LOCAL NEWS FOR FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 2004
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Future builders get tour
Eighteen Cincinnati Public Schools students who are considering careers in construction got a glimpse Thursday of the first new school being built in their district in more than two decades.
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Additional Local headlines
Mental agency needs bigger levy
Nuns find new spot to serve up pizza
Robbery suspects released

Additional Neighbors Headlines:
Plea made for new I-75 bridge
Panel to study Green's finances
Study calls for cuts at Drake
Airport noise pledge falls on deaf ears
Neighbors briefs

E D U C A T I O N
Fighting tide of teen deaths
What else can be done to prevent teens from dying in traffic crashes? Police want to hear your ideas at town hall meetings beginning next week.
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Additional Education Headlines:
Princeton pares applicant list
Chatfield ceremony to feature former CEO

G O O D T H I N G S H A P P E N I N G
Music to aid at-risk kids
The death of two people who didn't know each other is bringing together neighborhoods through a music project.

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Clerk assaulted during robbery
Mother charged in death
City now has 21 homicides after two early Thursday
Fox sees income source
Commission dismisses Shelley
Jurors in murder trial to deliberate Monday
News briefs

Donations to Davis questioned
FBI seeks rapist of solo store clerks
Mother helped son defy the odds
Money's missing, mayor resigns
Kentucky briefs

Harry Bothwell headed Hixson Architects firm
Jerry Cook, 88, music lover
Michael Harris, 61, pastor and founder

Priests and Sexual Misconduct
Eight priests in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati and two priests who formerly served in the Diocese of Covington have been suspended and/or accused of misconduct in a scandal that has swept across the country.
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New bridge: A $750M puzzle
In a special multimedia report, The Enquirer tells why the Brent Spence Bridge is one of the most dangerous bridges in the nation, and how replacing it will be fraught with enormous problems and costs.
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Erpenbeck Investigation
The Erpenbeck Co., once one of Greater Cincinnati's biggest home builders, became the subject of giant legal tangle involving banks, title insurance companies, suppliers and home buyers.
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