Suburban life 042016

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S UBURBAN S UBURBAN LIFE $1.00 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving Columbia Township, Deer Park, Dillonvale, Kenwood, Madeira, Rossmoyne, Sycamore Township Vol. 53 No. 6 © 2016 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED News .......................... 248-8600 Retail advertising .............. 768-8404 Classified advertising ......... 242-4000 Delivery ........................ 576-8240 See page A2 for additional information Contact 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. Despite a new option that would avoid lawsuit-causing de- lays, the plan for a new restau- rant in Madeira is still not mov- ing forward. Paxton’s Grill co-owner and Madeira resident Tom Powers went before Madeira City Coun- cil April 11and asked for the city to enter into a new contract with him to buy the land surrounding Swing Line Grill, the restaurant he plans to build on the old B&B Mower site. The contract would be simi- lar to one the council agreed to last year. In November, council ap- proved two resolutions allowing City Manager Tom Moeller to enter into contracts with Pow- ers. The city would buy the land surrounding the proposed building and turn it into a muni- cipal parking lot and Powers would buy a vacant portion of the Muchmore House property from the city. Those contracts were de- layed because Powers has not closed on the sale of the former B&B Mower. Powers said he and the city decided to hold off until a lawsuit was resolved. Resident Doug Oppenheimer is suing the city, Powers and Moeller, claiming the plan to sell part of the Muchmore House property is a violation of the town charter. The property is part of the Madeira Historic District. Powers said he can build the restaurant without the portion of the Muchmore property. “It will get down to next week. We are either moving for- ward or we are going some- where else. We have been work- ing on this for seven years,” Powers said, adding he has been contacted by other communi- ties but the right location has not come about. Powers asked for a vote from council that it would move for- ward with the contract. Council considered the issue in both regular and executive session and did not make a decision. “We can’t agree to something unless we know the final terms. We are taking a risk of buying the property from you when we don’t know what it is,” Council- man Tom Ashmore said. Powers and other council members pointed out council did that when it approved the resolution in November. Coun- cil approved the contracts “in a form substantially the same” as the ones that were in the council packet, because they were not completed. “We are agreeing to pur- chase at a particular price a par- cel to be defined later. I don’t Swing Line Grill’s future in Madeira uncertain Marika Lee [email protected] MARIKA LEE/ THE COMMUNITY PRESS With the city of Madeira and restaurant developer Tom Powers struggling to reach an agreement, Powers might be taking his restaurant idea elsewhere. FILE PHOTO Paxton’s Grill owner Tom Powers wants to build a restaurant in Madeira. See RESTAURANT, Page 2A T here’s something almost “Twilight Zone” like at Deer Park Junior/Sen- ior High School. One minute you’re in the hallways of this well-cared for but nearly 70-year-old school at the crossroads of Plainfield Road, Donna Lane and Myrtle Avenue. The next minute, you’re descending stairs leading to the old, dark 20 th Century industrial arts and athletic areas only to emerge in the 21 st Century. Brightly colored hallways decorated with inspirational quotes and the school mascot greet students and guests alike. The newly renovated space is home to Deer Park athletics and the new Deer Park Ca- reer Academy. The new space was designed by SHP Leading Design with a focus on 21 st Century learning. In the career academy portion of the renovated space, absent are traditional rows of desks. Instead, a mix of small and large tables, moveable student furniture, movable teacher lecterns, full-length walls covered with dry-erase boards, and more equip the labs and breakout spaces. Vibrant colors of green, orange and white add a certain cheerfulness to the space. Every effort was made to embrace the school’s original art deco design. The same careful attention to details was used in design of the athletic space. Here, however, school colors are the dominant palette. The space includes new locker rooms, coach rooms and a spacious workout room with cardio and weight-lifting equip- ment. In years past, the school’s workout equipment consisted of obsolete or used cardio equipment and weights that were donated from other school districts or busi- nesses. Today, everything is new. The seed for this significant transforma- tion was planted not long after assistant Superintendent Jay Phillips joined the Deer Park School District family in 2013. The focus was to ramp up curriculum to in- crease the advanced placement offerings, increase partnerships, and dual credit op- portunities for students - which they did. About this time, industrial technology in- structor Dave Hauser was retiring after 42 years. The stage was set for transformation of his workspace. Phillips pitched his initial idea for an engineering course to Superintendent Jeff Langdon. As he and Langdon talked, the focus expanded to an even broader view of what today’s students need to be successful in the job market or for college, Phillips said. The vision grew to become the Career Academy. The 1-mill permanent improve- ment portion of a recently approved oper- ating levy helped the school district finance the transformative building renovations. Brainstorming continued with others PHOTOS BY SHEILA VILVENS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS Clockwise from top: Deer Park Junior/Senior High School has a new fitness room thanks to recent renovations; a circular room in the Career Academy provides a collaborative space for Deer Park Junior/Senior High School students and community members; and breakout spaces allow Deer Park Junior/Senior High School Career Academy students to collaborate in a business-like setting. Career Academy brings 21st century learning space to DPHS Sheila A. Vilvens [email protected] See ACADEMY, Page 2A

description

 

Transcript of Suburban life 042016

Page 1: Suburban life 042016

SUBURBANSUBURBANLIFE $1.00

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Your Community Press newspaper serving Columbia Township, Deer Park, Dillonvale, Kenwood, Madeira, Rossmoyne, Sycamore Township

Vol. 53 No. 6© 2016 The Community Press

ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDNews ..........................248-8600Retail advertising ..............768-8404Classified advertising .........242-4000Delivery ........................576-8240

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.

Despite a new option thatwould avoid lawsuit-causing de-lays, the plan for a new restau-rant in Madeira is still not mov-ing forward.

Paxton’s Grill co-owner andMadeira resident Tom Powerswent before Madeira City Coun-cil April 11and asked for the cityto enter into a new contract withhim to buy the land surroundingSwing Line Grill, the restauranthe plans to build on the old B&BMower site.

The contract would be simi-lar to one the council agreed tolast year.

In November, council ap-proved two resolutions allowingCity Manager Tom Moeller toenter into contracts with Pow-ers. The city would buy the landsurrounding the proposedbuilding and turn it into a muni-cipal parking lot and Powerswould buy a vacant portion ofthe Muchmore House propertyfrom the city.

Those contracts were de-layed because Powers has notclosed on the sale of the formerB&B Mower. Powers said heand the city decided to hold offuntil a lawsuit was resolved.Resident Doug Oppenheimer issuing the city, Powers andMoeller, claiming the plan tosell part of the MuchmoreHouse property is a violation ofthe town charter. The propertyis part of the Madeira HistoricDistrict.

Powers said he can build therestaurant without the portionof the Muchmore property.

“It will get down to nextweek. We are either moving for-ward or we are going some-where else. We have been work-ing on this for seven years,”Powers said, adding he has beencontacted by other communi-

ties but the right location hasnot come about.

Powers asked for a vote fromcouncil that it would move for-ward with the contract. Councilconsidered the issue in bothregular and executive sessionand did not make a decision.

“We can’t agree to somethingunless we know the final terms.We are taking a risk of buyingthe property from you when wedon’t know what it is,” Council-man Tom Ashmore said.

Powers and other councilmembers pointed out councildid that when it approved theresolution in November. Coun-cil approved the contracts “in aform substantially the same” asthe ones that were in the councilpacket, because they were notcompleted.

“We are agreeing to pur-chase at a particular price a par-cel to be defined later. I don’t

Swing LineGrill’s futurein MadeirauncertainMarika [email protected]

MARIKA LEE/ THE COMMUNITY PRESS

With the city of Madeira and restaurant developer Tom Powers strugglingto reach an agreement, Powers might be taking his restaurant ideaelsewhere.

FILE PHOTO

Paxton’s Grill owner Tom Powerswants to build a restaurant inMadeira.

See RESTAURANT, Page 2A

There’s something almost “TwilightZone” like at Deer Park Junior/Sen-ior High School.

One minute you’re in the hallwaysof this well-cared for but nearly 70-year-oldschool at the crossroads of Plainfield Road,Donna Lane and Myrtle Avenue. The nextminute, you’re descending stairs leading tothe old, dark 20th Century industrial arts andathletic areas only to emerge in the 21st

Century.Brightly colored hallways decorated

with inspirational quotes and the schoolmascot greet students and guests alike. Thenewly renovated space is home to DeerPark athletics and the new Deer Park Ca-reer Academy.

The new space was designed by SHPLeading Design with a focus on 21st Centurylearning. In the career academy portion ofthe renovated space, absent are traditionalrows of desks. Instead, a mix of small andlarge tables, moveable student furniture,movable teacher lecterns, full-length wallscovered with dry-erase boards, and moreequip the labs and breakout spaces.

Vibrant colors of green, orange andwhite add a certain cheerfulness to thespace. Every effort was made to embracethe school’s original art deco design.

The same careful attention to details wasused in design of the athletic space. Here,

however, school colors are the dominantpalette. The space includes new lockerrooms, coach rooms and a spacious workoutroom with cardio and weight-lifting equip-ment. In years past, the school’s workoutequipment consisted of obsolete or usedcardio equipment and weights that weredonated from other school districts or busi-nesses. Today, everything is new.

The seed for this significant transforma-tion was planted not long after assistantSuperintendent Jay Phillips joined the DeerPark School District family in 2013. Thefocus was to ramp up curriculum to in-crease the advanced placement offerings,increase partnerships, and dual credit op-portunities for students - which they did.About this time, industrial technology in-structor Dave Hauser was retiring after 42years. The stage was set for transformationof his workspace.

Phillips pitched his initial idea for anengineering course to Superintendent JeffLangdon. As he and Langdon talked, thefocus expanded to an even broader view ofwhat today’s students need to be successfulin the job market or for college, Phillipssaid. The vision grew to become the CareerAcademy. The 1-mill permanent improve-ment portion of a recently approved oper-ating levy helped the school district financethe transformative building renovations.

Brainstorming continued with others

PHOTOS BY SHEILA VILVENS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Clockwise from top: Deer Park Junior/Senior High School has a new fitness room thanks to recentrenovations; a circular room in the Career Academy provides a collaborative space for Deer ParkJunior/Senior High School students and community members; and breakout spaces allow Deer ParkJunior/Senior High School Career Academy students to collaborate in a business-like setting.

Career Academy brings21st century learning

space to DPHS

Sheila A. [email protected]

See ACADEMY, Page 2A

Page 2: Suburban life 042016

2A • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016 NEWS

SUBURBANLIFE

NewsRichard Maloney Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7134, [email protected] Marika Lee Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7577,[email protected] Jeanne HouckReporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7129, [email protected] Vilvens Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7139, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . . .768-8512, [email protected] Scott Springer Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . .576-8255, [email protected]

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

Twitter: @adamjbaum

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

[email protected]

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

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

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

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

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

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

Calendar ................8AClassifieds ................CFood .....................9APolice .................... 8BSchools ..................7ASports ....................1BViewpoints ............10A

Index

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including the man whobecame the academy’sdesigner, Doug Arthur ofTransform Consulting.

Initial career path-ways were introducedfor the 2014-2015 schoolyear, prior to the openingof the Career Academywing. The courses wereentrepreneurship, digitalinstructional design andproject management.This school year, in part-nership with Great Oaks,Project Lead the Way, anengineering program,was introduced. GarthMichelsen is the instruc-tor.

Project Lead the Wayis part of the push toincrease STEM expo-sure, Michelsen said.

Over the past six to eightyears STEM focus hasgrown as concerns overwho will be the buildersand designers of thefuture have come to theforefront. There’s worryover manufacturing jobsleaving the UnitedStates. The focus ofSTEM is to keep kidsexcited about learningScience, Technology,Engineering and Math.

All kids get fired upabout science and tech-nology when they areyounger, he said. Thenthere’s a point when theyreach a certain age andthey lose interest.

“They lose that child-like wonder,” Michelsensaid. “The gateway pro-gram is wonderful. Wecatch them while theystill hold that interest.And hopefully those withthe passion and interest

continue on in more spe-cialized areas.”

Introduction to Engi-neering Design is thefirst course in the engi-neering program. Thesecond, Principles ofEngineering Design, will

be offered for the firsttime next school year.

A big portion of theengineering program is3-D design, Michelsensaid. Whether a studentis looking for a career asa civil engineer or fash-ion designer, 3-D mod-eling will be a part of it.

Deer Park Senior C.J.Tassell was one of thefirst students to embracethe new Career Academyprograms. He’s takenentrepreneurship and isin Project Lead the Way.

“I’m looking to majorin industrial manage-ment at UC,” he said. “Iwas wanting to get aheadin the field as much as Ican beforehand. I wasexcited they offered theintro to engineering.

“(Project Lead theWay) is giving me a bet-ter understanding ofprinciples in engineeringthat I will be able to ap-ply outside of highschool.”

This glimpse into theengineering career hasconfirmed for Tassell it’sthe right career for him.This is a primary pur-pose of the Career Acad-emy.

“Our purpose more sothan (students) figuringout what they want to doin the career academy isfiguring out what theydon’t want to do,” Phillipssaid. Say they go throughProject Lead the Way anddecide engineering is notthe career choice forthem. They avoid wast-

ing their first two yearsof college in a major theydislike.

The Career Academycourses are electivesoffered to studentsgrades 7-12. Future pro-gram options are underconsideration.

Next year the pro-gram will include expan-sion of engineering and,thanks to a partnershipwith Mercy Health, theintroduction of a SportsMedicine Academy.

The ultimate big pic-ture will be to offer 101,201 and 301 level coursesin the academy, Phillipssaid. Each level offeringmore specialized instruc-tion and expanded oppor-tunities.

AcademyContinued from Page 1A

PROVIDED

Deer Park eighth-grader Keller Wessel works on a project in his Gateway to Technology class at Deer Park Junior/Senior HighSchool.

see that being any differ-ent than what we werelooking at back in Novem-ber,” Mayor MelisaAdrien said.

Council members

asked Powers why actionfrom council was so im-portant to the restaurant’sfuture. Powers said hecould build the restaurantand parking lot, but heprefers not to. “Whateverthe dollar amount of whatthe city will pay for theproperty can be used tobuild a better building.

For us to build a reallycool building that will last100 years, it cost moneyand if the city buys theland from us we havemore money to spend onthe building,” Powerssaid.

Follow Marika Lee onTwitter:@ReporterMarika

RestaurantContinued from Page 1A

Page 3: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 3ANEWS

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4A • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016 NEWS

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An interest in world af-fairs has propelled an In-dian Hill High Schoolteam to a national compe-tition.

Made up of four stu-dents, who are juniors andseniors, the AcademicWorldquest team will par-ticipate in a national com-petition in Washington,D.C., this April.

The team became a re-gional champion duringlocal competition earlierthis year.

Academic Worldquestis a competition with cate-gories on global topics,said Wendy Silvius, who

teaches a class at the highschool called advancedplacement human geogra-phy. She is also a teacherliaison with the World-quest team.

Three of the studentswho are taking Silvius’sHuman Geography classare also on the Worldquestteam.

“I’ve enjoyed collabo-rating with the other stu-dents and learning about(national) topics,” said ju-nior Hannah Powell, whois among the Worldquestcompetitors.

Powell said her in-volvement with the teamhas taught her about top-ics of which she was pre-viously unaware. For ex-ample, she said shelearned about the Organi-zation of American States,an organization whichworks to promote democ-racy in the Western Hemi-

sphere.Learning about (these

subjects) has made meconsider my options incollege,” Powell said. “I’ddefinitely consider whatI’ve learned for a futurecareer.”

In addition to Powell,other members of the Ac-ademic Worldquest teamare Charlie Klekamp, Ja-cob Young and Laney My-ers.

Silvius said the World-

quest competition typical-ly has 10 different catego-ries with general ones ontopics such as food, secu-rity and current events aswell as more specializedones. For example, thisyear’s competition will in-clude questions focusingon a Middle Wast countrycalled Oman as well asquestions on America’seconomic relationshipwith Asia.

Silvius said World-

quest has spurred an in-terest in international top-ics among students on theteam.

It creates an interest inglobal affairs, she said.

It encourages the stu-dents to delve deeper intotopics they aren’t neces-sarily familiar with, shesaid.

“They realize areas inthe world, (where) theycan make a difference,”she said.

Students challenged on global topics at competitionForrest [email protected]

PROVIDED

The Indian Hill High School Academic Worldquest team of Jacob Young and Charlie Klekamp, inback, and Hannah Powell and Laney Myers show the medals they won in regional competitionin February. The team will face challengers in a national competition in April.

Silvius

Page 5: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 5ANEWS

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

A four-page bill is caus-ing a stink in Cincinnati.It’s a back-and-forth battleabout parents’ right toknow versus privateschools’ right to indepen-dent operation.

The bill would requireprivate schools to publish

some infor-mation ontheir web-sites, in-cluding en-rollmentand finan-cial data.Other in-formation –reading

lists and school bylaws,for example – would haveto be accessible to parentsof enrolled students.

“Transparency is theonly thing that’s going tosave us,” said Rep. Thom-as Brinkman Jr., R-MountLookout, the bill’s primarysponsor. “Things get hid-den, and things happen be-hind the scenes. And theonly way we’re going to beable to make informed de-cisions and know what’sgoing on is if we requireour institutions to betransparent in their opera-tions.”

Opponents have a dif-ferent take. Heidi Huber,who lost to Brinkman inthe March 15 primary, saidthe bill is an affront to thedefinition of privateschooling. She called it anoverreach and the “antith-eses of liberty and educa-tion.”

Huber said the bill,which hasn’t made it out ofcommittee yet for a fullHouse vote, was the finalstraw in her decision torun against Brinkman.The two will face off in theMarch primary.

“Private schools arejust that – private,” saidHuber, of Anderson Town-ship. She is also on the fi-nance committee for Mi-ami Valley ChristianAcademy. “Once you startasking the government tomonitor you, you’re basi-cally giving them author-ity to determine what isbest practice. And they’remore than happy to step inand do that, as we know.”

What does it say?The bill is only 16 para-

graphs long. And the sub-stance is packed into thefinal six paragraphs.

Private schools wouldhave to:

» Publish on their web-site a summary of the

school’s cash flow and stu-dent enrollment for theprevious two school years,as well as the policy forbackground checks ofthose working with stu-dents;

» Give parents of en-rolled students access to:reading lists and curriculafor each grade level; docu-ments concerning theschool’s bylaws; and meet-ing minutes “in a mannersimilar” to the minutespublic school boards arerequired to publish.

Private schools alreadyhave that information,Brinkman said, so it won’tcause much fuss to make itavailable. Some of it is al-ready on the Ohio Depart-ment of Education web-site, but there’s a differ-ence between it being bur-ied under “volumes” ofspreadsheets, Brinkmansaid, versus being easilyaccessible.

Huber said that’s notthe point. Parents chooseprivate school for a host ofreasons, one of which is toescape state influence.But it’s a choice, she said.If a parent doesn’t like howhis private school is oper-ating, he can choose a dif-ferent school.

‘It’s very bizarre’ Anderson Township fa-

ther Chris Hicks tells sto-ries of parents feeling vil-ified for wanting informa-tion from their children’sprivate schools. The usualresponses: Why would youpossibly ask for this? Or,You’re the only one who’sever asked for this. Or,Don’t you trust us?

Some may rememberHicks from a 2012 battle toget the Archdiocese ofCincinnati to make publicits curriculum. The curri-culum is now availableonline, but previously, ac-cording to Hicks, the poli-cy was parents could onlyreview it during a “super-vised visit” with the prin-cipal.

And, he said, theyweren’t allowed to takeany notes.

“Honest to God, thatwas their policy,” he said.“… It’s very bizarre.”

Hicks is now part of asmall team of Cincinnatiparents pushing for Brink-man’s bill, HB 401. It’s “at-tacked as being this unbe-lievable government in-trusion,” Hicks said, butreally, it’s “super simple.”He demands people whoare against the bill say towhich of the provisionsthey object.

He likes his school, and

he wants to keep his sonthere, he said. But he wish-es there was more trans-parency. He tried to getenrollment numbers, forexample, and he ended upwith four numbers thatvaried by 20 percent, hesaid.

“Why would a schoolnot just provide that infor-mation?” he asked. “Whywould any school send youon a goat rodeo to get basicinformation?”

Will it go anywhere? HB 401 doesn’t have

any teeth. If a school

doesn’t comply, there’snothing in the bill thatstates what would happen.. There’s no oversight orappeals process.

And it’s vague. Keepingmeeting minutes “in amanner similar” to publicdistricts could lead to con-fusion or disagreement.

Brinkman said it’s allabout demanding trans-parency. He has six chil-dren, all of whom went toprivate school. That was72 years’ worth of commit-ment.

“It’s not like going toMcDonald’s and not liking

the burger, and so the nextday you go to BurgerKing,” Brinkman said.

Locally, Catholicschools constitute the big-gest chunk of privateschools, so they would bemost impacted. But Caro-lyn Jurkowitz, CatholicConference of Ohio execu-tive director, said shedoesn’t have strong feel-ings one way or another.

If Jurkowitz had herdruthers, she’d rather thebill not pass as-is, she said– not because she’s op-posed to the transparency,but because she’s not sure

the bill, as written, wouldbe easily applied to di-verse schools. SomeCatholic schools, for ex-ample, don’t have schoolboards, she said, so itwould be impossible tokeep meeting minutes.

Brinkman points to St.James of the Valley Schoolin Wyoming, which closedthis past school year afterit came to light the schoolhad been running a deficitfor a dozen years.

Parents didn’t knowwhat was going on untilthis past January. Theschool closed in June.

Should private schools disclose more?Hannah [email protected]

TomBrinkman Jr.

Page 6: Suburban life 042016

6A • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016 NEWS

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Acting for ‘Peanuts’at Indian Hill

“You're A Good ManCharlie Brown” will bepresented 7 p.m. Thurs-day through Saturday,April 21 through 23, atIndian Hill High School,6865 Drake Road.

The production is 80minutes with no inter-mission.

The cast will be avail-able to meet with guestsafter the show.

Tickets are $10 at thedoor and will be avail-able during school lunchas well April 21 andApril 22.

Plant sale at Art FairThe Miami Hills Gar-

den Club will host itsannual plant sale at theMadeira Art Fair Sun-day, May 1.

The club is asking forpotted perennials readyfor sale which are identi-fied as to color and thearea in which the plantsthrive such as sunshineor shade. Bring the

plants the day of the fairby 8 a.m. to the club’sbooth on Miami Avenue,near Starbucks.

Walton Creek Roadto close for twomonths

Walton Creek Road,between Muchmore andVarner roads in Colum-bia Township/IndianHill, will be closed be-ginning Monday, April25.

Work being per-formed by W.E. Smith onthe pier wall for roadstabilization and is antic-ipated to last until June24 (weather permitting).

Any problems/ques-tions should be directedto either Gene Smithwith W.E. Smith at 513-508-2157 or to Ted Will-man with the HamiltonCounty Engineer’s at513-946-8442.

W.E. Smith’s detourwill be routed overMuchmore Road to Mi-ami Road to Indian HillRoad to Drake Road to

Varner Road and viceversa.

For information onother projects, visitwww.hamilton-co.org/engineer.

InRETURN hostsDerby party

On Saturday, May 7,InRETURN will host itsfirst Derby Party – “Em-powering Others to Runfor the Roses.”

Enjoy a live broad-cast of the derby, drinks,dinner, silent and liveauction and live enter-tainment.

The party is at Gree-nacres Art Foundation inIndian Hill.

For more details, visitmy.bidpal.net (http://bit.ly/1TCbCX8).

Senior CommissionTown Meeting

The Madeira SeniorCommission is hosting atown meeting from10a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Sat-urday, April 23, at Ma-deira High School, 7465

Loannes Drive, in thePerin Learning Com-mons.

The meeting willcover education andadvocacy programs inMadeira and the futureneeds of older residentsof Madeira. It will alsoaddress the closing ofthe Sycamore SeniorCenter.

Madeira bringingback large-itempickup

Madeira City Councilpassed a motion April 11to reinstate large-itemcurbside collection.

Councilman Tom Ash-more introduced themotion, which was ap-proved by a vote of 6-0.

Councilman Mike Steurwas not at the meeting.

The city will be nego-tiating a cost not to ex-ceed $25,000 with Re-public Services/CSI forthe service. The cityspends $6,000 a year forits two large-item drop-off days.

BRIEFLY

PROVIDED

The cast of "You're a Good Man Charlie Brown," which will be presented at Indian Hill HighSchool April 21 through April 23.

Page 7: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 7A

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

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

Great Oaks/Indian Hill» Indian Hill High School/

Great Oaks took a school-record 81 students to stateDECA business competition inMarch, and 47 of them fin-ished in the top 10 in the statefor their event.

Of those, 17 students will goon to international competi-tion at the International Ca-reer Development Conferencein Nashville.

One student, Adam Sichel,became state champion inbusiness finance for the sec-ond time.

The international qualifiersand students placing in the top10 include:

First place (ICDC qualifi-ers) - Adam Sichel, businessfinance (two-time state cham-pion); Anna Defendiefer, foodmarketing; Ben Friedberg,restaurant and food service

management; Ben Korengeland RJ Dein, financial ser-vices team; Mrinal Singh,principles of business man-agement and administratio-n,and Hannah Mendelsohn,entrepreneurship promotionplan.

Second place (ICDC qualifi-ers) - Sara Price and MaryHall, buying and merchandis-ing operations research;Rhian Horton, hospitality andtourism professional selling;Pablo Guzman and TarikWhitham, international busi-ness plan, and Jane Petrie,start up business plan.

Third place (ICDC qualifi-ers) - Ben Singer and PatrickGiroux, business growth plan.

Fourth place (ICDC qualifi-ers) - Hannah Kaplan, finan-cial consulting; Otto Acker-man, franchising businessplan.

Other top 10 finalists - Je-

ongwon Ryu and Milan Bhan-dari, business law and ethics;Zoe Rabkin and Sara Lu, busi-ness operations research;Caroline Skaggs and AnnaMarie Logan, buying and mer-chandising operations re-search; Peter Bansil and CamLuckey, buying and merchan-dising team; Maddie Entineand Elise Sum, creative mar-keting project; Alex David,food marketing; Amalia Guz-man and Stephanie Tranter,hospitality and tourism opera-tions research; Maren McKen-na, hospitality and tourismprofessional selling; EmilyWentz, hospitality and tourismprofessional selling; LucySlattery and Emma Campbell,independent business plan;Maddie Youngblood and AllieLach, public relations project;Chandler Harris and MatteoFiore, sports and entertain-ment marketing operations

research plan; Andrew Leongand Mitch Epcke, sports andentertainment marketingoperations research plan;Chase Angel and Carter Hoff-man, sports and entertain-ment marketing operationsresearch plan; Bailey Bathal-ter, sports and entertainmentpromotion plan; Matt Neu-mann, start up business plan;Robin Schumcher and KyleGoold, finance operationsresearch,and Dawson Aicholz/Ben Wirthlin/Evan Young-blood, finance operationsresearch.

The students are enrolledin the Great Oaks CareerCampuses Marketing Manage-ment and Research programat Indian Hill High School.

More than 15,000 studentswill compete at the Interna-tional Career DevelopmentConference. All the compet-itors take a written 100-ques-

tion multiple choice test onmarketing concepts and per-form an impromptu role-playsituation. The situations maycover human relations, prob-lem solving, selling, promo-tion, economic concepts, man-agement decision making,pricing, product development,product planning, marketingstrategies, customer serviceproblem solving or a combina-tion of the above.

DECA is an association ofhigh school marketing stu-dents that have an interest inpursuing careers in market-ing and management. DECA isco-curricular to the Market-ing Management programoffered by Great Oaks CareerCampuses at Indian Hill HighSchool. Ohio DECA has 4,700members with 157 chaptersand National DECA has a totalof 180,000 student membersfor the High School Division.

SCHOOLS NOTEBOOK

Moeller High SchoolThese have earned first honors for

the second quarter of 2015-2016 (to seethe entire honor roll, go to Cincin-nati.com - http://cin.ci/1RhWvgp):

SeniorsFirst Honors - Jack Allbright, Arnoud

Bakker, Justin Balogh, Owen Bayer, AlecBayliff, Bradley Buller, Kyle Butz, NickByrnes, Keith Chachoff, Roger Chanin,Domenic Dicari, Jonathan Dowling,Hunter Elmore, Thomas Farrell, NathanGeorgeton, William Gorczynski, AlecGraves, Thomas Gray, Samuel Hansen,Andrew Henke, Alex Holbert, CameronJunker, Samuel Miller, Chad Mustard,Ryan Nance, Daniel Nymberg, AugustPainter, Jacob Peloquin, Kelley Peter,Alexander Polnow, Ryan Probst, JohnQuehl, Richard Raga, Anthony Shirk,Samuel Thompson.

JuniorsFirst Honors - Christopher Berger,

Max Berky, Luke Bowles, ZacharyBrauns, Matthew Bugada, Caleb Canter,Cameron Carlin, David Chesko, MasonDavy, Kyle Dunlop, William Egan, EvanErnst, Joseph Geraci, Nicholas Gerard,Adam Gieseke, William Gilreath, JoshuaGorczynski, Simon Gores, Ryan Griffin,Augustin Haffner, Daniel Hansen,Hayden Horter, Steven Johnston, RileyJones, Connor Kincaid, Matthew Knue-ven, V. Paxton Kreger, Anthony Kritz,Andrew Kuprionis, Ryan Laib, NicholasLong, Tyler Manger, John Manny, ReedMarquardt, William McCullough, JasonMiller, Curtis Moss, Michael Mueller,Kyle Padgett, Tyler Quehl, Conner Rice,Matthew Rieger, Madison Ring, NoahSavage, Garrett Schroeder, AndrewSherbun, Christopher South, SamuelSteffen, Nathaniel Stentz, PrestonStephens, Andrew Storer, Philip Stuben-rauch, Ryland Voss, Matt Weaver,Theodore Weber, Michael White, NoahZirpoli.

SophomoresFirst Honors - Hadi Akbik, Tareq

Al-Saleh, Kyle Atchley, Thomas Batt,Connor Bayer, Austin Beeching, Luke

Borgemenke, Justin Braun, John Bus-chelmann, Chase Coyle, John Cundiff,Nicholas Cunningham, Justin Davis,John Debelak, Sean Delany, RyanDevolve, Alexander Deyhle, JoshuaEbeling, Alexander Elma, Eric Ernst,David Filipowski, Evan Fletcher, CollinGallagher, Kyle Gallagher, Carlos Garcia,Chase Gilhart, Donald Ginnetti, AdamGrob, Alexander Grothaus, SamuelGurekovich, Benjamin Hall, ZacharyHanson, Jacob Hardesty, GrantlandHawkins, Andrew Heuker, Taylor Hop-kins, Griffin Horter, Samuel Inman,Robert Jones, Chase Kendall, Christo-pher Kiser, Patrick Kloppenburg, Nicho-las Lima, Scott Lutmer, Kevin Marklay,Matthew Medl, Griffin Meno, NicholasMiesch, Ben Morehouse, DonovanPeed, Nicholas Perron, Nicholas Peters,James Prugh, Gabe Redmond, JaredRegruth, Tyler Rinn, Nicholas Rodrigo,Morgan Romano, Patrick Sage, ZacharySchaffer, Patrick Schulteis, Adam Sieb-ert, Tanner Slivka, Liam Smith, RyanSmith, Jack Stahanczyk, Michael Stare-sinic, Nicholas Staudigel, Max Stecz,Cameron Swanger, Benjamin Sweeney,Trey Thomas, Jacob Thompson, Camer-on Tuttle, Guillermo Villa, Jason Wana-maker, Jack Warncke, Nathan Weis-gerber, Nicholas Wimmers.

FreshmenFirst Honors - Bradley Becker, Jared

Becker, Dylan Borow, Jonathan Buck,Sam Buehler, Elijah Campbell, JacobCarota, Connor Chatlos, Jacob Cline,Drake Cooper, Dennis Cowell, JosephCraft, Alexander Faller, Nathan Farwick,Michael Fehrenbach, Aidan Fiorenza,Brandon Fritts, Ryan Galanie, JonathanGardner, Patrick Gates, Jacob Glass,Maxwell Hardewig, Chase Harding,Benjamin Hegge, Nicholas Holden,Tanner Hughes, Zachary Jones, BraedonJunker, Shubh Khandhadia, ThomasKing, Benjamin Kiser, Ryan Konkoly,Caleb Maletta, Alexander Neubecker,David Ryan, Noah Saffron, NathanSchappacher, Adam Shimala, MichaelShipp, Nathan Steffen, Louis Tallarigo,Michael Tennie, Tyler Totin, William Tull,Jordan Walter, Jordan Ward, GreysonWesley, Chase Widener.

MOELLER HIGH SCHOOL HONORROLLS

SeniorsFirst Honors - Maria Barnes, Molly McCudden,

Linh Nguyen, Bridget Sypniewski, Mackenzie Volz.Second Honors - Kathryn Black, Rachele Cafazo,

Sophia Forte, Victoria McCaffery, Aleeyah Nurre-din, Anne Rumpke, Hannah Ruschman, VanessaVarbanova.

Mount Notre Dame High School These students have earned honors for the third

quarter of 2015-2016:

FreshmenFirst Honors - Stephanie Carrington, Ginny

Edwards, Katherine Kenny, Olivia Long, MariaStein.

Second Honors - Olivia Albers, Micah Blue,

Madeleine Campbell, Anastasia Cappozzo, LauraDaum, Remington DeAngelis, Denise Durbin,Emma Falci, Alexis Perry, Lillian Rentrop, ChloeTurner, Elizabeth Volz, Abigail Williams.

SophomoresFirst Honors - Grace Burns, Julia DeVita, Victoria

Lyon.Second Honors - Mia Bortz, Emily Brock, Ashley

Brooks, Alexa Cox, Brianna Heverin, Katie Hinder-

sman, Madison Mullinger, Stefanie Schweikert,Erin Wallet.

JuniorsFirst Honors - Ashley Becker, Grace Nunn, Hon-

ora Poch, Katherine Van Den Brink, Sarah Walsh.Second Honors - Lindsay Altemuehle, Kristen

Elmlinger, Anne Mier, Maria Pisciotta, Emma Theis.

MOUNT NOTRE DAME HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLLS

Moeller National Honor Societyinductees

THANKS TO TERESA MEYER

Archbishop Moeller High School has admitted the following students into the Blessed William JosephChaminade Chapter of the National Honor Society, from left: front, John Buschelmann (All Saints,Montgomery), Adam Siebert (St. Gertrude, Madeira), Benjamin Hall (Lebanon, Lebanon) and Jason Wanamaker(St. Andrew/St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Miami Township); middle, Michael Staresinic (St. Gertrude, Mason), ScottLutmer (All Saints, Montgomery), Collin Gallagher (St. Veronica, Clermont County), Hadi Akbik (Sycamore,Symmes Township), Donovan Peed (St. Andrew/St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Miami Towmship), Andrew Heuker (St.Andrew/St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, Miami Township), Chase Coyle (Bethany, Sycamore Township) and moderatorBrother Robert Flaherty, S.M.; back row, Kyle Gallagher (St. Susanna, Kings Local), Justin Davidson (LebanonJunior High, Lebanon), Kevin Marklay (St. Michael, Sharonville), Josh Ebeling (St. Susanna, Mason), Alex Elma(All Saints, West Chester Township), Chase Kendall (St. Susanna, Mason) and J.C. Prugh (Indian Hill,Montgomery). Not pictured, Ryan Devolve, Nick Lima and Ben Morehouse.

Page 8: Suburban life 042016

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8A • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016

THURSDAY, APRIL 21Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 3 p.m., Creativities, 7010Miami Ave., Check websitecalendar for details. $10 percreator. Add $5 for drop off ofages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

Sewing 201: Basic Tote, 6-8:30p.m., Women’s Art Club CulturalCenter, 6980 Cambridge Ave.,$35. Registration required.Presented by Abby Graham.254-9480; www.artatthebar-n.org. Mariemont.

Art Exhibits123rd Annual Juried Art Exhi-bition, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Wom-en’s Art Club Cultural Center,6980 Cambridge Ave., The BarnGallery. Exhibition showcasescollection of fine art worksproduced by women from Ohio,Indiana, and Kentucky. JurorShaun Dingwerth, executivedirector of Richmond Art Mu-seum, focuses on craftsmanship,color, composition, and diversityin style and subject. Over $3500in awards. Free. Presented byWoman’s Art Club CulturalCenter. 272-3700; www.artatthe-barn.org. Mariemont.

Business SeminarsLinkedIn: Leveraging LinkedInFor Sales, 10 a.m., DimalantaDesign Group, 4555 Lake ForestDrive, Suite 650, Learn to le-verage LinkedIn for sales andgrow business. $20. Reservationsrequired. Presented by ErnieDimalanta. Through Nov. 3.588-2802; bit.ly/1OL0TTq. BlueAsh.

Drink TastingsA Taste of Art and Wine, 5:30-8p.m., Women’s Art Club CulturalCenter, 6980 Cambridge Ave.,Original art, selection of wineand beer, food bites. $40. Pre-sented by Mercy NeighborhoodMinistries Inc.. 272-3700. Marie-mont.

Home & GardenDesigning Hot Kitchens andCool Baths, 6:30-8 p.m., Neal’sDesign Remodel, 7770 E. KemperRoad, Project consultants anddesigners discuss trends in kitch-en and bath design. Light fareprovided. Ages 18 and up. Free.489-7700; neals.com. Sharonville.

Literary - LibrariesHomework Help, 3-6 p.m.,Loveland Branch Library, 649Loveland-Madeira Road, Freehomework help Monday-Thurs-day for students in grades K-8.Free. 369-4476; www.cincinnati-library.org. Loveland.

FRIDAY, APRIL 22Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 3 p.m., Creativities, $10per creator. Add $5 for drop off

of ages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

Art Exhibits123rd Annual Juried Art Exhi-bition, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Wom-en’s Art Club Cultural Center,Free. 272-3700; www.artatthe-barn.org. Mariemont.

Holiday - Earth DayEarth Day Celebration, 4-7p.m., Blue Ash Recreation Center,4433 Cooper Road, Earth-friendlyorganizations, food, music, craftsand fun. Blue Ash CommunityGarden program provides in-formation on garden plots forthis year’s community garden atHunt House. Presented by BlueAsh Recreation Department.686-1878; bit.ly/1qwBYOJ. BlueAsh.

Earth Day in Loveland, 4-7p.m., Jackson Street Market, 204West Loveland Ave., Learn aboutsustainable practices at Sustain-ability Expo. Free. Presented byLoveland Sustainability Council.683-0491; www.gogreenlove-land.wix.com/sustainability.Loveland.

Earth Day Trivia, 5-7 p.m.,Julian’s Deli and Spirits, 200 W.Loveland Ave., Test knowledgewith fun trivia about environ-ment. Win prizes. Free. Present-ed by Loveland SustainabilityCouncil. 583-1725; www.go-greenloveland.wix.com/sustain-ability. Loveland.

Music - IndieModoc, 8 p.m., Plaid RoomRecords, 120 Karl Brown Way,Free. 292-4219; plaidroomrec-ords.blogspot.com. Loveland.

SATURDAY, APRIL 23Art & Craft ClassesCreativities Open Studio, 10a.m. to 2 p.m., Creativities, $10per creator. Add $5 for drop offof ages 7-11. 272-1500; www.art-sandcreativities.com. Madeira.

Reconnect Drawing withAfsaneh Ardehali, 1-4 p.m.,Women’s Art Club CulturalCenter, 6980 Cambridge Ave.,The Barn. Interactive drawingsession. All materials supplied.$45. Reservations required.Presented by Woman’s Art ClubCultural Center. 272-3700. Marie-mont.

Art Exhibits123rd Annual Juried Art Exhi-bition, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 1-4p.m., Women’s Art Club Cultural

Center, Free. 272-3700; www.ar-tatthebarn.org. Mariemont.

Cooking ClassesSimple Health-Smart CookingClass, noon to 1:30 p.m., Cincin-nati Nutrition Counseling Center,7400 Montgomery Road, In-formal and interactive class seriesto discover how healthy andtasty meals can be preparedquickly and simply. $139. Regis-tration required. Presented byCommuniversity at UC. ThroughMay 14. 556-6932; www.uc.edu/ce/commu. Silverton.

Health / WellnessHealing Touch for Self-CareWorkshop, 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.,The Community of the GoodShepherd, 8815 E. Kemper Road,Community Room. Learn princi-ples and techniques to reducestress and pain for yourself andothers. Free. Registration re-quired by April 10. 407-3401;www.good-shepherd.org. Mont-gomery.

Cancer Prevention ThroughDiet and Lifestyle, 2:30-4 p.m.,Peachy’s Health Smart, 7400Montgomery Road, Registereddietitian-nutritionist PeachySeiden covers issues that maylead to cancer development andhow to combat and avoid thoseissues through good nutritionand positive lifestyle changes.Ages 21 and up. Benefits RetiredReligious. Free. Reservationsrequired. 315-3943; peachysh-ealthsmart.com. Silverton.

Holiday - Earth DayMadisonville Earth Day/GreatAmerican Clean Up, 9 a.m. to 1p.m., Madisonville, MadisonRoad and Whetsel Avenue, Incoordination with Keep Cincin-nati Beautiful and observance ofEarth Day, volunteers are soughtto assist with cutting back brush,weeding, picking up litter andhelping to keep one of Cincin-nati’s oldest neighborhoodsclean and beautiful. Free. [email protected]. Presented byMadisonville BeautificationCommittee. 271-2495. Madi-sonville.

Home & GardenDesigning Hot Kitchens andCool Baths, 10-11:30 a.m., Neal’sDesign Remodel, Free. 489-7700;neals.com. Sharonville.

On Stage - Children’sTheater

Playhouse Off the Hill: The

Garden of Rikki Tikki Tavi, 7p.m., Blue Ash Recreation Center,4433 Cooper Road, Ages 5 andup. Contact venue for pricing.Presented by Playhouse in thePark. 421-3888. Blue Ash.

RecreationCincinnati Soap Box DerbyKid’s Fun Run, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.,Red Dog Pet Resort and Spa,5081 Madison Road, Ages 7-17who are accompanied by parentor guardian can test drive SoapBox Derby car. Free. Registrationrecommended. Presented byCincinnati Soap Box Derby.463-3649; bit.ly/1RIkPaJ. Madi-sonville.

Runs / Walks5K Run/Walk, 8-10:30 a.m.,Indian Hill High School, 6865Drake Road, Registration andpacket pick-up at Indian Hill HighSchool. Free T-shirt for those overage 10 if registered by April 1.Benefits Indian Hill Schools. $25.Discounts for students, groupsand early registration. Regis-tration required. Presented byIndian Hill Public Schools Foun-dation. 272-5932; www.ihps-f.org. Indian Hill.

ShoppingUnique and Chic Event, 10 a.m.to 5 p.m., Wags To Riches, 9697Kenwood Ave., Food, vendorswith unique merchandise, raffleitems and adorable adoptabledogs and cats from local rescues.Benefits United Coalition forAnimals (UCAN) NonprofitSpay/Neuter Clinic.. Free. Present-ed by Wags to Riches. 793-7387;www.wagstorichesconsignment-s.com. Blue Ash.

Trunk Show: Designers RobertGraham and Vince, 10 a.m. to 6p.m., Blaine’s Fine Men’s Apparel,9407 Montgomery Road, Free.

791-9970; www.blainesappa-rel.com/designers. Montgomery.

Support GroupsFamilies Creating Love, GivingBack, 12:30-1:30 p.m., CancerSupport Community, 4918 Coop-er Road, Fun family art project.Create 2 love-themed paintings.One to take home and one to bedonated back to CSC and auc-tioned at upcoming event, WineWomen and Shoes on May 26.Free. Reservations recommend-ed. 791-4060. Blue Ash.

ToursCincy Wine Wagon WineryTour, 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Mag-giano’s Little Italy, 7875 Montgo-mery Road, Bar. Visit ValleyVineyards, Henke Winery andMeier Wine Cellar. Approximate-

ly 5-hour tour. Wine and snacksat each location. Ages 21 and up.$65. Reservations required.Presented by Cincy Wine Wagon.258-7909; www.cincybrew-bus.com. Sycamore Township.

SUNDAY, APRIL 24Art & Craft ClassesReconnect Drawing withAfsaneh Ardehali, 1-4 p.m.,Women’s Art Club CulturalCenter, $45. Reservations re-quired. 272-3700. Mariemont.

Art EventsClosing Reception for 123rdAnnual Juried Art Exhibition,1-4 p.m., Women’s Art ClubCultural Center, 6980 CambridgeAve., The Barn Gallery. Exhibitionshowcases collection of fine artworks produced by women fromOhio, Indiana, and Kentucky.Free. Presented by Woman’s ArtClub Cultural Center. 272-3700;www.artatthebarn.org. Marie-mont.

SchoolsOpen House, 2-4 p.m., Children’sMeeting House MontessoriSchool, 927 O’Bannonville Road,Prospective parents tour seven-acre campus and visit classrooms.Teachers available to answerquestions, discuss hands-onclassroom materials and talkabout Montessori method. Free.683-4757; www.cmhschool.com.Loveland.

ShoppingCincinnati Music CollectorsConvention, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.,Crowne Plaza Hotel Blue Ash,5901 Pfeiffer Road, Thousands ofrecycled, out of print and hard tofind phonograph records, CDs,DVDs, tapes and other music-related items. $4. Presented byAlpha Records & Music. 317-882-3378. Blue Ash.

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.

FILE PHOTO

Earth Day Celebration, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, April 22, at theBlue Ash Recreation Center, 4433 Cooper Road. Earth-friendlyorganizations will be on hand as well as food, music, craftsand fun. The Blue Ash Community Garden program willprovide information on garden plots for this year’s communitygarden at Hunt House. The celebration is presented by BlueAsh Recreation Department. Call 686-1878; visitbit.ly/1qwBYOJ.

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

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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: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 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: Suburban life 042016

10A • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016

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

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

SUBURBANLIFE

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

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

A publication of

The Suburban Life recentlyfront-paged an article abouthow I “won” an almost six-yearlawsuit against the Indian HillBoard of Education for impos-ing a tax increase that the OhioSupreme Court unanimouslydeclared illegal.

I beg to disagree with theheadline. No one “won.” We alllost. In the first place, the arti-cle gives the impression thatthe lawsuit was a one-personcrusade. It most definitely wasnot.

The Committee for Respon-sible School Spending wasformed by a core group ofconcerned citizens who spenthundreds and hundreds ofhours in this effort to support

the right oftaxpayers tovote for...oragainst...in-creases inschool taxes,through thelevy process.

CRSS wassupported bycontributionsfrom more

than 200 school district resi-dents, which were spent on thecosts of litigation, keepingresidents informed of the needto file protests with their prop-erty tax payments, and manyother procedural matters.

Meanwhile, CRSS was rep-resented on a pro bono basis by

the 1851 Center for Constitu-tional Law under attorneyMaurice Thompson. He perse-vered through almost six yearsof seemingly endless litigationat the Cincinnati level, at theOhio Board of Tax Appeals, atthe Ohio Supreme Court, and,finally, at the Hamilton CountyCourt of Common Pleas. Thislawsuit was the longest Mr.Thompson has ever adjudicat-ed.

Next, well over $1 million oftax-payer money has beenspent. Much of it could havebeen avoided if the Board ofEducation had accepted theSupreme Court’s December2014 decision and immediatelystarted refunding the illegal

tax. Instead, the Board en-gaged new legal counsel (fromCleveland) in an effort to avoidrepaying 100 percent of therefunds due taxpayers.

The Board’s response madeit necessary to convert theoriginal law-suit into a classaction. That change hugelyincreased legal costs. Then,when the Board finally agreedto settle in late 2015, the cost ofadministering the refundsadded to the expenses paid forwith tax-payer money. Finally,in addition to the horrendousexpense of this sorry history,there’s been a lamentablebreach in community relation-ships.

The preponderance of com-

ments our CRSS group hasreceived in letters and con-versations, have been posi-tive...and much appreciated.But we’ve also received abu-sive letters excoriating our“selfishness” and demandingthat we leave Indian Hill. A redbanner on a flagpole in front ofthe entrance to the Indian Hillhigh school proclaims “Integri-ty.” Really?

The one bright light at theend of the tunnel is the assur-ance by a respected judge thatthis suit will govern case lawfor all 611 Ohio school districtsfor the next 50 years.

Fred Sanborn is a residentof Indian Hill.

Lawsuit has hurt everyone in Indian Hill

Fred SanbornCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Islamophobia is a red her-ring today.

George Orwell would haveturned in his grave at this hy-brid word - invented to conveythe fear of Islam. Islam is a

religion just asis Christianityor Judaism.The followersof Islam areMuslims. Is-lamist refersto adherents ofpolitical Islaminto whichfalls the major-ity of terror-ists or govern-ments that

support them. Phobia is a termused in medicine to refer tovarious forms of pathologicalfear. Do not the survivors ofthe bombing of the Brusselsairport experience fear?

What does Islamophobiamean to you? To me Islamo-phobia is a red herring. It is afact that the primary objectiveof the terrorist is to bring ter-ror, that is debilitating fear, toas many people as possiblethrough calculated acts ofterror. Through the fear thatresults, the terrorist seeks tohumiliate and destabilize gov-ernments. The goal is to seizepolitical power. Terrorism hastormented humanity sinceancient biblical times.

We no longer live in thedays of the holy scriptures.Humanity lives in the age ofInternet connectivity, auto-mated machines and intelli-gent robots. In the last 100years, the world has survivedtwo World Wars, the secondone being dubbed a “total” war,numerous small wars or “gue-rillas” and finally the Cold War,a cat-and-mouse confrontationbetween superpowers pos-sessing nuclear arms. Thegood news is that generally, thebig nations are at peace witheach other.

Presently warfare is experi-

enced inside nations at peacethrough acts of terrorism. Themarvelous thing about terror-ism is that a small cell of fanat-ics can terrorize an entire city,embarrass the national govern-ment, and hijack the attentionof the whole world. But whyshould anyone fear an entirereligion just because of a hand-ful of fanatics? To do so is toplay into their hands.

A reasonable counterpointis to ask, “How can a city or anation protect its citizens fromterrorists? Terrorism usesindiscriminate killing by at-tacking population centerssuch as airports, train stations,and theaters. Every act ofterror increases resistance,sometimes over-zealous,against the invisible perpetra-tors of terror. Who are theseterrorists? The one hope ofvictory that the terrorist oftoday can ever dream of is anover-reaction that indiscrimi-nately oppresses innocentMuslims. To do so is to playinto their hands.

Terrorists hope to thrive inthe aftermath of their violencewhile constituted governmentsmust respond according to law.The hard reality is that to stopterrorism in the short run aconstituted government mayalso have to resort to violence.Indeed, terrorists today arekilled silently, discretely withdrones. In the long run, consti-tuted governments will ensurethat there is no scape-goatingof an entire religion or thedeprivation of civil rights with-out evidence of criminal activ-ity. Thus reduced and furtherisolated, in the long run, thefanatics will lose their war.

Finally, terrorists and thefight against terrorism havelittle to do with the any of theholy scriptures known to, readby or embraced by humanitytoday. This is why Islamopho-bia is a red herring.

Charleston C.K. Wang is aresident of Montgomery.

Why Islamophobiais a red herring

CharlestonC.K. WangCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

ABOUT LETTERS AND COLUMNSWe welcome your comments on editorials, columns, stories or other topics. Include your name, address and phone number(s) so we may verify your letter. Letters of 200 or fewer words and columns of 500 or fewer

words have the best chance of being published. All submissions may be edited for length, accuracy and clarity. Deadline: Noon Thursday E-mail: [email protected] Fax: 248-1938 U.S. mail: See box below

Letters, columns and articles submitted to The Suburban Life may be published or distributed in print, electronic or other forms.

Columbia Townshippolice contract

I would like to apologize tothe villages of Mariemont andGolf Manor for the way thepolice contract was negotiat-ed and will be voted on April19.

It has nothing to do withquality of service provided bythe Sheriff’s department. It isa “no bid” contract that shouldhave been bid and signed lastyear. Nobody was able to bid,which did not allow savings tous taxpayers. David Kubicki(trustee president) and theother trustees must not pass

this contract April 19. Let it bebid out to everybody thatwant’s to bid. Again no trans-parency.

It shows a price tag of$809,572.61 for one year (notthree years), but the “hiddencost” in this contract is theproblem. The “hidden costs”in the contract is not limitedto what Columbia Townshipwill be charged during thecontract. Services (manpow-er) can be cut if there is high-er cost charged by the sheriff.Why two more police cars(bought by the township forabout $55,000) when there arealready four available?

The price just went up. We taxpayers are already

paying for police protectionfrom the Sheriff’s departmentthrough our real estate taxes.Why isn’t there a credit in-cluded in the contract?

So what is the real price ofthis contract? It is not in thebest interest (no competition-tax savings) for the residentsof Columbia Township.

No discussion now on thecontract so we are looking athigher cost in a year withhigher taxes. Vote no now.

Carl Jones Columbia Township

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

April 13 questionBatman or Superman? Why?

“Tough call on this one.Batman has an unrivaledcool car and motorcycle aswell as a man-cave to top allman-caves. Big points allaround. However, the abilityto fly anywhere you wantwithout the bother of goingto an airport or even havingto pay for a ticket, givesSuperman a bit of an edge.Plus, that X-ray vision thingcan certainly come in handy.The current world supply ofKryptonite is pretty small sono worries there.

“For these reasons itwould be easy to give the nodto the big ‘S’ man except forwhen one factors in the fash-ion aspects. Face it, spandexand tights are currently outof vogue and a cape? So twocenturies ago. But wait, Bat-man has a cape too.Hmmm...”

M.J.F.

“If the decision is basedon physical prowess it wouldbe hard to go against Su-perman versus Batman letalone any other ‘super hero.’However if the evaluation is

done on contributions tosociety I would have to gowith Batman due to his alterego Bruce Wayne. TheWayne Foundation helpedout many of those in Gothamcity.

“Superman’s alter ego ofreporter Clark Kent wouldpale in comparison.

“Either way I am not sureof the reasoning behind thecurrent movie (’Batmanversus Superman’) exceptmoney. Go figure!”

T.D.T.

April 6 questionEarth Day is April 22. In

what “green” efforts do youpartake?

“Here’s what we havebeen able to do…

“We donate, reuse andrecycle as much as possiblethe items we won’t use: thefive of us fill less than a gar-bage can each week withtrash. Everything but pro-teins are composted, thevegetable garden improvingso much our neighbors nowcompost.

“Our dogs daily areas nolonger receive lawn treat-ments - no weeds there in 10years. The light bulbs wereswitched and new treesplanted. New plants are na-tive species (low-mainte-nance) producing fruits andnuts for ourselves (and wild-life who beat us to them).Garden (veggie and flower)areas are slowly increasingto decrease mowing space.Shopping trips are combinedwith other necessary errandsto reduce driving time. Adown side: complaining fromchildren. An upside: moretime in the schedule to spendwith them outside the car.”

L.B.

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’SQUESTIONShould Ohio consider andenact laws similar to thoserecently signed into law inNorth Carolina and Mississippiregarding religious freedomand LGBT rights? Why or whynot?

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

Page 11: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 1B

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

Boys lacrosse» Indian Hill beat Elder in

sudden death overtime 11-10 onApril 11.

The Braves beat SummitCountry Day 14-10 on April 16.

Girls lacrosse» Mount Notre Dame defeat-

ed Walnut Hills 10-6 on April 11.» Indian Hill downed Lakota

East 11-1 on April 14.Indian Hill won a pair of

games on April 16 over Hudson10-5 and Olentangy Orange 6-4.

Softball» Deer Park downed Madei-

ra 7-2 on April 12. Junior JennaShepherd got the win and drovein two runs. Sophomore Julie

Kramer was 2-for-3 with a dou-ble and drove in two runs.

Deer Park defeated Winton

Woods 8-3 on April 13. Shepherdstruck out 10 for the win andwas 3-for-4 with a double at theplate.

The Lady Wildcats beatPrinceton 9-6 on April 14. Fresh-man Samantha Schreibeis gotthe win with Kramer going 2-for-4 and driving in two runs.

Deer Park downed Madeira12-0 behind Shepherd April 15.Schreibeis was 3-for-4.

» Mount Notre Dame beatUrsuline 6-1 on April 12. SeniorSydney Zeuch remained un-beaten and junior Shelby Nel-son was 4-for-4 with a triple andRBI.

MND slammed Seton 14-1 onApril 13. Zeuch had the win withShelby Nelson going 3-for-3with a pair of runs driven in.

» Madeira fell 12-1 to Read-ing on April 14.

SHORT HOPS

Scott Springer, Adam Baumand Nick RobbeCommunity Press staff

SCOTT SPRINGER/COMMUNITY PRESS

Indian Hill senior goalie CamMcMillan clears the ball for theBraves.

THANKS TO ST. XAVIER

On April 13, St. Xavier High School held a spring signing day ceremony in itslibrary. The following student athletes signed to continue their careers incollege; from left: Anthony Morgan, baseball (Earlham College); ZachBertoia, football (Ohio Wesleyan); Brennan Hatten, baseball (OhioDominican); J.P. Olding, football (Thomas More); Andrew Niehaus, tennis(Northern Kentucky); Nick Prather, rugby (Kentucky); Aaron Taske,swimming (Missouri University S&T). See SHORT HOPS, Page 2B

Missing 11seniors from last spring’s 16-3 (5-0Girls Greater Catholic League) team, one wouldthink the Mount Notre Dame High School la-crosse team would be rebuilding.

However, the stream of athletes continuesfor coach Russell Mackey, who is back witheight more seniors and a variety of girls proudlysupporting the MND blues on the field. The de-fending GGCL coach of the year returns onlysenior Kelsey Beitman from last year’s MNDfirst teamers, but is again back in the leaguemix.

The season didn’t start on a high note as MNDhad to square off with perennial powerhouseMason. The Cougars lost a close one April 5, 12-10.

“We were hoping to have a game in beforeMason,” Mackey said. “They were pumped;they were home. We came out flat and dug our-

selves a whole a little bit too deep.”Since then, the MND transition game has

been better as the Cougars have matured. Beit-man was the GGCL’s top scorer in early Aprilwith sophomore Julia Harmon and junior Kait-lin Young not far behind.

“She’s ambidextrous. She goes left; she goesright,” Mackey said of Kaitlin Young. “We’ve gottalent. We’re still a few games from really put-ting it together.”

MND also has non-conference wins againstan always-tough Wyoming squad and an im-proved Walnut Hills group. In the league theygot by St. Ursula 14-13 April 7.

“We gave up a five-point lead,” Mackey said.“We gutted that one out.”

The Cougars have “spurtability”. In their re-cent win over Walnut Hills, a 3-3 tie at halftimeturned to 8-3 less than five minutes into the sec-

PHOTOS BY SCOTT SPRINGER/COMMUNITY PRESS

Sophomore Julia Harmon (15) is congratulated after an MND goal.

Mount Notre Dame lacrossepotent despite lossesScott [email protected]

MND junior Allie Daumeyer races down the fieldtoward the goal for the Cougars.

MND sophomore Rachel Harmon attempts theface-off for the Cougars against Walnut Hills.

See LACROSSE, Page 2B

INDIAN HILL - At their cur-rent rate, the Indian Hill HighSchool boys and girls tennis pro-grams will surround theirfenced-in courts with plaques.Currently, one side of the courtsadjacent to Tomahawk Stadiumis filled with the accomplish-ments of Braves, past and pre-sent.

The girls squad has won ev-ery Cincinnati Hills League titlein fall since 1991. The boys inspring have won every CHLcrown since 1986 with the excep-tion of 2009 and 2014. Loadedwith much of last year’s stable ofstars, including CHL Player ofthe Year, Alexander Warstler,CHL Coach of the Year MarcYoung has every reason to grinwhen he fills out his lineup.

Despite the meteorologicalchallenges of April, the Bravesare again off to great start.

“We’ve benefited from greattalent,” Young said. “Warstlercomes back as No. 1, with threevisits to the state tournament.”

Warstler will attend Mar-quette to play tennis. He’s alsohighly-ranked in the USTA.

Joining Warstler on the CHLfirst team last season was fresh-man Andrew Pregel. Thoughstill shorter than most oppo-nents, he’s grown and gottenstronger. Opponents who judgetalent on stature often leave de-feated after facing the sopho-more southpaw who has alreadymade the state tournament.

“Only 16 kids get there,”Young said. “He did a great job(last year). He’s a powerhouse.He’s a big-time player. I neverenjoyed playing lefties. I have tobelieve that hasn’t changed awhole lot.”

Pregel is another potential

college player as interest devel-ops early in tennis circles.

Juniors Christiano Lima andMilan Bhanderi return to dom-inate doubles in the CHL. Thepair dropped a district match toWyoming last season, whichwould have sent them to thestate tournament as well. Thisspring, Columbus is squarely intheir sights.

Pablo Guzman and DurhamColohan are other veteran play-ers Young can mix and match insingles or doubles. At IndianHill, most of the players areknown in the tennis circuit and aspot on the roster is tough toearn for upperclassmen or newarrivals.

A new face to varsity is soph-omore Maanas Pisati, who hasthus far dabbled at third singlesand doubles. Young’s eight play-ers are as tough as anyone andare accustomed to getting on thebus with victories.

“It’s not new to them,” Youngsaid. “With experience comessome confidence and comfort.”

The Braves’ better matchesoften come in practice. Howev-er, they turn from rivals to team-mates on match days and havehad just one blemish (at press-time) in the Southwest Ohio Ten-nis Classic against a talented Up-per Arlington team, 3-2.

As always, the Braves sched-ule is challenging with non-con-ference matches ahead againstDivision I opponents, Mason, St.Xavier, Moeller and WalnutHills. In conference, the usualsuspects are always waiting toknock off the school in red.

“Wyoming will be anotherstrong team and Mariemont isgood,” Young said.

Indian Hill will host MadeiraApril 21. They take on “cross-woods” rival Cincinnati CountryDay on Given Road April 26.

PHOTOS BY SCOTT SPRINGER/COMMUNITY

PRESS

Indian Hill senior Alex Warstlerchases down the ball for the Braves.

Sophomore Andrew Pregelprepares to drill the yellow ballback across the net.

More bannersahead for IndianHill tennisScott [email protected]

Page 12: Suburban life 042016

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Baseball» Moeller beat St. Xavier 4-1 on April

13 behind senior Nick Bennett. SeniorAlec Graves was 2-for-4.

» Madeira lost to Reading 6-0 on April14. Matt Schroeder went 2-for-3 with twodoubles at the plate for the Mustangs.

Boys volleyball» Moeller swept Oak Hills three

straight games April 11.

Tennis

» Indian Hill blanked Wyoming 5-0 onApril 12. Senior Alex Warstler, sopho-more Andrew Pregel and senior DurhamColohan swept singles.

Indian Hill beat Summit Country Day4-1 on April 13. Senior Alex Warstler,sophomore Andrew Pregel and seniorDurham Colohan took singles.

The Braves blanked Mariemont 5-0April 14 with Milan Bhandari/ChristianoLima and Pablo Guzman/Maanas Pisatisweeping doubles.

Boys track and field» Indian Hill was second at the Read-

ing Invitational April 16. Junior PatrickGiroux won the 1,600 meters in 4:43.9 andsophomore Joe Murdock won the 3,200 in10:19.74.

Short hops Continued from Page 1B

ond half. MND eventuallywon 10-6. When the Cou-gars find open looks ongoal, they’re dangerous.

As always, the non-GGCL schedule for theCougars is brutal. Syca-more, Loveland, IndianHill and others are on thisyear’s slate. With numer-ous competitive offeringsat MND, Mackey is stillable to pull talent onto thelacrosse field.

“We’re OK in the num-bers department,” Mack-ey said. “You have feederprograms. We try to geteveryone in to play andmake it a positive experi-ence.”

Ahead on the MND me-nu is an away game atMercy April 21, then ahome contest April 26with Springboro.

LacrosseContinued from Page 1B

SCOTT SPRINGER/COMMUNITY PRESS

Senior Casey Dingwall (35) awaits instruction for MND withjunior Kinsey Young standing by

The Ohio High School Athletic Asso-ciation Board of Directors voted unani-mously April 14 to change the Division Ifootball playoffs from a two-region set-up back to a four-region platform. Thenew alignment will begin this fall.

The 9-0 vote was not met with fan-fare by local Division I coaches andprograms.

“We’re familiar with it. It’s a systemwe’ve had before, but we would haveliked to have kept it in two regions,”Colerain Assistant Athletic Directorand defensive backs coach Phillip Jo-seph said. “I thought that was better. Ifthe goal is to get the best teams in theplayoffs, the two-region system wasdoing that.”

The OHSAA last had four regions inDI football in 2012.

When the OHSAA expanded foot-ball’s postseason to seven divisions in2013, the biggest change came at the DIlevel. Since then, Divisions II-VII haveall consisted of roughly 107 schools(give or take a school). In contrast, DIhas been comprised of the state’s 72largest schools.

In 2013, instead of breaking DI intofour regions like the other six divisions,the OHSAA decided to break the divi-sion into two regions – Region I coveredthe northern half of the state while Re-gion II covered the southern portion.Also, instead of eight teams per regionmaking the playoffs, 16 per region ad-vanced to the postseason. The largerqualification pool, some coaches andadministrators argue, allowed for notonly a better playoff field but also somelocal teams a chance to get in that theywouldn’t have under a four-region for-mat.

But the OHSAA did see issues withthe format from a statewide stand-point. For instance, only 22 of Ohio’s 88

counties feature at least one DI school,so travel was a problem for some pro-grams. Also, the lack of a true regionalchampionships was seen as a negative.

Travel and the lack of a traditionalregional title game – in the two-regionformat, the state semifinals acted as re-gional final games – were the drivingfactor behind Thursday’s vote.

Football playoffformat changedispleases DI schoolsJohn [email protected] 2016 OHSAA Football Division I

Schools by RegionRegion 1Brunswick, Dublin Jerome, Elyria,

Findlay, Lewis Center Olentangy, PowellOlentangy Liberty, Lewis Center Olen-tangy Orange, Lorain, Marysville, Medi-na, Newark, North Royalton, Parma,Strongsville, Toledo Start, Toledo Whitm-er, Westerville Central, Westerville South

Region 2Austintown-Fitch, Berea-Midpark,

Canton GlenOak, Canton McKinley,Cleveland Heights, Cleveland John Mar-shall, Cleveland Rhodes, Cleveland St.Ignatius, Cuyahoga Falls, Euclid, Lake-wood, Lakewood St. Edward, MassillonJackson, Mentor, North Canton Hoover,Shaker Heights, Solon, Stow-MunroeFalls

Region 3Beavercreek, Columbus Westland,

Dublin Coffman, Gahanna Lincoln,Grove City, Grove City Central Crossing,Hilliard Bradley, Hilliard Darby, HilliardDavidson, Huber Heights Wayne, Ketter-ing Fairmont, Lancaster, PickeringtonCentral, Pickerington North, Reynolds-burg, Springfield, Thomas Worthington,Upper Arlington

Region 4Archbishop Moeller, Colerain, Elder,

Oak Hills, St. Xavier, Sycamore, WesternHills, Centerville, Clayton Northmont,Fairfield, Hamilton, Lebanon, LakotaEast, Mason, Middletown, Milford,Springboro, Lakota West

Madeira went down hard onthe road at Bishop Fenwick,losing 13-0 in five innings onApril 16 in the first game of around robin tournament.

PHOTOS BY ADAM BAUM/COMMUNITY PRESS

Madeira sophomore pitcher Patrick Thatcher delivers against Fenwick on April 16.

MADEIRA FALLSON DIAMOND

Madeira sophomore Sam Wirsing covers histhird base position at Fenwick.

Madeira senior Zach Evans fields his positionat Fenwick.

Madeira junior Jake Bellayuto puts the ball inplay in the first inning at Fenwick on April 16.

Page 13: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 3BLIFE

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Page 14: Suburban life 042016

4B • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

Final Days

First Church of Christ,Scientist, Anderson

Township7341 Beechmont Avenue

(Near Five Mile Road)Email: [email protected]

231-1020christiansciencecincinnati.com

Sunday Service & Sunday School10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Testimonial Meeting7:30 p.m.

In Church Reading Rm/BookstoreOpen after all services.

Downtown Reading Rm/Bookstore412 Vine Street, Cincinnati

Open Monday - Friday 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.

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

School 10:30amWednesday Testimonial Meeting

7:30pmReading Room 3035 Erie Ave

Experience the Light and Sound of God

You are invited to theCommunity HU Song

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

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

7832 Five Mile Road Cincinnati, OH 45230

1-800-891-7713 EckankarOhio.org

Worldwide1-800 LOVE GODECKANKAR.org

3850 E. Galbraith,Deer Park

Next to DillonvaleShopping Ctr

www.TrinityCincinnati.org791-7631

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

PastorCathy Kaminski

Weekend WorshipSaturday: 5 p.m.

Sunday: 9 & 10:30 a.m.

Nursery, Children’s & Youth available

Everyone is welcome!

6635 Loveland-Miamiville Rd.Loveland, OH 45140

513.677.9866 • www.epiphanyumc.org

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

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

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

PASTOR MARIE SMITHwww.cloughchurch.org

Come, connect, grow & serve

Connections Christian Church7421 East GalbraithCincinnati, OH 45243

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

Jeff Hill • Ministerwww.connectionscc.org

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

MADEIRA-SILVERWOODPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

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

Sunday Worship9:00 am - Contemporary Service

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

Service DirectoryCALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

Armstrong ChapelMethodist ChurchMembers and guests have

three choices for Sundaymorning services – 8:20 a.m.Old Chapel worship includestraditional hymns, praise

songs and message; 9:40 a.m.Classic worship in the sanctu-ary with pipe organ, hymnsand chancel choir singing

classic anthems, and 11:11 a.m.faith infusion contemporaryservice in the Worship Centerwith the Infused Praise Bandleading contemporary musicand using audio-visual tech-nology.

Nursery is available at 9:40 a.m.and 11:11 a.m. services forchildren ages three months totwo years. The church providesSunday school for childrenages 2 to sixth-grade and foryouth in seventh-through12th-grades at the 9:40 a.m.service.

Armstrong Chapel is at 5125Drake Road, Indian Hill; 561-4220; www.armstrongchape-l.org.

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

Sunday School classes are 10a.m.; Sunday worship is 11 a.m.Kings Kids, a children’s wor-ship service, is offered duringthe 11 a.m. service.

Nursery care is available. The church is at 8501 PlainfieldRoad, Sycamore Township;891-2221; bethelbaptist-temple. org.

Cincinnati FriendsMeeting - QuakerRegular worship is 11 a.m.Sundays followed by fellow-ship in the Fireside room atnoon. First day/nursery schoolis available.

The Meetinghouse is at 8075Keller Road, Cincinnati; 791-0788; cincinnatifriends.org.

CommunityLighthouse Churchof GodSunday School is 10 a.m. Sun-day night service is 6 p.m.Wednesday night service is 7p.m.

The church is at 4305 SycamoreRoad; 984-5044; on Facebookunder “Community Light-house Church of God.”

Good ShepherdLutheran ChurchGSLC is a large church thatoffers a variety of styles ofworship and service times.Woven worship (mix of tradi-tional and contemporary) is 5p.m. Saturdays; Traditionalworship is 8 a.m. and 11 a.m.Sundays. Contemporary wor-ship is 9:30 a.m. Sundays. A30-minute family worship forwee ones is 9 a.m. Sundays.“NOSH” dinner and worship is5:45 p.m. Sundays, offsite atUC Campus Ministry EdgeHouse. GSLC offers preschooland student Sunday School at9:30 a.m. September throughMay. Faith-building classes,fellowship and outreachopportunities, and smallgroups are offered each week-end and throughout the weekfor adults to connect.

The church is at 7701 KenwoodRoad, Kenwood; 891-1700;goodshepherd.com.

Hartzell UnitedMethodist ChurchThe annual rummage and bakesale is 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sat-urday, May 7.

Salad Bar Luncheon is 11 a.m. to1 p.m. Wednesday, May 18.Doors open at 10 a.m. Craftswill be available for purchase.

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

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

Madeira SilverwoodPresbyterian ChurchSunday morning contemporaryservice is 9 a.m. Traditionalservice is 11 a.m. classes areoffered at 10 a.m. for all ages,as well as nursery care.

The church is at 8000 MiamiAve., Madeira; 791-4470.

Mission BaptistCincinnatiSunday school is 10 a.m. Sundaymorning service is 11 a.m.Sunday evening service is 6p.m. Wednesday eveningservice is 6:30 p.m.

This independent church offersministries for youth, teens andyoung adults. Master Club isoffered for children onWednesday evening.

The church is at 7595 Montgo-mery Road, Kenwood.

St. Paul CommunityUnited MethodistChurchWorship times are 8:30 a.m.and 11 a.m. (traditional) and9:30 a.m. (contemporary).Come to the choir room at10:30 a.m. to join the choir anySunday.

The church is at 8221 MiamiRoad, Madeira; 891-8181;www.stpaulcumc.org.

Trinity CommunityChurchA yard sale is planned for 8:30a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, May7, at the church.

Trinity is in search of an enthu-siastic Christian to teachchildren in Kindergartenthrough third-grades aboutthe Bible from 9:45 a.m. to11:15 a.m. Sundays. Call thechurch between 9 a.m. andnoon, Monday through Friday,for details on compensation,lesson planning and sched-uling an interview.

The church is at 3850 E. Gal-braith Road, Deer Park; 791-7631.

About religionReligion news is published atno charge on a space-availablebasis. E-mail announcementsto areeves@community-

press.com.

RELIGION

Page 15: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 5BLIFE

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Page 16: Suburban life 042016

6B • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

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Have you, your familyor friends paid for foun-dation or waterproofingrepairs on their house ora previous residence?

These repairs can bevery costly and verydisheartening if the con-tractor’s work does notsolve the problem. Pay-ing for repairs that maycost you $5,000, $10,000,$20,000 or more thathave not worked makesthe idea of foundationproblems a major night-mare and scares home-owners.

People lose sleep overthe fear of what the re-pairs may cost. Potentialbuyers are kept frommaking an offer on ahome for sale because itmay have foundation

issues orhave hadshoddyfounda-tion re-pairs.

Withmorethan 100founda-tion con-tractorsin the

area, thousands of home-owners are paying con-tractors every year.When an individual callsa contractor to solve theproblem, the contractorsends a sales person. Irecently met a lady thatcalled four companiesfor bids, but only gotthree different salesmen.The one salesman that

returned under a differ-ent company name gaveher a different proposal.She lost the “warmfuzzy” feeling of relyingon the salesmen. Anypotential client of thesefirms is only getting theopinion of a sales personwanting to sell work, notthe opinion of an unbi-ased professional engi-neer.

Contractors providebids to work on symp-toms. If you have cracks,they will probably wantto install underpinningsystems to fix a supposedsettlement problem. Ifthe foundation walls arethought to be leaning orbulging inward, probablyevery one of them willwant to install steel I-

beams against the wall,which may be an incom-plete or improper repair.If a house has basementleaks, most will want tosaw-cut the basementslab to install a sumppump and maybe coverup the crack. Almostevery foundation or wa-terproofing company inthis area does not un-derstand how externalforces affect a founda-tion. If four differentcompanies are called,you will most likely getfour different sugges-tions.

The best way a home-owner can protect them-selves is starting with aprofessional engineer.Contractors’ sales peopletry to sell you their ser-

vices with well knownand “respected” celebri-ty advertising, good BBBratings, “A” ratings onAngie’s list, and some-times even fraudulentlystating that they are anengineer or have a li-censed engineer on staff.Any homeowner thatskips the professionalengineer and relies onthe sales person may becommitting checkbooksuicide.

After completingmore than 10,000 inspec-tions over 18 years, Ihave homeowners tell methe horror stories. Lucki-ly, some of these have notsigned on the dotted linewith a contractor. Theengineer can provideengineering designs or

details that several con-tractors can bid the samescope of work you canthen easily compareprices. Also, professionalengineering designsmean you will have arecord of the repair workwhen selling the home.

Remember, work in-stalled by a contractorwithout an engineeringdesign is merely workthat has been installedand may only cover up asymptom and cost youmore in the long run.

Michael Montgomeryof Buyers ProtectionGroup is a licensed engi-neer in Ohio, Kentuckyand Indiana. Call 1-800-285-3001 www.enginee-ringandfoundations.com

Common homeowner foundation repair mistakes

MichaelMontgomery COMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Impact 100 is accept-ing applications for theclass of 2017 Young Phi-lanthropist ScholarshipProgram.

“The program is ameans to encourageyoung members to expe-rience women’s collec-tive giving,” Impact 100President Donna Broder-ick said. Through thegenerosity of donors,young women with an in-terest in local philanthro-py, who might struggle tofund a full Impact 100membership, can get in-volved in the collectivegiving organization, withthe goal of moving to fullmembership in fouryears. The applicationdeadline is April 30.

For more information,or to access the applica-tion, visit: www.impact100.org

Impact 100 Recipientof $20K Grant

Impact 100 has beenawarded a $20,000 grantto help grow member-ship and celebrate the15th anniversary. Thegrant is from the H.B.,E.W. and F. R. LutherCharitable Foundation,Fifth Third Bank andNarley L. Haley Co-Trustees.

“We thank them fortheir generous supportand look forward to theresults it will help usachieve in 2016, our 15thyear,” Broderick said.

Increasing member-ship will enable Impact100 to award more grantsto area non-profitsAll ofImpact 100 membershipdonations go directly tofund the annual grantpool; so, the more Impact100 members, the largerthe grant pool. The rec-ord 2016 membership

translates to fundingfour $101,500 grants. Thegrant recipients will beannounced at the AnnualAwards CelebrationSept. 13.

Impact 100 is celebrat-ing 15 years and morethan $3.6 million in tawards.

Impact 100 was found-ed in Cincinnati with thesimple premise that 100women, each contribut-ing $1,000, could collec-tively award a $100,000grant to a deserving non-profit. Over the past 15years, Impact 100 hasawarded $100,000-plusgrants to 29 non-profitsin the Greater Cincin-nati/Northern Kentuckyregion. Additionally, theconcept has spread to 26U.S. cities and Australia,generating more than$32 million in grant con-tributions.

Each year $100,000-plus grants are awardedto Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky non-profit organizations.Each grant applicantchooses in which of fivefocus areas to summit anapplication: Culture,Education, Environ-ment, Family, and Health& Wellness.

The number andamount of grants is de-termined by the size ofthe membership thatyear. In 2016, four grantsof $101,500 will be award-ed at the Annual AwardsCelebration on Sept. 16.

Impact 100 was found-ed in 2001, in Cincinnati,by a group of women, ledby Wendy Steele, who de-sired to make a greaterimpact with their philan-thropic donations by col-lectively pooling theirfunds to create a signifi-cant $100,000-plus grant.

Impact 100 announcesyoung philanthropistscholarship programThe Jewish Hospital

is hosting a free “Walkwith a Doc” program atKenwood Towne Centertwice monthly.

The walks take placeevery other Thursdayfrom 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. atthe mall, 7875 Montgo-mery Road. Walkerswill meet at The JewishHospital’s “Walk with aDoc” booth in front ofAnthropologie nearNordstrom’s insideentrance. New walkersget a free T-shirt and apedometer to log theirsteps.

The walks are led bya variety of physicians

and otherhealthprofes-sionalsrepre-senting awide ar-ray ofhealth,

wellness and fitness-related expertise. Theystart the meeting with abrief and informativetalk on their area ofspecialty before walk-ing. The program isfree and does not re-quire pre-registration.

The walk schedule: » 9-10 a.m. Thursday,

April 28;

» 9-10 a.m. Thursday,May 12 and 26;

» 9-10 a.m. Thursday,June 9 and 23;

» 9-10 a.m. Thursday,July 14 and 28;

» 9-10 a.m. Thursday,Aug. 11 and 25;

» 9-10 a.m. Thursday,Sept. 8 and 22;

» 9-10 a.m. Thursday,Oct. 13 and 27.

Mercy Health Physi-cian Dr. Barry Brook,who practices fromKenwood InternalMedicine at 4750 E.Galbraith Road and isthe director of The Jew-ish Hospital’s internalmedicine residency

program, leads the firstwalk April 14. He cananswer walkers’ ques-tions about regularhealth screenings andhow to maintain well-ness.

Evan Herdeman, aphysical therapy su-pervisor at The JewishHospital’s physicaltherapy location at 4760E. Galbraith Road, leadsthe walk on April 28.

He can answer walk-ers’ questions on how toavoid injury, whenphysical therapy isnecessary and howphysical therapy helpsinjuries heal.

Jewish Hospital launches‘Walk with a Doc’ program

Brook

Page 17: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 7BLIFE

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GEN. WIRELESS SVC: Subj. to Wireless Customer Agmt (att.com/wca). Svcs are not for resale. Deposit may be reqd. Credit approval, activ. ($15) & other fees, monthly, overage & other charges, usage & other restr’s per line apply. Pricing, promotions, & terms subject to change & may be modified or terminated at any time without notice. Coverage & svc not avail. everywhere. You get an off-net (roaming) usage allowance for each svc. If you exceed the allowance, your svc(s) may be restricted or terminated. Other restr’s apply & may result in svc termination. Screen images simulated. ©2016 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. AT&T and the Globe logo are registered trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.

Get up to $650 in credits per line to help you switch to AT&T*

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*Ltd time (PR ends 6/30/16). Each line reqs elig. port-in, trade-in, purch., & svc. $650=Min. $10 trade-in credit/promo card (for AT&T products/svc only) + prepaid card (in 90 days) for device balance/early term. fee amount less trade-in. Fees, charges & restrs apply. See Offer Details.

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Page 18: Suburban life 042016

8B • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

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COLUMBIA TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsBurglaryReported at 3500 block ofKenoak Lane, Feb. 25.

TheftReported on 5300 block ofKennedy Ave., Feb. 25.

Reported on 3400 block ofHighland Ave., Feb. 23.

Light bulbs removed from3400 block of Highland Ave.,Feb. 29.

DEER PARKIncidents/investigationsCriminal damagingReported at 7700 block ofBlue Ash Road, March 29.

Drug paraphernalia, drugabuseReported at 4200 block ofLinden Ave., March 24.

TheftReported at 7700 block ofDearborn Ave., March 31.

Reported at 8000 block ofLake Ave., April 4.

MADEIRAIncidents/investigationsDrug abuseMarijuana located in vehicleat area of Miami Ave. andShawnee Run, March 28.

TheftMail taken and check forgedat 6300 block of Vista Ridge,March 24.

ID used with no authorization(IRS related) at 6500 block ofApache Circle, March 25.

SYCAMORE TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsBurglaryReported and jewelry valuedat $700 removed from 12000block of Fifth Ave., Jan. 28.

Attempt made at 8000 blockof School Road, Feb. 25.

Attempt made at 8400 block

of Plainfield Road, Feb. 26.$70 removed from 8700 blockof Pine Road, Feb. 20.

Criminal damagingDrywall damaged at 7200block of Kemper Road, Jan27.

Trampoline damaged at 4500block of Harrison Ave., Jan.31.

Criminal mischiefReported on 3700 block ofBelfast Ave., Feb. 22.

Gross sexual impositionReported on Reading Road,Feb. 1.

Identity fraudReported on 4600 block ofDuneden Ave., Feb. 24.

Identity theftReported on 4600 block ofDuneden Ave., Jan. 30.

Reported on 8300 block ofLake Ave., Feb. 25.

Theft Phone valued at $700 re-moved from 7900 block ofMontgomery Road, Feb. 25.

Reported on 2800 block ofMontgomery Road, Feb. 22.

License plate removed from8000 block of HosbrookRoad, Feb. 29.

License plate removed fromvehicle at 8000 block ofHosbrook Road, Feb. 29.

Wallet and contents valued at$150 removed from 7800block of Montgomery Road,

Feb. 27.Shirt valued at $170 removedfrom 7800 block of Montgo-mery Road, Feb. 25.

Purse and contents removedfrom 4600 block of E. Gal-braith Road, Feb. 24.

Jewelry removed from 8300block of York St., Feb. 24.

Reported on 7800 block ofMontgomery Road, Feb. 23.

Snow blower removed from5600 block of Kugler MillRoad, Feb. 1.

Reported on 8700 block ofWicklow Ave., Feb. 2.

$400 in merchandise removedfrom 7800 block of Montgo-mery Road, Feb. 2.

Items removed from 800block of Montgomery Road,Jan. 31.

Reported on 4200 block ofWilliams Ave., Jan. 28.

Reported on 7600 block ofMontgomery Road, Jan. 30.

Clothing valued at $200removed from 7800 block ofMontgomery Road, Feb. 24.

Reported on 7800 block ofMontgomery Road, Feb. 25.

Glasses valued at $325 re-moved from 7800 block ofMontgomery Road, Feb. 27.

Reported on 7900 block ofMontgomery Road, Feb. 27.

Unauthorized use of motorvehicleReported in Sycamore, Feb.24.

POLICE REPORTS

ABOUT POLICE REPORTSCommunity Press publishes incident records provided by

local police departments. All reports published are publicrecords.

To contact your local police department:» Columbia Township: Hamilton County Sheriff's Office,683-3444 » Deer Park, 791-8056» Madeira, 272-4214» Sycamore Township, 774-6351 or 683-3444

Page 19: Suburban life 042016

APRIL 20, 2016 • SUBURBAN LIFE • 9BLIFE

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MADEIRA7250 Longfield Drive: Stigall,Brenda K. Tr. to Stigall,Shaun A.; $203,500.

8177 Miami Ave.: Sabai, Myato Bennewitz, Alexander &Lizbeth; $253,000.

7235 Osceola Drive: FusionDream Homes LLC to Beech,Joseph III Tr.; $289,000.

SYCAMORE TOWNSHIP8738 Appleknoll Lane: Mack-ey, Joanna to Meyer, Mau-reen K.; $295,000.

1916 Chaucer Drive: Miree,Kimberly to Wells FargoBank NA; $16,000.

1925 Chaucer Drive: Glaser,Graham to Lindner, Daniel S.& Anna C. Zamborsky;$79,000.

Galbraith Road: GalbraithSouth Realty Co. LLC toKenwood Land Acquisition

LLC; $23,474,168.7830 Kenwood Road: SchiearRealty Co. LLC to KenwoodLand Acquisition LLC;$19,525,832.

4309 Kugler Mill Road: Kings-ley, Sophie Margret to Mon-teiro, Abel F. & Sophie M.;$43,692.

Montgomery Road: GalbraithSouth Realty Co. LLC toKenwood Land AcquisitionLLC; $23,474,168.

8136 Startinggate Lane: Mey-er, Gerard B. to Cheung, HiuC. & Suwen Tao; $517,000.

7357 Timberknoll Drive:

Hewitt, James Franklin toDickerson, Jaclyn & ZacharyMaly; $275,000.

3985 Trebor Drive: Setty,David J. & Mark T. to SturmHome Renovation LLC;$85,000.

8671 Wicklow Ave.: Tyler,Daniel R. to Kaanapali Reno-vations LLC; $50,000.

8671 Wicklow Ave.: KaanapaliRenovations LLC to NicroyInvestments LLC; $55,000.

11783 Wingate Lane: Lehm-kuhl, Veronica M. Tr. toMcCarley, Mary Christine &David; $525,000.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

ABOUT REAL ESTATE TRANSFERSInformation is provided as a public service by the office

of Hamilton County Auditor Dusty Rhodes. Neighborhooddesignations are approximate.

Ohio Parks and Recreation Associa-tion has announced its 2015 AnnualAwards of Excellence .

Great Parks of Hamilton Countywon a second place award in the Natu-ral Resources & Conservation cate-gory for exceeding its Taking Rootgoal.

The overall impact of Great Parksparticipation in the regional TakingRoot campaign to plant 2 million treesby 2020 has been extremely positive.The most noticeable impact was GreatParks exceeding its goal of planting60,000 trees by 2016 and planting73,850 a year early. Another notice-able impact was the increased produc-tivity it provided in reforestationefforts to combat invasive species

such as the emerald ash borer. Also,by offering multiple volunteer oppor-tunities, it has helped grow the con-nection of the community to the im-portance of conservation and parks.

The OPRA Annual Awards of Ex-cellence was presented at a banquethosted by the association in Sandusky.The awards are judged by a panel ofparks and recreation professionalsfrom around Ohio.

“Parks and recreation profession-als throughout Ohio work every day toimprove the quality of life of the peo-ple they serve,” OPRA Executive Di-rector Woody Woodward said. “Thiseffort is a shining example of thatkind of work, and we are pleased to beable to present this award.”

Taking Root initiativeearns state award

Page 20: Suburban life 042016

10B • SUBURBAN LIFE • APRIL 20, 2016 LIFE

EXPANDED WORLDVIEWBY HOWARD BARKIN / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

No. 0417

RE

LE

ASE

DA

TE

: 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

513-752-1804SALESHOURS:

Mon-Thu9-8 • Fri 9-6 • Sat 9-5:30

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

5QT Oil & Filter Change$21.95

Most vehicles. Some restrictions apply.Expires 04/30/16.

CAR GOT THE SHAKES?CompleteFrontEndAlignmentService

$49.95Most vehicles. Some restrictions apply. Expires 04/30/16.

15CARSUNDER$9995!

2001FordTaurusSilver,V6,

LocalTrade

2007 Chry. Pacifica Tour.Green,V6,Auto,A/C,3rdRowSeating,

AlumWheels,#G8033

2010Chry.PTCruiserSilver, Auto, A/C,

PW, PL, Stereo CD,Low Miles, #G8041

2008FordEscapeXLTBlack,V6,Auto,A/C,PW,PL,CD,Leather,

#F8168

2011 Dodge CaliberBlack, Auto, A/C, PW,

PL, CD,#F8121

2008DodgeCaliberSEBlack,Auto,A/C,

Alum.Wheels,StereoCD,GreatonGas,#F8194

2002FordEscapeXLTRed,V6,Auto,A/C,

PW,PL,GreatSchoolCar.

2006ToyotaRav4Silver,Auto,A/C,PW,PL,

Alum.Wheels,4x4,#G8060

$3,295

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OVER100CARS INSTOCK!

2010DodgeJourneySXTGrey,V6,Auto,

A/C,PW,PL,AlumWheels,#G8049

2007JeepCompassLTDAuto,A/C,PW,PL,

Leather,LocalTrade

2009Chev.Cobalt LSCoupe,Auto,AC,

Stereo,CD,60KMiles

2008Chry.SebringLtd.HardTopConvertible,Red,V6,Leather,ChromeWhls,PW,PL,

CD, GreatSpringCruiser!

2006ChryslerPacifica

Loaded!

2000HondaAccordLXSilver,Auto.,A/C,PW,PL,

VeryEconomical!#G8029

2009MitsubishiLancerGTS

Grey,Auto,A/C,sunroof,AlumWheels,Spoiler,#G8056

$9,988

$8,477

$7,885

$9,995

$5,988

$4,475

$9,995

Page 21: Suburban life 042016

Careers

Jobsnew beginnings...

Administrative

Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio

Real Estate

Rentalsgreat places to live...

4250 FERGUS STREETWe helped our buyer find the right home for them. Renovated townhouse located in Northside within walking distance of business district. If you have your eye on a certain home, let The Deutsch Team help you fulfill your dream.

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

NORTHSIDEBUYER

BOUGHT

West Shell

dreeshomes.comPrice subject to change.© 2015 The Drees Company. All rights reserved.

OPENSUN 12-5SycamoreGrove inBlue Ash

8947 Kenwood Road, 45242 l $599,000• 3 bdrms., 4 baths, and 3-car side entry garage

• Convenient living in a luxury one-level plan• Open family room, kitchen and dining room• Spectacular owner’s suite with spa bath• Approx. 3,923 sq. ft. of living space

• Many included upgrades with this home

Move-inReady!

(513) 494-0112

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

Kenndey Hgts/Silverton-2BR,Hugeliv rm, eat in kit, den, beautifulhardwood flrs, w/d hkups, $710+util’s.no pets. 513-984-3070

LOVELAND PINE APTSNow Accepting for our 2BR THwaiting list. Mon,Tues,Thurs & Fri 1-5, 2/9 thru 2/29. The waiting list willclose at 5 o’clock on 2/29. Apply inperson 112 Englage, Loveland OHManaged by Showe Mgmt.

MILFORD- SEM VillaRent subsidized.

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

Secure building.Service CoordinatorVisiting physicians.

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

MT. Washington-1BR, extraclean, quiet 4 Fam, garage,heat & water paid. $550+$550 dep. 1 yr lease. 513-283-4604

Mt Washington-2BR, Clean, QuietBuilding. $550/mo. heat/waterincluded. 513-231-8690

Oakley- 1-2BR, equip kit., water &heat furnished, $550-$600/mo+dep513-831-5959 or 513-658-5766

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

The Timbers Condo, Blue Ash,2BR, 2.5BA, W/D, newer ap-pliances, pool/tennis court.$1250. 513-582-8887

Cherrygrove - 3BR, 2BA, LR,FR, half basement, 2 car car-port, lg fenced yard. no pets.$1000/mo. Call 513-553-1555

Hamilton, OH 3Br-1.5Ba House canbe avail for Sec 8, $900/mo+dep,Exc Cond., oversized yard, Call fordetails 513-315-5255

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.

DEPENDABLE, honest &hardworking with referen-ces. Home health aide withover 30+ years experience.

incl. dementia &alzheimers. Available 24/7.

Call 513-658-1413,513-704-5551.

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]

Earn Cash, Prizesand Bonuses!

Deliver the Community PressNewspapers in yourneighborhood onWednesdays Only

So Don’t Delay Call Today-Call Customer ServiceCall 576-8240

HEY KIDS!

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]

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

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

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.

Person needed to do sewing & alter-ations in your home. Necessaryequipment needed to do the job.Non smoker only. More details callMary -513-248-0003

PET GROOMERFT. Great Pay. Rich Benefits. Great

Schedule. Email resume to [email protected] or apply online

www.petwow.com/pages/jobapp

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

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

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]

JOBS HOMES RIDESPETS &STUFF

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

VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifiedsTO PLACE YOUR AD

Homes ofDistinction

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Sell your car.

HANDOUT THECIGARS!

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebratewith aannouncement.

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post your rental.

APRIL 20, 2016 μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ 1C

Page 22: Suburban life 042016

Community

Announceannouncements, novena...

Special Greeting

Special Notices-Clas

Business

Commercialopportunites, lease, Invest...

Equipment

Farmhome grown...

Assorted

Stuffall kinds of things...

Yard and Outdoor

Adopt Me

Petsfind a new friend...

Restaurants-Hotels

Management

Retail Retail

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Thank You St. Jude-CMC

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS!Harris Bed Bug Killers/KITComplete Treatment SystemHardware Stores, The HomeDepot, homedepot.com

Public Notice Medical RecordDestructionPediatricians of Hyde ParkThe medical records of formerpatients of Drs. Joseph, Brown,Bagamery, Person, Leroux,Niehaus, Cassady and Rittershoferseen at 3006 Portsmouth who wereborn in 1985 or earlier will be de-stroyed the week of May 9, 2016.

Recycling Electronics Driveat Loveland Middle and HighSchool, On Saturday, April23rd from 12pm-3pm. If ithas a cord we want it!,(513)276-7403

BAR CAFE FOR SALE - On the OhioRiver w/Tiki bar, $35,000. Ownerfinancing possible 1329 US 52,New Richmond. 614-207-8933

1944 CUB TRACTOR, w/sicklebar, Needs some work,$3,000; 513-752-4283

100 piece Collectable Pirvate ModelCar Collection. 1/32, 1/24, 1/18.John- 513-575-5561, leave message.

American Fine Art & PerformanceLooking for collectors

& speaking venues.513-321-3251.

[email protected]

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

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]

3 WALNUT TREES IN FIELD,1 IN EXCELLENT CONDITION,2 IN GOOD CONDITION.513-753-5494

NEVER BEEN USED, BRIGHTRED MOTORIZED WHEEL-CHAIR. JAZZY SELECT ELITEPRIDE. 2 SETS OF BATTERIES.300 WEIGHT LIMIT. $1,500.(859)391-1327 [email protected]

Stainglass Inventory - Allcolors & sizes, lots of 12 x 12pieces, Will for sale $300.513-932-3884

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

HANDYMANNo job too big or small incl.electrical. Call Bob & com-

pare. 513-248-2130

HANDYMANNo job too big or small incl.electrical. Call Bob & com-

pare. 513-248-2130

#1 ALWAYS BUYING -Retired Vet pays topcash for antiques andvintage items. Singleitem or completeestate 513-325-7206

BUYING CHINA, Crystal,Silverware, Stemware,Estate 513-793-3339

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

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

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

www.cincytestrips.com

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

Slot Machines, Tools,Electronics, Firearms

& CollectiblesWith 2 Locations

3236 W. Galbraith3621 Harrison Ave

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

Absolute HighestCash Buyer!

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

Records (513) 473-5518

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

$$$ 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

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

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

WANTED Used FurnitureAntiques, Estate & Moving SaleItems, Old Toys. 513-821-1604

WAR RELICSUS, German, Japanese

Paying Top DollarCall 513-309-1347

White Pine, Norway/BlueSpruce 4-12 ft. Maples/Pears2" cal. Wholesale $ . Quant.disc. Dlvry & planting avail.513-673-8415

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

HANDOUT THECIGARS!

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebratewith aannouncement.

2C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 20, 2016

Page 23: Suburban life 042016

General Auctions General Auctions

Automotive

Ridesbest deal for you...

20.694-Acre Property - Offered in 3 ParcelsTate Twp., Clermont Co., Ohio

Historic Dwelling on 3.7 Acres 2 Other Parcels of Vacant Cleared & Wooded Land

Also selling in two separate parcels, 1.99 acres of B-2 Zonedland .6 miles west of Bethel on the south side of SR 232.

Public Auction 1 mile West of Bethel at 2969 SR 125 -16 miles SE of Exit 65(SR 125) I-275

Tuesday, May 3 – 2016 5:30 PM(Auction to be held at 2969 SR 125)

20.694 Acre Farm will be offered in 3 separate tracts. The dwelling tract(w/ 3.7 acres of land) has a historic 2-story home The other two parcelsare vacant cleared & wooded land. Clermont County Sewage and BethelWater are available for all parcels. Personal Property: GE Refrigerator,Maytag washer & GE dryer will sell after the real estate.

1.99 Acres of Vacant Land will sell after the farm at the above location –Mors details available soon

Open House – Sunday, April 24 - 1:00 – 3:00 P.M.

Jerry & Eileen Sipple – OwnersAUCTIONEERS

White’s Auctions, est. 1922 (AC31500023) Dave Jonathan Burke Adam White & White & Thomas & Tebbe 765-647-5360 765-265-3886 765-458-6202 513-383-7757

Don’t forget to connect with us on the web:www.whiteswebsite.com

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

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]

AKC registered pedigreechowchow puppies , Chow-chow, Males, , 4 weeks Tak-ing deposits , 3 cream 1 black1 red all males, Good withkids and other pets Firstshots mom and dad onpremises (937)689-3396 [email protected]

Bernese Mountain Dog Pup-pies - AKC, Taking dep. willbe ready May 9th, $1,200 +tax, Cash/CC 937-273-2731

Dog-puppies, Chihuahua,Males, $300-350, 8 weeks,black and white and tan,calm and playful CKC regis-tered, (513)581-1200 [email protected]

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]

German Shepherd Puppies -AKC black & red, DOB2/16/16, hips & health guar-anteed, Mother from Croatia,Father from Germany, $800859-992-5481

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

Puppy, N e w f o u n d l a n drottweiler mix $200, 7weeks, Black (513)850-9223

SHIH TZU PUPS- CKC,cream/tan, black/white,shots, wormed, small/fluffy,$400. 937-515-0265

Yorkie P u p p i e s , CKC, 3F,small Vet chk, shots &wormed, tails docked, $600cash only. 513-528-0278

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

Lexus ’02 SC430 Convertible ,1 owner, All maintenancedone at local Lexus dealer,Limited Edition Silver Greyw/saddle interior. Seriousinquiries only 513-307-2291

LEXUS 1999 ES 300 Coach Edt.Great shape, well maintained, Mustsee! 145K., $5,100. 513-641-6113

Lexus 2012 LS 460, 21K miles,Exc. cond., $42,000 firm. 513-575-1309 or 513-604-1722

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

1979 CLASSIC BEETLE CONVERTIBLEEXCELLENT CONDITION, $7,900513-476-7153

1 BUYER OF OLD CARSCLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s,Running or not.

513-403-7386

Fastiques Rod & Custom 23rd Annual Swap Meet & Cruise-InClermont County Fairgrounds,

Owensville, OHSATURDAY, APRIL 23.

Swap 7:30am to 4pmCruise-In starts @10am

Spaces $20 (15’x20’); Car Corral $10pumpkinrunnationals.com

513-528-0554FREE ADMISSION!!!

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

HARLEY 2004. 1450 cc, 5spd, 17,500 mi, lots of extrachrome, saddle bag, wellmaint, exc cond, $5,400. 513-309-9484

Harley Davidson 2008Road King, Anniversary Edi-tion, Pewter, like new w/Only1,100 miles, saddle bags w/locks,trickle charger, custom exhaust,$13,000 513-833-5200

Honda 2005 CR-V, SUV,140000 mi., 5 dr., Automatic,Great cond., White ext., Tanint., 04 Cylinders, AWD,$3000. (916)389-1450

CHEVY ’94 ASTRO EXTENDED VANLT SERIES. 89,000 mi, Exc Cond,$2,800. 513-489-7168

powering real estate search for over 365 newspapers

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UPD

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ALL

DAY.

NOW THAT’SREFRESHING.

THE NEWS ISALWAYS CHANGING.SO AREWE.VISIT US ONLINE TODAY

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

CALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

Service Directory

Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

Anderson/Cherry GroveSaturday April 23, 9a-4p567 Marilyn Ln. Furniture, antique dressers &twin bed, pictures, walkes,sheower chair, cedar chest,kitchen items, sm. appliances,tools, Christmas decor.Dir: Beechmont Ave to Hop-per Hill Rd left on Aldor, lefton Michael, Right on Marilyn.

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.

Williamsburg 4966 St Rt 1334/22 & 4/23, 9am-6pm: Rain or ShineNo Early Birds!

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]

Amelia OH-Yard Sale1194 Harthill DrSat April 23, 9am-3pmClothing, household items,SW decor & many misc

Anderson Twp - 2 FamilySale, 8203 & 8206 EastdaleDr, Sat. April 23 , 9am-2pm, Men &Women clothes,shoes & prom dress, lots ofhousehold items, computerdesk & chair, custom orderedhouse shutters & m u c hmore! Too much to lists!

Anderson Twp- 4 Family Garage SaleFri. 8-3 & Sat. 8-1, April 22 & 23,1641 & 1644 PINEBLUFF LANEBaby furn., baby clothes, householdgoods & furniture, pool table & more

ANDERSON TWP- Multi yardsale! Fri & Sat, 4/22 & 4/239am-4pm, 2711 RoyalwoodsCt., off corner of Lawyer Rd.Look for yellow signs. Tonsof stuff in Garage Too! Oursales get rave reviews! Hholditems, couches, chairs, babyequip., clothes new dishes,crystal, seasonal decor.books, tools Many newitems! too much to list!

Burlington, Paragon MillCommunity Yard Sale,2263 Paragon Mill Dr., Sat:4-23 8-2, Dir: Rt 18 toBurgandy Hill Dr. BetweenWalgreens and Krogers

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

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

FAYETTEVILLE- Lake Loreleicommunity wide yard, plant& flower sale. Sat 4/30 & Sun5/1, 9am-4pm Dir: St. Rt. 131(1 mile west of Rt. 50).

Glendale -Indoor Garage SaleThurs 4/21 & Fri 4/22, 11a- 4p2 Little Creek Lane. Miscitems, clothing, cook books,seasonal decor & more

GREENHILLS INDOOR & OUT-DOORSaturday 9a-4p. $10 Set-up,American Legion Hall.1100 Winton Rd,Info- 513-825-3099

Huge Garage Sale, Bake Sale &Car Wash Calvery Christian School5955 Taylor Mill Rd, Covington,Saturday, April 23, 10am to 4pmAll Proceeds benefit Girl’sBasketball Team

LOVELAND- 9474 Hopewell Rd.,4/22 & 4/23, Fri-Sat 9-3. furn., tools,books, toys, patio 4 chairs, patioloveseat, table & chair, hhld, LP’s,golf clubs & more!

LOVELAND-/GOSHEN Moving Sale, Sat 4/23,8:30am-5:30pm & Sun4/24, 8:30am-4pm.6695 Susan Dr.Snow thrower, Stihl chain-saw, mini tiller, generator,tools, dolls, to many items tolist. 50 yrs of hoarding

Mason, Garage Sale, Fri: 8-1,5546 Greenwich Park Dr.,4286 Hickory Woods Dr.,5620 Richmond Park Dr.PARKSIDE subdivision INMASON. Household, kids,furniture. MUCH MORE

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.

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, 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

USED BOOK SALEMILFORD Library 1099 St Rt 131,

Thurs. Apr. 28, 3-6pm;Fri. Apr. 29, 1-5pm;

Sat. Apr. 30, 10am-3pm

Withamsville - Multi FamilySale Sat April 23, 8-3pm,4060 Waterford Way, Diningset, hhold, home decor &much more~ Rain cancels

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

APRIL 20, 2016 μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ 3C

Page 24: Suburban life 042016

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

LEGAL NOTICE

The following legislation has been adopted by Loveland’sCity Council:

2016-20 Resolution authorizing the City Manager to enterinto a contract with Lebanon Ford to purchase a PublicWorks Department 1/2 ton Ford F150 pick-up truck throughthe State of Ohio Department of Transportation PurchasingPlan

2016-21 Resolution authorizing the City Manager to exe-cute an agreement with the Ohio Department of Transpor-tation for the milling of pavement within the City of Love-land

2016-22 Resolution authorizing the City Manager to sub-mit a Local Government Safety Capital Grant Application

2016-23 Resolution establishing goals for the City of Love-land

2016-24 Resolution authorizing the City Manager to enterinto a contract with Statewide Ford to purchase a 2016Ford Utility Interceptor Police Cruiser

2016-25 Resolution authorizing the City Manager to con-tract with J.K. Meurer, Crop. For the City fo Loveland 2016Street Repair Program

2016-26 Ordinance to approve the current replacement pa-ges to the Loveland Codified Ordinances, and declaring anemergency

2016-27 Ordinance to make revisions to appropriations forexpenditures of the City of Loveland, State of Ohio, duringthe fiscal year ending December 31, 2016, and declaring anemergency

2016-28 Resolution recognizing Jeff Williams as the recipi-ent of the 2016 Louis G. Rockwood Community VolunteerService Award and honoring his many contributions to thecommunity of Loveland

2016-29 Resolution authorizing the City Manager to enterinto an agreement between the City of Loveland and theWarren County Drug Task Force Council of Governments

2016-30 Ordinance transferring two parcels on AnshutzAvenue located in the City of Loveland, Clermont County,Ohio to the Community Improvement Corporation of Love-land and declaring an emergency

2016-31 Ordinance assessing liens for unpaid utility billson property in Clermont County owed to the City of Love-land and declaring an emergency

2016-32 Ordinance assessing liens for unpaid utility billson property in Hamilton County owed to the City of Love-land and declaring an emergency

Misty Cheshire,Clerk of CouncilCity of Loveland

The above listed legislation is available for inspection atthe City Manager’s office, 120 West Loveland Avenue, Love-land, Ohio during normal office hours.LH,Apr20’16#1198978

LEGAL NOTICE

Loveland City Council willconduct a public hearing onMay 10, 2016 at and around7:00 p.m. in the CouncilChambers located at Love-land City Hall, 120 W. Love-land Ave., Loveland, Ohio45140.

The purpose of the hearingis to receive public com-ments on a proposed textamendment to the City’sZoning Code, specificallysection 1171.06, “Handicap-ped Parking Requirements”.The purpose of the proposedtext amendment is to clarifysaid parking requirementsby defining applicable re-quirements, removing a con-flicting table and adding pro-visions for marking require-ments and positioning ofhandicap spaces. Informa-tion about the proposed zon-ing code text amendments isavailable for review in theCity’s Building & Zoning De-partment during normalbusiness hours, Mondaythrough Friday.

Interested persons may ap-pear and be heard with re-spect to the proposedamendment. Comments mayalso be submitted in writingto Misty Cheshire, Clerk ofCouncil, 120 W. LovelandAvenue, Loveland, OH 45140or emailed [email protected].

Individuals with disabilitiesrequiring special accommo-dations that are participat-ing in or wish to attend thishearing should call 513-683-0150 at least seven (7) daysin advance so arrangementscan be made.LH,Apr20’16#1198954

LEGAL NOTICE

Loveland City School kinder-garten teacher, Beth AnnFord, will be retired at theend of the 2015-2016 schoolyear. The Loveland Boardof Education intends to con-sider her re-employment asa part-time Kindergartenteacher. There will be apublic hearing, as dictatedby state law, regarding herrequest for re-employment,at the regularly scheduledLoveland School Board Ses-sion at 5:00pm on May 17th,2016 at the Loveland Inter-mediate School MediaCenter, 757 S Lebanon Rd.,Loveland, OH 45140LH,Apr20,’16#1202556

PUBLIC SALEThe following individuals aredelinquent on their storagerental payments; their per-sonal property will be sold atpublic sale on Friday, April22nd at 1:00 pmSEAN HUMPHREY-P.O. BOX72553 NEWPORT, KY 41072204LH,Apr13,20’16#1177003

THE VILLAGE OFINDIAN HILL

HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTFOR BIDS FOR2016 STREET

RESURFACING PROJECT

Sealed Bids will be receivedby Ms. Dina C. Minneci, CityManager of The Village ofIndian Hill, 6525 DrakeRoad, Cincinnati, Ohio 45243until 2:00 p.m. EasternStandard Time (DaylightSavings Time) Thursday,April 28, 2016 for the 2016Street Resurfacing Project.

Detailed Specifications andContract Documents are avail-able at the Office of the CityManager, 6525 Drake Road.A cost of twenty dollars($20.00), non-refundable, willbe charged for each set ofBid Documents obtained.

Bid Proposals must be sub-mitted on the printed formscontained in the Specifica-tions and Contract Docu-ments. All other conditionsdescribed in the Bid Docu-ments shall also be met.

Each Bid Proposal shall beaccompanied by a Bid Guar-anty (10% of the BidAmount) and Contract Bond(100% of the Bid Amount) inaccordance with Section153.571 of the Ohio RevisedCode.

The Village of Indian Hill re-serves the right to reject anyor all Bids in accordancewith the Contract Docu-ments.306IHJ,Apr13,20,’16#1186619

PUBLIC HEARINGSYMMES TOWNSHIP

BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS

Notice is hereby given that apublic hearing will be heldby the Symmes TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals onMonday, May 2, 2016 at 7:00p.m. for the purpose of hear-ing Appeal (#2016-01 - Modifi-cation) filed by the Cincin-nati Hills Christian Acade-my, 11525 Snider Road(45249), appellant, for themodification of an approvedConditional Use Plan for thebuilding alterations to relo-cate a planned addition to theearly childhood/elementaryschool building further to thenorth on the site. The sub-ject properties (11300 and11312 Snider Road) are pres-ently zoned “A” Residence.A school is permitted in aResidential District as a“Conditional Use”. Thishearing will be held atTownship Admin. Bldg., 9323Union Cemetery Road. Plansare on file and open for pub-lic inspection.

Carol A. SimsFiscal Officer2 0 4 L H , A p r 2 0 , ’ 1 6 # 1 1 9 2 3 3 9

VILLAGE OF INDIAN HILLNOTICE TO BIDDERS

Supply and Install SnowEquipment and Hydraulic

Hook Hoist System

Sealed bids will be receivedby the City Manager of theVillage of Indian Hill, Ohioat the Public Works/ WaterWorks facility until 11:00a.m. Eastern StandardTime, May 5, 2016 for thepurchase and installation ofSnow Equipment and Hy-draulic Hook Hoist Systemon a Freightliner M2 106 forthe Public Works Depart-ment of the Village of IndianHill.

Detailed specifications andbid forms are on file at thePublic Works Department,7100 Glendale-Milford. Bidsmust be on the forms in thecontract document and otherconditions therein describedmust be met. Each bid mustbe enclosed in a sealed enve-lope stating on the face ofthe envelope “BID FOR PUR-CHASE AND INSTALLTIONOF SNOW EQUIPMENT ANDHYDRAULIC HOOK HOISTSYSTEM” and shall also bearon the face of the envelopethe name and address of bid-der.

Bids must not be withdrawnfor a period of one hundredtwenty (120) days followingthe bid opening.

The Village of Indian Hill re-serves the right to reject anyor all bids or to correct orwaive irregularities in bidsshould it be determined inthe best interest of theVillage of Indian Hill to doso.

Dina C. MinneciCity ManagerVillage of Indian Hill306IHJ,Apr20,27,’16#1201201

LEGAL NOTICE

The City of Loveland Plan-ning & Zoning Commissionwill conduct a public hearingon May 3, 2016, at andaround 7:00 p.m. in theCouncil Chambers located atLoveland City Hall, 120 W.Loveland Ave., Loveland,Ohio 45140.

The purpose of the hearingis to receive public com-ments on a Planning andZoning Commission Applica-tion for a Conditional Usesubmitted by Chad Powers,for the operation of aBrewpub at 106 Karl Brown.

Information about the pro-posed conditional use re-quest is available for reviewin the City’s Building & Zon-ing Department during busi-ness hours, Monday throughFriday during the permitwindow hours of 10AM-2PM.

Interested persons may ap-pear and be heard with re-spect to the proposedamendment. Comments mayalso be submitted in writingto Eva Parker, Building andZoning Supervisor, 120 W.Loveland Avenue, Loveland,OH 45140 or emailed [email protected] .

Individuals with disabilitiesrequiring special accommo-dations that are participat-ing in or wish to attend thishearing should call 513-683-0150 at least seven (7) daysin advance so arrangementscan be made.LH,Apr20,’16#1201880

Public NoticeThe personal property listedbelow will be sold at publicsale to satisfy self-storageliens. The items are claimedby and the sales will be heldat Infinite Self Storage ofLoveland, 10686 LovelandMadeira Rd., Loveland, Ohio45140 on Thursday, April 21,2016 at 10 AM. Cash only.Unit #D164 – FrederickThoman, 10038 E. KemperRoad - Suite B, Loveland,OH 45140 (Lawn furniture,metal cabinets, metal shelv-ing, clothes and assortedcartons); Unit #B112 – TomDooley, 254 HeidelbergDrive, Loveland, OH 45140(Stove, couch, table, chairs,clothes assorted cartons)204LH,Apr13,20,’16#1189601

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4C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 20, 2016

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Find yournew home today

Stress-free home searches

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©2014 HomeFinder.com, LLC. All rights reserved Equal Housing Opportunity

APRIL 20, 2016 μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ 5C

Page 26: Suburban life 042016

*Vehicle / Equipment may vary from photo. Offers plus tax, license and fees. Incentives deducted as noted. Expires 4/26/2016.

ASK ABOUT OUR FRESH START/FIRST TIME BUYER PROGRAM!

513-943-5404Rt. 32 - I-275, Exit 63B

JeffWylerEastgateChevrolet.com

SALES HOURS:MON-THUR 9am - 9pmFRI - SAT 9am - 7:30pmSUNDAY 12pm-5pm

*ELIGIBLE FOR BUSINESS CHOICE PROGRAM ELIGIBLE FOR BUSINESS CHOICE PROGRAM

MSRP..................................................................$24,170JEFF WYLER DISC .................................................-$4,175CHEVROLET REBATE ..............................................-$1,500

SALE PRICE............. $18,495

NEW 2015 CHEVYSILVERADO 2500

$30,695 $18,495AS LOW AS AS LOW AS

REG CAB • A338195

NEW 2015 CHEVYSILVERADO 2500

REG CAB • A900013 A900018

NEW 2015 CHEVYEXPRESS 3500

MSRP ........................................................... $38,195JEFF WYLER DISC ........................................... -$4,000CHEVROLET REBATE ........................................ -$3,500

SALE PRICE............. $30,695

ELIGIBLE FOR BUSINESS CHOICE PROGRAM

$32,597AS LOW AS

MSRP ........................................................... $40,985JEFF WYLER DISC ........................................... -$4,888CHEVROLET REBATE ........................................ -$3,500

SALE PRICE............. $32,597

REG. CAB • A338406

NEW 2015 CHEVYCITY EXPRESS LS

ELIGIBLE FOR BUSINESS CHOICE PROGRAM

MSRP..................................................................$37,205JEFF WYLER DISC .................................................-$4,967CHEVROLET REBATE ..............................................-$1,000

SALE PRICE............. $31,238

$31,238AS LOW AS

Stock Photo

In stock, 1 per offer available at this price. Equipment may vary from photo. Offers plus tax, license and fees. Incentives deducted as noted. Expires 4/26/16.

$15,185 $17,395 $17,395

$18,185

MSRP........................................................................$19,695WYLERDISCOUNT...........................................-$2,5105CHEVYREBATE...................................................-$2,000SALEPRICE.................................................$15,185

MSRP.......................................................................$22,385WYLERDISCOUNT............................................ -$3,200CHEVYREBATE....................................................-$1,000SALEPRICE.................................................$18,185

MSRP.......................................................................$24,200WYLERDISCOUNT............................................-$4,305CHEVYREBATE................................................... -$2,500SALEPRICE.................................................$17,395

NEW 2015 CHEVY

NEW 2015 CHEVY

NEW 2015 CHEVY

CRUZE LS

CRUZE 1LT

MALIBU LS

$17,799SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

SALEPRICE

MSRP........................................................................$22,105WYLERDISCOUNT............................................ -$3,306CHEVYREBATE....................................................-$1,000SALEPRICE.................................................$17,799

NEW 2015 CHEVY

CRUZE LTSTK#A339003, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $22,105

STK#A338961, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $19,695

$13,599MSRP........................................................................$18,270WYLERDISCOUNT..............................................-$2,671CHEVYREBATE...................................................-$2,000SALEPRICE................................................$13,599

NEW 2015 CHEVY

SONIC LTSTK#A339316, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $18,270

STK#A338845, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $22,385

STK#A338900, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $24,200

MSRP.......................................................................$37,455WYLERDISCOUNT............................................-$4,456CHEVYREBATE....................................................-$1,500SALEPRICE................................................$31,499

NEW 2015 CHEVY

CAMARO2LTSTK#A338861, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $37,455

$17,699MSRP........................................................................$21,880WYLERDISCOUNT...............................................-$3,181CHEVYREBATE....................................................-$1,000SALEPRICE................................................ $17,699

NEW 2015 CHEVY

CRUZE 1LTSTK#A338987, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $21,880

MSRP.......................................................................$24,200WYLERDISCOUNT............................................-$4,305CHEVYREBATE................................................... -$2,500SALEPRICE.................................................$17,395

NEW 2015 CHEVY

MALIBU LSSTK#A338911, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $24,200

$19,399 $31,499MSRP.......................................................................$24,335WYLERDISCOUNT............................................ -$3,436CHEVYREBATE....................................................-$1,500SALEPRICE................................................$19,399

NEW 2015 CHEVY

TRAX LTSTK#A338802, 1 AT THIS PRICE, MSRP $24,335

An OfficialAutomotive

Sponsor of theCincinnati Reds

6C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ APRIL 20, 2016