Hilltop press 060816

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H ILLTOP H ILLTOP PRESS $1.00 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving College Hill, Finneytown, Forest Park, Greenhills, Mount Airy, Mount Healthy, North College Hill, Seven Hills, Springfield Township Vol. 79 No. 17 © 2016 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED News ......................... 923-3111 Retail advertising ............ 768-8404 Classified advertising ........ 242-4000 Delivery ...................... 853-6277 See page A2 for additional information Contact The Press SEND US VACATION PHOTOS Planning a vacation? Take your Community Press paper with you, and send us a photo. Tell us who is in the photo, where they live and where the photo was taken. Note – Readers on Vacation photos must be submitted by email. Send the photo as a .jpg attachment. Email to [email protected]. Call 513-221-BONE (2663) www.OrthoCincy.com 20 Doctors. 6 Convenient Locations. NOW SEEING PATIENTS IN OUR NEW CINCINNATI OFFICE IN MT. AUBURN You could always count on being greeted with a bright smile and a sweet, “Hi, hon” whenever you walked into the West Side office of the Community Press. Seated there at the front desk to wel- come you was Ruth Summe Day, a lively lady eager to help and even more eager to offer a warm hug. “She loved people. She never really knew a stranger,” Day’s daughter, Gina Schneider, said. “She gave hugs to ev- eryone.” Day’s family and friends and her for- mer Community Press colleagues are fondly cherishing those hugs, as the West Side lost a beloved matriarch. Ruthie, as she was affectionately known, died May 25 at age 86 after complica- tions from a recent heart surgery. “She was an awesome lady and had a great life,” Schneider said. “She loved her family and friends and enjoyed life up until the very end.” Raised in Avondale, Day spent the majority of her adult life devoted to the West Side. She and her first husband, the late Eugene Summe, settled and raised their three children in Mount Healthy. Her career at the Community Press See DAY, Page 4A Community Press icon Ruthie Day remembered Kurt Backscheider [email protected] PROVIDED Ruth Summe Day, former longtime receptionist for the Community Press, died May 25. Mount Healthy officials say the short-term headaches caused by a rash of road projects in the city will be work the long-term improvements to several city streets. A road project at Mount Healthy’s gateway could cause traffic slow- downs near the Hamilton Avenue in- terchange with Ronald Reagan Cross County Highway. The Ohio Department of Transpor- tation is widening a section of Hamil- ton Avenue between St. Clair and Mad- ison avenues. The work was set to be- gin Monday, June 6. Ohio Department of Transportation officials awarded the contract to Barrett Paving Materi- als Inc. for $229,798. City officials say they are hopeful that the work will be finished by the middle of August. The project widens Hamilton Ave- nue by about 13 feet on the east side to allow for striping of dedicated left turn lanes, When the project is complete, motorists can use the turn lanes on northbound Hamilton Avenue to turn on to Kemper Avenue and on south- bound Hamilton Avenue to turn onto St. Clair Avenue. During construction, all existing lanes will remain open to traffic. ODOT officials said Following a traffic study of the area, Mount Healthy City Council de- cided to prohibit left turns during re- stricted hours at the corner of St. Clair and Hamilton Avenue, similar to other left-turn restrictions in the city during traffic rush hours. Later this summer or early in the fall, workers will start on the improve- Hamilton Ave. project marks start Mt. Healthy road work Jennie Key [email protected] JENNIE KEY/THE COMMUNITY PRESS Perry Street north from Compton Road to Adams Road, is set for reconstruction that should begin this summer. The city is paying for the project with local dollars and a grant from the state. See ROADS, Page 2A Electric slide KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS La Salle left fielder Brady Reynolds slides into safely at home to score the game-winning run on a wild pitch during the OHSAA Division I state semifinal game against Solon at Huntington Park in Columbus. La Salle lost to Pickerington North 2-1in Saturday’s state finals. La Salle’s only other state final appearance came in 1995. For more on the Lancers and other state results, see Sports, B1.

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Transcript of Hilltop press 060816

Page 1: Hilltop press 060816

HILLTOPHILLTOPPRESS $1.00

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Your Community Press newspaper serving College Hill, Finneytown, Forest Park,Greenhills, Mount Airy, Mount Healthy, NorthCollege Hill, Seven Hills, Springfield Township

Vol. 79 No. 17© 2016 The Community Press

ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDNews .........................923-3111Retail advertising ............768-8404Classified advertising ........242-4000Delivery ......................853-6277

See page A2 for additional information

Contact The PressSEND US VACATION PHOTOSPlanning a vacation? Take your Community Press paper with you, and send us a photo.Tell us who is in the photo, where they live and where the photo was taken.Note – Readers on Vacation photos must be submitted by email. Send the photo as a.jpg attachment. Email to [email protected].

Call 513-221-BONE (2663)

www.OrthoCincy.com20 Doctors. 6 Convenient Locations.

NOW SEEING PATIENTS IN OURNEW CINCINNATI OFFICE

INMT. AUBURN

You could always count on beinggreeted with a bright smile and a sweet,“Hi, hon” whenever you walked into theWest Side office of the CommunityPress.

Seated there at the front desk to wel-come you was Ruth Summe Day, a livelylady eager to help and even more eagerto offer a warm hug.

“She loved people. She never reallyknew a stranger,” Day’s daughter, GinaSchneider, said. “She gave hugs to ev-eryone.”

Day’s family and friends and her for-mer Community Press colleagues arefondly cherishing those hugs, as theWest Side lost a beloved matriarch.Ruthie, as she was affectionately known,died May 25 at age 86 after complica-tions from a recent heart surgery.

“She was an awesome lady and had agreat life,” Schneider said. “She lovedher family and friends and enjoyed lifeup until the very end.”

Raised in Avondale, Day spent themajority of her adult life devoted to theWest Side. She and her first husband, thelate Eugene Summe, settled and raised

their three children in Mount Healthy.Her career at the Community Press

See DAY, Page 4A

Community Press icon Ruthie Day rememberedKurt [email protected]

PROVIDED

Ruth Summe Day, former longtime receptionist for the Community Press, died May 25.

Mount Healthy officials say theshort-term headaches caused by arash of road projects in the city will bework the long-term improvements toseveral city streets.

A road project at Mount Healthy’sgateway could cause traffic slow-downs near the Hamilton Avenue in-terchange with Ronald Reagan CrossCounty Highway.

The Ohio Department of Transpor-tation is widening a section of Hamil-ton Avenue between St. Clair and Mad-ison avenues. The work was set to be-gin Monday, June 6. Ohio Departmentof Transportation officials awardedthe contract to Barrett Paving Materi-als Inc. for $229,798. City officials saythey are hopeful that the work will befinished by the middle of August.

The project widens Hamilton Ave-nue by about 13 feet on the east side toallow for striping of dedicated left turnlanes, When the project is complete,motorists can use the turn lanes onnorthbound Hamilton Avenue to turnon to Kemper Avenue and on south-bound Hamilton Avenue to turn ontoSt. Clair Avenue. During construction,all existing lanes will remain open totraffic. ODOT officials said

Following a traffic study of thearea, Mount Healthy City Council de-cided to prohibit left turns during re-stricted hours at the corner of St. Clairand Hamilton Avenue, similar to otherleft-turn restrictions in the city duringtraffic rush hours.

Later this summer or early in thefall, workers will start on the improve-

HamiltonAve. projectmarks startMt. Healthyroad workJennie [email protected]

JENNIE KEY/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Perry Street north from Compton Road toAdams Road, is set for reconstruction thatshould begin this summer. The city ispaying for the project with local dollarsand a grant from the state.

See ROADS, Page 2A

Electric slide

KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

La Salle left fielder Brady Reynolds slides into safely at home to score the game-winning run on a wild pitch during the OHSAA Division I statesemifinal game against Solon at Huntington Park in Columbus. La Salle lost to Pickerington North 2-1 in Saturday’s state finals. La Salle’s onlyother state final appearance came in 1995. For more on the Lancers and other state results, see Sports, B1.

Page 2: Hilltop press 060816

2A • HILLTOP PRESS • JUNE 8, 2016 NEWS

HILLTOPPRESS

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

[email protected] Jennie Key Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .853-6272, [email protected] McBride Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .544-2764, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . .768-8512, [email protected] Baum Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . . .513-364-4497, [email protected]

Twitter: @adamjbaum

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

[email protected]

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

Circulation Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .853-6279, [email protected] Lynn Hessler

District Manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7115Mary Jo Puglielli

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

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

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

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

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

Calendar ................6AClassifieds ................CFood .....................7APolice .................... 5BSchools ..................5ASports ....................1BViewpoints .............8A

Index

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June 17-19 2016THE TRADITION STARTS NOWTHE TRADITION STARTS NOWARTS NOWTHE TRADITION STTHE TRADITION ST

Summer in MountHealthy is packed withconcerts, entertainmentand activities to keep thecity’s park busy with ac-tivities for residents. Thecity pool opened June 4, soresidents can cool offwhen summer weatherhits.

Administrative assis-tants Monica Lubiani andRay Rissel have workedwith Mayor James Wolf tobuild a summer calendardesigned to draw people toCity Park all summerlong. All of the events arefree. Bring your ownchairs or blankets to anyprograms listed at theCity Park Stage or Gaze-bo. In the event of rain, ex-ercise classes will be inthe community room. Callthe city offices if you haveany questions.

Senior bingo starts inthis month, and seniorscan meet at 1p.m. Wednes-day, June 8, in the Commu-nity Room at City Park.The main entrance to CityPark is on McMakin Streetbetween Perry and Josephstreets. Lubiani says sen-

iors bring snacks and havea great time at theWednesday bingo games.

“They make it an event,and everyone has a goodtime,” she said.

Friday, June 17, kicksoff the summer’s free con-cert series with a showfeaturing “Jess LambBand,” American Idol con-testant from 2015, on theCity Park Stage, from 7p.m. to 9 p.m.

On Saturday, June 18,come see the Madcap Pup-pets perform “Monstersof Baseball,” on the CityPark Stage at 7 p.m.

The Free Senior Gar-dening Class meets from10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.Monday, June 20, at theChristian Village of MountHealthy, 8097 HamiltonAve. The class is free andopen to anyone. Thismonth, members of theHamilton Great Parksstaff will present a butter-fly gardening class.

On Saturday, June 25,Arnice Smith brings inter-active storytelling withsongs, to the City ParkStage, from 10 a.m. tonoon.

On Wednesday, June29, Senior Bingo returnsat 1 p.m in the CommunityRoom, at City Park. In theevening, Coal Train Rob-bery, an alternative rockband, performs in the CityPark from 7 to 9 p.m.

July leads off with abang on Sunday, July 3,with Fireworks in thePark. At 6 p.m., there willbe live music from BlueStone Ivory. There will befood trucks, local foodvendors and refresh-ments.

The fun continues Fri-day, July 8, with a free con-cert featuring Like MindsJazz, Blues & Rock, on theCity Park Stage, startingat 7 p.m.

On Saturday, July 9,Saturday Night Cinema,comes to the City ParkStage. Bring lawn chairsand get seats around 8p.m. because the moviestarts at dusk. The moviehas not yet been selected,so check the city web site

at www.mthealthy.org tosee what’s showing.

Senior Bingo is in theCommunity Room at CityPark at 1 p.m. Wednesday,July 13.

There’s a free concertset for Friday, July 15, fea-turing Rucca Band, a sing-ing and songwritingfemale duo mixing coun-try, folk, rock and Indiemusic on the City ParkStage, at 7 p.m.

Smooth, a live R&Bband takes the stage at 7p.m. Friday, July 22. OnSaturday, July 23, Satur-day Night Cinema returnsto the City Park Stage,Bring lawn chairs and getseats around 8 p.m., moviestarts at dusk.

Get your card markersready for Senior Bingo at 1p.m. Wednesday, July 27,in the City Park Communi-ty Room.

The month closes withthe traditional overnightcampout, at the City Pool,at 8 p.m. Saturday, July 30.Call city hall for more de-tails at 513-931-8840.

August kicks off withNational Night Out Tues-day, Aug. 2. This is now anannual event to promoteinvolvement in crime pre-vention activities, policecommunity partnershipsand neighborhood cama-raderie. Come to City Parkfrom 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. for

food, refreshments,games, entertainment andto meet and support yourlocal police department.

Live music continues inthe park from 7 p.m. to 9p.m. Friday, Aug. 5, with afree concert featuring theAppalachian Grass on theCity Park Stage.

On Thursday, Aug. 11,enjoy the Ohio MilitaryBand on the City Parkstage beginning at 7:30p.m.

On Saturday, Aug. 27,Cincinnati Shakespeare inthe Park will present“Macbeth” on the CityPark stage beginning at7:30 p.m.

The summer fun sea-son closes out at 7 p.m. Sat-urday, Sept. 10 for Cele-brate Mount Healthy.Free concert by King Beeand the Stingers. Therewill be an ice cream social,Fibonacci Brewing, craftbeer, food and refresh-ments, activities for kids,train rides, a bouncyhouse, Brian Gill’s CoolCritters Outreach, a bas-ket auction, fireworks andmore.

If you have any ques-tions concerning the useof the park for familyevents, rates for poolpasses, swimming lessonsand pool hours, call MountHealthy City Hall at 513-931-8840.

Mount Healthy summerpacked with family funJennie [email protected]

PROVIDED.

King Bee and the Stingers are scheduled to close out thesummer at Celebrate Mount Healthy Sept. 10

ments planned for Per-ry Street from ComptonRoad to Adams Road.The city project is beingpaid for with city fundsand a grant from theOhio Public Works Co-mission. The estimatefor the reconstructionproject is $1.3 million.

Compton Road willalso see major work.The Cincinnati WaterWorks is replacing theexisting eight-inch wa-ter line with a larger, 12-inch main before the ac-tual road reconstructionproject planned by thecity gets underway. Thisis another project thecity is doing with fundsfrom the OPWC. The es-

timate for the Comptonproject is $1.5 million.

The Compton Roadproject stretches fromHamilton Avenue eastto the corporation line.Kocher says the water-works project will mostlikely delay the installa-tion of the finish courseof asphalt until 2017.The leveling course ofasphalt will be suffi-cient to drive on duringthe winter months untilthe final coat is putdown.

“This was a good op-portunity to leverageour local dollars to se-cure a grant from thestate,” Kocher said. “Wewill pay about $450,000of local money and gettwo projects with a com-bined cost of $2.8 mil-lion, which stretchesour tax payer dollars.”

RoadsContinued from Page 1A

Page 3: Hilltop press 060816

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If interested, [email protected] call 513-595-5202

Church hosts freemeal

Augsburg LutheranChurch welcomes com-munity members to afree cookout meal, 5:30p.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday,June 19.

The church is at 11676Hamilton Ave., about ahalf-mile mile north ofInterstate 275.

Home ownershipclasses offered

Mount Airy Schooland the Home Owner-ship Center of GreaterCincinnati are partner-ing to offer home owner-ship training classes forparents and other pros-pective first-time home-owners beginning thissummer. The initialclasses will be conductedin three, three-hour ses-sions on Wednesday eve-nings June 8, 15, and 22from 6 to 8 p.m. at theschool, 5730 ColerainAve. The classes will re-peat in August and eachmonth afterwards.

Classes will cover top-ics including down-pay-ment assistance, solvingcredit programs, navi-gating the mortgage loanprocess and home in-spections. Participantsmust register on theHome Ownership Cen-ter’s website atwww.hometoday.cc. Allthree sections of theclass must be completedto receive the certificateof eligibility for down

payment assistance pro-grams.

Rick Williams, presi-dent of the Home Owner-ship Center of GreaterCincinnati, said homeownership, like goodschools, can contributeto the stability of neigh-borhoods. “But it can be adaunting process forfirst-time home buyers,which is why trainingfrom experts can be soimportant,” he said.

Winton WoodsDistrict offeringfree summerlunches, readingtime

Winton Woods CitySchools is providing freelunches from throughJuly 28, along with read-ing time at noon onThursdays during thattime. The meals will beserved at Winton WoodsIntermediate School, 825Waycross Road in ForestPark, every Mondaythrough Friday, with theexception of Monday,July 4. Lunch is servedfrom noon to 1 p.m.

Everyone 18 years oldand younger, or up to age21 with an IEP, will beserved free of cost.Meals must be consumedon the premises, per U.S-.D.A. regulations.

Reading days areJune 2, 9, 16 and 23; July7, 14, 21 and 28.

This program is fund-ed by the U.S. Depart-ment of Agriculture andoperated by the WintonWoods City Schools ChildNutrition Department.Each year, the U.S.D.A.partners with local or-ganizations like WintonWoods City Schools toprovide free lunch tochildren when school isout for the summer.

To find if there aresummer meal sites inyour area, go to www.e-ducation.ohio . gov/KidsEat or call 1-866-3HUNGRY.

Business groupmeets

Mount Healthy Busi-ness Association’s Junemeeting is 11a.m. to noonTuesday, June 13, atMount Healthy ChristianVillage, 8097 HamiltonAve.

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PROVIDED

Guardian Savings Bank’s Ric Redy, left, discusses hisperspective on home ownership training with RickWilliams, president of the Home Ownership Center ofGreater Cincinnati, Mount Airy School principal AngelRoddy, Mount Airy School Resource Coordinator and towncouncil president TJ Smith, and Rick Schroer, CincinnatiRecreation Center, a Mount Airy School partner.

spanned nearly 40 years.She started designing dis-play ads for what was thena combination of the Hill-top Press and the North-west Press in 1968. Shelogged company moves toCheviot, where her jobchanged to receptionist,and to offices at the oldCrosley building in the

West End. She finishedher career as the recep-tionist in the newspaper’sWhite Oak office, retiringin 2007.“She loved theCommunity Press,”Schneider said. “She gaveit her all.”

Dozens of prayers andcondolences from her for-mer co-workers pouredinto a private CommunityPress & Recorder grouppage on Facebook uponnews of Ruthie’s passing.

Former advertising

sales representative Mar-cia Bovard posted that sheloved Day.

“No one ever said myname like she did,” Bo-vard wrote. “Wish I couldhave seen her one moretime.”

Tim Cottrill, a formeradvertising sales man-ager, wrote that news ofher death stopped him inhis tracks.

“The sadness I feelabout Ruthie’s passing isprofound,” he wrote. “She

was such a great spirit andI loved her dearly. Mydeepest sympathy to thefamily, may the greatmemories sustain youthrough this very difficulttime. The earth is a betterplace for her time hereand I am a better personfor having known her.”

In addition to spoilingall the children and juniorcarriers who visited thePress office with lolli-pops, Day also enjoyedlavishing her colleagueswith cakes she’d bake fortheir birthdays.

Marc Emral, a formerCommunity Press senioreditor, said one year Ruth-ie found out one of his fa-vorite cakes was pineap-ple upside down cake.

“She brought it in and itwas the best cake I hadever had,” he said. “Everyyear after that she baked acake for me and brought itinto the office.”

Even when he movedout of the West Side office,Emral said she baked hima cake and called him tocome pick it up.

“The year after she leftthe Community Press, shedropped off a pineappleupside down cake for me,”he said. “And it is still thetastiest cake of any kind Ihave ever had.”

Always a mom first,the love of her family wasevident in the many pho-tos of her children andfour grandsons that ac-cessorized her desk.

Though grieving theloss of their mother andgrandmother, Schneidersaid they’re glad she’s nolonger suffering and havefound comfort in knowingshe was so adored.

“She hugged andkissed so many over herlifetime,” she said.

Day is also survived byher daughter, KathySumme, son, Thomas(Carrie) Summe andgrandsons Chad and CraigSumme and Brian andBen Schneider. She waspreceded in death by herhusbands, Eugene Summeand George Day, brother,William Drout, and sister,Dorothy Kelley.

A memorial Mass wascelebrated June 4, at St.Ignatius Loyola Church inGreen Township. Memori-al contributions may besent to St. Vincent de Paul,1125 Bank St., Cincinnati,Ohio 45214.

DayContinued from Page 1A

Page 5: Hilltop press 060816

JUNE 8, 2016 • HILLTOP PRESS • 5A

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

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

McAuley High School» Seniors in Lisa Rocklin’s

English classes at McAuleyHigh School were treated tothree guest speakers over twoweeks.

The world literature stu-dents were in the midst of read-ing Tim O’Brien’s novel “TheThings They Carried.” Thisbook is set during the VietnamWar and was inspired by O’Bri-en’s experiences in the war.Rocklin’s intention in securingthree military veterans was foreach young woman to make apersonal connection with warvets and to understand the sac-rifices and life-changing expe-riences - both good and bad -that soldiers and returning vetsface.

On May 2, Major Matt Ba-ringhaus, US Army, spoke to thestudents and answered ques-tions for an hour about: dailylife when deployed, daily life atWest Point, fears while de-ployed, conditions in Iraq whenhe was deployed, and adjustingupon return from deployment.Baringhaus flew both Black-hawk and fixed wing missionsduring two tours deployed toBalad, Iraq. He is in the 38thCombat Aviation Brigade, Indi-ana Army National Guard in ad-dition to a full-time civilian job.

On May 13, two veterans vis-ited Rocklin’s classes. In themorning, Mike Starkey, whoserved in US Air Force from1974-1980, spoke to the class. Hewas on active duty for 4 ½ years,followed by reserve duty for 1½years He served in Thailand asan air rescue gunner, flying inhelicopters that were some-times shot at by the enemy. Af-ter his tour of duty, Starkeywent to school to become a jetengine mechanic and worked atthat position for the Air Force ata stateside base. In 1979, he washired by General Electric,where he worked until his re-cent retirement. As part of histalk, Starkey impressed uponthe students that a large part ofthe world is still very primitiveand how thankful they should beto be living in the United States.

In the afternoon, Amy Sutterwas the featured speaker. Shewas a social worker in Iraq in2007, and provided mentalhealth care services to detain-ees. She also treated membersof the armed forces who suf-fered from adjustment disor-ders such as PTSD. The stu-dents were very interested inher descriptions of tent livingconditions, terribly hot weath-er, and sand storms. Sutter isnow in the Army NationalGuard with the 1163rd medicalcompany in Shelbyville, Ken-tucky, and is also the principalof an alternative school.

Winton WoodsIntermediate School

» After listening to musiclike Doo-wop and Motown andlearning that music can breakdown barriers, students inKathryn Mihalyo’s music classat Winton Woods IntermediateSchool had the opportunity totalk to local radio personalityJ.D. Hughes about his years ofexperience on the air.

Hughes, who works atWGRR and WARM-98, talked tothe students about careers inthe entertainment business,how music affects emotions,and how music and the culturego hand in hand.

“The kind of music you listento is reflective of your culture,”Hughes said. He also explainedhow specific types of musiccame about because “certainparts of the culture had some-thing to say and would expressthemselves through music, likegangster rap of the early 90s.”

Mihalyo said her studentswatched the movie Hairspray

and were surprised that whiteteens listening to black musicwas a big deal at one time.“From jazz through the music oftoday, music continues to movecommunity relations and breakdown dividing walls,” she said.She added that Hughes’ insightsfrom his career as a disc jockeyadded to what her students inlearned in class “Mr. Hugheswas impressed with the atten-tiveness of our students andwould like to come back againnext year.”

Winton WoodsIntermediate School

» Twelve fifth- and sixth-grade students from WintonWoods Intermediate School andtheir coaches braved the rain torun in the Flying Pig 5K RaceApril 30.

“The students trained forover a month for this race anddid an amazing job,” WWISSprinters coach Janet Hardensaid.

This year’s Sprinters andtheir race times are: MichaelKabore (28 minutes, 21 sec-onds), Kaleb Taylor (29:16), Xi-mena Alaniz (30:56), JanieceLumpkin (30:56), Jamie Wilson(32:44), Coach Janet Harden(38:04), Coach Kristin Rumsey(42:54), Ivanna Ross (43.00),Sean Schouten (43:32), DawsonFrisby (45:06), Amber Conner(45.12), Aaron Bullucks (45:24),Marcus Johnson (45:45) and Au-tumn Bullucks (47:23).

“Coach Rumsey and I are soproud of these runners,” Hard-en said. “Some of our sixth-graders will be moving up to themiddle school cross countryteam, which makes us evenmore proud.”

» Girls on the Run is in itsthird year at Winton Woods In-termediate School and coach Ja-net Harden is proud of the fifth-and sixth-grade girls who par-

ticipate and in the program’scontinuing popularity at theschool. Harden is leading theprogram along with coachesCarmen Garner, Kay Robinson,Kristin Rumsey and Elaine Su-gawara-Forster.

“The Girls on the Run pro-gram integrates running into afun, experience-based curricu-lum that inspires girls to be joy-ful, healthy and confident,”Harden said. “These girls havebeen training their bodies andminds since February for theGirls on the Run 5K that tookplace on May 7 at Paul BrownStadium. Each young lady ran

with a running buddy, whichwas a family member, friend orhigh school volunteer. It was aperfect day to celebrate the ac-complishments of these youngladies.”

These students participatedin the Girls on the Run Programthis year: fifth-graders MakiyaWilliams, Kaisha Calhoun, Ho-tatia McKnight, Ivanna Ross,Me’Kayla Jackson, Dipika Sa-pokta, Sareena Acharya, Ash-mita Bastola, Latayea Harris,La’nijah Grove and Hari Pokrel,and sixth-graders JailynnAlsop, Amber Conner, AriannaGreen, Jaiden Hogan, AniahJohnson, Desiray Mabra, SageMcCall, Arianna Sanchez andJada Webb.

“We want to thank our volun-teer running buddies at thisyear’s 5K,” Sugawara-Forstersaid. “They were Winton WoodsHigh School students BriannaRichard, Bandana Acharya,Bhatwati Gautam, TatianaBrown, Suenay Tom, Isis Clackand Ashley Lewis, with sidelinesuper encourager Taria McDa-niel. Also volunteering wereWinton Woods High Schoolteacher Andrew Lock and UCstudent McKenzie Zimmerman,both of whom recently ran theFlying Pig Half-Marathon.”

To learn more about Girls onthe Run, go towww.gotrcincinnati.org.

Winton Woods Schools» A new 12-minute video fea-

turing students and staff fromWinton Woods High School isanother way Winton Woods CitySchools is communicating itscontinuing transition to becom-ing a New Tech Network dis-trict.

In the video, “New Tech War-riors: Overview of the NewTech Network at Winton WoodsCity Schools,” students SimonAsem, Elissa Lort, Jackie Marti-nez and Cari Sullivan sharetheir experiences with NewTech Network and project-based learning. Winton WoodsHigh school staff members Me-lissa Albers, Josh Amstutz,Brad Ciminowasilewski andNatombi Simpson discuss howNew Tech has transformedtheir classrooms, while Super-intendent Anthony G. Smithtalks about the Straight A grantthat is helping to expand theNew Tech experience.

There are four principlesthat define New Tech – teachingthat engages, culture that em-powers, technology that en-ables, and outcomes that mat-ter. In a New Tech classroom,“you use your special skills,

your strengths and weaknesses,and you put them together (withyour team), and you compro-mise, and you reach your goal,”Martinez said.

”Once you know people aregoing to listen when you’respeaking it gives you this kindof confidence and as your confi-dence builds so does your lead-ership,” Sullivan said.

Asem, who graduates thisyear, said he’s “more than pre-pared for college” because ofthe communication and collabo-ration that have happened in hisfour years at AGS.

Albers said becoming a NewTech teacher “was life changingfor me, both as a professionaland personally.”

Ciminowasilewski said NewTech, with its focus on PBL, has“completely revamped andchanged everything I knewabout education.”

“Students are in a collabora-tive environment with adultswho happen to be facilitators,rather than teachers,” said Am-stutz, who is also a New Techtrainer.

“I don’t have to be, and I amno longer the person that holdsthe keys to everything,” Simp-son said. “We explore together.”

Smith said the projects thatstudents are assigned “are stan-dards-based projects, so it’s thesame material you would havelearned from the textbooks. Butthe projects bring it alive, andthe students start to internalizeit and make it real every day. Wegive them a foundation but it’stheir responsibility to take thatfoundation and create this en-tire incredible learning envi-ronment. So the foundation isour responsibility, and we’rereally good at it, but as far as thecreativity, that’s where theycome in.”

“I would never go back to thetraditional way at all,” Alberssaid. “Teaching project-basedlearning is rigorous, it’s chal-lenging, it’s creative, it’s fun,and I think my students learnbetter with PBL than they everdid with traditional. My scoresshow it, my grades show it, andmy participation among my stu-dents shows it as well.”

Simpson agrees. “If you en-joy seeing kids really learn, seethem really invested in whatthey’re doing, then project-based learning is what you wantto be doing,” she said.

To view “New Tech Warriors:Overview of the New Tech Net-work at Winton Woods CitySchools” go to www.winton-woods.org and click on the NewTech Warriors video.

SCHOOLS NOTEBOOK

PROVIDED

Maj. Matt Baringhaus is surrounded by McAuley students and teacher LisaRocklin. From left, front, Molly Murphy, Ava Lawson and Chloe Huesman;back, Emily Schulte, Amanda Rodriguez, Matt Baringhaus, Sarah Dickersonand Lisa Rocklin.

PROVIDED

Winton Woods Intermediate School fifth-graders in Girls on the Run are,from left, front, Sareena Acharya, Ashmita Bastola, Latayea Harris, La’nijahGrove and Hari Pokhrel; back, Makiya Williams, Kaisha Calhoun, HotatianMcKnight, Ivanna Ross, Me’kayla Jackson and Dipika Sapkota.

PROVIDED

At the Flying Pig 5K are Winton Woods Intermediate School Sprinters Jamie Wilson, Sean Schouten, Ximena Alaniz,Janiece Lumpkin, Marcus Johnson, Dawson Frisby, Amber Conner, Michael Kabore, coach Janet Harden, IvannaRoss, Autumn Bullucks, coach Kristin Rumsey and Aaron Bullucks. Not pictured, Kaleb Taylor.

PROVIDED

Winton Woods Intermediate School sixth-graders Sage McCall, CoachRumsey, Arianna Green, Jaiden Hogan, coach Harden, Desiray Mabra andAmber Conner at the Girls on the Run 5K. Not pictured, Jada Webb, AniahJohnson, Jailynn Alsop and Arianna Sanchez.

THANKS TO JAN MAVRIDOGLOU

At the annual drama awards atWinton Woods High School arescholarship winner Parker Sarra,Winton Woods High School DramaDirector Michelle Kozlowski andscholarship winner Makayla Boyd.

PROVIDED

Mike Starkey speaks to a class atMcAuley High School.

PROVIDED

Amy Sutter stands next to aprojection screen as she gives hertalk at McAuley High School.

Page 6: Hilltop press 060816

6A • HILLTOP PRESS • JUNE 8, 2016

THURSDAY, JUNE 9Business SeminarsEPA Lead Renovator Training,8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Proactive SafetyServices Training Center, 1500Kemper Meadow Drive, ThisLead Renovator CertificationInitial course is 8 hours in lengthand includes both EPA-HUDapproved lead safety trainingand certification. Ages 18 andup. $240. Registration required.Presented by ProActive SafetyServices. 372-6232; www.proac-tivesafetyservices.com. ForestPark.

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

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

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

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

Farmers MarketCollege Hill Farm Market,3-6:30 p.m., College Hill Presby-terian Church, 5742 HamiltonAve., Open-air market providingfresh, local and organic produceMay-Oct. Live musicians andartists featured most weeks.Free admission. Presented byCollege Hill Farm Market. 542-0007; collegehillfarmmarket-.com. College Hill.

Health / Wellness

UC Health Mobile DiagnosticsMammography Screenings,8-11 a.m., Price Hill HealthCenter, 2136 W. Eighth St., Costvaries by insurance. Financialassistance available to thosewho qualify. Registration re-quired. Presented by UC HealthMobile Diagnostics. 585-8266.Price Hill.

UC Health Mobile DiagnosticsMammography Screenings,8-11 a.m., Price Hill HealthCenter, 2136 W. Eighth St.,15-minute mammographyscreenings, financial assistanceavailable for those who qualify.Varies by insurance. Registrationrecommended. Presented by UCHealth Mobile Diagnostics.584-7465; uchealth.com/mobile-diagnostics. Price Hill.

Karaoke and Open MicMean Jean Rockin’ Thursdays,9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m., Club Trio,5744 Springdale Road, Free.385-1005; www.clubtriolounge-.com. Colerain Township.

Literary - LibrariesDownloadables: Music,Movies and Magazines, 6p.m., Monfort Heights BranchLibrary, 3825 West Fork Road,Learn overview of download-able options for tablet, fromstreaming TV shows and moviesto downloading music to keep.Ages 21 and up. Free. Regis-tration required. Presented byPublic Library of Cincinnati &Hamilton County. 369-4472.Monfort Heights.

On Stage - Children’sTheater

Puppets For Lunch, noon to1:30 p.m., Springfield TownshipCivic Center, 9150 Winton Road,Grove Park. Pack lunch andpicnic blankets for puppet showon lawn. Check website forrainout information. Crafts forkids follow show. $2 per child.Presented by ArtsConnect.522-1410; www.theartsconnec-t.us. Springfield Township.

On Stage - TheaterAnything Goes, 7:30 p.m.,Warsaw Federal Incline Theater,801 Matson Place, Boys-Meet-Girls and the complications get

hysterically funny as a boat loadof crazy characters, including abungling gangster, an Englishgentleman and a bevy of daz-zling American showgirls crossthe Atlantic in an ocean linerthat makes the Love Boat looklike a leaky canoe in Cole Por-ter’s Anything Goes. $23-$26.Presented by Cincinnati Land-mark Productions. 241-6550;www.cincinnatilandmarkpro-ductions.com. East Price Hill.

Senior CitizensThursday Senior Bingo, 12:30-3p.m., North College Hill SeniorCenter, 1586 Goodman Ave.,$.50 per card. Through Nov. 17.521-3462. North College Hill.

Support GroupsGuided Meditations on For-giveness, 7-8:30 p.m., Journeyto Hope, 703 Compton Road,Group offers gentle process tohelp deal with hurt or badfeelings that were never re-solved, whether you were theinjured or the injurer. Reserva-tions required. 931-5777; tiny-url.com/familylifectr. Finney-town.

Womens Heart to Heart Sup-port Group, 6:30-7:30 p.m., TheChrist Hospital OutpatientCenter, 5885 Harrison Ave.,Conference room. Educateyourself about heart disease andlearn how to make heart-healthy lifestyle changes. Free.Presented by Christ Hospital.315-4278. Green Township.

FRIDAY, JUNE 10Business SeminarsEPA Lead Renovator Training,8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Proactive SafetyServices Training Center, $240.Registration required. 372-6232;www.proactivesafetyservi-ces.com. Forest Park.

Drink TastingsWine Tastings, 5:30-7:30 p.m.,Nature Nook Florist and WineShop, 10 S. Miami Ave., Taste 4fine wines from small produc-tion wineries around world.Appetizers included. Visit web-site for list of wines. Ages 21 andup. $5. 467-1988; www.nature-nookwinetime.com. Cleves.

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

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

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

FestivalsChurch of the AssumptionFestival, 6-11 p.m. BuffaloRidge Band 7:30-10:45 p.m.,Church of the Assumption, 7711Joseph St., $2. 521-7274; assump-tionmthealthy.org. MountHealthy.

Holy Family Parish Festival,6-11 p.m. Jonny and Mike’sAcoustic Abuse 6-7:30 p.m.,Bluefish 7:30-11 p.m., HolyFamily Church - Price Hill, 814Hawthorne Ave., School Yard.Bid-n-buy, instants, beat thedealer, cake and ham booth,split the pot, super split the pot,sports booth, Lots of kidsbooths, food and beer. Free.Through June 12. 921-7527;www.holyfamilycincinnati.org.East Price Hill.

Schwabenfest, 6 p.m. to mid-night, Donauschwaben Park,4290 Dry Ridge Road, Oktober-fest-like atmosphere. Home-made German oxen and sausagedinners and desserts. Live enter-tainment and dance perfor-mances. Stein holding competi-tion on Saturday evening. $3.Presented by DonauschwabenSociety. Through June 11. 385-2098; www.cincydonau.com.Colerain Township.

Literary - LibrariesFriday Flicks, 3 p.m., MonfortHeights Branch Library, 3825West Fork Road, Watch StarWars: The Force Awakens.Popcorn and drinks provided.Grades 6-12. Free. Registrationrequired. Presented by PublicLibrary of Cincinnati & HamiltonCounty. 369-4472. MonfortHeights.

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

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

On Stage - TheaterAnything Goes, 8 p.m., WarsawFederal Incline Theater, $23-$26.241-6550; www.cincinnatiland-markproductions.com. East PriceHill.

SATURDAY, JUNE 11Art & Craft ClassesTeen Maker Lock-in, 6:30-8:30p.m., Westwood Branch Library,3345 Epworth Ave., Teens getexclusive chance to use Maker-

Space equipment during specialafter-hours event. Free. Regis-tration required. Presented byPublic Library of Cincinnati &Hamilton County. 369-4474;www.cincinnatilibrary.org.Westwood.

Community EventFishing Day and MilitaryDisplay, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., DelhiPark, 5125 Foley Road, Clearwa-ter Lake. Military display: USSSubmarine, M29 Weasel,M5A1Stuart Tank, and othermilitary items. Representativesfrom US Navy Seals and USArmy. Presented by Delhi Town-ship Veterans Association.471-8693; www.delhiveteran-s.com. Delhi Township.

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

EducationStudio A Workshop, 9 a.m. to 5p.m., Waycross CommunityMedia, 2086 Waycross Road,Learn to produce own studiotalk show, band performance orany program. Highlights include:lighting and camera techniques,video switcher, basic multi-channel audio board and graph-ics software. $50, $25 residents.Reservations required. 825-2429;www.waycross.tv/workshops.Forest Park.

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

Jamz. 460-6696. Sayler Park.Dance Fit, 9:30-10:30 a.m.,Keeping Fit Studio, $5. 720-4142.Colerain Township.

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

Farmers MarketEighth and Enright FarmersMarket, noon to 3 p.m., EnrightRidge Urban Eco-Village, 700Enright Ave., Free admission.921-5124. East Price Hill.

FestivalsChurch of the AssumptionFestival, 5-11 p.m. Stuck In Time7:30-10:45 p.m., Church of theAssumption, $2. 521-7274;assumptionmthealthy.org.Mount Healthy.

Incline District Street Fair, 10a.m. to 4 p.m., Incline District,3006 Price Ave., Across streetfrom Holy Family School. Show-casing multicultural richness ofPrice Hill. Local artisan vendors,food trucks, music and craftbeer. Benefits Holy FamilyParish. Free. Presented by HolyFamily Church - Price Hill.Through Sept. 10. 921-7527;www.theinclinedistrictstreet-fair.com. East Price Hill.

Sayler Park Sustains, noon to10 p.m. Rain or shine, NelsonSayler Memorial Park, ParklandAvenue and Monitor Street,Festival focuses on community,stewardship, and sustainability.Live music, hands-on demon-stration in sustainability, ven-dors, raffles, food trucks, localbeer and wine, art installations,kid-friendly fun, and more.Bring blanket or chair. BenefitsSayler Park Village Council. Free.Presented by Sayler Park VillageCouncil. 706-5148; saylerparksus-tains.org. Sayler Park.

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

Holy Family Parish Festival is 6 to 11 p.m. Friday, June 10, with Jonny and Mike’s Acoustic Abuseat 6 to 7:30 p.m., Bluefish at 7:30 to 11 p.m. The festival is open 5 to 11 p.m., Saturday, June 11,with Safire Express from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. and a spaghetti dinner from 5 to 7 p.m. On Sunday,June 12, the festival will be open from 4 to 10 p.m. Los Silfos Del Amore will perform from 4 to 7p.m. Cincinnati Dancing Pigs from 7 to 10 p.m. and fried chicken dinners and Latin Americancuisine will be served from 4 to 7 p.m. Bid-n-buy, instants, beat the dealer, cake and ham booth,split the pot, super split the pot, sports booth, lots of kids booths, food and beer also will bepart of the festivities. Admission is free. The church is at 814 Hawthorne Ave., East Price Hill. Call921-7527; visit www.holyfamilycincinnati.org.

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Page 7: Hilltop press 060816

JUNE 8, 2016 • HILLTOP PRESS • 7ANEWS

I’m more than opinionated when itcomes to ethnic foods. The recipesfound in a book can’t compare to whatyou learn hands on from someone whohas cooked the dishes for years.

I can attest to that since the Leba-nese dishes I learned from my mom,sisters, aunts and friends like Joe andMarylou Zarick are authentic ones,lovingly taught and handed down forgenerations. Most of the ingredientsaren’t measured.

“Hands are my measurements,” my momused to say. My family loves the Lebanese foodI cook now, but I have to say that mom’s stillwas better.

One dish we make is our yogurt dip, withLaban/homemade yogurt, cucumber, mint andgarlic. Making this dip with homemade yogurtresults in a pretty loose mixture, even when Istrain the yogurt overnight. So the recipe I’msharing today uses strained Greek yogurt,which results in a thick, creamy dip.

I’m also sharing my family’s recipefor hummus which I’ll be making live onJune 9 with my Fox 19 friends at 9:45a.m. We’ll be chatting about the annualLebanese festival, Mahrajan, at St. An-thony of Padua Church on June 12 andI’ll be making my hummus on the show.

St. Anthony of Padua MaroniteCatholic Church Lebanese FestivalMahrajan

Noon to 8 p.m. Sunday, June 12, 2530Victory Parkway, Cincinnati; 961-0120.

Events: Middle Eastern dancing, shopping,raffle, kids games and prizes.

Food: Homemade Lebanese cuisine: kibee,grape leaves, tabouleh, falafel, vegetarian,pastries, and much more!

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is an herbalist, edu-cator, Jungle Jim’s Eastgate culinary profes-sional and author. Find her blog online atAbouteating.com. Email her [email protected] with “Rita’s kitch-en” in the subject line.

Yogurt cucumber dip

You can buy Greek yogurt already strained. I have to thank Kay Hitzler,a west side reader and dear friend, for allowing me to adapt her originalrecipe.

This is always included on our mezze/appetizer plate when I fix aLebanese dinner. We use Lebanese flat bread to scoop it up. Ditto with thehummus recipe I’m sharing.

1 English or regular large cucumber, peeled if desired, seeded,shredded

Salt1-1/2 cups plain Greek yogurt, strained1 teaspoon garlic, minced or more to taste2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil1 tablespoon lemon juice or more to tastePalmful of fresh chopped mint (I use peppermint; most people use

spearmint)Salt to taste

Place shredded cucumber in strainer over a bowl and sprinkle with alittle salt and let stand for 15 minutes. Meanwhile, place yogurt in a strainer(unless you bought already strained yogurt) and let drain for 15 minutes,then discard liquid. Squeeze the cucumber in a towel to remove as muchliquid as possible. Mix everything together.

Tip from Rita’s kitchen Remove seeds from regular cucumberCut in half longways and take a small spoon and run it down the

center, scooping up seeds. No need to do this with English cukes, as theirseeds are tiny.

Why this recipe is good for you:» Garlic and olive oil are good for your heart» Vitamin C in lemon helps your immune system and helps detoxify

your liver» Mint is high in fiber and good for digestion.» Greek yogurt has more protein than regular.

Rita’s easy hummus

A popular and expensive deli item. Making your own will give you agreater yield, taste so good, and is economical. If too thick, add a littlewater.

1 can, 15 oz, chick peas, drained1 teaspoon minced garlicLemon juice, olive oil and Tahini (ground sesame seed “paste”) to

taste - start with 3 tablespoons eachSalt to tasteCumin to taste – start with a teaspoonWhole milk Greek yogurt to taste - start with 1/4 cup

Mash chickpeas by hand or in food processor until of desired smooth-ness. Add everything else and mix until well blended, either in food proces-sor or by hand.

Why this recipe is good for you:» Chickpeas contain protein and calcium.» Tahini is sesame seed paste and high in protein.» Cumin is a good source of iron.

THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

Lebanese food, like this mezze platter, is a favorite of Rita Heikenfeld’s family.

DIP INTO LEBANESE COOKING

Rita HeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

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Page 8: Hilltop press 060816

8A • HILLTOP PRESS • JUNE 8, 2016

HILLTOPPRESS

Hilltop Press 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: 923-3111 fax: 853-6220email: [email protected] site: Cincinnati.com/communities

A publication of

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

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

Summer has barely begun,but plans are well underwayfor this year’s Harvest HomeFair.

Kicked off by our signatureHarvest Home Parade theThursday after Labor Day,this event is a shining exam-ple of west side communityeffort and pride. Since 1936,the HH Fair has been run bythe Cheviot-Westwood Kiwa-nis Club as an event to bringthe community together aswell as their major fundraiser.Profits from the Fair are dis-tributed back to the communi-ty in the form of grants anddonations.

Our club consists of a widevariety of small and largebusiness people from educa-tors, funeral directors, at-torneys, politicians, pastors,Realtors, police and firemen,

financial plan-ners, bankers,insuranceagents, doc-tors, dentistsand socialworkers. Wehave memberswho are deco-rated militaryheroes andexecutivesfrom Cincin-

nati’s major corporations. Wemeet at Westwood First Pres-byterian Church weekly forlunch, fellowship, and a shortprogram highlighting a com-munity organization, programor issue.

Each September, aftermonths of planning, each of usand our families spend at least16 hours (usually many more)working at “The biggest Little

Fair in Ohio,” setting up thefairgrounds, directing theparade, cooking and servingfood and beer, working thegate and overseeing many ofthe shows that separate ourfair from an average festival -food and crafts, hobby, art,flower, and horse shows, 4H,our Kiwanis Kitchen. Webring in local bands, choirsand dancers for the enjoymentof all.

Our CW Kiwanis Clubmembers are aging, but likeour predecessors, we want thelegacy of the Fair to go on.Several years ago a HarvestHome Fair Association wascreated, making it easier fornon- Kiwanians to participate.We have embarked on a five-year strategic plan to ensurethe Fair’s viability in the fu-ture. Several focus groups

confirmed and reinforced ouridea that the Harvest HomeFair has special memories inmany people’s hearts and theywant it to continue so thattheir children and beyondhave the Fair as a tradition.

Here’s how you can help:» Visit our website,

www.cheviotwestwoodkiwa-nis.com and Facebook pages,www.facebook.com/CWKiwa-nis. Invite friends to “like”and follow our Facebook page.As plans progress, we will beposting schedules, informa-tion about new events, andeven on-line volunteer sign up.

» Join the Cheviot-West-wood Kiwanis Club or TheHarvest Home Fair Associa-tion www.harvesthomefair-.com, or call 662-0524

» If you own or work for awest side business or non-

profit, consider renting a com-mercial booth - not only will ithelp your business gain expo-sure and contacts, it alsoshows your community sup-port.

» Plan ahead now to grow,paint, design, carve, bake,brew, ferment, knit, crochet,or craft your entry into one ofthe many craft categories wedisplay and have judged. Themore participation we get, thebetter the show. Youth havetheir own categories, so don’tforget to have your childrenenter their creations as well.

Enjoy summer and see youat the fair in September.

Diana Cron is a veterinari-an and co-owner of GlenwayAnimal Hospital. She has beena member of the Cheviot West-wood Kiwanis Club, and theHarvest Home Fair since 1995.

What’s missing from Harvest Home Fair? You!

Diana CronCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Cincinnati native AlecSchiering was just 21-years-old when he broke his back

serving as afirefighter inhis communi-ty. Followingthe doctor’sorders, Alecbegan takinghigh doses ofprescriptionopioids to easethe pain dur-ing his recov-ery. But like somany, Alecbecame ad-

dicted to these pills, and oncethe prescription ran out,turned to heroin to fill hiscraving.

Thankfully, Alec took ad-vantage of a second chance.After a six-month stint in jail,coupled with a 12-step reha-bilitation program, he wasable to rebuild and reclaim hislife. Alec’s been sober for thelast four years, and he’s nowinvolved with “Not OneMore,” an organization ded-icated to raising awarenessabout drug addiction and pre-venting further abuse.

For many across the coun-try, however, that secondchance never comes. In Ohio,in 2014 alone, more than 2,500people died of unintentionaldrug overdoses. Prescriptionopioids were involved in near-ly half of those cases. Over

400 of those individuals livedright here in Ohio’s SecondDistrict. These are not justnumbers. These are moms anddads, sons and daughters,husbands and wives, brothersand sisters. They’re our neigh-bors, friends, co-workers, andstudents. They’re from allwalks of life. And their drugdependency is robbing themof life.

This week, I’m proud tojoin fellow Members in thePeople’s House to battle thedeadly drug epidemic on sev-eral fronts:

» educating health careprofessionals on best prac-tices for prescribing opioids;

» increasing treatmentoptions for addicts;

» equipping our first re-sponders with life-savingmedication;

» cracking down on trans-national drug trafficking, andmore.

Alongside action from ourlocal communities, these billswill help give people the confi-dence and resources theyneed to get back on their feetand turn their lives around.Addiction destroys lives. Butwith the right tools and theright approach, we just mightbe able to save our communi-ties.

Congressman Brad Wen-strup represents Ohio’s 2ndDistrict in the U.S. House ofRepresentatives.

Prescription opioidscan lead too easilyto drug addiction

BradWenstrupCOMMUNITYPRESS GUESTCOLUMNIST

ABOUT LETTERS AND COLUMNSWe welcome your comments on editorials, columns, stories or

other topics important to you in The Hilltop Press. Include yourname, address and phone number(s) so we may verify yourletter. Letters of 200 or fewer words and columns of 500 orfewer words have the best chance of being published. All sub-missions may be edited for length, accuracy and clarity. Deadline: Noon Thursday E-mail: [email protected] Fax: 853-6220 U.S. mail: See box below

Letters, columns and articles submitted to The Hilltop Pressmay be published or distributed in print, electronic or otherforms.

June 1 questionDescribe your “brush with

greatness.”

“Throughout college I hada crush on Kim Deal who atthe time was the bass playerin The Pixies. After theybroke up she went on to formThe Breeders and they re-leased the album ‘Last Splash’with the big summertime hit‘Cannonball.’ After that groupdisbanded I lost track of whather musical pursuits were.

“One night a group offriends went to see the on therise Dayton band Guided byVoices. We were big fans, butalso liked one of the openingbands, Gaunt, from Colum-bus, Ohio.

“Well another openingband had been added preced-ing Gaunt called Tammy andthe Amps. We had neverheard of them, just that theywere all from the Daytonarea. When they came out wewere stunned that the leadsinger, guitarist was Kim Dealformerly of those big indiegroups we followed.

“After the Amps set shewas in the crowd just like allthe other Gaunt and Guide byVoices fans. After the showwe saw her and some friendsin the parking lot and wentover and talked music forawhile and got her opinion onsome of the bigger acts of theday like REM and U2 as wellas two of her Ohio favorites,Dayton’s, Brainiac and TheNew Bomb Turks of Colum-bus.

“It was great to realize thata former musical crush andfamous local musician was asbig a music fan as we were.”

C.S.

“The 3 Lettermen were theHomecoming entertainmentat XU many years ago. Theywere a beautiful harmonicgroup who did many greatcovers of love songs.

“Unfortunately they werebombing at XU due to theHomecoming crowd wishingfor some up tempo music anddancing. Fortunately the Let-termen looked to the audienceto have some one come up andbecome the 4th Lettermen. Iwas ‘forced’ on stage andended up doing two up-temposongs with them including a

dance down from the stageout the main aisle while sing-ing ‘going to Kansas City.’

“Even in light of the stand-ing ovation I was not asked tosign any recording contractthat night. If only there hadbeen YouTube then.

“I was at Nick and Tom’srestaurant on BridgetownRoad many years ago. Theplace was packed as it usuallywas in those days. They saidthey had a surprise guest andvoila down from the upper‘dressing room’ came ElvisPresley. He had on the whitejump suit and dark sunglass-es. He did several songs andhad the crowed in hysteria.He left in a large white limoout the kitchen door. I waslead to believe later it was notElvis, but he sure soundedand looked like him. Go Fig-ure!’

T.D.T.

May 25 questionWhat is your all-time favor-

ite movie - the one that you willalways watch if you comeacross it while channel-surfing?Why do you like it?

“’84, Charing Cross Road’will always be my all-timefavorite movie. It is from asimpler time when simplecourtesies and kindnessesseemed to be spontaneous andappreciated. A lovely friend-ship developed between twoopposite personalities throughletters and a love of books. Iwould be as excited as HeleneHanff was whenever shereceived one of her parcelsfrom the bookstore at No. 84,wrapped in brown paper andtwine, that had traveledacross the Atlantic on a ship. Ihave a friend in the UK whosends me packages wrappedin brown paper and twine andit always makes me smile and

think of Helene; and I alwayssave the twine! The goodnessof the people working at No.84 sharing out a small parcelof foodstuffs from Helenethat she had sent to show herappreciation for their book-finding efforts and writtencommunications was tender,generous, and typical of apeople living during ration-ing. That gave me a feeling oflives that were very whole-some and worthwhile, meagerthat they might have been.”

S.N.

“My movie is ‘The Gradu-ate.’ When I first saw themovie, I had a twin overheadcam, red Italian sports car,similar to Dustin Hoffman. Ithad four-wheel disc brakes, afive-speed gearbox, and madethe most wonderful noisewhen the engine was revved.These specs were quite amaz-ing for a car of that era.

“The music by Simon andGarfunkel was marvelous.They were one of my favoritegroups.

“I identified very muchwith the hero, driving hisbeautiful red Italian car, andthe most important thing inhis life, which was to get thegirl he loved, no matter whatit took.”

Neville Duffield

“Unfortunately, I was in FLwhen you asked for our favor-ite movie.

“Much to my surprise, noone responded with my favor-ite – ‘Final Countdown.’

An 1980 alternate historyscience fiction film about amodern aircraft carrier thatwas transported back in timewhen it encounters a strangestorm-like vortex storm. Itreappears a day before the1941 attack on Pearl Harborand launches a massive strikeforce against the incomingJapanese forces. However,before they can reach theenemy armada, the timestorm returns and the strikeforce and the ship are re-turned to 1980.

“There’s that memorablecomment by one of the pilots,‘Mission aborted, when wecan see them. They’re goingto let the Japs do it again.’”

Paul Ashworth

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’SQUESTIONDescribe your most memorablesummer vacation.

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

Page 9: Hilltop press 060816

JUNE 8, 2016 • HILLTOP PRESS • 1B

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

COLUMBUS - La Salle wasn’tready for the ride to end.

The Lancers battled back andbeat Solon 5-4 Thursday on awalk-off wild pitch in the bottomof the seventh inning of a Divi-sion I state semifinal at Hunting-ton Park in Columbus.

La Salle (25-7) then playedSaturday against Pickerington

North in search of the program’sfirst state championship in 50years of La Salle baseball. LaSalle’s only other state final ap-pearance came in 1995.

With the game tied 4-4, LaSalle junior Brady Reynolds andsenior Kevin Browne drew apair of walks to start the sev-enth. After Solon went to its bull-pen and brought in sophomoreRyan McCurry, junior Micah Al-len laid down a sacrifice bunt

which advanced Reynolds andBrowne into scoring position.Sophomore Griffin Merrittstruck out and senior catcherJon Hambrick dug in with twoouts. Hambrick worked thecount full and the ensuing wildpitch dance away from the plateand allowed Reynolds to speedhome as his Lancer teammatesspilled over the railing in front

La Salle walk-off in semisprecedes state final loss

KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE ENQUIRER

La Salle’s Brady Reynolds, left, and Jon Hambrick celebrate the walk-off winagainst Solon during the OHSAA Division I state semifinal game betweenLa Salle and Solon on Thursday at Huntington Park in Columbus.

Adam [email protected]

See LA SALLE, Page 2B

Sam Johnstone went backto state, with an extra shot ofconfidence this time around.

The Roger Bacon juniorwon the Division II regionalmeet with a 4:28.88 in the 1,600meter run. Now, he headed tostate looking to improve onlast year’s 10th-place statefinish. Johnstone ran a 4:27.20at state as a sophomore.

“It gives me a boost know-ing I can hold my own againstanyone in southwest Ohio,”said Johnstone. “It also showsme that I have the potential toplace high in the state meetwhich is a great feeling.”

And, he did. Johnstoneplaced sixth in the Division II1,600 meters at the state meetJune 4 at Ohio State's JesseOwens Memorial Stadium.

Merely reaching state thisyear was no longer the maingoal, after he accomplishedthe feat last season. Now, hewas gunning for the RogerBacon school record, which is4:21. He just missed it with atime of 4:22.52.

“I want to do whatever Ican to get on the podium,” hesaid before the race. “I haveto top off my conditioning andwork on my pacing throughplenty of grueling workoutsin this heat, but this is whatI've been training for all sea-son so most of the work is be-hind me. I just have to put it togood use.”

Even with a regional titleunder his belt, Johnstone en-tered the state meet believinghis best race of the season wasstill ahead of him. A regionalwin will do that for a runner.

“For Sam, it was a tremen-dous confidence boost,” saidSpartans coach Mike Braunof Johnstone’s regional vic-tory. “He has worked hard allseason for the opportunity toget back to the state meet, andhe knew that he wanted a goodrun at the regional meet tojump start him for the statemeet.”

The mental approach wasdifferent this time around aswell. Johnstone knew what toexpect at state and was notcaught off guard by theatmosphere. He focusedmore on his personal goalsand running the race the wayhe wanted to.

“Last year, he was excitedabout qualifying, and you cansee when he got there that hewas nervous,” said Braun. “Inhis mind now, he is more re-laxed, confident and wants togo out the and improve on lastyear.”

Johnstone added, “I

learned that being calm andrunning my race is definitelythe best course of action. Lastyear, I allowed nervousness toget the best of me, whichmeant I didn't eat, didn't sleepwell, and didn't run my bestrace. This year I know that, nomatter my competition, I amready and can run a goodrace.”

While he bested the compe-tition at regionals, this seasonwas no cakewalk for John-stone. He endured somecrushing losses, which heturned into valuable learninglessons. Losing a 1,600-meterrace in the final 100 meters ishumbling, but helped himprepare for the postseason. Inhis final race of the season,Johnstone took all of thoselessons and put them to useagainst the best competitionthe state has to offer.

“He has learned what heneeds to do in order to pacehimself, be smart throughoutthe race, and win,” saidBraun. “I told Sam after theregional meet that he is agreat runner. He needs to stayrelaxed and use what he haslearned from throughout thisseason and go have fun. Manyathletes don't get this oppor-tunity to be in his position andto just go out there and give iteverything he has.”

Roger Bacon’sJohnstone headed tostate with confidenceAdam [email protected]

GEOFF BLANKENSHIP/FOR THE ENQUIRER

Sam Johnstone of Roger Baconcrosses the finish line first in theBoys 1,600-meter run at theDivision 2 Regional final, May 28.

Once again, North Col-lege Hill was repre-sented at the final highschool track meet of the

season. This year, the Trojans had

two runners competing at thestate meet in Columbus. Zavon-tae Chichester made his statedebut after qualifying in the 110meter hurdles. The sophomoreplaced third at the regionalmeet with a time of 15.34. Atstate, he finished 12th in the pre-liminary heat with a better timeof 15.31.

Aniya Jones returns to stateafter competing as part of theTrojans’ 4x400 relay last season.This time around, Jones quali-

fied in an individual event, plac-ing second in the 800-meter runat the regional with a time of2:20.85. At state, she finished14th, also with a better time of2:20.52.

This marks the eighth time innine seasons under head coachNathaniel Snow the Trojanshave sent at least one qualifierto state. The continuity is a re-sult of the family vibe that per-meates the program.

Chichester is the latest ex-ample. The sophomore hasleaned on former Trojans likeLamar Hargrove and JazminSmith, who have shared theirwisdom and experience. TheNCH alums know what it takesto make it to state and their con-versations have helped the cur-rent Trojans mentally prepare

for state.“(They) help him understand

how much of a blessing it is torun at the state meet,” saidSnow. “Zavontae is very excitedbecause this was one of his goalsthis track season.”

Jones is also realizing one ofher goals. She put in the extrawork to be able to qualify indi-vidually this season. Getting ataste of the state meet last sea-son made her hungry for a re-turn trip.

“Going to state last year hasmotivated her to return thisyear in an individual event,”said Snow. “Aniya is trainingharder by running two miles aday. Also, she has utilized theweight room, getting her lower

GEOFF BLANKENSHIP FOR THE ENQUIRER

North College Hill’s Zavontae Chichester clears the hurdle halfway through the boys 100-meter race May 28 atregionals.

NCH continues trackexcellence, sendsrunners to stateAdam [email protected]

See NCH, Page 2B

Page 10: Hilltop press 060816

ALEX VEHR/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Brianna Richard from WintonWoods competes in the 100-meterdash at the state meet.

ALEX VEHR/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

La Salle’s Jaylen Hasan runs a leg ofthe 4x800 relay in the Division Istate meet on June 3.

Tournament boyslacrosse

» St. Xavier lost a heart-breaker 6-5 in triple overtime toLoveland on May 27 in a Divi-sion I regional final at St. X.

Tournament boys track and field

» Roger Bacon junior SamJohnstone placed sixth in 1,600meters at the Division II statemeet June 4 at Jesse Owens Me-morial Stadium in Columbus.

» La Salle’s Jaylen Hasanwas 13th in 800 meters at the Di-vision I state meet on June 4 inColumbus. Luke Doerger was11th in the discus with a throw of158’5”. The Lancers’ 4x800 relaytook 12th place at state.

Tournament girls track and field

» Winton Woods junior Bri-anna Richard placed seventh inlong jump and 100 meters at theDivision I state meet June 4 atOhio State’s Jesse Owens Me-morial Stadium. Richard hasmade the podium in threestraight years for the Warriors.

Pete Minor father-childbasketball camp

» The fourth annual Pete Mi-nor Father-Child basketballcamp designed to help fathersbond with their sons and daugh-ters will be June 18 from 3 p.m.to 7 p.m. at the Friars Club onVine Street.

Admission is $60 for a camp-er and father figure (additionalchildren are $25 each). Thecamp is open to boys and girlsentering grades 1-8. Both kidsand father figures will partici-pate in drills so wear comfort-able, athletic clothing. All par-ticipants receive a shirt, basket-ball and photo of camper and fa-ther figure. Dinner will beprovided by Skyline Chili.

To register or inquire aboutsponsorship opportunities, vis-it: www.2016pmfcbball-

camp.eventzilla.net. Email:[email protected].

North College Hillbasketball camp

» North College Hill HighSchool will host a boys basket-ball camp on June 13-16 at thehigh school gymnasium. Thecamp is open to boys enteringsecond grade through ninthgrade.

The camp runs from 9 a.m. tonoon each day and the cost is$40 (checks payable to NCHboys basketball). Payment canbe mailed to North College HillHigh School (attn: coach Minor)at 1620 West Galbraith Road,Cincinnati, OH 45239.

Each camper gets a t-shirtand lunch is provided free ofcharge daily.

Contact Shannon Minor withquestions (email: [email protected]) orcall (513) 728-4783.

College baseball

» Thomas More Collegehad five baseball student-athletes named All-MideastRegion by two organiza-tions.

The American BaseballCoaches Association (AB-CA) released its ABCA/Raw-lings All-Mideast teams onTuesday and sophomore sec-ond baseman Ben Laumann(Oak Hills) was named to thefirst team, senior first base-man Donovan Pogue (St.Xavier) and junior rightfielder Ben Kenning (Elder)were named to the secondteam and junior center field-er Casey Metzger (OakHills) was named to the thirdteam. D3baseball.com an-nounced its All-Regionteams on Monday and Lau-mann was named to the sec-ond team and junior pitcherKen Ruberg (LaSalle) wasnamed to the third team.

SHORT HOPS

ALEX VEHR/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

St. Xavier’s Jacob Lang tries to maneuver by a Loveland defender in aregional match on May 27.

2B • HILLTOP PRESS • JUNE 8, 2016 LIFE

body stronger.”No matter how many cur-

rent and former teammateshave been there, it was anerve-wracking experiencefor the first-timer Chiches-ter.

“Zavontae and I have a lotof one-on-one conversationshelping him calm his nerves,”said Snow before the race.

Jones and Chichester haveseen what it takes to make itthis far. They decided almostas soon as the 2015 seasonended that they would exertthe necessary effort to reachJesse Owens Memorial Stadi-um the first weekend of June2016.

“Those two have improvedtremendously. They workedextremely hard in the offsea-son and they have droppedtheir times which has allowedthem to be more competi-tive,” said Snow. “The goalevery time they run is to win;however, it's going to takehard work and preparingtheir minds on the race theyhave to run this weekend.This week’s expectations areto reach the podium on Satur-day.”

Regardless of the out-come, the Trojans already ac-complished their goal ofkeeping the state qualifyingstreak intact. The bar con-tinues to be raised for futureTrojans track and field ath-letes.

“The program has grownsince taking over nine yearsago,” said Snow.

The state meet experiencecontinues to be passed downfrom class to class, as the Tro-jans track and field pipelinecontinues to expand. Chich-ester is the latest qualifier;starting next year, he willshare his experience with thenext wave of talented Tro-jans.

NCHContinued from Page 1B

of the first-base dugout.“Once I saw the ball kick

away I knew we were going tothe championship,” said Rey-nolds. “This is the best feelingI’ve ever had. I wouldn’t trade itfor the world.

“In that situation, I just need-ed to find a pitch I could hit andhe didn’t throw me one. Just pa-tience and it came through; goton, got over, scored and we’regoing to the championship.That’s the coolest feeling … it’sa team sport so to see themcome out (of the dugout) allhyped like that, that’s prettyspecial. First time I’ve everdone that.”

La Salle coach Joe Voegelesaid, “I was hoping for a big hitthere. (Brady’s) an aggressivekid, that’s the way he plays thegame so he’s probably a goodguy to have down there at thattime.”

Another big game, anothercomplete-game performancefrom La Salle senior starter Ja-cob Kaiser who threw 108 pitch-es, allowed five hits with sixstrikeouts.

“I think he was trying tothrow too hard. I haven’t askedhim yet but that speed clock, Iwonder if he was looking atthat,” Voegele said of his ace.“He competed, you can’t takeanything away from him, he’sdone that all year. He’s 10-1 thisyear, 5-0 last year, I’d be prettystupid if I didn’t want him outthere.”

Slow startFor the second straight

game, La Salle trailed 1-0 afterthe first inning.

Kaiser walked the first bat-ter of the day, Anthony Charles,and a sacrifice bunt, followedby a groundout that gave himthird. Johnny Mooney drovehim home with a single to left to

put Solon up 1-0.Coming into the semifinal,

Solon (25-5) had only allowedone postseason run. And theComets had their left-handedace, starter Nathan Altstadt,who’s signed with Alabama, onthe bump.

La Salle’s pressure paid off inthe third inning. Senior center-fielder Andrew Sexton stungthe first of three consecutivehits. Reynolds followed Sextonwith another single andBrowne, who’s signed to play atAshland University, ripped adouble to right center field togive La Salle a 2-1 lead.

Solon leveled things 2-2 witha run in the fourth, an RBI-sin-gle from Mike Tsironis thatscored Joey Bubonics.

The Comets struck again inthe fifth inning to take a 4-2lead. First, Will Meyer smasheda triple to the warning track inright center that scoredCharles, then Meyer made ithome after a single from Moo-ney.

But true to form, La Salledidn’t panic, the Lancers wentback to work and tied the game4-4 in the bottom of the sixth.

“We come back from every-thing,” said Reynolds, whoscored twice in the game. “It’sjust baseball, we know what todo and we’ve all done it before.”

Sophomore Griffin Merrittled off with a single and Ham-brick dropped down a bunt andbeat the throw by sliding intofirst. Solon went to its bullpenand brought Tim Harmody on inrelief of Altstadt. Junior short-stop Tyler Wardwell’s bunt putMerritt and Hambrick in scor-ing position. A throwing erroron Baron Moreland’s grounderscored Merritt, and senior TimCasey tied the game by gettingdown a bunt on a squeeze play toscore Hambrick.

“If our approaches are goodand we get good pitches to hitwe’re pretty good,” said Voe-gele. “I know about 2-3 yearsago we were starting to put

some things together as far ashow we play the game the rightway and I think the La Sallealumni have to be proud of whatthey see now. You think aboutthe last two teams winning over24 games. It was the team twoyears ago that kind of set thetone. I owe them a lot and I’vegot a great coaching staff. It’snot me, it’s them.”

Reynolds said sleep might bean issue the next two nights be-fore Saturday’s state final at 1p.m. back at Huntington Park.

“Whoever I’m sleeping withtomorrow night better scootover cause I’m gonna be up allnight, might be pacing thehalls,” said Reynolds.

La Salle 5, Solon 4W-Kaiser (10-1); L-Harmody

(1-1). Leaders: L-Browne 2B, 2RBI; Hambrick 2-3; Wardwell2B. S-Mooney 2-3, 2 RBI; Meyer2-3, 3B. Records: L 25-7, S 25-5.

At the state finalThe big hits had been going

La Salle’s way this season. Whenthe Lancers needed to get keyouts, they had. Doing the littlethings right had paved the wayto the program’s second region-al championship and berth inthe Division I state final.

Those little things didn’t goLa Salle’s way on Saturday as itfell 2-1 to Pickerington North atHuntington Park in downtownColumbus. The Lancers (25-8)had won nine of their last 10games, including three postsea-son games by two runs or less,

but could only manage one un-earned run on five hits againstPickerington North senior Jus-tin Grubb.

“We just didn’t play as well aswe have lately,” said La Sallecoach Joe Voegele. “When we’restruggling a bit, we don’t getthose big hits. When we’reswinging and getting those bighits, we’re dangerous. We didn’tget them today, and we didn’texecute a lot of the bunt playswe normally do.”

The Lancers left eight run-ners on base, including six in thefirst three innings, and werejust 1-of-6 hitting with runnersin scoring position.

Andrew Sexton led off thebottom of the first with a walkbut was thrown out attemptingto steal second base. The Lanc-ers still loaded the bases withtwo outs but Grubb got out ofthe inning with a strikeout look-ing of Jon Hambrick. Micah Al-len was robbed of would-be ex-tra bases with one out in thethird inning when Panthers’center fielder Dillan Smithmade a diving catch on thewarning track in left-centerfield. Griffin Merritt followedwith a single but that’s all LaSalle got in the inning.

“It was a good hit off the bat. Ihad my hopes up but it camedown just to it getting caught,”said Smith. “As soon as I saw ithit, I put my head down andstarted running. About halfwaythrough I looked over and sawmy left fielder wasn’t going to

get there so I tried to keep goingto get the ball.”

Allen drove in the Lancers’run with a sacrifice fly in thefifth inning. He hit the ball hardall three of his plate appear-ances, singling in the first in-ning. He was on-deck when thefinal out of the game was madeon a fly ball to right field byKevin Browne.

Allen started and took theloss when Pickerington North(23-9) scored twice in the top ofthe fourth inning. He retired thefirst two batters on groundoutsbut walked consecutive batters.The Panthers converted thosewalks into runs on back-to-backsingles by Cole Losoncy andDrew Salinas, the eighth andninth hitters in the lineup.

“Walks hurt,” said Allen, a ju-nior who tossed a completegame in the regional semifinalsagainst Clayton Northmont. Heallowed just five hits in six in-nings.

“It just didn’t happen today,”said Allen. “We came to play.Things just didn’t go our way.”

La Salle’s only other trip tothe state tournament came in1995, when the Lancers also fin-ished as runner-up. Their 25wins this season was the mostsince 1976, according to the LaSalle athletic website, when theteam won 26 games.

Voegele has been coachingfor 41 years, the past seven sea-sons at La Salle, but this is hisfirst trip to the state tourna-ment. He’s also been the headcoach at Aiken and Wyoming.

“Just to have the opportunityto be here is really special,” saidVoegele. “I didn’t think it wouldever happen. I’ve had somegood teams that didn’t past thedistricts. This is very special.This is a great group of kids. Mycoaches are just outstanding.You’d have to come to practiceto see just how special they are,but nobody truly understands ituntil you see them in action.And we’ve got a great communi-ty that supports us.”

La SalleContinued from Page 1B

KAREEM

ELGAZZAR/

THE ENQUIRER

La Sallestarter MicahAllen deliversa pitch in thefirst inning ofthe OHSAADivision IstatechampionshipgameSaturday.

Page 11: Hilltop press 060816

JUNE 8, 2016 • HILLTOP PRESS • 3BLIFE

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4B • HILLTOP PRESS • JUNE 8, 2016 LIFE

All Are Welcome - Free Admission

521-7003 • www.amgardens.org

Please Join Us For A FREE CONCERT

Featuring:Forever Diamond

Cincinnati’s Favorite Neil Diamond Tribute Band

Sunday June 12th @ 7 PMRain Date: Sunday June 26 @ 7 PM

FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH8580 Cheviot Rd., Colerain Twp

741-7017 www.ourfbc.comGary Jackson, Senior Pastor

Sunday School (all ages) 9:30amSunday Morning Service 10:30amSunday Evening Service 6:30pmWedn. Service/Awana 7:00pmRUI Addiction Recovery (Fri.) 7:00pm

Active Youth, College, Senior Groups Exciting Music Dept, Deaf Ministry, Nursery

Bread From HeavenOutreach Ministry

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

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

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

Christ Church Glendale Episcopal Church965 Forest Ave - 771-1544

[email protected]@christchurchglendale.org

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

11am Holy Eucharist IIChild Care 9-12

Faith Lutheran ChurchNALC AND LCMC

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

Sunday School 10:15 AMSeptember through May

Trinity Lutheran Church, LCMS5921 Springdale Rd

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

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

www.trinitylutherancincinnati.com385-7024

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

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

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

Mt. HealthyUnited Methodist ChurchCorner of Compton and Perry Streets

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

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

“Come as a guest. Leave as a friend.”

FLEMING ROADUnited Church of Christ

691 Fleming Rd 522-2780Rev Pat McKinney

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

Nursery Provided

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

Northminster Presbyterian Church703 Compton Rd., Finneytown 931-0243

Growing Faith, Sharing Hope, Showing LoveSunday Worship Schedule

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

Student Cafe: 10:15amChildcare Available

Nancy Ross- Zimmerman - Pastors

DIRECTORY

TO PLACE YOUR ADEMAIL: cin-classi@[email protected]: 513.768.8184 or 513.768.8189

This summer’s 17-yearcicada hum will bedrowned out by theshrieks of discovery, thepure delight and joy aschildren of all ages andwalks of life from the Cin-cinnati region participatein summer camps, activ-ities and classes duringthe Summer of STEM (sci-ence, technology, engi-neering and math) thatcombats brain drain withactive, engaged learning.

While many offeringsare highly developed bylongtime STEM-focusedorganizations, the collabo-ration and network Sum-mer of STEM (SOS) ties to-gether is new.

“We have so many re-markable STEM provid-ers in this region and thereal challenge is how doyou make parents, stu-dents and teachers awareof the opportunities avail-able?” said Sean Kelley, di-rector of the Talent Pipe-line Initiative for Partnersfor a Competitive Work-force and part of theGreater Cincinnati STEMCollaborative. Since learn-ing how Chicago mu-seums, libraries, outdoorvenues and schools linkedarms with a comprehen-sive online list and badgesystem, Kelley hasdreamed of implementingsomething similar here.

Arts + STEM partnerin move towardnew economy

When the GCSC ap-plied to participate in a na-tional STEM ecosystemlast fall, the leadershipteam knew this was thetime for SOS. They re-searched the best plat-

form, finding a new web-site cost prohibitive. Kel-ley was aware that Art-sWave CEO AleciaKintner “really gets thatart is part of the regionaleconomic developmentengine and it struck methat she’s on the samepage.” They traded e-mails just as the arts or-ganization was launchingawebsite to offer the samesort of network and acces-sibility. BINGO, the twogroups clicked to formwww.cincyartsandste-m.org.

ArtsWave’s Kintnerwas grateful her organiza-tion, the nation’s largestand oldest community artscampaign, had the tech-nology to enable a jointlisting of arts and STEMactivities.

“The efficiency of thatplatform,” according toKintner, “enabled cin-cyartsandstem.org and aricher, more comprehen-sive tool.”

The unusual pairing ofart and STEM “gives kidsnew access points and thechance for STEM educa-tors and parents to see artsopportunities at the sametime,” Kintner said. Art-sWave relishes that“crossover” space. “AsCincinnati becomes a hot-bed for the maker move-ment, start-ups, entrepre-neurial culture and techsupport, it’s really impor-tant that our century-oldarts institutions are notrelegated to or stuck in thepast in actuality or publicperception. One way to en-sure the cutting edge is tobe closely aligned with thenew future and the neweconomy. Cincyartsand-stem.org is one manifesta-

tion of that vision.”“Because there’s so

much design work in engi-neering and everythinghas a creative bent, wedon’t want to limit thesekids,” Kelley said.“Whether it’s ballet or biol-ogy camp, they can findresources in the sameplace.”

STEM introduced tovariety of familiesas careerpossibilities

“Our highest order forSummer of STEM is tokeep kids engaged in a nat-ural asset: a giant, outdoorscience lab,” said MaryAdams, GCSC programmanager and formerProcter & Gamble execu-tive. Uniting educationand business partners,non-profit organizerGCSC opens STEM educa-tional and career possibil-ities to meet the accelerat-ing regional demand.

“Secondarily, we wantto get the word out aboutSTEM and are lucky topartner with ArtsWave,”Adams said. “Additionally,there are committed par-ents who can’t write thecheck. We also want to bethe force that helps under-served kids get into greatsummer programs.”

“We are giving the nextgeneration of the work-force opportunities askids,” Kelley said. “Wewant these kids to grow upin love with this region andstay here. As future lead-ers, we want to make surethey’re getting access.”

Kelley envisions threetypes of family scenariosSOS benefits.

“A lot of parents are

looking at what their kidscan do this summer, anoth-er group truly needs childcare and another doesn’thave the luxury or eco-nomic situation to thinkabout extras.” Cincyart-sandstem.org, accordingto Kelley, “offers real re-sources for all of thosefamilies.”

To create affordableoptions, “we awardedmuch of our funding tosome of our providers sokids who don’t have theeconomic means can stillattend these camps andmake sure these non-prof-its get paid to do theirgreat work.”

Funding touchesschools andhomeless students

One recipient, iSPACE,will engage specificallywith fifth- and sixth-grad-ers on engineering and ro-botics in four CincinnatiPublic middle schools. Ex-ecutive Director LindaNeenan is appreciative of

the P&G funding throughSOS “for a week-long ro-bust curriculum at eachschool.”

Both programs are “in-quiry-based,” Neenansaid. “We give the kids thebasic tools to program arobot, then give them achallenge. They may haveto go back to the drawingboard six or eight timesand we’ll guide them, butthey have to figure it outon their own.”

Neenan’s experience ofgiving up her dream engi-neering career stokes apassion for introducingkids to STEM.

“The goal of Summer ofSTEM is to keep kidssharp over the summer.Because it’s all hands-onand they have authenticexperiences doing whatreal engineers do, theyhave an ‘ah-ha’ momentwhen they understandthey can actually do thisand it can lead to a lucra-tive career.”

At the end of the week,iSPACE will invite parents

“so kids can show themwhat they’ve done and weget a chance to talk aboutwhat kids can do withSTEM careers.” Sheknows “it could be a turn-ing point for the entirefamily.”

iSPACE is partneringwith UpSpring and Hamil-ton County Parks at Shar-on Woods July 7 to engagehomeless kindergartnersto sixth graders in a simi-lar way with rocketry, na-ture walks and outdoorplay.

“These families have somany other stressors intheir lives, that school isthe last thing on theirminds,” Neenan said.“We’re partnering to pro-vide academic program-ming and something fun.This is what happens whena bunch of us come togeth-er to have a real impact.”

Neenan is excitedabout the Summer ofSTEM possibilities.“We’ve been looking forone rallying cry and this isthe one that’s caught on.We can accomplish somuch more together.”

Fourth- and fifth-grad-ers at William HowardTaft STEM Elementarywill plan, measure, plant,evaluate soil, sun and wa-ter conditions, irrigateand tend a garden overfour weeks in Junethrough an SOS grant. TaftResource CoordinatorElizabeth Cone said it’s awonderful way to “showthe community that our fo-cus is STEM and our stu-dents practice STEM con-cepts preparing them for21st Century skills.”Neighbors have alreadysigned up to help garden.

Funders supportplatform for parentsand educators

Designed for parentsand educators, cincyart-sandstem.org is search-able by grade level, date,discipline, provider andtype of activity. Summerof STEM offerings on thewebsite range from test-ing Ohio River wateraboard a boat to celebrat-ing Pi Day, developing mo-bile-game apps, inventingan imaginary bug to ex-plore predators vs. preyand emulating snake-skintextures in paint. Partici-pating institutions includethe Cincinnati-HamiltonCounty and Boone Countylibraries, the CincinnatiObservatory and Cincin-nati Opera, University ofCincinnati and NorthernKentucky University, theCincinnati Art Academy,Cincinnati Museum Cen-ter and many others. Oth-er area STEM providersmay still join the listing byregistering at cincyart-sandstem.org.

Summer of STEM links wealth of activities to develop local talent

PROVIDED

A variety of activities await children of all ages during Summer of STEM. Searchcincyartsandstem.org for information.

Page 13: Hilltop press 060816

JUNE 8, 2016 • HILLTOP PRESS • 5BLIFE

CE-0000645608

Call (513)421-CARE to schedule a free pickup or go to www.svdpcincinnati.org/Give_Help for more information.

Donate your car, truck, motorcycle or RV.

Give your car a new home & save a neighbor from becoming homeless.

Proceeds from your car can:

• Save families from becoming homeless.

• Provide beds for children sleeping on the hard floor.

• Feed hungry families.

• Provide medication for patients at our Charitable Pharmacy.

• Your donation may be tax deductible.

2016 Mt. Healthy

Friday, June 10th 6pm-11pmSaturday, June 11th 5pm-11pmSunday, June 12th 1pm-9pm

$2 Entry Fee | No Re-entry1/2 price Sunday (FREE with 2 canned goods)

No one under 18 admitted without parents after 9pmNo alcohol permitted outside the event area

Lots of Great FoodBrats, Melts, Corn on the Cob

Funnel Cakes, Turtle Soup,Ken’s Kitchen & More!

Live Bands All WeekendFriday 7:30-10:45pm Buffalo Ridge

Saturday 7:30-10:45pm Stuck In TimeSunday 6:00-9:00pm Stagger Lee

Music is Sponsored by Neidhard Young Funeral Home

Sunday Family DayRide Bracelets for All Rides $15 1-5pm

Travelling Magician & Balloon ArtistKids Scavenger Hunt (2pm & 3pm)

Chicken Dinner !!!Homestyle * Homemade

Sunday, Noon - 6pmAdults $10 - Kids $4

Back this Year! Drive-Thru 1-5pmElizabeth St to McMakin to Joseph St

Sponsored by Ogle & Paul Young Funeral Home

There will be no Bingo this year.

SORRY!

Located 2 blocks E of Hamilton Ave – 1 block N of Compton RdJoseph & McMakin, Mt. Healthy Ohio

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Call us today!

Bill AmmannBill Ammann, of Mount

Healthy died April 23. He was agraduate of Roger Bacon HighSchool. He worked for manyyears for Tipco Punch in Hamil-ton, as well as Porter Precision inColerain Township.

Survived by wife of 50 yearsJean (nee Landwehr) Ammann;children Vicki (Jim) Burbrink,Tom (Kathy) Ammann, and Jill(Barry) Gritton; grandchildren

Brooke (Jeff) Erndteman, Chel-sea Burbrink and fiancé JerrodBlust, Samantha Ammann,Chase Gritton, and Jack Am-mann; great-grandchildrenEmma Grace, Madelyn James,and Charlee Elizabeth.

Preceded in death by parentsWilliam Ammann and Lillian(nee Dirr) Ammann; sister Patri-cia Woodruff; granddaughterRiley Marie.

Visitation was April 27, funer-al services April 2 at Neidhard-Young Funeral Home, MountHealthy.

Bonnie Dee BaileyBonnie Dee (nee Lawson)

Bailey, 34, of Mount Healthydied April 13. She was employedas a Piping Designer with B.S.I.Engineering.

Survived by husband MichaelA. Bailey; parents Susan A.(Moore) and Jeffrey E. Lawson;brother Dennis Schott; nieceAshlynn Schott; grandparentsEarl and Betty Lawson; daugh-ter-in-law of Bob and CeyrraeBailey.

Preceded in death by grand-parents Willard and Dee Moore.

Visitation and Mass of Chris-

tian Burial were April 18 at St.Margaret of York Church, Love-land. Burial at Gate of HeavenCemetery.

Richard L. RobbRichard L. Robb, 66, of Forest

Park died April 18.Survived by children Amanda

and ElizabethRobb; grand-childrenIsabella, Jace,Kora andAlina; brotherJoe (June)Robb; formerwife BrendaRobb.

Visitationand funeral

services were April 24 at Mihovk-Rosenacker Funeral Home,Evendale.

Memorials to St. Rita Schoolfor the Deaf, 1720 Glendale-Milford Road, Cincinnati, Ohio45215.

Shirley Ann SnyderShirley Ann Snyder, 67, of

Mount Healthy died April 21.Survived by daughter Lea

(Jeff) Dennis; granddaughter

Taylor Anne Dennis; siblingsMelody (Kirk) Tolford, Loise(David) Stoddard and Victor(Daun) Preston; nieces andnephews.

Preceded in death by parentsSamuel and Margaret Snyder;siblings Maryann Williams, LindaKrieger, William and ElmerSnyder.

Visitation and funeral serviceswere April 26 at Neidhard-YoungFuneral Home, Mount Healthy.

Memorials to the Hamilton

County SPCA or the AmericanHumane Society.

Margaret Ann ThiemMargaret Ann (nee White)

Thiem, 82, of North College Hilldied April 24. She was a longtime member of St. MargaretMary Church.

Survived by children Teresa(Wayne) Jacobs, Yvonne (Mark)Hester, Thomas (late Jane)Thiem, Robert (Debi) Thiem,Richard (Yuriko) Thiem, David

Thiem, Mary Gulleman andJennifer Meyer; 21 grand-children; 18 great-grandchil-dren; sister Mary Eleanor Krieg-er.

Preceded in death by hus-band Thomas F. Thiem.

Visitation was at the Neid-hard-Young Funeral Home,Mount Healthy. Mass of Chris-tian Burial at St. Margaret MaryChurch.

Memorials to the AmericanHeart Association.

DEATHS

Robb

ABOUTOBITUARIES

Basic obituary informa-tion and a color pho-tograph of your lovedone is published withoutcharge by The Communi-ty Press. Email to [email protected] and [email protected]. To publish alarger memorial tribute,call 242-4000 or pricingdetails.

FOREST PARKIncidents/investigationsDomesticReported on Versailes, April 19. Reported on W. Kemper, April23.

Identity theftReported on 11000 block ofFarmington Road, April 19.

RobberyReported on 10000 block ofHamilton Ave., April 20.

TheftCamera valued at $700 removedfrom 700 block of NorthlandBlvd., April 22.

Vehicle removed from 1100 blockof Smiley Ave., April 21.

Reported on 1100 block of SmileyAve., March 31.

$1,300 removed from 1200 blockof W. Kemper Road, April 18.

Purse and contents removedfrom 600 block of NorthlandBlvd., April 17.

Radio valued at $1,000 removedfrom 11000 block of Chase PlazaDrive, April 19.

MOUNT HEALTHY Incidents/investigationsAssault

POLICE REPORTS

See POLICE, Page 7B

ABOUT POLICE REPORTSCommunity Press publishes incident records provided by

local police departments. All reports published are publicrecords.

To contact your local police department: » Springfield Township, 729-1300» Mount Healthy: 728-3183» Cincinnati District 5, 569-8500» North College Hill, 521-7171» Greenhills, 825-2101» Forest Park, 595-5220.

Page 14: Hilltop press 060816

6B • HILLTOP PRESS • JUNE 8, 2016 LIFE

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Page 15: Hilltop press 060816

JUNE 8, 2016 • HILLTOP PRESS • 7BLIFE

Huntington,WV

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From Huntington, WV to Hinton, WV and Return!

Sponsored by the:Collis P. Huntington Railroad Historical Society, Inc.

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**This trip will not be handicap accessible. Historic and antiquated rail passenger equipment, like that used on this excursion, is exempt from ADA regulationsunder U.S. Code: Title 42: Section 12184. The passenger cars and station facilities used on this excursion were constructed before disability accessibilitylaws were adopted. Platforms, boarding areas, stairs, step-stools, seating, and especially doorways, passageways, aisles, and onboard restroomsmay not accommodate all passengers. We will make all reasonable efforts to accommodate differently abled passengers who desire to ride this train.**

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June 17-19 2016THE TRADITION STARTS NOWTHE TRADITION STARTS NOWARTS NOWTHE TRADITION STTHE TRADITION ST

Big Pharma execsstand to losebillions as doctorsand their patientsabandon drugslike Nexium® andPrilosec®. Drug freeremedy could putBig Pharma outof the digestionbusiness.

By David WaxmanSeattle Washington:

Drug company execs arenervous. That’s because thegreatest health advance in decades has hitthe streets. And analysts expect it to put ahuge crimp in “Big Pharma” profits.

So what’s all the fuss about? It’s about a newingredient that’s changing the lives of millionswho use it. Some doctors call it “the greatestdiscovery since penicillin”! And their patientscall it “a miracle!”

The name of the product is the AloeCure.And since it’s completely drug-free; theproduct is available to anyone who wants it, noprescription necessary.

TOP DOC WARNS: DIGESTIONDRUGS CAN CRIPPLE YOU!

Company spokesperson, Dr. Liza Leal; aleading integrative health specialist out ofTexas recommends taking AloeCure before sheprescribes any digestion drug. Especially afterthe FDA’s stern warning about long-term use ofdrugs like Prilosec®, Nexium®, and Prevacid®.In a nutshell, the FDA statement warnedpeople should avoid taking digestion drugs forlonger than 14-days; you risk spine and hipdamage. Most people take them for decades.”

Dr. Leal should know. Many patients come toher with bone and joint complaints and she doeseverything she can to help them. One way fordigestion sufferers to help avoid possible risk oftragic joint and bone problems caused by overuseof digestion drugs; is to take the AloeCure.

The secret to the AloeCure’s “healthadjusting” formula is aloe vera. But not thesame aloe vera that mom used to apply to yourcuts, scrapes and bruises. This revolutionarystrain of aloe is grown in special Asian soil; undervery strict conditions. And despite its surprisinglypleasant taste, the AloeCure is so powerful itbegins to benefit your health the instant you takeit. It soothes intestinal discomfort and avoids thepossibility of bone and health damage causedby overuse of digestion drugs. Much like aloeworks externally on cuts, bruises, burns andabrasions. Studies show aloe has dozens ofhealth applications…

HELPS CALM DOWN PAINFULINFLAMMATION

According to a leading aloe researchscientist, the amazing plant compounds inAloe have a powerful anti-inflammatory effect.Inflammation is your body’s first reactionto damage. So whether it’s damage that isphysical, bacterial, chemical or auto-immune;the natural plant compounds in aloe helpssoothe inflammation— rapidly reducingredness, heat and swelling .

RAPID ACID ANDHEARTBURN FIX

At first, Aloe proved to have an astonishingeffect on users who suffer with digestionproblems like occasional acid reflux,heartburn, cramping, gas and constipation.But new studies prove it does a whole lot more.

SIDE-STEPHEART CONCERNS

So you've been taking proton pumpinhibitors for years and you feel just fine. A2015 medical study showed long-term use ofdigestion meds may be a leading cause of heartdamage. Getting off those meds and taking theAloeCure daily, helps you support a healthyheart.

UNLEASH YOUR MEMORYThink about it. If you kept dumping fat

and grease down your drain; how long do youthink it would take to clog it up? The answeris, not very long at all. And that’s exactly whathappens to your brain every time you eatprocessed, fried or fatty foods. Studies show

that your brain needs the healthy bacteria fromyour gut in order function at its best. Both lowand high dosages of digestion drugs are provento destroy that healthy bacteria and get in theway of brain function. So you’re left with asluggish, slow-to-react brain without a lot ofroom to store information. AloeCure’s specialformulation actually makes your gut healthier;so healthy bacteria flows freely to your brainso you think better, faster and with a largercapacity for memory.

SLEEP LIKE A BABYA night without sleep really damages your

body. And continued lost sleep can lead to allsorts of health problems. But what you may notrealize is the reason why you’re not sleeping.Some call it “Ghost Reflux”. A low-intensity formof acid reflux discomfort that quietly keeps youawake in the background. Taking AloeCure willhelp you sleep more soundly and comfortablythrough the night.

CELEBRITY HAIR,SKIN & NAILS

One of the Best-Kept Secrets in Hollywood.Pills like Nexium and Prevacid greatly reduceyour body’s ability to absorb calcium. Aloeneutralizes the pH levels in your blood so yourbody can absorb massive amounts of calcium.The result? Thicker, healthier looking hair…more youthful looking skin… And nails sostrong they may never break again.

SAVE YOUR KIDNEYNational and local news outlets are reporting

Kidney Failure linked to PPI’s. Your Kidneyextracts waste from blood, balance bodyfluids, form urine, and aid in other importantfunctions of the body. Without it your bodywould be overrun by deadly toxins. Aloe helpsyour kidney function properly. Studies suggest,if you started taking aloe today; you’d see a bigdifference in the way you feel.

SPECIAL OPPORTUNITY FORREADERS OF THIS PUBLICATION

With this introductory offer the makersof the AloeCure® are excited to offer you arisk free supply. Readers of this paper areprequalified for up to 3 FREE months ofproduct with their order. Take advantageof this special opportunity to try AloeCure®

in your own home and find out how to testAloeCure® for a full 90 days. But that’s notall…. If you don’t see remarkable changes inyour digestion, your body, and your overallhealth... Simply return it for a full refund lessshipping and handling (when applicable).Just call 1-855-645-0339 to take advantageof this risk free offer before it’s too late. Thisoffer is limited, call now.

Doctors call it “The greatesthealth discovery in decades!”

DOCTOR’S EVERYWHERE AREEXCITED ABOUT THE ALOECURE:

"My first experience rec-ommending AloeCurewas of a 46 year patientwho developed a stom-ach ulcer due to stress.I suggested that he take

AloeCure and the worst was over within3 days.

To my colleagues, if you’re not usingAloeCure, you really need to. Toall patients there is powerful helpavailable, find a practitioner who knowsof AloeCure.

Dr. Rick Marschall, Port Angeles, WA*

Analysts expect the AloeCureto put a huge crimp in“Big Pharma” profits.

THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION. THIS PRODUCT IS NOT INTENDED TODIAGNOSE, TREAT, CURE OR PREVENT ANY DISEASE. INDIVIDUAL RESULTS MAY VARY ALOECURE IS NOT A DRUG. IF YOU ARE CURRENLTYTAKING A PRESCRIPTION DRUG YOU SHOULD CONSULT YOUR DOCTOR BEFORE USE. FOR THE FULL FDA PUBLISHED WARNING ONPROTON PUMP INHIBITORS PLEASE VISIT HTTP://WWW.FDA.GOV/DOWNLOADS/FORCONSUMERS/CONSUMERUPDATES/UCM213307*compensated for opinion

Drug companies are understandablyupset since AloeCure delivers quicker

and better health benefits.

Drug Companies Nervousas Doctors and PatientsDemand the AloeCure®

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6261 Banning Road: East,Andrew S. & Melody A. toSNTR LLC Tr.; $80,400.

6638 Kirkland Drive: WellsFargo Bank NA to Lopez,Wiltrud J.; $69,500.

1361 North Bend Road: Pikar,Edward P. Tr. & Marian J. Tr.to City Country CottagesLLC; $45,000.

2227 North Bend Road:Edgar Construction LLC Tr.to Corn, Dewayna M. &Mathew C. Michel;$110,000.

1512 Wittekind Terrace:Thornton, Timothy I. toKerby, Ann M. &; $149,900.

FOREST PARK10829 Carnegie Drive: Ben-nett, Christina L. to Kenne-dy, Jennifer; $85,500.

836 Cascade Road: Colon,Luis D, to Chang, Dagny D,;$90,000.

11650 Geneva Road: HomeSolutions LLC to Rex Resi-dential Property Owner LLC;$54,000.

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GREENHILLS38 Gambier Circle: Morison,Kyle & Carol E. to Mess-inger, Derek; $93,000.

MOUNT AIRY5661 Little Flower Ave.: Tate,Linda J. to Carrington Mort-gage Services LLC; $79,350.

NORTH COLLEGE HILL1917 Acorn Drive: Cline,Melissa K. to Bayview LoanServicing LLC; $54,000.

6511 Betts Ave.: KS Manage-ment Properties LLC toTandjari LLC; $29,750.

8570 Bobolink Drive: King,Thomas N. to U.S. Bank NA;$32,000.

8418 Carrol Ave.: Pucke,Edward to Daugherty Cal-vin; $1,500.

1489 Clovernoll Drive: Oldig-es, Larry E. to Taylor, Del-rico; $105,900.

1504 Clovernoll Drive: Meier,Kenneth H. Tr. to Zuidema,Russell Wayne; $93,000.

7039 Noble Court: ShucktisRemodeling LLC to Moore,Jennifer Mitchell & AndreM.; $102,500.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

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

office of Hamilton County Auditor Dusty Rhodes.Neighborhood designations are approximate.

Reported at 7700 block ofHamilton Ave., April 24.

Reported at 8000 block ofHamilton Ave., April 25.

BurglaryReported at 7600 block ofClovernook, April 19.

Reported on 7600 block ofElizabeth Ave., April 30.

RobberyReported on 7800 block ofHamilton Ave., April 22.

TheftItems removed from 7700 blockof Hamilton Ave., April 19.

Wallet removed from 7300block of Hamilton Ave., April21.

$260 removed from 7900 blockof Hamilton Ave., April 26.

Poster removed from 7600block of Hamilton Ave., April27.

NORTH COLLEGE HILLIncidents/investigations

AssaultReported on 500 block of Dalyroad, April 22.

Reported on 8500 block of DalyRoad, April 24.

Breaking and enteringReported on 7100 block ofHamilton Ave., April 23.

BurglaryReported at 8200 block of FourWorlds Drive, April 15.

Reported at 1800 block ofEmerson Ave., April 24.

Criminal damagingReported on 1500 block ofCorcoran Place, April 16.

Reported on 1700 block of W.Galbraith Road, April 19.

DomesticReported on W. GalbraithRoad, April 25.

Reported on W. GalbraithRoad, April 23.

Reported on Marvin Ave., April23.

Reported on Catalpa Ave.,April 14.

Reported on W. Galbraith,April 14.

Reported on Columbine Court,April 16.

Reported on Mar Bev, April 17. Reported on Parrish Ave., April17.

Reported on Salmar, April 20. Reported on Daly Road, April22.

MenacingReported on 6400 block ofBetts Ave., April 19.

TheftVehicle removed from 6800block of Marvin Ave., April 20.

Vehicle removed from 1500block of W. Galbraith, April14.

Reported on 6800 block ofHamilton Ave., April 15.

Reported on 7100 block ofHamilton Ave., April 19.

Reported on 1600 block of W.Galbraith Road, April 19.

POLICEREPORTS

Continued from Page 5B

Page 16: Hilltop press 060816

8B • HILLTOP PRESS • JUNE 8, 2016 LIFE

WORD SEARCHBY TOM MCCOY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

No. 0605

RE

LE

AS

E D

AT

E: 6/12/2016

ACROSS

1 “Shucks!”

7 They might be covered on your first day of employment

13 Only a second ago

20 Ones with good poker faces?

21 Charm City ballplayer

22 With a leg on either side of

23 Where you can find … “jacket” or “yourself”?

25 “Yay!”

26 Lentil or coconut

27 Chinese philosophy

28 Student’s saver

29 Plus

31 … “go” or “so”?37 … “anybody” or

“cooking”?44 Dog holder

45 A.F.L.-____

46 “Over here!”

47 “Aww”-inspiring

49 Muhammad’sbirthplace

51 Lover boy

52 Like Fermat’s last theorem, eventually

53 Much appreciated

54 They decide what’s fair

55 Oteri of “S.N.L.”

56 Material in mitochondria

59 Acclaims

60 Issuer of IDs: Abbr.

61 Shade

62 Its material is not hard

64 ____-gritty

65 … “got” or “tell”?69 Result of hitting the

bar?

71 “The price we pay for love,” per Queen Elizabeth II

72 Goddess who gained immortality for her lover but forgot to ask for eternal youth (whoops!)

73 Flirtatious wife in “Of Mice and Men”

76 They stand up in their bed

77 Kind of gift

78 Sports-team bigwig

81 Cash register

82 Like the installments of “A Tale of Two Cities”

83 “Ver-r-ry funny!”

85 Abu ____

86 Obliterate

87 Suspenseful sound

90 ____ Finnigan, friend of Harry Potter

91 Contraction missing a V

92 Kind of verb: Abbr.

93 … “two” or “face”?95 … “building” or

“hours”?100 Flames that have

gone out?

101 Assist in crime

102 Indian spice mix

107 Things you may dispense with?

110 Take over for113 … “that’s” or

“special”?116 “That much is clear”117 Pays for the meal118 Stay cheerful despite

adversity119 Back entrance120 Jellyfish relatives

named for a mythologicalmonster

121 Private property?

DOWN

1 Woof2 “____ your daddy?”3 River that flows south

to north4 Sets free into the world5 “Ta-ta!”6 Directional abbr.7 “____ Nox” (Mozart

title meaning “good night”)

8 Greek vessel9 Enthusiastic Spanish

assent10 Debt docs11 Scale12 Collection13 Chin former14 “DJ Got Us Fallin’ In

Love” singer, 201015 Women’s retro

accessory16 Offensive poster17 Small bite18 Part of the classic

Chinese work “Shih Ching”

19 Puny24 “Was ____ hard on

them?”30 “____ Lat”

(traditional Polish song)

32 Subside33 Opposite of -less34 Paranormal35 Fine point36 Provokes37 Persian Empire

founder38 Impends39 ____-Loompa (Willy

Wonka employee)40 Fictional braggart41 The “O” of B.O.42 Setting for a watch?43 “We’ll teach you to

drink deep ____ you depart”: Hamlet

48 Et cetera49 Certain racy

magazines50 Lift52 “Glad that’s done!”53 Street-fair participant55 “Aww”-inspiring57 Empire State sch.58 Org. with an

emergency number61 Razz, as a speaker63 What the pros say65 Hesitates66 Default avatar for a

new Twitter user67 Reconstruction, for

one68 Contraction missing

a V69 From both sides, in

a way

70 Songs of praise

73 City whose name looks like it could mean “my friend”

74 Track holder?

75 A Beethoven piece was für her

76 Win every game

79 Exhilarated cry

80 ____ cabbage

81 “End of discussion”

84 Botanist Gray

85 “A man can be destroyed but not ____”: Hemingway

87 Age for a quinceañera

88 “… ____ quit!”

89 “The Silmarillion” creature

90 Red ____

94 Newspaper V.I.P.Baquet

96 Pollute

97 Too big for one’s britches, say?

98 Hotheadedness?

99 Disposable board

103 Let go

104 Twinkler

105 Lead-in to boy

106 Something to mourn

108 Red giant in Cetus

109 Cozy

110 Rend

111 “The Name of the Rose” novelist

112 “____ Meninas” (Velázquezpainting)

113 Highest degree

114 ____-Wan Kenobi

115 Family docs

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

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 6A

CAMARGOCADILLAC

Sales:513-891-9400Mon-Thurs 9am-9pmFri-Sat 9am-6pmSunday 12pm-4pm

Service:513-891-3533Mon-Fri 7:30am-6pmSat8am-12pm

Viewall special oUers atcamargocadillac.com

9880MontgomeryRoad,Cincinnati,OH45242

2016 CTS AWD

BUYFOR $45,000

$495LEASEFOR

Page 17: Hilltop press 060816

Careers

Jobsnew beginnings...

Administrative

Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio

Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio

Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio

Real Estate

Rentalsgreat places to live...

3006 BLUE HERON DR.Here’s a home that we sold right away. We represented both the seller and the buyer. If you are looking for a Realtor that you can count on to get the job done call The Deutsch Team. We would be glad to help you!

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

FAIRFIELD TWP.JUST

SOLD

West Shell

5428 NORTHPOINT DR.Check out this great house that we just sold in Monfort Heights. If you want the job done you have to call The Deutsch Team immediately because we are ready to sell your house NOW!

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

MONFORT HEIGHTSJUST

SOLD

West Shell

CORNERSTONEWe’re In Your Corner.

812.637.2220 WWW.CSTONEREALTY.COMBRIGHT: Clean remodeled 3 bed home w/over-sized 2 car detached garage, level yard, & plenty of parking. $129,900

W. HARRISON: 54 ACRES! Private & picturesque! Travel nearly half a mile on this ridge top driveway w/splendid views to quality custom built 2183 sq. ft. ranch brick home w/ full LL, gas & wood fireplace. Was designed w/ windows & screened porch to take advantage of views. 2x6 construction & hardwood flrs. Has some tillable land & road frontage, woods & plenty of wildlife. Within 10 minutes of Brookville exit of I-74. $499,900

YORKVILLE: 2,180 sq. ft. brick ranch home, full LL, family rm w/WBFP, breakfast nook, 1st flr laundry, 2 car attached garage & 24x38 insulated detached garage. $269,900.

Colerain 2BR, heat/water pd, newcpt., balcony, A/C, equipt., Dep.$300, Rent $695; Call 513-521-3753

Middletown Homes/Apt 2-4BR $475-$1745!

513-737-2640 orWWW.BBRENTS.COM

Price Hill/Delhi-1BR, 2nd floor,updated Kit & BA, $390/mo+$390dep, + utils. no pets, Not Sec 8

approved. 513-490-4331

Colerain - 3BR, 1BA, 2 strytownhouse, $685/mo. Cornerof Pippin & Mercury. 513-236-4875 or 276-2576

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

Hamilton/Fairfield Twp Homes2BR-4BR $775-$1745!

513-737-2640 orWWW.BBRENTS.COM

Liberty Twp/Monroe3-4BR $1395-$1595

513-737-2640 OR WWW.BBRENTS.COM

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

Non Profit office space forlease, Office space up to5,000 square feet, Secondfloor location, Space includesfree parking, Use of the6,200 square foot Fifth ThirdConvening Center at UnitedWay is included, Rent is not-for-profit friendly at $16.10 asquare foot per year and in-cludes all other occupancy-related costs, Available Imme-diately. Special offer: UnitedWay will offer three monthsfree rent on a five-year leaseterm! (513)762-7168

H A R T W E L L /E L M W O O D -Furnished rooms on busline.$90 to $100/week w/$100 dep.513-617-7923, 513-617-7924,513-919-9926

Reading, A v o n d a l e ,Elmwood & Madisonville. Re-frig, cable, laundry, utilities,Wi-Fi, bus, kitchen$85 per week & up. 513-851-0617

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

Compassionate Personwill care for your loved onein their home. Experienced

and dependable. Can do 24hours. 513-304-1130

Make BIG Money With

OUR Fairfield Township & Evendalelocations have a GREAT business

opportunity for you to own &operate your own Flatbed delivery

service!

μ BIG Income Potential with small

startup costs

μ Be home EVERY night with your

family!

μ Work for Y O U R S E L F , not

someone else!

Fairfield TownshipFor more information call

(513) 273-2180 or emailFFTPGeneralManager@

menards.com

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

menards.com

CARPENTRY- OUTSIDE Finish Trim. Must have driver’s

license and own transportation.Immediate Openings.

Full Time. 513-309-3116.

DIRECT SUPPORTPERSONNEL

Full Time and Part TimePositions

2nd & 3rd Shifts

$11.25 hourly rateNo prior experience

Paid training

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

Required

Assist persons withdevelopmental disabilities

in daily living skills andcommunity activities

in a home environment.Health insurance paid by

company, Simple IRA with 3% match,

and vacation.

$750 Sign-on Bonus (after520 hours worked)

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

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

org513-724-0094

GROOMING ASSISTANTFT or PT. $10.00-11.50/Hr.WILL TRAIN. Rich Benefits.

Email resume [email protected] or

apply online www.petwow.com/pages/

jobapp

JOBS HOMES RIDESPETS &STUFF

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

VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifiedsTO PLACE YOUR AD

Homes ofDistinction

JUNE 8, 2016 μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ 1C

Page 18: Hilltop press 060816

Community

Announceannouncements, novena...

Special Greeting

Special Notices-Clas

Special Notices-Clas

Bring a Bid

Auctiona deal for you...

General Auctions

Business

Commercialopportunites, lease, Invest...

Equipment

Farmhome grown...

Assorted

Stuffall kinds of things...

Restaurants-Hotels Restaurants-Hotels Restaurants-Hotels

Restaurants-Hotels

Management

Retail

WE’RE BUILDING OUR TEAM IN KENTUCKY!

NOW HIRING ALL POSITIONS

Career Advancement • Comprehensive Training Paid Vacation • 401k Plan • Weekly Pay

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

PICK UP AN APPLICATION AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS:

ALEXANDRIA - 6805 ALEXANDRIA PIKEHEBRON - 1960 NORTH BEND ROAD

HIGHLAND HEIGHTS - 2730 ALEXANDRIA PIKELUDLOW - 102 ELM STREET

WALTON - 625 CHESTNUT DRIVE

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

Bartlett Bearing Company, Inc.Hebron KY has an immediate

opening for a WarehouseAssociate. The Warehouse

Associate would be responsiblefor shipping, receiving, and

inventory management. This is afull time opportunity which

would require the candidate tohave the ability to lift at least

50lbs and work on their feet foran 8 hour day shift.

Bartlett Bearing offers: Competitive Salaries, Benefits

(Medical, Health, Dental),Incentive programs to all

employees, 401-K program,Vacation and Sick Pay,

Educational Reimbursement,Ongoing Training and

Development Programs, andInternal Advancement

Please submit resumes [email protected] more information about

Bartlett Bearing Company pleasevisit www.bartlettbearing.com

or call 800-523-3382

MAINTENANCEMECHANIC

Neighborhood Foundations isseeking a qualified individual for

the full time position ofMaintenance Mechanic. Duties

include a variety of painting,electrical, plumbing, carpentry,preventive maintenance, work

orders, and apartment turn overs.Includes general maintenance of

grounds and exterior of buildings.Must possess a valid driver’s

license and be insurable.Experience with HVAC is a plus.

Excellent benefits package.E-mail resumes to

[email protected] mail to Neighborhood

Foundations, HR Dept., PO Box72459, Newport, KY 41072.

Equal Opportunity Employer.

P/T Office Help FlorenceMon Wed Fri

Must have office experience 513-922-1660

Security Officers$10-13.00

Job Fair June 9th 10-2 pmHilton Cincinnati Airport

7373 Turfway RoadFlorence, Kentucky

Imm. FT/PT opportunitiesBenefits & Advancement

Apply first @ www.ussecurityassociates.com

VETERINARY ASSISTANT FT or PT. $27K-30K/Year(FT). WILL TRAIN. Email

resume [email protected] or

apply onlinewww.petwow.com/pages

/jobapp

Licensed Practical Nurse Accepting applications at:

Sunrise Manor & Convalescent Center

3434 St. Rt. 132,Amelia, OH 45102

(513) 797-5144

State Tested Nurse AidAccepting applications at:

Sunrise Manor &Convalescent Center

3434 St. Rt. 132,Amelia, OH 45102

(513) 797-5144

GRAND RE OPENING!FRISCH’S BIG BOYCOVINGTON, KY

HIRING ALL POSITIONS *Great starting salaries * Flexible schedules * Paid Training * Free shirts * Paid Vacation * Discounted meals * Health Care benefits * Direct Deposit

Apply in person from 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.Monday thru Friday at

520 W. 5th Street , Covington, KY 41011Or online www.frischs.com

Frisch’s is an equal opportunity employerIncluding the disabled

Nurses needed for skilled focused, transitional care environment.

Must possess strong clinical, customer service & organizational skills.

Exp preferred. Competitive salary.New higher shift and weekend diffs!

Health Insurance $98/mo.

Apply online to join our team!

Nurses Full Time - Nights

www.carespring.com/employment

Citizens Bank of N KYAsst. Br. Manager-

Crestview Hills.Also hiring P/T Tellers

Details & onlineapplication at:

https://citizensbanknkycareers-

farmerscapital.icims.comAA/EOE/Male/Female/

Disability/ Veteran

REGISTERED SANITARIAN ORSANITARIAN-IN-TRAINING

Clermont County Public Healthneeds a Registered Sanitarian ofSanitarian-In-Training. Full time

field position in Water and WasteDivision to inspect septic system

installations, investigatecomplaints, and supervise privatewater programs. Must have B.S.Degree that meets qualificationsof Ohio State Board of SanitarianRegulation. Competitive pay andfull benefits. Apply online only atwww.clermontcountyohio.gov

click on "How Do I?" and then"Career Listings."

Contact Robert Wildey [email protected]

with general questions.

MOTEL CLERK/MANAGERSmall motel in Grant Co. Free

apt+pay. Great for elderly and/ora couple. 859-963-2755

Florist Shop AssistantCreative, out-going person withknowledge of flowers, or withfloral design experience. Parttime position. Flexible hours.

25 - 30 hrs/wk. At least 26 yrs old.Nature Nook Florist & Wine

Shop. Call Jackie at513.520.9449

Bulk Tanker Drivers WantedC-Jams Trucking, Wilder KY

Division. Home Nightly. Health Insand Paid Holidays.

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

or apply at cjamstrucking.com

Delivery DriversNow Hiring CDL A, CDL B,drivers for local beverage

delivery. Competitive wages,401k, great benefits. Cleanbackground and drug free.

Submit applicationsonline at

www.heidelbergdistributing.com/careers

or in person atHeidelberg DistributingCompany, 1518 Dalton

Ave, Cincinnati, OH45214. Mon-Fri

8am – 5pm. EOE

Drivers: Get Home. No-Touch! Excellent Weekly

Pay! Strong FamilyBenefits Package.

Monthly Bonuses! CDL-A1yr exp. 888-406-9046

Drivers WantedClass A & B

Immediate PositionsAvailable

Call Rick @ Frate Inc.859-586-3800

Used Oil Recovery TruckDriver needed inCincinnati, Ohio.

Hourly paidCDL driver, typically works

M-Femptying customer’s

used oiltanks. Qualifiedcandidates will

possess a Class B CDL;excellent driving

record, good customerservice skills,

and have the ability towork independently.

High School Diploma orGED required.

For consideration, applyonline at

www.nobleoil.com or atyour local

Employment SecurityCommission office.

“EOE. Veterans/Disabled”

Viessman Trucking is hiringqualified tanker drivers in the

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

profit sharing. Qualifiedapplicants are eligible for a

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

1 year OTR experience or 6months of experience for trucking

school graduates and a gooddriving record.

Contact Bill directly at937-454-6490.

THANK YOU SACRED HEARTOF JESUS & ST JUDE. Forprayers answered -SMH

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

Complete Treatment SystemHardware Stores, The Home

Depot, homedepot.com

Service Technician PositionAvailableStarrag USA Inc. is lookingfor qualified machine toolservice technician to serviceStarrag Group equipmentthroughout North America.This is an excellent opportu-nity for an experienced pro-fessional to join a qualitymachine tool builder withcompetitive pay and bene-fits. Ability to travel fulltime to customer locationsthroughout North Americais required.

The candidate must have 5years or more experiencein:- Installation and repair ofCNC machine tools.- Both Mechanical and Elec-trical troubleshooting, serv-icing and repair.- Siemens 840D control.Power line and Solutionline.

Only applicants meeting allof the above requirementswill be considered.Submit resume to:[email protected]

ABSOLUTE AUCTIONOnline Only

5.84 acresNorris Lake Front Tract

Mariner Point Rd.,LaFollette

760 ft deep water lake frontCity Water, Unrestricted

www.ayersauctionrealty.com TAL 407

For Lease-Heart of GreenhillsRetail/Office/Workshop/Service;200-8,000 SF available, immediateoccupancy w/flexible lease terms.Rents from $2 SF+CAM. Pleasecontact Steve at 513-348-1828 oremail:[email protected]

Southeastern Indiana - 140acres (100 woods, 40 tillable),2 barns, stocked pond, water& electric, abundant wildlife,so peaceful & quiet. $449,000;

812-593-2948

BEAUTIFUL

BURLINGTON ANTIQUE SHOW

Boone County FairgroundsBurlington, KY

Sunday, June 19------------

8am-3pm $3.00/AdultEarly Buying

6am-8am $5/AdultRain or Shine513-922-6847

burlingtonantiqueshow.com

GREENHILLS SHOWS 1st Saturday of Every Month

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

11100 Winton Rd., 45218

Indoor/Outdoor2 Tables for $15

Call 513-825-3099for reservations.

For Sale Two cemetery lotsin Arlington Memorial Gar-dens, Double crypt, SectionA, Lot 16 , Graves 2A-2B,$4,500; (513)[email protected]

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

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

Same Day DeliveryBunk Bed 2x6 splitables sol

wd $199Bunkies (the very Best)

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

starting tonight!Hundreds of Sauders pieces

from $29Liv Rm Suites, 2 piece sets

from $499Elec adjustable beds $795

complete with memory foammattress

Futons- wood & metal & fu-ton mattresses

Memory Foam queen mat-tress $379

King Prem Matt Sets 18"$499-$799

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

868 Eads Pkwy.,Lawrenceburg, IN

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

513-383-2785!Mattress & Furniture Express

mattressandfurnitureexpress.com

GUARANTEED FINANC-ING!

EVERYONE’S APPROVED!

Electric Wheelchair, Hoveround,Jazzy traveler $395, Pride Jet7 w/new batteries.513-886-9960

HANDYMAN Experienced, Reasonable, No Job Too big orToo Small. Call Steve 513-491-6672

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

HANDOUT THECIGARS!Celebratewith aannouncement.

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

Find yournew home

todayStress-free home searches

powering real estate searchor over 365 newspapers

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

Masonry

AAA+ CLEANING Do you needhelp with pesky household chores?No worries. Call Kathryn at 859-992-6519. Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly orone time. RRR

ChampionConcrete & Stone

Landscapes•Driveways •Patios •Steps

•Porches •Sidewalks•Retaining Walls •Pavers

513-288-8855Over 25 Years Experience

DECORATE YOUR YARD TODAY!

LOW Cost Tree Service - Trim,Top & Removal. 30 yrs exp.

Free est. Sr disc.George 513-477-2716

CALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

Service Directory

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post jobs.

2C μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ JUNE 8, 2016

Page 19: Hilltop press 060816

Yard and Outdoor

Adopt Me

Petsfind a new friend...

Automotive

Ridesbest deal for you...

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

www.cincytestrips.com

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

Slot Machines, Tools,Electronics, Firearms

& CollectiblesWith 2 Locations

3236 W. Galbraith3621 Harrison Ave

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

Absolute HighestCash Buyer!

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

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

Records (513) 473-5518

# I BUY VINYL RECORDSRock, Metal, Punk, Indie,R&B, Reggae, etc. We makehouse calls. 513-258-0535

$$$ PAID for LPs,CDs-ROCK,BLUES, INDIE, METAL, JAZZ,

ETC + VINTAGE STEREOEQUIP, DVDs & MEMORABIL-

IA. 50 YRS COMBINEDBUYING EXPERIENCE!

WE CAN COME TO YOU!513-591-0123

SAME DAY CASH PAID!for Baseball Cards Pre-1978, Singlecards, sets, and collections, alsogame used bats."I am not a dealerso I can pay you More!" 513-236-6804

Daylillies Field Sale of 100’s pf col-orful varieties. June 11th, 18th &25th & July 9th, 9am-5pm. 3595

Fender RdCamp Springs Ky. 859-630-1711

www.arrasmithfarm.com

** Landscaping - Professio-nal & Affordable **, We doCleanups, Mulch,Hardscapes, Pavers & Retain-ing Walls, Trim & Plant Trees,Shrubs and Bushes, PressureWashing, Stump Grindingand more... Call today for aFREE Estimate, $$FREE Esti-mate. (859)206-9423 [email protected]

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

Goldendoodle Pupp iesavailable to adopt soon.Shots, deworking, CKC pa-pers. $975 513-403-9696

Goldendoodle, Standard,Teddy Bear Puppies, Avail.end of July, $1,200, takingdeps. 513-344-7929

Kittens - FREE to a goodhome. black & white, tiger,black, short hair, 8 -10wks,513-941-0093

Mini Schnauzer pups AKC,Taking deposits, Male & Fe-males, Vet checked, shots &wormed $600 513-283-6343

Puppies, English Bulldog, 2males, 2 females, $3000.00,8 weeks, Tri, various colors,Excellent Sire Incognito EliBlue and Dam Incognito ZoeMahogany Brindle. Supercolorful litter! Champion lin-eage! DO NOT MISS OUT ONTHIS INCREDIBLE LITTER!!!!Call 740-710-9646 or visit ourwebsite at www.incognitoroth.com! (740)710-9646 [email protected]

Westie Puppies- CKC & PED. POP,M-$650, F-$700. Vet @ , championbloodline 513-284-2487

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

Week. 513-605-0063

2008 CADILLAC CTS 3.6, BLACK,EXCELLENT CONDITION.

CALL 859-912-1026

Buick 2004 LeSabre, Se-dan, 97000 mi., 4 dr., Auto-matic, Good cond., Goldext., Tan int., 06 Cylinders,FWD, $3995. Tom (513)873-0145

Mazda 2007 RX-8, Coupe,74000 mi.,new motor at62000, adult owned dealermaintained, 2 dr., Manual,Excellent cond., Red ext.,Black int., RWD, A/C: Front,Airbag: Driver, Airbag: ,Alarm, Alloy Wheels, Anti-Lock Brakes, Bucket Seats,CD Player, Cruise Control,Fog Lights, Moonroof, PowerLocks, Power Steering, Pre-mium Sound, Rear WindowDefroster, Remote KeylessEntry, Bra , spoiler, seat cov-ers, all season mats , suicidedoors, $8999.00. Rick(859)628-0419

Mercedes-Benz 2011 E-Class, Convertible, 59,500mi., 2 dr., Automatic, Excel-lent cond., Silver ext., Tani n t . ,VIN#WDDKK5GF9BF058396, 06 Cylinders, RWD, A/C:Front, A/C: Rear, Airbag:Driver, Airbag: Passenger,Airbag: Side, Alarm, AlloyWheels, Anti-Lock Brakes,Bucket Seats, CD Player,Cruise Control, Fog Lights,Leather Interior, MemorySeats, Navigation System,Power Locks, Power Seats,Power Steering, Power Win-dows, Premium Sound,Rear Window Defroster, Re-mote Keyless Entry, TintedGlass, Highly maintained,garage kept; extended,transferable factory warran-ty thru 6/26/2017; loaded-too many options to list.,$27,500. Bruce J. Baker(513)769-9977

RV LOTS FOR RENT Dale HollowLake Full hookup, minutes fromState Park. dalehollowrvlots.com317-502-6999

GMC 2002 YUKON SLT, 4WD,Gray, leather, M/roof, rear air, 3rdseat, new tires, exc. cond., 156Kmi., $6,700. 513-851-9880

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Garage Sales Garage Sales

Garage Sales

Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

Butler County Flea Marketat Butler County Fairgrounds.TUESDAYS 9am to 3pmJune 7, 14, 28, July 12, 19

Rain (indoor) or ShineLike us on Facebook???’s 513-382-8696

HISTORIC 91st ANNUALSHANDON

STRAWBERRYFESTIVAL

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

*Church Dinner from noonHomemade Ice Cream andStrawberry Shortcakes

from 10 a.m.*40+ Vendors* Pony Rides

*Antique Tractor ShowFree Rides to

Salty Dog MuseumFew Vendor Spaces

Still AvailableOho St. Rt. 126 west of Ross

513-738-0491

Annual Biscayne Avenue Street Sale

Saturday, June 11th 9am-2pm

Blue Ash, Neighborhood Ga-rage Sale, 9648 SycamoreTrace Court, June 4 from8:30-noon; 10+ families;Household items, books,bed, children clothes, adultclothes, toys, puzzles etc, Dir:Just off Reed Hartman (nearCross County) - SycamoreTrace Neighborhood

BRIDGETOWN: 6215 Kingoak Dr.(Off of Ebenezer, across from OakHills HS)

Saturday, June 11 8a-3phousehold, baby/kids toys, StarWars, guitar/music items,stamp/accessories, clothing, furni-ture & more

Bridgetown, Garage Sale, 4158Westwood Northern Blvd, Thur: 8-4, Fri: 8-4, Sat: 8-2, Kids clothes &toys, home decorating items, die-cast cars & trucks, lots of CLEANmisc. Rain or shine.,

Bridgetown- Sat 6/11, 9a-2p5236 Valley Ridge Multi

Family Sale. Lots of everything!

CELEBRATE KIDS!50% OFF

All Kids’ Books, Toys, ClothesFriday & Saturday, June 10 & 11

10am to 4pmThe Franciscan Peddler Thrift Shop

60 Compton Rd. 45215Proceeds benefit the Ministries ofThe Franciscan Sisters of The Poor

CINCINNATI: AnnualNeighborhood Steet Sale

Windridge Cr, Tyson Ct, Race Rd,Saturday, June 11th, 8am-2pm

Rain Delay, June 18Lots of good items

Colerain- The Yacht ClubTownhomes Garage Sale,Saturday June 11, 8a-3p,Rain or Shine Streets include:Courageous, Enterprise,Resolute & IntrepidDir: Colerain to Dryridge toChallenger.

COLERAIN TWP: 3119 Elkhorn DrJune 10 8am-4pm

heavy duty guage 3 story ladder,tools, tupperware, handicap ac-cessories, CB radio, furniture,something for everyone, toomuch to mention

Colerain Twp- Mult FamilyYard Sale Sat. June 11, 8a-4p;2825 Regal Ln, 45251, Furni-ture, bikes, baby items,clothes, pictures and more!!

College Hill- Meryton PlaceStreet Sale 7+ Homes Sat.June 11, 8a-1p Collectibles,furniture, antiques. YouName it!!

DELHI HUGE YARD SALE5620 Treeview Dr (off

Neeb Rd). Fri 6/10, 8a-2p& Sat 6/11, 8a-1p: Lots &

lots of things at a greatprice!No Early birds Please

DELHI OH5001 Bonaventure Ct

June 11th, 8am-12pm:Bookcase, children’s

clothes, toys, tv stand, ex-ercise bike & misc items

Evendale- Garage Sale, SaturdayJune 11, 8a-2p, 9696 Rexford Dr.45241. Household, outdoor,misc. furniture

Finneytown, Multi-Family GarageSale, 980 Springbrook Dr., Fri&Sat:8a-3p,6/10&11; Exercise bike, P90X3,golf bag, AC units, grill, Schwinn 10-spd bike, antiques, toys, householditems, Huge Variety! 5 houses

Florence Ky- Estate Sale25 New Uri Ave-410423 day sale 6/10, 9a-5m, num-bers avail @ 8:45, 6/11, 9a-5m& 6/12, 1p-5p: Large estae of68 yrs! Contents of a 2 storuhome, basment, garage.Items from 30’s, 40’s, 50’s,60’s to current. Signed art-work to include Janot &Jelinek, old toys, trucks,games, Derby glass datingback to 50’s, pottrey Rose-ville, Weller, Haeger, oldclocks, old drum sets,Glockenstiel, xylophone, oldtv & radios, old fishing items,old poker chips, Shelby bike,old sewing machines, brassbeds, school desk, dropleaftables, painted fire screen,china, quilts, costume jewel-ry, old holiday, dressers,chest, beds, linens, books,old frig, old boats, mowers,chain saws, yard & handtools, electronics, to much tolist all priced to sell. Info &pic hsestatesales.com or859-468-9468. Dir: Hwy 42 toNew Uri.

Friendship Flea Market,Freindship, IN.

June 11-June 19,Open Daily 9am

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

859-341-9188www.friendshipfleamarket.com

Bring this ad for $1 offparking Monday - Thursday.

GREEN HILLS: 187 Farragut RdSaturday, June 11th 11am-4pm

bikes, clothing, kitchen applian-ces & more

GUITAR SALE 50% OFFWESTERN HILLS MUSIC

513-598-9000

Hebron, Annual CommunityYard Sale, Fister Place Blvd.,Sat: June 11 8-2, Dir: off Pe-tersburg Rd. one mile Westof Rte. 237

Mt Airey- Raeburn NeighborhoodSale! Multiple Houses withMultiple Family. Friday & Saturday June 10 & 11; 9am to 2pm

Price Hill-Garage Sale, Saturday,June 11, 8:30a-12:30pm,1115 Olivia Ln. Patio tablew/5 chairs, signed RobertFabe, glass coffee table,Lenox Chirp (4), mirror,Blackbird arts, much more.Rain Cancels.

Price Hill Multi Family SaleEnright Ave. Sat 6/11& Sun 6/12, 9-4: 1950’s

lawn furniture, kidsclothes, home decor,

lots of misc

SERIOUSLY EV ER Y TH IN GBUT THE HOUSE SALE!Estate/Garage Sale, Sat 6/4,9am-3pm, 832 Sabino Ct,Finneytown, Jewerly, fridge,washer, tons of furniture,lighting, cabinets, tools, yarditems, & misc. items. EVERY-THING MUST GO ASAP !Low prices and a lot of MakeMe an O F F E R S! Rain orshine!

Springfield Twp- Multi FamilyGarage Sale. June 10 & 11; 9a-3p 10124 & 10133 LOCHCREST DRDining table, wood desk,rocking/high chair, loft bed(twin), antique sewing mach., 2passenger bike carrier, kid’sbike, lots of misc.

WEST CHESTER: Beckett RidgeAnnual Community Garage SaleSaturday, June 11th 8am-4pm

RT 747, E on Smith Rd toBeckett Ridge Blvd.

www.beckett-ridge.or g

White Oak- Olde SavannahGarage Sale; Saturday, June 11,9-3 Rain or Shine. Cash Only.Dir: Colerain to GalbraithLeft to Olde Savannah.

White Oak: Pond Plants, Perrennials,Herbs, Native Wild Flowers, Hardy

Cactus, Winter HardyJune 10 & 11 9a-3p

3506 Jessup Rd, 45239

Wyoming Street SaleSat June 4th, 9am-1pmRain Date 6/11Ritchie & Garden Circle

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

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

JUNE 8, 2016 μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ 3C

Page 20: Hilltop press 060816

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

The Springfield Township Zoning Commission will hold apublic hearing at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, June 20, 2016 in theTownship Administration Building, 9150 Winton Road, Cin-cinnati, Ohio 45231. The purpose of this hearing is to con-sider case ZC2016-002, application of Springfield TownshipBoard of Trustees and Finneytown Local School District,seeking approval under the Springfield Township ZoningResolution for a Zone Map Amendment from R-2 & R-3 Res-idential to SP-PUD Special Purpose Planned Unit Develop-ment for the following listed properties:

LOCATION: Parcel Number Current Zoning Classification590-0213-0063 R-2590-0212-0001 R-2590-0212-0002 R-2590-0212-0004 R-2590-0212-0005 R-2590-0212-0006 R-2590-0212-0260 R-2590-0213-0272 R-3590-0212-0276 R-2590-0204-0102 R-2590-0204-0004 R-2590-0204-0005 R-2590-0204-0006 R-2590-0204-0008 R-2590-0204-0009 R-2590-0204-0010 R-2

The application is available for viewing at the TownshipAdministration Building, 9150 Winton Road, from 8:00 a.m.until 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Interested citi-zens are welcome to attend the public hearing. At the con-clusion of the hearing, the Zoning Commission will submita recommendation to the Springfield Township Board ofTrustees for its action.

Submitted by:Christopher Gilbert, Development Services Director522-1410202HT,June8,’16#1324921

NOTICE OF HEARING

Notice is hereby given that apublic hearing will be heldby the Springfield TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals onTuesday, June 21, 2016 at5:30 p.m., in the SpringfieldTownship AdministrationBuilding, 9150 Winton Road,for the purpose of hearing anappeal, filed by JohnGrigsby, on behalf of theproperty owner, as providedby the Springfield TownshipZoning Resolution. The Ap-pellant is seeking conditionaluse construct an accessorystructure on existing churchproperty.

LOCATION: 1927 W. Kemper RoadCincinnati, OH 45240Book 590, Page 415, Parcel 001

Plans are on file and openfor public inspection and re-view in the SpringfieldTownship Administration Of-fice, 9150 Winton Road, Cin-cinnati, Ohio, during normalbusiness hours.

Office Hours:Monday through Friday8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Submitted by:Christopher Gilbert, Devel-opment Services Director513.522.1410202HT,June8,’16#1326279

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING

The Springfield TownshipZoning Commission will holda public hearing at 5:30 p.m.on Monday June 20, 2016 inthe Township AdministrationBuilding, 9150 Winton Road,Cincinnati, Ohio 45231. Thepurpose is to consider caseZC2016-003 an application tomodify the exterior façadeof an existing restaurantwithin the Winton CorridorOverlay District.

The property is zoned “B-2”General Business

LOCATION:8505 Winton RoadCincinnati, OH 45231Book 590 Page 221 Parcel 215

The application is availablefor viewing at the TownshipAdministration Building,9150 Winton Road, from 8:00a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Mondaythrough Friday. Interestedcitizens are welcome to at-tend the public hearing.202HT,June8,’16#1324942

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING

The Springfield TownshipZoning Commission will holda public hearing at 5:30 p.m.on Monday June 20, 2016 inthe Township AdministrationBuilding, 9150 Winton Road,Cincinnati, Ohio 45231. Theappellant is seeking appro-val under the SpringfieldTownship Zoning Resolutionand the Winton Road Corri-dor Overlay District in orderto construct a new restau-rant establishment.

The property is zoned “B-2”General Business

LOCATION: 9200 Winton RoadCincinnati, OH 45231Book 590 Page 180 Parcel 764

The application is availablefor viewing at the TownshipAdministration Building,9150 Winton Road, from 8:00a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Mondaythrough Friday. Interestedcitizens are welcome to at-tend the public hearing.202HT,June8,’16#1325007

PUBLIC HEARING

The Colerain Township Zon-ing Commission will hold apublic hearing on Tues.,June 21, 2016 at 6:00 p.m. atthe Colerain TownshipGovernment Complex, 4200Springdale Rd., Cincinnati,OH. Case No. ZA2016-04 –Zone Map Amendment. Lo-cation: 3680 Springdale Rd.Parcel No’s. 510-0103-0078-00.Applicant/Owner: TimBeischel, 6007 Eden PlaceDr., Cincinnati, OH. Re-quest: Zone Map Amend-ment from R-4 SuburbanMedium-Residential Districtto B-2 General BusinessDistrict. Application: Theapplication may be exam-ined at the ColerainTownship Planning & Zoningoffice located at 4200 Spring-dale Rd., Cincinnati, OH,Monday-Friday between 8a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Afterconclusion of this hearing, arecommendation will bemade to the ColerainTownship Board of Trustees.201,NWP,Jun8,’16#1276036

NOTICE OF HEARING

Notice is hereby given that apublic hearing will be heldby the Springfield TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals onTuesday, June 21, 2016 at5:30 p.m., in the SpringfieldTownship AdministrationBuilding, 9150 Winton Road,for the purpose of hearing anappeal, filed by RobertaArnold, the property owner,as provided by theSpringfield Township ZoningResolution. The Appellant isrequesting a variance appro-val to construct a deck thatencroaches within the frontyard setback.

LOCATION: 10727 Mill RoadCincinnati, OH 45240Book 590, Page 391, Parcel 391

Plans are on file and openfor public inspection and re-view in the SpringfieldTownship Administration Of-fice, 9150 Winton Road, Cin-cinnati, Ohio, during normalbusiness hours.

Office Hours Monday throughFriday 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Submitted by:Christopher Gilbert, Devel-opment Services Director513.522.1410202HT,June8,’16#1326139

PUBLIC HEARING

The Colerain TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals willhold a public hearing onWed., June 22, 2016 at 6:30p.m. at the Colerain TownshipGovernment Complex, 4200Springdale Rd., Cincinnati,OH for the following case:BZA2016-07 – Variances re-quested from the followingzoning provisions: Section8.3.1 pertaining to the mini-mum and maximum lot cov-erage with impervious surfa-ces. Section 13.3.2(B) per-taining to the maximum al-lowable number of parkingspaces. Section 13.4.1(D)pertaining to the street buf-fer for parking along a pub-lic street. Section 18.8.3(G)pertaining to wall signage onthe south side of the build-ing. Location: 9890 ColerainAve., Cincinnati, OH. Appli-cant: Julie Shirk, GPDGroup. The application maybe examined Mon.-Fri., 8a.m.-4:30 p.m. at the Coler-ain Township Planning &Zoning Dept., 4200 SpringdaleRd., Cincinnati, OH 45251.201NWP,June8,’16#1301246

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Separate, sealed proposalsfor each of the requirementsset forth below will be re-ceived at the Northwest Lo-cal School District Board ofEducation at 3240 BanningRoad, Cincinnati, Ohio 45239until 10:00 A.M. - LOCALTIME, June 21st, 2016

Said work consisting of:White Oak Middle SchoolTrack

Complete digital project bid-ding documents are availa-ble at www.questcdn.com.You may download the digi-tal plan documents for $10by going to Kleingers.comand clicking on “Project BidInformation” on the bottom,left-hand side of the page.Or by inputting Quest proj-ect #4522154 on the website’sProject Search page. Pleasecontact QuestCDN.com at952-233-1632 or [email protected] for assistance in freemembership registration,downloading, and workingwith this digital project in-formation.

Copies of the contract bid-ding documents may be ob-tained from:

The Kleingers Group, 6305Centre Park Drive, WestChester, Ohio 45069; 513-779-7851

Documents will be forward-ed at bidder’s expense. Anon-refundable deposit of$100.00 per set is required.

All questions regarding in-terpretation of the contractbidding documents shall bereferred to The KleingersGroup, Attn: Brad D’Agnil-lo, 6305 Centre Park Drive,West Chester, OH 45069; 513-779-7851. All questions mustbe received no later than10:00am on June 15th, 2016.

No bids may be withdrawnfor at least 60 days after thescheduled closing time forreceipt of bids.

The cost estimate for thiswork is $80,000.00.

Board of Education – North-west Local School District201NWP,June8,15,’16#1321939

Public NoticeIn accordance with the pro-visions of State law, therebeing due and unpaid charg-es for which the undersignedis entitled to satisfy an own-er and/or manager’s lien ofthe goods hereinafter descri-bed and stored at the UncleBob’s Self Storagelocation(s) listed below.And, due notice having beengiven, to the owner of saidproperty and all partiesknown to claim an interesttherein, and the time speci-fied in such notice for pay-ment of such having expired,the goods will be sold at pub-lic auction at the below stat-ed location(s)to the highestbidder or otherwise disposedof on Monday, June 20, 2016@ 11AM, 11378 SpringfieldPike, Springdale, OH 45246,(513)771-5311

Kim Gibert P.O. Box 141443Cincinnati, OH 45250-1443Household Goods/Furniture,TV/Stereo Equipment,Tools/Appliances, OfficeFurniture/Machines/Equipment,Account Records/Sales Sam-ples, Boxes, Sporting Goods,Child’s Motorcycle, Child’sBike.

Doneta N. Dawson 711 Bancroft CircleSpringdale, OH 45246Household Goods/Furniture,TV/Stereo Equipment,Tools/Appliances, OfficeFurniture/Machines/Equipment.

Centica Jones1630 Linden Dr. Apt. 948Cincinnati, OH 45224Household Goods/Furniture,TV/Stereo Equipment, Boxes.203TRI,Jun1,8,’16#1312528

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING

The Planning Commission ofthe Village of Evendale willconduct a public hearing be-ginning at 6:00 pm on Tues-day, June 21, 2016 in theCouncil Chambers atEvendale Village MunicipalBuilding, 10500 ReadingRoad. The purpose of thepublic hearing will be to con-sider a proposed text amend-ment to the Evendale ZoningCode Section 1258.02, per-taining to off street parkingand signage.

Copies of all documents re-lated to the public hearingare on file in the EvendaleBuilding Department. Theymay be inspected duringnormal business hours. Thepublic is invited to attendand comment at the publichearing.

Planning CommissionVillage of Evendale203TRI,June8,15,’16#1312853

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice 1:The Colerain TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals willhold a public hearing onWed., June 22, 2016 at 6:30p.m. at the ColerainTownship Government Com-plex, 4200 Springdale Rd.,Cincinnati, OH for the fol-lowing case: BZA2016-06 –Variances requested fromthe following zoning provi-sions: Section 8.3.1 pertain-ing to the maximum lot cov-erage with impervious surfa-ces. Section 12.11.1(A) per-taining to exterior wall planebreaks or offsets for wallsover 60 feet in length. Sec-tion 12.11.1(B)(1) pertainingto the roof cornice require-ment for a projection of atleast 8 inches from the wallsurface. Section 13.3.2(B)pertaining to the maximumallowable number of parkingspaces. Section 13.4.1(C)pertaining to the setback ofparking from a building.Section 13.4.1(D) pertainingto the street buffer for park-ing along a public street.Section 13.4.2(B)(1) pertain-ing to the sidewalk require-ment along a public street.Section 14.5.1 pertaining tothe streetscape landscapingbuffer along a public street.Section 14.5.2(A)(1) pertain-ing to the minimum setbackof parking from an adjoiningresidential district. Section14.6.1 pertaining to interiorlandscape islands require-ments. Section 14.6.2 per-taining to the maximumparking spaces in a continu-ous row without beingbroken with a landscapeisland. Section 14.6.3 per-taining to the landscape re-quirements for interior park-ing islands. Location: 3211Lina Place, Cincinnati, OH.Applicant: Ron and BrianLiette, Owner: Roller FunLLC. The application maybe examined Mon.-Fri., 8a.m.-4:30 p.m. at the Coler-ain Township Planning &Zoning Dept., 4200 Spring-dale Rd., Cincinnati, OH45251.201,NWP,Jun8,’16#1299944

NOTICE OF HEARING

Notice is hereby given that apublic hearing will be heldby the Springfield TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals onTuesday, June 21, 2016 at5:30 p.m., in the SpringfieldTownship AdministrationBuilding, 9150 Winton Road,for the purpose of hearing anappeal, filed by JohnGrigsby, on behalf of theproperty owner, as providedby the Springfield TownshipZoning Resolution. The Ap-pellant is seeking a condi-tional use approval to allowthe church to place and uti-lize an electronic messageboard sign.

LOCATION: 12191 Mill RoadCincinnati, OH 45240Book 590, Page 411, Parcel 003

Plans are on file and openfor public inspection and re-view in the SpringfieldTownship Administration Of-fice, 9150 Winton Road, Cin-cinnati, Ohio, during normalbusiness hours.

Office Hours: Monday through Friday8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Submitted by:Christopher Gilbert, Devel-opment Services Director513.522.1410202HT,June8,’16#1326312

PUBLIC HEARING

The Colerain TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals willhold a public hearing onWed., June 22, 2016 at 6:30p . m . at the ColerainTownship Government Com-plex, 4200 Springdale Rd.,Cincinnati, OH for the fol-lowing case: BZA2016-08 –Variances requested fromthe following zoning provi-sions: Section 10.4.2(D)(1)pertaining to maximum timeallowed for a temporarystorage container. Location:2700 Buell Rd., Cincinnati,OH. Applicant: Joe Walter,Great Parks of HamiltonCounty. The application maybe examined Mon.-Fri., 8a.m.-4:30 p.m. at the Coler-ain Township Planning &Zoning Dept., 4200 Spring-dale Rd., Cincinnati, OH45251.201NWP,June8,’16#1302496

PUBLIC NOTICE

The following legislation waspassed at the June 1, 2016Springdale City Councilmeeting:

ORDINANCE No. 15-2016AMENDING SECTION 72.38OF THE CODIFIED ORDI-NANCES OF THE CITY OFSPRINGDALE REGULAT-ING THE USE OF TINTEDGLASS AND DECLARINGAN EMERGENCY

Kathy McNearClerk of Council/FinanceDirector203TRI,Jun8,’16#1331127

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