-vis his
Verdin Bell Co.).
None of the
rascals named above is a O.T.R resident. Peter
Calloway, however, is a resident. His
personality seems driven by this current fashion of right-wing entrepreneurial
spirit beliefs. At ORCC’s October meeting he was video taped thanking buddy
gray’s friends taking down the hate No Way buddy gray stickers and announcing
the existence of a No Way buddy gray organization.
The reader
will find it useful to know the sticker with a telephone number, remains on post
throughout the city, is a third generation effort.
It was preceded by nine months: 1st by a gray and black silver dollar
sized Stop buddy gray sticker, and then by a fluorescent green or sometimes
reddish hand sized circular stick-on.
If you called
the number on the most recent sticker, which was disconnected by 10a.m. the day
buddy was shot, you were invited to push 3 or 1 for separate hate messages.
The recordings consisted largely of lies, misinformation and inferences
of impropriety concerning papers in the possession of City Hall.
Frutkin,
Sinzer and Calloway bear the moral responsibility for the hate campaign and the
climate of fear for buddy gray’s personal safety.
Post script: Within twenty-four hours of buddy’s death, stickers appeared in O.T.R which read; ‘Where there is a Wilbur there is a way’. Wilbur was the name of the man that killed buddy.