The Dayton Police Department will hold two presentations aimed at downtown property owners on Thursday Oct. 29 to inform them how they can assist in maintaining a safe downtown environment.
The presentations, co-sponsored by Sinclair Community College, are a part of an ongoing effort by the police department and local business and civic leaders to develop strategies to create a more inviting downtown space.
Ideas discussed will include:
- Building Lighting
- Landscaping
- Way-Finding
- Enhanced Walkways
- Walkway Lighting Systems
The event is free and open to the public.
- WHO: The Dayton Police Department’s Central Business District
- WHAT : “The Gateway Project” presentations
- WHEN : Thursday, Oct. 29 at 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
- WHERE : Sinclair Community College, Building 12, Smith Auditorium
- WHY : To discuss strategies developed for the safety of the patrons and business owners of downtown Dayton.
For additional info, contact Lt. Larry Faulkner at (937) 333-2336.
Dayton is dying?
A noted writer, Natalie was born October 31, 1876 in Dayton, OH. From the age of 12, Natalie Barney knew that she was a lesbian and she was raised to appreciate the arts. By the age of 20, she had moved to Paris and published the first of her renowned feminist books. In the early 20th Century, when women writers were ignored and dismissed, Natalie Barney created and anchored a formidable leadership role in literary circles. She established her own literary salon which included women, and it quickly drew the leading western writers to her Paris home. For more than 50 years, prominent writers joined her literary circle each week, run according to her rules. Ms. Barney died in Paris on February 2, 1972.















