Northwest press 042016

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Vol. 95 No. 13 © 2016 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED N ORTHWEST N ORTHWEST PRESS $1.00 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving Colerain Township, Green Township, Groesbeck, Monfort Heights, Pleasant Run, Seven Hills, White Oak News ......................... 923-3111 Retail advertising ............ 768-8404 Classified advertising ........ 242-4000 Delivery ...................... 853-6277 See page A2 for additional information Contact The Press VISIT THE NEW CINCINNATI.COM The region’s most comprehensive and most used news web site is even better. Checkout the changes to Cincinnati.com. Motorists who access Inter- state 74 at North Bend Road will find a snarl in their commute next week. A project to replace the North Bend Road bridge over Interstate 74 kicks off Monday, April 18, and is expect- ed to be completed next year. For phase one, the first 10 months of the project, there will be one lane of traffic main- tained in each direction on the northbound side of the existing bridge, while southbound side of new bridge is built. Once work on the south- bound side is completed, phase two begins, with two lanes of southbound traffic and one lane of northbound traffic moving onto the new side to permit con- struction of the northbound side of the new overpass. Liz Lyons, a spokeswoman for ODOT, says traffic will be maintained dur- ing construction using tempor- ary roads, lane shifts and posted detours. Access will also be pro- vided to the I-74 ramps and ad- jacent properties. A local alternate route has been posted by the Hamilton County Engineer’s Office from North Bend Road to West Fork Road to Race Road to Boomer Road to North Bend Road and vice versa with a temporary traffic signal at the Race Road intersection with West Fork Road. The North Bend overpass was built in 1969. Concrete is de- teriorating, and the bridge abut- ments, which are the substruc- ture at the ends of a bridge span upon which the structure rests, are sliding, in turn crushing the back walls. The new bridge will carry two lanes of southbound through traffic, one southbound ramp lane, and two lanes of northbound through traffic. The overpass replacement will also increase the vertical clear- ance for traffic on I-74 from 14.5 feet to just under 17 feet, mak- ing it better able to accommo- date “supersize” loads. And there is an existing steel beam bent from the bridge being struck by a vehicle that needs to be replaced. Green Township is partnering with the project, adding a decorative vandal- proof fence with the township’s name to identify the area as a gateway to the community. The $8.2 million project was awarded to the Sunesis Con- struction Company and is antic- ipated to be complete in fall of 2017. JENNIE KEY/THE COMMUNITY PRESS The North Bend Road overpass replacement project, starting April 18, is expected to be completed in the fall of 2017. North Bend Road bridge work under way April 18 Jennie Key [email protected] La Salle High School Princi- pal Tom Luebbe is out – re- placed mid-year for unspeci- fied reasons. Luebbe was principal at La Salle for 17 years. His removal earlier this month was immedi- ate after officials with the school and the Archdiocese of Cincinnati decided not to renew his contract. In a statement April 8 an- nouncing the decision, Interim Superintendent of Catholic Schools Susan Gibbons gave no hint as to what went sour. She commended Luebbe for his de- dication, energy and profes- sionalism, writing that he “will be recognized as transforming the lives of the young men en- trusted to his care.” “La Salle High School is a very important ministry of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, as are all of our schools,” Gibbons wrote. “We are charged with the evangelizing mission of the Uni- versal Catholic Church. The school must continue to adapt to this mission in new and relevant ways as our culture and envi- ronment evolve.” All administrators and teachers at schools owned by the archdiocese operate under one-year contracts, Gibbons wrote. The decision to end Luebbe’s employment was made in conjunction with her office and La Salle’s Board of Limited Jurisdiction. “We wish Tom well in his next pursuits,” she wrote, “and know that his impact will be forever felt on the LaSallian community that he has served so passion- ately.” Luebbe could not be reached for comment, and archdiocese spokesman Dan Andriacco de- clined to offer more specifics, citing a policy against discuss- ing personnel matters. Stacy Papke, former dean of academics at the Green Town- ship school, will serve as in- terim principal until a perma- nent replacement is found. In an email April 12, ad- dressed to alumni, friends and benefactors, La Salle’s director of alumni relations, Barrett Co- hen, promised to do what he Tom Luebbe is no longer the principal at La Salle High School. No specific reasons have been given by the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. What happened to La Salle High School’s principal? Hannah Sparling [email protected] See LASALLE, Page 2A

description

 

Transcript of Northwest press 042016

Page 1: Northwest press 042016

Vol. 95 No. 13© 2016 The Community Press

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

NORTHWESTNORTHWESTPRESS $1.00

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Your Community Press newspaper serving Colerain Township, Green Township, Groesbeck,Monfort Heights, Pleasant Run, Seven Hills, White Oak

News .........................923-3111Retail advertising ............768-8404Classified advertising ........242-4000Delivery ......................853-6277

See page A2 for additional information

Contact The PressVISIT THE NEWCINCINNATI.COMThe region’s most comprehensive andmost used news web site is even better.Checkout the changes to Cincinnati.com.

Motorists who access Inter-state 74 at North Bend Road willfind a snarl in their commutenext week. A project to replacethe North Bend Road bridgeover Interstate 74 kicks offMonday, April 18, and is expect-ed to be completed next year.

For phase one, the first 10months of the project, there willbe one lane of traffic main-tained in each direction on thenorthbound side of the existingbridge, while southbound sideof new bridge is built.

Once work on the south-bound side is completed, phasetwo begins, with two lanes ofsouthbound traffic and one laneof northbound traffic movingonto the new side to permit con-struction of the northbound sideof the new overpass. Liz Lyons,a spokeswoman for ODOT, says

traffic will be maintained dur-ing construction using tempor-ary roads, lane shifts and posteddetours. Access will also be pro-vided to the I-74 ramps and ad-jacent properties.

A local alternate route hasbeen posted by the HamiltonCounty Engineer’s Office fromNorth Bend Road to West ForkRoad to Race Road to BoomerRoad to North Bend Road andvice versa with a temporarytraffic signal at the Race Roadintersection with West ForkRoad.

The North Bend overpasswas built in 1969. Concrete is de-teriorating, and the bridge abut-ments, which are the substruc-ture at the ends of a bridge spanupon which the structure rests,are sliding, in turn crushing theback walls.

The new bridge will carrytwo lanes of southboundthrough traffic, one southbound

ramp lane, and two lanes ofnorthbound through traffic.The overpass replacement willalso increase the vertical clear-ance for traffic on I-74 from 14.5feet to just under 17 feet, mak-ing it better able to accommo-date “supersize” loads. And

there is an existing steel beambent from the bridge beingstruck by a vehicle that needs tobe replaced. Green Township ispartnering with the project,adding a decorative vandal-proof fence with the township’sname to identify the area as a

gateway to the community. The $8.2 million project was

awarded to the Sunesis Con-struction Company and is antic-ipated to be complete in fall of2017.

JENNIE KEY/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

The North Bend Road overpass replacement project, starting April 18, is expected to be completed in the fall of2017.

North BendRoad bridgework underway April 18Jennie [email protected]

La Salle High School Princi-pal Tom Luebbe is out – re-placed mid-year for unspeci-fied reasons.

Luebbe was principal at LaSalle for 17 years. His removalearlier this month was immedi-ate after officials with theschool and the Archdiocese ofCincinnati decided not to renewhis contract.

In a statement April 8 an-nouncing the decision, InterimSuperintendent of CatholicSchools Susan Gibbons gave nohint as to what went sour. Shecommended Luebbe for his de-dication, energy and profes-sionalism, writing that he “willbe recognized as transforming

the lives of the young men en-trusted to his care.”

“La Salle High School is avery important ministry of theArchdiocese of Cincinnati, asare all of our schools,” Gibbonswrote. “We are charged with theevangelizing mission of the Uni-versal Catholic Church. Theschool must continue to adapt tothis mission in new and relevantways as our culture and envi-ronment evolve.”

All administrators andteachers at schools owned bythe archdiocese operate underone-year contracts, Gibbonswrote. The decision to endLuebbe’s employment wasmade in conjunction with heroffice and La Salle’s Board ofLimited Jurisdiction.

“We wish Tom well in his next

pursuits,” she wrote, “and knowthat his impact will be foreverfelt on the LaSallian communitythat he has served so passion-ately.”

Luebbe could not be reachedfor comment, and archdiocesespokesman Dan Andriacco de-clined to offer more specifics,citing a policy against discuss-ing personnel matters.

Stacy Papke, former dean ofacademics at the Green Town-ship school, will serve as in-terim principal until a perma-nent replacement is found.

In an email April 12, ad-dressed to alumni, friends andbenefactors, La Salle’s directorof alumni relations, Barrett Co-hen, promised to do what he

Tom Luebbe is no longer the principal at La Salle High School. No specificreasons have been given by the Archdiocese of Cincinnati.

What happened to La SalleHigh School’s principal? Hannah [email protected]

See LASALLE, Page 2A

Page 2: Northwest press 042016

2A • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 NEWS

NORTHWESTPRESS

NewsRichard Maloney Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7134 or 853-6265,

[email protected] Jennie Key Community Editor . . . . . . . . . .853-6272, [email protected] Kurt Backscheider Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . .853-6260, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . .768-8512, [email protected] Robbe Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . .513-364-4981, [email protected]

Twitter: @nrobbesportsAdam Baum Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . . .513-364-4497, [email protected]

Twitter: @adamjbaum

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

[email protected]

DeliveryFor customer service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .853-6277Sharon Schachleiter

Circulation Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .853-6279, [email protected] Mary Jo Schablein

District Manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .853-6278Mary Jo Puglielli

District Manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .853-6276

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 ................8AClassifieds ................CDeaths 7 ..................BFood .....................9APolice .................... 8BSchools ..................5ASports ....................1BViewpoints ............10A

Index

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could to make a smoothtransition from Luebbe toPapke to whoever is thepermanent replacement.

“I am very sensitive tothe fact that this has beendifficult for some of ouralumni and communitymembers,” Cohen wrote.“… my goal is to continueto do my part in keepingLa Salle as one of the pre-eminent academic institu-tions in Cincinnati and a

place alumni can be proudto call “home.”

A number of alumniand parents have ex-pressed support forLuebbe on social media,asking for more informa-tion and questioning whythe principal had to leavebefore the school yearwas finished.

So another messagewas posted April 13 on theschool’s website. But the600-plus word statement –on behalf of Archdioceseof Cincinnati Interim Su-perintendent of CatholicSchools Susan Gibbons

and La Salle's Board ofLimited Jurisdiction –doesn’t answer the basicquestion: Why did TomLuebbe not get a contractfor next school year?

It does, however, ex-plain the structure of thedecision – who made it,who agreed to it and howwas it implemented? Italso squelches some spec-ulation about wrongdo-ing.

“During his time at LaSalle, Mr. Luebbe has act-ed consistently with themission at La Salle, andthe recent decision by theArchdiocese was in noway the result of anycriminal or immoral be-havior or any actions thatjeopardized the safety ofLa Salle students, faculty,or staff,” the statementreads. “Mr. Luebbe shouldbe commended for hiscommitment and dedica-tion to La Salle and forhelping to transform thelives of so many youngmen over the years.”

Principals at archdio-cese-owned schools oper-ate under one-year con-tracts. Each school has aBoard of Limited Juris-diction, and that boardrecommends whether ornot to renew the principal.

At La Salle, the 18-member board recom-mended against keepingLuebbe. Gibbons andArchbishop Dennis M.Schnurr agreed, and they“determined that it is inthe best interest of LaSalle that the transition toan interim principal andthe search for a Principalbegin immediately.”

LaSalleContinued from Page 1A

A section of CheviotRoad from Blue RockRoad to Galbraith Road inColerain Township is clos-ing beginning Monday,April 25, so motoristsshould get ready to findalternate routes to com-mute.

Barrett Paving is put-ting in a storm pipe andwater main in the area.Hamilton County Engi-neer Ted Hubbard saysthe project requires thefull closure of CheviotRoad between Blue Rockand Galbraith roads. Peo-ple who live in the areawill have access to theirhomes, but the road willbe closed to through traf-fic from the northernBlue Rock intersection,near White Oak ChristianChurch. Barrett’s detourroutes traffic over WestGalbraith Road to BlueRock Road to CheviotRoad and vice versa.

The good news is thework should be finishedby May 20.

The bad news is thatmotorists might want tokeep those alternate

routes handy becausemore work is coming.

Hamilton County ChiefDeputy Engineer Tim Gil-day said the storm work isa part of a $3.3 million in-tersection makeoverwhich moves the BlueRock and Cheviot inter-section about 400 feetnorth. The newly config-ured intersection willhave more room for traf-fic to wait for a left turnsignal from Cheviot Roadand will permit left turnsfrom Blue Rock Roadnorth onto Cheviot, whichare currently not allowed.

Hubbard says the in-tersection project wouldmake dual left turns fornorthbound Cheviot Roadmotorists onto westboundBlue Rock Road whilemaintaining a through-lane for traffic continuingnorth. The through-lanewill no longer be continu-ously green-lighted.Much of the project is aresult of the 2003 NorthBend/Cheviot Road Corri-dor Study.

The project also in-stalls sidewalks alongCheviot to Galbraithroads, Gilday said. It’s be-ing paid for with money

from the Ohio PublicWorks Commission andthe Urban Surface Trans-portation Programthrough OKI.

This is a busy area.Hubbard said trafficcounts show 16,700 vehi-cles a day travel BlueRock Road and 8,500 onCheviot Road. He expectsthat to increase over timeand the plan for the newintersection is engineeredto accommodate the traf-fic expected 10 yearsfrom now.

The county has beenacquiring right-of-way

for properties that will beaffected by the projectand utilities and trees arebeing removed from thework area.

Traffic will be main-tained but there may bedelays during the project.Hubbard says he antici-pates one more full clo-sure, this one on BlueRock Road. That will like-ly come in September orOctober, and he antici-pates it would last about aweek to allow the contrac-tor to tie together the oldand new Blue Rock Roadpavement.

Gilday says the engi-neer’s office is hopefulthe project will be com-

plete by the end of thisyear, weather permitting.

Section of Cheviot Road closing for storm water workJennie [email protected] CORRIDOR STUDY

The 2003 North Bend Road Corridor Study resulted inseveral road improvement projects in the White Oak/Monfort Heights area.

» » » Cheviot Road/Hubble Road intersection improve-ment in 2007

» North Bend Road improvement from Boomer Road toInterstate 74 in 2009

» North Bend Road improvement from Kleeman Road toBoomer Road in 2012

» North Bend Road improvement from I-74 to West ForkRoad in 2013

Members of the communities ofSpringfield Township, MountHealthy, Forest Park and Greenhillsare joining the Reds for the fifth an-nual Community Day at GreatAmerican Ball Park. Good CATCHis organizing the Community Daywith proceeds supporting academicprograms for students within thecommunities’ neighborhoods.

Colerain Township enters theCommunity Day party this year asnew partners. The Colerain Elemen-tary Chorale has been selected tosing the National Anthem at theReds-Giants game at 7:10 p.m. Tues-day, May 3. Colerain families shouldcontact Nicole Epure Taulbee, Cole-rain Elementary PTA at [email protected] for discounted ticketsor visit www.goodcatch-cincy.com.

For the fifth consecutive year ofraising funds and making academicinvestments, Good CATCH, whichstands for Collective AchievementThrough Connected Hands, is backwith its signature program, a Com-munity Day at the Cincinnati Reds.

Good CATCH is an initiative ofthe Community Partnership for Col-lective Achievement; an organiza-tion that leverages regional relation-ships to build support for education.Good CATCH has arranged a dis-count for residents and businessesof these communities to buy tickets

at up to 33 percent below the regularticket price and every ticket soldgenerates a contribution toward thesupport of academic initiatives forstudents. Tickets for the game are:view level ticket for $10 or mezza-nine ticket for $15. For group ticketsales, call 513-428-1002.

Katrina Rugless, founder andpresident of Good CATCH, said theprogram has invested more than$20,000 in support of academic ini-tiatives and the group’s goal thisyear is to raise $10,000 more to in-vest in targeted academic programswithin the community. She saysschools in the northwest area of thecity need to build partnerships andwork with communities to addressthe needs of their students and GoodCATCH can help.

In 2012 $5,000 paid for servicesfrom Youth Motivational Learningprovided on-site tutoring, OGT

preparation and afterschool tutor-ing while Envision Children offereda Summer Academic EnrichmentProgram for Winton Woods stu-dents, and those services were fund-ed again in 2013.

In 2014, $4,000 was awarded toWinton Woods City Schools to sup-port programming to support thirdgrade reading guarantee initiatives,with 10 percent earmarked to con-tinue support of Envision ChildrenSummer Program.

In addition, $1,200 was awardedto YMLC to expand free tutoring ser-vices to students throughout thecommunity, $250 went to the Spring-field Township Art Council for arteducation and literacy, and MountHealthy City Schools received$2,464 for an intensive ACT prepara-tion program.

Last year, $500 was awarded toYouth Motivation Learning Centerfor tutoring supplies, servicing Win-ton Woods City School students, $300was given for Envision ChildrenSummer Camp supplies held at Win-ton Woods Intermediate School,2015: $500 was awarded to the ArtsConnect Young Entreprenuers Pro-gram, $1500 was awarded to Whit-aker Elementary supportive aca-demic services and $1,000 estab-lished Good CATCH Bishop ErvinWatson Sr. Scholarship.

You can learn more about GoodCATCH at www.goodcatch-cin-cy.com

Reds tickets a Good CATCH for local communitiesJennie [email protected]

PROVIDED.

Students sing the National Anthembefore the Community Night at the Redsevent for Good CATCH every year.

Page 3: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 3ANEWS

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4A • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 NEWS

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proudsponsor of

The Hamilton CountyRecycling and SolidWaste District’s free resi-dential yard trimmingsdrop-off sites are nowopen.

The District providesfree residential yardtrimming drop-off siteson Saturdays and Sun-days, from 11:30 a.m. to 5p.m., through Nov. 27 asfollows:

West: Kuliga Park, 6717Bridgetown Road inGreen Township;

North: Rumpke Sani-tary Landfill, 3800 StrubleRoad (and Colerain Ave-nue) in Colerain Town-ship;

East: Bzak Landscap-ing, 3295 Turpin Lane (offstate Route 32) in Ander-son Township.

(Also open Monday –Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 5p.m. in addition to hourslisted above; closed Mon-day, May 30; Monday, July4; Monday, Sept. 5, andThursday,Nov. 24).

Guidelines:» Landscapers and

commercial establish-ments are NOT eligible toparticipate in this pro-gram.

» Hamilton Countyresidents only; pleasebring proof of residency,such as a driver’s licenseor utility bill.

» No large trailers ortrucks larger than pick-ups.

» Cut brush and treebranches to four feet orless – must not exceed onefoot in diameter.

» Bundle brush andtree branches with a ma-terial such as twine – mustnot be heavier than 50pounds.

» Bring yard trim-mings to the locations incontainers or bags –brown paper bags pre-ferred.

» Containers and plas-tic bags will be returned.

» No pallets, boards,nails, fence or wire ac-cepted.

» No bricks, stones orsoil accepted.

For more information,please call the RecyclingHotline at 946-7766, visitHamiltonCountyRecycle-s.org, or interact on Twit-ter (@HamCoRecycling)and Facebook (Hamilton-CountyRecycling).

Hamilton County’s yard trimmingsdrop-off sites now open

Colerain Township’shistoric cemeteries havemore than 5,000 graves,and probably about thatmany stories to hear orimagine.

You can trace the com-munity’s story through theconflicts of history, fromthe Revolutionary War,

through the War of 1812,the Civil War, and WorldWar I and World War II. Fa-miliar names, such as Wei-gel, Pottinger, Compton,Bevis, Stehlin and Hughes,now memorialized on busi-nesses, schools and streets,can be found on the stonesof the graveyards in thetownship.

The Coleraine Histori-cal Society is sponsoring a

“Dearly Departed Ceme-tery Walk” from 10 a.m. to 1p.m. Saturday, April 30. It’sa self-guided tour to visitseveral of the historic Col-erain cemeteries. Stop atBevis-Cedar Grove Ceme-tery on Colerain Avenuebetween the Dry RidgeConnector and the Inter-state 275 interchange, andget maps and informationabout 11 other historic

cemeteries in ColerainTownship. Guided toursabout the founding fam-ilies of Colerain Townshipwho are buried at Bevis Ce-dar-Grove Cemetery willbe conducted by membersof the historical society be-ginning on the half-hourbeginning at 10:30am.

Start at Bevis, thendrive at your leisure on aself-guided tour of Bethel,Schulinger, Compton, VanSickle, Dunlap StationWest Branch, Foster,White Oak Christian, Hus-ton, Willsey and OliveBranch using the maps andinformation received atBevis. Near Heritage Parkon East Miami River Road,you can visit the Dunlap’sStation Cemetery near thesite of Fort Coleraine, andyou stand where several of

the pioneers who settledthe area with Dunlap, whodied during Shawnee Indi-an attacks in the late 1700s,are buried.

Although no markersremain, the late area histo-rian Ruth Wells said AbnerHunt, who was held hos-tage, and then tortured todeath in 1791, rests some-where in the graveyardthat today is hedged in byfarm fields. Others slainand buried at Dunlap’s Sta-tion include Michael Hahn,Michael Hahn Jr.; MichaelLutz and John McNamara,all of whom died in 1792,Wells maintained.

The small, secluded plotalso contains three veter-ans of the RevolutionaryWar, one from the War of1812, one from the Mexi-can-American War and

two Civil War veterans.“Of all the places in Col-

erain Township, DunlapStation Cemetery is theplace I revere,” Wells saidin Bailey Stewart Rogers’“Gravestones and Inscrip-tions of Colerain Town-ship,” which was publishedfor the township’s bicen-tennial celebration in 1994.

The historical societymaintains a museum at4725 Springdale Roadwhich is open to the publicon the second and fourthSaturday of each monthfrom 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Ad-mission is free for ColerainTownship residents.

For appointments totour the Museum at othertimes, individuals orgroups may call museumtrustee Sandra Shea at 513-702-5687.

Coleraine Historical society sponsors cemetery walk on April 30Jennie [email protected]

Page 5: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 5ANEWS

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Trustees say thanks

JENNIE KEY/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Colerain Township trustees presented Hamilton CountyCommissioner Dennis Deters with a photo plaque featuringthe township’s memorial gateway at Springdale Road andColerain Avenue as a token of thanks for his service as aColerain Township Trustee. Deters stepped down from theColerain Township board to take a seat on the HamiltonCounty Board of County Commissioners.

Triple Creek Kids’Fishing Derby

Great Parks sponsors afree, outdoor familyevent, perfect for younganglers to share in the funof fishing. The TripleCreek Kid’s Fishing Der-by is Sunday, April 24from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. with alake stocked full of chan-nel catfish.

Youngsters ages 16 andunder who catch a taggedfish will have a chance towin a trophy and eachchild who catches any fishwill receive a certificateto commemorate their ac-complishment. Everychild who participateswill receive a special der-by button.

Participants mustbring their own equip-ment. Live bait will beavailable to purchase atthe event. Advanced res-ervations are not neces-sary to participate.

Triple Creek is at 2700Buell Road in ColerainTownship. A valid GreatParks of Hamilton CountyMotor Vehicle Permit ($10annual; $3 daily) is re-quired to enter the parks.

For additional infor-mation, please visit great-parks.org or call 513-521-7275.

Rummage saleThe Northern Hills

United Methodist Churchis having a rummage sale,from 9 to 2 p.m. Friday,May 13, and 9 a.m. to noonSaturday, May 14, at thechurch, 6700 Winton Roadin Finneytown.

There will be a $5 bagsale on Saturday at 10:30a.m. Clothing, handbags,jewelry, household,books, toys, and small fur-niture will be sold. Therewill also be a bake sale onFriday from 9 a.m. to 1p.m.

Parish shows ‘HopeBridge’ screening

The Parish Health Min-istry of St Ignatius Parishin Monfort Heights has fo-cused on mental healththis year. Suicide is the10th cause of death in theU.S.

St Ignatius Church isoffering a free presenta-tion of “Hope Bridge,” amovie written and pro-duced by a Loveland cou-ple, David and Christine

Eaton. The message of thepresentation is to bringawareness to mentalhealth and suicide pre-vention. Representativesfrom local mental healthagencies will be available.

The screening is at 6:30p.m. Friday, June 10, in StIgnatius Parish’s HilvertCenter (behind thechurch), 5222 North BendRoad.

RSVP to the Parish of-fice at 513-661-6565.

‘Spring Fest inWoods’ at BurnetWoods

Cincinnati Parks hostsits first Spring Fest in theWoods, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Saturday, April 23, in Bur-net Woods.

This free familyfriendly event will keepall ages engaged with liveanimal encounters, guid-ed wildflower walks, facepainting, crafts, plant andnatural product vendorsand local experts on handto answer your questionsabout habitat restoration.

Don’t miss the cookingdemonstrations/tastingswith wild edibles you canforage from your ownback yard. For a quickmeal, visit U Lucky Dogfood truck located on-site.Live music from HuTownHoller, a local string band,will keep our feet moving.

Visit park naturaliststo discover the remark-able natural resourcesCincinnati Parks have tooffer.

For more informationon this event, call 861-3435.

Art and gardenshow

Joe Cappel’s GardenCenter will present itsfirst Art & Garden Show,

from noon to 7 p.m. Sun-day, April 24, at the gar-den center, 8370 CheviotRoad.

Enjoy beautiful localartwork and strollthrough the garden cen-ter brimming with yourspring and summer favor-ites. There will be 15 tal-ented vendors showcas-ing their must-see art-work with countlesschoices for you to takehome that day. Joe Cap-pel’s Garden Center willbe offering specials onmany of our items as wellas having onsite design-ers to assist you in makingyour vision a reality.

Plan to spend the daywith us talking to the art-ists, enjoying the sceneryand making purchases tobeautify your home bothinside and out with theconvenience of an on-sitefood truck for refresh-ments.

Call 513-470-9609 forinformation.

Pioneer Antique &Hobby Association

The Pioneer Antique &Hobby Association willmeet at 7 p.m. Wednesday,April 20, at the Nathanael

Greene Lodge, 6394 Wes-selman Road, Cincinnatiin the Mulberry Room.

The program will bepresented by Dayle Dear-dorff, who will discussThe Betts House, the old-est brick house in Cincin-nati.

Call 451-4822 for moreinformation.

Car show atDiamond Oaks

Classic and customautomobiles and truckswill be front and centerSaturday, April 23, at theannual Cars and Couragecar show presented byGreen Township VFWPost 10380.

This year’s show is 10a.m. to 3 p.m. at DiamondOaks Career Campus,6375 Harrison Ave.

Cars and Courage at-tracts entries fromthroughout the Tristate,including muscle cars,imports, rat rods, domes-tic cars and more. Awardsare given in six categoriesand 25 People’s ChoiceAwards will be voted onby attendees.

The family-friendlyshow is open to all ages.Admission is free. Hotdogs and hamburgers willbe available to buy.

The Diamond Oakslabs and facilities will beopen for tours.

Proceeds go towardhelping the VFW groupfulfill its mission of serv-ing veterans, active ser-vice members and thecommunity.

Show entries are $10per car. Show and regis-tration information can befound atwww.vfw10380.org.

Spots are also available

for sponsors and vendors.Contact event organizersvia email [email protected].

Great Parks auctionThe Great Parks of

Hamilton County annualauction will be Saturday,April 23, at the WintonWoods Maintenance Com-plex. Viewing of itemsstarts at 8 a.m. and bid-ding starts at 9 a.m.

Great Parks will beauctioning used surplusequipment including ve-hicles, lawn maintenanceequipment, recreationequipment, office equip-ment, golf equipment, etc.For a detailed list of items,visit www.greatparks.org(http://bit.ly/1VAwDBy).

Those interested inbuying items from theauction can pay with cash,check, MasterCard, Visa,American Express andDiscover. Proper identifi-cation may be required.

The Winton WoodsMaintenance Complex ison Golfview Drive be-tween Springdale Roadand Mill Road in WintonWoods. A valid GreatParks of Hamilton Countymotor vehicle permit ($10annual; $3 daily) is re-quired to enter the parks.

For additional infor-mation, visit greatpark-s.org or call 513-521-7275.

Adopt a countywarning siren

Hamilton CountyEmergency ManagementAgency and the Home-land Security Agency areintroducing a new pro-gram, Adopt-A-Siren, tohelp monitor the county’soutdoor warning sirens.

Citizens chosen to par-

ticipate will be asked tolisten to assigned sirens inthe county during eachmonthly test and reportback to the agency.

By registering to be anoutdoor warning sirenvolunteer, HamiltonCounty residents arehelping neighbors and thecommunity to be saferthroughout the yearagainst severe weatherevents.

Those interested inadopting a siren close tothem can visit the countyagency’s website, www.hamiltoncountyohioema.org/siren-watch-program, to view the list of activesirens and register as avolunteer.

Bob Kline MemorialScholarship Dance

The annual fundraiserdance for the Bob KlineMemorial Scholarshipwill be from 8 p.m. to mid-night on Saturday, April30, at the Wesley WernerAmerican Legion Post 513Hall, 7947 Hamilton Ave.

Tickets are $15 each or$25 per couple.

Michelle Robinson willbe performing. Thisdance raises money topresent eight scholar-ships to senior athletes.The committee awardstwo $1,000 and six $500scholarships. There willbe a DJ, food and drink(beer and soda), basketraffles, split the pot andother prizes. The grandprize will be announced atthe dance. You do not needto be present to win thegrand prize. The dance isfor adults only. For ticketreservations, contact Ar-lene Poppe at 513-324-5249.

BRIEFLY

PROVIDED

St. Ignatius parishioners Mary Ann Bosse, Debbie Rennekamp,Barb Ehrhardt and Barb Evans look over a copy of the film"Hope Bridge."

Page 6: Northwest press 042016

6A • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 NEWS

CE-0000645936

We invite you to stop by and tour our model! 10400 Edgewood Rd, Harrison, OH 45030

www.hearthhomecommunities.com

Breathe new life into your home and a new lifestyle- Learn more about living the “Green Acres” life -Fresh Air & A Fresh Start at Villages of Whitewater.

Join Karen Sacksteder of Sacksteder’s Interiors & Villages of Whitewater -

A Luxury Ranch Rental CommunityTuesday • April 26 • 11:30a-1p

Karen will share 2016 design trends and talk abouthow downsizing doesn’t mean giving up luxury. Light snacks and refreshments will be served.

Limited space available!Please RSVP by calling 513.729.7600Plus while you are there, you can register to win

a Sacksteder’s Interiors Gift Card!

findnsave.cincinnati.com

Business updateWe welcome news

about your business, in-cluding new hires, promo-tions, business openings,special events etc ...

Promotions of sales arebest handled as ads. Callour advertising depart-ment at 768-8404.

Business updates arepublished periodically.

College cornerWe want to share news

about local college stu-dents.

Most of the informa-tion in our “College Cor-ner” section is submittedby a third-party PR firmused by schools, whichdesignates specific publi-cations.

Some colleges send usthe information directly.

Parents are also wel-come to submit the infor-mation. Make sure you in-clude in what communitythe student lives.

Email information [email protected].

“College Corner” ispublished periodically.

Honor rollsHere are the guide-

lines for submitting honorrolls to The CommunityPress:

» Honor rolls should besubmitted as simple textfiles or non-formatted MSWord files. Non-format-ted means no columns ortabs.

Please do not send Ex-cel files or spreadsheets.

» Example of how hon-or rolls should look:

Name of schoolThese students made

the honor roll for the(first/second/third/

fourth) quarter:GradeType of honorsAmy Allen, Bill Baker,

Joe Jones, John Smith, etc...

Next gradeType of honorsAmy Allen, Bill Baker,

Joe Jones, John Smith, etc...

» Use regular case fornames. Do not submit inALL CAPS.

» We post all honorrolls online at Cincinnati-.com. We can not guaran-tee all honor rolls will beprinted, because of spaceconsiderations. We re-serve the right to publishpartial honor rolls.

» Honor rolls can beemailed to [email protected] or [email protected].

» Questions can beemailed to [email protected].

ObituariesBasic obituary infor-

mation and a color photo-graph of your loved one ispublished without chargeby The Community Press.

Most notices are sub-mitted by the funeralhomes. We no longer pro-vide forms.

Please include the spe-cific community in whichthe person lived, so wecan make sure we publishit in the correct paper.

Because of space, wemay limit publication tothe paper which coversthe community in whichthe person lived.

For Western HillsPress, Delhi Press, PriceHill Press, NorthwestPress and Hilltop Press,email to [email protected] and

[email protected].

For Tri-County Press,Suburban Life, Indian HillJournal, Northeast Subur-ban Life, Loveland Her-ald, Eastern Hills Journal,Forest Hills Journal, Mil-ford-Miami Advertiser,North Clermont Commu-nity Journal, CommunityJournal Clermont and Be-thel Journal, email to [email protected] [email protected].

To publish a larger me-morial tribute, call 242-4000 for pricing details.

Because of the numberof notices we receive, itcan take several weeksbefore a notice is pub-lished.

Police reportsCommunity Press pub-

lishes incident recordsprovided by local policedepartments. All reportspublished are public rec-ords.

Readers on vacationPlanning a vacation?

Take your CommunityPress paper with you, andsend us a photo.

Tell us who is in thephoto, where they live andwhere the photo was tak-en. Please provide IDsfrom left to right, front toback (or bottom to top).Readers on Vacation pho-tos must be submitted byemail. Send the photo as a.jpg attachment. DO NOTimbed photos in the bodyof the email or in MS Wordfiles, or put photos on adrop box or FTP site. Pho-tos should be at least 200Kfile size.

Email to [email protected].

HOW TO SHARE YOUR NEWS

Page 7: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 7A

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

NORTHWESTPRESSEditor: Richard Maloney, [email protected], 248-7134

Colerain High School Students from Colerain High

School have been selected topaint rain barrels as part of thefourth annual Rain Barrel ArtProject, an initiative designedto educate the community aboutwater conservation and pollu-tion caused by storm water run-off.

The Rain Barrel Art Projectis a joint effort of SaveLocalWa-ters.org and the Cincinnati Zoo& Botanical Garden. As part ofthis initiative, students and oth-er community membersthroughout the Ohio River Val-ley submitted artistic designs tobeautify otherwise dull rainbarrels. Fifty of those designswere selected, and the submit-ting artists now are paintingthem on rain barrels that will bedisplayed at the CincinnatiZoo’s Go Green Garden throughApril and auctioned off duringthe Rain Barrel Art BenefitAuction on April 21, 2016.

The students of ColerainHigh School were selected todesign and paint three rain bar-rels for this year’s event. Theparticipating students from theAdvanced Design class areworking under the leadership ofart teacher Carrie Barnett. Thethree groups of students devel-oped concepts that were sub-mitted and approved for thisyear’s event. Students workedon painting their rain barrelsover a course of about threeweeks. Each design is originaland shows off the students’ ar-tistic skills and their ability tocollaborate on an art project.

The painted rain barrels willbe auctioned off on April 21,2016, during the zoo’s Party forthe Planet event, with proceedsbenefitting conservation educa-tion in the Ohio River Valley.“The zoo is thrilled to be hostingthe rain barrel event onceagain. As the ‘Greenest Zoo inAmerica,’ we are always look-ing for ways to inspire our com-munity to take action that canimpact the environment in posi-tive ways,” said Sophia Ci-fuentes, the zoo’s sustainabilitycoordinator.

For more information re-garding the Rain Barrel ArtProject or SaveLocalWater-s.org, contact John Nelson at513-772-7645 or visit the websiteat

savelocalwaters.org/rain-barrel-art-project. For

more information on the stu-dents of Colerain High Schooland their rain barrels, contactCarrie Barnett, Art Depart-ment Chairperson [email protected].

Northwest High SchoolThe Northwest High School

Booster Association inductedthe Class of 2016 Hall of FameInductees at ceremonies April14.

This year’s inductees were:Seth Eckerlin(’06), John Flow-ers (’98), Darren Heidenreich(‘92), Bruce Kennedy (’98),Heather McKeee (’10) and Dar-ren Schneider (’01).

Our Lady of Grace School» More than 200 competitive

writers from 42 schools com-peted in the Regional Power ofthe Pen Tournament at Wyo-ming Middle School.

Our Lady of Grace had sixwriters who qualified and com-peted in this regionals.

Seventh-grader Eileen Jonesplaced 20th among the seventh-grade writers and has qualifiedto advance to the state tourna-ment. Jones received a “Best ofthe Best” Award for her story ti-tled “A Bigger Brain,” earningher publication in next year’sPower of the Pen Book of Win-ners.

Other OLG students whocompeted in the regional tour-nament included seventh-grad-

er Julie Bittner and eighth-graders Stephanie Ahrnsen,Emily Lawson, Isabella Lynchand Courtney Stiles.

McAuley High School» The McAuley community

celebrates march with “MERFMadness.”

MERF stands for McAuleyEmergency Relief Fund and,through MERF, money anditems are collected each weekto donate to different charitableorganizations. ThroughoutMarch, students and adults do-nated much-needed food andtoiletry items to CAIN's FoodPantry and Mount Healthy Alli-ance Inc. The McAuley commu-nity was able to give 53 bags toCAIN's Food Pantry and 53 bagsto Mount Healthy Alliance Inc.Many students helped sort anddeliver these items.

Gina Keith, McAuley’s ser-vice coordinator, received athank you message for bothfood pantries: “Thank you somuch for the wonderful gift tothe food pantry. Our clients willbe thrilled to receive the per-sonal items as well as the food.Your gift came at a time when itwas greatly needed.

“Your grand total was 421pounds (for each pantry). Passon our thanks to everyone whoparticipated.”

» The McAuley High Schooland La Salle High School VocalEnsembles performed both to-gether and as individual choirsin the Festival Disney competi-tion in Orlando, Florida, theweek after Easter. The McAu-ley/La Salle group received nu-merous awards, including:Mixed Choir – superior rating,best in class; Show Choir – supe-rior rating, best in class; Men’sChoir – superior rating; Wom-en’s Choir - superior rating,andoutstanding soloist award – Ja-cob Nichols, La Salle senior.

Superior ratings mean thatthe average of all four groups

from the three Festival Disneyadjudicators was in the 90 per-cent to 100 percent range. Thisrating is based on the NationalMusic Standards and the supe-rior ratings are quite an accom-plishment.

Best in Class awards are pre-sented to the highest scoring en-semble within each division andclassification, which is calculat-ed based upon the size of theschool.

The McAuley Vocal Ensem-ble is directed by Mary White.The members are: Rosie Belle-man, Janie Burwick, EmilyDriehaus, Sarah Elchynski,Lynsey Ficker, Maria Huey,Lauren Humpert, MeghanHutchins, Kylie Montgomery,Danielle Mouch, AmberSchmuelling, Madeline Smith,Mirey Taite, Amanda Wood andJordan Zulli.

The La Salle Vocal Ensembleis directed by Cindy Webb. Themembers are: Bryan Barry, Za-chary Brueneman, Jason Duna-way, Michael Fiore, AndrewKathman, Conner Liette, ArrickMaccarone, Logan Montgome-ry, Tyler Neel, Jacob Nichols,Edward Owsley-Longino, Alex-ander Prinzbach, Stephen

Schwemberger, Mason Silliesand Daniel Uetrecht.

» » Two McAuley HighSchool alumnae receivedawards at Xavier University’sAll Honors Day, including theAcademic Honors Convocation.Emmy Schwartz, McAuleyclass of 2013, received the Fran-cis I. Hamel Psychology Award.This is awarded to a junior psy-

chology major demonstratingexcellence in psychology andoutstanding academic perfor-mance. Sarah Workman, classof 2012, received the Excellencein Accounting Award presentedto accounting majors in theirsenior year, who have demon-strated excellence in the studyof accounting.

SCHOOL NOTES

PROVIDED

The McAuley and La Salle vocal ensembles won several awards at the Festival Disney Ensemble in Orlando.

PROVIDED

The McAuley and La Salle vocal ensembles on stage at Festival Disney.

PROVIDED

McAuley students help with the sorting and delivery of the MERF Madnesscollection. From left: front, Alexis Fehring , Jenna Averbeck, Kelsey Mooney,Mia Raleigh and Anh Nguyen; back, Cassie Fulks, Tiffany Nascimento andJulie Lasonczyk.

THANKS TO PAULETTA CROWLEY

Members of Carrie Barnett’s Advanced Design class: Raph Bishop, LayneFrederick, Rachel Bachman, Christian Weber, Megan New, Katie Laycock,Jeremy Sullivan Julia Block, Keirstin Campbell, and Claire Stehlin. Notpictured are Justin Hiles & Caleb Sunderhaus

PROVIDED

Our Lady of Grace Power of the Pen regional competitors, from left: front.Courtney Stiles and Emily Lawson; Isabella Lynch, Eileen Jones, Julie Bittnerand Stephanie Ahrnsen.

PROVIDED

McAuley High School alumnaeEmmy Schwartz and SarahWorkman were honored at XavierUniversity's All-Honors Day.

Page 8: Northwest press 042016

8A • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016

THURSDAY, APRIL 21Art & Craft ClassesDrawing Classes, 6:30-8:30p.m., Springfield TownshipSenior and Community Center,9158 Winton Road, Art Room.Students deepen understandingof form through perspective,color, and rapid visualizationdrawings. Ages 15-Up. $85.Reservations required. Present-ed by ArtsConnect. 522-1410;www.theartsconnect.us. Spring-field Township.

Business SeminarsEPA Lead Renovator Training,8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Proactive SafetyServices Training Center, 1500Kemper Meadow Drive, ThisLead Renovator CertificationInitial course is 8 hours in lengthand includes both EPA-HUDapproved lead safety trainingand certification. Ages 18 andup. $240. Registration required.Presented by ProActive SafetyServices. 372-6232; www.proac-tivesafetyservices.com. ForestPark.

CivicGreat Parks of HamiltonCounty Board Meeting, 1p.m., Winton Woods, 10245Winton Road, Free. Presented byGreat Parks of Hamilton County.521-7275; www.greatparks.org.Springfield Township.

Dance ClassesWestern Square Dance Les-sons, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Forest ParkActivity Center, 651 W. SharonRoad, Low impact physicalactivity improves mind, bodyand spirit. Ages 8 and up canexercise together to variety ofmusic from western to modernday pop. Price is per person, perclass. $5. Presented by SunshineSquares Square Dance Club.232-1303; www.sunshinesqua-resclub.org. Forest Park.

EducationGenealogy Club, 11 a.m. tonoon, Green Township BranchLibrary, 6525 Bridgetown Road,Hands-on computer practicum:team research for elusive ances-tors.” If available, please bringfully-charged, WIFI-ready,laptop computer. Ages 18 andup. Free. Presented by PublicLibrary of Cincinnati & HamiltonCounty. 369-6095. Green Town-ship.

Exercise ClassesDance Jamz, 6:30-7:30 p.m.,Sayler Park Community Center,6720 Home City Ave., Dancefitness class incorporates highintensity interval training. Ages18 and up. $40 for 10 classes, $5per class. Presented by DanceJamz. 706-1324. Sayler Park.

Dance Fit, 9:30-10:30 a.m.,Keeping Fit Studio, 7778 Col-erain Ave., Workout designedfor all levels of fitness. For ages16 and up. $5. 720-4142. Col-erain Township.

Barre Fit, 5:30-6:20 p.m., West-ern Tennis and Fitness Club,5490 Muddy Creek, Balance,strength and flexibility are focusof class. Ages 18 and up. $15.451-4233; www.westerntfc.com.Green Township.

Circuit Fit Training, 4:45-5:45p.m., Keeping Fit Studio, 7778Colerain Ave., Dance fitness classthat incorporates weights,exercise tubes, strength trainingand toning for all levels offitness. For ages 16 and up. $5.720-4142. Colerain Township.

Step Circuit Fitness, 7:05-8:05p.m., Keeping Fit Studio, 7778Colerain Ave., Fitness classincorporates step (optional),weights, exercise tubes andtoning. For ages 16 and up. $5.720-4142. Colerain Township.

Pure Potential ChiKung(Qi-gong)/TaiChi, 9:30-11 a.m.,Gather Studio, 6110 HamiltonAve., Second Floor, AboveMarty’s Hops & Vines, freeparking. Learn to engage withown energy system based upontraditional Chinese technique ofChiKung(Qigong). Last half ofclass includes TaiChiEasy. $50.Pre-registration Discount. Pre-sented by Harmonic PulseWellness. 405-1514; www.har-monicpulsewellness.com. Col-lege Hill.

Spring Introduction of Yogafor Beginners, 6-7 p.m., Earth-Connection, 370 Neeb Road, Forparticipants who have nevertried yoga. $85 for 10-classseries. Reservations recom-mended. Presented by Yoga byMarietta. 675-2725. Delhi Town-ship.

Karaoke and Open Mic

Mean Jean Rockin’ Thursdays,9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Club Trio, 5744Springdale Road, Free. 385-1005;www.clubtriolounge.com.Colerain Township.

LecturesIntroduction to the 8 Limbs ofYoga, 7:15-8:15 p.m., Earth-Connection, 370 Neeb Road,Learn about 8 basic elements ofthe practice of yoga. $60 for 6class series. Reservations recom-mended. Presented by Yoga byMarietta. 675-2725; www.yoga-bymarietta.com. Delhi Town-ship.

Literary - SigningsJeff Howe: “Into the RoaringFork”, 6 p.m., College HillBranch Library, 1400 W. NorthBend Road, Free. Presented byPublic Library of Cincinnati &Hamilton County. 369-6036;www.cincinnatilibrary.org.College Hill.

Music - OldiesThe Mike Davis Show, 7-9 p.m.,Jim & Jack’s on the River, 3456River Road, Entertainer andtribute artist salutes Elvis Pres-ley, Tom Jones, Neil Diamondand other music icons. $10.Reservations required. 251-7977.Riverside.

NatureBirds, Blooms and PaintedPots, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Farbach-Werner Nature Preserve, 3455Poole Road, Families invited tostop by during week of April15-29 and paint a pot. Pots willbe hung in park trees. Weekendof April 30-May 1, plant a flowerin pot. Wildflower hike, tie-dyeproject, games, crafts. Free,requires Hamilton Countyvehicle permit. Presented byGreat Parks of Hamilton County.521-7275; www.greatparks.org.Colerain Township.

On Stage - TheaterGlengarry Glen Ross, 7:30 p.m.,Warsaw Federal Incline Theater,801 Matson Place, Look into livesof 4 desperate Chicago realestate agents as they lie, bribe,betray, flatter, intimidate andeven burglarize their way toelusive, illusory success. $26, $23seniors and students. Presentedby Covedale Center for thePerforming Arts. 241-6550;warsawfederalinclinetheater-.com. East Price Hill.

RecreationGroup Fitness, 5:45-6:30 a.m.,Delhi Senior and CommunityCenter, 647 Neeb Road, Bringmat and set of 5-15 lb. dumb-bells. Ages 18 and up. $45 for 4week session or $10 per work-out. Presented by RTR Fitness,LLC. 706-0477; www.rtrfit-ness.com. Delhi Township.

Weekly Bingo, 12:30 p.m.-3p.m., North College Hill SeniorCenter, 1586 Goodman Ave.,$.50 per card. 521-3462. NorthCollege Hill.

Support GroupsReclaiming Intimacy, 6:30-8p.m., OHC West Medical OfficeBuilding, 3301 Mercy HealthBlvd., OHC West Medical OfficeBldg. Provides safe, professional-ly facilitated and fun environ-ment for women to discussconcerns and learn about in-timacy and sexual function aftercancer diagnosis. Stacey Birk-heimer discusses helpful prod-ucts, tips and activities. Everyonereceives $50 gift card. For Wom-en. Free. Reservations recom-mended. Presented by CancerSupport Community. 791-4060.Green Township.

FRIDAY, APRIL 22Business SeminarsEPA Lead Renovator Training,8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Proactive SafetyServices Training Center, $240.Registration required. 372-6232;www.proactivesafetyservi-ces.com. Forest Park.

Exercise ClassesDance Fit, 9:30-10:30 a.m.,Keeping Fit Studio, $5. 720-4142.Colerain Township.

Dance Fit Express, 4:45-5:15p.m., Keeping Fit Studio, 7778Colerain Ave., Fast dance fitnessclass that incorporates weightsand is completed on feet. Forages 16 and up. $5. 720-4142.Colerain Township.

Strength Training, 5:15-5:45p.m., Keeping Fit Studio, 7778Colerain Ave., No-impactstrength building and bodytoning class. For ages 16 and up.$5. 720-4142. Colerain Town-ship.

Vinyasa Flow Yoga, 6-7 p.m.,

EarthConnection, 370 NeebRoad, $85 for 10 class pass, $505-class pass, $11 drop-in. Present-ed by Yoga by Marietta. 675-2725; www.yogabymarietta-.com. Delhi Township.

Engage Your Inner HealerChiKung(Qigong)/TaiChi,6:30-8 p.m., Gather Studio, 6110Hamilton Ave., Second Floor,Above Marty’s Hops & Vines,free parking. Uses purposefulrelaxation, breath, posturalawareness and gentle move-ments. Self-applied massage andTaiChiEasy. $50. Pre-registrationDiscount. Presented by Harmon-ic Pulse Wellness. 405-1514;www.harmonicpulsewell-ness.com. College Hill.

Literary - Book ClubsMonthly Book Club, 11 a.m. tonoon, North College Hill SeniorCenter, 1586 Goodman Ave.,Monthly Book Club held 4thFriday of every month. Call forcurrent book title. For seniors.Free. 521-3462. North CollegeHill.

Music - CountryKevin McCoy Band, 9:30 p.m.to 1:30 a.m., Club Trio, 5744Springdale Road, Free. 385-1005;www.clubtriolounge.com.Colerain Township.

NatureBirds, Blooms and PaintedPots, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Farbach-Werner Nature Preserve, Free,requires Hamilton Countyvehicle permit. 521-7275;www.greatparks.org. ColerainTownship.

On Stage - StudentTheater

Spring Musical, 7 p.m., MountSt. Joseph University, 5701 DelhiRoad, University Theatre. Show-cases acting and vocal skills oftalented cast as they presentmusical version of favoritechildren’s fairy tale. $15. Reser-vations required. Presented byUrsuline Academy Stage Compa-ny. 961-3410, ext. 190;www.saintursula.com. DelhiTownship.

The Man Who Came to Dinner,7 p.m., La Salle High School,3091 North Bend Road, Classicromp follows escapades ofsophisticated New Yorker Sheri-dan Whiteside, forced by acci-dent to stay with Ohio family,whose lives he and his outra-geous friends disrupt withhilarious results. Ages 10-99. $12premium, $10 reserved, $8bleachers, $5 student bleachers.Reservations recommended.Presented by La Salle HighSchool Drama. Through April 24.741-2369; www.lasallehs.net/drama. Green Township.

On Stage - TheaterGlengarry Glen Ross, 8 p.m.,Warsaw Federal Incline Theater,$26, $23 seniors and students.241-6550; warsawfederalincli-netheater.com. East Price Hill.

The Fantasticks, 8-10:30 p.m.,Glenmore Playhouse, 3716Glenmore Ave., Funny andromantic musical about boy andgirl who fall in love, grow apartand finally find their way backto each other despite meddlingfathers. Ages 13-93. $16. Reser-vations recommended. Present-ed by The Drama Workshop.Through May 8. 598-8303;www.thedramaworkshop.org.Cheviot.

SATURDAY, APRIL 23AuctionsHamilton County Park DistrictUsed Equipment, 8 a.m.,Winton Woods, 10245 WintonRoad, Winton Woods Mainte-nance Compound. Viewingbegins at 9 a.m. Antique tractorsand furniture, cars, lawn care,office, recreational equipmentand more.Free. Presented byGreat Parks of Hamilton County.521-7275. Springfield Township.

Community EventHealthy Kids Day, 11 a.m. to 2p.m., Parky’s Farm, 10037 DalyRoad, Bounce house, climbingwall, relay and obstacle courses,visits with farm animals, tractorrides, face painting, hula-hoopand dance contests, healthyfood sampling and more. Free.Presented by YMCA of GreaterCincinnati. 362-9622; www.my-y.org. Springfield Township.

Dining EventsRoast Pork and SauerkrautDinner, 4:30-7 p.m., St. PaulUnited Church of Christ, 5312Old Blue Rock Road, $10, $ages10 and under. 385-9077. ColerainTownship.

Drink TastingsWine Tasting, noon to 5 p.m.,Henke Winery, 3077 HarrisonAve., 7 tastes, souvenir glass.Appetizers and meals available.Ages 21 and up. $10. Reserva-tions recommended. 662-9463;www.henkewine.com. West-wood.

EducationConcealed Carry Course, 8 a.m.to 5 p.m., Tactical IntelligenceGroup, 6111 Morgan Road,Course qualifies for over dozenstates’ permits, including OH,KY, and FL Non-Resident. Gobeyond basics and learn realworld skills. Ages 21 and up.$150. Registration required.579-1405; bit.ly/1SvG19C. Cleves.

Exercise ClassesDance Jamz, 9:30-10:30 a.m.,Sayler Park Community Center,6720 Home City Ave., Dancefitness class incorporates highintensity interval training. Ages18 and up. $40 10-class pass, $5single. Presented by DanceJamz. 460-6696. Sayler Park.

Dance Fit, 9:30-10:30 a.m.,Keeping Fit Studio, $5. 720-4142.Colerain Township.

P90X Live, 8-8:50 a.m., WesternTennis and Fitness Club, 5490Muddy Creek, Adult fitness classfeatures cardio, strength andflexibility. Ages 18 and up. $12.451-4233; www.westerntfc.com.Green Township.

Barre Fit, 10:30-11:20 a.m.,Western Tennis and Fitness Club,5490 Muddy Creek, Balance,strength and flexibility are focusof class. Ages 18 and up. $15.451-4233; www.westerntfc.com.Green Township.

Yoga, 10:05-11:15 a.m., MercyHealthPlex Western Hills, 3131Queen City Ave., Free programfor anyone impacted by cancer.Free. Presented by CancerSupport Community. 791-4060.Westwood.

Music - Classic RockHowl’n Maxx, 9 p.m., Drew’s onthe River, 4333 River Road, $3.451-1157; www.howlnmaxx.com.Riverside.

Music - CountryAmy Sailor, 9:30 p.m. to 1:30a.m., Club Trio, 5744 SpringdaleRoad, Free. 385-1005; www.club-triolounge.com. Colerain Town-ship.

NatureBirds, Blooms and PaintedPots, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Farbach-Werner Nature Preserve, Free,requires Hamilton Countyvehicle permit. 521-7275;www.greatparks.org. ColerainTownship.

On Stage - Children’sTheater

The Garden of Rikki Tikki Tavi,2 p.m., Arts Center at Dunham,1945 Dunham Way, Free. Pre-sented by Sunset Players Inc..588-4988; www.sunsetplay-ers.org. West Price Hill.

Playhouse Off the Hill: TheGarden of Rikki Tikki Tavi, 2p.m., Arts Center at Dunham,1945 Dunham Way, Ages 5 andup. Contact venue for pricing.Presented by Playhouse in thePark. 251-4222. West Price Hill.

On Stage - StudentTheater

Spring Musical, 2 p.m., 7 p.m.,Mount St. Joseph University,

$15. Reservations required.961-3410, ext. 190; www.sain-tursula.com. Delhi Township.

The Man Who Came to Dinner,7 p.m., La Salle High School, $12premium, $10 reserved, $8bleachers, $5 student bleachers.Reservations recommended.741-2369; www.lasallehs.net/drama. Green Township.

On Stage - TheaterGlengarry Glen Ross, 8 p.m.,Warsaw Federal Incline Theater,$26, $23 seniors and students.241-6550; warsawfederalincli-netheater.com. East Price Hill.

The Fantasticks, 8-10:30 p.m.,Glenmore Playhouse, $16.Reservations recommended.598-8303; www.thedramawork-shop.org. Cheviot.

SUNDAY, APRIL 24Drink TastingsCatholic Singles Wine TastingParty, 2-5 p.m., Werk CrossingCondominium Clubhouse, 5350Werk Road, Meet with otherTri-state Catholic singles. Widevariety of wines, snacks andother goodies. Ages 21 and up.Benefits Catholic Alumni Club.$8. Reservations recommended.Presented by Catholic AlumniClub. 520-1323; www.cacofcin-cinnati.com. Bridgetown.

Exercise ClassesFree Workout Every Sunday,2-5 p.m., Greater EmanuelApostolic Temple, 1150 W.Galbraith Road, Lower level.Chair exercise and Leslie San-sone’s low-impact, indoor,aerobic workout. Free. Present-ed by SEM Laurels. 324-6173.Springfield Township.

Dance Fit, 9:30-10:30 a.m.,Keeping Fit Studio, $5. 720-4142.Colerain Township.

ExhibitsDelhi in Bloom and The Lan-guage of Flowers, 12:30-3p.m., Delhi Historical Society

Farmhouse Museum, 468 An-derson Ferry Road, Learn historyof Delhi Township through itsfloriculture with new exhibits.Delhi in Bloom explains howgrapes, growers and green-houses shaped history of DelhiTownship and The Language ofFlowers explores Victorian’s loveof flowers. Free. Presented byDelhi Historical Society. 720-0942; www.delhihistoricalsocie-ty.org. Delhi Township.

Music - Concert SeriesWestwood First ConcertSeries, 3-5 p.m., Westwood FirstPresbyterian Church, 3011 Harri-son Ave., Sanctuary. Choir andsoloists under direction ofHeather MacPhail. Concertfeatures music of Andrew LloydWebber and Stephen Sondheim.Free. 661-6846, ext. 105. West-wood.

NatureBirds, Blooms and PaintedPots, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Farbach-Werner Nature Preserve, Free,requires Hamilton Countyvehicle permit. 521-7275;www.greatparks.org. ColerainTownship.

On Stage - StudentTheater

Spring Musical, 2 p.m., MountSt. Joseph University, $15. Reser-vations required. 961-3410, ext.190; www.saintursula.com. DelhiTownship.

The Man Who Came to Dinner,1:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m., La SalleHigh School, $12 premium, $10reserved, $8 bleachers, $5 stu-dent bleachers. Reservationsrecommended. 741-2369;www.lasallehs.net/drama. GreenTownship.

On Stage - TheaterGlengarry Glen Ross, 2 p.m.,Warsaw Federal Incline Theater,$26, $23 seniors and students.241-6550; warsawfederalincli-netheater.com. East Price Hill.

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.

THANKS TO KIMBERLY WHITTON

Birds, Blooms and Painted Pots is 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 21, at Farbach-Werner Nature Preserve,3455 Poole Road, Colerain Township. Families invited to stop by during week of April 15-29 andpaint a pot. Pots will be hung in park trees. During the weekend of April 30-May 1, plant aflower in pot. Participants can also take a wildflower hike, participate in a tie-dye project, playgames and make crafts. The event is free, but entering the park requires Hamilton Countyvehicle permit. Call 521-7275; visit www.greatparks.org.

PUZZLE ANSWERS

N A C H O O L S E N B L O B S H A QE T H E R N O O S E L O V E L G B TA N I M A L H O U S E O N E S E A T E RT I N L I A I S E W E R E N TE N U F O N E A S Y S T R E E T M B AR E A R E N D S O H O A N S W E R S

A L E A T W O R S T E S A IS T U M B L I N G B L O C K F I G H T SH O S E A B A R I H A I R D OA R E S D E S I R E S B E L T O U TG M O S E X A N D T H E C I T Y U N ES E N S A T E S E A B A S S P I C A

C R E S T S M O L E A U J U SR E N O I R C O M M U N I S T S T A T EI D I O I M A M E S S R I SS U N B U R N P D A B R E A C H E DE C O R E D S O X N A T I O N H E X A

T A P E U P D I G I T S D I PT I M E L A P S E G O O G L E E A R T HA P E X S T I R F U G U E G R E E NJ O L T T H E A S T A N D A A N D E

Page 9: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 9ANEWS

I don’t know why I got the urge tobake bread from scratch, but today foundme doing just that. It wasn’t that I had alot of time to do it, either.

We spent most of the early afternoonsplitting and cutting wood for winter.Actually, I did the splitting with a sledge-hammer and wedge, and my husband,Frank, sawed up the big pieces intostackable ones.

Maybe it was learning something new,like splitting really big pieces of wood.Whatever, when we got inside, I decided I wasgoing to bake bread for supper to go along withpressure cooked cottage ham and green beans. Iwanted to share the recipe with you, especiallyif you’re intimidated by making bread fromscratch.

This really is easy, I promise. So try it and letme know how you like it.

Can you help? Braciole madewith round steak

Kenny Ann R., a Suburban Press read-er, is still looking for a recipe made withround steak and not flank. She said:“Bread crumbs were used, maybe onionsand spices. I believe it was round steak, Iknow it was not flank steak. I think therecipe called for using string when youroll it up. I cooked it in (I think) a jar ofspaghetti sauce for a long time. If it

wasn’t a jar of sauce, I know it was very sim-ple.”

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is an herbalist, educa-tor, Jungle Jim’s Eastgate culinary professionaland author. Find her blog online atAbouteating.com. Email her [email protected] with “Rita’s kitchen”in the subject line.

Fast French bread from scratch

This will not be like a French baguette that you buy from the bak-ery. It makes a larger, wider loaf with a close, tender crumb and goldencrust. Use instant fast rising yeast, which is more aggressive than regularyeast.

2 packages instant fast rising yeast (not regular yeast)2-1/4 cups warm water, divided6 cups bread flour (whisk before measuring, and spoon into cup) 1 tablespoon salt

Put yeast into food processor with 1/4 cup warm water. Pulse toblend. Add flour and salt and process a few seconds. Keep motor run-ning and add rest of water, and let it mix until the dough forms a massaround the blade and sides are clean. This will take a minute or two.Remove and knead on very lightly floured surface 5 minutes. Bless thedough.

Divide in half and shape into 2 long loaves, about 12” long each.Place on sprayed baking sheet. Cover and let rise until doubled,

about 45 minutes.Preheat oven to 400. Cut several diagonal slashes on top with sharp

knife. This will deflate the bread a bit, don’t worry.Place in oven and throw a handful of ice cubes on the floor of

oven. This makes for a crunchier crust. Bake 30 minutes, lower temper-ature to 350 and bake 10 minutes more.

I like to slather on some butter on the crust right after it comes outof the oven.

Tip from Rita’s kitchen: Divide recipe in halfYes, you can and you’ll get one nice loaf.

Using a mixer

This will take more time but should turn out well. Put yeast and 1/4 cup water in mixer and blend on low. Add flour

and salt and blend. With machine running, slowly add rest of water andlet it mix until it is very well mixed, starting on low and increasing speedto medium until it forms a on the beater.

Remove and proceed with recipe.

See complete tutorial with photosOn my site: Abouteating.com

Whipped chocolate frosting from ganache

A reader wanted to know how to make this. She saw it on a cook-ing show. Here’s how I do it:

Bring a cup of whipping cream to a boil. Pour over 8 oz ofchopped chocolate, (good quality chocolate bars, not morsels) cover andlet sit 5 minutes. Whisk until smooth and refrigerate until slightly firm,about 1 hour but still spreadable. This is called ganache and it’s spreadover cake. To make whipped frosting, cool ganache until firm, then beatwith mixer until fluffy. Don’t overbeat as it may curdle.

THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

This French bread can be made quickly using fast rising yeast.

Tackle baking bread fromscratch (it’s not that hard)

Rita HeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

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Page 10: Northwest press 042016

10A • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016

NORTHWESTPRESS

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

5460 Muddy Creek RoadCincinnati, Ohio 45238phone: 923-3111 fax: 853-6220email: [email protected] site: Cincinnati.com/communities

A publication of

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

NORTHWESTPRESSEditor: Richard Maloney, [email protected], 248-7134

April 13 questionBatman or Superman? Why?

“Tough call on this one. Bat-man has an unrivaled cool carand motorcycle as well as aman-cave to top all man-caves.Big points all around. However,the ability to fly anywhere youwant without the bother of go-ing to an airport or even havingto pay for a ticket, gives Super-man a bit of an edge. Plus, thatX-ray vision thing can certainlycome in handy. The currentworld supply of Kryptonite ispretty small so no worriesthere. For these reasons itwould be easy to give the nod tothe big ‘S’ man except for whenone factors in the fashion as-pects. Face it, spandex andtights are currently out ofvogue and a cape? So two centu-ries ago. But wait, Batman has acape too. Hmmm...”

M.J.F.

“If the decision is based onphysical prowess it would behard to go against Supermanversus Batman let alone anyother ‘super hero.’ However ifthe evaluation is done on contri-butions to society I would haveto go with Batman due to his al-ter ego Bruce Wayne. TheWayne Foundation helped outmany of those in Gotham city.

“Superman’s alter ego of re-porter Clark Kent would pale incomparison. Either way I amnot sure of the reasoning behindthe current movie (’Batmanversus Superman’) except mon-ey. Go figure!”

T.D.T.

April 6 questionEarth Day is April 22. In what

“green” efforts do you partake?

“Here’s what we have beenable to do…

“We donate, reuse and recy-cle as much as possible theitems we won’t use: the five ofus fill less than a garbage caneach week with trash. Every-thing but proteins are compost-ed, the vegetable garden im-proving so much our neighborsnow compost.

“Our dogs daily areas nolonger receive lawn treatments- no weeds there in 10 years. Thelightbulbs were switched andnew trees planted. New plantsare native species (low-mainte-nance) producing fruits andnuts for ourselves (and wildlifewho beat us to them). Garden(veggie and flower) areas areslowly increasing to decreasemowing space. Shopping tripsare combined with other neces-sary errands to reduce drivingtime. A down side: complainingfrom children. An upside: moretime in the schedule to spendwith them outside the car.”

L.B.

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’SQUESTIONShould Ohio consider and enactlaws similar to those recentlysigned into law in North Caroli-na and Mississippi regardingreligious freedom and LGBTrights? Why or why not?

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

Apathy/care? (RE: AlOstendorf, April 6)

The reason for apathy amongmillennials and their bent to-ward change and Socialism isdue to the lack of duty of ourcongress and other legislatorswho refuse to do the job towhich they were elected. Debtpiles up due to their out of con-trol spending some of which isour social security savings. So-cial security is a blessing andshould be preserved, not givento private entities who wouldtake a profit from it.

Mr. O. likes to complainabout everything but he missesthe real point on a lot of issues.First, Socialism is not a badword. It includes all the Chris-tian ideals and takes care ofthose in need as does welfareprograms. Some folks are not aslucky as we are with our jobs,cars and long lines in restau-rants, etc. Secondly, all coun-tries have burdensome debt andalways will have obligations tomeet, but there is really plentyof money out there; Ie: Billionsof dollars we spend on sports,gambling, political campaigns,unnecessary wars, overpriceddrugs, candy, cosmetics, illegaldrugs, donations to other coun-tries and most of all ‘fraud’ and‘cheating’. If all those religiouspeople were honest, we couldsolve a lot of the money prob-lems. Millennials are not stupid.They see what is happening.“Hope & Change” is coming.

Like social security, socialprograms that help the least ofus, are a practical way of pre-

serving our way of life. ACAprovides health care insuranceto millions of us who would nototherwise have health care. Soif it’s subsidized, so is the freeaccess to the ER. At lease, now,some have to pay for their owninsurance. We put too much em-phasis on money. Running acountry is about ‘people’, not aprofit making business. Lastly,why are religious folks so para-noid? We enjoy maximum reli-gious freedom now. Those whocomplain simply want to forcetheir opinions on everyone else.

Ann Thompson Green Township

Thank you ColerainTownship voters

Colerain Residents For Hon-orable Goverment, a citizen ac-tion group in rigorous pursuit ofaccountable, transparent andefficient government in Cole-rain Township, wishes to thankvoters for recognizing there isno need for additional taxes, asstated with Issue 3.

The voters have recognizedall is not doom and gloom due tothe recent annual settlementbetween Rumpke and ColerainTownship, ending a lawsuit andallowing the expansion of thelandfill. Colerain Township canhave good roads, parks and acommunity center by cost ef-fectively using existing andcontinuing funds and not bur-dening taxpayers with yet an-other new tax.

James W. Acton Treasurer, Colerain Residents For

Honorable Government

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

An ominous howl from thetethered black and whitecollie punctuated the moonlitspring night.

It was just one of severalpronounced acts family mem-bers had noticed during thecourse of the week. Earlierthey had observed a sense ofalertness to sounds, otherdogs, and even the slightest ofnoises. All signs pointed to-ward an unwanted adventureaccompanied by a period offamily mourning in the nottoo distant future.

After the town’s deep-throated shift whistles calledrailroad employees to work,the family routines ensued.The dog, Skippy, was un-leashed, adult members of thehousehold departed for workand their son, Colin, went toschool. True to small town lifeeveryone, including familypets had free run of the com-munity with the understand-ing that five o’clock was theappointed time to returnhome. Watches were unneces-sary, body clocks were auto-matically set.

Later, neighbors noticedtwo stray dogs walking withpurpose down the street.They were immediatelyjoined by Skippy and Winky,the dog who lived next door.One of the strays led the packwhile Skippy, the instinctiveherder, kept the adventurerstogether as they crossed astreet and disappeared be-hind a hedge row that lined afield of weeds, wild flowersand honeysuckle. Their un-

known desti-nation forev-er remained amystery toall.

When themagic hour offive o’clockarrived, Skip-py wasAWOL. Atfirst therewere no panic

alarms, but as the daylightturned to night fall, lines ofworry became the commonfacial expression. Searchparties were formed. Whis-tles pierced the evening’sshadows. Alas, not a singledog responded.

So what happened to a“pack of dogs” that went on aspree? Where did they go?What were their food sourc-es? A question not begging ananswer. Were they safe?Would barks reveal theirsecret habitat of animal rev-erie?

Meanwhile, adults andchildren became more de-spondent with each passingday. Neighborhood rumorsraised and diminished hopes.Just a glance at the emptydog house at night elicitedremorseful thoughts and darkdreams.

On the third day the fam-ily’s optimistic thoughts we’rereplaced with lamentablememories. Long faces andresigned feelings of lossdampened the unified solemnmood. Last rites were con-templated.

As the bewitching hour offive o’clock approached gath-ering storm clouds began toreplace the day’s bright sun-light. Tree leaves turned in-ward while the distinct scentof a spring rain permeatedthe air. In the distance a faintrumble of thunder rolledacross the steel gray westernsky.

Looking through a bed-room window Colin heard thelight thunder become a drumroll of sound and fury. Sud-denly, he saw four dogs partthe hedgerow, then race upthe street with Skippy in thelead. Two frightened caninesrushed past the house, whileWinky peeled from the packto crawl under the neighbor’sporch. Skippy leapt onto thefront stoop where he franti-cally pawed the screen door.

The family membersopened the door where theysaw their rain soaked colliecovered with cockleburs,mud, and leaves greetingthem with yelps of joy. Toodirty to allow inside, Colinhugged his long lost friendthen steered him to thescreened back porch wherehis almost unrecognizable petwedged himself against theroom’s most secluded corner.

For this shinning momentall was right in the world.Skippy had come home!

(Story dedicated to doglover’s everywhere.)

Noel Taylor is a formerPrinceton City Schools admin-istrator and a resident ofSharonville.

Skippy come home!

Noel TaylorCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Oil and water don’t mix,but what about oil and thestock market?

Both were in a lockstepdecline, to the tune of an over91 percent correlation whenoil fell below $40 a barrel inDecember, according to LeoChen, a quantitative analystfor Cumberland Advisors, inMarketWatch.com.

The good news is that whathappened recently is a blackswan, says Chen. He says thata correlation between oilprices and stock market vola-tility isn’t the norm.

“In fact, over a five-yearperiod, the correlation (be-tween the S&P index) was anegative 71.8 percent, mean-ing stocks and oil tended tomove in opposite directions.”He goes on to say in his analy-sis that the correlation hasbeen only 25 percent over thepast 20 years.

So what happened thistime around? A decline in oilprices should be good newsfor the economy, correct?

Well, like the 2009 moviewith Meryl Streep and AlexBaldwin, “It’s complicated.”

Some believe the decline isassociated with a slowing,sluggish world economy. Ifglobal GDP is softening, thenthis is bad news for corporateprofits and demand for oil.This in particular involvesChina, which has reported

slowinggrowth.

Anotherperspectiverelates to thestrength ofthe dollarrelative toother cur-rencies. Tobi-as Levkovich,chief of U.S.equity at Citi,

suggests in CNBC in a Ci-tigroup research note that“it’s not about oil and stocks,but rather the strong dollaraffecting them both at thesame time.”

Lastly, there’s the idea of“volatility momentum,”which former Federal Re-serve Chairman Ben Ber-nanke addressed to in hisFeb. 19 blog post on theBrookings Institute website:“If investors retreat fromcommodities as well as stocksduring a period of high un-certainty and risk aversion,then shocks to volatility maybe another reason for theobserved tendency of stocksand oil prices to move togeth-er.”

There are a lot of ingredi-ents in this oil-and-stock soup,and some of them add flavorand clarity, while others maysimply confuse the recipe. Ifthere is any take-away thatmay make sense from a long-

term investing standpoint, it’sthese three observations: therecent oil-stock price cou-pling is not the norm; we haveno idea if the recent lockstepmovement will continue ei-ther up or down; and historytends to reward those whohave a long-term investmenttime horizon.

These are the investorswho view stock market pull-backs as opportunities to buyshares of solid-performingcompanies that have weath-ered economic and equitystorms and have grown overtime.

While we cannot predictthe future, investing in un-certain times like these tendsto eventually reward theinformed and strong-stom-ached shareholder with eitherrising dividends or shareprices - or both.

Larry Blundred of GreenTownship is a registered rep-resentative with Kehoe Fi-nancial Advisors of Cincin-nati, a 33-year-old financialadvising and services prac-tice in Springdale. Kehoeassists clients in developingand implementing financialstrategies to help meet retire-ment, estate and businessplanning objectives, businesscontinuation and successionplanning. For more informa-tion, go to www.kehoe-finan-cial.com or call 481-8555.

Are oil industry and stockmarket friends, or foes?

LarryBlundred COMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Page 11: Northwest press 042016

2016 OHSAA Football Division I Schools by RegionRegion 1Brunswick, Dublin Jerome, Elyria, Findlay, Lewis Center Olentangy,

Powell Olentangy Liberty, Lewis Center Olentangy Orange, Lorain,Marysville, Medina, Newark, North Royalton, Parma, Strongsville,Toledo Start, Toledo Whitmer, Westerville Central, Westerville South

Region 2Austintown-Fitch, Berea-Midpark, Canton GlenOak, Canton Mc-

Kinley, Cleveland Heights, Cleveland John Marshall, ClevelandRhodes, Cleveland St. Ignatius, Cuyahoga Falls, Euclid, Lakewood,Lakewood St. Edward, Massillon Jackson, Mentor, North CantonHoover, Shaker Heights, Solon, Stow-Munroe Falls

Region 3Beavercreek, Columbus Westland, Dublin Coffman, Gahanna

Lincoln, Grove City, Grove City Central Crossing, Hilliard Bradley,Hilliard Darby, Hilliard Davidson, Huber Heights Wayne, KetteringFairmont, Lancaster, Pickerington Central, Pickerington North, Rey-noldsburg, Springfield, Thomas Worthington, Upper Arlington

Region 4Archbishop Moeller, Colerain, Elder, Oak Hills, St. Xavier, Syca-

more, Western Hills, Centerville, Clayton Northmont, Fairfield, Ham-ilton, Lebanon, Lakota East, Mason, Middletown, Milford, Spring-boro, Lakota West

The Ohio High School Athlet-ic Association Board of Direc-tors voted unanimously April 14to change the Division I footballplayoffs from a two-region set-up back to a four-region plat-form. The new alignment willbegin this fall.

Thursday’s 9-0 vote was notmet with fanfare by local Divi-sion I coaches and programs.

“We’re familiar with it. It’s asystem we’ve had before, butwe would have liked to havekept it in two regions,” ColerainAssistant Athletic Director anddefensive backs coach PhillipJoseph said. “I thought that wasbetter. If the goal is to get thebest teams in the playoffs, thetwo-region system was doingthat.”

The OHSAA last had four re-gions in DI football in 2012.

When the OHSAA expandedfootball’s postseason to sevendivisions in 2013, the biggestchange came at the DI level.Since then, Divisions II-VIIhave all consisted of roughly107 schools (give or take aschool). In contrast, DI has beencomprised of the state’s 72 larg-est schools.

In 2013, instead of breakingDI into four regions like the oth-er six divisions, the OHSAA de-cided to break the division intotwo regions – Region I coveredthe northern half of the statewhile Region II covered thesouthern portion. Also, insteadof eight teams per region mak-ing the playoffs, 16 per regionadvanced to the postseason. Thelarger qualification pool, somelocal coaches and administra-tors argue, allowed for not onlya better playoff field but alsosome local teams a chance to getin that they wouldn’t have under

a four-region format.“I think the coaches that we

talked to down here, in general,were opposed to it,” Josephsaid. “This part of the state, it’sdifficult. Between the GCLschools, the GMC schools andwhen you bring in some of theDayton schools, trying to getthe best eight out of that group,sometimes the team that’s ninthor 10th, they’re a team that’sworthy of being in the playoffs.For that reason, we would haveliked to have kept it where itwas.”

But the OHSAA did see is-sues with the format from astatewide standpoint. For in-stance, only 22 of Ohio’s 88counties feature at least one DIschool, so travel was a problemfor some programs. Also, thelack of a true regional champi-onships at the DI level was seen

Football playoff format change displeases DI schoolsJohn [email protected]

See FOOTBALL, Page 2B

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 1B

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

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COLERAIN TWP. - AngelEhrenschwender has aboutfive weeks left at ColerainHigh School. It’s not a lot oftime, but regardless of howlong she has left, the seniorhas spent her four years be-coming a blueprint for all thatembodies Cardinal red.

Ehrenschwender’s playedsoftball and basketball all fouryears at Colerain, in additionto playing golf, tennis andtrack and field.

But that’s only part of allshe’s accomplished.

When Ehrenschwendergraduates later this spring,she will walk summa cum lau-de — the top student in herclass with a 5.68 GPA.

“I am so blessed to have ex-perienced as many seasons asI did as a Colerain athlete,” An-gel said. “I’m so grateful foreverything I’ve experiencedover my four years.

“I’m looking at colleges andI’m trying to find it (the samethings she’s come to love aboutColerain). It’s such a commu-nity, when you walk down thehalls people know you and yougo out in the community andI’m so proud to wear my Col-erain gear. It’s so cool to havethat.”

Ehrenschwender is still de-ciding on college, but shewants to play softball, so at thetop of her list are Denison Uni-versity and Centre College.She likes science, so she’sthinking about majoring in bi-ology with a focus on neurosci-ence.

With all she’s achieved, Eh-renschwender still calls her-

self “a professional procrasti-nator.”

“I can succeed in waiting. Ithink a big part of it is not get-ting stressed out and frustrat-ed, just working efficientlyand getting things done whenthey need to get done. That’swhat my parents taught me atan early age,” she said.

Ehrenschwender creditedher academic success to hermom, and her competitive-ness to her dad, who’s noslouch academically either ashe graduated from BrownUniversity. So she inheritedthe best from both.

“She’s an awesome kid,”said her softball coach Emily

Colerain’sEhrenschwenderembodiesCardinal redAdam [email protected]

THANKS TO TRICIA ODEN

Colerain High School senior AngelEhrenschwender is in her finalseason of competing as aCardinal.

See COLERAIN , Page 2B

COLERAIN TWP. - Beforethe season got started, North-west High School’s Malik Bev-erly was looking to wrest for-mer teammate Jay Trimble’sschool records in the 110 and 300meter hurdles.

It didn’t take long for him tobreak one. At the La Salle Leg-ends meet March 26, Beverlybroke both the stadium recordand school record, clocking14.09 in the 110 event. He’s thelatest in a line of solid North-west boys track athletes, whichinclude Trimble, Miles Baldwin,DeVohn Jackson and MylesPringle.

“That’s been a goal of mineever since I was a little kid,” thesenior said of breaking the rec-ord. “From my standpoint, myseason is going really well.”

That 14.09 mark is the fastestin the city and it’s not evenclose. According to coach LoriSpence, it’s also the top time in

the state and he’s in the top-25for the event across the nation.

To make another goal – the300-meter hurdles record – hap-pen, he needs to shave aboutthree seconds from his top timeto best Trimble’s mark.

The 300 requires a differentstrategy than the 100.

In the 100, Beverly focuseson technique and is constantlyworking to improve his form.With the longer version, it’sabout endurance.

“It’s about getting to thoselast three hurdles,” Spence said.“With him doing a lot of techni-cal work, it’s hard to get aroundto doing the endurance work.However, he does have the abil-ity to get the record and I thinkhe will.”

Beverly has always been be-hind the likes of Baldwin, Trim-ble and Jackson, but only be-cause he was younger. He saidhe never considered himselfahead or behind them in termsof skill. He was right there in

the pack, where he wanted to be.“When they were here, I

didn’t care who was beatingwho,” the team captain said. “Ialways considered us to be atthe same speed.”

However, Spence said this ishis team, his time to succeed.Obviously, a return trip to JesseOwens Memorial Stadium inJune and returning with somehardware are desired results,but there is still about a monthuntil the postseason gets going.

For now, the coach reallylikes Beverly’s chances to bethe next state champion North-west produces.

“He’s been building to thissince he was a gangly fresh-man,” Spence said. “Unless Ihaven’t seen them or they arehiding somewhere, he’s the tophurdler in the city, region andstate right now. Of course,things can happen, but I thinkhe’s the one to beat. This is hisyear.”

TONY TRIBBLE FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Northwest’s Malik Beverly competes in the 110-meter hurdles during the Coaches’ Classic meet at Winton Woods.

Northwest’s Beverly theone to beat in 110 hurdlesNick [email protected]

Page 12: Northwest press 042016

2B • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

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as a negative.“Back in 2013, we had

initially talked about hav-ing four regions for Divi-sion I, but at that time wethought that since therewas a smaller number ofteams in Division I, thatmight lend itself better tohaving just two regions,”OHSAA Assistant Com-missioner and the state’sfootball administratorBeau Rugg said in an OH-SAA statement Thursday.“But with only two re-gions the last three years,the increased travel andlack of emphasis on theregional championshipgame wasn’t always wellreceived.”

Travel and the lack of atraditional regional titlegame – in the two-region

format, the state semifi-nals acted as regional fi-nal games – were both thedriving factor behindThursday’s decisive vote.For some local programs,however, the desire tohave a potentially moreopen postseason super-seded both travel and titlegames.

“If they were lookingfor more diversity, I thinkthey missed the boat onthat one,” Moeller Athlet-ic Director Michael As-beck said. “I think thetwo-regional system al-lowed for some diversityin the playoffs. It allowedfor some different match-ups and it allowed forsome teams to have someopportunities that maynot have happened in afour-regional system. Ithink, by going back to afour-region system,you’re going to create acouple of regions, that

quite frankly, are going tobe a little more stackedthan others.”

With Thursday’s vote,the DI tournament will bebroken down into four re-gions of 18 teams eachwith eight teams fromeach region making thetournament. The new Re-gion IV, which is central-ized around the Cincin-nati-area, consists ofMoeller, Colerain, Elder,Oak Hills, St. Xavier, Syc-amore, Western Hills,Centerville, ClaytonNorthmont, Fairfield,Hamilton, Lebanon, Lako-ta East, Mason, Middle-town, Milford, Springbo-ro and Lakota West.

Also of note, Thursday,the OHSAA Board voted(9-0) to approve a golf pro-posal that would allowmatch play during regu-lar-season golf competi-tion.

FootballContinued from Page 1B

Schwaeble, who’s also aColerain graduate. “Shecomes from a great fam-ily and a bunch of hardworkers. She’s definitelya kid you want on the teamand to influence otherplayers … all the girlsreally look up to her.”

Ehrenschwender saidher dream scenario wouldbe to have a PhD in neuro-science doing research ina lab, finding cures fordiseases, or working as acollege professor.

"If you’re capable,which I am, why would Ido anything less than I’mcapable of,” said Eh-renschwender.

Schwaeble said, “She’sgonna have a very suc-cessful career. I can seeher being the top of herclass in college wherevershe chooses. I think any-body would hire her in asecond with her work eth-ic. Whatever she puts herheart into she’s gonna begood at it.”

Ehrenschwender saidthe end being near reallyhasn’t hit her yet, but itwill.

“I think it’s going to hit

me hard. Right now I’mjust trying to soak up whatI can and try to instill that:this (everything Colerainhas to offer) is so valuablein the younger kids … em-brace it earlier. This is it,this is the greatest thing,the greatest four years ofyour life,” she said. “Ican’t think of anything I’ddo differently. I’m in sucha great situation and I’mprepared for what’s tocome.”

Even though life maytake people away in dif-ferent directions, at aschool like Colerain, lifehas a habit of bringingthem back.

ColerainContinued from Page 1B

Conference will be hon-ored.

Baseball» Roger Bacon edged

Badin 4-2 in a leaguematch-up on April 10. Jeor-don Kuderer had 11 strike-outs in the win. Josh Bren-ner went 2-for-4 with twoRBI.

On April 13, the Spar-tans topped Alter 6-4 be-hind Beau Otto on themound. Otto also drove in apair of runs.

» Colerain edged Syca-more 3-2 on April 12. JuniorJason Fischer earned thewin with nine strikeouts.Kyle Bolden went 2-for-3with a double and twoRBIs.

Colerain beat Middle-town 7-4 on April 13. JaredFlueck got the win with sixstrikeouts. Jacob Schmidtwent 2-for-3 with a tripleand three RBIs.

» La Salle beat Elder 4-1at the University of Cincin-nati on April 13. Jacob Kai-ser got the win and BradyReynolds went 3-for-3.

» St. Xavier lost 4-1 toMoeller on April 13 at theUniversity of Cincinnati.Pete Fisher went 2-for-2with a double for theBombers. Moeller scoredall four runs in the seventh

Breakfast to featureDalton

» Cincinnati Bengalsquarterback Andy Daltonwill be this year’s featuredspeaker at the 28th annualWest Side Sports Break-fast on May 6 at the Wun-derland Banquet Hall onColerain Avenue.

The breakfast, whichbenefits the Boys Scouts ofAmerica and the DanBeard Council, runs from7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. (doorsopen at 7 a.m.).

Jim Breech, a formerNFL kicker and presidentof the local NFL AlumniChapter, will emcee theevent.

For information on se-curing a table or individualtickets, contact Travis Mc-Cormick ([email protected]) or vis-it www.danbeard.org/sportsbreakfast.

Colerain’s Breakfastof Champions

» The 20th annualBreakfast of Championsand Hall of Fame inductionceremony at Colerain HighSchool will be May 21in theschool cafeteria.

This Colerain Boosterevent is open to the publicfree of charge and beginswith a breakfast at 8:30a.m., followed by the pro-gram at 9:15. All Hall ofFame members are invitedto watch as the newestclass is inducted.

Joining this year are:Eric Von Berg (1975), Lind-say Casteel Long (2002),Beth Drewes (’04), TerrillByrd (’05), Dan Osterbrock(’05) and Connor Smith(’06). In addition, all cur-rent Colerain student ath-letes who have been namedhonorable mention or bet-ter in the Greater Miami

inning. On April 14, the Bomb-

ers beat La Salle 9-1behinda complete-game from Na-than Kappers. Sam Anken-bauer went 3-for-3 withtwo RBIs and J.P. Bitzen-hofer was 2-for-3 withthree RBIs.

» Talawanda defeatedNorthwest, 8-7 back onApril 13. The Knights fell to1-7 with the defeat.

» Ross topped MountHealthy, 12-1in just five in-nings back on April 13. TheOwls fell to 0-5 with theloss.

Softball» McAuley knocked off

Clermont Northeastern10-0 in six innings on April12. Senior pitcher AubreyBrunst got the win witheight strikeouts. HaileyMcAdoo went 3-for-4 witha double and five RBIs.

On April 13, the Mo-hawks topped St. Ursula10-0 in five innings. Mc-Adoo went 3-for-3 with adouble, home run and fourRBIs.

» Roger Bacon beat Al-ter 13-0 in five innings onApril 13. Ashton Lindnergot the win and went 2-for-3 with two RBIs. Har-monie Kugele went 2-for-2with two triples and three

RBIs. On April 14, Roger Ba-

con lost to Badin 14-0 infive innings.

» Colerain lost to OakHills 17-1 on April 13.

» Northwest bested Ta-lawanda, 14-8 Wednesdaylast week. Kyhara Evensonwas the winning pitcherand drove in three runs.Ashley Carroll went 3-for-6with a triple and three RBI.Kylie Hiser knocked oneover the fence, as well.

» Little Miami handledMount Healthy in bothgames of a doubleheaderback on April 14. The Pan-thers won 17-1 in the firstgame and 17-0 in the sec-ond. Kristen Spradlindrove in the Owls’ only runof the series with a homerun.

Ross also topped theOwls in a twinbill Wednes-day last week. The Ramscombined to outscore theOwls 27-0.

Volleyball» St. Xavier knocked

off Centerville on April 12,25-17, 23-25, 25-17, 25-20.

» La Salle beat Withrow25-7, 25-4, 25-6 on April 12.

The Lancers droppedRoger Bacon on April 13,26-24, 25-19, 25-19.

Tennis» Colerain dropped

Middletown 5-0 on April 13. » Edgewood defeated

Northwest, 5-0 Thursdaylast week.

Oak Hills topped North-west, 4-1 back on April 13.The doubles pair of Thom-as Chhim and Louis Girtspicked up the Knights’ onlypoint. Talawanda edgedNorthwest 3-2 Tuesday lastweek. The Knights wonboth doubles points.

Lindner namedLaRosa’s MVP

» Roger Bacon seniorsoftball standout AshtonLindner was named LaRo-sa’s MVP of the Week forApril 11.

SHORT HOPS

THANKS TO ST. XAVIER

On April 13, St. Xavier High School held a spring signing dayceremony in its library. The following student athletes signedto continue their careers in college; from left: AnthonyMorgan, baseball (Earlham College); Zach Bertoia, football(Ohio Wesleyan); Brennan Hatten, baseball (Ohio Dominican);J.P. Olding, football (Thomas More); Andrew Niehaus, tennis(Northern Kentucky); Nick Prather, rugby (Kentucky); AaronTaske, swimming (Missouri University S&T).

MONFORTHEIGHTS - The Lancersare rolling on the dia-mond. Photos show LaSalle’s 11-2 win over Col-erain on April 9. JakeBarford got the win and

Andrew Sexton went 2-for-3 with a double andtwo RBI. The Lancersalso beat Elder 4-1 at theUniversity of Cincinnation April 13.

THANKS TO ALEX VEHR

La Salle sophomore Griffin Merritt connects with a pitchagainst Colerain on April 9.

La Salle heatsup on diamond

THANKS TO ALEX VEHR

La Salle pitcher Quintin Baldwin tosses a pitch againstColerain.

Page 13: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 3BLIFE

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Page 14: Northwest press 042016

4B • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

Final Days

Bread From HeavenOutreach Ministry

C.O.G.I.C.2929 Springdale Road 45251

Phone#(513) 742-9400Sunday School - 9:45am

Sunday Morning Service - 11:00amBible Study Thurs. - 7:00pmPantry Tuesday - 11am-2pm

Christ Church Glendale Episcopal Church965 Forest Ave - 771-1544

[email protected]@christchurchglendale.org

The Rev. John F. Keydel, Jr.8am Holy Eucharist I9am Holy Eucharist II

11am Holy Eucharist IIChild Care 9-12

Faith Lutheran ChurchNALC AND LCMC

8265 Winton Rd., Finneytownwww.faithcinci.org 931-6100Pastor Paul SchultzContemporary Service 9:00 AMTraditional Service 11:00 AM

Sunday School 10:15 AMSeptember through May

Trinity Lutheran Church, LCMS5921 Springdale Rd

Rev. Richard Davenport, PastorWorship & Sunday School 10:30 a.m,

Bible Study 9:15 a.m. SundaysClassic Service and Hymnbook

www.trinitylutherancincinnati.com385-7024

Monfort HeightsUnited Methodist Church3682 West Fork Rd, west of North BendTraditional Worship 9:45am

Connect Contemporary Worship 11:00amNursery Available • Sunday School513-481-8699 • www.mhumc.org

Spiritual Checkpoint...Bearing the Love of Christ...for you!

St. Paul United Church of Christ5312 Old Blue Rock Rd., off Springdale

Phone: 385-9077Rev. Michelle Torigian

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

Nursery Available/Handicap Accesswww.stpaulucccolerain.org

www.facebook.com/StPaulUCC

Mt. HealthyUnited Methodist ChurchCorner of Compton and Perry Streets

513-931-5827Sunday School 8:45-9:45am

Traditional Worship 10:00-11:00amNursery Available Handicap Access

“Come as a guest. Leave as a friend.”

FLEMING ROADUnited Church of Christ

691 Fleming Rd 522-2780Rev Pat McKinney

Sunday School - All Ages - 9:15amSunday Worship - 10:30am

Nursery Provided

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

Northminster Presbyterian Church703 Compton Rd., Finneytown 931-0243

Growing Faith, Sharing Hope, Showing LoveSunday Worship Schedule

Traditional Services - 8:00 & 10:30amContemporary Services - 9:00am

Student Cafe: 10:15amChildcare Available

Nancy Ross- Zimmerman - Pastors

DIRECTORY

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

This year’s HometownHollywood gala raised$160,000 for People Wor-kiing Cooperatively’sModifications for Mobil-ity program, a recordamount for the event,which has taken place onOscar night each yearsince 1998. This yearmarks the final ‘Home-town Hollywood’ event; a

new event format will beannounced for 2017.

“We thank our friendsand supporters who cametogether to support such awonderful cause,” saidJock Pitts, president &CEO of PWC.

Each year, PWC sup-ports one family with amodification need great-er than the typical job per-

formed by the agency.This year, HometownHollywood raised$65,000, another record,for the Johnson family,whose 950-square-foothome lacked the spaceneeded to accommodateadopted son Jackson’smedical equipment andcare needs. Jackson’sadoptive brothers, both

teenagers, had been shar-ing a closet instead of abedroom so that Jacksoncould have his own bed-room.

The funds will be usedto build a 320-square-footaddition onto the John-sons’ home.

For more information,visit pwchomerepairs.org.

THANKS TO CHRIS CONE

PWC Board Chairperson Rick Zoller (Colerain Township) & PWCPresident Jock Pitts (Oxford).

People Working Cooperatively raises$160,000 at Hometown Hollywood Gala

According to the Cen-ters for Disease Controland Prevention, one in sixAmericans (48 millionpeople) become ill eachyear by consuming con-taminated food and bever-ages, 128,000 are hospital-ized and 3,000 die of food-borne diseases.

“Food service facilitieshave huge responsibil-ities when it comes to pro-tecting public health,” ac-cording to Greg Kester-man, assistant HamiltonCounty Health Commis-sioner. “Most of the food-borne illness we see ispreventable. That’s whywe put so much effort intoour education and inspec-tion program with thefood service facilities weserve,” he adds.

“The Hamilton CountyPublic Health CleanKitchen Award recogniz-es the best-of-the-best inmaintaining safe food ser-vice operations,” Kester-

man said. “The award isnot easy to receive. Whenyou see one on display, itpoints to an operator thattakes the responsibilityvery seriously.

When choosing a placeto eat, make sanitation apriority. You can view in-spection data for all foodservice facilities and list-ings for all Clean KitchenAward winners on theHamilton County PublicHealth website atwww.HCPH.org. TheClean Kitchen Award re-flects inspection datafrom the previous twoyears and is not necessar-ily indicative of currentconditions.

The requirements forreceiving a Clean KitchenAward are stringent. Tobe considered, facilitiesmust:

» have fewer thanthree violations in the pre-vious two years prior toapplying;

» have no “critical” orrepeat violations in theprevious two years;

» maintain at least twostaff members with levelI food handler certifica-tion or at least one staffmember with a currentServSafe certificate;

» submit applicationsalong with correspondingdocumentation;

» have a minimum oftwo years of inspectiondata on file with HamiltonCounty Public Health.

Winning operators forthe third quarter of 2015 (*repeat winners):

Hillebrand Nursingand rehabilitation*, 4320Bridgetown Road, GreenTownship; Covenant Vil-lage*, 3210 WestforkRoad, Green Township;

Waverlys Hope ChildCare, 5956 Colerain Ave.,Green Township;

Skyline Chili Finney-town*, 9115 Winton Road,Springfield Township.

Cleanest county kitchensin second quarter

Page 15: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 5BLIFE

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Unlike CPAP, an oral appliance is the sizeof a whitening tray.

Miami Whitewater For-est is expected to expandby 273 acres this year – andtake steps toward one dayconnecting to the FernaldPreserve.

Ohio Public Works offi-cials are expected to paythe bulk of the cost for theland from the Clean OhioGreen Space ConservationProgram. Great Parks ofHamilton County will payjust $38,085 for land andrestoration estimated tocost almost $2.2 million.

These deals are possi-ble because of a partner-ship with the Ohio Environ-mental Protection Agencyand leaders at Fernald andthe generosity of one prop-erty seller.

These purchases will bethe latest and some of thelargest examples of landacquisitions made byGreat Parks in the last fiveyears.

Since 2011, Great Parkshas acquired 485 acresacross the county. Otherpurchases have allowedthe county to extend theLittle Miami Bike Trail andadd protected lands to cur-rent nature preserves andriver corridors. Once these2016 land acquisitionsclose, the total will grow to758 acres.

The grant applicationshave already been ap-proved by Hamilton Coun-ty’s local Clean Ohio dis-trict. The state will simplyconfirm the projects are el-igible and if so, approvethem, according to Clean

Ohio Program DirectorLinda Bailiff.

“Local decision makingis the basis of the pro-gram,” said Bailiff. CleanOhio programs have beenin operation now for 15years after Ohio voters ap-proved selling $50 millionin general obligation bondsannually to support theprogram, which includestwo other grant pools, onethat conserves agricultur-al land and another thatsupports trail construc-tion.

Connecting parks, protecting habitats

In these most recent ad-ditions to Miami Whitewa-ter, there are two sales in-volved.

The first is the WelchSand and Gravel companyproperty at 8285 E. MiamiRiver Road in ColerainTownship. The second isthree parcels near the But-ler County line owned byCarl J. Hesselbrock.

Expanding parkland onthe northern Hesselbrockproperties enhances GreatParks’ ability to restoreand protect wetland andwoodland habitats, and is astep toward one day con-necting Miami Whitewaterand Fernald, Sutton said.

The Hesselbrock prop-erties are three tracts ofland in Crosby Townshiptotaling about 130 acres ofmature forest and wet-lands. The wetlands arehome to a population ofchubby, little, black-and-silver marbled salaman-ders.

The long-range plan is

to acquire more propertiesto create a bridge of pro-tected lands connectingthe two parks.

The Fernald Preserve islocated where a nuclearweapons uranium plant op-erated from 1951 to 1989.The federal governmentcompleted a $4.4 billioncleanup and environmen-tal remediation of the sitein 2006 – one of the largestenvironmental cleanupprojects in American his-tory, according to informa-tion on Fernald’s website.

The property is now anature preserve open tothe public and operated by

the U.S. Energy Depart-ment’s Office of LegacyManagement.

If and when the twoparks connect the county’sShaker Trace Trail couldbe extended to Fernald,and one day link up withthe Great Miami RiverTrail, envisioned to stretchroughly 100 miles fromShawnee Lookout in NorthBend up to communitiesincluding Fairfield, Hamil-ton, Middletown, Daytonand beyond, Sutton said.

The hike-and-bike trailcurrently ends in Piqua,Ohio.

The primary reason for

purchasing the Welchproperty, which bordersthe Great Miami River is toprotect natural resources,like the river and aquiferbeneath it, said GreatParks Executive DirectorJack Sutton.

The Welch propertycould be a good spot for acanoe and kayak launch,and take-out ramps, Suttonsaid, particularly becauseColerain parks now havelaunch ramps upstream.

Adding 273 acres to Mi-ami Whitewater will in-crease the size of the parkby 6 percent.

At the end of 2017, the

county park district’s cur-rent levy ends and leaderswill be asking voters for fu-ture funding with a ballotinitiative. So, why add landnow?

“It is critical that we actwhen opportunities arise,”Sutton said. “Otherwise,these parcels could be lostforever.”

He added that protect-ing land meets the dis-trict’s fundamental mis-sion of conserving naturalresources and future main-tenance costs can be ab-sorbed into their operatingbudget.

Hamilton Co.’s largest park is getting biggerCarrie Blackmore [email protected]

Merit badge assistance,earth science games, ge-ode cracking, gold pan-ning, free mineral collec-tions (for kids under 12),free fossils (for kids under12), and free identificationof your fossils, meteorites,minerals and gemstonesare among the family-friendly activities at thisyear’s GeoFair.

GeoFair is 10 a.m. to 6p.m. Saturday, April 30,and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sun-day, May 1, at SharonvilleConvention Center, 11355Chester Road.

GeoFair is Cincinnati’slargest non-profit gem,mineral, fossil and jewelryshow. The 51st annual Geo-Fair will highlight “Miner-al and Fossil Collections inthe American Midwest.”

Admission is $9 foradults and $3 for children.A two-day adult pass isavailable for $12. Plentifulparking is free at the Shar-onville Convention Center.Scouts in uniform get freeadmission, as do teacherswith identification whenaccompanied by a payingadult. (A coupon for $2 offadult admission is offeredfor download at Geo-

Fair.Com).Scheduled speakers in-

clude:» Saturday, April 30, 1

p.m. - Dr. Carl A. Francis ofthe Maine Mineral & GemMuseum, will discuss“Fine Mineral Collectionsof the Midwest.”

» Saturday, April 30, 3p.m. - John Moffitt, paleon-tological educator fromHouston, willpresent “MyFavorite Trilobites.”

» Sunday, May 1, 1p.m. -“Midwest Mineral Trea-sures” will be the topic ofJeff Scovil, professionalphotographer from Phoe-nix.

» Sunday, May 1, 3 p.m. -Dr. Brenda Hunda of theCincinnati Museum Centerwill discuss “Using theFossil Record to Save Mod-ern Species.”

More than 50 commer-cial vendors from as faraway as Florida and Neva-da will offer stunningitems for sale, rangingfrom curiosities costingmere pennies to museum-quality specimens costingthousands of dollars.

For more informationon GeoFair 2016, visit Geo-Fair.com

GeoFair inspires children withearth science learning, hobbies

Page 16: Northwest press 042016

6B • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

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Page 17: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 7BLIFE

Mercy Health — West Hospital, right here on the West Side, is a state-of-

the-art member of the largest integrated healthcare network in Greater

Cincinnati. West Hospital brings the residents of the West Side award-

winning preventative and emergency heart and vascular care, cardiac

rehabilitation, and access to life-saving care, from minimally invasive cardiac

procedures to open-heart surgery. West Hospital. Right here when you

need us most. For more information, visit e-mercy.com/west-hospital

A Catholic healthcare ministry serving Ohio and KentuckyCincinnati | Irvine | Lima | Lorain | Paducah | Springfield | Toledo | Youngstown

Life-saving cardiac carein the heart of your community.

This is your hospital

Mary Lee BarryMary Lee (nee Gueterman)

Barry, 81, of Green Townshipdied Feb. 15.

Survived by husband RichardBarry; children Rick (Tess) Barry,Gregory Barry, Vicki (John)Michael and Michael (Sherry)Barry; grandchildren Shane,Luke and Greg Barry, Scott andJessie Michael and Jenna andKatie Barry; great-grandchildAria Barry; brothers Ronald andLarry Gueterman.

Preceded in death by sisterKay Warner.

Visitation and funeral Masswere at Our Lady of VisitationChurch. Burial St. Joseph NewCemetery. Neidhard-MingesFuneral Home served the family.

Memorials to Hospice ofCincinnati, P.O. Box 633597,Cincinnati, OH 45263, or theAmerican Lung Association,4050 Executive Park Drive, No.402, Cincinnati, OH 45241.

Shirley M. Ewing CovertShirley M. (nee Sellers) Ewing

Covert, 87, former resident ofCollege Hill and Mount Airy diedFeb. 28.

Survived bychildrenDavid (Jenny)Ewing, Mad-eline (James)House, Patrick(Sally) Ewing,Theresa(Thomas)Goens, Mi-chael (Gwen)Ewing, Greg-ory (Amy)

Ewing, Connie Ewing Schitoskey,Anthony (Kittie) Ewing, Brian(Joette) Ewing, Jennifer (Brooks)Webb; 23 grandchildren; 21great-grandchildren

Preceded in death by hus-bands Harry Ewing and JamesCovert; son Mark Ewing; grand-son Marcus Ewing.

Mass of Christian burial at St.Clare Church, internment atArlington Memorial Gardens.Gwen Mooney Funeral Homeserved the family.

Memorials to St. Clare Church,1443 Cedar Ave., Cincinnati, OH45224.

Wilbur M. EvansWilbur M. Evans, 85, of Green

Township died Feb. 17.Survived by children Linda

Yelton and Beth (Timothy)Wernery; grandchildren AshleyYelton, Christina Wernery andMegan Wernery; great-grand-child Scarlett Gally; brotherMelvin Evans.

Preceded in death by wifeNorma Jean (nee Mason) Evans.

Visitation and funeral serviceswith military honors at Neid-hard-Minges Funeral Home,Westwood. Burial at MiamitownCemetery.

Memorials to Strong Kids atCamp Kern, 5291 state Route350, Oregonia, OH 45054.

Ruby Faye EvensonRuby Faye (nee Dick) Evenson,

93, of Springfield Township diedFeb. 29.

Survived by grandchildrenMelanie (Jon) Branditz, TracyEvenson and Troy Evenson;great-grandchildren EmmaBranditz, Ty Napier, KyharaEvenson, Lillie and Logan Even-son; brother Bobby Lee Dick.

Preceded in death by husbandDuane D. Evenson; son RichardDuane Evenson.

Visitation and funeral servicewere March 5 at NeidhardYoung Funeral Home, MountHealthy.

Russell F. HamiltonRussell F. Hamilton, 63, died

Feb. 24 at his residence. He wasa meal cutter at Langen Meats.

Survived bywife MaryKathleen (neeHunsche)Hamilton;children ScottHamilton,Karen (Matt)Cain andMary Ann(Nick) Ram-sey; grand-children

Chloe, Liam, Neve, Will, Zachand Charley; sister Shirley King;numerous other family andfriends.

Preceded in death by siblingsBobby and Janet Hamilton.

Visitation was Feb. 28 at RadelFuneral Home. Mass of ChristianBurial Feb. 29 at St. Jude Church.Burial at St. Joseph New Ceme-tery.

Memorials to ALS, 1810 Mac-Kenzie Drive, Suite 120, Colum-bus, OH 43220.

Daniel Lawrence HoefferDaniel Lawrence Hoeffer, of

Mount Healthy died recently.Survived by son DJ Hoeffer;

parents Lawrence Hoeffer andDiane (nee Michel) Hoeffer;grandparents Lawrence and AnnHoeffer and Daniel Michel;siblings Melissa, Amanda, andJackie Hoeffer; many aunts,uncles and cousins.

Preceded in death by grand-mother Patricia Michel.

Visitation was at Neidhard-Young Funeral Home, MountHealthy. Mass of Christian Burialwas at the Church of Assump-tion, Mount Health.

Memorials to the MiamiCredit Union in care of DJ Hoeff-er.

Joan A. KroegerJoan A. (nee Harmann) Kroeg-

er, 80, of Green Township diedFeb. 21.

Survived by children Debra(Jay) Weingartner, Jeffrey,Michael and Daniel (Jeannie)Kroeger; 14 grandchildren; sevengreat-grandchildren; sistersCathy Caughlin and HarriettPrice; several nieces and neph-ews.

Preceded in death by husbandThomas Kroeger; grandchildrenJayson and Patty.

Visitation was at the Vitt,Stermer and Anderson FuneralHome. Funeral Mass at St. JudeChurch.

Memorials to Children’sHospital Cancer Research.

Paul Joseph JesterPaul Joseph Jester, 56, of

Colerain Township died Feb. 27.Survived by children Paul

Jester Jr., Amy (Thomas) Roarkand Joshua Jester; grandchildrenGabriel Jester, Madison Roark,AnnMarie Roark, Thomas RoarkJr., Hunter Roark, DominicRoark, Ayden Jester, Tyler Jesterand Ava Nicole Jester; siblingsMary (late Gene) Schulkers,Kathie (Bennie) Vallandingham,John (Cheryl) Jester, Dianne(Steve) Zeek and Mark (Debbie)Jester; several nieces and neph-ews;

Preceded in death by sonMatthew Jester.

Visitation and Mass of Chris-tian Burial were March 5 atCorpus Christi Catholic Church.Neidhard-Young Funeral Homeserved the family.

Memorials to The Cure StartsNow Foundation.

Stephen Paul LiererStephen Paul Lierer, 66, of

Colerain Township, formerly ofForest Park died Feb. 24. He was

a Vietnamveteran, andan activemember ofthe VFW andDAV.

Survived bymotherElizabethLierer; daugh-ter MelissaLierer; grand-sons Cooper

and Cameron; 20-year compan-ion Phyllis Bell and her daughterChelsea; siblings Sue (Robert)Stockmeier, Melody (Tim) Smith,and Paula (Anthony) Joyce;many nieces and nephews.

Preceded in death by fatherPaul Lierer; siblings Jeff, Danieland Samuel.

Visitation and Mass of Chris-tian Burial were Feb. 29 at St.John the Baptist Church – DryRidge Road. Neidhard-YoungFuneral Home served the family.

Irmgard RedderIrmgard (nee Loxterkamp)

Redder, 86, of Green Townshipdied Feb. 24.

Survived by children ClemensRedder, Alfred (Erika) Redder Jr.,Paul (Mary) Redder; grand-children Eric (Mary Ann), Bryan(Ashley), David, Kara, Nathan,Emily and Julia.

Preceded in death by husbandAlfred Redder Sr.; daughterBarbara (John) Redder Krum-men.

Visitation, Kolping prayerservice and funeral Mass were atSt. Antoninus Church. Vitt,Stermer and Anderson FuneralHome served the family.

Memorials to the Fr. DavidHiller Fund, 10235 Mill Road,Cincinnati, OH 45231, or theAmerican Cancer Society, 2808Reading Road, Cincinnati, OH45206.

Helen E. SchmidtHelen E. (nee Lucken)

Schmidt, 95, of Green Townshipdied Feb. 17. She was a chartermember of St. Ignatius LoyolaChurch, Monfort Heights.

Survived by children Donald(Kim) Hooper and ThomasHooper; grandchildren TammyHubbard, Tommy Hooper, Ken(Stephanie) Hooper and Kathy(Andy) Salmon; 13 great-grand-children; four great-great-grandchildren.

Preceded in death by hus-bands Howard Schmidt, HenrySchifferns and Donald Hooper;brother Arthur Lucken.

Visitation and funeral Masswere Feb. 23 at St. IgnatiusLoyola Church, Monfort Heights.Vitt, Stermer and Anderson

Funeral Home served the family.Memorials to SPCA Cincinnati,

11900 Conrey Road, Cincinnati,OH 45249, or Cincinnati Right toLife, 1802 W. Galbraith Road,Cincinnati, OH 45239.

Glenn E. VandergriffGlenn E. Vandergriff, 67, died

Feb. 26 atUniversityHospital.

Survived bychildren Amy(Todd) Veld-haus andAlison (Alex)Molnar;grandchildrenJoseph andTucker Glenn

Veldhaus, Sebastian and SimonMolnar; siblings Sharon Wright,

Wayne and Dale Vandergriff;brother-in-law Joseph Geraci;friend Russ Gibson; numerousother family and friends.

Preceded in death by wifeKathleen (nee Geraci) Van-dergriff; parents Earl and EvelynVandergriff.

Visitation and funeral serviceswere March 3 at the RadelFuneral Home. Burial at Gate ofHeaven Cemetery.

Memorials to USTA Schol-arship Fund, USTA NationalOffice, 6304 Bayberry Blvd.,Winter Haven, FL 33881.

DEATHS

Covert

Hamilton

Lierer

Vandergriff

ABOUT OBITUARIESBasic obituary information and a color photograph of

your loved one is published without charge by The Com-munity Press. Email to [email protected] [email protected]. To publish a larger memo-rial tribute, call 242-4000 or pricing details.

Page 18: Northwest press 042016

8B • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

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CINCINNATI DISTRICT 5Incidents/investigationsAggravated robbery5200 block of Eastknoll Court,March 31.

Assault2900 block of Highforest Lane,April 3.

4500 block of Colerain Ave.,March 29.

Breaking and entering2700 block of WestonridgeDrive, April 1.

Burglary5100 block of Hawaiian Terrace,March 30.

5300 block of Bahama Terrace,March 29.

Criminaldamaging/endangering2500 block of Kipling Ave.,March 30.

2900 block of Highforest Lane,April 3.

5000 block of Hawaiian Terrace,April 3.

5300 block of Bahama Terrace,March 31.

Domestic violence5600 block of Buttercup Lane,March 28.

Theft2900 block of High Forest Lane,March 28.

5500 block of Colerain Ave.,March 28.

5800 block of Shadymist Lane,March 25.

5800 block of Shadymist Lane,March 30.

5800 block of Shadymist Lane,March 31.

COLERAIN TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsAssaultReported on 3200 block ofNiagara St., Feb. 21.

BurglaryReported at 8400 block ofHaskell Drive, Feb. 23.

Criminal damagingVehicles damaged on 3100 blockof Niagara, Feb. 20.

Window damaged at 8600 blockof Colerain Ave., Feb. 20.

Vehicle parts damaged at 3100block of Niagara St., Feb. 20.

Reported on 9100 block of NeilDrive, Feb. 19.

Vehicle damaged at 6800 block

of Pasco Drive, Feb. 20.Landscaping damaged at 9800block of Marino Drive, Feb. 20.

Vehicle damaged at 2600 blockof Wheatfield Drive, Feb. 20.

Reported on 9800 block ofWiscasset Way, Feb. 21.

Window damaged at 8600 blockof Pippin Road, Feb. 21.

Vehicle window damaged at9700 block of Loralinda Drive,Feb. 20.

Siding damaged at 10000 blockof Zocalo Drive, Feb. 19.

Window of vehicle damaged at3200 block of Deshler Drive,Feb. 21.

Window damaged at 2600 blockof Niagara St., Feb. 21.

Glass damaged at 2300 block ofWalden Glen Circle, Feb. 21.

Reported on 8500 block ofNeptune Drive, Feb. 21.

Reported on 2900 block ofWheatfield, Feb. 22.

Glass removed from 3700 blockof Hermes Drive, Feb. 22.

Window damaged at 3100 blockof Lapland Drive, Feb. 22.

Reported on 9200 block ofBurgess Drive, Feb. 22.

Reported on 8500 block ofNeptune Drive, Feb. 22.

Reported on 3400 block ofNiagara St., Feb. 22.

Vehicle damaged at 6900 blockof Hillary Drive, Feb. 24.

Window damaged at 2500 blockof Mercury Ave., Feb. 20.

Reported on 3400 block ofClippard Park Drive, Feb. 25.

DomesticReported on Cheviot Road, Feb.25.

ForgeryReported on 3000 block of W.Galbraith Road, Feb. 26.

FraudReported on 4200 block ofEndeavor Drive, Feb. 23.

MenacingReported on 3600 block of StoneCreek Blvd., Feb. 20.

Misuse of credit cardReported on 2800 block ofSheldon Ave., Feb. 22.

RobberyReported on 2800 block ofWillow Ridge Drive, Feb. 21.

Taking the identity ofanotherReported on 10000 block ofPottinger Road, Feb. 25.

TheftVehicle entered and itemsremoved from 2400 block ofGarrison Drive, Feb. 26.

Vehicle valued at $5,000 re-moved from 9100 block ofTrinidad Drive, Feb. 26.

Bikes removed from 9300 blockof Neil Drive, Feb. 26.

Items removed from 8400 blockof Colerain Ave., Feb. 26.

Money order removed from2300 block of Walden GlenCircle, Feb. 26.

Reported on 3600 block of StoneCreek Blvd., Feb. 26.

Radio and toolbox valued at$670 removed from 9900 blockof Captan Drive, Feb. 26.

Grinder removed from 3400block of Joseph Road, Feb. 25.

Tires valued at $600 removedfrom 9400 block of PippinRoad, Feb. 24.

Vehicle removed from 3300block of Crest Road, Feb. 23.

Items valued at $20 removedfrom 9600 block of ColerainAve., Feb. 26.

$1,800 removed from 9300 blockof Roundtop Road, Feb. 23.

Items valued at $100 removedfrom 9900 block of ColerainAve., Feb. 23.

Check removed from 8300 blockof Royal Heights Drive, Feb. 23.

Reported on 8200 block ofPippin Road, Feb. 22.

Bike valued at $600 removedfrom 7400 block of ColerainAve., Feb. 22.

Clothing valued at $640 re-moved from 9500 block ofColerain Ave., Feb. 22.

Reported on 2800 block ofHyannis Drive, Feb. 1.

Cell phone valued at $600removed from 9000 block ofColerain Ave., Feb. 22.

Reported on 8400 block ofColerain Ave., Feb. 21.

Medication removed from 8400block of Colerain Ave., Feb. 21.

Vehicle removed from 3400block of Joseph Road, Feb. 21.

Items valued at $85 removedfrom 10000 block of ColerainAve., Feb. 21.

$900 removed from 9600 blockof Colerain Ave., Feb. 20.

Medication and saw valued at$131 removed from 7300 blockof Applevalley Court, Feb. 21.

Truck valued at $1,500 removedfrom 9800 block of GreenriverDrive, Feb. 21.

Purse and items removed from3700 block of Stone CreekBlvd., Feb. 20.

Wood removed from 3100 blockof W. Galbraith Road, Feb. 20.

Beer removed from 9500 blockof Pippin Road, Feb. 20.

Reported on 3400 block ofJoseph Road, Feb. 20.

Shovel removed from 3300 blockof Compton Road, Feb. 1.

Reported on 9500 block ofColerain Ave., Feb. 20.

GREEN TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsAssaultReported at 5700 block HarrisonAve., March 29.

Reported at 4500 block GlencaryCourt, April 2.

Reported at 6200 block BerauerRoad, April 2.

Reported at 6300 block HarrisonAve., April 2.

Reported at 4300 block Dale-hurst Drive, April 4.

BurglaryTwo Apple iPads, two videogame systems, 85 video games,watch and pillow case reportedstolen at 5700 block BiscayneAve., March 29.

Reported at 5700 block CheviotRoad, April 3.

Criminal damagingReported at 5800 block Val-leyway Court, March 30.

Reported at 3300 block PalmhillLane, March 31.

Reported at 4800 block Welling-ton Chase Court, March 31.

Reported at 5200 block Crooksh-ank Road, April 1.

Reported at 2000 block An-derson Ferry Road, April 4.

Domestic disputeReported on Taylor Road, March29.

Reported on Glenmont Lane,March 30.

Reported on Hearne Road,March 30.

Reported on Cheviot Road,March 30.

Reported on Drew Ave., March31.

Reported on Hearne Road, April2.

Reported on Beech Dell Drive,April 2.

Reported on Harrison Ave., April3.

Reported on BeechmeadowLane, April 4.

Reported on Cheviot Road, April4.

MenacingReported at 5500 block EulaAve., March 29.

Reported at 5500 block KarenAve., March 31.

Reported at 6700 block Tower-ing Ridge Way, April 4.

TheftPurse and personal documentsreported stolen at 1400 blockEbenezer Road, March 29.

Reported at 6400 block GlenwayAve., March 29.

Four memory cards and a wire-less speaker reported stolenfrom Walgreen’s at 5400 blockNorth Bend Road, March 29.

Several tools reported stolen at3900 block Ebenezer Road,March 29.

Suspect attempted to steal nailproducts from Family Dollar at6100 block Colerain Ave., March29.

Medication reported stolen at5600 block West Fork Road,March 30.

Suspect attempted to stealclothes from Meijer at 6500block Harrison Ave., March 30.

Reported at Colerain Ave. andEarl Ave., March 30.

Suspect attempted to steal drillbits from Home Depot at 6300block Glenway Ave., March 31.

Reported at 3000 block GodaAve., March 31.

Two drills, screw gun and agrinder reported stolen at 2000block Sylved Lane, March 31.

Clothes reported stolen at Kohl’sat 6500 block Harrison Ave.,April 1.

Reported at Home Depot at6300 block Glenway Ave., April2.

Money reported stolen at 4000block Simca Lane, April 2.

Suspect attempted to stealclothes and an adapter fromMeijer at 6500 block HarrisonAve., April 2.

Reported at 6800 block Bridge-town Road, April 2.

Eyeglasses reported stolen at

6000 block Seiler Drive, April 4.Reported at 3300 block LinsanDrive, April 4.

Reported at 6000 block SeilerDrive, April 4.

Tickets to “Disney on Ice” re-ported stolen at 6700 blockHarrison Ave., April 4.

Reported at 7000 block Willow-dale Drive, April 4.

TrespassingReported at 6100 block ColerainAve., March 31.

Reported at 6100 block HarrisonAve., April 1.

Reported at Valley Ridge Roadand Harrison Ave., April 1.

SPRINGFIELDTOWNSHIP

Incidents/investigationsAssaultReported on 2000 block ofRoosevelt Ave., Feb. 23.

Reported on 8900 block ofFontainebleau, Feb. 24.

Breaking and enteringReported on 10000 block ofHamilton Ave., Feb. 23.

BurglaryReported at 1400 block of For-ester Drive, Feb. 15.

Reported and Game system,computer, jewelry, TVs andgames valued at $4,400 re-moved from 1700 block of MilesRoad, Feb. 24.

Criminal damagingVehicle window damaged at2000 block of Roosevelt Ave.,Feb. 23.

Window of vehicle damaged at8500 block of Winton Road,Feb. 20.

Window damaged at 9200 blockof Ranchhill Drive, Feb. 21.

Reported on 8800 block ofZodiac Drive, Feb. 20.

Window broken at 8900 block ofZodiac Drive, Feb. 20.

Vehicle damaged at Hamiltonand Hudepohl, Feb. 21.

Window damaged at 9100 blockof Ranchhill Drive, Feb. 21.

Window damaged at 9300 blockof Ranch Drive, Feb. 20.

Reported on 1200 block ofDeerhorn Drive, Feb. 26.

DomesticReported on Sprucehill Drive,

POLICE REPORTS

See POLICE, Page 9B

Page 19: Northwest press 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 9BLIFE

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2016

Feb. 14.Reported on Hamilton Ave., Feb.14.

Reported on Winton Road, Feb.20.

Reported on 1400 block ofSummit Road, Feb. 24.

FightReported on 9600 block ofHamilton Ave., Feb. 14.

Identity theftReported on 1600 block ofAcreview Drive, Feb. 22.

Reported on 8200 block ofWinton Road, Feb. 19.

Reported on 1100 block ofMadeleine Circle, Feb. 25.

Reported on 10000 block ofHamilton Ave., Feb. 25.

Menacing

Reported on 1000 block of MainSt., Feb. 29.

Reported on 1500 block ofMeredith Drive, Feb. 21.

Misuse of credit cardReported on 6700 block ofParkview Drive, Jan. 1.

TheftItems removed from vehicle at11000 block of Brookway Drive,Feb. 21.

License plate removed from 1500block of Meredith Drive, Feb.27.

AC unit valued at $2,200 re-moved from 500 block ofFleming Road, Feb. 28.

Reported on 8600 block ofElmtree Ave., Feb. 27.

Items removed from vehicle at1400 block of Hartwood Drive,Feb. 25.

Cell phone valued at $700removed from 900 block ofNorth Bend Road, Feb. 25.

Reported on 6200 block ofSimpon Ave., Feb. 24.

Items removed from vehicle at9700 block of Wildbrook Lane,Feb. 13.

Household items valued at $55removed from 8400 block ofWinton Road, Feb. 15.

Items valued at $26 removedfrom 9700 block of WoodmillCourt, Feb. 19.

Items removed from motorvehicle at 9600 block of Wood-mill Court., Feb. 20.

Watch valued at $5,000 re-moved from 9100 block ofMillcliff Drive, Feb. 6.

Reported on Galbraith Road,Feb. 21.

POLICE REPORTS

Continued from Page 8B

COLERAIN TOWNSHIP2612 Ambassador Drive: Jackson,Jennifer to PNC Bank NA;$64,000.

9131 Brehm Road: Deupree,Joyce Schultz to Weil, Rick L.;$350,000.

6256 Castlestone Lane: Walter,Raymond W. & Marilyn J. toWallpe, Brian & Hillary Wen-ning; $209,000.

10238 Chippenham Court: Dia-monds in The Rough Invest-ments LLC to Folkes, Junior &Hem Raj Joshi; $34,000.

7530 Colerain Ave.: 7530 ColerainAvenue LLC to NKB InvestmentsLLC; $200,000.

7222 Creekview Drive: Dunn,Victoria L. & Martin L. to Nixon,Matthew B. & Vanier; $35,000.

5587 Day Road: Moyer, Christo-pher A. to Acheson, Marsha;$241,000.

2586 Houston Road: McCann,Kelly to Lombert, John A.;$100,000.

3088 Lapland Drive: RejuvenoteLLC to Equity Trust Co. Custodi-an FBO; $16,000.

3088 Lapland Drive: Dixon, Lesterto Rejuvenote LLC; $8,000.

3088 Lapland Drive: Equity TrustCo. Custodian FBO Z148960 IRAto RJB Acquisitions LLC; $26,000.

3341 Lindsay Lane: Erickson, NeilL. to Goddard, Nathan William;$61,350.

6043 Magnolia Woods Way:Fischer Single Family Homes IIILtd. to Agbenu, Abriel;$253,747.

10933 Newmarket Drive: Hall,Kenneth R. to Wells Fargo BankNA; $44,000.

3289 Paprika Court: Sorensen,Christine to Hoehn, Jennifer L.;$130,500.

11512 Pippin Road: Green,Dwight & Janel to DeutscheBank National Trust Co. Tr.;$58,000.

8754 Planet Drive: Brown, PaulLawrence to Brown, Paulette L.;$50,790.

6324 Sheed Road: Slagle, HomerE. to Fessler, Edwin & Jennifer;$219,900.

3606 Twinview Drive: Mays,Brenda to MAV InvestmentsLLC; $17,728.

3612 Twinview Drive: Mays,Brenda to MAV InvestmentsLLC; $17,728.

GREEN TOWNSHIP6195 Bridgetown Road: Bonhaus,Lyn J. Tr. to Faigle, Stephen E. &Kathleen E.; $250,000.

5657 Candlelite Terrace: Swee-

ney, Steve C. to Helmers, Mi-chael P.; $131,000.

5757 Cheviot Road: Hansen,Charles J. & Norma J. to Jones,Wardell & Linda M.; $45,500.

5213 Eaglesnest Drive: Losenhop,Philip A. Jr. to Halverson, DamonSuccessor Tr.; $67,500.

6024 Eden Place Drive: Dourson,Patricia A. to Rumpke, Carol J.;$323,000.

3312 Emerald Lakes Drive: Kattel-man, Mary Ann to Bresler,Sharon K.; $113,900.

3541 Gailynn Drive: Metzner,Matthew J. to Bradford, Brian T.;$149,900.

5719 Harrison Ave.: JAJ Invest-ments LLC to 5731 Harrison LLC;$77,840.

5723 Harrison Ave.: Anevski, JeffTr. to 5731 Harrison LLC; $21,280.

5795 Heights Court: Salyers,Judith L. to Investors Source LLC;$100,000.

3543 Jessup Road: Slattery,Shawn to Campbell, Joseph C.;$45,000.

5380 Karen Ave.: Grannan,Thomas E. to Westside HoldingsI. LLC; $49,124.

5049 Mallard Crossing Lane:Henn, Carole L. to Gall, AmyLynn; $266,500.

3686 Neiheisel Ave.: Abel, Dan-

ielle to Trefzger, John & Sarah;$125,000.

3131 Northgate Drive: BoulderDevelopment II Co to BoulderDevelopment II Co; $115,000.

5228 Peterborough Drive: M/IHomes of Cincinnati LLC toLawrence, Nichole Marie &Jason Thomas; $355,205.

4300 Regency Ridge Court:Merritt, Mark D. to Wallace,Charles D. & Rosemary G.;$95,500.

5786 Spire Ridge Court: O’Reilly,Michele M. to Boland, RachaelE. & Casey; $154,900.

6963 Summit Lake Drive: Tenk-man, Diane M. to Kinzeler,Christine M.; $105,400.

5624 Surrey Ave.: Queen CityProperty Solutions LLC to Bauer,Raynell M.; $103,500.

5642 Surrey Ave.: NationstarMortgage LLC to West SideHoldings I. LLC; $61,950.

3764 West Fork Road: 3756 West

Fork Real Estate LLC to McCann,Kelly; $55,200.

3004 Westbourne Drive: Crafts-man Properties LLC to DddRestoration LLC; $84,900.

3370 Wheatcroft Drive: Haller,Charles S. & Mary L. to Nichols,Andrew & Leah M. Bashover-Nichols; $216,500.

5567 Windridge Drive: GloriaProperties LLC to Mink, Jullian;$139,900.

MOUNT AIRY2553 North Bend Road: GlenairyProperties LLC to Lainhart,Brandon M.; $70,000.

SPRINGFIELDTOWNSHIP

462 Beechtree Drive: Schubert,Robert W. to Krishnan, KarthikM. & Jianli Xue; $129,000.

1101 Dalbren Lane: HuntingtonNational Bank The to KtdjProperties LLC; $42,105.

9671 Daly Road: Schnell, MichaelR. to Presley, Arlene; $130,000.

2033 Highland Ave.: Thompson,Jeffrey to Stauffer, Gerald;$30,000.

9334 Long Lane: Smith, Huston R.Jr. & Diana T. to Wpeblemberg,Jeremy B.; $162,000.

968 Lost Crossing Drive: Holt-schulte, Janine L. to Davis,Michanne M.; $107,000.

987 Lost Crossing: Drees Co. Theto Stephens, Kimberly A.;$139,200.

997 Lost Crossing: Drees Co. Theto Holden, Sharon A.; $174,364.

1131 Madeleine Circle: CP-SRMOFII 2012-A Trust to Hillcrest HomesInc.; $64,200.

1551 Meredith Drive: Liebman,Warren to Jeff Newman Proper-ties LLC; $12,500.

8782 Mockingbird Lane: StoneFinancing LLC to Boadi, Sylvester& Letitia Nyarkoa; $97,000.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

Page 20: Northwest press 042016

10B • NORTHWEST PRESS • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

EXPANDED WORLDVIEWBY HOWARD BARKIN / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

No. 0417

RE

LE

AS

E D

AT

E: 4/24/2016

ACROSS

1 Kind of chip6 Novelist Tillie who

wrote “Tell Me a Riddle”

11 1950s sci-fi terror, with “the”

15 Pro-baller-turned-commentator for N.B.A. on TNT

19 Upper reaches20 Last method of death

in Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None”

21 Letter sign-off22 Modern movement

inits.23 *1978 movie in which

Kevin Bacon made his film debut

25 Minicar, say27 Makeup for a

“Wizard of Oz” character?

28 Cooperate (with)29 Didn’t exist30 Sufficient, in brief32 *Having it made35 Deg. in the

boardroom38 Fails to brake in time

for, maybe40 “I see what you did

there!”41 Comments from a

crossword kibitzer43 It’s sold by the yard44 If all else fails47 Actor Morales

48 *Progress preventer53 Some Vegas

attractions55 Prophet whose

name means “deliverance”

56 Southern Italian port57 Lock combination?59 Helmeted deity60 Cravings63 Sing loudly67 Non-____ (modern

food label)68 *1990s-2000s HBO hit71 A, in Amiens72 Feeling74 “Chilean” fish75 Typewriter type76 Family symbols79 Mexican sauce80 “Natural” way to

serve a roast81 “Dance at Le Moulin

de la Galette,” e.g.84 *Laos or Vietnam88 Start to -matic89 “Oh jeez, don’t look

at me”90 Sue Grafton’s

“____ for Ricochet”91 Result of

overexposure?94 Where phone nos.

might be stored95 Burst through, as a

barrier100 Prefix meaning

118-Across101 *Sobriquet for

ardent Boston fans105 Tetra- plus two106 Superficially repair107 Things always kept

on hand?

109 Quick jump in the pool

110 Like some photography

113 *Popular app that can view any of the places named at the ends of the answers to the starred clues

115 Tippy-top116 Disturbance117 Bach composition118 See 100-Across119 Shock to the system120 “____-Team”121 Blackjack option122 “Duck Dynasty”

network

DOWN

1 More likely to win a handwriting award

2 When many start the workday

3 Achebe who wrote “Things Fall Apart”

4 Designer line?5 Like some medication6 Available7 Sarges’ superiors8 March composer9 Curves seen in sports

car ads10 Formerly11 Instrument in a

metalworker’sunion?

12 Soloist?13 Lose control at the

buffet14 Appear15 Blind part16 Elev.17 Prez on a penny

18 15 mins. of an N.F.L. game

24 Rich Richie26 Tolkien creatures31 Purchase at an

optometrist’s33 Cry of pain34 “Vamoose!”35 Work well together36 Seasoned pork

sausage, informally37 “No warranty”39 Third-largest island

in Italy, after Sicily and Sardinia

42 “____ the Beat” (1982 Go-Go’s hit)

44 Broadly smiling45 Gang in “Grease”

with an automotive name

46 Reggae precursor48 Fetches49 See 112-Down50 Deliver to, as a

pickup line51 Agile mountain

climbers52 Explorer’s grp.53 Guitar bars54 One way to sit by58 Storklike waders60 Dissuade61 La saison chaude62 P.I., in old slang64 Board displaying the

alphabet65 Like some DVD-

exclusive releases66 Mess with, as hair or

siblings68 What covers parts of

80-Down?69 Poetic shades

70 L.A. locale73 Cartoon Great Dane,

informally75 Coup d’état77 Cable channel whose

first initial stands for its founder

78 Drama that can go on for years

80 See 68-Down81 Order in the court82 Cabinet dept.

83 El ____85 The year 251086 Average87 Thirty, en français89 Thorough92 River past Orsk93 Meal95 Mogul96 Churned97 Star of Hitchcock’s

“The Birds”

98 Egressed99 Nymph turned into a

laurel tree, in Greek myth

102 “Calvin and Hobbes” girl

103 Tennis situation after deuce

104 Border county of New York or Pennsylvania

106 “omg” or “lol,” say

108 Phantasy Star maker

110 Indian mausoleum opening?

111 N.Y.S.E. debut112 With 49-Down,

singer with the autobiography “It Wasn’t All Velvet”

113 Guys’ dates, informally

114 ____ Pacis (Roman monument)

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

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 8A

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Page 21: Northwest press 042016

Careers

Jobsnew beginnings...

Administrative

Administrative

Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio

Real Estate

Rentalsgreat places to live...

LOT #4 HOFFMAN RDAlmost 5 acres of buildable land, has level building areas and some rolling. All utilities at the road. Short distance to US 50 and only 15 minutes to 275. Located between Aurora & Dillsboro. Great Opportunity!

Sherilyn Reynolds

513-266-3022

AURORAJUST

LISTED

West Shell

3BR, 2 full baths, remodeled, Ev-erything New! water/heat provided.a/c, off st. park, $800/mo + dep.3412 Lumardo Ave 513-400-6727

Green Township 1BR, heat & waterfurn’d, equip kit, $450/mo+$450/dep513-922-0484

HARRISON RemodeledDeluxe 1 & 2BR, $565-$705,

d/w, a/c, balc, no pets.Sec. dep. 513-574-4400

Bridgetown - 3799PownerRd4Bdm/3.1Ba$264,500 Dir: BridgetowntoPowner or Taylor toPowner..H-8882

OPENSUNDAY2-3:30

Elisa Ibold

Bridgetown - 3385GlenmontLane4Bdm/1.2Ba$109,500 Dir: LawrencetoMoonridge to left onWoodhaven to leftonstreet..H-8929

OPENSUNDAY12-1:30

Jeanne Rieder

Covedale - 1181MoradoDr4Bdm/2.Ba$94,900Dir: CovedaleAve. toEastonWillnet toMorado..H-8923

OPENSUNDAY1:30-3

Jeanne Rieder

Delhi - 5389Romance Ln 3Bdm/2.Ba$116,900 Dir:AndersonFerry south ofFoley to street..H-8919

OPENSUNDAY12-1:30

Jeanne Rieder

Delhi - 4798Basil Lane 3Bdm/1.1Ba$89,900 Dir:Pedretti to Fehr toWilke tostreet..H-8928

OPENSUNDAY2-3:30

Jeanne Rieder

Finneytown - 6511GreentreeDr 3Bdm/2.Ba$175,000 Dir: North Bend -Winton - Harbury -Greentree..H-8792

OPENSUNDAY3:30-5

Steve Florian

Miami Township - 3735TangoDr 3Bdm/2.1 Ba$174,900 Dir: BridgetownRd. toShadyland toFoxtrot,toTango..H-8861

OPENSUNDAY12-1:30

Wissel Schneider Team

Miami Township - 47JacksonDell Ct. 3Bdm/2.1Ba $169,900 Dir:Bridgetown turns intoStateRd. to JacksonDell Ct..H-8930

OPENSUNDAY2:30-3:30

Julie Pieczonka

Miami Township - 3816Foxtail Ln4Bdm/3.1Ba$309,500 Dir: BridgetownRd. toDeer Path to Foxtail..H-8653

OPENSUNDAY1:30-3

Steve Florian

North Bend - 50EdinburghPl 3Bdm/3.1Ba$369,900 Dir:ShadyLanetoAstonOaks to LonStratford to L onMuirfieldR onSt. AndrewsRonAbbeyHill to st.H-8875

OPENSUNDAY11:30-1

Steve Florian

PriceHill - 4365Cappel Dr3Bdm/1.Ba $79,900 Dir:W. 8th toHermosa toRt. onSchultewhich turns intoCappel Dr..H-8904

OPENSUNDAY2-3:30

Jeanne Rieder

Westwood - 3114RamonaAve3Bdm/2.Ba$109,900Dir: Boudinot toRamona..H-8926

OPENSUNDAY1-2

Julie Pieczonka

Westwood - 2445NovaAve2Bdm/1.Ba$57,500Dir:GlenwayAve toNova.H-8918

OPENSUNDAY11:30-12:30

Julie Pieczonka

Colerain - One acre home site withgreat views. Private drive.Perfect forwalkout.Underground utilities.Septic approved for 4bedroom.$39,900H-8901

Joe Darwish

Colerain East - Perfect 3 Bed 2BathRanchHome,NoSteps! New equipt eat-inkit, SS appl, Tile Flr! Flatpriv fen yd, patio.Newcarpet/paint! Updtd bath.$62,900 H-8921

Jeanne Rieder

Evanston - Great Value/Invstmt3bed 2 bath brick 2 sty!Open LR/DR.Woodequiptkit! CovrdPorch, Spaciousrooms! AvgMech. LongTermTenant.$54,900H-8757

Jeanne Rieder

Fairfield - Sharp 2BRTownhouse.LR/DRcombow/hdwd flrs,fin LLw/WBFP&wlkout topatio.Updted kit &ba.Bathon every flr. Carport & 2assn. spaces$89,900H-8800

Vicki Schlechtinger

Hamilton - Nice Tudor Ranch w/updated kit &bath, replwinds,GFA furn, C/A, covporch, 1 car gar, fin LL rmposs 3 bdrm/office -convenient location!$77,900 H-8799

Doug Rolfes

Monfort Hts. - Nice Brick Ranchon over half Acre lot.Finishedbasement, 2 cargarage.$119,900H-8839

Brian Bazeley

Monfort Hts. - Beautiful 1st floorcondo.Builtwithexpandedkitchenoption.Split bdrmflr plan. Lrg living rm withgas fp.Wlk/patiowithaccess topkg.$81,900H-8842 Joe Darwish

Monfort Hts. - Nice 2 BR/3 BATownhouse inNWSchools.FinishedLowerLevelw/FP,wetbar,walkout toprivatepatio. Updated baths, largebedrooms.$45,000H-8649

Jennifer Hamad

Monfort Hts. - Like New! 2 BD, 2BACondoover 1,000SF.OpenPlan, EquippedKit.Balcony, 1 car det gar. 2pets (under 25 lbs) allowed.NrHwy&Bus.$70,000H-8776

Jeanne Haft

Monfort Hts. - Purchase this lot inbeautifulEckertWoodsandyou are one step closer toyourdreamhome. Justunder a half acre. Bringyourownbuilder.$73,500H-8895

Mary Ann Zieverink

Monfort Hts. - Beautiful remodel!1200sf 6 rm, 3 bd1baCape Cod! 3/4 AC!Welcome front & sideporches. Total newkitchen!Tiled ba! Rich restoredhdwd!$144,900 H-8922

Jeanne Rieder

Mt. Washington - Great 2bedroom1bathhomewith1car detached garagewithworkshoparea! 2nd floorlaundry! Private flat backyard abutsMiddleSchool.$79,900 H-8917

Jeanne Rieder

Patriot - Breathtaking view ofOhioRiver &Countryside fromthis 63ACparadise. 4 bdlog cabin and2ndhome.60x40steel barn.HuntersDreamLodge.$349,500H-8332

Julie Pieczonka

Ross - Sharp Transitional TwoStoryw/3bedrms, 3baths,customkitchen, large2ndflr bonus rm& 2 car attgarage - large lot w/nicevalleyview.$199,900H-8546

Doug Rolfes

WhiteOak - Beautifully updated 3bd+ cape cod. Lg livingspaces.Mstr BRwith 12x11changing area. LL FamRmw/study&bath.20x12covrddeck.$124,900 H-8736

Joe Darwish

Hartwell - 1BR, $500/mo in-cludes electric, gas & trash,cute, quiet building, CallLester 513-413-1344

PRICE HILL / Covedale -1 BR apt. w/balcony, no pets, ht& wtr incl. $460/mo. 451-3191

Whiteoak Seniors 1BR Apt on 1st flrSecure bldg., 1 car gar., 2 milesfrom I-275 &I74, 1/2 mile from firedept. 3 miles from nearest hospital,1 yr lease required, 513-324-6344 or513-245-0995

3BR North Bend, OH Condo, 1.5BA,1 yr lease, no pets, ref’s req’d,$795/mo. 513-738-3962

COLERAIN 8462 FOREST VALLEY DRIVEMust see this gem! Only 1 year old with many upgrades thru out. Shiny hardwood floors, finished lower level with walkout, huge master suite and 2nd floor laundry. Give The Deutsch Team a call to find the home that’s meant for you!

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

OPEN SUNDAY 4/24JUST

LISTED

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject tothe Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegalto advertise any preference, limitation or discriminationbased on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicapor familial status or an intention to make any such prefer-ence, limitation or discrimination.This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisingfor real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readersare hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in thisnewpaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566

H.O.M.E. (Housing Opportunities Made Equal) 513-721-4663

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

Westchester - Huge 3BR, 3 Bath,equip. kit, fpl, sunroom, den, bsmt,gar., fitness center/pool, $1,750/mo +dep. No Pets. 513-737-0778

Hamilton, Oh, Exerter Dr, 3BR-1.5BA, lease option or Land con-tract $65,000. Owner financing. 10%down, $750/mo. Avail Now. com-pletely rehabbed, 2 lots. 513-315-5255

Hamilton / W. ChesterHomes, Ham Apt. 2BR-4BR$395-$1895! 513-737-2640or WWW.BBRENTS.COM

Middletown/SharonvilleHomes, Midd. Apt;

2-4BR $575-$1795! 513-737-2640 or

WWW.BBRENTS.CO M

Mortgage Loan CloserUnion Savings Bank has a full time opening for amortgage loan closer at our corporate office located at8534 E. Kemper Road Cincinnati, Ohio. The loan closerposition is an integral part of the overall mortgage loanprocess. Individuals in this position coordinate acceptableclosing dates, handle communications with title companies,broker’s, attorney’s and loan officers. The loan closer hasknowledge of all loan products that are offered by theCompany and works closely with loan officers andprocessors in order to successfully close loans. Position mayinclude Saturday commitments.

Please send resumes to:[email protected]

MORTGAGE LOAN PROCESSOR Union Savings Bank has a full time opportunity available foran experienced mortgage loan processor at our corporateoffice located at 8534 E. Kemper Road, Cincinnati Ohio.This individual is responsible for the timely and accurateprocessing of mortgage loan files, ensures files meet bankand regulatory guidelines and will check the accuracy of allloan documents. Individuals in this position will respond toinquiries, resolve problems and obtain missing documentsrequired to complete the loan file. This position requiresthe ability to prioritize and manage multiple tasks andmeet deadlines. Position may require Saturdaycommitments.

Please send resumes to:[email protected]

Great Space for smallstart- up or consultant cubi-cle space-fully furnished ,optional adminstrative sup-port short/long term lease,free WiFi conferenceroom/kitchen area, all utilitiesincluded. free parking lot, su-per location next to 74 & 275.Call Melissa 513-353-0700

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

Receptionist, FT/PT for a busy veterinary

hospital. Computer skillsrequired. Need to be able

to multi task whileanswering a multi-linephone and scheduling

appts. Attention to detail isa must. Looking for an

outgoing personality whocan provide courteous

service. Salary andbenefits (FT).

For serious consideration,apply in person at:

9520 Montgomery Rd.Montgomery 45242

or fax resume to513-985-5473.

Compassionate Person willcare for your loved one in

their home. Experienced anddependable. Can do 24

hours. 513-304-1130

JOBS HOMES RIDESPETS &STUFF

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

VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD

Homes of Distinction

HAND OUTTHE CIGARS!

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebrate it.

APRIL 20, 2016 μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ 1C

Page 22: Northwest press 042016

Management

CE-000

0645

948

APPLY FOR THESE AND OTHER POSITIONS AT:www.butlersheriff.org/general-info/employments/

BUTLER COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICEis currently seeking applicants for:

PARAMEDICS (PT/FT)Render emergency and routine medical care to prisoners. Conduct sick-calls, issue and assist prisoners with prescribed medications and deliver

treatment as ordered by a physician.Requirements: Valid Paramedic certification from the State of Ohio.

Experience preferred but not required.

SALARY: FT Paramedic: starting $18.76 / hour plus benefit packagePT Paramedic: starting $16 - 19 / hour, based on availability, attendance

and performance.

CORRECTION OFFICERS (PT)Corrections Officers are responsible for the safety and security of inmates

housed in Butler County Sheriff's Office correctional facilities. Within the first year of hire, the officer will be required to complete the Basic Corrections

Officer Training.A peace officer certification from OPOTA is not required.

Requirements: Must be 18 years of age or older at time of appointment. Position requires a high school diploma or GED. Applicants are subject to an extensive background investigation as detailed on the employment

information page linked below.SALARY: Part-Time $16.00/hour

DISPATCHER (PT/FT)LATERAL ENTRY / ENTRY LEVEL

Dispatchers answer telephone calls for emergency services (fire, law enforcement, and medical), general information, and non-emergency

requests for service. Obtains pertinent information for emergency situation and relays the information to the appropriate emergency responders.

Must be able to handle high stress situations. The BCSO Regional Dispatch Center is a 24/7 operation. Employee will receive training and certification

as an Emergency Medical Dispatcher (EMD).Requirements: Prior service in a public safety dispatch center is preferred.

Candidates must be willing and able to work assigned shifts, including weekends and holidays.

SALARY: FT dispatchers current starting wage is $15.56 an hour with contractual increases up to $24.22 an hour. PT Dispatcher is $15.10/hour

STARTING WAGE FOR LATERAL ENTRY BASED UPON EXPERIENCE

Position Type: Full-Time and Part-TimeStatus: Open

Preschool & Summer ProgramOutings, Summer Activties, Pre-school learning, play & games.State Licensed, FBI Ck’d, CPR, 1st aid,18 yrs in business. Great References. M-F, 5:30am-7pm. Ages 2-12 yrsGreat Rates. Kim 513-328-0907

Sr. Database Administrators DB2z/OS, Vantiv LLC, Symmes Twp, OH.Req. BS in comp sci, MIS or compeng’g + 84 mo. heavy DB2z databaseadmin. exp & product supportrequiring DB2z V10 or V11 exp + 72mo. w/: very large databaseportioning (> billion rows); largesystems in data sharing sysplexenvironment; & IBM Admin toolsuite, IBM Log Analyzer, QueryMonitor, & Omegamon (DB2 PE).Also req: in-depth knowledge ofDB2 utilities such as LOAD, UNLOAD,High Speed Unload, RUNSTAT,REORG, COPY, COPYTOCOPY,MERGECOPY, MODIFY & SPUFI; &hands-on exp. w/ performance-tuning of complex SQLs. Apply atwww.vantiv.com/careers.

Supervisor of Financial ServicesAs a member of the SeniorLeadership Team, the SFS

manages, supervises, coordinatesand/or performs accounting and

human resources functions at oneof Ohio’s most successful public

park systems. Competitive salary& benefits.

Application with resume is due by4:00 pm May 15, 2016.

Visit www.yourmetroparks.netfor details. EEO Employer.

CLEANI NG SERVICEPOSITION

Carole’s Personal TouchFull time cleaner neededPolice report required.

Call Carole Davis (513)470-7867

Experienced Unio nHeavy Equipment

OperatorMust have experience

with foot swing backhoe,dig concrete sidewalk and

curb. Email resume:[email protected]

Earn Cash, Prizesand Bonuses!

Deliver the Community PressNewspapers in yourneighborhood onWednesdays Only

So Don’t Delay Call Today-Call Customer ServiceCall 853-6277

HEY KIDS!

Front Desk and Night Auditor Comfort Inn in Florence, KY is

currently looking for a Front Deskand Night Auditor

Ideal candidates would be freindly,helpful, detail oriented, and a

problem solver. Computerknowledge is a must. If you areinterested in joining our team,

please send your resume to:

Comfort Inn7454 Turfway Road Florence, KY 41042

or email:[email protected]

JANITORFT or PT. $10.00-11.50/HR. Rich

Benefits. Email resume [email protected]

or apply onlinewww.petwow.com/pages/jobapp

Janitorial Office CleaningPart-time.

5-7days per weekDaytime hours

Contact: 859-586-7014

Local Class "B" Truck DriverStandard Shift- Knuckle boom -straight truck full time. Medical

and Paid Vacations. Call Paul atStone Center (513) 271-5646

Mock Jurors$$ Earn $12 Per Hour $$

Spend 6-10 hrs on a given wkdaynight, wkday or wkend serving asa juror in a mock trial to evaluate

settlement of an actual courtcase. If you have a valid OH DL or

State I.D.,a U.S. Citizen, andeligible to vote, enroll with us on:

SIGNUPDIRECT.COM (please fillout on line form completely forconsideration) or only if you donot have access to a computer

Call: 1-800-544-5798. (On-line signup preferred). *****Mock Trials

held in Hamilton Co. Ohio.

PET GROOMERFT. Great Pay. Rich Benefits. Great

Schedule. Email resume to [email protected] or apply online

www.petwow.com/pages/jobapp

Stone Shop Fabrication2 years exp. in limestone or granite

required. Full time. Medical andPaid Vacations. Call Paul at Stone

Center (513) 271-5646

VETERINARY ASSISTANT FT or PT. $27K-30K/Year (FT).WILL TRAIN. Email resume to

[email protected] or apply online

www.petwow.com/pages/jobapp

PART TIMEMOTOR ROUTE &VAN DRIVERS

Needed in the CommunityPress Newspapers

Delivery area. West side

Jobs are available onTuesday/Wednesdays.

Must have a reliable vehicle

Call 513-853-6277

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

CE-0000645983

RECREATION PROGRAMM-ER

The City of Springdale, Ohio,is accepting applications andresumes for the position ofRecreation Programmer toprovide oversight and direc-tion for the community’ssports, classes, activities andspecial events forpreschoolers through adults.Successful candidate musthave excellent administra-tive, organizational and cus-tomer service skills. Previousexperience in sports pro-gramming and Rec Trac soft-ware a plus. Candidate musthave: an Associates degree inParks and Recreation or aclosely related field; mini-mum of two years superviso-ry experience with four yearsprogressively responsible ex-perience in Parks and Recrea-tion or related field; andability to work a variedschedule. A Bachelor’s de-gree in Parks and Recreationis preferred. Salary range:$47,479.57 to $74,068.13 +excellent benefits.

Interested candidates shallsubmit an application andresume to the SpringdaleMunicipal Building 11700Springfield Pike, Springdale,OH, Monday thru Friday,8:30 AM – 4:30 PM. No ap-plications will be acceptedafter 4:30 PM on Friday, May6, 2016. EOE

Volvo of CincinnatiWe are a rapidly growingAutomotive Group seekingto add to our corporateteam of part-time, flexibleemployees.

Job requirements are goodcommunication skills,dependability and theability to work a flexibleschedule of day, eveningsand weekend hours. Thesepart-time positions requirea commitment of between8-28 hours per week onone’s personal needs andthe schedule can be an everchanging one, allowing forthe ever changing scheduleof our busy lives.

These position are theperfect fit for collegestudents, parents of schoolage children and/or peopleseeking a second job tosupplement their full-timeincomes.

Interested applicants,contact Cindy Rabe at

624-1104 toarrange for apersonal interview.

Western Hills, Maintenance Tech for Complex, Full time, HVAC exp

plus, carpentry, plumbing, tools,transport, 513-623-2996 or email

[email protected]

WHITE CASTLE NOW HIRING –CATERING

COORDINATORIn this fun, full-time

opportunity, you’ll buildawareness for our cateringprogram by developing an

action plan to visitbusinesses, community

groups and social groups.You’ll also use your

outgoing personality to bea positive brand

ambassador for WhiteCastle!

Don’t be fashionably late –

EMAIL YOUR RESUME TODAY!

[email protected]

DME Delivery Technician

Responsible for thedelivery, set-up, and pick-

up of DME equipment,respiratory, & supplies to

acute, sub-acute, long-termcare, hospice, and

homecare accounts.Requires at least 5 years

DME Industry experience,excellent driving record,

strong work ethic,excellent physical

condition, and able tomulti-task. Ability to

lift/carry 75lbs frequently.

Email resume [email protected]

or fax to 614-888-8453

LPNAccepting applications at:

Sunrise Manor & Convalescent Center

3434 St. Rt. 132,Amelia, OH 45102

(513) 797-5144

STNAAccepting applications at:

Sunrise Manor &Convalescent Center

3434 St. Rt. 132,Amelia, OH 45102

(513) 797-5144

STNAs – All Shifts

Horizon Health Care is seekingdependable, caring STNAs – Fulland Part Time – for all shifts. We

offer a $500 sign-on bonus,referral bonuses, a full healthinsurance package (medical,dental, vision), accrued PTOavailable for use after six (6)

months of employment, rotatingholidays, the ability to earn an

attendance bonus each pay periodand flex scheduling. We provide

free parking on-site or areconveniently located on the bus

line.

Horizon’s State Tested Nurse Aideswork 12 hour shifts (7a-7p or 7p-

7a) with every other weekend off.Our pay scale starts at $11.00/hr

with no experience and increasesbased on years of experience. On-

line scheduling makes it easy tocheck your schedule at any time.

It’s a new day at Horizon, so comejoin our team!

Please apply in person at: 3889 E.Galbraith Road, Cincinnati, OH

45236

AdministrativeAssistant/Clerk ofCouncil Position

The City of Milford is acceptingapplications for the position ofAdministrative Assistant/Clerkof Council. The ideal candidate

must possess the ability to carryout detailed written and oralinstructions, communicateeffectively with residents,

maintain files in accordancewith the Ohio Public Records

Act, distribute notices of publicmeetings and prepare purchaseorders for the City Manager andCity Council. This position alsoserves as Clerk of Council andprovides records transcription

for all meetings of City Council,which occur on alternate

Tuesday evenings, and budgetmeetings which occur 2Saturdays per year. An

Associate’s Degree in BusinessAdministration or equivalent

experience required. Theposition is full-time and offers acomplete benefits package and a

rate of pay dependent uponqualifications. Submit resume to

the City of MilfordAdministrative Assistant, 745Center St., Suite 200, Milford,

OH 45150 or email [email protected].

Applications will be accepteduntil April 29, 2016.

AA/EOE

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

2C μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 20, 2016

Page 23: Northwest press 042016

Community

Announceannouncements, novena...

Special Greeting

Special Greeting

Special Notices-Clas

Bring a Bid

Auctiona deal for you...

General Auctions

Equipment

Farmhome grown...

Assorted

Stuffall kinds of things...

Restaurants-Hotels

Retail Retail

Food Service Shift LeaderOhio Valley Goodwill Industries seeks a Cafeteria ShiftLeader. The position includes preparation of main meals, onthe job instruction of trainees, general kitchen clean-up, cashregister operation and customer service. In addition, thisposition will provide general staff oversight in the absence ofthe supervisor. Typical hours are Monday-Friday from 6:30am-3:00 pm with minimal overtime required. High SchoolDiploma or G.E.D. with one year of experience in FoodService including customer service and cash registeroperation required. Experience as a shift leader or key holderin a restaurant or retail operation preferred. Must be able topass all applicable back ground checks and various registrychecks. Proof of education required at time of interview.Goodwill offers comprehensive benefits package to full timeemployees.

Please apply at www.cincinnatigoodwill.org.(513) 771-4800.

EEO Employer/Vet/Disabled

Nurses needed for skilled focused, transitional care environment.Must possess strong clinical,

customer service & organizational skills.

Exp preferred. Competitive salary.New higher shift and weekend diffs!

Health Insurance $98/mo.

Apply online to join our team!

NursesFull Time – Days & Nights

www.carespring.com/employment

Assists DON with around the clock staffing for nursing dept. Inputs

all nursing schedules into Ulti system. Must be dependable,

organized and able to multi task.Health ins for only $98/month.

Apply online to join our team!

Staffing Coordinator

Full-Time

www.carespring.com/employment

Program ManagementAnalyst Responsible foranalysis of company’s

warranty serviceprogram for electronic

products. Apply by mailonly to Total Display

Solutions, 1379 JamikeAve., Erlanger, KY

41018, attn. HR.

THE FARMSeeking Part-Time , Mature

Banquet EmployeesEvenings and Some Weekends

Must be 21 or olderSend email to:

[email protected] 513-922-7020

for more info

ELECTRICIAN NEEDEDGrowing service-oriented

electrical contractor on HiltonHead Island, SC seeking an

experienced electrician to joinus. If you’re interested in

re-locating, inquire at [email protected]

PAINTERS5 yrs exp or more, must

have own tools and trans.513-290-9067

CDL Route Driver

Noble Oil Services, Inc. hasan immediate opening

for a Route Driver inCincinnati and northern KY

area to collect used oil.

Qualified candidates will possess a CDL, the ability to

obtain a T endorsement, excellent driving record,

good customer serviceskills,

and have the ability towork independently. High

school diploma or equivalent

required. Forconsideration, apply

online atwww.nobleoil.com or atyour local Employment

Security Commission office. “EOE. Veterans/Disabled”

Drivers: CDL – A 1 yr. exp., Earn$1,250 + per week, Great Weekend

Hometime, Excellent Benefits &Bonuses, 100% No Touch/

70% D & H888-406-9046

Drivers:, CDL-A: LOCALLawrenceburg, IN!! Regional &OTR Home Weekends! Sign-OnBonus!! Excellent Pay, Benefits!

Drue Chrisman Inc.:1-855-506-8599 x103

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

DEAR KEN HARNED,, Godput it on my heart to reachout to you and to let youknow your sons in Az are do-ing great. Jake is a spittingimage of you and Xavier is a10 yr old genius. It’s been acouple of years since wespoke, but I know you stilllove them. You take care. Ifyou want to get in touch,find me on FB.,

ST JUDE NOVENAMay the sacred heart of Jesusbe adored, glorified, loved &preserved throughout theworld now and forever. SacredHeart of Jesus pray for us, StJude, worker of miracles, prayfor us. St Jude helper of thehelpless, pray for us. Say thisprayer 9 times a day, by the8th day, your prayer will be an-swered. Say it for 9 days. Its hasnever been known to fail. Pub-lication must be promised.Thank You St Jude.

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS!Harris Bed Bug Killers/KITComplete Treatment SystemHardware Stores, The HomeDepot, homedepot.com

Recycling Electronics Driveat Loveland Middle and HighSchool, On Saturday, April23rd from 12pm-3pm. If ithas a cord we want it!,(513)276-7403

Absolute Auctionof Bank Owned Real Estate

Wed, April 27th at 1PM On-siteAddress: 3422 Woodbine Ave,

Cheviot, OH 45211Description: 2BR, 1BA (possible3rd BR in finished attic), built in1912, .273 Acre, 1,821 +/- sq ftper Auditor.Preview: Wed. April 20th 12Noon-12:30PM & 30 minutesprior to auctionBasic Terms: Sells regardless ofprice, As-Is with no buyer contin-gencies for financing, inspec-tions or otherwise. Clean deedwith no liens or delinquent taxesat closing. A 10% buyer’s premi-um will apply. Short tax pro-ration. Buyer pays all closingcosts.Deposit and Closing: 10% depos-it required on auction day. Mustclose within 30 days of auction.Auctioneer: Michael Hoffman

Broker: Ohio Real EstateAuctions, LLC (614) 314-0298www.OhioRealEstateAuctions.com

CLEVES SELF STORAGEwill sell items at publicauction/sale. The items to be soldare generally described as house-hold goods, boxes, bags, clothing,furniture, appliances, bedding,mattresses, toys, tools, bikes, lug-gage, trunks, personal effects,equipment, office supplies, fix-tures and business inventories.Auction/sale will take place on05/06/16 at 10:00 a.m. at Cleves SelfStorage 9561 Cilley RD, Cleves,Ohio 45002. Please call ahead toconfirm if auction/sale has beencancelled, 513-257-0833. The fol-lowing units will be auctioned orsold: Unit #53 Ray Tippitt PO box3621, Lawrenceburg, in 47025, Unit#91 Sue Clemons 8765 Bigtree Ct,Cleves, Ohio 45002, Unit # 77 BillHuff 5408 Wing Ave, Cleves,Ohio45002, Unit#39 Robin Thomas 6626River Rd Apt. 4 Cincinnati, Oh45233, Unit #148 Amy Benkert 7314Bridgetown Rd, Cincinnati, Oh45248.

1944 CUB TRACTOR, w/sicklebar, Needs some work,$3,000; 513-752-4283

ANNUAL Spring DOLLShow & SALE

Sun, April 24, Clarion Hotel(same location, formerly

Holiday Inn), I-275, exit 46(Rt. 42, Sharonville), Cinti45241, 10am-3p. $4 adult

adm. [email protected]

ANTIQUE & VINTAGEMARKET

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

Sunday June 7, 7am-3pmOver 200 dealers

513-738-7256lawrenceburgantiqueshow.com

BURLINGTON ANTIQUE SHOW

Boone County FairgroundsBurlington, KY

FIRST SHOW OF SEASON!Sun., April 17

------------8am-3pm $3.00/Adult

Early Buying6am-8am $5/Adult

Rain or Shine513-922-6847

burlingtonantiqueshow.com

WE SERVICE ALL APPLIAN-CES + HANDYMAN SERVICES

513-473-4135

4-grave sites in Arlington MemorialGardens, Mt Healthy, $800 each or$3,000 for all 4. 513-722-0070

Ethan Allen Queen Cannon-ball Bed and MatchingChest,, Black, great condi-tion, R. Lauren bedding in-cluded, $$1,250 or best offer.(859)250-9131 [email protected]

For Sale: Sleeper Sofa.Like New, $300. Paid [email protected]

24’ Round Pool - only 2 yrsold, includes patio furniture,$100 in chemicals, all acces-sories, & auto cleaner.$1,500/obo. 513-574-7651BOOK STOREChildren’s, Adult, Cartoons, Es-says, Short Stories, Poetry, BasicMath, A Play. Appointments 513-601-1571 Audrey

Room A/C unit - 5100 BTU,used 4 mos, $100, Loveseat,VGC, $75, Stamp Collection,$75, Maxwell House collec-tors cup. 513-574-7004SPORTS FANS! NASCAR, Bengals& Reds memoribilia. Pictures,cars, cut glass, etc. 513-733-3968

Wheelchair Shop RiderScreamer New batteries,$650; Pride Go-Go ScooterLike new $650, 513-886-9960

Lost sport coat, shirt & tie, ina green plastic garment bag,Near I-75 and I-275.262-853-6397

Stained Glass Beginners SetUp Glass, grinder, table, saw,solder, $500; 513-752-4283

HANDYMAN Experienced, Reasonable, No Job Too big orToo Small. Call Steve 513-491-6672

#1 ALWAYS BUYING -Retired Vet pays topcash for antiques andvintage items. Singleitem or completeestate 513-325-7206

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!

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

Records (513) 473-5518

# I BUY VINYL RECORDSRock, Metal, Punk, Indie,R&B, Reggae, etc. We makehouse calls. 513-258-0535

INSTANT CASH PAID For Baseball Cards Coins, Gold,

Silver, Paper Money, Antiques, OldToys, Watches, Comics, Nascar, CaseKnives Military, Trains, Autographs,Estates, Many Others! We Pick-up

513-295-5634

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

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Sell your car.

Garage SalesGarage Sales

Garage Sales

Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

Colerain Twp- Estate Sale7210 Southwind Ter.(Cincinnati). Fri 4/22, 9am-4pm. Numbers @ 8:45 &Sat 4/23, 9am-4pm: Con-tents of home, basement,garage, dining table 4 chairs& leaf, china cabinet, couch,cedar chest’s, tv armoire,rocker, kitchen table w/4chairs, end tables,bookshleves, desk, file cabi-net’s, folding chairs, china,costume jewelry, linens, pics,rugs, old camera’s, records,books,holiday, designer clothes,shoes & purses, lamps, elec-tronics, washing machines,mirrors, luggage, lots ofmisc, to much to list, allprcied to sell. info & picshsestates.com or 859-992-0212Dir: Harrsion Ave to AlthausRd to Austin Ridge Dr toSouthwind Ter.

Hamilton SpringShopping Expo

Saturday, April 23, 2016 10am-6pm

Butler County Fairgrounds

1715 Fairgrove Ave.Hamilton, Ohio 45011

Join us on this spring dayfor lots of shopping. Joindozens of vendors both in-side and out, rain orshine. Whether your look-ing to purchase a home-made craft or network,seeking home improve-ment ideas or just grab-bing a bite to eat andspending a day with thefamily, this is one eventyou don’t want to miss.For more info:

513-284-6617 orwww.ohiofamilyevents.com

Outdoor Vendors Wanted: Shandon, Ohio’s oldest Welsh

community, celebrates it91st. Annual Strawberry Festival, Saturday June 11, 10 am to 5 pm.Antiques, crafts, art vendors areinvited. Call Jerry 513 738-0491 or

email him at [email protected]

Blue AshChimney Hill Neighborhood

Garage Sale Sat. April 23, 8am -12pm Cooper Rd at ChimneyHill, Furniture, Baby items &

household & more!

Bridgetown - Large GarageSale, Sat 4/23, 8am-3pm,2897 Blackberry Trail &

Quailhill, (off Werk Rd),Too much to list!

Cincinnati, Multi Family Garage Sale2862 Werkridge Dr,Fri: 4/22 8-1; Sat: 4/23 8-1,Electronics, Women’s &children clothing, toys,household misc, framed art,other items. Must See!

Cold Spring, Huge YARDSALE Fri 4/22, Sat 4/23 - 8-4& Sun 4/24 - 8-2. Homemedical equip., toys, furni-ture, craft items, smallkitchen items & appliances,household goods, someItems Free, & more! Dir: US27 to Brightwood to JamesCt, Dir: US 27 to Bright-wood to James Court

COVEDALE- Multi-Familysale Sat, April. 23, 8am-2pm, 1173 Overlook . Lots of fur-niture, cd’s, dvd’s , hand &elec tools, books, furniture,clothing, misc knick knacks,board games, household &kitchen items, children’s toys,lawn mower’s, weed eater’s,lots of party supplies,Eveything must go. to muchto list.

COVERED BRIDGE ANTIQUE MALLBig 23rd Anniversary SaleApril 22, 23 & 24, 10am-6pm

15-50% off most itemsRefreshments-Bargains Galore7508 Hamilton Ave-Mt Healthy,

Ohio513-521-5739

Find us on facebook

Delhi OH- Fri 4/22 & Sat 4/23, 9a-3p475 Hibernia Dr: Lots of misc itemsDir: Anderson Ferry to Cannas toHibernia

Delhi-Street Sale, Saturday 4/239am to 2pm; Gwendolyn Ridge offMitchell Way.

GREENHILLS INDOOR & OUT-DOORSaturday 9a-4p. $10 Set-up,American Legion Hall.1100 Winton Rd,Info- 513-825-3099

Mason, Multi Family Ga-rage Sale, 5528 CrestwoodDrive , Fri: 8am-3pm, Sat:8am-3pm, Furniture, house-hold items, sporting goods,tools, lots of misc., Dir:Crooked Tree SubdivisionFrom Bethany Rd - takeHeartwood to CrestwoodFrom Mason Montgomery -take Sentinel Oak to Bent-ley Oak to Crestwood

Milford, OH, Moving Sale,1369 Mills of Miami Blvd,Fri: 10-5, Sat: 10-6, Sun:12-5, Wide variety, Collecti-bles, Dept. 56, Boyds Bear,Sara’s Attic, furniture,tools, much more, Dir: Rt.28, right at Woodville Pike,right at Deerfield Rd.,Potterhill Homes, firsthouse on left. Good park-ing.

Montfort Heights -Parkvalley Street Sale,

April 23, 9am-?(off Edger to Parkvalley)

Something for Everyone!

MONTGOMERY RUMMAGE/BAKE SALEAll proceeds support

Montgomery Boy Scut Troop 258Sat. April 23, 8-2pm

Toys, Household, ClothesMontgomery Presbyterian Church

9994 Zigzag Rd, 45242

Moving Sale -Most items must go! Sat.April 23, 8am to 2pm,789 Arbor Run Dr, Delhi

Moving Sale, S y m m e sTownship, 11913 HarbortownDr., 45249 Friday 4/22 9a-4pSaturday 4/23 9a-4pHenkel Harris accent chest,Henkel Harris corner chair,Love Seat, wingback chairs,antique butcher block, AmishFarm Table, assrtd garageitems & tools, great whitebaby crib, DR Set, Patio Set-grill,fire pit, other items includingchina. For pictures visitwww.studioeastonmain.comPatsy 859-992-7607

PRICE HILL-5223 Highview Dr, Fri & Sat,

April 22 & 23, 7a-2p. For St Leo’s Food Pantry,Something for Everyone!

Reading 45215- 1307 ObservatoryAve Street Sale, Fri 4/15 & Sat 4/16, 9am to3pm, Antique, vintage, tables,planter, milk can, chairs, barstools, front gate metalwood, furniture, Wedding,Christmas, golf bag, paintballgun/mask, corn hole, little tikestables, wagon, bikes,housewares, coolers, coffeetables & misc.

Sharonville/Sat April 23, 8-3, Multi Family, 3567 - 3600Grandview Ave, Baby items,toys, household, vintageclothes & etc

West Chester- RUMMAGE SALESaturday April 23, 8a-1pLord of Life Lutheran Church6329 Tylersville Rd, Great Deals! Furniture, clothing, kidsstuff, kitchenware, garden gear,sporting goods, holiday decor,books, & much more

White Oak- Multi Family Sale5705 Haubner Rd. Sat 4/23,8am-2pm: Lots of misc items,household, furniture, home de-cor, mostly adult clothes

White Oak- Multi Street Garage SaleNickview, Ridgedale, Pattie & Randy45247; April 22 & 23, Fri & Sat; 8a-2p

WHITE OAK-St. James PTORummage Sale, 3565 HubbleRd (in church hall bsmt) Sat.April 23, 9-12:30. $5.00 bag

sale at Noon.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

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

LISA’S CLEANING SERVICEResidential, office, apts & rentalsDependable & Free Estimates812-637-9171 or 513-256-0698

ALR LANDSCAPES, LLCSpring cleanup & more for youryard/landscape. Free estimates &consulation. 859-638-7186 ( Westside owner/operator)

A.B.C. Lawn ServiceMowing-Walk EdgingFertilizing - Seeding513-738-4410

GREENGENE’SRESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL MOWING

HOME 931-7921CELL # 368-5180

GENE VONDERHAARFULLY INSURED

LAWN CARE SERVICE

WIMMER LAWN SERVICE

Spring Mulch & Mowing SpecialsFree Estimates

448-6674

CE-0000644053

Hensley Roofing - Local companyhere to stay, w/20 yrs exp. Special-izing in residential & commercialroofing & siding, Longest warran-ties, fully insured, Refs avail., Wedo not sub out! We do the job our-selves and stand behind our work.

No Job too big or small. 937-509-3308

LOW Cost Tree Service - Trim,Top & Removal. 30 yrs exp.

Free est. Sr disc.George 513-477-2716

CALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

Service Directory

APRIL 20, 2016 μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ 3C

Page 24: Northwest press 042016

Adopt Me

Petsfind a new friend...

Automotive

Ridesbest deal for you...

Older Video Games, Lookingto buy your older Nintendovideo games and systems. ,$Vary. (513)315-2058 [email protected]

$$$ PAID for LPs,CDs-ROCK,BLUES, INDIE, METAL, JAZZ,

ETC + VINTAGE STEREOEQUIP, DVDs & MEMORABIL-

IA. 50 YRS COMBINEDBUYING EXPERIENCE!

WE CAN COME TO YOU!513-591-0123

SAME DAY CASH PAID!for Baseball Cards Pre-1978, Singlecards, sets, and collections, alsogame used bats."I am not a dealerso I can pay you More!" 513-236-6804

WANTED: COINCOLLECTIONS

for the

AUCTION held in conjunction with the

33rd Annual Greater CincinnatiNumismatic Exposition

June 2-4, 2016. Sharonville Conv Ctr.This annual event is Cincinnati’s

oldest and largest coin conventionand draws buyers from all over

the US. If you have a serious coincollection for sale, this is the

marketplace-nothing else in thearea is even close! To

discuss consigned contactPaul Padget (513)-821-2143

WANTED: COIN COLLECTIONSfor the

AUCTIONheld in conjunction with the

33rd Annual Greater CincinnatiNumismatic Exposition

June 2-4, 2016. Sharonville Conv Ctr.This annual event is Cincinnati’s old-est and largest coin convention anddraws buyers from all over the US.If you have a serious coin collection

for sale, this is the marketplace-nothing else in the area is even

close! Todiscuss cosigning contactPaul Padget (513)-821-2143

WAR RELICSUS, German, Japanese

Paying Top DollarCall 513-309-1347

AKC English Labrador Retriever Puppies 1 Litter born 02/19/16.Colors are Black a n dYellow. Beautiful EnglishChampion Bloodlines.Pups will have Limited AKCReg i s t ra t ion , 1st set ofshots, microchipped andwormed every 2 weeks$250 will reserve yourplacement for one of ourBeautiful Pups. Please callStephanie at (740)636-0645or [email protected]

CAVALIER KING CHARLESPuppies- AKC, M & F, Healthguaranteed, 513-316-1737

German Shepherd puppies,1 male, 1 female, , 8 weeksGerman Shepherd AKC Certi-fied Pedigreed puppies.Breeders pick male and fe-male held from a litter of 11.Puppies are of the Wash-burn, Afton, and VonHerrmann bloodlines. Theyare HOUSEBROKEN and havehad shots and wormed.Great homes only. (513)550-4222 [email protected]

Ohio’s Biggest & Best REPTILE Sale & Show

Buy, sell, trade!Sat, April 23, 9a-3p

Adults $4. 10 & under $1NEW LOCATIONFranklin County

Fairgrounds5035 Northwest Pkwy

Hilliard, OH 43026614-459-4261 / 614-457-4433

http://allohioreptileshows.webs.com

ROTTWEILER PUPS- German,AKC reg., Born on 2/18/15,POP, M & F. $600. cash only.859-586-8624

Yorkie P u p p i e s , CKC, 3F,small Vet chk, shots &wormed, tails docked, $600cash only. 513-528-0278

FOUND CAT, large, fat tabby,Sayler Park area (Delhi), sweet,waits by door, 513-941-3267

Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk $200-$2000and more. Fair cash price,quick pickup. 513-662-4955

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

Week. 513-605-0063

Chevrolet 2012 Equinox,52622 mi., Excellent - LTPackage cond., Black ext.,Silver int., Remote KeylessEntry, $15,995. Ryan(859)991-3984

Jaguar 1984 XJ6, Sedan, 4dr., Automatic, Green ext.,Black int., 06 Cylinders, RWD,69500 miles, reconditioned,meant to be driven. Verynice shape, beautiful classyauto, $6500. Brian.Rutemiller (513)807-0461

Pontiac 1996 Grand AM 4cyl, Clean, Runs good, $950,513-922-4334

1 BUYER OF OLD CARSCLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s,Running or not.

513-403-7386

Lincoln 1980 Versailles 4dr,88K miles, 302 V8, many newparts, all original, not perfectbut beautiful car. $4,500.513-931-8472

LOUISVILLE SPRING CLASSICCOLLECTOR CAR AUCTION

SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 2016Now accepting quality

consignments.To be held at Clark Co. Auto Auction

1611 E. 10th St. (Hwy. 62) Jeffersonville, IN 47130

For Buy/Sell Info. - Call George Eber 615-496-2277

2003 Harley Heritage Softtail100th Aniversary, Exc Cond, seniorowned, 1st 7,500. 513-941-3926

Harley 2008 Lowboy,Anniversary Edition, only 4Kmiles, MINT cond., $13,500.513-258-7061

Honda 2005 CR-V, SUV,140000 mi., 5 dr., Automatic,Great cond., White ext., Tanint., 04 Cylinders, AWD,$3000. (916)389-1450

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

ONLYCARS.COMHELPS YOUGETTHE RIGHTCAR,WITHOUTALL THEDRAMA.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

HAND OUTTHE CIGARS!

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebrate it.

4C μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 20, 2016

Page 25: Northwest press 042016

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

LEGAL NOTICE to BIDDERS

Sealed bids will be received at the City of Wyoming Munici-pal Building, 800 Oak Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio 45215, until1:00 P.M. local time on Wednesday, May 11, 2016 for all la-bor, materials, and equipment necessary to complete theproject known as WYOMING RECREATION CENTER2016 IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT RE-BID , as set forth inthe project documents prepared by SFA Architects, 300West Fourth Street, Suite 100, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202. Bidsshall be publicly opened and read aloud immediately afterclosing time for said bids.

Contract documents, bid sheets, drawings and specifica-tions shall be obtained at Key Blue Prints, Inc., 411 ElliotAvenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 45215, (513) 821-2111, www.keycompanies.com. The cost of each set of documents shall bepaid by each bidder to Key Blue Prints, Inc. and shall benon-refundable. All prospective bidders shall be a planholder of record with Key Blue Prints, Inc.

Each bidder is required to furnish with its proposal, a BidGuaranty and Contract Bond in accordance with Section153.54 through 153.571 of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid securi-ty, furnished in Bond form, shall be issued by a surety com-pany or corporation licensed in the State of Ohio in the fullamount of one hundred percent (100%) of the bid amount.A 100% satisfactory performance and payment bond shallbe required of the successful bidder.

A non-mandatory Pre-bid Meeting will be held on Wednes-day, May 4, 2016 at 3:00 P.M. at Wyoming RecreationCenter, 9940 Springfield Pike, Cincinnati, Ohio 45215.

Each bid must be submitted in a sealed envelope plainlymarked on the outside with the name of the bidder, theiraddress, and the name of the project for which the bid issubmitted. Each bid must contain the full name of the par-ty or parties submitting the same and all persons interest-ed therein.

All bidders must comply with the prevailing wage rates onPublic Improvements in Hamilton County and the City ofWyoming, Ohio as ascertained and determined by the Ad-ministrator of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services(OBES) as provided in Section 4115.05 through 4115.034 ofthe Revised Code of the State of Ohio.

The City of Wyoming reserves the right to waive irregulari-ties and to reject any or all bids or to accept or reject anypart thereof.203TRI,Apr20,27,’16#1201148

CITY OF WYOMING, OHIOHAMILTON COUNTY

LEGAL NOTICE

The City of Wyoming, Ohiowill accept sealed bids forfurnishing one thousand(1,000) tons of treated bulkhighway salt from June 1,2016 to April 30, 2017 winterseason. The City of Wyomingwill have the right to pur-chase up to 150% of the con-tracted amount (1,500 tons).The provider will be guaran-teed 80% of the contractedamount (800 tons). Provide aseparate bid amount fordump delivery and a sepa-rate bid amount for piler de-livery. Envelopes should bemarked “SALT BID”. Bidswill remain firm until July 1,2016. Bids will be accepteduntil 11:00 a.m. on May 6,2016 in the office of the CityManager, 800 Oak Avenue,Wyoming, Ohio, 45215 atwhich time all bids receivedwill be opened and readaloud.The City of Wyoming re-serves the right to reject anyand all bids and to acceptany portion or portions ofany bid and waive any for-mality or technicality in anyproposal in the interest ofthe City.203TRI,Apr20,27,’16#1197440

LEGAL NOTICE

Evendale CommunityImprovement Corporation

(CIC)NOTICE

The 2015 unaudited financialstatement for the EvendaleCommunity ImprovementCorporation are availablefor public inspection. Directquestions to David Elmer,10500 Reading Road,Evendale, Ohio during regu-lar business hours.203TRI,Apr20,27,’16#1197011

LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF SHARONVILLEORDINANCE 2016-15

AUTHORIZING THE SAFETY/SERVICE DIRECTOR TOENTER INTO A CON-TRACT FOR THE PUR-CHASE OF TWO NEWFORD FLEX VEHICLESFOR THE FIRE DEPART-MENT AND TO DISPOSEOF A FORD VAN AND AFORD EXPEDITION VEHI-CLE WHICH ARE NO LON-GER NEEDED BY THEFIRE DEPARTMEN T

Vicki Hoppe, President ofCouncil. Passed: April 12,2016. Attest: Teresa Bucheit,Clerk of Council. Approved:Mayor Kevin Hardman.Please be advised that thecomplete text of this legisla-tion may be viewed or pur-chased during regular busi-ness hours at the SharonvilleMunicipal Building, 10900Reading Rd., Sharonville,Ohio 45241.203TRI,Apr20,’16#1197380

LEGAL NOTICE

The Board of Zoning Appealsof the City of Wyoming, Ohiohereby gives notice that apublic hearing will be heldon May 10, 2016 at 6:00 p.m.in the City Building CouncilChambers, 800 Oak Avenue,Wyoming, OH 45215 to hearand decide the following var-iance request:

An application requesting apermit to replace and en-large the existing frontporch on the home at 737Barney Avenue, Wyoming ,OH 45215 was denied as theproposal violates the provi-sions of Section 1153.04(a) ofthe City of Wyoming Codi-fied Ordinances which regu-lates front yard setbacks.Case #4-16

City of WyomingBoard of Zoning Appeals203TRI,Apr20,’16#1197477

LEGAL NOTICE

VILLAGE OF EVENDALEADOPTED ORDINANCES

AND RESOLUTIONS

The following ordinancesand resolutions were adopt-ed by the Council of theVillage of Evendale at itsRegular Council Meeting onApril 12th, 2016

ORD. #16-15ORDINANCE APPROVINGA TRANSFER FROM THEGENERAL FUND TO AP-PROPRIATE FUNDS FORTHE TAX DEPARTMENTTO PAY REQUIRED TAXREFUNDS NOW DUE ANDDECLARING AN EMER-GENCY. Unanimously ap-proved.

ORD. #16-16AN ORDINANCE APPROV-ING A TRANSFER FROMTHE GENERAL FUND TOTHE MUNICIPAL MOTORVEHICLE FUND TO RE-SURFACE PLAINFIELDROAD AND DECLARINGAN EMERGENCY. Unani-mously approved.

ORD. #16-17AN ORDINANCE AUTHOR-IZING THE PAYMENT OFAMOUNTS DUE UPONCERTAIN CONTRACTS RE-QUIRING CERTIFICATIONOF AVAILABILTY OFFUNDS AND DECLARINGAN EMERGENCY. Unani-mously approved.

ORD. #16-18ORDINANCE APPROVINGA TRANSFER FROM THEGENERAL FUND TO THEOPERATIONS AND MAIN-TENANCE ACCOUNT INTHE FIRE DEPARTMENTAND DECLARING ANEMERGENCY. Unanimous-ly approved.

ORD. #16-19AN ORDINANCE AUTHOR-IZING THE MAYOR TOHIRE A CURRENT PART-TIME EMPLOYEE IN ANADDITIONAL PART-TIMECAPACITY AND SETTINGA PAY RATE AND DE-CLARING AN EMERGEN-CY. Unanimously approved.

ORD. #16-20ORDINANCE ESTABLISH-ING THE POSITION OFRECREATION DEPART-MENT CUSTODIAN, MAN-DY INGRAM AS FULLTIME AND DECLARINGAN EMERGENCY. Unani-mously approved.

ORD. #16-21ORDINANCE AUTHORIZ-ING MAYOR TO ENTERINTO CONTRACT WITHTHE LOWEST AND BESTBIDDER FOR THE TLCDEMOLITION PROJECTAND DECLARING ANEMERGENCY. Unanimous-ly approved.

ORD. #16-22AN ORDINANCE APPROV-ING AN APPROPRIATIONFROM THE GENERALFUND TO COVER IBIGROUP CONTRACT COSTSFOR THROUGH THEVALLEY PHASE 1 SCHE-MATIC DESIGN AND DE-CLARING AN EMERGEN-CY. Unanimously approved.

ORD. #16-23AN ORDINANCE AUTHOR-IZING THE MAYOR TODETERMINE AND IMPLE-MENT THOSE STEPS NEC-ESSARY TO SELL THEPROPERTY LOCATED AT3680 GLENDALE MILFORDROAD, SPECIFICALLYHAMILTON COUNTYPROPERTY BOOK 611,PAGE 10, PARCEL 24 ANDDECLARING AN EMER-GENCY. Unanimously ap-proved.203TRI,Apr20,’16#1197038

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