Northeast suburban life 060116

16
FORREST SELLERS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS Indian Hill High School senior Emily Satterfield proudly displays her Baylor University sweatshirt. Despite losing a significant amount of class time because of a crippling leg injury, Satterfield will graduate with her classmates and attend college this fall. Indian Hill High School sen- ior Meredith Breda found her life completely altered follow- ing her parents’ divorce. It was a perfect family life, she said. “In the blink of an eye it changed.” Breda’s parents divorced during her sophomore year. However, Breda, who lives with her mother in Indian Hill, found some degree of consolation in playing tennis. Tennis was something Breda had grown up with, and she still retained a passion for the sport. “I made sure to work even harder on the court,” she said. “I used tennis as an outlet for my stress.” Breda said she and her moth- er moved into a rental home, and in a sense both had to start over. “It was very tough emotion- ally and mentally,” she said. “I lost my way a bit and was dis- connected.” However, despite suffering depression following her par- ents’ divorce, Breda continued to hone her skills on the tennis court. “I realized (tennis) was something I could control,” she said, adding that tennis helped relieve some of the stress she was feeling at the time. Breda even won a state championship with her doubles partner. She also continued to main- tain a 4.0 grade point average. “I threw myself into my school work even more,” she said. Breda said in some ways the divorce motivated her to strive on both the tennis court and in the classroom. “I realized it could easily go downhill,” she said. “I (also) realized I can adjust to big changes. “I feel I am stronger.” Breda will attend DePauw University this fall. She plans to major in communication and broadcast journalism and hopes to eventually become a news an- chor. Breda feels students can overcome adversity by focus- ing on the positive aspects of their life. “Just try to excel in what you can control and have a passion for it,” she said. “Realize it will get easier with time.” - Forrest Sellers Indian Hill senior not sidelined by crippling injury Indian Hill High School sen- ior Emily Satterfield’s motto the last few years has been, “Don’t give up.” Satterfield, who is a resident of Indian Hill, suffered a crip- pling leg injury in sixth-grade. Satterfield sustained the injury while playing on the school bas- ketball team. She was confined to a wheel chair for a number of years, and at one point was even told she might not be able to walk again. However, through persever- ance and determination, Satter- field not only started walking with the use of crutches and a brace, but since January 2014 has been walking unassisted. She even joined the golf team this past summer. “This (injury) was something (with which) I had to struggle,” she said. “Even something as simple as walking became a goal. However, Satterfield said she refused to allow self-pity to overwhelm her. “(This) made me more deter- mined,” she said. Between grades seven and nine, Satterfield was only able to attend school sporadically be- cause of hospital stays and physical therapy. However, these challenges in addition to also being diagnosed with epilepsy, only made her more focused on pushing ahead. She became an avid reader, saying it took her away from the pain, and made it a goal to com- plete her classwork in order to graduate with her peers. The injury significantly im- pacted her education, she said. Most of her days were spent half in the hospital and half cracking the textbooks. However, Satterfield not only fulfilled her requirements, she even joined the mock trial team. “It was the long run versus the present,” she said, explain- ing that it was important to keep keep her eye on the prize. Name- ly, finishing her schooling and then going to college. Satterfield will attend Baylor University this fall. She plans to major in business. Her advice to others who may also have to deal with an in- jury or illness - “Keep fighting and know that the pain can be overcome. “Don’t let it beat you.” - Forrest Sellers Weiss heavily involved, despite illness Sycamore High School stu- dent Max Weiss doesn’t let any- thing stop him from being in- volved in his high school com- munity. “I have done student council and theater and National Honor Society and a bunch of other clubs,” said Weiss, of Blue Ash. Weiss has been a member of student council since his fresh- man year and was the student body president for the Class of 2016. “I have fun putting together parades, events, school dances and fundraisers for charities,” he said. He has been doing theater since the eighth-grade. “I have been in a bunch of productions; musicals, plays and the improve show every year. I like being in the shows and acting and singing and all that stuff,” he said. He is also a member of the National Honor Society, Model UN and math club. Outside of school, he teaches a Sunday school class. Though he is heavily in- volved now, he missed most of his seventh-grade year because ulcerative colitis, a chronic in- flammatory disease similar to Crohn’s disease. “I was in and out of the hospi- tal just from being sick and the surgery, which was two parts,” he said. Weiss said he recovered through seventh- and eighth- grades and his health normal- ized for high school. “It is always in the back of my mind I guess, remembering that I still have ulcerative colitis and I still don’t have a colon. It is not a huge part of my life any- more but it still exists,” he said. Weiss is attending Harvard University and is studying eco- nomics. “And I’m pre-med, so hope- fully I will become a doctor at some point,” he said. - Forrest Sellers Kumar overcomes challenge to find success Sycamore High School stu- dent Rachit Kumar challenged himself into academic success. “I’ve consistently challenged myself by taking the highest- level available to me, including double-accelerated math courses,” said Kumar, of Love- land. Kumar said he drive to chal- lenge himself stemmed from being profoundly deaf in both ears. He received a cochlear im- plant for his right ear when he was nearly 2-years-old. “I started public school feel- ing inferior compared to all my peers due to having several lim- itations that they didn’t and it took me several years to grow out of this. By fifth grade, how- ever, I realized that my cochlear implant was insignificant in the things that it kept me from do- ing. I could still go out and play and do most things that others could. I began then to challenge myself, both academically and personally,” Kumar said. He received a perfect score of 36 on his ACT and a 2320 out of 2400 on his SAT. He has taken six AP exams while at Sycamore and received a grade of 5 – the highest possible grade – on all of them. He is a member of the math club, the varsity Academic Quiz Team, Science Olympiad Team GRADE A GRADUATES FORREST SELLERS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS Following her parents' divorce, Indian Hill High School senior Meredith Breda helped to overcome her depression by honing her skills on the tennis court. Student tackles depression by honing skills on court Marika Lee, Forrest Sellers & Sheila Vilvens [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected] See GRADS, Page 2A We began the tradition more than a decade ago, and every year the stories continue to inspire, and sometimes amuse. This is our annual salute to graduating high school seniors - those with a unique story to tell. We call them our Grade A Graduates. PROVIDED Sycamore student Rachit Kumar didn’t let the challenge of being born deaf hold him back. S UBURBAN L IFE S UBURBAN L IFE NORTHEAST $1.00 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving Blue Ash, Montgomery, Sycamore Township, Symmes Township Vol. 53 No. 11 © 2016 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED News .......................... 248-8600 Retail advertising .............. 768-8404 Classified advertising ......... 242-4000 Delivery ........................ 576-8240 See page A2 for additional information Contact us GOING MOBILE Find the latest community news on our new and improved Cincinnati.com mobile app. TOURNEY TIME How is your high school team doing in post-season play? Find out at http://cin.ci/1Cmt6hr.

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Transcript of Northeast suburban life 060116

Page 1: Northeast suburban life 060116

FORREST SELLERS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Indian Hill High School senior Emily Satterfield proudly displays her BaylorUniversity sweatshirt. Despite losing a significant amount of class timebecause of a crippling leg injury, Satterfield will graduate with herclassmates and attend college this fall.

Indian Hill High School sen-ior Meredith Breda found herlife completely altered follow-ing her parents’ divorce.

It was a perfect family life,she said. “In the blink of an eye itchanged.”

Breda’s parents divorcedduring her sophomore year.However, Breda, who lives withher mother in Indian Hill, foundsome degree of consolation inplaying tennis.

Tennis was something Bredahad grown up with, and she stillretained a passion for the sport.

“I made sure to work evenharder on the court,” she said. “I

used tennis as an outlet for mystress.”

Breda said she and her moth-er moved into a rental home, andin a sense both had to start over.

“It was very tough emotion-ally and mentally,” she said. “Ilost my way a bit and was dis-connected.”

However, despite sufferingdepression following her par-ents’ divorce, Breda continuedto hone her skills on the tenniscourt.

“I realized (tennis) wassomething I could control,” shesaid, adding that tennis helpedrelieve some of the stress shewas feeling at the time.

Breda even won a statechampionship with her doublespartner.

She also continued to main-tain a 4.0 grade point average.

“I threw myself into my

school work even more,” shesaid.

Breda said in some ways thedivorce motivated her to striveon both the tennis court and inthe classroom.

“I realized it could easily godownhill,” she said. “I (also)realized I can adjust to bigchanges.

“I feel I am stronger.” Breda will attend DePauw

University this fall. She plans tomajor in communication andbroadcast journalism and hopesto eventually become a news an-chor.

Breda feels students canovercome adversity by focus-ing on the positive aspects oftheir life.

“Just try to excel in what youcan control and have a passionfor it,” she said. “Realize it willget easier with time.”

- Forrest Sellers

Indian Hill senior notsidelined by cripplinginjury

Indian Hill High School sen-ior Emily Satterfield’s motto thelast few years has been, “Don’tgive up.”

Satterfield, who is a residentof Indian Hill, suffered a crip-pling leg injury in sixth-grade.Satterfield sustained the injurywhile playing on the school bas-ketball team.

She was confined to a wheelchair for a number of years, andat one point was even told shemight not be able to walk again.

However, through persever-ance and determination, Satter-field not only started walkingwith the use of crutches and abrace, but since January 2014

has been walking unassisted. She even joined the golf team

this past summer. “This (injury) was something

(with which) I had to struggle,”she said. “Even something assimple as walking became agoal.

However, Satterfield saidshe refused to allow self-pity tooverwhelm her.

“(This) made me more deter-mined,” she said.

Between grades seven andnine, Satterfield was only ableto attend school sporadically be-cause of hospital stays andphysical therapy.

However, these challenges inaddition to also being diagnosedwith epilepsy, only made hermore focused on pushing ahead.

She became an avid reader,saying it took her away from thepain, and made it a goal to com-plete her classwork in order tograduate with her peers.

The injury significantly im-pacted her education, she said.Most of her days were spent halfin the hospital and half crackingthe textbooks.

However, Satterfield notonly fulfilled her requirements,she even joined the mock trialteam.

“It was the long run versusthe present,” she said, explain-ing that it was important to keepkeep her eye on the prize. Name-ly, finishing her schooling andthen going to college.

Satterfield will attend BaylorUniversity this fall. She plans tomajor in business.

Her advice to others whomay also have to deal with an in-jury or illness - “Keep fightingand know that the pain can beovercome.

“Don’t let it beat you.” - Forrest Sellers

Weiss heavily involved,despite illness

Sycamore High School stu-dent Max Weiss doesn’t let any-thing stop him from being in-volved in his high school com-munity.

“I have done student counciland theater and National HonorSociety and a bunch of otherclubs,” said Weiss, of Blue Ash.

Weiss has been a member ofstudent council since his fresh-man year and was the studentbody president for the Class of2016.

“I have fun putting togetherparades, events, school dancesand fundraisers for charities,”he said.

He has been doing theatersince the eighth-grade.

“I have been in a bunch ofproductions; musicals, playsand the improve show everyyear. I like being in the showsand acting and singing and allthat stuff,” he said.

He is also a member of theNational Honor Society, ModelUN and math club. Outside ofschool, he teaches a Sundayschool class.

Though he is heavily in-volved now, he missed most ofhis seventh-grade year becauseulcerative colitis, a chronic in-flammatory disease similar to

Crohn’s disease. “I was in and out of the hospi-

tal just from being sick and thesurgery, which was two parts,”he said.

Weiss said he recoveredthrough seventh- and eighth-grades and his health normal-ized for high school.

“It is always in the back ofmy mind I guess, rememberingthat I still have ulcerative colitisand I still don’t have a colon. It isnot a huge part of my life any-more but it still exists,” he said.

Weiss is attending HarvardUniversity and is studying eco-nomics.

“And I’m pre-med, so hope-fully I will become a doctor atsome point,” he said.

- Forrest Sellers

Kumar overcomeschallenge to find success

Sycamore High School stu-dent Rachit Kumar challengedhimself into academic success.

“I’ve consistently challengedmyself by taking the highest-level available to me, includingdouble-accelerated mathcourses,” said Kumar, of Love-land.

Kumar said he drive to chal-lenge himself stemmed frombeing profoundly deaf in bothears. He received a cochlear im-plant for his right ear when hewas nearly 2-years-old.

“I started public school feel-ing inferior compared to all mypeers due to having several lim-itations that they didn’t and ittook me several years to growout of this. By fifth grade, how-ever, I realized that my cochlearimplant was insignificant in thethings that it kept me from do-ing. I could still go out and playand do most things that otherscould. I began then to challengemyself, both academically andpersonally,” Kumar said.

He received a perfect scoreof 36 on his ACT and a 2320 outof 2400 on his SAT. He has takensix AP exams while at Sycamoreand received a grade of 5 – thehighest possible grade – on all ofthem.

He is a member of the mathclub, the varsity Academic QuizTeam, Science Olympiad Team

GRADE A GRADUATES

FORREST SELLERS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Following her parents' divorce, Indian Hill High School senior Meredith Breda helped to overcome her depressionby honing her skills on the tennis court.

Student tackles depressionby honing skills on courtMarika Lee, Forrest Sellers &Sheila [email protected];[email protected];[email protected]

See GRADS, Page 2A

We began the tradition more than a decade ago, and everyyear the stories continue to inspire, and sometimes amuse.

This is our annual salute to graduating high school seniors - thosewith a unique story to tell. We call them our Grade A Graduates.

PROVIDED

Sycamore student Rachit Kumardidn’t let the challenge of beingborn deaf hold him back.

SUBURBAN LIFESUBURBAN LIFENORTHEAST

$1.00

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Your Community Press newspaper serving Blue Ash, Montgomery, Sycamore Township, Symmes Township

Vol. 53 No. 11© 2016 The Community Press

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

News ..........................248-8600Retail advertising ..............768-8404Classified advertising .........242-4000Delivery ........................576-8240

See page A2 for additional information

Contact usGOING MOBILEFind the latest communitynews on our new andimproved Cincinnati.commobile app.

TOURNEY TIMEHow is your high schoolteam doing in post-seasonplay? Find out athttp://cin.ci/1Cmt6hr.

Page 2: Northeast suburban life 060116

2A • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • JUNE 1, 2016 NEWS

NORTHEASTSUBURBAN LIFE

NewsRichard Maloney Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7134, [email protected] Marika Lee Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7577,[email protected] Sheila Vilvens Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7139, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . . .768-8512, [email protected] Scott Springer Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . .576-8255, [email protected]

Twitter: @sspringersports Nick Robbe Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . .513-364-4981, [email protected]

Twitter: @nrobbesports

AdvertisingTo place an ad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .513-768-8404,

[email protected]

DeliveryFor customer service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .576-8240 Stephen Barraco

Circulation Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7110, [email protected] Ann Leonard District Manager. . . . . . . . . . .248-7131, [email protected]

ClassifiedTo place a Classified ad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .242-4000, www.communityclassified.com

Content submitted may be distributed by us in print, digital or other forms

To place an ad in Community Classified, call 242-4000.

Find news and information from your community on the WebCincinnati.com/communities

Calendar ...........4AClassifieds ...........CFood ................5APolice .............. 5BSchools ............3ASports ..............1BViewpoints .......6A

Index

Confident Living, a Life Enriching Communities program, is affiliated with the West Ohio Conference of theUnited Methodist Church and welcomes people of all faiths.

SpecialOffer

Brookside SwimClub hosts openhouse weekend

Brookside Swim andTennis Club will host anopen house from noon to 8p.m. Saturday, June 4, and1 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday,June 5, with discountedmembership fees for newmembers.

Open to the public foran admission fee of $5 perperson, community mem-bers will have the oppor-tunity to enjoy the pooland facilities.

Brookside offers RedCross certified swim-ming lessons, late nighttheme parties, and youthpool parties everyWednesday nightthroughout the summer.

Brookside is at 4400

Sycamore Road.For more information

call 891-9832 or visitwww.brooksideswimand-tennisclub.com.

JCC hosts women’shealth speaker

The Jewish Hospital -Mercy Health’s speaker

series con-tinues atthe Mayer-son JCCWednes-day, June8, with adiscussionon wom-en’s health.TheMayerson

JCC is at 8485 RidgeRoad.

Dr. Caroline Bohme

will lead the presentationand question-and-answersession afterward.

The event begins at5:30 p.m. with appetizersand wine, followed by theprogram, which runsfrom 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Theevent is free, but space islimited.

Please make a reserva-tion (required) by June 6to reserve your spot byvisitingwww.mayersonjcc.org(http://bit.ly/1RnPU2I).

Look for details atmayersonjcc.org or formore information, call513-792-5654.

Township offeringfree yoga classesthis summer

Symmes Township willoffer free yoga classestwice a week this summerat Hopewell MeadowsPark, 9131 HopewellRoad.

The classes will be 6:30p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Wednes-days beginning June 1and9 a.m. to 10 a.m. Saturdaysbeginning June 4.

For more information,call the township office at513-683-6644.

Free social plannedfor dogs

Are you looking forsomething fun for yourdog to do this summer?

Symmes Township isoffering a free dog socialon the first Thursday ofevery month beginningJune 2 at Symmes Park,11600 Lebanon Road,from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 pm.The event will be at theBark Park.

For more information,call the township office at683-6644.

BRIEFLY

Bohme

and the Science Bowl. Hewas also named a Nation-al Merit Finalist and aPresident Scholar Semi-finalist. He received Syc-amore’s physics medal-lion award.

He is also a member offast track mentoring atthe high school, where hehelps students who arestruggling and need help.

“I see my implant notas a barrier to my suc-cess, but as a gatewaythat allowed me to realizemy potential by present-ing me with my earliestchallenges,” Kumar said.

He will attend theGeorgia Institute ofTechnology to study bio-medical engineering. Heis also pre-med withplans to go to medicalschool.

- Marika Lee

Strong work ethichelps Moellerstudent shine

Hard work is some-thing Archbishop Moell-er High School graduateThomas Gray knows.

He’s not a star athlete,for example, but throughdedication, commitmentand hard work, he se-cured a spot as holder forkicker Matthew Coghlinon the Moeller footballteam in his senior year.Gray played football allfour years, varsity his ju-nior and senior year.

Gray said he lovessports and football wasvery important to him.

“I set a goal to get onthe field somehow mysenior year,” he said. Acouple games into theseason they needed aholder. This was the op-portunity Gray needed toachieve his goal.

“I had my role on theteam which was cool,” he

said. The son of Kim and

Tom Gray of Loveland,Gray is not what onewould call a joiner. Hewas selectively involvedin activities that interest-ed him or that he valued.

The primary reasonbehind his selectivenesswas a recognition of hislimits.

“I don’t want to end uphaving too much on myplate where I can’t get toeverything,” Gray said.“Football is a demandingsport year round. I didn’twant to spread myselftoo thin and not be able toget to the commitment.”

He participated insome intramural sports.He was active with theNational Honor Society,the Spanish Honor Soci-ety his sophomore and ju-nior year; and was editorand chief of newspaper,the Crusader.

Gray was active withTeens Acting for Peacewhich involved workingwith children at St Fran-cis De Sales School. Heparticipated in C40M,which stands for Chris-tian 40-Day Meditation.This is a Lenten programthat helps guide theMoeller studentsthrough their spiritualjourney.

He enjoyed leader-ship opportunitiesthrough involvementwith the school’s housesystem. He also servedas a Kairos retreat lead-er. Kairos is a four-day,intensive, Christ-cen-tered retreat for seniors.

His involvement with

Kairos as first a partici-pant and later as a rectorwas a highlight of his sen-ior year. During his Feb-ruary session, Gray wasled by other students whohad already participatedin the retreat.

“I really got in touchwith my faith,” he said.As a result, he decided togo back and lead a ses-sion to help other stu-dents rediscover God intheir lives and furtherbuild the brotherhoodthat they have with theirclassmates.

Academically Graywas a shining star. Again,his work ethic benefittedhim. He worked hard toget good grades and wasfirst honors every quar-ter with an A average.

“I’m pretty proud ofthat,” he said. For him,good grades, a good ACTscore mean getting intothe college of yourchoice. The same workethic in college will helphim to get a good job inthe future, Gray said.

“I think that I mightnot be the most naturallygifted student out there,”he said of what sets himapart from his class-mates. “There are plentyof guys in my tough class-es that are smarter thanme. I always try to makeup for that by workinghard.”

With his Moeller yearsbehind him, Gray saidhe’s ready for college. Hedecided to attend the Uni-versity of Dayton this fallto major in finance, orsome area of business.

- Sheila Vilvens

SHEILA VILVENS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Moeller High School graduate Thomas Gray of Lovelandenjoyed great success thanks to a strong work ethic.

GradsContinued from Page 1A

Page 3: Northeast suburban life 060116

JUNE 1, 2016 • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • 3A

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

NORTHEASTSUBURBAN LIFEEditor: Richard Maloney, [email protected], 248-7134

Tickets available online today!celticfestohio.com

On the grounds of the Ohio Renaissance Festival

June 17-19 2016THE TRADITION STARTS NOWTRADITION STARTS NOWTHE TRADITION

Mount Notre DameHigh School

» Mount Notre Dameplaced three teams in thetop 10 at the “Caring ForOur Watersheds” compe-tition, an environmentaleducational competitionthat encourages creativ-ity and rewards studentsfor solutions they identi-fy. Final presentationswere held at the Cincin-nati Zoo and BotanicalGardens. This year, 100proposals for improvingthe local watershed wereentered.

Teams were evaluatedon content and innovationof written proposals aswell as live presentationsmade to a panel of judges.MND teams that placedin the top 10 includeAleeyah Nurredin of Am-berley Village for herproposal “A Rain Gardena Day Keeps the DirtAway,” Taylor Schmidt ofReading, Alex Herbert ofReading and Abigail Au-brey of Maineville fortheir proposal “GreenWomen Products,” andMolly Bonino of Lovelandfor her proposal “Auto-matic Rainwater TerraceSystem.”

All teams were men-tored by Michelle Shafer,MND Science Depart-ment chair and STEM co-ordinator, who has cham-pioned MND’s efforts inthis competition over thepast few years.

MND students haveenjoyed great success atthis competition andclaimed first prize inboth 2014 and 2015.

“I’m very proud of ourstudents for their innova-tive ideas,” Shafer said.“They presented theirideas with poise and con-fidence and made MNDshine. They showed theyare empowered youngwomen who are ready tosolve real world prob-lems.”

St. Ursula Academy» » Students at Saint

Ursula Academy hosted a“Fashion Revolution”day for their peers tobring awareness to ethi-cally sourced fashionitems in the clothing in-dustry.

Students Emilie Kil-foil ’17 of Anderson Town-ship and Kate Bachman’17 of Montgomery ledthe event and presented

clips from a recent movie“The True Cost,” whichhighlights poor working

conditions and low wagesfor clothing factoryworkers in third world

countries. After sharingthe clips and discussingthe stories of the womenfeatured in the movie, theleaders encouraged stu-dents to watch the moviein its entirety and reflectupon the way their cloth-ing was made.

To show their supportfor the event, studentswore their shirts inside-out, with tags showing tohighlight the brand ofclothing they were wear-ing and supporting. Stu-dents were then asked toresearch the particularbrand appearing on theirtag to determine whetheror not their clothing hadbeen made using accept-able fair trade practices.

Kilfoil and Bachmanplan to continue to pursuetheir passion to bringawareness to fair trade/ethically sourced itemsavailable in the UnitedStates. They both recent-ly attended a conferenceat the United Nationswhich focused on thistopic and are working toensure that the UN offersfairly traded items intheir gift shop. Addition-ally, they are workingwith the Saint UrsulaAcademy Spirit Shop tooffer fairly traded uni-form items to students.

St. Vincent FerrerSchool

» COSI On Wheelscame to St. Vincent Fer-rer for some truly “handson” learning.

Teachers, parent vol-unteers and students allhad a great time learningthrough experimentationand play. The studentsparticipated in a “chem-istry detective” case tofind the clues to makingtheir own slime. The stu-dents used universal indi-cators to discover the pHof soda pop, revealed asecret message usingwashing soda, and creat-ed an oozing and expand-ing “elephant toothpaste”with a rapid chemicalchange.

SCHOOLS NOTEBOOK

PHOTOS PROVIDED

Mount Notre Dame students who participated in the "Caringfor Our Watersheds" competition, from left: front, AbigailAubrey, Alex Herbert and Taylor Schmidt; back, AleeyahNurredin and Molly Bonino.

Saint Ursula Academy juniors Emilie Kilfoil of AndersonTownship and Kate Bachman of Montgomery led the FashionRevolution which was conducted on campus to bringawareness to fairly traded clothing items.

Angela Robinson (Pleasant Ridge), Faith Lewis (AmberleyVillage), Isabelle Hager (Madisonville), Lucas Montovani(Sycamore Township) and Ian Hubbard (Sycamore Township)enjoy the COSI on Wheels exhibit at St. Vincent Ferrer School.

Academic MeritListsWilmington College - ErikaJane Giliespie.

Dean’s Lists» Belmont University - Madi-son Bishop, Abby Docherty,Scott Frenzel, Samuel Hoff-man, Gabriel Hoyer, Kather-ine Jones, Athena Kennedy,Clayton Walker.

» Berry College - Sara Priest.» Coastal Carolina University -Brittany Southerland.

» Emerson College - NicholasInglin.

» Furman University - Alexan-dra O'Neill.

» Grove City College - MeganCotterman, Michelle Chu,Ann Busch.

» Harding University - HannahStanger.

» Heidelberg University -Darby Moloney.

» Marietta College - CarolineBecker.

» Northeastern University -Lydia Osborne.

» Ohio Wesleyan University -Jessica Choate, JonathanGriggs.

» University of Evansville - SariBaum.

» University of Mount Union -Dillon Frees.

» University of Vermont -Margaret Policastro.

» Washington & Lee University- Reid Gaede.

» Wilmington College - ElyseM. Spraul.

Graduates» Clemson University - Megh-an Marion Glass.

» Grove City College - MeganCotterman.

» Lehigh University - Kather-ine MacLachlan.

» University of Evansville -Amy Gordon.

» University of Mount Union -Joseph Chmura, Jared Neit-zel, Brooke Rayokovich.

» Wittenberg University -Shannon Lance.

On campus» Grove City College - FiveGrove City College biologystudents had a paper describ-ing the results of three yearsof student research acceptedby and published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Michelle Chu contributed tothe project.

They are credited as authorsof “Heme sensing in Bacillusthuringiensis: a supple-

mentary HssRS-regulatedheme resistance system,” apaper published in the March29 edition of FEMS (Feder-ation of European Microbiol-ogist Societies) MicrobiologyLetters.

» Harding University - HannahChunn received a TrusteeScholarship, amounting toeight semesters of full tu-ition. Chunn is one of 27Trustee Scholars who will befreshmen at the universitythis fall.

» Leehigh University - TheJames J. Duane III StudentLife Leadership Award isgiven to seniors in recog-nition of extraordinaryperformance as a studentleader. The following areasare used as a basis for evalu-ating outstanding perfor-mance: overall impact onstudents, program devel-opment and implementation,bridging cultural differences,and student governance bytaking a role to improvestudent, faculty and staffinteractions. KatherineMacLachlan was among therecipients of this award.

» University of Dayton - JuliaCourt is among six Universityof Dayton honors studentsselected to participate in theLondon Flyers internshipprogram. Court will workwith Hibiscus Initiativesworking with the specialneeds of migrant womenimprisoned in the UK.

» University of Findlay -Brooke Wallace participatedin the 2016 Juried Student Artand Design Exhibition. Wal-lace showcased her creativityin digital photography.

» Wittenberg University -Capping off a day-longcelebration of the liberal artsat Wittenberg University, thecampus community cametogether to celebrate theachievements of students andfaculty members alike at theannual Honors Convocationin Weaver Chapel. The facultycommemorated the occasionas the university recognizedhigh achievement of studentsand faculty members inacademic and co-curricularactivities.

Lpcal students recognized:Madison Manger, LauraJansing, Margaret Smith,Margaret Smith, Emily Duder-stadt, Andrew Swart, KieranConway, Zachary Hoyer,Annelise Page and Laura

Jansing.

COLLEGE CORNER

Paddling pals

PROVIDED

St. Vincent Ferrer’s eighth-graders made their annual trip to Morgan’s Canoe Livery inOregonia. Cold water temperatures meant they had to raft rather than canoe, but that didn’tstop the water gun wars or the swimming. From left are Jack Ashmore, Loveland; MatthewMerritt, Kenwood; Leo Rainey, Evendale; Nicholas Smith, Forest Park; Christian Harris,Silverton, and Holland Faller, Kenwood.

Page 4: Northeast suburban life 060116

4A • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • JUNE 1, 2016

THURSDAY, JUNE 2Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 3 p.m., Creativities, 7010Miami Ave., Check websitecalendar for details. $10 percreator. Add $5 for drop off ofages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

Beginner/Intermediate Water-color with Chris Campbell,9:30 a.m. to noon, Women’s ArtClub Cultural Center, 6980Cambridge Ave., The Barn.Learn about saving whites,experiment with differentpapers, create textures, reflec-tions and shadows, negativepainting, glazing and more.Ages 18 and up. $25 per class;$20 with own materials. Regis-tration required. Presented byWoman’s Art Club CulturalCenter. 272-3700; www.artat-thebarn.org. Mariemont.

Business SeminarsIntroduction to Social MediaBy Dimalanta Design Group,10 a.m., Dimalanta DesignGroup, 4555 Lake Forest Drive,Suite 650, Learn to further skillsin social media marketing. Free.Registration recommended.Presented by Ernie Dimalanta.588-2802; bit.ly/1JuPLZ8. BlueAsh.

Symmetry, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.,Oasis Golf Club and ConferenceCenter, 902 Loveland-MiamivilleRoad, Networking event forworking women focused onhow to better balance theirlives. Jenn Jordan, cohost of Jeff& Jenn Morning Show on Q102is keynote speaker. Karrie Helm-Regional Director of fashionretail line Evereve is emcee. $35.Presented by Little Miami RiverChamber Alliance. 683-1544;www.lmrchamberalliance.org.Loveland.

Cooking ClassesSalads that Make a Meal withMarilyn Harris, 6:30-9 p.m.,Cooks’ Wares, 11344 Montgo-mery Road, $62. Reservationsrequired. 489-6400; www.cooks-waresonline.com. SymmesTownship.

Dining EventsFamily Ice Cream Social,5:30-7:30 p.m., Mayerson JCC,8485 Ridge Road, Outdoorgames, bounce house, giantslide and petting zoo. Pizzadinner and kosher ice creamfrom Miss Missy’s Ice CreamTruck available for purchase.Free. 761-7500. Amberley Vil-lage.

Farmers MarketMadeira Farmers Market,3:30-7 p.m., City of Madeira,Madeira, Intersection of Dawsonand Miami. Wide variety oflocally and sustainably grownfoods, made-from-scratchgoodies and various artisan

products. Presented by MadeiraFarmers Market. 623-8058;www.madeirafarmersmarket-.com. Madeira.

ShoppingFair Trade Oriental Rug Event,10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Introduction toOriental Rugs at 7 p.m. Thiseducational presentation is freeto attend but must RSVP at513-871-5840., Ten ThousandVillages Harper’s Point, 11316Montgomery Road, Featuresover 300 exquisitely beautifulrugs. Tribal, Bokhara and Per-sian, classic to contemporary invariety of sizes. All rugs arehandmade by fairly paid adultsin Pakistan. Benefits Bunyaad.Free. 802-5721; bit.ly/1S0ppXh.Symmes Township.

Support GroupsBlood Cancer NetworkingGroup, 6:30-7:30 p.m., CancerSupport Community, 4918Cooper Road, This networkinggroup brings together peoplecoping with blood cancers andissues related to treatment andsurvivorship. Open to bothpeople with cancer and theirloved ones. Ages 18 and up.Free. 791-4060; www.cancersup-portcincinnati.org. Blue Ash.

FRIDAY, JUNE 3Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 3 p.m., Creativities, $10per creator. Add $5 for drop offof ages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

Dining EventsFriday Night Grill Outs, 5-8p.m. Katie Pritchard, LakeIsabella, 10174 Loveland-Madei-ra Road, Items available a lacarte. Dine on outdoor coveredpatio by the lake or in air-conditioned Chart Room. Livemusic. $10, $8.50, $4.25 forchildren ages 10 and under.Presented by Great Parks ofHamilton County. 521-7275;www.greatparks.org. SymmesTownship.

Music - AcousticString Theory, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.,Silverton Cafe, 7201 Montgo-mery Road, $5. 791-2922;www.silvertoncafe.com. Silver-ton.

ShoppingFair Trade Oriental Rug Event,10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Ten ThousandVillages Harper’s Point, Free.802-5721; bit.ly/1S0ppXh.Symmes Township.

Quilt Outreach Fabric Sale, 9a.m. to 2 p.m., Quilt Outreach,7859 Carmago Road, Fundrais-ing yard sale for quilting group.Benefits Quilt Outreach. Free.Presented by Quilt Outreach,Inc.. 607-6569; quiltoutreach-.com. Madeira.

SATURDAY, JUNE 4Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 2 p.m., Creativities, $10per creator. Add $5 for drop offof ages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

Cooking ClassesKids Making Breakfast withIlene Ross, 1-3 p.m., Cooks’Wares, 11344 MontgomeryRoad, $38. Reservations re-quired. 489-6400; www.cooks-waresonline.com. SymmesTownship.

Home & GardenInsects, Arachnids, Crusta-ceans: Getting to KnowGarden Bugs, 8-9:30 a.m.,Turner Farm, 7400 Given Road,$15. 561-7400; www.turnerfar-m.org. Indian Hill.

Literary - LibrariesTeen Craft, 3 p.m., LovelandBranch Library, 649 Loveland-Madeira Road, Make sparkly lipgloss and sugar scrubs to helprelax and beautify. Ages 12-17.Free. 369-4476; www.cincinnati-library.org. Loveland.

RecreationMontgomery Kiwanis FishingContest, 9-11 a.m., Swaim Park,Zig Zag and Cooper roads, Forchildren aged 1-15 (three agegroups). Cash prizes for firstchild in each age group to catchfish each half hour. Final cashprizes for most fish, biggest fishand smallest fish. Free. Present-ed by Montgomery KiwanisClub. 910-7068. Montgomery.

ShoppingFair Trade Oriental Rug Event,10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Ten ThousandVillages Harper’s Point, Free.802-5721; bit.ly/1S0ppXh.Symmes Township.

Quilt Outreach Fabric Sale, 9a.m. to 1 p.m., Quilt Outreach,Free. 607-6569; quiltoutreach-.com. Madeira.

ToursCincy Wine Wagon WineryTour, 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.,Maggiano’s Little Italy, 7875Montgomery Road, Bar. VisitValley Vineyards, Henke Wineryand Meier Wine Cellar. Approxi-mately 5-hour tour. Wine andsnacks at each location. Ages 21and up. $65. Reservations re-quired. Presented by Cincy WineWagon. 258-7909; www.cincy-brewbus.com. Sycamore Town-ship.

SUNDAY, JUNE 5Drink TastingsL’Chaim: Israeli Wine Tastingand BBQ, 4-7 p.m., Adath IsraelCongregation, 3201 E. GalbraithRoad, Lerner Fisher Hall. Sample6-8 Israeli wines and BBQ menuof shish kebab, Mediterranean

salad, hummas with pita, anddessert sweets. Activities, gamesand prizes throughout evening.Ages 21 and up. Free. Reserva-tions recommended. 793-1800;adath-israel.org. AmberleyVillage.

Exercise ClassesFamily Fun Fitness Hour,3:15-4:15 p.m., Mayerson JCC,8485 Ridge Road, Fitness in-structor Adi Nulson instructshour-long class incorporatingexercises for all ages. Free.Registration required. 761-7500;www.mayersonjcc.org. Amber-ley Village.

ShoppingFair Trade Oriental Rug Event,noon to 5 p.m., Ten ThousandVillages Harper’s Point, Free.802-5721; bit.ly/1S0ppXh.Symmes Township.

Support GroupsFamily Backyard Bash: Cele-brating Cancer Survivorship,11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Cancer SupportCommunity, 4918 Cooper Road,Food, games, arts and crafts andmore. Get sneak peek at kidsand family programs for sum-mer. Program for anyone im-pacted by cancer. Free. Reserva-tions recommended. 791-4060.Blue Ash.

MONDAY, JUNE 6Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, noonto 3 p.m., Creativities, $10 percreator. Add $5 for drop off ofages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

LecturesA Community Conversation:

Poverty, Preschool, and OurSchools, 7-8:30 p.m., MayersonJCC, 8485 Ridge Road, Learnabout initiatives such as Pre-school Promise and other educa-tional efforts to improve lives ofchildren. Free. 761-7500;bit.ly/1sMN83c. Amberley Vil-lage.

Literary - LibrariesAdult Coloring Enthusiasts, 6p.m., Loveland Branch Library,649 Loveland-Madeira Road,Adults who love to color canjoin other adults who love tocolor. Coloring pages and sup-plies provided. Ages 18 and up.Free. 369-4476; www.cincinnati-library.org. Loveland.

Literary - Story TimesPreschool Storytime, 10-11a.m., Loveland Branch Library,649 Loveland-Madeira Road,Enjoy books, songs, activities,crafts and more, while buildingearly literacy skills. For pre-schoolers and their caregivers.Ages 3-6. Free. 369-4476;www.cincinnatilibrary.org.Loveland.

Toddler Storytime, 11 a.m. tonoon, Loveland Branch Library,649 Loveland-Madeira Road,Encourage emerging languageskills with books, rhymes, crafts,music and fun. For ages 18-36months. Free. 369-4476;www.cincinnatilibrary.org.Loveland.

TUESDAY, JUNE 7Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 3 p.m., Creativities, $10per creator. Add $5 for drop offof ages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

WACC Open Model SketchGroup, 1-4 p.m., Women’s ArtClub Cultural Center, 6980Cambridge Ave., Lindner Class-room. Draw and paint fromcostumed clothed model. Unin-structed sessions. Easels provid-ed but bring own supplies. Ages

18 and up. $15, $10. Registrationrecommended. Presented byWoman’s Art Club CulturalCenter. 259-9302; deborah-ridgley.com. Mariemont.

Farmers MarketLoveland Farmers Market, 3-7p.m., Loveland Farmers’ Market,205 Broadway, 683-0491;www.lovelandfm.com. Love-land.

Music - ClassicalCCO Tuesday Night ConcertSeries, 7 p.m., Blue Ash NaturePark, 4433 Cooper Road, Free.Presented by Cincinnati Cham-ber Orchestra. 745-9500;www.ccocincinnati.org. BlueAsh.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 3 p.m., Creativities, $10per creator. Add $5 for drop offof ages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

Cooking ClassesFoolin’ with Fish with DianePhillips, 6:30-8:30 a.m., Cooks’Wares, 11344 MontgomeryRoad, $75. Reservations re-quired. 489-6400; www.cooks-waresonline.com. SymmesTownship.

Farmers MarketFarmers Market, 3:30-7 p.m.,Blue Ash Summit Park, 4335Glendale-Milford Road, Varietyof food and products from localvendors. Free. Presented by Cityof Blue Ash. 745-8550;www.blueash.com. Blue Ash.

Literary - LibrariesToddler Playdate, 11 a.m. tonoon, Loveland Branch Library,649 Loveland-Madeira Road,Meet new friends and socializethrough unstructured play. Toysprovided. For ages 18 months-4years. Free. 369-4476; www.cin-cinnatilibrary.org. Loveland.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

ABOUT CALENDARTo submit calendar items, go to Cincinnati.com/share, log in

and click on “submit an event.” Send digital photos to [email protected] along with event information.Items are printed on a space-available basis with local eventstaking precedence. Deadline is two weeks before publicationdate.

To find more calendar events, go to Cincinnati.com/calendar.

PROVIDED

The Madeira Farmers Market will be open 3:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday, June 2, at the intersection ofDawson and Miami, Madeira. A wide variety of locally and sustainably grown foods,made-from-scratch goodies and various artisan products will be for sale. Call 623-8058; visitwww.madeirafarmersmarket.com.

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Page 5: Northeast suburban life 060116

JUNE 1, 2016 • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • 5ANEWS

These longer days find usoutside until just about dark.Both the vegetable and herbgardens are starting to lookreally nice. Not too manyweeds yet!

We’re already harvestingradishes. Alongwith the redglobe and Dai-kon radishes,one of our favor-ites turns out tobe an heirloomradish calledCincinnati rad-ish. Ron Wilson,gardening guru,gifted me with apack of seeds.

We’ve been eating them rawand also making open faceradish sandwiches. I wanted toshare that recipe since it takesradishes to a whole new level.Radishes, members of thecabbage family, are chock fullof nutrition: vitamins, antioxi-dants, minerals, fiber andanti-cancer qualities, as well.The leaves are edible, too!

So many of you asked forthe no fail pie crust recipe thatI’m including it here. I willconfess that it took me a longtime to make a good pie crustby hand.

My mom used to tell me notto fool too much with it andrelax. But the cookbook Iturned to instead of listeningto her instructed me to “cutthe fat into the flour until itlooks like small peas.” Really?Peas? And small peas? Easiersaid than done when you’re anovice like I was!

My first attempt was atwo-crust apple pie that looked

gorgeous. But when it came tocut the pie, a regular knifewouldn’t go through the topcrust. I would up literallysawing through the crust witha large serrated knife.

The crust was beyond toughbecause I had overworked thedough. My saving grace wasthat the filling was delicious,but I learned a valuable les-

son: Mom really did knowbest!

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is anherbalist, educator, JungleJim’s Eastgate culinary profes-sional and author. Find herblog online atAbouteating.com. Email her [email protected] “Rita’s kitchen” in thesubject line.

Radish sandwicheswith Boursin

Slice a thin French ba-guette, on the diagonal into1/2-inch slices. Brush with a bit ofolive oil and run under broilerjust until golden on top side.Spread some Boursin or herbedcheese on bread and top withvery thinly sliced radishes.

No fail pie crust

Instructions are very de-tailed to make it easy for you.Make sure shortening and waterare cold.

2 cups all purpose flour1/2 teaspoon baking powder

(the secret ingredient whichmakes the crust flaky)

1/4 teaspoon salt1 cup cold Crisco shortening- I

use Crisco sticks1/2 cup ice cold water

Whisk flour, baking powderand salt together. Cut up Criscointo very small pieces and put ontop of flour mixture. Using apastry blender, two knives or fork(I use a fork), quickly work Criscointo flour mixture. You could alsodo this in a food processor usingthe pulse button. You’ll know it’sgood when the Crisco is in flattishsmall pieces and coated withflour. It takes about 3-4 minutesby hand and less than a minute inthe processor.

Pour the water all over flourmixture and mix again quicklyuntil the dough comes togetherbut still is lumpy. If a few drypieces remain on the bottom ofthe bowl, just leave them.

If using the food processor,pulse just until water is incorpo-rated and dough still lookslumpy.

Dump out onto a lightlyfloured counter. Bless the dough!(A tradition in our home). Gatherinto a ball and pat into a disk.Sprinkle a bit of flour on top andthen roll out a bit larger than thepie plate. If it starts to stick onbottom, add a little more flouronto counter. If it sticks on top,add a little more flour.

Carefully put it in the piepan, and pat down bottom andsides of the dough into pan. Thishelps prevent shrinking duringbaking. Cut plain edge with aknife or flute if you like.

Dough can be refrigerated,well wrapped, up to 3 days orfrozen for 3 months, either rolledout or not.

THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

Radish sandwiches are lavished with Boursin cheese.

Boursin takes radishesto a whole new level

Rita HeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

*Applies to the purchase of anyin stock Uooring . Some exclusions apply. Not valid with any other oVer. Not valid on previous purchases. Cannot be combinedwith any other oVer. Photos are for illustration purposes only andmay not reUect actual product. OVer ends 7/2/16.

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6A • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • JUNE 1, 2016

VIEWPOINTSVIEWPOINTSEDITORIALS | LETTERS | COLUMNS | CH@TROOM Cincinnati.com/communities

NORTHEASTSUBURBAN LIFEEditor: Richard Maloney, [email protected], 248-7134

NORTHEASTSUBURBAN LIFE

Loveland Herald EditorRichard [email protected], 248-7134Office hours: 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-FridaySee page A2 for additional contact information.

7700 Service Center Drive, West Chester, Ohio, 45069phone: 248-8600email: [email protected] site: Cincinnati.com/communities

A publication of

south of Pittsburgh, creating acrater 1,500 square feet, 12 feetdeep and burned 44 acres. Aman was burned from the in-tense heat as he ran out of hishouse to get away from the in-ferno a quarter mile away fromthe explosion.

Call Duke Energy. Tell themto stop this plan. Central Corri-dor Pipeline Hotline 513-287-2130. Most importantly, writethe Ohio Power Siting Board atwww.opsb.ohio.gov/opsb/ to ex-press your opinion and con-cerns. Be sure to refer to theCase ID number 16-0253-GA-BTX For more information in-cluding maps of danger zonesaround the proposed pipelinesgo to nopecincy.org/

Joanne Gerson Montgomery

Views that moveAmerica backward

The actor Bill Murray oncesaid, “It’s hard to win an argu-ment with a smart person, butit’s damn near impossible to winan argument with a stupid per-son.” Nonetheless, I will try.

There is no doubt that partsof the world are in turmoil andthat we live in uncertain times.But, is guest columnist Ted Dayactually equating our country’sinterment of Japanese Ameri-cans during WWII with somekind of nebulous solution towhat he sees as “open borders”that “allow our enemies to infil-

Pipeline a deadlyaccident waiting tohappen.

The Duke Energy pipelineposes a potentially deadly haz-ard to everyone who lives nearit, drives near it, works near it,use services near it, shops nearit, eats at restaurants near it,sends their children to school ora day care center near it, at-tends a place of worship near it,or gets medical attention near it.

The history of these pipe-lines exploding, causing asmuch as 44 acres of carnage in-stantly, should be enough toscrap this idea. According to the2014 Report by the US Office ofInspector General, state pipe-line safety programs lack effec-tive management and over-sight. High transmission gaspipelines are usually built in ru-ral areas, but Duke Energy pro-poses to put one in the middle ofour highly populated communi-ties.

Gas companies reported 35explosions and 32 ignitions attheir transmission pipelinessince 2010, according to federalrecords. During that same timeperiod, 17 people died and 86were injured in incidents in-volving pipelines, including aSeptember 2010 explosion inSan Bruno, California, thatkilled eight, injured 51, and de-stroyed 38 homes. Last month ahigh transmission pipeline ex-ploded in a rural farm area

trate through mass migration”?If so, that’s beyond disturbing.

Day will have his readers be-lieve that casting a wide net thatcaptures anyone who is differ-ent is worth the cost of captur-ing those who are no threat andworth the cost of damages to ourcountry’s core beliefs and val-ues.

“Enemies of America” arewhat Day calls Americans whochampion the values of inclu-siveness and intelligence oversegregation and ignorance. Asan example of a false dichoto-my, it’s one of the best. His fear-mongering column exemplifiesmuch that is wrong with the mis-guided backlash social progressis receiving in this country. Fur-ther, his “political correctness”is linguistic code for a threat tohis white, male, middle classand-presumably-heterosexualprivilege. Equality, anotherAmerican value, is one, itseems, that is either lost on Dayor one he only wants on histerms.

Let’s resolve to discuss andreflect upon the internment ofJapanese Americans duringWWII - one of a handful of darktimes in our country’s otherwiseremarkable history. Let’s not doit in this context, however. Let’snot do it in this way. For to do soonly moves our country back-wards. Then again, maybe that’sexactly what Mr. Day wants.

Eric Weiss Blue Ash

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

May 25 questionWhat is your all-time favorite

movie - the one that you will al-ways watch if you come across itwhile channel-surfing? Why doyou like it?

“Really tough call. For spec-tacular scenery and weak act-ing, it’s ‘The Eiger Sanction.’For the most intensity, ‘Argo.’Best portrayal of Jack Nichol-son by Jack Nicholson, ‘AsGood As It Gets.’ Reasons areall personal. Wife and I en-gaged on the Eiger Glacierwhile skiing. I took many tripsto Tehran before the Ayathollaand as the unrest grew to gun-fire in the alley where I wasstaying. Jack Nicholson hasplayed so many ‘Jack Nichol-son’ roles, he has become myfavorite. Yet, I despised ‘AngerManagement’ and ‘Chinatown.’‘You can’t handle the truth!’ iseven more iconic than‘Heeere’s Johnnnie.’”

D.B.

“My favorite, all-time, No. 1,most awesome, incrediblymeaningful, deep and amazingmovie is the ‘70s classic ‘Har-old and Maude,’ which tells thequirky story of a love affair(but mostly relationship) be-tween an 18-year-old over-priv-ileged young man with a deathobsession (not what you maythink) and a 79-year-old con-centration camp survivor witha spunk for life. If you havenever seen this powerful movieyou must. If you have seen itover 100 times, as someone I

know, it’s past due time to im-merse one’s self in it yet again.This movie is quirky, no doubt,but it holds so many deeperphilosophical insights and posi-tions on life that have been per-manently woven into the fabricof my life.

“Although not asked, youmust be wondering what othermovies round out my all-timeTop 5 and they are: ‘Pay It For-ward,’ ‘Out Of Time,’ ‘My Cous-in Vinny’ and ‘The ShawshankRedemption.’ Rush out to Net-flix or the library and enjoy allof these gems soon.”

M.J.F.

“My all time favorite movieis ‘Step Brothers’ with Will Fer-rell and John C. Reilly. It is oneof the funniest movies I haveever seen. I find myself laugh-ing just thinking about the in-teractions of the two stepbrothers in the film.”

C.S.

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’SQUESTIONDescribe your “brush with great-ness.”

Every week we ask readers a questionthey can reply to via email. Send your answers [email protected] withCh@troom in the subject line.

I read the draft “PropertyMaintence Code” proposed bySymmes Township, and spokeat the public hearing April 7.

I’ve investigated further,and have additional commentsfor the trustees and townshipresidents. I understand theboard’s “intent” is to developthe code as a tool to assist resi-dents with deteriorating orpoorly maintained propertiesnear them, and identify proper-ty owners needing help inmaintaining their homes.Trustees advised (at the April 7hearing) that at any one timethere are approximately 12properties with maintenanceissues before the board.Through Public Records re-quest I received the NuisanceComplaint Log dating from

2001 and foundthis statementis not true.

1. For 2016the log showsthree nuisancecomplaints,five in 2015,and zero in2014. That’s atotal of eightcomplaints

within three years - when theboard claimed they deal with12 problem properties at atime. The scope of nuisanceproperties has been greatlyoverstated.

2. The proposed code statesthat gravel driveways must beupgraded to a solid surface.Since 2001 there has been zero,nada, zip complaints about

gravel driveways. Why is thisprohibition included in thecode?

3. The proposed code in-cludes a list of “noxiousweeds” which seems pulledfrom thin air. Included is milkweed - promoted by the gar-dening industry as beneficialto Monarch Butterflies. Plantson the national and state nox-ious weeds list are not includedin the Symmes list. So, accord-ing to the township I can plantkudzu, but not milk weed. Com-plaints filed since 2001 havezero mentions of any specificplant. Vegetation complaintsare limited to “tall grass andweeds.” Simplifying the codeto require that grass and vege-tation be maintained seemslike a smarter requirement

than listing specific plants.4. The code states that

“foundations must support thebuilding at all points.” In 15years there were zero com-plaints about buildings withopen foundations. (just generalcomplaints about buildingdisrepair.) There are manybuildings in the township withopen foundations includinggarden/tool sheds on block andsand foundations, mobilehomes and properties built onstilts or pilings along the LittleMiami River to comply withflood zone building rules. Aproductive code would statethat foundations must be ingood repair - allowing bothsolid and open foundationtypes in the township.

Many other areas of the

code are unclear, undefined orunnecessary. How did we getthis code? Township trusteestook an outdated, over reach-ing document from anothertownship and threw it out tothe public without consideringthat the proposed code couldcreate more problems than itsolves.

To properly address realproblems in Symmes, a betterprocess would be to studyactual complaints receivedover the past ten years, identi-fy problem areas, and developa code targeted and limited tosolving those issues. Until thatreal work happens I will con-tinue to oppose this ill devisedcode.

Karen Diehl is a resident ofCamp Dennison.

Symmes property maintenance code is unclear

Karen DiehlCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

A bill has been intro-duced in the Ohio Senateallowing the alcohol contentof beer to be raised from 12percent to 21 percent.

“We just thought thelimit was archaic and un-

necessary,”SenatePresidentKeith Fabersaid. Brew-ers and re-tailers claimthe cap ham-pers creativ-ity andsends beerdrinkersoutside Ohioto buy high-

alcohol - and high-pricedbeers.

“It’s an artistic expres-sion so why are we limitingartistic expression, espe-cially today when everyoneknows how hot it is?” saidthe co-owner of the Liz-ardville Beer Store & Whis-key Bars.

“Extreme beers are theresults of breweries acrossthe world trying to one-upeach other in experimentingwith exotic ingredients andnew brewing tactics. Byadding more malts and hopsto the mix, brewers can upthe alcohol content of beers,making them impossiblystrong while trying to main-tain some flavor (emphasisadded). Casual drinkersmay not be able to stomachthese new concoctions, butbeer buffs and hopheadslove them for the tantaliz-ing taste - and killer buzz -they bring.”

Alcohol-by-volume(ABV) of extreme beersranges from 10-15 percent(Dogfish Head Olde SchoolBarleywine) to 67.5 percent(Brewmeister Snake Ven-om). In 12 ounces, a 15 per-cent ABV beer would con-tain 1.8 ounces of alcohol, a21 percent ABV beer wouldcontain 2.5 ounces, while a67.5 percent ABV beer con-tains 8 ounces. For compari-son, a six-ounce glass ofwine (10-12 percent ABV)contains about 0.7 ounces of

alcohol and three ounces ofgin (45 percent ABV) pro-vides 1.35 ounces of alcohol.

How many drinks does itusually take to reach thelegal limit of the blood-alcohol percentage for driv-ing? Many factors come intoplay, but, in general, toachieve a blood-alcohollevel of 0.08, it takes oneserving for a 100-pounderand three servings (within arelatively limited time peri-od) for a 160-pounder. Aserving of alcohol is consid-ered to be one ounce of 100-proof liquor, 12 ounces ofbeer, or four to five ouncesof table wine(www.brad21.org/bac_charts.html). Thismeans that, for a 160-poun-der, the legal limit, or asignificant decrease in driv-ing skills, can be reachedwith consumption of 3.5bottles of beer with a 5 per-cent ABV - or just one 12-ounce bottle of beer with a21 percent ABV.

In 2012, Molson Coorsstated it was going to “stopselling one of its products(10 percent ABV) in Alber-ta, Canada for the good ofthe community.” The U.K.has instituted higher taxeson such beers with a con-comitant reduction instreet-drinking problems.

Potential dangers associ-ated with high-alcohol beerswill therefore depend on thenature of their consump-tion. A responsible con-sumption time for suchbeers is obviously morecritical than with ordinarybeer (one bottle of 21 per-cent ABV beer is like onemartini).

Parenthetically, a recentreport stated that followingthe “wild success” of analcoholic root beer (5.9 per-cent ABV), hard soda (alco-pop) will be “taken to thenext level” with an 8 per-cent ABV product this sum-mer. It appears that, heretoo, there is no constrainingcreativity and artistic ex-pression.

Jules Freedman is a resi-dent of Montgomery.

Even if they makeit legal, does thatmake it right?

JulesFreedmanCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Page 7: Northeast suburban life 060116

JUNE 1, 2016 • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • 1B

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

NORTHEASTSUBURBAN LIFEEditor: Melanie Laughman, [email protected], 513-248-7573

PAINFREETAKE YOUR FIRST STEP TOWARD

WALKING & STANDING

Whywait? (513) 712-9662

LOVELAND - Three weeksafter they last played, the Love-land and Moeller High Schoollacrosse squads met at TigerStadium to determine whichteam would be finished for thespring and which team wouldadvance.

On May 4, Loveland pre-vailed 8-7. The Division I re-gional semifinal May 25 was a

slightly different game. Love-land took a lead they would nev-er relinquish midway in thefirst quarter en route to an 12-7victory. Freshman Kyle Beas-ley and senior Sam Walthereach registered the hat trick forthe Tigers.

“I’m really glad we were ableto play this one at home,” Love-land coach Mike Pritz said. “Be-ing the No. 2 seed was huge forus to get the home field advan-tage over Moeller. It’s a big win

for the program, two wins overMoeller in the same season.”

With a large contingent of or-ange in the bleachers Lovelandraced to a 5-1 first quarter lead.Left to play catch-up the rest ofthe night, Moeller couldn’tmake up the deficit.

The Crusaders did strike theopening blow of the game withsenior attack Jack Richey, butthen watched Loveland sopho-more Adam Clark and fresh-man Kyle Beasley score the

next five goals in an openingquarter statement.

In the second stanza, Moellercut the Loveland lead to 5-3 ongoals by senior David Denzyand junior Will Sturgis. The Ti-gers then answered with sopho-more Joey Walerious and juniorDanny Moss finding the net fora 7-3 advantage at the intermis-sion.

Loveland senior attack SamWalther likely ruffled the hotdog and popcorn line by scoring

just 20 seconds into the thirdquarter to put Loveland up 8-3.He would score two more timesin the frame in the next fiveminutes. The Crusadersworked in a score by junior Co-rey Lockwood and another bysenior Richey for the 10-5 tallygoing into the final act.

As the sun began to set on thet-shirt and shorts crowd, Moell-er’s Lockwood scored early in

Moeller lacrosse season ends in regional semiScott [email protected]

See MOELLER, Page 2B

SYCAMORE TWP. - A pret-ty reliable sign of May turninginto June lately has been apostseason tournament run bythe Sycamore High Schoolgirls lacrosse team. This sea-son is no different as coach Ed-die Clark’s Lady Aves.

Several milestones werereached by Sycamore this sea-son, most notably the record-ing of Clark’s 300th careercoaching win. Sycamore en-tered the tournament with a16-1 mark, with the only loss toUpper Arlington at 14-9. Thefive-point deficit is a bit de-ceiving.

Sycamore had a 6-2 lead,but then gave up goals to UA inthe second half. Clark pulledthe goalie to add more offenselate, but then gave up threegoals to an unattended net.

“We didn’t do our job or dothe little things right with Up-per Arlington,” Clark said.“They beat us up. They werethe better team that night. Youget better if you admit to whatyou did wrong and keep work-ing.”

Clark hoped to meet up withUA in the state finals, but Syc-amore was derailed by NewAlbany, 12-8 in the regional fi-nal May 26.

Three Lady Aves will nowmove on to college lacrossewith two others walking on toprograms. On signing day,Sydney Pattison and HaleyRayburn chose to continue

playing at Butler University.Eva Thorn signed to continueat Mercer.

“Pattison is a great attackplayer and sees the field phe-nomenally,” Clark said. “She’sthe quarterback of our offenseand a very, very good player.”

Rayburn became a goalieby choice in the Sycamorelineup when she refused towear the traditional kilt re-quired of the field players. Aformer catcher in a boys base-ball league, she most definite-ly wears the pants protectingthe net for the Lady Aves.

“She’s one of the most ath-letic, skilled goalies we’veever had here,” Clarksaid.”She’s the fifth or sixthcollege goalie from our pro-gram. We found the right situ-ation for her at Butler, a first-year program.”

Rayburn should play rightaway at Butler; no kilt re-quired.

Thorn was an All-Americanlast year and should be thisyear according to Clark. Whenhe found a former Mount No-tre Dame coach was an assis-tant at Mercer, he intercededon Thorn’s behalf.

“She probably at one timewas the best unsigned playerin the country,” he said. “Shewaited and found the rightplace for her. She had some of-fers early and couldn’t find aschool she loved.”

The architect of three statetitles and three runner-up hon-

Sycamore justmisses state netsScott [email protected]

THANKS TO TERRENCE HUGE

Evie Goodyear, a senior, is surrounded by New Albany players in the12-8 loss. Sycamore finishes 17-2.

See SYCAMORE, Page 2B

XENIA- CHCA lost its Di-vision III regional semifinalgame to Versailles, 1-0 onMay 26. Clayton Brock wassaddled with the loss and fin-

ished the season with a 4-1record. Griffin Hughessmacked a double for the Ea-gle offense. CHCA finishedthe year 19-7.

PHOTOS BY GEOFF BLANKENSHIP/FOR THE ENQUIRER

CHCA catcher Jon Edelmann and pitcher Clayton Brock discuss pitch strategy on the mound.

CHCA loses inregional semis

David Jung comes on in relief andkeeps the Versailles lead at one run.Johnny Noyen’s line drive was caught for the final out.

Page 8: Northeast suburban life 060116

2B • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • JUNE 1, 2016 LIFE

Tickets available online today!celticfestohio.com

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June 17-19 2016THE TRADITION STARTS NOWTRADITION STARTS NOWTHE TRADITION

the frame to make it 10-6,then Connor Rice’sthrow into the stitchinggot the Crusaders withinthree.

“The ball didn’tbounce our way in thesecond half,” Moellercoach Sean McGinnissaid. “We got a couplegoals and they just keptbattling back to cushiontheir lead. We just ranout of time.”

The Tigers then wentinto a game of strategickeep-away that had theirfans restlessly poundingtheir aluminum seats.The Tigers remained pa-tient, until senior Mi-chael Newbold found alikable shot that he bur-ied with 6:00 remaining.

The freeze continuedon Loveland’s part asthey tried to drain sec-onds from Moeller’s sea-son. With 1:24 remaining,the Crusaders took a fi-nal time out, but the Ti-gers recovered the ballquickly. For the finish-

ing touch, junior JackSexton scored with lessthan eight seconds leftfor the 12-7 final.

It was the final gamefor 11Moeller seniors,but the next seasonstarts soon.

“We’re ready to getafter it tomorrowagain,” McGinnis said.“We’ll just start all overand get ready for nextyear.”

New OHSAA guide-lines will allow 10 “touchdays” for coaches andMcGinnis has a summerprogram planned that in-cludes lifting, skill ses-sions with 2017’s seniorsand summer trips. TheCrusaders will be show-cased in Baltimore andChicago.

For now, the season isover at 9-9; likely one ofthe toughest .500 finish-es in the state.

“We played the topfive teams in Ohio,”McGinnis said. “Weplayed the No. 1 team inIndiana to overtime andwe played the top twoteams in Kentucky. Wedo not shy away from thebest competition.”

PHOTOS BY SCOTT SPRINGER/COMMUNITY PRESS

Moeller coach Sean McGinnis (in white) gathers his troops after a timeout in the Division Iregional final at Loveland.

Moeller’s Tony LeBarge (11) battles junior Danny Moss (2)and senior Michael Newbold (7) of Loveland in the DivisionI regional semifinal.

MoellerContinued from Page 1B

ors, Clark now focuseson getting his Sycamoresquad north in 2017.

On June 5, Sycamoreand all of the other la-crosse-playing schoolswill fall under the arm ofthe OHSAA. That willcut some “team time”down, but Sycamore be-lieves their girls will bein order and ready foranother deep run.

SycamoreContinued from Page 1B

THANKS TO TERRENCE HUGE

Eva Thorn, who signed to play lacrosse at MercerUniversity, goes on the attack against New Albany.

The Sycamore HighSchool boys track teamcoached by Hank Ray fin-ished second at the Divi-sion I district meet May20-21 at Mason behind thehost Comets.

Qualifying from theDivision I district meet atMason for regionals fromSycamore were: the4x800 relay, first in8:00.51 (Gonzalez, Hill,Schrantz, Menyhert); ju-nior Brenden Archer,first in the 100 meters at11.15 and third in the 200at 22.69; sophomore Joh-nathan Malek, second inthe 100 meters at 11.18; the

4x200 relay (Malek,Glauser, Hedrick, Stuck-er), third in 1:31.98; the4x100 relay (Malek,Stucker, Bonner, Archer),second in 42.86; JoshGlauser, 400 meters,fourth in 50.56; Miles Me-nyhert, 800 meter cham-pion in 1:56.59; Max Hill,800 meters, fourth in1:59.75; Kevin Lawson,champion at 3,200 metersin 9:44.07; R.J. Barnes,high jump, fourth at 5’10”. Ben Pendergast hadthe top height in polevault at 14’ 6” to win onMay 21 and also advanceto the regional meet.

TONY TRIBBLE/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Sycamore’s Miles Menyhert finishes first in the boys 800 meter final, at the district meet atMason High School May 20.

Sycamore boys aredistrict runners-up

TONY TRIBBLE/FOR THE

COMMUNITY PRESS

Sycamore’s Kevin Lawson(shown in second) finishedfirst in the boys 3,200 meterfinal, at Mason May 20.

SCOTT SPRINGER/COMMUNITY PRESS

Sycamore junior Brenden Archer, second from right, and sophomore teammate JohnathanMalek were first and second in the 100 meters at the Division I district meet at Mason.

State tennis» Sycamore’s Alex

Taylor and Noah Stern fallin the Division I doublesfinal to Copley’s GavinAten/Gustavo Garcia.Copley won 7-6 3-6 6-3,making the Aves runners-up.

They advanced to DIdoubles final after 6-3 6-1wins over New Albany inday two. While the dou-bles final happened rightat deadline, the state teamtournament happened af-ter deadline.

Boys tournamenttrack and field

» The following Syca-more boys advanced tothe Division I state meetfrom the regional meet inDayton: Sycamore 4x800relay, regional championat 7:58.96 (juniors MilesMenyhert, Max Hill, An-drew Schrantz, Noah Dar-wiche); 4x200 relay (sen-ior Paul Stucker, fresh-man Asa Hodrick, juniorBrenden Archer, fresh-man Jonathan Malek) re-gional champs at 1:27.57;junior Josh Glauser, thirdin the 400 at 49.81; juniorMenyhert, second in the800 meters in 1:56.04; ju-

nior Kevin Lawson, fourthin 3,200 at 9:36.36.

Girls tournamenttrack and field

» Ursuline finishedtied for 41st place at theDivision I regional cham-pionships in Dayton with apoint.

Boys tournamentlacrosse

» After winning 20-6over Franklin May 21, In-dian Hill lost in the region-al final May 26 to BishopFenwick, 9-8 to just missthe Division II state semi-finals. Coach Tim Mc-Kay’s crew finished 13-7.

Girls tournamentlacrosse

» Sycamore lost in theDivision I regional final toNew Albany, 12-8 on May26. The Lady Aves finishat 17-2. They are rankedthird bywww.laxpower.com.

» After a 14-4 win overSeton on May 23, the Indi-an Hill Lady Braves lost atight one 8-7 to St. FrancisDeSales in the Division IIregional final for a chanceto move to the state semis.DeSales came into thegame ranked sixth bywww.laxpower.com, withIndian Hill seventh. TheLady Braves coached byKatie Post finish the sea-son 16-4.

SHORT HOPS

Scott Springerand Nick RobbeCommunity Press staff

Sycamore’s Noah Stern reactsduring his doubles match atthe State tennis tournamentin Mason, Saturday, May 28.

PHOTOS BY TONY TRIBBLE/

FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Sycamore’s Alex Taylor reactsduring his doubles match atthe State tennis tournamentin Mason, Saturday, May 28.

Page 9: Northeast suburban life 060116

JUNE 1, 2016 • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • 3BLIFE

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4B • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • JUNE 1, 2016 LIFE

CE-0000649682

Hyde Park Baptist ChurchMichigan & Erie Ave

513-321-5856 Bill Rillo, PastorSunday Worship Services: 11:00am & 6:00pm

Sunday School: 9:45amWednesday Bible Study: 7:00pmwww.hydeparkbaptistchurch.org

First Church of Christ, Scientist3035 Erie Ave 871-0245Sunday Service and Sunday

School 10:30amWednesday Testimonial Meeting

7:30pmReading Room 3035 Erie Ave

Experience the Light and Sound of God

You are invited to theCommunity HU Song

2nd Sunday, 10:00 - 10:30 amECK Worship Service

11:00 am - NoonSecond Sunday of Each MonthAnderson Center Station

7832 Five Mile Road Cincinnati, OH 45230

1-800-891-7713 EckankarOhio.org

Worldwide1-800 LOVE GODECKANKAR.org

3850 E. Galbraith,Deer Park

Next to DillonvaleShopping Ctr

www.TrinityCincinnati.org791-7631

Worship Service - 10:00AMSunday School - 10:15AM

Pastor Cathy Kaminski

Weekend WorshipSaturday: 5 p.m.

Sunday: 9 & 10:30 a.m.

Nursery, Children’s & Youth available

Everyone is welcome!

6635 Loveland-Miamiville Rd.Loveland, OH 45140

513.677.9866 • www.epiphanyumc.org

Sharonville United MethodistTraditional worship services at 8:15am & 11:00amContemporary worship service at 9:30amFaith development opportunities for all ages!3751 Creek Rd. 513-563-0117www.sharonville-umc.org

2010 Wolfangel Rd., Anderson Twp.513-231-4301

Sunday Worship: 9:00 & 10:15 AM withChildrens Ministry & Nursery

PASTOR MARIE SMITHwww.cloughchurch.org

Come, connect, grow & serve

Connections Christian Church7421 East GalbraithCincinnati, OH 45243

Phone: 513-791-8348 • Fax: 513-791-5648

Jeff Hill • Ministerwww.connectionscc.org

Worship Service 10:30am Sunday School 9:15 am

MADEIRA-SILVERWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

8000 Miami Ave. 513-791-4470www.madeirachurch.org

Sunday Worship9:00 am - Contemporary Service

10:00am Educational Hour11:00 am - Traditional Service

DIRECTORY

EMAIL: cin-classi@[email protected] CALL: 513.768.8184 or 513.768.8189

for further information. New adult discussion group -“Come to the Waters” fromthe Horizons Bible Study,Thursday mornings at 10 a.m.in room 120 with Rev. McCla-nahan and on Tuesday eve-nings at 5:30 p.m. in thechapel. The study includestopics on creation, baptism,faith, justice, forgiveness andhope. Books will be availableat the Spiritual Growth Re-source Center. All are wel-come and no registrationrequired.

Adult discussion group: “I ama Church Member” is offeredat 10:45 a.m. Sunday morn-ings, in the foyer, by Rev.Linda McClanahan. Call683-0254.

Sunday Adult Bible StudyGroup meets at 10:45 a.m.Room 120 to study “Mark-Follow Me , A Life Guide BibleStudy;” Contact Randy Grossat 683-6709.

Monday Women’s Bible Studymeets at 10:30 a.m. Room 120.The group is discussing “I AmA Church Member” by ThomS. Rainer. Contact Marilyn Poeat 677-1515 with questions.

Tuesday (first and third only)Morning Women’s BibleStudy is 9:30 a.m. in room 120;the group is studying “OldTestament Characters, A LifeGuide Bible Study.” ContactClaudia Gross at 683-6709with questions.

Harmony Circle meets thethird Tuesday of each monthat 7 p.m. in Room 120. Thegroup is studying “MissingPieces” by Jennifer Roth-schild. Contact Mitzi Green [email protected] questions.

Wednesday Women’s Study is9:30 a.m. in Room 120; “TheBest Yes: Making Wise Deci-sions in the Midst of EndlessDemands” by Lysa Terkeurst.Contact Jenny Ellsworth [email protected] withquestions.

Wednesday Morning Men’sBible Study meets at 6:45 a.m.in Room 120. The group isstudying I Peter. Contact JohnStrong at 677-1712 withquestions.

Men’s Bible Study meets at8:30 a.m. Saturday morningsin Room 120. The group isstudying “Basic Christianity”by John Scott; Contact ChrisDugle, 658-0802, or AlanGreggo, 573-0920.

Lamplighters Bible Study is 7p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays inthe Media Center. ContactJoyce and Don Dunham with

questions at 398-6893.Student ministries wel-comes students to partici-pate in its activities. Checkthe Student MinistriesKiosk for a calendar ofevents.

The church is at 11800Mason-Montgomery Road,Symmes Township; 683-0254.

About religionReligion news is publishedat no charge on a space-available basis. E-mailannouncements [email protected].

www.bapc.netThe church is at 4309 CooperRoad; 791-1153.

Hartzell UnitedMethodist ChurchSunday School: 9 a.m., Sundayworship service: 10:30 a.m.,Camp Kids and Child Care: 11a.m., youth, outreach, fellow-ship, music ministries, Biblestudies.

The church is at 8999 Apple-wood Drive, Blue Ash; 891-8527; www.hartzellumc.org.

St. BarnabasEpiscopal ChurchRegular service times are at 8a.m. with spoken Eucharistand 10 a.m. with SundaySchool for all ages, includingGodly Play Sunday School forages 3 to 8, and nursery forthe youngest. Youth groupmeets at least once per week.

The church offers many activ-ities, including choir, adulteducation and formationprograms, children’s activities,youth socials, Bible study,book group, prayer shawlministry, ladies and couplesbridge, monthly events forOlder Persons with ActiveLifestyles (OPALS), Tai Chi,quilting, SMART Recoverymeetings and many outreachactivities.

Youth group meets at leastone per week. This summer,the youth will join a missionto Mountain TOP, Tennessee.

The church is at 10345 Mont-gomery Road, Montgomery;984-8401; www.st-barnabas.org.

SycamorePresbyterianChurchSunday worship services are at9:15 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.Child-care is available at bothservices for infants throughage 2; Sunday School is at10:45 a.m. for toddlerthrough 12th-grade. Addi-tional child-care for parents inadult education classes duringthe 9:15 a.m. service. Pre-school and older, meet in thenursery during the 9:15 a.m.service. A webcast is availablefor the 9:15 a.m. and 10:45a.m. services.

Preschool registration is openfor the 2016-2017 school year.Visitwww.sycamorechurch.org orcall Jamie Coston at 683-7717

Adath IsraelCongregationSample six to eight Israeliwines and munch on thebarbecue menu of shishkebab, Mediterranean salad,hummus with pita and des-sert sweets at the Israeli WineTasting and BBQ, presentedby the Adath Israel Congrega-tion Young ProfessionalGroup, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sun-day, June 5, at Adath IsraelCongregation. Activities,games and prizes are plannedthroughout the evening.

Adath is at 3201 E. GalbraithRoad, Cincinnati; adath-israel.org; 793-1800.

Ascension LutheranChurchThe church is collecting cerealand prepared canned dinnersfor NEEDS.

Worship is at 8 a.m. and 10:15a.m. The 8 a.m. worship is asmall, quiet and simple wor-ship service in the Lutherantradition. The 10:15 a.m.worship is in a variety ofstyles, from contemporary totraditional. Lyrics and por-tions of the service are pro-jected for all to follow alongeasily. A children’s message isoffered every Sunday. HolyCommunion is offered everySunday at both services.

Sunday school, Confirmationand adult forum are at 9 a.m.Upcoming forum topicsinclude “Entertaining Un-settling Questions,” “BeyondTolerance” and “The HolySpirit.”

Healing Christ (healing touch)Ministry is offered at 7 p.m.on the fourth Tuesday of themonth. More information onthis ministry is available at793-3288.

The church is at 7333 PfeifferRoad, Montgomery; 793-3288; www.ascensionluth-eranchurch.com.

Bethel BaptistTempleThe AWANA children’s pro-gram for preschool agethrough ninth-grade is of-fered at 7 p.m. every Wednes-day through the school year.Children are led through anevening of Bible stories andlessons, games and specialevents.

Sunday School classes are 10a.m.; Sunday worship is 11a.m. Kings Kids, a children’sworship service, is offered

during the 11 a.m. service. Nursery care is available. The church is at 8501 PlainfieldRoad, Sycamore Township;891-2221; bethelbaptist-temple. org.

Blue AshCommunity ChurchServices are 10 a.m. and 11 a.m.Services for children areoffered for ages 6 monthsthrough sixth-grade.

The church is at EnvisionTheater, 4781 Cornell Road,Blue Ash; blueashcc.com

Blue AshPresbyterianChurchBring a favorite word gamefor WordWits from 2 p.m. to4 p.m. each second andfourth Monday of the monthfor two hours of word gameplay.

The Mission Committee isplanting a garden at thechurch to give fresh produceto NEEDS this summer. Volun-teers are needed to help withplanting, weeding, watering,and harvesting. If you arewilling to lend your expertiseto this project, please contactthe church office.

The sewing group meets at 10a.m. Friday, June 3. All arewelcome.

Donate gently used shoes tothe annual Soles 4 Souls driveon June 4. Soles for Souls is anon-for-profit global socialenterprise committed tofighting poverty through thecollection and distribution ofshoes and clothing.

High School and college grad-uates will be recognizes atthe June 4 worship service.

Donations of canned fruit arebeing accepted in May forNEEDS

The adult Sunday Schoolinvites beginners and ques-tioners to two differentclasses, each beginning at 9a.m. to explore Bible knowl-edge, moral and faith issueswith fellow Christians. Begin-ners and questioners arewelcome. Two differentclasses are available, eachbeginning at 9 a.m.

The BAPC Bowling team meetsfor the last game of theseason at 10 a.m. June 2 atCrossgate Lanes.

Sunday worship services are at10:30 a.m. Nursery care isavailable.

Sunday sermons are recordedand available at

RELIGION

The Sycamore Com-munity Band led by PeteMetzger announced itsannual donation of $1,500to the Amelia High SchoolBand.

The presentation of thecheck occurred at a jointconcert with both thebands May 10 in the Ame-lia High School Auditori-um.

The Amelia SchoolBand Program is com-prised of students ingrades six to 12 at AmeliaMiddle School and AmeliaHigh School.

The program has con-tinued to build and growover the past severalyears, with nearly 300 stu-dents involved in bandthis year. In recent years,the Amelia Band has per-formed at the Cedar PointMusic in the Parks Festi-val and together with theUniversity of Cincinnati

Bearcats Marching Bandduring their halftimeshow.

The concert band hasalso earned excellent rat-ings at the OMEA District14 Large Group Events.Many of the Amelia bandstudents have been select-ed to perform in honorgroups, such as the Cin-cinnati Youth Wind En-semble at CCM, District14 Honor Band, XavierUniversity Honor Band,and Land of Grant HonorBand. Just this pastmonth, the band had 59seventh- and eighth-grade students (19 ensem-bles total) participate inthe District 14 Solo andEnsemble event at Mil-ford High School, all ofwhich earned the top rat-ings of Superior and Ex-cellent for their perfor-

PROVIDED

Conductor Pete Metzger and President Paul Wallace presentthe Sycamore Community Band’s Annual Donation to theAmelia High School Band. From left: Metzger, Amelia banddirector Amy Schrameck and Wallace.

Sycamore CommunityBand gives $1,500 toAmelia HS Band

See BAND, Page 5B

A roundup of yourneighbors making head-lines:

Sycamore Townshippet trainer earnsdog trainingcertification

Lisa Desatnik, a Syca-more Township-based dogtrainer and behavior con-sultant, has earned certifi-cation through the inter-nationally respected Cer-tification Council for Pro-fessional Dog Trainers.

To earn this designa-tion, Desatnik has trainedmore than 300 hours, re-ceived recommendationsfrom clients, colleaguesand veterinarians, andpassed an extensive four-hour exam.

Additionally, Desatnikis a certified parrot be-havior consultant throughthe International Associa-tion of Animal BehaviorConsultants.

NEIGHBORS IN THE NEWS

PROVIDED

Lisa Desatnik and her dog,Sam. Desatnik has earnedcertification from theCertification Council forProfessional Dog Trainers.

Page 11: Northeast suburban life 060116

JUNE 1, 2016 • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • 5BLIFE

We are celebrating our 40th anniversary at the Plant Farm. Who are we? We are an experienced retail nursery-landscape business specializing in plants, not to be confused with stores that sell

plants along with furniture, groceries, hardware and appliances. On any given day we are giving personal service to customers, helping them

find new plants that will be successful in their landscape, whether it be container gardening, a woodland retreat, formal or cottage gardens, foundation plants around the home or a new tree in the yard. Our extensive inventory includes a large native selection,

heritage plants, and the newest plant introductions that have truly “proven” their worth in Mary’s test gardens. If it doesn’t meet her

standards, we don’t grow or sell it. During business hours customers tour Mary’s 3 acres of 65 year old private gardens. Mary at 94 years young, gardened her entire life, and shares her expertise to help other gardeners. Walking our growing fields you will find plants locally grown in Ohio soil, ready to be transplanted in your garden. Or choose from those plants already potted or balled and burlapped in the nursery sales area. We provide a full landscape consultation, design, and installation service to fit any gardener’s needs. Our designs use “the right plant for the location”, not just what looks good today, but will be hardy and remain attractive for years to come. In celebration we will be offering selected plants valued to $8.00 for 40¢ with purchase. Events: July 14, 17, 21 & 24 – High Tea in the Garden, a four course high tea served in the garden. Reservations only and limited seating. Aug. 7 – Art in the Garden, enjoy refreshments and wine as you tour the gardens and view art pieces by local artists. Complete event listing, fee and reservation information is found at www.marysplantfarm.com Groups for guided tours are welcome with reservations.

Mary’s Plant Farm & Landscaping

Summer Hours:June - October

Tuesday – Saturday 9:30 am to 5:00 pmCLOSED SUNDAY & MONDAY

2410 Lanes Mill Road Hamilton, OH 45013 | (513) 894-0022 CE-0000645425

513-871-3167www.gocourtesy.com

Hours: Mon. - Thur. 9am - 8pm • Friday 9am - 6pm • Sat. 9am - 5pm • Sunday Closed

AllTradesAccepted!

Located at the corner of Brotherton Rd & Madison Rd in the heart of Oakley!

We BuyCars!

WE WORK ON ALL MAKES AND MODELS!

We HaveCarfax

Certified Cars!

L KFOR ALL OF YOUR AUTOMOTIVE, SERVICE

AND COLLISION REPAIR NEEDS

WHO’S AT COURTESY

Jim Cobb Adam Eckerle Tom Eppens

$20 OFF AC SERVICEEXPIRES June 30, 2016

WHY BUY

NEW?

SUMMER SERVICE SPECIAL

33nd AnnualGreater Cincinnati

Numismatic Expositionat the

SHARONVILLECONVENTION CENTER

(I-75 Exit 15, follow signs)

Friday & SaturdayJune 3rd & 4th

10am-6pm

100 National DealersNo Admission Charge!

BIG COIN SHOW!

CE-0000649834

The 55th national,competitive, annual exhi-bition of aqueous mediapainting, WatercolorUSA 2016 opens at theSpringfield (Missouri)Art Museum June 4.

The annual exhibitionattracts entries fromacross the United States.The competition thisyear received 447 entriesby 254 artists from 39states.

Dick Close of Montgo-mery was juried into thisannual national exhibi-tion for his watercolor,“Duff.”

The judge for Water-color USA 2016 wasLynne Warren, curator atthe Museum of Contem-porary Art in Chicago.

Warren selected theexhibition from digitalfiles submitted by theartists. She selected 78works by 78 artists forthe exhibition. Artistsare represented from 25states. Awards are se-lected from the actualworks.

Watercolor USA be-gan in 1962 to present tothe public a watercolorshow which was repre-sentative of our country.Artists from 45 statessent their entries to theSpringfield Art Museum.The jury consisted of twomen, Mario Cooper,

painter and president ofthe American WatercolorSociety, of Port Washing-ton, New York, and RexBrandt, painter, author,

and teacher from CoronaDel Mar, California.There were 155 artistsaccepted in the first Wa-tercolor USA show.

Montgomery artist acceptedfor Watercolor USA 2016

PROVIDED

Dick Close of Montgomery was juried into Watercolor USAfor his watercolor, Duff.

BLUE ASHIncidents/investigationsCriminaldamaging/endangeringReported at 6000 block of CreekRoad, May 14.

Criminal simulationReported at 10900 block of ReedHartman Hwy., May 11.

Disorderly conductReported at Plainfield Road/SR-126, May 16.

OVI (under the influence ofalcohol/drugs)Reported at 1700 block of IR-71,May 15.

Petty theftReported at 4400 block of VictorAve., May 14.

Possession of cocaine, illegaluse or possession of drugparaphernaliaReported at Reed HartmanHwy./Ashwood Drive, May 13.

Possession of marijuanaReported at 5900 block of Pfeif-fer Road, May 10.

Possession of marijuana,

resisting arrest, tamperingwith evidenceReported at 4200 block of HuntRoad, May 16.

Receiving stolen propertyReported at Hunt Road/SR-126,May 15.

TheftReported at 9300 block of Cardi-nal Court, May 10.

Reported at 1900 block of CEIDrive, May 13.

SYCAMORE TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsAssaultReported on 7500 block of SchoolRoad, April 10.

Identity fraudReported on 8400 block ofWexford Ave., April 11.

TheftReported on 7800 block ofMontgomery Road, April 11.

Clothing valued at $343 removedfrom 7800 block of MontgomeryRoad, April 7.

Sunglasses removed from 7800block of Montgomery Road,April 8.

Reported on 7800 block ofMontgomery Road, April 7.

POLICE REPORTS

ABOUT POLICEREPORTS

Community Press pub-lishes incident recordsprovided by local policedepartments. All reportspublished are publicrecords.

To contact your localpolice department: » Blue Ash, 745-8573 » Montgomery, 985-1600 » Sycamore Township,774-6351 or 683-3444» Symmes Township,774-6351 or 683-3444

ABOUT REALESTATETRANSFERS

Information is providedas a public service by theoffice of Hamilton CountyAuditor Dusty Rhodes.Neighborhood desig-nations are approximate.

BLUE ASH10506 Adirondack Way: Blue AshDevelopment LLC to GT BlueAsh Homes LLC; $115,000.

6057 Ashley Court: Camfield,Kevin W. & Heidi to Courtice,Andrew J. & April M.; $569,000.

5133 Cook Ave.: Byrd, WilmaAnn to Mirtalipova, Dilorom R.;$122,900.

4824 Fairview Ave.: Farr, Jo A. toSaeks, Sumner M. & Pamela J.;$185,000.

11023 Margaretta Ave.: Monarch

Homes LLC to Holly, Craig;$213,450.

9512 Raven Lane: Pauciulo, JohnR. & Janet B. to Kreit, Eric &

Deborah; $311,000.10151 Zig Zag Road: GunningReal Estate LLC to Kosofsky,Joshua & Christina; $656,000.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

mances.Metzger formed the

Sycamore CommunityBand in 1974 and built thegroup to a full concertband with 65 active adultmusicians. The bandplays a variety of musicconsisting of light classi-

cal selections, soundsfrom the Big Band Era,patriotic music, andmarches.

For more informationcontact Paul Wallace at513-697-0868.

BandContinued from Page 4B

Page 12: Northeast suburban life 060116

6B • NORTHEAST SUBURBAN LIFE • JUNE 1, 2016 LIFE

BEST-PICTURE ADAPTATIONSBY KEVIN G. DER / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

No. 0529

RE

LE

AS

E D

AT

E: 6/5/2016

ACROSS

1 2013 Best Picture nominee in which a main character isn’t human

4 Airplane part9 “Hairspray” mom

usually played by a man

13 Leg presses work them

18 60 minuti19 Successors to

Cutlasses21 Best Picture

adaptation about … a search for the perfect brew, with “The”?

23 Disney Channel’s “____ and Maddie”

24 … inaudible metrical poetry, with “The”?

26 Northeast Corridor train

28 Like groaners29 River islet30 1988 chart-topping

country album32 Game for bankers?33 Psychedelic37 … a fat Eastern

monarch?43 One in a no-blinking

contest45 Second draft46 Neighbor48 Extended rental?49 Sea urchin, at a sushi

bar

50 … fools accompanyinga pack of wild animals?

56 King’s handful59 Chance occurrence,

old-style60 Bad sound in a

changing room61 Vegas-to-Denver dir.62 Part of a city network63 “Relax”64 Reusable part of a

commonthank-you gift

67 … a reed and percussion duet?

71 Group standing at the U.N.

74 Treat with a “Golden” variety

75 They rank below marquises

79 Words before and after “what”

80 O.T. book before Jeremiah

81 Chorus line?82 Obstacle in road

repairs, maybe84 … an éclair or crème

brûlée, with “The”?90 Previously91 Spork part92 Daughter in E. M.

Forster’s “Howards End”

93 Neighbor of Irkutsk on a Risk board

96 Badger99 … gorgeous fur?103 Shred105 Lit ____106 Safari sight?107 Singer DiFranco

108 Like a portrait that seems to be watching you

110 Winnower113 … cooties from hugs

and kisses?121 Blender setting122 … a salon woman

I go to?123 Tush124 Set of anecdotes125 A while, in hyperbole126 Olympian with a

bow127 Jet similar to a 747128 Benedictine title

DOWN

1 Chihuahua greeting2 Country singer Church3 * * * *4 Honeydew cousins5 U.S. women’s soccer

star Krieger6 Volume measure7 Cause of boiling over8 Sarge, e.g.9 Jet10 Stand up to11 Bit of safari

equipment12 Enlightened Buddhist13 “Enough is enough!”14 “____ voce poco fa”

(Rossini aria)15 PIN point16 One having a ball?17 G.R.E. takers: Abbr.20 Ice-cream order22 Juniors, maybe25 Writer ____ Stanley

Gardner27 1880s-’90s veep

____ P. Morton

31 Step ____32 Half of a Vegas show

duo34 Shroud35 ____ Drive (street

where Harry Potter grew up)

36 Dweller along the Mandeb Strait

37 Bridge support38 “As such …”39 College-campus

offering40 Like carpaccio or

crudités41 Geisha’s accessory42 Metaphorical low

point44 Physicist Nathan

who postulated wormholes

47 Attempt at a dunk tank

51 Spiced teas52 The White House’s

____ Room53 Peeping Tom’s spot54 Modern encyclopedia

platform55 Muses57 Simon of the

“Mission:Impossible” films

58 It circles the globe63 Merino mother64 Stethoscope’s place65 War on Poverty agcy.66 Main ingredient in

queso relleno68 Bite69 Like candied apples70 Gillette razor name71 Liquor purchase72 Ring around the

collar?

73 Chief Theban god76 Hightailed it77 Peaceful protest78 Apt anagram of

SNAKE

82 Slip83 Quash85 Peachy86 Things zygotes come

from87 Pen point

88 Commission, e.g.89 “You’re stuck with

me”94 What stars do95 Hilton alternative97 Equilibrium98 Sancho Panza, e.g.100 About 3/4 of a

football field101 ____ Heep (Dickens

villain)

102 Like some sponsorshippackages

104 One taking a long shot?

108 Prefix with spore

109 “Slow Churned” brand

111 Antipasto pairing

112 Reason for a class struggle?

113 TV inits. since 1975

114 Photographer’sasset

115 Certain fraternity chapter

116 “Wowie!”

117 Musician’s asset

118 Lapel attachment

119 Suffix with subsist

120 Never, in Nikolaus

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

18 19 20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29

30 31 32 33 34 35 36

37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44

45 46 47 48

49 50 51 52 53 54 55

56 57 58 59 60 61

62 63 64 65 66

67 68 69 70

71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78

79 80 81 82 83

84 85 86 87 88 89 90

91 92 93 94 95

96 97 98 99 100 101 102

103 104 105 106

107 108 109 110 111 112

113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121

122 123 124

125 126 127 128

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWERS ON PAGE 4A

513-752-1804SALESHOURS:

Mon-Thu9-8 • Fri 9-6 • Sat 9-5:30

1065 OHIO PIKEJUST 3 MILES EAST OF I-275, EXIT #65www.joekiddauto.com

2015ChevroletTraverseLSV6,Auto.,A/C,PW,PL,16KMiles,BalanceofFactoryWarranty.#G8091

$23,988

JOEKIDDAUTOMOTIVEJUST INTIMEFORSUMMERTRAVELS!•FRESHSUPPLYOFVANSANDSUVS!

2013Ram1500CrewCab4x4 ... $26,988Red, Hemi, ChrmWhls, RunningBoards, PW, PL, Bedliner, #F8180

2012Ram1500SLT..................... $25,988QuadCab,4x4,RunningBoards,Hemi, ChrmWhls, Sunroof,#G8065

2012Ram1500QuadCab4x4... $22,588Silver, V8, Auto, A/C. 20 inch Alum.Whls, TowPkg., #F8205

2012FordE150CargoVan.......... $14,985White, V8, Auto, A/C, Great Work Vehicle, #G8073

2007HyundaiSantaFeLtd............ $9,985Blue, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Sunroof, #G8071

MiniVan,SUV&Truck

SALE!

2006ToyotaRAV44X4,auto,ACAluminumWheelsExcellentCondition,#G8060

$9,975

2011CadillacSRXLuxuryGold,V6,Leather,RearBackupCamera,Sunroof,#G8078

$20,488

2008SaturnVueXRBlack,V6,Auto,A/C,Alum.Whls,PW,PL,62KMiles

$8,9952007ChryslerAspenLimitedSilver,Leather,4x4,Hemi,ChromeWheels,HardToFindModel,NiceLuxurySUV. #G8070

$12,988

2013HyundaiTusconLimitedRed,AWD,Leather,Alum.Wheels,ExceptionalValue#G8064

$18,375

5QT Oil & Filter Change$21.95

Most vehicles. Some restrictions apply.Expires 06/30/16.

CAR GOT THE SHAKES?CompleteFrontEndAlignmentService

$49.95Most vehicles. Some restrictions apply. Expires 06/30/16.

OVER100CARS INSTOCK!

BUDGET BUYSMINIVANSTRUCKS & SUVS2014Chry. Town&CntryTouringL..$22,988Blue, V6, Lthr, DVD,WhyPay36KNew!#G8237

2013DodgeGrandCaravan......... $15,983Silver, V6, 7 Pass., Auto., A/C, StowNGo, #8046

2010DodgeGrandCaravanSXT.. $10,988Silver, V6, StowNGo, 7 Pass., PW, PL, Ready for Vacation, #G8032

2011DodgeGrandCaravanCrew .. $11,975White, V6, StownGo, AlumWhls, PW, PL, Stereo CD, #G8049

2008DodgeCaravanSXT................ $7,995Blue, V6, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, DVD, #G8083

2006ChevroletEquinox ................. $8,988Burgundy, V7, AWD, PW, PL, LowMiles

2010ChryslerPTCruiser ................ $7,985Silver, Auto, A/C, PW, AlumWhls, #G8041

1998Toyota4Runner ..................... $6,495V6, 4x4, AluminumWheels, RunsGreat! #G8055

2007ChryslerPacifica ................... $5,995Silver, V6, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Stereo CD, AlumWhls, #G8050

2002DodgeDurangoSLT................ $5,988Silver, V8, Leather, PW, PL, 3rdRowSeat, Hurry

GreatDeal GreatDeal GreatDeal

Page 13: Northeast suburban life 060116

Real Estate

Rentalsgreat places to live...

Real Estate

Homesstarting fresh...

Administrative

Community

Announceannouncements, novena...

Special Notices-Clas

Business

Commercialopportunites, lease, Invest...

Assorted

Stuffall kinds of things...

FELICITYGarrison Place Senior Apts.

62 and over, Rent SubsidizedFree Utilities, Secure Building

On-site laundryPets Allowed513-876-3590

TTY 800-750-0750EHO

MILFORD- SEM VillaRent subsidized.

Voted Best of the EastSenior apts. 55 + olderNewly renovated apts.

Secure building.Service CoordinatorVisiting physicians.

513-831-3262tty 1-800-750-0750

MT. Washington 1 BR, busline, off-st parking.

Quiet 5 Unit Building$400/mo+dep. No pets.

513-734-4259

Mt. Washington - Special: 1/2off 1st mos rent! 1 & 2BRs,1BA, on busline, hdwd flrs,lndry on site, wtr incl, winda/c units, carport/garage incl.513-313-2709 or 513-732-0967

White Oak- Deluxe 2 & 3BRssome with w/d hkup. Com-pletely updated. NorthwestSchools. Call for Specials.513-227-4220 or 513-315-9990

Williamsbrg 1BR-$425; 2BR-$525Eqpt Kit. New crpet.

283-5569Mt. Carmel $450

(for Senior) 528-2632

Destin, FL, Gulf front, 2BR,Condo Rentals, in Beautiful Des-tin, Local owner. 513-528-9800Office., 513-752-1735 H

Siesta Key - Gulf front beachcondo,Weekly as June 4th, cincy own-er, Call Don 513-232-4854.

Rent to Own Houses.Milford & Eastgate areas.Homes starting at $890/mo.Sorry, no pets. 513-528-1667

New Richmond 3BD,2BA,1280 sq ft Quiet area. Petsok w/$200 dep. & $20/mo.pet rent. $795/mo & $795dep. Wtr/trash pd. 513-553-3220

MT CARMEL/EASTGATE

AREAOffice for

Rent/lease, 875SF, 1st flr,

parking in front& back

of office.513-528-1500

Offices for Lease#1 - Small, private office

w/reception area; overlookingpond; high traffic count; signage;$450 per mo. includes utilities &

CAM; KAT 5; near Ohio Pike.#2- 1500 sq. ft office; completelyremodeled; offices suites; recep-tion, conference & kit; private

parking; balcony overlooks waterfeature; near Ohio Pike & I-275;signage; $1500 per mo; no CAM;

KAT 5. Ideal forlawyers & doctors etc .

Call John TrautmannOwner/Agent513-752-5000

Beautiful Lexington Run,2BR, 2BA, vaulted ceilings, allappliances included. $84,000;513-608-0171

The Cincinnati Enquirer has carrierroutes available in the following areas:

CentralSt. Bernard @ Walnut Hills @ Wyoming @ Avondale

EastAmelia / Batavia @ Bethel @ Brown County @ Goshen @

Hyde Park @ Madeira/Indian Hill/Milford/Loveland @ Montgomery / Silverton @ Oakley

WestColerain Twp. @ Groesbeck

Monfort Heights @ NorthsideWestern Hills / Westwood @ Wyoming

NorthFairfield @ Liberty Township @ Maineville @ Middletown

@ Morrow Mason @ Sharonville South Lebanon@ West Chester

KentuckyCold Spring @ Crescent Springs

Edgewood ErlangerFlorence / Burlington

Independence / Taylor MillPark Hills / Ft. Mitchell

Union @ Walton / Verona @ WarsawIndianaSt. Leon

Must be 18 with a valid drivers license and proof ofinsurance. If interested please call: 513-768-8134

City of Cold Spring, KYSeasonal Summer Help Wanted - Department of Public WorksThe Cold Spring Department of Public Works is now accepting

applications for seasonal laborers (period of June throughSeptember). Salary is $10.00 per hour. Duties include manual and

semi-skilled tasks, related work in maintenance of a parks,streets, buildings, operating vehicles and power tools. Theis

position requires a valid Kentucky Driver’s License. Applicantsmust be 18 years old, background check, and drug screen will berequired prior to employment. Applicants must complete a Cityapplication available at the City Administration Building, 5694East Alexandria Pike, Cold Spring, KY 41076, phone number is

859-441-9604. An application may be downloaded atwww.coldspringky.gov.

Applications must be received by 3:30 on June 10, 2016.

VILLAGE OF GREENHILLSFULL TIME SERVICE WORKER

Greenhills, Ohio is accepting applications for full timeService Worker position. Position performs work

related to municipal streets, maintenance of municipalbuildings and grounds, turf maintenance, landscaping,

etc. Position reports to the Service DepartmentForeman. Must be capable of performing strenuous

physical work in all types of weather. Experience withsnow removal/plowing, & ability to operate heavy

machinery is a plus. Applicants must have a high schooldiploma or an equivalent G.E.D. and possess a

clean driving record.Village Employment Application documents available atwww.GreenhillsOhio.US submit to Municipal Manager,11000 Winton Road, Greenhills Ohio 45218 as soon as

possible. Open until filled. Greenhills is an EEOC.

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTPT position available in Westwood

Psychiatrist office. $14 per hourwith room for advancement. Emailresumes to: [email protected]

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTPT position available in Westwood

Psychiatrist office. $14 per hourwith room for advancement. Emailresumes to: [email protected]

Family owned tree service since 1963seeking person who knows how to

run and manage medium sizedbusiness. Responsibility will be toensure that day to day operations

run smoothly. 513-313-3438

DEPENDABLE, honest &hardworking with referen-ces. Home health aide withover 30+ years experience.incl. Available 24/7.Call 513-658-1413,513-704-5551.

Make BIG Money With

OUR Fairfield Township & Evendalelocations have a GREAT business

opportunity for you to own &operate your own Flatbed delivery

service!

μ BIG Income Potential with small

startup costs

μ Be home EVERY night with your

family!

μ Work for Y O U R S E L F , not

someone else!

Fairfield TownshipFor more information call

(513) 273-2180 or emailFFTPGeneralManager@

menards.com

EvendaleFor more information call(513) 250-4570 or emailEVNDGeneralManager@

menards.com

SE E K I N G Detail OrientedCAREgivers Serving DDS (fkaMRDD) for imm openings inHamilton & Cler. Co. Includessigning bonus. 513-681-2472LM or fax: resume to 513-681-0710

Associate PastorLead various worship and

prayer services. Directpreparation of

discipleship programs forchurch leaders and

teachers; MA of Divinityreq’d; Korean Baptist

Church of Cincinnati @4829 Myrtle Ave., Blue

Ash, OH 45242

DIRECT SUPPORTPERSONNEL

Full Time and Part TimePositions

2nd & 3rd Shifts

$11.25 hourly rateNo prior experience

Paid training

H.S. Diploma or G.E.D.,Background Checks, Valid Driver’s License

Required

Assist persons withdevelopmental disabilities

in daily living skills andcommunity activities

in a home environment.Health insurance paid by

company, Simple IRA with 3% match,

and vacation.

$750 Sign-on Bonus (after520 hours worked)

APPLY IN PERSON AT:4073 Tollgate RoadBatavia, Ohio 45103Near WilliamsburgOffice hours: M-F

9:00am-3:00pmwww.residentialconcepts.

org513-724-0094

MainSource Bank isexpanding its presenceinto the GreaterCincinnati Area!We are looking for Relationship Bankers to joinour team! To apply for this position and to checkout our other opportunities, please visit ourwebsite atwww.mainsourcebank.com

Positions offer a competitive salary andbenefits package.

JANITORIAL

Part time evening cleanersneeded in the Eastgate andAmelia areas. Mon,Wed, Friand wkend. Approx. 2-4 hrs

per eve. Please call 513-315-0218

Pipe Layers andEquipment Operators

Local Contractor seekingexperienced applicants for

Sanitary Sewer, StormSewer, and Water Main

installations. Competitivepay. Good Benefits.

Apply in person: 5780 SR128; Cleves, OH 45002 or

email resume to: resume@

welshexcavation.comEOE

SALES ASSOCIATES CVG Airport Sales Associates atThe Paradies Shops use First

Class Service standards to assistcustomers and process sales

transactions. Must be customerservice focused. Competitve pay

with benefits.Please send resumes only to:

[email protected]

Truck DriverClass B CDL & HAZMAT

Required. Drag experiencea plus.

Immediate start.

Competitive pay.Good Benefits.

Apply in person: 5780 SR128; Cleves, OH 45002 or

email resume to: resume@

welshexcavation.com EOE

MEDICAL ASSISTANT POSITIONMedical Assistant needed

3-4 days/week for busydermatology office in

Milford. Medicalexperience a MUST. NO

PHONE CALLS. Please sendresume ATTN: Peggy to

513-831-3178 fax [email protected]

RN’s and LPN’s for transitional rehab unit with fast paced

environment. Must possess strong clinical, customer service &

organizational skills. Experience required. Very competitive salary

with increased Shift Diff! 12 hr shifts available!

Health plan only $98/mo.

Apply online to join our team!

Nurses - Full Time(All Shifts)

www.carespring.com/employment

Select SpecialtyHospitals NorthernKentucky is hiring!

Select Specialty Hospitalscare for medically complex,

critically ill patients.Because our patients

require a longer stay and amore resource-intensivelevel of care, we offer a

unique setting forprofessional development

and engagement. Anational leader in post-

acute care, we are seeking:

Full-Time Registered Nurses(ask about our sign-on

bonus)Full-Time Respiratory

TherapistsFull-time Certified Nursing

Assistants

Interested candidates maycontact:

Rhonda Bothman, HumanResources Coordinator at

859-572-3923 orrbothman@

selectmedical.com

Office AssistantCandidates should be reliable

self-starters able to workautonomously. They haveinitiative and take pride in

their work. This is a full timeposition. In this role you will beperforming the following tasks.∞ Opening and closing the office∞ Invoicing and data entrythrough QuickBooks.∞ Processing sales orders∞ Administrative support tosales team.∞ Excellent communicationskills via phone and email∞ Using Windows-8&Office suiteThe company culture:A small

team of three who arewelcoming, supportiveindividuals and happy.

[email protected]

Supported Employment SpecialistTrain and support persons

w/disabilities or other barriers tofind and maintain employment.

Related BA & exp. pref. Excellentbenefit package. EOE.

Resume & salary req. to: BAWAC, Inc. [email protected].

Concrete Finisher WantedWest Side of CincinnatiExperience and Drivers

License RequiredCall 513-574-0060

Leave Message

Looking for energetic, experienced & caring STNA’s

to join a great team! We offer competitive wages &

12 hr shifts. New higher shift and weekend diffs! Health insurance $98/mo. Must be

State Tested.

Apply online to join our team!

Nurse Aides Full Time(All Shifts)

www.carespring.com/employment

Bulk Tanker Drivers WantedC-Jams Trucking, Wilder KY

Division. Home Nightly. Health Insand Paid Holidays.

1 Yr experience and clean MVR.Call Brandon @ 812-248-9446

or apply at cjamstrucking.com

Drivers: Dedicated, Regional, OTR,Flatbed & Point to Point Lane

Openings! Excellent Pay, (New hiresguaranteed min $$$ week)!CDL-A 1yr. Exp, Orientation

Completion Bonus!: 1-855-314-1138

D r i ve r s : Get Home. No-Touch! Excellent Weekly Pay!Strong Family Benefits Pack-age. Monthly Bonuses! CDL-A 1yr exp. 888-406-9046

Drivers WantedClass A & B

Immediate PositionsAvailable

Call Rick @ Frate Inc.859-586-3800

Viessman Trucking is hiringqualified tanker drivers in the

Dayton, OH area! We offerhealth, dental, life, 401K and

profit sharing. Qualifiedapplicants are eligible for a

$1,000 sign on bonus. Averagerate per mile for Dayton tankerdrivers is $0.59. Requirements:CDL with tanker endorsement,

1 year OTR experience or 6months of experience for trucking

school graduates and a gooddriving record.

Contact Bill directly at937-454-6490.

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS!Harris Bed Bug Killers/KIT

Complete Treatment SystemHardware Stores, The Home

Depot, homedepot.com

BAR CAFE FOR SALE - On the OhioRiver w/Tiki bar, $35,000. 1329 US52, Some owner financing possible.New Richmond. 614-207-8933

ANTIQUES & VINTAGEMARKET

Lawrenceburg, FairgroundsU.S 50, Exit 16 I-275

Sunday June 5, 7am-3pmOver 200 dealers

513-738-7256lawrenceburgantiqueshow.com

GREENHILLS SHOWS 1st Saturday of Every Month

Flea Market & Antique ShowFREE adm & parking. Food avail.9am-4pm. American Legion Hall

11100 Winton Rd., 45218

Indoor/Outdoor2 Tables for $15

Call 513-825-3099for reservations.

CASKETS & URNSSOLID WOOD $795, Brass urns$99. Metal $895 floor modelspecial discounts hundreds inStock. Save thousands over anyfuneral home price! Use ourFREE layaway. Prearrange &visit 3640 Werk Rd. Call Bill ForInformation & A Free Brochure:513-383-2785thecasketcompany.com

JOBS HOMES RIDESPETS &STUFF

Toplace your ad visit: cincinnati.com/classifieds or search: classifiedsClassifiedscincinnati.com

NEEDTORENT?VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post your listing.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post jobs.

JUNE 1, 2016 μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ 1C

Page 14: Northeast suburban life 060116

Tickets

Yard and Outdoor

Adopt Me

Petsfind a new friend...

TAX Refund Specials!Shop us before you buy!Lowest Prices In Cincinnati

Same Day DeliveryBunk Bed 2x6 splitables sol

wd $199Bunkies (the very Best)

$99 eachTwin mats-all sizes available$69 -...replace your mattress& get a more restful sleep

starting tonight!Hundreds of Sauders pieces

from $29Liv Rm Suites, 2 piece sets

from $499Elec adjustable beds $795

complete with memory foammattress

Futons- wood & metal & fu-ton mattresses

Memory Foam queen mat-tress $379

King Prem Matt Sets 18"$499-$799

Compare from $2000-$60003640 Werk Rd; by Toys R Us,

868 Eads Pkwy.,Lawrenceburg, IN

next to Krogers. Call me,BILL, with your questions

513-383-2785!Mattress & Furniture Express

mattressandfurnitureexpress.com

GUARANTEED FINANC-ING!

EVERYONE’S APPROVED!

Elan SRE 3000 , straight railstair lift. Like new, new bat-teries, buyer uninstall. $975.513-543-1816

HAWAII2 round trip airfairs,

lv Cinti. $199/ea.1-800-325-8816

BUYING-RECORD ALBUMS& CDs, METAL, JAZZ,BLUES, ROCK, RAP, INDIE,R&B & REGGAE513-683-6985

CASH FOR RECORDSPrivate collector buying45’s & LP’s Up to $10 perrecord, small & large col-lections. Roger 513-575-2718

CASH PAID for unopenedunexpired Diabetic Strips. Upto $35 per 100. 513-377-7522

www.cincytestrips.com

CASH PAID!Gold, Jewelry, Diamonds,Coins, Rolexs, Antiques,

Slot Machines, Tools,Electronics, Firearms

& CollectiblesWith 2 Locations

3236 W. Galbraith3621 Harrison Ave

513-385-6789; 513-661-3633 www.americantradeco.net

Absolute HighestCash Buyer!

Freon R12 WANTED, 609certified, will pickup and payCASH for cylinders of R-12.,$0. (312)291-9169 [email protected]

I BUY OLD ELECTRONICS: StereoEquip. Radio speakers guitar amp.

Records (513) 473-5518

LOOKING TO BUYUsed Furniture & Appliances atReasonable Prices. We can alsopick up items & auction them offfor percentage. 937-798-1257

Magic the Gathering cards ,Looking to purchase Magicthe Gathering cards. Cashpaid. Call 513 748 3392 to ar-range a meeting, $$10,000.(513)748-3392 [email protected]

STAR WAR & KENNERITEMS WANTED

“WE ARE LOCAL COLLECTORSLOOKING FOR OLD TOYS, ESPE-

CIALLY STAR WARS! We are inter-ested in toys made in the 1980s, 1970sand earlier, and can come to YOU!

Looking for STAR WARS, Trans-formers, GI JOE, Alien, M.A.S.K.,He-Man, and most other character-related toys older than 1990. WE

ARE LOOKING FOR EX-KENNEREMPLOYEES and FAMILY MEM-BERS of EX-KENNER EMPLOY-

EES who have unique items such asKenner service awards and pre-production items like prototypes,

quote or packaging samples, cata-logs, paint guides, sculpts and molds.We also looking for vendors who per-

formed work for Kenner in the 70sand 80s who did work relating to toycreation, such as injection molding.

WE ARE BUYING ALL YEARLONG, so please save this ad forwhen you clean out your garage,

closet, or attic! We will pay thou-sands of dollars for the right itemsand have purchased several collec-

tions over $10,000. Call or text513.477.2557 or email us at cincystarw

[email protected]. We canusually meet within 24 hours. WEDO NOT BUY Beanie Babies or

Barbie.”

WANTED TO BUY - Ridingmower & zero turn mower,in need of repairs. Will payup to $75. 513-313-5349

U PICK Strawberries! ReadyNow! 1305 Knoxville Rd(behind Red Barn), DryRidge, Ky 41035. Call be-fore coming 859-391-4433

ADOPT- Animal Rescue Fund. Now Open 7 days. Mon-Sun 11-5;513-753-9252 www.petfinder.com

akc boxers, Male, $600.00,Born 3/23/16, Fawn and brin-dle Full akc registration. Tailsand dew claws done. Vetchecked. Wormed. 1stimmunizations. Parents onpremise. Rantam akc boxerson fb. (513)207-5652 [email protected]

CAVALIER KINGCHARLES Puppies- AKC,M & F, All Colors. Healthguaranteed, 513-316-1737

Dachshund mini AKCpups, wormed, shots, vetchecked, M &F’s. 937-403-

8967 or 937-661-7611

Goldendoodle pupsEnglish, F1, Royal size,

Champ bloodlines,pics on facebook searchCherie Emmons. $1,200.

859-620-5085

Great Dane pups CKC,3 Females, 1 shots &wormed twice, POP, $600.Ready 513-282-9183

Himalayan kittens, M/F, ,8-10 wks, CFA registeredLitter, 2 rounds of shots,vet checked, money backguarantee. Facebook: KATSHIMALAYAN KITTENS(513)515-3133 [email protected]

Lab puppies, AKC, white,chocolate, black, yellow, tak-ing deposits now, males andfemales available, parents onsite, healthy and beautifulpuppies, visit our website www.gossercharolais.com forprices and more pictures, callor text today: 270-585-1307(270)585-1307 [email protected]

Mini Schnauzer, AKC, Tak-ing deposits, M&F, black, blk/silver,Parti, $600 513-283-6343

SIBERIAN KITTEN, Hypoallergen-ic, black silver torbie, 10 wks,male, $800. call 513-727-0764

Schnauzer Pups, AKC,miniature, 1 male, 1 female,black, 9 wks, puppies arehome raised with love,healthy, good tempered, upto date on shots. Mother hasEnglish bloodlines, and Fa-ther has great lineage. Beau-tiful active pups, ready forloving home. for more info.call 765-238-1032

ONLYCARS.COMHELPSYOUGET THE RIGHTCAR,WITHOUTALL THEDRAMA.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

General Housecleaning,Trustworthy & Reliable. Refs.Avail., Call Karen 513-510- 0455

House cleaning by Sharon.Weekly and bi-weekly. Hon-est & Reliable. ReasonableRate. References available.513-807-5795

Lawn Mowing Service.Owner operator on-site.Insured, competitive price.Since 1990.Call Rodger @ 513-248-2568

A & J Tree RemovalBrush Removal & Fire Wood.Fully Insured. 513-325-5172

CALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

Service Directory

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

2C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ JUNE 1, 2016

Page 15: Northeast suburban life 060116

Bring a Bid

Auctiona deal for you...

General Auctions

Your Source

Legalsfor the latest...

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

Automotive

Ridesbest deal for you...

CASH for Junk Cars, Trucks &Vans Call TODAY! Get CASHTODAY! We Pick Up! 7 Days a

Week. 513-605-0063

21’ ft., Sea Ray 210 Signa-ture, 1997 1997 Sear Rayopen bow runabout.MERCRUISER V8 ENGINE, 350CI, 210 HP. Alpha oneoutdrive with after marketstainless steel prop. Aftermarket JL Audio speakers re-cently installed. Gimbalbearing just replaced, and alloutdrive seals were replacedin 2015. Boat still runs great!Please call or email me if in-terested. $$8,500 (859)393-5240 [email protected]

2002 Ford Mustang Convertible,6 cyl, Auto, loaded, very clean,164k, Asking $5,125.obo 513-482-1842

Ford 2013 Taurus, Sedan,88900 mi., 4 dr., Automatic,good cond., White ext., Tanint., 06 Cylinders, 2WD, A/C:Front, A/C: Rear, Airbag:Driver, Airbag: Passenger,Airbag: Side, Alarm, AlloyWheels, Anti-Lock Brakes, CDPlayer, Cruise Control, FogLights, Leather Interior, Navi-gation System, Power Locks,Power Seats, Power Steering,Power Windows, PremiumSound, Rear Window De-froster, Remote Keyless En-try, Extended warranty, Newbattery, Tires have 25,000miles, highway miles, PearlWhite exterior, $12,30000.Steve Day (513)479-7016

Lexus 2006 GS 300, Sedan,146,870 mi., 4 dr., Automat-ic, Outstanding cond., Blackext., Gray int.,VIN#JTHCH96S560005267, 06Cylinders, AWD, Immaculateautomobile! I have ownedthis beautiful car for 9 years.The only reason I am sellingit is because I now have a carallowance from work. No ac-cidents. All the options in-cluded - loaded! Originalprice was $47,500. All sched-uled maintenance, All re-cords, Always garaged Most-ly highway miles, Non-smoker, Very clean interior,Well maintained, $8950.Mark (513)253-8998

Pinball & Pacman mach w/multiple games. $2500 firmPing Pong/Table Tennis$200. Grt cond 513-528-7506

1 9 3 0 ’ s & up Muscle Cars,Classics & Vettes wanted.Paying Top Market Value513-500-1828

ford 2009 escape XLS, AWD,Gray, Air, 1 owner, 140K mi.,remote start, exc. cond.,$5,500; 513-646-7362

Chevrolet 2000 Astro, PassVan, 51000 mi., 4 dr., Auto-matic, Good cond., Brownext., Beige int.,VIN#1GBDM19W6YB124586,06 Cylinders, RWD, A/C: Rear,Airbag: Passenger, Anti-LockBrakes, Cruise Control, Pow-er Windows, Rear WindowDefroster, Tow Package,2000 Chevy ASTRO van w/only 51,000 miles. Wellmaintained, recently tunedup and detailed. Fully auto-mated wheelchair lift, acces-sible from the rear of thevan., $7300.00. Tim Petry(513)375-3007

Ford 1995 E150 CustomV a n , 93,561 miles, new tires &battery, side frame needs repaired.$1,000. 937-695- 1405

ABSOLUTE AUCTIONOnline Only

5.84 acresNorris Lake Front Tract

Mariner Point Rd.,LaFollette

760 ft deep water lake frontCity Water, Unrestricted

www.ayersauctionrealty.com TAL 407

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC INVITED TOHEARING ON A PART B

AND PRESCHOOLSPECIAL EDUCATION

GRANT PROGRAM

The Loveland City Schooldistrict invites all interestedpersons to attend a publichearing at 4:00 p.m. onThursday, June 2, 2016 atThe Loveland Board of Edu-cation building, 757 S.Lebanon Road, Loveland,Ohio. The purpose of thishearing is to make informa-tion available to parents andthe general public on Part Band preschool special educa-tion grant programs. Pleasecall Eric Dool, Director ofStudent Services, at 683-5600if you have any questions.204LH,May25,Jun1,’16#1270847

LEGAL NOTICE

The Madeira & Indian HillJoint Fire District has onfile in the Administrative Of-fice the completed FinancialStatements from 2015. Per-sons interested in reviewingthe Financial Statements orin obtaining copies of thesame, should contact: Ma-deira & Indian Hill JointFire District 6475 DrakeRoad, Cincinnati, Ohio45243-phone number 513-561-7926.304SL,June1,’16#1309445

Notice to Bidders

Separate, sealed bids for each of the requirements set forthbelow will be received at the Office of the Treasurer of theBoard of Education of the Deer Park Community CitySchools, 4131 Matson Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 45236 until:

3:00 P.M. – local timeJune 3, 2016

and will be publicly opened and read immediately there-after at the usual place of meeting, and a report thereofmade to the board at their next meeting.

Said work consisting of a wheelchair lift at Amity Elementa-ry School.

Pre-bid meeting:Prospective bidders are encouraged to attend a pre-bidmeeting to be held May 27, 2016 at 10:00 a.m. at the fol-lowing location:

Amity Elementary School4320 East Galbraith Road

Cincinnati, Ohio 45236

The Contract Documents are available for purchase from:Key Blue Prints Inc., 411 Elliott Ave, Cincinnati, Ohio 45215,513-821-2111 www.keycompanies.com . Documents willbe forwarded at bidder’s expense.

Bids shall be submitted on the form furnished with each setof bid documents or on a photographic copy of that form.Each bid shall be accompanied by a bid guarantee meetingrequirements of Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code.Said guarantee may be in the form of a bond (ORC153.571) or a certified check, cashiers check, or letter ofcredit meeting requirements of 153.54. Bids received afterthe time and date set for bid opening will be returned to thebidder unopened.

The said Board of Education reserves the right to waiveinformalities, and to accept or reject any and all, or parts ofany and all bids.

No bids may be withdrawn for at least 60 days after thescheduled closing time for receipt of bids.

The probable construction cost estimate for this work is: $30,000 base bid

Board of Education – Deer Park Community City SchoolsBy: Brittany Marks, TreasurerSL,May25,Jun1,’16#

PUBLIC HEARING

The Deer Park Silverton JointFire District will hold A PublicBudget Hearing on Tuesday,June 14, 2016 at 4:30 pm.At this Public Hearing, theFire Board of Trustees will beaccepting Input from citizensregarding the 2017 Budgetin written or oral form. Saidmeeting will be held at theFire District Headquarters.7050 Blue Ash Road Silver-ton, Ohio 45236

Belinda C. JoergerFire District Clerk Treasurer304SL,June1,’16#1304746

PUBLIC NOTICE

1)The Loveland City SchoolsBoard of Education meetingscheduled for June 7, 2016has been cancelled. A newSpecial Board Meeting hasbeen scheduled for June 6,2016 at 5:00 pm in the Love-land City Schools Board ofEducation Office.

2)There is a BoardMeeting/Retreat scheduledfor June 20, 2016 at 8:00 amin the Loveland Intermedi-ate School Media Center.204LH,June1,’16#1308928

FORTRESS CASTLE, LLC.SELF STORAGE

697 STATE ROUTE 28MILFORD, OH 45150

(513) 831-9150FAX: (513) 831-9154

JAMES HELTON JR., LASTKNOWN ADDRESS: 1978ST. RT. 28, GOSHEN, OH.BIN 34,35.

EUGENE WALKER, LASTKNOWN ADDRESS: 1108BROADVIEW PLACE,MILFORD, OH. BIN 65.

JERRI PLAVSIC, LASTKNOWN ADDRESS: 415 CA-TRINA CT, LOVELAND,OH. BIN 122,123.

SHAWN SHOPE, LASTKNOWN, ADDRESS: 100BETHEL PARK DR,BETHEL, OH. BIN 177,178.

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI-FIED THAT YOUR PER-SONAL PROPERTY NOWIN STORAGE AT FOR-TRESS CASTLE STORAGEIN MILFORD, OHIO MAYBE OBTAINED BY YOUFOR THE BALANCE DUEPLUS ALL OTHER EX-PENSES WITHIN 15 DAYSOF THIS NOTICE OR THEPROPERTY WILL BESOLD AT PUBLIC SALE.THE LAST DAY TO OB-TAIN YOUR PROPERTY ISJUNE 16TH, 2016 BY 8:30AM (EST). AUCTION TOBE HELD AT 9:00AM(EST); THURSDAY,JUNE 16TH, 2016 AT 697STATE ROUTE 28,MILFORD, OH.204LH,June1,8,’16#1309186

Public NoticeIn accordance with the pro-visions of State law, therebeing due and unpaid charg-es for which the undersignedis entitled to satisfy an own-er and/or manager’s lien ofthe goods hereinafter descri-bed and stored at the UncleBob’s Self Storagelocation(s) listed below.And, due notice having beengiven, to the owner of saidproperty and all partiesknown to claim an interesttherein, and the time speci-fied in such notice for pay-ment of such having expired,the goods will be sold at pub-lic auction at the below stat-ed location(s)to the highestbidder or otherwise disposedof on Monday, June 20, 2016at 12:30PM4932 Marburg AvenueCincinnati OH 45209(513)386-9947Shannon L Hamilton4605 Vendome PlCincinnati, OH 45227Household Goods/Furniture,TV/Stereo Equipment,Tools/Appliances, BagsJordan Gaitskill5210 Montgomery Rd.Cincinnati, OH 45212Household Goods/Furniture,TV/ Stereo EquipmentRebecca Richmond5 Apache Ct.Loveland, OH 45140Household Goods/ Furniture,TV Stereo Equipment,Tools/AppliancesRebecca Richmond5 Apache Ct.Loveland, OH 45140Household Goods/ Furniture,Tools/Appliances2950 Robertson AvenueCincinnati, OH 45209(513)631-0290Marcela Cabrea-Canseco5500 Glengate LnCincinnati, OH 45212Household Goods/Furniture,Boxes, StoveCedric Green6322 Elbrook AveCincinnati, OH 45237Clothes, shoes, bagsChris Selker3569 Raymar DrCincinnati, OH 45208Household Goods/Furniture,OfficeFurniture/Machines/EquipmentDerek Jent4815 Beech St apt 2Cincinnati, OH 45212Household Goods/FurnitureDenesha Hill5480 Glengate Lane Apt 8Cincinnati, OH 45212Household Goods/FurnitureAndrea Carter4543 Bristol LaneCincinnati, OH 45229Household Goods/Furniture,Tools/AppliancesChuana Dubose 2864 Colonial Ridge Ct.Cincinnati, OH 45212Household Goods/Furniture,TV/Stereo Equipment, OfficeFurniture/Machines/ Equip-ment, Account Records/ SalesSamplesTyra Duncan 2416 Kenilworth Ave #5Norwood, OH 45212Household Goods/Furniture305EHJ,Jun1,8,’16#1313186

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Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

Chapter Two Estate Sales, LLC4057 Egbert AveCincinnati, Oh 45220Sat. June 4th 9-3and Fri June 5th 10-3Tucked away on the edge ofClifton’s Gaslight District is alovely home full of anunique blend of Mid CenturyModern and Primitive collec-tions:FU RN ITU RE ; Stickley QUEEN bed,Tempurpedic mattress Lazyboy leath-er recline & sofa, bar stools dining tablew/6 chairs,Corner cupboard,buffet rock-ing chairs, OUTDOOR cushion settee &side chair, chaise lounge patio table6/chairsANTIQUES; Pie Chest leather top desk,23” cast iron cauldron, crocks, FULL sizeRose carved bed set, vanity , Seth Tho-mas & Regulator wall clocks, OriginalArtwork, Toys ,Chinese battle drums,drop leaf tables, LODER HOUSE signHOUSEWARES; Gourmet Cookingtools, Cookbooks, Kitchenaide pcs,catering supplies, glassware’s, China,Sterling Silver Spoons,silver plate,vtg linens, China, towels,down bed-ding , BYBEE & JAN JACQUE Pottery,Mandruzzato, Murano Glass,area rugs,lamps, holiday, decor, lamps, FIESTAWAREGARAGE; work bench, fridge, garden tools,ladders, pots, leaf blowerMEDICAL; wheelchairs, Travel Scootscooter, walker, canes suppliesELECTRONICS; 46” & 21” SamsungTV’s, treadmill, cameras,Toshiba minilap top, Magellan GPS,cell phones,office supplies ART; Charley Harpe-r’s, Original Oils, Sue Mueller,JimBorgman, Buckley Moss,Ray Harm,Metal Yard Birds art, sculpturesMISC; Large amount of VTG BASKET-BALL cards,mint condition including(Jerry West, Wilt Camberlain, OscarRobertson, games, vhs, dvd’s, cds, re-cords, puppets,clown & magic props,JEWISH Menorah’s & collectables,Plus size Designer WOMEN’S cloth-ing, Shoes 5.5 & 8.5, 14kt GOLD, SS &costume jewelry, Movado watch,washer/dryer, microwave House is lo-cated on a dead end street nearClifton Meadows Swim & TennisClub Numbers will be given out at8am on Sat. Bring HELP for removalof heavy items.Visit Chapter Two Estate Sales onFacebook orwww.chaptertwoes.comfor photos see http://www.auctionzip.com/Listings/2724486.html

EASTGATE: Fern & Clayton Ave(off Summerside Rd)Saturday, June 4th 9a-4pantiques, furniture, tools, exerciseequip, records (45’s/LP’s), CD’s,R2R tape, die cast cars, collecti-bles & lots of misc

TEAR-DOWN SALEThis is a Relogistics sale!

Madeira7540 Shewango Way 45243Friday 6/3 and Saturday 6/4

10am to 4pmThink about all that’s in and arounda house and you can probably buy iton June 3rd and 4th. Along withsome fabulous furniture, tools, col-lectibles (Hummels, Ruthvens,W a t e r f o r d , B a r b i e s ), books,sewing/knitting items, householditems and personal items you can ex-pect to find kitchen and laun-dry appliances, hot waterheater, furnace, whole housefan, hardwood floors, pinepaneling, vintage bath fix-tures, beautiful yard plant-ings and – you guessed it -SO MUCH MORE! Get infoand pics atticsestateservices.com/estate-gallery. (We will be using thenumber system.) See youthen!

Antiques & Crafts ShowsJune 12 - July 10 - Aug 17

New Richmond, OhioBandstand Park;

10am-4:30pmInformation: [email protected]

HISTORIC 91st ANNUALSHANDON

STRAWBERRYFESTIVAL

Saturday, June 11, 201610:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

*Church Dinner from noonHomemade Ice Cream andStrawberry Shortcakes

from 10 a.m.*40+ Vendors

*Antique Tractor ShowFree Rides to

Salty Dog MuseumFew Vendor Spaces

Still AvailableOho St. Rt. 126 west of Ross

513-738-0491

Anderson- Garage Sales-8302 & 8294 Jakaro (off 8 Mile), Fri. & Sat., June 3 & 4; 9a-2p

ANDERSON -“Rummage SaleFriday, June 3rd, 9AM to 2PMComboni Mission Ctr, 1318 NagelRd (behind post office). $6.00/bag:Furniture, collectibles, clothinghousehold items."

Anderson Twp - BloomfieldHills Subdiv. Multi FamilySale, Sat. June 4, 8a-2p. TakeBretton off Hunley Rd.Something for Everyone!Furniture, tools, crafts, golfitems, brand name babyclothes/toys.

Anderson Twp- Fri & Sat 6/3 & 49a-2p; 7370 Kennebell LN, 45244Kirby sweeper, vintage Avon,sewing machs., wheelbarrow,tools, golf, furn., household items.

BLUE ASH: 5131 Belleview Ave(Off Kenwood)

June 3rd & 4th 9am-3pmladies plus size clothing, (2sets)twin/full bed rails & lots and lotsof misc.

CINCINNATI: 4545 Ellman AveFri 6/3 & Sat 6/4 9am-2pmsports memoabilia, dryer, stove &much more

Deer Park - Colton Lane &Frontenac Ave Streets Sales,6/3 & 6/4, 8-4, Rain date 6/10

& 6/11, Lots of costumejewerly, hhold items & more!

Shop till you drop!

Eastgate nr. -Huge MultiFamily Yard SaleMcGuffey Lakes and TheBluffs of McGuffey HOA’s.Up to 470 Homes,Take Schoolhouse Rd toMcguffey Lane and allside streets off McGuffeyLane. Sat. 6/4; 9a-2p

Florence,KY garage sale,7059 Glade Lane, Fri: June 38-2, Sat: June 4 8-2, elec-tronics, vintage, misc , Dir:OAKBROOK Rd. off Hwy 18and Pleasant ValleyFollow the Signs

Friendship Flea Market,Freindship, IN.

June 11-June 19,Open Daily 9am

Southeastern IN, 45 mi. westof Cincinnati, on State Road 62.

859-341-9188www.friendshipfleamarket.com

Bring this ad for $1 offparking Monday - Thursday.

GOSHEN: 1675 Hill Station RdHUGE CHURCH SALEGoshen Church of God

(located in the back gym)All Proceeds Go To

Upcoming Missions TripJune 3rd & 4th 9am-3pm

Harley Davidson motorcycle parts,tools, variety of furniture, clothes,shoes, Name Brand items, anti-ques, sports items (Nascar, base-ball, ect.), household & much more

Goshen Twp/45122 - BigYard Sale! Sat. 6/4, 9-3,1765 Liberty Woods Dr,Antiques, collectibles, powerlawn items, tools, old adver-tising signs, & misc.

GUITAR SALE 50% OFFWESTERN HILLS MUSIC

513-598-9000

LIBERTY TWP: HawthorneHills Community Garage Saleoff Milliken between Yankee &MaudHuges Rd, Nearest intersec-tion Milliken and MaudHuges roundabout, enter off Milliken at Haw-thorne Reserve Drive or offMaudHuges at Woodgate Way.Saturday, June 4th 9am-3pm

Rain Date- June 5th Participant maps downloadable @hawthornehillslibertytownship.orgafter June 1st.

LIBERTY TWP: HawthorneHills Community Garage Saleoff Milliken between Yankee &MaudHuges Rd, Nearest intersec-tion Milliken and MaudHuges roundabout, enter off Milliken at Haw-thorne Reserve Drive or offMaudHuges at Woodgate Way.Saturday, June 4th 9am-3pm

Rain Date- June 5th Participant maps downloadable @hawthornehillslibertytownship.orgafter June 1st.

Loveland/45140 – Large MovingSale, Multi Family. Fri-Sat 6/3,6/4, 9-4 pm. 6232 N. ShadowhillWay. Freezer, dorm fridge, filingcabinet, pocket knives, linens,dishes, dehumidifier, outdoor furni-ture, 20’ ladder + hinged ladder,Toys, kids & adult clothes, coin col-lection, sports memorabilia,books, trading cards, yard tools,wheelbarrow, vintage jewelry, bead-ing supplies and more!

Loveland-Belle M e a d eNeighborhood Garage Sale,June 3 & 4, 8a-2p. Rain orShine. Lots of Families!Wards Corner/Branch HillArea.

LOVELAND, Moving, 10678BETTYRAY DR, Sat: 9-2, Furnitureincluding Mission dining set,Thonet chairs, household items,electronics, china, more!

Loveland, Yard Sale, 333 N.Wall St., Fri: 8-2, Sat: 8-2,Some of everything: house-hold, antiques/vintage, mis-cellaneous and such, Dir: W.Loveland to Wall St. towardhigh school, last house bythe city limit sign.

MAINEVILLE: 7447 Victoria FallsRdSaturday, June 4th 8am-1pmhousehold items & much more

Maineville: Miami BluffCommunitySaturday, June 4th 9am-2pmLarge Community Sale

Maineville: Regency ParkCommunitySaturday, June 4th 9am-2pmLarge Community Sale

Montgomery-AnnualChurch of Saviour

Rummage Sale8005 Pfeiffer Rd, 45242

Thu 6/2. 5:30pm-8:30pm,Fri 6/3, 9am-1:30pm: BagSale 12-1:30pm on Friday

PIERCE TWP - THUR 6/2 thruSAT 6/4, 9:00 to 4:00, 3681Merwin - Ten Mile Rd. Hshld,Furni, Toys, Clothes - Infantto Adult 2X, Xmas seasonal,Mech & Elec supplies, Gardenitems, Misc and More .

Garage & Yard SaleVISIT: cincinnati.com/classifiedsTO PLACE YOUR AD

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

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