16
E ASTERN H ILLS E ASTERN H ILLS JOURNAL 75¢ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving Columbia Township, Columbia-Tusculum, Fairfax, Hyde Park, Madisonville, Mariemont, Mt. Lookout, Oakley, Terrace Park Vol. 34 No. 35 © 2014 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED News .......................... 248-8600 Retail advertising .............. 768-8404 Classified advertising ......... 242-4000 Delivery ........................ 576-8240 See page A2 for additional information Contact us BREADER IDEAS B3 Rita welcomes High Holy Days, fall with recipes. GET MORE INFORMATION Get local news every day on your Cincinnati.com mobile app. CE-0000602389 Art Affaire Super Star Sponsors Art Affaire 65 Artists - Live Music - Raffle & Split the Pot - Food and Drinks by Lehr’s Prime Market, Bite Restaurant, Sweet Frog, and Steamin’ Joes September 27, 2014 11am – 5pm Promont House Museum • 906 Main St. Milford Milford’s Premier Arts & Fine Craft Show Michal Adams Marc Wavra Robbin Weingartner Roger Ross Jason Parsley Doug Sovonick Greater Milford Area Historical Society Facebook.com/ArtAffaire Now you can get more for your dollar! In the next seven to 10 days your carri- er will be collecting for your Eastern Hills Journal. When you pay your carrier the monthly charge of $3.50, you will receive a coupon worth $3.50 off a classified ad. Not only will you be helping to supple- ment your carrier’s in- come, you will also be sav- ing money doing it. COLLECTION TIME East Hyde Park tackles parking problem HYDE PARK A newly formed committee will tackle the parking problem in East Hyde Park with a vengeance. A traffic study is already un- derway by the city at the encour- agement of East Hyde Park rep- resentatives. This study comes on the heels of forming an East Hyde Park Master Plan Steering Committee. “We really started this July 2013 with a survey and have been working with key stake- holders,” said John Jarczyk, who spearheaded the formation of the committee. These stakehold- ers include residents and busi- ness owners. The survey indicated that parking remains an ongoing con- cern in the East Hyde Park area. “We have formally kicked off (a) parking and traffic study,” Jarczyk said. The study is being conduced by the Cincinnati De- partment of Transportation and Engineering. Jarczyk said the traffic study will take from four to six weeks. He said once data is available, the steering committee will be- gin formulating possible park- ing solutions. He said at that time a brain- storming session which will in- volve not only the steering com- mittee, but the entire communi- ty is planned. Jarczyk antici- pates this will be sometime at the end of October. Although parking is one of the primary topics, Jarczyk said the committee will also be creat- ing a master plan for the com- munity that will focus on devel- oping a new streetscape, en- hancing greenspace locations and improving the area for pe- destrians and cyclists. The 100th anniversary of East Hyde Park next year served as a catalyst for all of this, according to Jarczyk. A kick off of the centennial By Forrest Sellers [email protected] See PARKING, Page A2 Milford’s annual Art Af- faire is nine years old, but that doesn’t mean there won’t be anything new at the arts and fine crafts festival Saturday, Sept. 27. For the first time, food and beverages will be sold there by local businesses such as Bite restaurant of 1279 state Route 131 in Milford, Lehr’s Prime Market of 740 Main St. in Milford, Steamin’ Joe’s res- taurant of 6096 West Chester Road in West Chester Town- ship and SweetFrog frozen yo- gurt of 4450 Eastgate Blvd. in Eastgate. “We have always offered food and beverages at Art Af- faire,” said Donna Amann, ad- ministrator of the Greater Milford Area Historical Soci- ety, which is presenting Art Affaire from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the grounds of the Promont House Museum at 906 Main St. in Milford. “But we have expanded this year by inviting local food and beverage businesses to set up on the grounds. “We’re pleased with the en- thusiasm and creativity they are showing in working on menus that are festival- friendly and cost-effective for our visitors, artists and staff,” Amann said. Another first for Art Af- faire Sept. 27 will be an exhibit and sale of items featuring Nancy Ford Cones photogra- phy in the Promont House Mu- seum. “Each year we work on en- hancing Art Affaire based on the feedback and recommen- dations of our sponsors, our artists and the local communi- ty,” Amann said. “A new element for Art Af- faire, the Cones exhibit will be Locals to shine at Milford’s Art Affaire By Jeanne Houck [email protected] See ART, Page A2 PROVIDED An exhibit by Nancy Ford Cones will be featured at the Art Affaire. HYDE PARK — A new pizzeria has opened in Hyde Park. Romeo’s Pizza began serving pizzas at Hyde Park Station ear- lier this month. “The secret is in the sauce,” co-owner Jason Woitha said about what distinguishes the pizza served at his restaurant. Woitha described the sauce as being sweeter. He also said fresh ingredi- ents are used daily. The vegeta- bles are sliced fresh every morning, he said. This is the first Romeo’s Piz- za to open in Cincinnati. The chain, which consists of about 35 stores, has locations in Cleveland, Akron and Colum- bus. Woitha manages Romeo’s with his wife, Tricia, who is a co- owner. Woitha said Romeo’s Pizza has won numerous awards including Best Gour- met Pizza in America 2005 and Best Pizza in Columbus consec- utively from 2009 to 2012 for its ranch and potato pizza. Although this is his first time operating a franchise, Woitha has been serving up pizzas in some capacity since high school. “I enjoy the pizza business,” he said. “The whole concept is well-received in Ohio.” Woitha, 34, said he liked the Hyde Park location because of the variety of customers. A lot of business people come in during the day while residents are frequent custom- ers during the evening, he said. In addition to pizzas, Rome- o’s Pizza also has salads, sub sandwiches, chicken wings, strombolis and calzones as well as a variety of appetizers. Romeo’s Pizza is open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday and11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday. It is at Hyde Park Station at 3646 Edwards Road. FORREST SELLERS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS Romeo's Pizza co-owner Jason Woitha serves a deluxe pizza. Romeo's Pizza, which is new to the Cincinnati area, began operation at Hyde Park Station in early September. New pizza place has a delicious secret By Forrest Sellers [email protected]

Eastern hills journal 092414

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Page 1: Eastern hills journal 092414

EASTERNHILLSEASTERNHILLSJOURNAL 75¢

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Your Community Press newspaper servingColumbia Township, Columbia-Tusculum,Fairfax, Hyde Park, Madisonville, Mariemont,Mt. Lookout, Oakley, Terrace Park

Vol. 34 No. 35© 2014 The Community Press

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

See page A2 for additional information

Contact usBREADERIDEAS B3Rita welcomes HighHoly Days, fall withrecipes.

GETMOREINFORMATIONGet local news every dayon your Cincinnati.commobile app.

CE-0000602389

Art Affaire SuperStar SponsorsArt Affaire

65 Artists - Live Music - Raffle & Split the Pot - Food and Drinks byLehr’s Prime Market, Bite Restaurant, Sweet Frog, and Steamin’ Joes

September 27, 2014 • 11am – 5pmPromont House Museum • 906 Main St. Milford

Milford’s PremierArts & Fine Craft Show

Micha

lAda

ms

MarcWavra

Rob

binWeing

artner

Rog

erRos

s

Jaso

nParsley

Dou

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onick

Greater Milford Area Historical SocietyFacebook.com/ArtAffaire

Now you can get morefor your dollar! In the nextseven to 10 days your carri-er will be collecting foryour Eastern Hills Journal.When you pay your carrierthe monthly charge of

$3.50, you will receive acoupon worth $3.50 off aclassified ad. Not only willyou be helping to supple-ment your carrier’s in-come, you will also be sav-ing money doing it.

COLLECTION TIME

East Hyde Park tackles parking problemHYDE PARK — A newly

formed committee will tacklethe parking problem in EastHyde Park with a vengeance.

A traffic study is already un-derwaybythecityat theencour-agement of EastHyde Park rep-resentatives. This study comeson the heels of forming an East

HydeParkMasterPlanSteeringCommittee.

“We really started this July2013 with a survey and havebeen working with key stake-holders,”saidJohnJarczyk,whospearheaded the formation ofthecommittee.Thesestakehold-ers include residents and busi-ness owners.

The survey indicated thatparkingremainsanongoingcon-

cern in theEastHydePark area.“Wehave formally kicked off

(a) parking and traffic study,”Jarczyk said. The study is beingconduced by the Cincinnati De-partment of Transportation andEngineering.

Jarczyk said the traffic studywill take from four to sixweeks.He said once data is available,the steering committee will be-gin formulating possible park-

ing solutions.He said at that time a brain-

storming session which will in-volve not only the steering com-mittee, but the entire communi-ty is planned. Jarczyk antici-pates this will be sometime atthe end of October.

Although parking is one ofthe primary topics, Jarczyk saidthe committeewill alsobecreat-ing a master plan for the com-

munity that will focus on devel-oping a new streetscape, en-hancing greenspace locationsand improving the area for pe-destrians and cyclists.

The 100th anniversary ofEast Hyde Park next yearserved as a catalyst for all ofthis, according to Jarczyk.

A kick off of the centennial

By Forrest [email protected]

See PARKING, Page A2

Milford’s annual Art Af-faire is nine years old, but thatdoesn’t mean there won’t beanything new at the arts andfine crafts festival Saturday,Sept. 27.

For the first time, food andbeverages will be sold thereby local businesses such asBite restaurant of 1279 stateRoute 131 in Milford, Lehr’sPrime Market of 740 Main St.in Milford, Steamin’ Joe’s res-taurant of 6096 West ChesterRoad in West Chester Town-ship andSweetFrog frozenyo-gurt of 4450 Eastgate Blvd. inEastgate.

“We have always offeredfood and beverages at Art Af-faire,” said Donna Amann, ad-ministrator of the GreaterMilford Area Historical Soci-ety, which is presenting ArtAffaire from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.on the grounds of the PromontHouseMuseumat906MainSt.in Milford.

“But we have expandedthis year by inviting local foodand beverage businesses toset up on the grounds.

“We’re pleasedwith the en-thusiasm and creativity theyare showing in working onmenus that are festival-friendlyandcost-effective forour visitors, artists and staff,”Amann said.

Another first for Art Af-faireSept. 27will beanexhibitand sale of items featuringNancy Ford Cones photogra-phy in thePromontHouseMu-seum.

“Each year we work on en-hancing Art Affaire based onthe feedback and recommen-dations of our sponsors, ourartists and the local communi-ty,” Amann said.

“A new element for Art Af-faire, theCones exhibitwill be

Locals to shine atMilford’s Art AffaireBy Jeanne [email protected]

See ART, Page A2

PROVIDED

An exhibit by Nancy Ford Coneswill be featured at the Art Affaire.

HYDEPARK—A new pizzeriahas opened in Hyde Park.

Romeo’sPizzabeganservingpizzasatHydeParkStationear-lier this month.

“The secret is in the sauce,”co-owner Jason Woitha saidabout what distinguishes thepizza served at his restaurant.Woitha described the sauce asbeing sweeter.

He also said fresh ingredi-ents are used daily. The vegeta-bles are sliced fresh everymorning, he said.

This is the first Romeo’s Piz-za to open in Cincinnati. The

chain, which consists of about35 stores, has locations inCleveland, Akron and Colum-bus.

Woitha manages Romeo’swithhiswife,Tricia,who isaco-owner. Woitha said Romeo’sPizza has won numerousawards including Best Gour-met Pizza in America 2005 andBest Pizza in Columbus consec-utively from 2009 to 2012 for itsranch and potato pizza.

Although this ishis first timeoperating a franchise, Woithahas been serving up pizzas insome capacity since highschool.

“I enjoy the pizza business,”he said. “The whole concept is

well-received in Ohio.”Woitha, 34, said he liked the

Hyde Park location because ofthe variety of customers.

A lot of business peoplecome in during the day whileresidents are frequent custom-ers during the evening, he said.

In addition to pizzas, Rome-o’s Pizza also has salads, subsandwiches, chicken wings,strombolis and calzones as wellas a variety of appetizers.

Romeo’s Pizza is open from10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday, 10 a.m. to 11p.m.FridayandSaturdayand11a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday.

It is at Hyde Park Station at3646 Edwards Road.

FORREST SELLERS/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Romeo's Pizza co-owner Jason Woitha serves a deluxe pizza. Romeo's Pizza, which is new to the Cincinnati area,began operation at Hyde Park Station in early September.

New pizza place hasa delicious secretBy Forrest [email protected]

Page 2: Eastern hills journal 092414

NEWSA2 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014

EASTERN HILLSJOURNAL

NewsRichard Maloney Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7134, [email protected] Houck Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7129, [email protected] Sellers Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7680, [email protected] Wakeland Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7139, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . . .248-7573, [email protected] Dudukovich Sports Reporter . . . . . . .248-7570, [email protected] Springer Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . .576-8255, [email protected]

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

[email protected]

DeliveryFor customer service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .576-8240Stephen BarracoCirculation Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7110, [email protected]

Lynn Hessler District Manager . . . . . . . . . . .248-7115, [email protected] McAlister District Manager. . . . . . . . .248-7136, [email protected]

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

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

Find news and information from your community on the WebColumbia Township • cincinnati.com/columbiatownshipColumbia Tusculum • cincinnati.com/columbiatusculum

Fairfax • cincinnati.com/fairfaxHamilton County • cincinnati.com/hamiltoncounty

Hyde Park • cincinnati.com/hydeparkMadisonville • cincinnati.com/madisonvilleMariemont • cincinnati.com/mariemont

Madisonville • cincinnati.com/madisonvilleMount Lookout • cincinnati.com/mountlookout

Oakley • cincinnati.com/oakleyTerrace Park • cincinnati.com/terracepark

Calendar .................B2Classifieds ................CFood ......................B3Life ........................B1Police .................... B6Schools ..................A5Sports ....................A6Viewpoints .............A8

Index

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Ohio House District27 candidate forum

Republican TomBrink-man and Democrat JoeOtis will participate in anOhio House District 27candidate forum present-ed by the League of Wom-enVoters of theCincinnatiArea. The forum is at 7p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 7, at

Anderson Center, 7850FiveMileRoad,andwillbeaired live on local Ander-son Community Televi-sion.

Opening remarks willbe provided by CarolynWashburn, Editor of TheCincinnati Enquirer. Amoderator who does notlive inAndersonTownshipwill present questionsfrom the League of Wom-en Voters, and communityresidents will have the op-portunity to ask questionsfrom amicrophone.

The League of WomenVoters is a nonpartisan or-ganization and does notsupportoropposeanycan-didate or party. Informa-tion about the League ofWomen Voters of the Cin-cinnatiAreamaybe foundonline at www.lwvcincin-nati.org.

Nonpartisan electioninformation on candi-dates, issues, voter regis-tration information andpolling locations may befound online atwww.vote411.org. TheLeague'snonpartisanelec-tion guide, The Who &What of Elections, will beavailable in public librar-ies the week of Oct. 6.

The LWVCA telephonehotlineforvoting informa-tion is 513-281-VOTE(8683).

Visit votehamilton-county.org or by callingthe Board of Elections at513-632-7000.

BRIEFLY

celebration was held atthe Cincinnati Observa-tory in July. “We are set-ting a vision for how thisneighborhood will con-tinue to evolve for thenext 20 to 30 years,” saidJarczyk, who is alsoboard vice president oftheHydeParkNeighbor-hood Council.

The steering commit-tee includes East HydePark residents and busi-ness owners as well asCincinnati representa-tives from the police,recreation commissionand the Transportation

andEngineeringDepart-ment.

“The goal is to im-prove the lifestyle forboth residents and busi-nesses in the area,” saidPete Kopf, an East HydePark resident and busi-ness owner.

Kopf said the parkingissuehasbeenaddressedbefore, but he feels acommittee speakingwith “one voice” couldpotentially yield results.

Dialoguewiththegoalto enhance the neighbor-hood is always good,Kopf said.

Stay on top of East HydePark developments byfollowing fsellerspress onTwitter.

ParkingContinued from Page A1

presented in coopera-tivepartnershipwiththeGreater Loveland His-torical Society.”

Cones (1869-1962)was a nationally recog-nized photographer andlongtime resident ofLoveland who docu-mented country life, of-ten using local residentsas models.

It will cost $1 to seethe Nancy Ford Conesexhibit.

Art Affaire is other-wise free and will alsoinclude 65 artists, livemusic, raffles and book

signings by local au-thors, according toMaryWard, a representativeof the Greater MilfordArea Historical Society.

Proceeds from ArtAffaire will support thehistorical society’s pro-grams including itsscholarship fund. Park-ing will be available onthe state Route 28/MainStreet sideof theKrogerCo./PNC Bank parkinglot at 782 to 784 Main St.in Milford. A shuttle be-tween the parking lotand the Promont HouseMuseum grounds willrun continuouslythroughout Art Affaire.Visit MilfordHistory.netor facebook.com/artaf-faire.

ArtContinued from Page A1

Page 3: Eastern hills journal 092414

SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • A3NEWS

Proudly sponsored by Madeira Chamber

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Premier Event Partners

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Celebrate by Kate – A party supply boutique

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Dempsey & Siders Agency, Inc.

Designs by Dawson Paper Boutique

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Madeira Farmers Market

Madeira Optical

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Mattress Warehouse

McCabe Do-it Center

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The Pink Box

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Root Beer Junction

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TGI FRiDAY’S

Therapeutic Medical Massage

Tie a ribbon for the CureHelp Madeira honor all women affected by anytype of cancer this October. Receive a length ofpink ribbon where you can write names of survivorsor women anywhere in their journey. The ribbons willbe tied in the trees throughout the month as abeautiful display of community support. The ribbonsare a $2 donation, and proceeds will benefit theAmerican Cancer Society.

PARTICIPATING BUSINESSES ARE MADEIRA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MEMBERS.

October

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Bumps, bubbles andbreaks on a 1.6-milestretchof theLittleMiamiScenic Trail near Milfordhave been paved over.

That’s thanks to theFriends of the Little Mi-ami State Park, a nonprof-it groupof volunteers thathas since 2008maintainedand improved the park,which is really a formerrail corridor stretching50miles between Newtownand Spring Valley nearXenia.

The park corridor tiesinto trails like the LittleMiami Scenic Trail alongthe way.

Friends of the LittleMiami State Park won a$150,000 grant from theU.S. Department ofTransportation after rais-ing therequiredmatching$37,000 in18 days last fall.

The group used the$187,000 grant andmatch-ing money to repair andrepave six broken sec-tions of the Little MiamiState Park trail — thelargest being the onearound Milford – for thebenefit of cyclists, run-ners and walkers.

“Estimates of peopleusing the trail are around500,000 a year, but wehave installed electroniccounters anddata is beinganalyzed to get amore ac-curate count,” said JanetSlater, communicationscoordinator for theFriends of the Little Mi-ami State Park, which hasmembers all along thepark corridor, doesn’tspend money on a head-quarters and maintains a

Mason mailing address.“Our trail and others

like it consistently drawbusiness to an area; Love-land is a prime example,”Slater said.

Milford also benefits,says City Manager JeffWright.

“Milford’s location onthe Little Miami Bike (orScenic) Trail is one of thecomponents of successfor our downtown mer-chants and is a factor inMilford’s identity, as evi-denced in us being namedthe first ‘Trail Town’ inOhio,” Wright said.

“Inaddition to thecom-mercial benefits, it also isa very positive factor inthe quality of life of ourresidents since it adds tothewellness/exercise fac-tor and research showsthat property values clos-est to long-distance biketrails are higher.”

The Ohio State Parkssection of the Ohio De-partment of Natural Re-sources recently recog-

nized the Friends of theLittle Miami State Parkgroup’s work in a letter,saying, “From the outset,the Friends of Little Mi-ami State Park has beenone of our most highly ef-fective volunteer groupswith the vision and ambi-tion to get things done.

“We appreciate your

outstanding work on im-mediateneeds, suchas re-surfacing the trailbridges and cleaning upstorm debris, not to men-tion the ongoing trailmaintenance and fund-raising projects that youaccomplish.”

Friends of the LittleMiami State Park also run

an Adopt-a-Trail sectionprogram, dispatch chain-saw crews for emergencystorm cleanup, clearbrush to maintain a bermand sightlines at road in-tersections, operate trailhotline toreportproblemsand provide portable toi-lets at trail access pointsthat do not have perma-

nent restroom facilities.For more information

about the Friends or tojoin the group, visitwww.littlemiamistatepar-k.org.

Want to knowmore aboutwhat is happening in Milford?Follow me on Twitter @jean-nehouck.

Easy riding in MilfordBy Jeanne [email protected]

JEANNE HOUCK/THE COMMUNITY PRES

Like the sign says, this is the Milford Trailhead.

JEANNE HOUCK/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

It’s smoother sailing along Milford’s section of the Little Miami Scenic Trail, thanks to avolunteer group and a federal grant.

Page 4: Eastern hills journal 092414

A4 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 NEWS

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Beth Booksellers in Cin-cinnati.

Books by the Banks isthe region’s largest bookfestival. The world-fam-ous Harper was a Cincin-nati-based AmericanModernist artist whodied in 2007.Howeverhisson, artist Brett Harper,and graphic designerMatthew Dayler repur-posed some iconic Har-per images to create aspecial new design topromote the eighth yearof the festival. Thisyear’s festival is set for10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday,Oct. 11, at the Duke Ener-gy Center in downtownCincinnati.

Brett Harper andDaylerwill be at the post-er unveiling to talk aboutthe creation of the poster.

Artwork by the lateCharley Harper gets anew life in this year’s col-lectible Books by the

Banks event poster. The2014 poster will be un-veiled at 6:30 p.m. Tues-day, Sept. 16, at Joseph-

A poster signing will fol-low. Joining them will bepast poster artists, in-cludingWillHillenbrand,Christina Wald and Jef-freyEbbeler. Posterswillbe for sale,with proceedsbenefiting Books by theBanks. This year’s posteris $15 and previous years’posters are $10.

Joseph-Beth Booksell-ers is in Rookwood Pavil-ion, 2692 Madison Road.Visit www.Booksbythe-Banks.org for details.

Books by the Banks2014 poster includesCharley Harper art

ABOUTMATTHEW DAYLERVisual artist Matthew Dayler was born in Hamilton,

Ontario, Canada. He earned a BFA in printmaking from ArtAcademy of Cincinnati and a MFA in studio arts from theMemphis College of Art.Dayler is one of the founders of Higher Level Art, a

mural a creative collective based in Cincinnati. He’s hadsolo exhibitions both locally and internationally and been apart of group exhibitions in New York City and Los Ange-les, as well as Australia, Switzerland, France and Germany.He is an assistant professor at the Art Academy of Cincin-nati.ABOUT BRETT HARPERThe son of Cincinnati artists Charley and Edie Harper,

Brett Harper helped his parents form Harper Studios. He isa 1971 graduate of Finneytown High School with a BA inEnglish from Brown University. He is also an artist knownfor his contemporary, nature-themed serigraphs.For many years Harper was in advertising, sales promo-

tion, and publishing until he assumed full-time manage-ment of his family's studio in 1995. Since then, he has beenresponsible for overall strategic marketing, includinglicensing deals with book publishers.Harper is the director and owner of the Charley Harper

Art Studio in Cincinnati. He is writing and editing the textfor an upcoming book, “Harper Ever After,” due out fromPomegranate Communications in early 2015. He and hiswife, Sandy, live in the Lebanon, Ohio, area.Books by the Banks: Cincinnati USA Book Festival is an

annual celebration of books and reading that takes placeevery October in downtown Cincinnati. The day-longfestival, which is free and open to the public, features over100 national, regional, and local authors and illustrators;book signings; panel discussions; and activities for theentire family to enjoy.

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BrettHarper isthedirectorandowner ofCharleyHarperArtStudio.

Page 5: Eastern hills journal 092414

SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • A5

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

Seventeen-year-old WillGrimmer–yes,heof the59atPi-nehurst No. 1 in July 2013, andthe three straight birdies at theU.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2monthsago–playedoneofhis fi-nal matches of his high schoolcareerSept.20whenhemedaledwith a 71 in the Cincinnati HillsLeague championship at SharonWoods, the fourth straight time.

The rules of the Ohio HighSchoolAthleticAssociationbasi-cally mandate it.

OHSAA – unlike the “golfingstates” of North Carolina, SouthCarolina, Florida, Texas and oth-ers (even Indiana, the next-moststringent state athletic associa-tion, gives the golfer three ex-emptions) – says once the highschool season begins, the golfercannot play in anything but in-terscholasticmatches, except inthe rarest of exceptions, such asthe U.S. Junior Ryder Cup.

Under Indiana rules, Grim-merwouldhavehadhisthreeex-emptions: TheU.S.Amateur, the

Junior Players tournament andtheupcomingUSGAMen’sStateTeamChampionships. It is diffi-cult tounderstandthepublicpol-icy reason behind OHSAA’srules. Officials there talk aboutmaintaining “competitive bal-ance,” but the players who qual-ify for those state and nationalevents have already earnedtheirway in; they’regettingonlywhat’s due them.

Now, Grimmer will play inthe sectionals thisweek, accord-ing to theCHLsite, butnot in thedistricts or finals, which occurafterSept.30.He’sbeenreducedtoplaying only 21/2weeks of thehigh school season this fall, andthe first match was rained out.

TheUSGAStateTeamCham-pionship Sept. 30-Oct. 2 at thePeteDyeCourse inFrenchLick,Ind., was, in effect, too good andtoo valuable of an experience topass up.

Essentially, under OHSAArules,playingin itwillendGrim-mer’shighschoolgolfcareer.Hecan’t be shortsighted, however.He needs to do what will con-tinue to hone his craft and givehim the best opportunity for apro career. In most other states,he could have played his highschool season and in state and

national events.“I’m really looking forward

to the team championship at theend of the month,” Grimmersaid. “I never knew much aboutit, but as the (summer) seasonwent on, the more I learned(and) themoreIwanted toplay. Iknew I wasn’t going to get thechance again.”

The three-day, 54-hole tour-nament features 50 three-manteams from each state in theUnited States, plus three-manteams from Puerto Rico and theDistrict of Columbia. The besttwo scores from each team eachday are counted, and, at the endof three days, voila, a teamchampion is crowned.

“I’ve never played the course– I’ve just been looking at somepictures and guys have told meit’s one of the toughest coursesthey’ve ever played,” Grimmersaid. “The Big Ten Champion-ships have been there for two orthree years now.”

One of the other two golferson the Ohio team is also fromCincinnati – attorney Bill Wil-liamson – and the third is fromDayton, former U.S. Air ForceAcademy golfer Jeff Scohy.

THE COMMUNITY PRESS/MARK D. MOTZ

Mariemont senior Will Grimmer will play perhaps the final match of his high school golf career at Sharon Woods onSaturday because of OHSAA rules regarding exemptions.

Sectionals last prepsstop for Mariemontgolfer Grimmer

See GRIMMER, Page A7

OHSAA rule may endhigh school careerBy John [email protected]

EAST WALNUT HILLS — Thewhite athletic tape wrappedaroundher leftwrist looks likeamodern art project.Doodles.Names. Numbers.

“I play for something orsomebody every game,” saidSt. Ursula Academy juniorsoccer player Olivia Silver-man. “This is just a little re-minder to me what it is.”

One of the things on the In-dian Hill resident’s wrist,though, might pass for a lie.It’s the Hebrew phrase for“This, too, shall pass.” Andseeing how Silverman is agoalie, not many things passher at all.

She’s given up just fourgoals through the first eightgames for the Bulldsogs, whodropped to 4-2-2 after a 1-0road loss to McNicholas HighSchool. Even the Rocket goalthat got by her wasn’t herfault.

Barely a minute into thegame,McNicksophomore for-ward Sophie Gormanlaunched a high, hard shotfrom about 25 yards thatslipped into the upper left cor-nerof thegoal,unreachablebyanyone this sideofSpiderman.

“Itwas pretty amazing; youhave to give her credit,” Sil-verman said. “She found thelucky space, but that happens.You just have to pick yourselfup and get the next one. It’s atough loss, but we’ve got agame against Beavercreek(Sept. 15), so we have to put itbehind us and get ready forthat.”

First-year SUA coach Mac

Garrigan said he likes theshort memory of his team.

“Both our losses have been1-0,”Garrigan said. “It’s disap-pointing, but these are qualitygirls and they play well. I alsoknow how they’ll pick one an-other up and get ready for thenext game. They won’t dwellon this.”

He’s been especially im-pressed with Silverman, whomissed a few games with nag-ging injuries.

“She’s just like an anchorfor us, a rock back there”Gar-rigan said. “She’s a real leaderfor our defense and our wholeteam.

“All aspects of her game -her feet, her hands, her judg-ment - are excellent. You havetoremember,she’s the last lineout there. She sees it all andshe does a great job.”

Silverman started playingsoccer in grade school at Sev-en Hills and fell in love.

“I rememberwalking to thecar after practice one day andtelling my dad this is some-thing that I have to do,” Silver-man said. “I just loved it rightaway. (The soccer field) is myfavorite place to be and myteam is my family.

“I always tell people I haveone sister at home, but I have17 sisters on my team.”

Silverman enjoys playingin thegoal, too, despite it beingapositionwithareputation forproducing - in polite terms -wackos.

“I’ve been told I’m one ofthe more subtle goal keeperspeople have seen,” she said.“Butyeah,goaliesarecrazy, atleast a little bit. They have tobe. It’s cool.”

St. Ursula juniorgoalie doesn’t letmuch pass her in netByMark D. [email protected]

MARK D. MOTZ FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

St. Ursula Academy junior goalie Olivia Silverman scoops up aMcNicholas shot attempt late in the game during a 1-0 road loss to theRockets Sept. 11.

HYDE PARK — For some rea-son, football games tend to takeonmoremeaningwhenaprize isinvolved.

The University of Cincinnatiand Miami University play forthe Victory Bell; Indiana andPurdue have the Old OakenBucket; Minnesota and Wiscon-sin play for Paul Bunyan’s Axe;Michigan and Minnesota, theLittle Brown Jug; LSU and Ar-kansasplay for theGoldenBoot;and for some reason SMU andTCUscuffleoveranIronSkillet.

Taking from that, ClarkMon-tessori and Gamble Montessorihave developed the “Sledge-

hammer of Service” with a tro-phyupforgrabsandcommunityservice involved around thefootballgame.CoachJoeBerta’sCougars won round one of the“Montessori Bowl” 37-0 overGamble Sept. 13 at WithrowHigh School.

The Cougars ran out to a 34-0halftime lead thanks to a 27-point second quarter. Leadingthe way was junior MicahBlythewhoranfor118yardsanda score and caught a 65-yardtouchdown pass from juniorquarterbackMark Secen.

It was Blythe’s first game inthe backfield after beginning asa wide receiver.

“He’s a natural with the ballin his hands,”Berta said. “He’s a

big-play guy.”Going into their game at Cin-

cinnatiChristian, theplanwastosplit carries with senior XavierFerguson.Theoccasionallypun-ishing Ferguson rambled for 70

yards in the “Montessori Bowl”.“They’re two different types

of backs,” Berta said. “Micah’sabout a buck-80 and real shiftywith some speed. Xavier’s 230.Whenyou’re used to a quick guy

thenXavier lowers his shoulderon you, it can’t feel good.”

To get to the next level, Fer-gusonwill alsohave tobe skilledin another aspects of the game,which isanotherreason theCou-garshaveoptedtodivvyuptheircarries.

“‘X’ has to take pride at beinga lead blocker sometimes andbeing able to catch the ball,”Berta said.

Handing the ball off is Secen,however the 160-pound juniorcan scamper himself and can beeffective throwing the pigskin.

“Hisarm’salittlebitstrongerand his legs are a little thicker,”Berta said. “Against Gamble he

Clark football out to put the hammer downBy Scott [email protected]

BRANDON

SEVERN/FOR THE

COMMUNITY PRESS

The first annualMontessoriBowl wasplayed atWithrow HighSchool with the“SledgeHammer ofService” trophyon the line.

See CLARK, Page A7

Page 6: Eastern hills journal 092414

A6 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 SPORTS & RECREATION

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Girls soccer»Walnut Hills shut

out Lakota West 4-0 onSept. 13. Senior Macken-zie Richter had the hattrick.

»Mariemont beatCHCA 3-2 on Sept. 13.Senior Audrey Yorkscored twice.

» Summit CountryDay blanked Mariemont3-0 onSept.15.FreshmanLily Melink and juniorsJanel Bond and MorganEvans scored.

Summit continuedstrong MVC play win-ning their 17th consecu-tive leaguevictorywitha6-0 win over North Col-lege Hill. The youngerplayers led the chargewith goals scored bythree freshmen – MimiStines, Maddie Braultand Lily Melink. JuniorGracie Kunkel scoredher first career goal, agamewinner, to open thescoring. Also scoringwere Addy Smythe andJennifer Whitehead. Mi-mi Stines also contribut-ed to the shutout withtwo saves in the secondhalf combiningwithCar-oline Walton for theteam’s seventh shutouton the season.

Boys soccer»Walnut Hills shut

out Princeton Sept. 13 ongoals by senior BrandonPitzandsophomoreIbra-haimGoumballe.

» Summit CountryDay beat SpringfieldCatholic 8-3 on Sept. 13.Senior Philip McHugh,juniorCharlieMaciejew-ski and sophomore Da-

vidCookeachscoredtwogoals.

Girls tennis»Mount Notre Dame

was second at Flight C oftheCoachesClassicSept.13. Juniors Ali Staun/Alex Burt won the firstdoubles championshipwith team of Bowling/Sypnewelski finishingrunner-up in second dou-bles.

»Mariemont shut outMadeira5-0Sept.15.Sen-iorsHaleyWeston,AnnieWirthlin and GraceHaffner swept singles.

»Walnut Hillsblanked St. Ursula 4-0 onSept.15. SophomoreLillyO’Toole, junior MeganBurke and senior AlisonFisher swept singles.

Girls volleyball»MND beat Magnifi-

cat 26-24, 25-22, 25-7 onSept. 13. The Cougarsalso defeated Walsh Je-suit, 25-14, 25-13, 25-12.

» Purcell Marian de-feated Summit CountryDay Sept. 13,17-25, 25-18,25-22, 26-24.

»WithrowbeatMead-owdaleSept.13,26-24,25-12.

Boys golf» Summit Country

Daywon theMiddletownChristian School Invita-tional at Brown’s RunCountry Club Sept. 13.Senior Alec Petrie shot77.

»Walnut Hills beatAnderson by fourstrokes Sept.15 at Losan-tiville. Co-medalistswere Katie Hallinan(Walnut has no girlsteam) and Laine Harrett

SHORT HOPS

By Scott [email protected]

See SHORT HOPS,Page A7

The door is open forCincinnatiCountryDay tobreak through and win aMiami Valley Conferencechampionship and ad-vance beyond the finaleight in the state tourna-ment. Rebuilding ahealthyvarsity rosterwillbe the key to CCD takingthe next step.

The Indians only grad-uated two contributingseniors from last year’sstate quarterfinal squad.With so much experiencereturning, this appearedto be a promising year forthe Indians. Before theseason even started, theinjury bug bit. It hasn’tstopped gnawing at theCCD roster yet.

Four projected start-ers are currently shelved.All-state central defenderand team captain Will Co-hen is expected to returnthis month from an ankleinjury. Soham Basu willbe back next month after

his broken leg heals.Quinn Petrie injured hisshoulder playing basket-ball over the summer, andmay be back in time forpostseason tournamentplay. Justin Ramey isworking his way backfrom a foot injury.

“Injuries are our big-gest obstacle right now,”said head coachGregHir-schauer.

Yet, despite all of theinjuries, the Indians areoff to a 8-1 start, reelingoff eight straight victo-ries after dropping theseason opener. They aretiedatop theMiamiValleyConference standingswith Seven Hills. The twoteamsmeet in the regularseason’s penultimatematch, on October 8. TheIndians hope to have a

healthy squad by thatpoint, but will also haveexperienced young play-ers who have proventhemselves at the varsitylevel.

“In Division III soccer,you usually don’t havemuch depth. That’s usual-ly the difference betweenDivision I andDivision IIIschools,” saidHirschauer.“This year is probably un-usual in the sense that wedo have a little bit ofdepth.”

Freshmen Daniel Nes-bitt and John Blang havesteppedup,ashavesopho-more Nick Krammer andjuniors A.J. Rowe, SeanO’Brien, and Eric Chris-tine. Rowe is finallyhealthy after missingmost of the last two sea-sons. O’Brien has thrivedat his new position at thetop of the Indians’ forma-tion. Blang continues toimprove and is providingquality minutes at strikerand outsidemidfielder af-

Despite injuries, CCD soccershares spot atop MVCBy Adam [email protected]

BRANDON SEVERN FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Nick Krammer of Cincinnati Country Day attacks the ball tomaintain control against Clark Montessori Sept. 18.

See CCD, Page A7

After one play Satur-day at Penn Station Stadi-um, it looked like McNi-cholas’ division title de-fense might end before ittruly began.

On the first play fromscrimmage, senior Pur-cell Marian quarterback

McKell Jones connectedwith junior wide receiverJamele Howard over themiddle. Howard sprintedpast his defender and tookit therestof thewayforan80-yard touchdown.

TheCavaliers’ hopes ofupsetting host McNicho-las, ranked third in theEn-quirer’s Division IVcoaches’ poll, ended short-

ly thereafter. TheRockets(4-0 overall, 1-0 GCL) ranoff 20 unanswered pointsandheldonfora30-14win,beginning their quest to-ward a third straightGreater Catholic LeagueCoed Central champion-ship. “We came out a littleflat,” said McNicholascoach Mike Orlando. “Ifwe’re going to be the team

we think we can be, we’vegot to take care of thatstuff and clean it up.”

McNicholas capital-ized on favorable field po-sition all afternoon asPur-cellMarian(2-2,0-1)strug-gled tomove theball asidefrom a pair of deep catch-and-runs. On three con-

Purcell starts out strong in McNick lossByMatthew [email protected]

See PURCELL, Page A7

Page 7: Eastern hills journal 092414

SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • A7SPORTS & RECREATION

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SUNDAY12-3

at 41.

Girls golf» St. Ursula beat Syca-

more and Lakota EastSept. 15 on the WestCourse at Glenview. Caro-lyn Markley was medalistwith a two-under 34.

Football» Clark Montessori

shut out Cincinnati Chris-tian 36-0 on Sept. 19. Dari-us Chatman scored on arun and a pass fromMarkSecen. Xavier Ferguson,Micah Blythe and TimoneAndrew had touchdownscampers and Kevin Haidhad a 27-yard field goal.The Cougars are at NorthCollege Hill Sept. 26.

»Mariemont defeatedIndian Hill 28-17 on Sept.19. Senior Kane Coateswas 26-37 passing for 330yards and a touchdown.He also ran for a scorefrom a yard out. The War-riors are at FinneytownSept. 26.

»Walnut Hills lost toAnderson35-17onSept.19.The Eagles touchdownscame on runs by Jeremi-yah Hairston and KevinBlount. Walnut Hills hostsWithrow on Thursday,Sept. 25 at 7 p.m.

»Withrow lost to Mil-ford 42-24. The Tigers areat Walnut Hills Thursday,Sept. 25 at 7 p.m.

»Moeller beat Louis-ville St. Xavier 26-0 onSept. 19. Matt Crable was19-32passingfor259yardsand a touchdown to KyleButz. Sterling Noes had a27-yard touchdown runand Matt Coghlin kickedfour field goals. The Cru-saders are at St. XavierSept. 26.

» Summit Country Daybeat St. Bernard 49-18Sept. 20, scoring all theirpointsinthefirsttwoquar-ters. SCD had 104 passingyards and 182 on theground. QB Duke Tobinwas 6-for-8 with 101 yardspassing. The majority ofrushing yards wereshared by Tyler Hannah,Jackson McKeever andDavionne Laney.

»McNicholas beatPur-cell Marian 30-14 on Sept.20. Quarterback Luke Sul-ken was 20-24 for 157yards and a score and ranfor 141 yards and twotouchdowns. The Cava-liers scored on passesfrom McKell Jones to Ja-mel Howard and JairKnox. Purcell Marian’s atChaminade-Julienne Sept.27.

» Percy Roberts, Classof 2018, is amember of theDenison University foot-ball team.Percy isanativeof Cincinnati, OH, (45237)and is a graduate of With-row University HighSchool.

The Denison footballseason is off to a 1-1 startafter opening the seasonwith a victory at EarlhamCollege. The Big Red willopen the home portion oftheir schedule on Satur-day (Sept. 20) against Wa-bash College at 1 p.m. TheLittleGiants are currentlyranked 13th in the latestD3football.com Top-25poll.Formore informationonPercyandDenisonfoot-ball visit: denisonbigred-.com/sports/fball

Softball»Mount Notre Dame

juniorLexiRippergerwasselected to attend a presti-gious fastpitch softballevent atWinthropUniver-

sity in South Carolina, the“Softball Queen of Dia-monds Camp” Aug. 31-Sept. 1. Ripperger was se-lected from more than1,000 applications of thetopfastpitchathletes.Thisis the second time she hasbeen selected by this pro-gram; once in January2014 for the Queen of Dia-monds North, and then inAugust for the Queen ofDiamonds South Event.While at the tournament,Lexi received the MVPaward given to the bestplayer in each game out ofthe 264 athletes invited tothe tournament. Ripperg-er has also been selectedfor The Cup InternationalFastpitch Championshipbeing held in the Nether-lands inJanuary2016.Rip-perger has played forMND her freshman andsophomore years atMND.She plans to join the teamagain this spring.

“We are so proud ofLexi in all her accomplish-ments on the field and inthe classrooms of MND,”said Larry Mock, MND’sHead of School.

SHORT HOPS

Continued from Page A6

had threecompletionsandtwo were touchdowns.Teams are going to stopthe run sometimes andyou’re going to have tothrow.”

Berta now hopes to be-gin a streak after fallingshort against Hughes andbeing routed at Taylor.TheHughesgamewaslostin the final seconds andClark had the unenviabletask of helping Tayloropen up their new footballfield.

“They’re probably go-

ing to beat us 10 out of 10times,” Berta said of Tay-lor. “To be able to comeback home and get thesupport we had and put ona nice show reallymeant alot.”

Now, with a revampedoffensive line and thehopeful double whammyofMicahBlythe andXavi-er Ferguson, the Cougars’next two games are cru-cial.

Up ahead are the Tro-jans and Silver Knights;both yearly thorns in theside.

“We have to beat one orboth of those teams to ac-complish the goals wewant,” Berta said.

ClarkContinued from Page A5

It’s an every-other-year event, and active col-legiate golfers are not eli-gible to play in it underNCAA rules, so it’s now ornever for Grimmer. Bythis timenext year, hewillbe a college golfer (he hasverbally committed toOhio State, and is expect-ed to sign a letter of intentin November).

One individual honorGrimmer wanted to win –and now won’t get thechance – is being statemedalist in theDivision IIstate high school tourna-ment Oct. 10-11 on theScarlet Course at OhioState University.

Grimmer will miss byonly 10 days that opportu-nity to play one last tour-nament on Ohio’s biggesthigh school stage, but hehas bigger fish to fry andwill seeplenty of theScar-let Course the next fewyears as a Buckeye.

In lastyear’s state tour-nament, junior Grimmerfinishedonestrokebehind

senior Tripp French(Grimmer’s two-day totalwas 147) of Dayton Oak-wood;FrenchisnowatXa-vier University.

If you think a youngmanwhohas played in theU.S. Open would havetroublegettingexcitedforahighschoolmatch,guessagain.

“You can’t let the situa-tion get to you,” Grimmersaid. “I have no problemstaying in the moment.Youcan’t let one (competi-

tion) become bigger thanit is, and another becomeless than what it is. TheU.S. Open ismore fun, butyou’re still playingagainst yourself. I stillhave goals for my highschool career, to play mybest, tobreakmypersonalachievements.”

For example, itwas funto hear the following inover the P.A. last week atMariemontHigh:

“Congratulations to thegolf team on defeating

Wyomingyesterdayat theMill Course. Will Grim-mer shot a six-under 30and Henry Lewis shot asix-over 42 to lead theWarriors.”

A30?Mercy.Howclosedid Grimmer come to a29?

“I was six-underthrough eight holes,” hesaid.“Iwas50yardsoutonthe last hole, and ran it 15to 20 feet by the hole” andmissed it coming back, orhewouldhavecardeda29.

GrimmerContinued from Page A5

ter being called up fromthe junior varsity squad.

“We’ve had somekidsstep up,” said Hir-schauer. “We’ve beenfortunate that we’ve hadthese guys step up, butwe’re not going to thriveuntil we get some ofthose other guys back.”

The Indians havedominated opponentsthis season, scoring 50

goals and allowing justeight in their eight victo-ries after losing toMcNicholas, 2-1, to openthe season. Matcheswith perennial MVCpowers Summit CountryDay (Sept. 23) andSevenHills (Oct. 8) loom.

The Indians will havetogoon the road forbothmatches in their questfor the program’s firstoutright MVC title since2000. Will a full squad,the Indians have thepieces in place to makethat history.

CCDContinued from Page A6

secutive drives in thefirsthalf, theRocketsbe-gan inCavalier territory,scoring on all three. Fol-lowingupa10-for-10firstquarter, senior McNi-cholasquarterbackLukeSulken hit senior tightendElliotHiggins over aleaping defensive backfor a25-yard touchdown.

Sulken completed 20ofhis 25passesSaturday

for 178 yards. In desper-ate need of a response,Jones ledPurcellMarianon another short drive,hitting senior wide re-ceiver Jair Knox as thepocket collapsed. Knoxfound room to run downthe left sideline, reach-ing the end zone for an84-yard score that cutthe McNicholas lead tosix at halftime. Of Jones’138 passing yards, 120 ofthem came on the twotouchdown passes. Hefinished 5-for-15 and alsothrew two interceptions.

PurcellContinued from Page A6

Page 8: Eastern hills journal 092414

A8 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014

VIEWPOINTSVIEWPOINTSEDITORIALS | LETTERS | COLUMNS | CH@TROOM CommunityPress.com

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

EASTERNHILLSJOURNAL

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

394 Wards Corner RoadLoveland, Ohio 45140phone: 248-8600email: [email protected] site:www.communitypress.com

A publication of

Something has drasticallychanged in our economy.

In1880 a private companybuilt the Cincinnati street carcompanywith inclines, paid forit andmade a profit with thefares collected. It continued tobe a private company until 1973.Nowwe need $147million oftaxpayer dollars to build andoperate a four-mile street carroute.What has changed?

In1875 the zoowas built as aprivate for profit company andthe tickets at the gate paid for itandmade a profit. This lasteduntil 1932when the city took itover. Now the zoo requires tax-payers to pay $6.8million peryear and they needmore. Thezoo also receives about $10.6

million a yearindonationsand brings inas incomeabout $12.9million for gatetickets, park-ing and conces-sions.

What haschanged?

In1878Mu-sicHall was

built by severalmusic groupsand businessmen as a profitmaking enterprise. It ran as aprofitmaking business until the1950s. Now the city needs $100million plus tomodernize it.

What has changed?In1912 Powel Crosley owner

of theReds built Crosley Fieldwith no publicmoney, itmade aprofit and it lasted until 1970whenRiver front stadiumwasbuilt and taxpayers had to paythe cost.

Cincinnati Union Terminalwas built by theB&ORailroadas a private company in1933including a roundhouse and 94miles of track for $ 41millionandwas paid forwith rail pas-senger tickets. NowUnion Ter-minal needs100million fromtaxpayers tomaintain the struc-ture.

What has changed?In1937 Iwas born atGood

SamaritanHospital.Mymotherwas there for 6 days and thetotal bill, including the doctor

was $118.00What has changed?In1955 I enrolled at theUni-

versity ofDayton and the tu-itionwas $240 a semester. Nowthe tuition at highly taxpayersubsidized public colleges is$12,600.

What has changed?What has changed is the size

of government. In1900 govern-mentwas 5 percent of grossdomestic product and today thecost of Federal, State, and localgovernment is 53 percent ofGDP. All of this extra govern-mentmoney is built into ourtelephone bills, our electricbills, our grocery bills, ourmaintenance bills, fuel bills,hotel bills, taxi bills, hospital

bills and every other thing thatwe buy.

Thismeans thatwe pay dou-ble for everythingwe purchaseand thatwe receive only half ofour pay checks to pay the vis-ible and hidden taxes to pay forgovernment.

History shows thatwhengovernments grow, debt goesup, people become poor anddependent and unemploymentincreases. Just look at countrieslikeGreece, Italy, Spain, Vene-zuela, Brazil, and hundredsmore.

Wemust cut the size of gov-ernment and our deficit.

WilliamC. Schmidter is a resident ofIndianHill.

What has changed? Little for the good

William C.SchmidterCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

You may not realize this,but falling is a serious healthrisk among older adults.

Each year, roughly one outof three Americans over theage of 65 experiences a fall.For adults over the age of 65,falls are the leading cause ofemergency department visitsand hospitalizations. Theseemergency room visits andhospitalizations result in $30billion a year being spent inthe U.S. treating older adultsfor the effects of falls.

Not only are falls expensiveto treat, but the pain and in-jury they cause can have nega-tive effects on a person's qual-ity of life and drastically re-duce an older adult's inde-pendence. Once a first fall hasoccurred the apprehensionlevel rises because we areafraid it will happen again. Wealso become concerned withthe actions others might taketo help us. All of this can leadto further physical decline,depression, isolation and feel-ings of helplessness.

Fall Preven-tion Aware-ness Month isimportantbecause wewant to sendthe message tofamilies thatfalling is not anatural part ofaging, and inmany in-

stances, falls can be prevent-ed.

So what can be done to pre-vent falls? Plan Ahead. Beginwith a conversation betweenthe senior and caregivers.Listen to one another. Do notassume you know the answers.Be open with one another. Askwhat challenges the person isfacing each day with the dailyactivities. Ask them to showyou how they do certain rou-tine activities. Include anynurse or therapists involved inthe daily health care plan. Thismay take a few conversationsto build or rebuild trust. It isimportant to be open-minded

to options and possibilities.Families can also take steps

to make their home safer.Some of the most commonlocations for falls are door-ways, cluttered hallways,areas with heavy traffic, bath-rooms and stairs. Simple stepsto prevent in-home falls in-clude removing throw rugs orensuring floor coverings aresecured with a non-skid back-ing and installing lighting atthe top and bottom of stair-cases. It’s also important tosecure electrical and phonecords out of walkways, and toremove tripping hazards likepaper, boxes, toys and clothesfrom stairs and walkways.

For additional support andto increase safety for seniorswho may have already experi-enced a fall or have been in-jured, home modificationsmay become beneficial. Forexample, grab bars can beinstalled in kitchens and bath-rooms, doorways can be wid-ened, and step-free entrancescan be constructed.

The important thing to re-member is that falling doesnot have to be a part of gettingolder. There are easy stepsthat can be taken to preventfalls, and to make your home asafe place.

If you’re not sure where tostart, consider calling a Certi-fied Aging in Place Specialist(CAPS). Whole HomeMod-ifications’ CAPS offer freein-home consultations. Wecome prepared with a FallPrevention Checklist, and canguide you in the best directionto ensure safety and preventfalls.

Jere McIntyre serves as director ofmodifications for mobility for PeopleWorking Cooperatively and WholeHomeModifications. A certifiedaging in place specialist, McIntyreoversees the daily operations ofWhole Home, PWC’s new servicethat provides quality home mod-ification services for all peopleabove PWC’s current income guide-lines.

September is Fall Prevention Awareness Month

Jere McIntyreCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

What’s it like to bemarried57 years?

It’smore comfortable thanmost peoplewould expect. Doyou remember the pressureafter five years ofmarriage?Therewas pressure to succeedat yourwork, or to improveyour position bymoving toanother firm. Youmay alsohave been under pressure tosucceed at being a good parent.

What was your car like?Didyou buy a house?Howwere thenew neighbors?Do you remem-berwhen health insurancewasnot that important?

Have you noticed that theydon’t teach these subjects inschool? One of themost impor-tant of life’s decisions, how toselect a spouse, is not taught inschool. They also do not teachyou how to buy a house, a car,select a doctor or invest yourmoney. Isn’t that a little crazy?

Hopefully, bynow, there is anapp for that?

At fiveyears ofmar-riage, you havesome verypleasantmem-ories; however,at 57 years, youhave awholebucket of expe-

riences andmemories, somevery good, and somewhich arequite sad. The loss of relatives,friends and neighbors is alwaysone of life’s pause buttons. Youare put on hold to reflect for themoment on your relationships,your health and your familyplan should it be you that is nolonger around; and then you areforced back into themad rushof life to stay ahead ofwhateverevents youmay encounter.

Do you have a “bucket list?”

Are there places to visit, eventsto attend, something special toacquire or an activity youwould enjoy? If youwish to dothese together, it is better doneearlier than later. There are noguarantees of good health, suf-ficient to travel or engage inmore strenuous activities.Sometimes, later in life, justwalking is an impossibility.

What are yourmemories?Wewill always have Paris! Youmust put Paris in your bucketlist; but don’t go alone; Parismust be shared. The food, fash-ion, art, architecture and theambiancewill last your life-time. Youwill want to return,just for the quiche.

As a pilot, it was unforget-table the eveningmywife, abank branchmanager, camehome fromwork and an-nounced that a repossessedCessna Cardinal was available

for $8,000. “You should get it,”she suggested. It had 300 hourson the tachometer; that’s like3,000miles on a new S-Class,and it was solid as a rock aswelifted off the runway on theferry flight fromClevelandHopkins.

We did crazy things, like aday trip to Chicago’sMeigsField for a deep-dish pizzalunch, followed by the Sundayarchitectural boat tour up theChicagoRiver, then the flighthome.

We traveled lots for busi-ness. Almost every tripwascoupledwith a small vacation,such as the Bahamas, Englandand Europe.

To fill your bucket ofmemo-ries, you cannot travel toomuch, or visit friends too often.

James Baker is a 37-year resident ofIndianHill.

What’s it like to be married 57 years?

James BakerCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Sept. 17 questionHas the National Football

League fairly and properlyhandled the Ray Rice domes-tic abuse/violence case? Whatcould or should the league dodifferently?

“Fairly, yes. Properly, no.I am sick and tired of read-ing about these prima donnaathletes acting like thethugs and criminals a lot ofthem are...and getting awaywith it most of the time. Allof these big-time sports ath-letes (every sport), whetherthey want to be or not, arerole models for millions ofyouth. On that fact alone,they need to be held to ahigher standard of moralitythan the rest of us. It is arare privilege to be goodenough to play in the bigleagues and if you happen tobe that talented or lucky,you need to be held to a one-and-done morality clause.Muck up once and your areout for life. Seems harsh,but how many youth seethese guys do these kinds ofstupid and wrong beatings/murders/rapes/gun viola-tions/drug violations etc.and then the guy is backplaying later this year ornext, so it must be OK forour youth to do that too?”

M.J.F.

“Once theNFLhad all thefacts in theRayRicespousalabuse case they stiffenedhis penalty. His Ravensteam and the NFL have sus-pended him indefinitely.HoweverRaywas paid hugefront end bonuses thatshould be recouped. It ap-pears the NFL has an epi-demic of these abuses bothspousal andchild.The indef-inite suspension of at leastone year makes sense forthe first timeoffender; afterthata life timeban. I amgladthe Bengals have been freeof these thugs. Go Figure!”

T.D.T.

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’SQUESTIONWill the U.S. eventually haveto send combat troops(“boots on the ground”) tofight ISIS in Iraq and Syria?

Every week we ask readers aquestion they can reply to viaemail. Send your answers tormaloney@community press.comwith Ch@troom in the subject line.

Here are the guidelines for elections-related guest columns and letters tothe editor:

» Columns must be no more than 500words.

» Letters must be no more than 300words.

» All letters and columns are subject toediting.

» Columns must include a color headshot (.jpg format) and a short bio ofthe author.

» For levies and ballot issues, we willrun no more than one column in

favor and one column against. Thecolumns should be from officialpro-levy or anti-levy groups. If thereis no organized group for a side,the first column submitted will beused.

» All columns and letters must includea daytime phone number forconfirmation.

» The deadline for columns and lettersto appear in print is noon Thursday,

Oct. 16. The only columns andletters that will run the weekbefore the election (Oct. 29 edition)are those which directly respond toa previous letter.

» Print publication depends on avail-able space. The earlier they aresubmitted, the more likely they areto be used.

» Send to [email protected]

Our elections letters, columns policy

Page 9: Eastern hills journal 092414

LIFELIFE PEOPLE | IDEAS | RECIPES

EASTERNHILLSJOURNAL

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2014

The17th annualKomenRacefor the Cure 5K walk/run drew8,100 participants to Coney Is-land Sept. 14 – 700 of thembreast cancer survivors. Theevent raised $300,000 inpledges. According to Komen’swebsite, up to 75 percent of ev-ery dollar earned by the Great-er Cincinnati affiliate is spenton research, education and out-reach efforts in the 21-countyarea it serves.Theremaining25percent goes to groundbreak-ing research.

LIZ DUFOUR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Linda Honious, 68, of Dayton crosses the finish line Sunday with her husband, Harold, during the Komen Race for the Cure. Honious said her doctor called her survival after her breast cancer hadspread to her liver and bones “a miracle.”

Komen marks 17thRace for the CurePhotos by Liz [email protected]

LIZ DUFOUR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Louise Young, center, of Maysville, Kentucky, diagnosed six months agowith breat cancer, celebrates as she crosses the finish line with husband,Brad, and daughter, Katie Looney.

LIZ DUFOUR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Nancy Moore, 68, of Anderson Township, celebrated her birthday takingpart in The Komen Race for the Cure.

LIZ DUFOUR/THE

COMMUNITY PRESS

Young girlswarm-up toJazzercise priorto the start ofThe Komen Racefor the Cure atConey IslandAmusementPark. From left:Aleesa Parker,11, PaytonSmith, 11,Megan Bennett,11 and MorganPorter, 11. Theywere walking tosupport theircoach, TinaStassi, the headcheerleadingcoordinator forGlen Este YouthSports, who is atwo-year breastcancer survivor.

LIZ DUFOUR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Patti Wical, 50, of WashingtonCourthouse, was diagnosed withbreast cancer on April 28, 2014. Shejust finished chemotherapy and isdoing radiation. Her team wasPatti's Pink Posse.

LIZ DUFOUR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Christine Tieman, of Bellbrook,Ohio, a 12-year breast cancersurvivor and women’s winner ofthe 5K race, is supported by herhusband, Dan, as she is overcomewith emotion during theCelebration of Hope.

LIZ DUFOUR/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Breast cancer survivors listen to “Amazing Grace” during the Celebrationof Hope at the Komen event. Seven hundred participants werebreast-cancer survivors.

Page 10: Eastern hills journal 092414

B2 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014

THURSDAY, SEPT. 25Art & Craft ClassesSharp Art: StainedGlass Class-es, 6:30-9 p.m., Brazee StreetStudios, 4426 Brazee St., Learnbasic glass cutting, wet grinder,foil wrap and solder. Ages 12-80.$30-$100. Presented by SharpArt. 389-6742; [email protected] Paintingwith Ron Johnson,1-4 p.m., Woman’s Art ClubCultural Center, 6980 CambridgeAve., The Barn. Class starts withbasics: value, color, color mixing,composition, color application,edges andmore. Ages 18 and up.$150 for six classes, one per week,Tuesday or Thursday. Regis-tration required. 741-1141;www.artatthebarn.org.Marie-mont.Open Studio Oilswith ChuckMarshall,10 a.m. to noon,Woman’s Art Club CulturalCenter, 6980 Cambridge Ave.,The Barn. Bring current projectfor assessment and help; still lifesetups be available. Ages 18 andup. $20. Reservations required.404-3161; www.artatthebarn.org.Mariemont.

Art ExhibitsPortrait Exhibition: 20 Artists,11a.m. to 5 p.m., Mary RanGallery, 3668 Erie Ave., Featuring20 of areas top portrait artists inoil, pastel, bronze, all together tocelebrate The Portrait. Free.871-5604; www.maryrangallery-.com.Hyde Park.

Community DanceBeechmont Squares, 7:30-9:30p.m., Anderson Senior Center,7970 Beechmont Ave., Western-style square dance club forexperienced dancers. $5. Present-ed by Southwestern Ohio/North-ern Kentucky Square DancersFederation. Through Dec. 11.929-2427.Anderson Township.

Dining EventsDinner Club, 7 p.m. Theme:Southern Harvest., Nectar, 1000Delta Ave., Themed dinners. $65.Reservations required. 929-0525.Mount Lookout.

Literary - BookstoresMusicwithMissMeghan,9:45-10:15 a.m. 10:30-11a.m., BlueManatee Children’s Bookstore,3054Madison Road, For childrenunder age 4 and a grown-up.Move, sing songs andmostlyenjoy time together. $8. Reserva-tions required. 731-2665.Oakley.

Music - ConcertsDierks Bentley, 8 p.m.With ChrisYoung, Chase Rice and Jon Pardi.,RiverbendMusic Center, 6295Kellogg Ave., American countrymusic artist. $40.25, $28.25 lawn;plus fees. 800-745-3000; www.ri-verbend.org.Anderson Town-ship.

On Stage - TheaterTakingMy Turn, 7:30 p.m.,Walton Creek Theater, 4101Walton Creek Road, The spokenwords book by Robert H. Living-ston represent stories, poems,remembrances, reflections andeven complaints collected frominterviews with everyday seniorcitizens. The result is fresh, a littlefeisty, full of poignancy and ofhumor. TakingMy Turnwas thewinner of the1984 Outer Critic’sCircle Award for Best Musical.$20. Presented byMariemontPlayers Inc.. 684-1236; www.ma-riemontplayers.com. ColumbiaTownship.

PetsOpenAdoption Hours, 6-8 p.m.,Ohio Alleycat Resource, 5619Orlando Place, Meet cats andkittens at shelter. All cats arespayed/neutered, up-to-date onvaccinations, tested for FIV andFeline Leukemia andmicro-chipped. Free admission. Adop-tion fee: $75. Presented by OhioAlleycat Resource & Spay/NeuterClinic. Through Dec. 28. 871-7297;www.ohioalleycat.org.Madi-sonville.

Support GroupsCaregiver Support Group,5:30-7 p.m., Hyde Park HealthCenter Terrace, 3983 RosslynDrive, To support caregivers ofelderly or disabled parents(relatives). Ages 18 and up. Free.Registration required. Presentedby Catholic Charities SouthWest-ern Ohio. 929-4483.Hyde Park.DivorceCare, 6:30-8 p.m., Park-side Christian Church, 6986 SalemRoad, Childcare available. $15.Presented by DivorceCare. 231-9482; www.divorcecare.org.Anderson Township.GriefShare, 6:30-8 p.m., Parkside

Christian Church, 6986 SalemRoad, Gain access to resources tohelp you recover from your lossand look forward to rebuildingyour life. $15. Presented byGriefShare. 231-9482; www.grief-share.org.Anderson Township.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 26Art ExhibitsOne Painter’s Journey, 9 a.m. to2 p.m., Woman’s Art Club Cultur-al Center, 6980 Cambridge Ave.,The Barn Gallery. Retrospectiveexhibit of paintings by PatriciaMcNeil Wakeman. Her impres-sionistic oils andwatercolorscelebrate her sojourns in nature,travels andmemories of mo-ments. Free. 272-3700; www.ar-tatthebarn.org.Mariemont.Portrait Exhibition: 20 Artists,11a.m. to 5 p.m., Mary RanGallery, Free. 871-5604;www.maryrangallery.com.HydePark.

Drink TastingsWine Tasting, 6-8 p.m.Wines ofCincinnati’s own Burnet Ridge,with special guest Chip Emmer-ich, owner andwinemaker.,RemkeMarket Skytop, 5218Beechmont Ave., Includes sam-ples of food, meat, cheese andproduce selections. Ages 21andup. $5 for five samples. 231-0606.MountWashington.

Exercise ClassesZumba Fitnesswith Sue,9:30-10:30 a.m., Clough UnitedMethodist Church, 2010Wolfan-gel Road, Burn calories, sculptyour body and have a blast. $5.379-4900; www.zumbasue.net.Anderson Township.

Literary - BookstoresStory TimewithMiss Sarah,9:30-10 a.m., BlueManateeChildren’s Bookstore, 3054Madison Road,WithMiss Sarahand her guitar. Free. 731-2665.Oakley.

Literary - Story TimesStorytime,10:30-11a.m., Joseph-Beth Booksellers-Rookwood,2692Madison Road, Sing songs,play games and read books,brand new and cherished favor-ites. Free. 396-8960; www.jo-sephbeth.com.Norwood.

NatureStories and S’mores, 7 p.m.,Johnson Hills Park, 7950 BridleRoad, Not-too-scary storiesaround campfire. S’mores sup-plies provided. Bring flashlight.$8, $5 resident, free ages 2 andunder. Registration required.Presented by Anderson TownshipPark District. 474-0003; www.an-dersonparks.com.AndersonTownship.

On Stage - TheaterTakingMy Turn, 8 p.m., WaltonCreek Theater, $20. 684-1236;www.mariemontplayers.com.Columbia Township.

SATURDAY, SEPT. 27Art EventsOakley Fancy FleaMarket,10a.m. to 4 p.m., Oakley Square,Madison Road, Curated fleamarket. Free admission. Present-ed by The O.F.F. Market. Nophone; www.oakleyfancyflea-.com.Oakley.

Art ExhibitsOne Painter’s Journey,1-4 p.m.,Woman’s Art Club CulturalCenter, Free. 272-3700; www.ar-tatthebarn.org.Mariemont.

Portrait Exhibition: 20 Artists,11a.m. to 4 p.m., Mary RanGallery, Free. 871-5604;www.maryrangallery.com.HydePark.

Drink TastingsFarewell to Summer Blast,5:30-8:30 p.m., The Art of Enter-taining, 2019Madison Road,Wines, paired cuisine andmusicby the TeryMetcalf Project. Ages21and up. $35, $30 advance.871-5170; www.cincyartofenter-taining.com.O’Bryonville.

EducationKid Super Self-Defense,10 a.m.to noon, Beech Acres Park Rec-Plex, 6915 Beechmont Ave.,Children recognize their “sup-er powers†to get away fromunsafe situations. Lessons onawareness and self-defensetechniques. Grades K-5. $25, $20residents. Registration required.Presented by Anderson TownshipPark District. 388-4513.AndersonTownship.

FarmersMarketAndersonOutdoor FarmersMarket, 9 a.m. to1p.m., An-derson Center Station, 7832 FiveMile Road, Fresh fruits and locallygrown vegetables, plants, home-made products, bakery goods,organic meats, food trucks, fairtrade coffee andmore. Rain orshine. Special features includeentertainment and seasonalevents for children. Presented byAnderson Township. 688-8400;www.andersonfarmersmarke-t.org.Anderson Township.

FestivalsPumpkin Festival,10 a.m. to 6p.m., Burger Farm and GardenCenter, 7849Main St., Hayride,pony rides and farm petting zoo,carnival rides and games, puppetshow, paintball shooting gallery,sand art, music, food and drink.Pick-your-own pumpkins, gourds,cornstalks, Indian corn and fallmums. Ages 2-12. $2. 561-8634;www.burgerfarm.com.New-town.

Music - AcousticAcousticMusic, 7-11p.m.,American Legion Post 72, 497Old Ohio 74, Free. Presented byCBB Production. ThroughOct. 18.528-9909.Mount Carmel.

Music - BluesChuck Brisbin & COLD Tuna, 8p.m. tomidnight, Belterra ParkGaming and EntertaimentCenter, 6301Kellogg Ave., Free.232-8000; www.chuckbris-binmusic.com.Anderson Town-ship.

Music - LatinSabadoNocheMovimiento,9:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m., InnerCircle, 4343 Kellogg Ave., $10,ladies free until 11p.m. 828-8317;innercirclecincy.com. East End.

NatureWeekendWith the Stars, 7-10p.m., Cincinnati ObservatoryCenter, 3489 Observatory Place,Tours, Q&A and stargazing.Family friendly. Free. 321-5186;

www.cincygreatoutdoorweeken-d.org.Mount Lookout.

On Stage - Children’sTheaterRoses and Thorns,10:30-11:30a.m., Woman’s Art Club CulturalCenter, 6980 Cambridge Ave.,The Barn. Playhouse in the ParkOff the Hill. Comedic version oforiginal story of beautiful Rose(the Beauty) and the hideousBeast. Based on18th centuryversion of story, play uses slap-stick and satire to tell tale, whichproves that true beauty is alwaysmore than skin deep. $5. 272-3700; www.artatthebarn.org.Mariemont.

On Stage - TheaterTakingMy Turn, 3 p.m., 8 p.m.,Walton Creek Theater, $20.684-1236; www.mariemontplay-ers.com. Columbia Township.

PetsOpenAdoption Hours,1-4 p.m.,Ohio Alleycat Resource, Freeadmission. Adoption fee: $75.871-7297; www.ohioalleycat.org.Madisonville.

ShoppingCountry Store,10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,Miller-Leuser Log House, 6550Clough Pike, Children’s games,farmer’s market, silent auction,handcrafted dolls and toys, fleamarket, crafts, raffle andmore.Free. Presented by AndersonTownship Historical Society.231-2114.Anderson Township.

Special EventsFire Up theNight, 4 p.m., ConeyIsland, 6201Kellogg Ave., Gatesopen at 4 p.m. Competitionbegins at 8:30 p.m. Pits Spain,Japan and Germany against eachother in best-of-the-best fire-works extravaganza produced byRozzi Famous Fireworks. $30 percarload. 232-8230; www.coneyis-landpark.com.Anderson Town-ship.

SUNDAY, SEPT. 28Art ExhibitsOne Painter’s Journey,1-4 p.m.,Woman’s Art Club CulturalCenter, Free. 272-3700; www.ar-tatthebarn.org.Mariemont.

FarmersMarketHyde Park FarmersMarket,9:30 a.m. to1:30 p.m., Hyde ParkSquare, 2643 Erie Ave., Localproduce and farm goods, gour-met foods andmore. Presentedby Hyde Park Farmers’ Market.Through Oct. 26. 561-1205;[email protected].

FestivalsPumpkin Festival,10 a.m. to 6p.m., Burger Farm and GardenCenter, $2. 561-8634; www.bur-gerfarm.com.Newtown.

Music - AcousticTomStephenson, 5-9 p.m.,Pirate’s Cove Tropical Bar & Grill,4609 Kellogg Ave., Free. 258-5110. East End.The 43 Presents: Brett Dennen-Watercolors, 7-11:30 p.m., 20th

Century Theater, 3021MadisonRoad, Tickets include two drinktickets for beer or wine. BenefitsFernside: supporting childrenand families through grief. $50.Presented by The 43. 731-8000;www.the20thcenturyth-eatre.com.Oakley.

Music - Hip-HopSuckaFree Sundays,10 p.m. to2:30 a.m., Inner Circle, 4343Kellogg Ave., $10, ladies freeuntil 11p.m. 321-0220; innercir-clecincy.com. East End.

NatureWeekendWith the Stars,1-10p.m., Cincinnati ObservatoryCenter, Free. 321-5186; www.cin-cygreatoutdoorweekend.org.Mount Lookout.

On Stage - TheaterRoses and Thorns by Play-house in the Park, 2:30-3:30p.m., Carnegie Center of Colum-bia Tusculum, 3738 Eastern Ave.,Tale of Beauty and the Beast byBret Fetzer. Darker, funnier takeon classic fairy tale that provestrue beauty is always more thanskin deep. For ages 9 and up. $5.289-8671; www.thecarnegiecen-ter.org. Columbia Tusculum.TakingMy Turn, 2 p.m., WaltonCreek Theater, $20. 684-1236;www.mariemontplayers.com.Columbia Township.

PetsOpenAdoption Hours,1-4 p.m.,Ohio Alleycat Resource, Freeadmission. Adoption fee: $75.871-7297; www.ohioalleycat.org.Madisonville.

ShoppingCountry Store, noon to 5 p.m.,Miller-Leuser Log House, Free.231-2114.Anderson Township.

MONDAY, SEPT. 29Art & Craft ClassesSharp Art: StainedGlass Class-es, 6:30-9 p.m., Brazee StreetStudios, $30-$100. 389-6742;[email protected].

Art ExhibitsPortrait Exhibition: 20 Artists,11a.m. to 5 p.m., Mary RanGallery, Free. 871-5604;www.maryrangallery.com.HydePark.

Exercise ClassesBeginner Taoist Tai Chi Class,5:30-7 p.m., Oakley RecreationCenter, 3882 Paxton Ave., In-ternal arts andmethods in-corporate stretching and turninginto sequence of movementsthat improve health of body,mind and spirit. Free, donationsaccepted. Presented by Taoist TaiChi Society of the USA. ThroughNov. 19. 304-6055; www.usa-.taoist.org.Oakley.

Literary - BookstoresMake aMess at theManatee,10-10:30 a.m., BlueManateeChildren’s Bookstore, 3054Madison Road, $7. Registrationrequired. 731-2665.Oakley.

Literary - Story TimesStorytime,10:30-11a.m., Joseph-Beth Booksellers-Rookwood,Free. 396-8960; www.josephbe-th.com.Norwood.

Music - ConcertsTheWood Brothers, 8 p.m., 20thCentury Theater, 3021MadisonRoad, $22, $20 advance. 731-8000; www.the20thcenturythea-ter.com.Oakley.

TUESDAY, SEPT. 30Art & Craft ClassesThe Joy of Painting: Land-scape, 6-9 p.m.Weekly throughOct. 21., Beech Acres Park Rec-Plex, 6915 Beechmont Ave., Learnfamous Bob Ross landscapepaintingmethod. Ages 16 andup. All skill levels. $50, $45residents. Registration required.Presented by Anderson TownshipPark District. 388-4513.AndersonTownship.Oil Paintingwith Ron Johnson,6-9 p.m., Woman’s Art ClubCultural Center, $150 for sixclasses, one per week, Tuesday orThursday. Registration required.741-1141; www.artatthebarn.org.Mariemont.

Art ExhibitsPortrait Exhibition: 20 Artists,11a.m. to 5 p.m., Mary RanGallery, Free. 871-5604;www.maryrangallery.com.HydePark.

EducationAnderson Township HistoryRoom, 6-8:30 p.m., Anderson

Center, 7850 FiveMile Road,Lower atrium. Learn about thehistory of Anderson Townshipthrough photos, hands-onexhibits and artifacts. Free.Presented by Anderson TownshipHistorical Society. Through Oct.29. 231-2114; andersontown-shiphistoricalsociety.org.An-derson Township.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 1Art & Craft ClassesAfter-School Drawing andPainting, 4-6 p.m., Woman’s ArtClub Cultural Center, 6980 Cam-bridge Ave., Alternating fromworking from students’ still lifeor referencematerial, studentsreceive one-on-one instructionand class demonstrations. Ages11-18. $100 for four weeks; $275for 12 weeks. Registration re-quired. Presented by TheWom-an’s Art Club of Cincinnati.259-9302; www.deborahrid-gley.com/event.Mariemont.Costumed Portrait PaintingandDrawing Class,12:30 p.m.Weekly through Oct. 22., Wom-an’s Art Club Cultural Center,6980 Cambridge Ave., Studentshave opportunity to work fromcostumedmodel at each class.Class focuses on study of values,color temperature, composition,painting and drawing tech-niques. $150 per session, plus $30modeling fee per session. Reser-vations required. 259-9302;www.artatthebarn.org.Marie-mont.

Art ExhibitsPortrait Exhibition: 20 Artists,11a.m. to 5 p.m., Mary RanGallery, Free. 871-5604;www.maryrangallery.com.HydePark.

Clubs & OrganizationsAnderson Township HistoricalSocietyMeeting, 7:30-9 p.m.Susan Bell presents “A DaywithAnn Symmes Harrison.” Little-known facts about time Annlived, including fashions of theday and stories of her husbandPresidentWilliamHenry Harri-son., Anderson Center, 7850 FiveMile Road, Lower Atrium. In-cludes refreshments. Publicinvited. Free. Presented byAnderson Township HistoricalSociety. 231-2114.AndersonTownship.

Drink TastingsWinestationWednesdayHappy Hour, 4-7 p.m., TheWineMerchant, 3972 Edwards Road,All tastes of wines half-off. Eightpremiumwines to choose from.Newwines every week. Compli-mentary cheese and Frenchbaguettes. Ages 21and up. Pricesvary. 731-1515.Oakley.

EducationAnderson Township HistoryRoom,1-4 p.m., AndersonCenter, Free. 231-2114; anderson-townshiphistoricalsociety.org.Anderson Township.

Exercise ClassesBeginner Taoist Tai Chi Class,5:30-7 p.m., Oakley RecreationCenter, Free, donations accepted.304-6055; www.usa.taoist.org.Oakley.

Literary - Story TimesStory Time,10:30-11a.m., BlueManatee Children’s Bookstore,3054Madison Road, On LaPageStage. Stories, songs andmore.Free. 731-2665.Oakley.Storytime,10:30-11a.m., Joseph-Beth Booksellers-Rookwood,Free. 396-8960; www.josephbe-th.com.Norwood.

Parenting ClassesDemystifyingDyslexia: Re-sources and Strategies forSuccess, 7-9 p.m., SpringerSchool and Center, 2121MadisonRoad, Program explains anddefines language-based learningdisability and provides blueprintfor supporting school success.Center staff provides guidance asyou determine options and nextsteps. For parents/guardians. $10.871-6080, ext. 402; www.spring-er-ld.org.Hyde Park.

THURSDAY, OCT. 2Art & Craft ClassesSharp Art: StainedGlass Class-es, 6:30-9 p.m., Brazee StreetStudios, $30-$100. 389-6742;[email protected] Paintingwith Ron Johnson,1-4 p.m., Woman’s Art ClubCultural Center, $150 for sixclasses, one per week, Tuesday orThursday. Registration required.741-1141; www.artatthebarn.org.Mariemont.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

ABOUT CALENDARTo submit calendar items, go to www.cincinnati.com and click

on “Share!” Send digital photos to [email protected] with event information. Items are printed on a space-available basis with local events taking precedence.Deadline is two weeks before publication date. To find more

calendar events, go to www.cincinnati.com and choose from amenu of items in the Entertainment section on the main page.

PATRICK REDDY/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

The Oakley Fancy Flea Market is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 27, in OakleySquare on Madison Road. Admission is free. Visit www.oakleyfancyflea.com for moreinformation.

Page 11: Eastern hills journal 092414

SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • B3LIFE

Please join us for our33RDRD ANNUAL PUMPKINANNUAL PUMPKINAND S’MORES EVENTAND S’MORES EVENT

Sunday, October 26th 6-8pmThere’s something magical about Autumn... the bite in the air, the color of the leaves,and the smell of s’mores wafting up from the fire! Please join the Seasons family as

we celebrate with carved pumpkins, s’mores, music, and so much more!

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Mercy Health - Cincin-nati announces itsnext se-ries of pre-diabetes edu-cation classes .

Pre-diabetes is a condi-tion that formsbeforedia-betes. It means that a per-son’s blood sugar levelsare higher than normalbut aren’t high enough tobe diagnosed as diabetes.Usually a fasting bloodsugar level of 100-125 mg/dl indicates pre-diabetes.

The good news is thatpre-diabetes is a warning

sign allowing you to takeaction to prevent or delaythe onset of Type 2 diabe-tes.

Diabetes educatorswho are also registereddietitians teach MercyHealth’s two-hour pre-di-abetes education classes.Each class includes infor-mation on: makinghealthy food choices, ex-ercise and blood sugarcontrol and monitoringblood sugar levels.

Cost is $20 per class,

payable in advance withcheck or credit card. Call513-557-7718 to registerfor all classes. Upcomingdates, times and locationsfollow below:

Anderson HealthPlex,7495 State Road: 4 p.m. to6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18

Kenwood Weight Man-agement Solutions (onThe JewishHospital cam-pus), 8001KenwoodRoad:10 a.m. to noon Tuesday,Oct. 28; 10 a.m. to noonTuesday, Nov. 25.

Mercy Health offers pre-diabetes classes

This has been a busyweek. I was a featuredpresenter at MotherEarth News Fair in Penn-sylvania and my talk was

on Bibleherbs andfoods withanti-agingqualities.

One ofmy topicswas breadsincewheat wasone of thefirst, if notthe first,

crop planted back then. Ayoung woman came up tome afterwards and askedif I ever made challah,the honey egg bread. Yes,I told her, I have. “Wouldyou send me your reci-pe?” she asked. Yes, Itold her, I would.

As I write this, we’re aweek away from RoshHashanah, the JewishNew Year, of which chal-lah is an important food.We just got a quart ofhoney from our beekeep-er, so today I’m sharing areally good recipe forchallah. It’s adapted fromJoan Nathan’s, an experton Jewish cuisine.

ChallahGrandson, Jack, loves

this sweeter type eggbread. A wonderful giftfrom the kitchen, as well.

This makes 2 loaves.Some people like tosprinkle it with poppy orsesame seeds beforebaking.

2-1/2 cups warmwater,110-115 degrees

1 tablespoon active

dry yeast (not rapid rise)1/2 cup honey1/4 cup Canola oil3 large eggs, room

temperature1 tablespoon salt8 cups unbleached all

purpose flour - I usedKing Arthur brand

Egg wash - 1 or 2whole eggs, beaten untilblended

Sprinkle yeast overwarmwater. On lowspeed, stir in honey, oil,eggs and salt until verywell blended.

Add flour, one cup at atime, beating after eachaddition. You may windup having to beat byhand, depending upon thesize of the bowl, if you’reusing a hand or standmixer, etc.

Remove dough tolightly floured surface.Dough will be sticky.Knead until smooth andelastic (like a baby’sbottom, my friend Carol

says) and no longersticky, adding flour a bitat a time as needed. Becareful here - don’t addtoo much or bread will bedry. Cover with dampclean cloth and let riseuntil doubled in bulk - upto 1-1/2 hours or so.

Punch dough downand again place on lightlyfloured surface. Dividein half and knead eachhalf for a fewmore min-utes, adding more flour ifneeded. Again, be carefulhere - add just enoughflour to keep it frombeing sticky.

Divide each half intothirds and roll into ropesabout 1-1/2” wide. Pinchtop ends of each 3 ropestogether. Then, startingfrom the middle, startbraiding, again pinchingends after braiding.Leave as is or curvebraid into a circle andpinch ends together verywell. I pinch and tuck

ends under.Spray 2 baking sheets

or use parchment paper.Put braids on. Brush withegg wash. Cover withtowel and let rise untildoubled, about an hour.Preheat oven to 375.

If you want a lac-quered finish, brushgently again with eggwash. Bake for 30-40minutes. If you insertthermometer into centeron bottom, bread willregister 190 degreeswhen done. Or tap it onbottom - it should soundhollow.

Even easier: Thawfrozen bread dough, thendivide in thirds, make 3ropes and follow instruc-tions on label for rising,etc. This bread won’t beas sweet as homemadechallah, but it’s still good.

Hot mulled ciderI can’t believe the

weather has turned coolenough to enjoy a mug ofhot mulled cider. Whenthe kids were little, wemade cider from ourorchard apples. Wonder-ful memories of chillyautumn evenings, sitting

by the woodstove, sip-ping mulled cider. Ahealthy splash of applebrandy or spiced rumadded brings back prettygood memories, too!

Bring ingredients to agentle boil, then lower toa simmer and cook, cov-ered, about 10 minutes orso. Strain, add brandy,and enjoy.

1 qt. apple ciderBrown sugar to taste -

start with 3 tablespoons4 whole ea. cloves and

allspice berriesSeveral pinches fresh-

ly ground nutmeg6” cinnamon stick,

broken up

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is anherbalist, educator, JungleJim’s Eastgate culinary pro-fessional and author. Find herblog online atAbouteating.com. Call 513-248-7130, ext. 356.

Welcome High Holy Days, fall with recipes

RitaHeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

Challah is an important food during Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.

Page 12: Eastern hills journal 092414

items. Never pay morethan the amount of workthat’s been satisfactorilycompleted.

Make sure the con-tract you receive con-tains the company’sname, address andphone number. It shouldalso state the start andcompletion dates of thejob.

Under the law youhave three days to can-cel a door-to-door sale.In Ohio, the companymust also give you awritten right-to-cancelform to mail back. Ifyou don’t receive such acancellation form don’tdo business with thecompany. Finally, don’tlet the company beginany work until threedays have passed.

Howard Ain’s column ap-pears biweekly in the Com-

munity Press. He appearsregularly as the Trouble-shooter on WKRC-TVLocal 12 News. Email [email protected].

B4 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 LIFE

If not completely satisfied with our company or our work, within 10 days we will reclean your carpet or furniture at our expense*

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This is the time ofyear when many con-sumers hire home im-provement contractorsto fix up items aroundtheir house. Before youhire a contractor, youshould know there aresome who just take yourmoney and run.

I received a letterfrom a woman whohired a company toclean her roof and in-stall new windows. Shepaid a $2,000 depositbefore any work wasdone and, unfortunately,no work was ever done.Now the firm, which shesays, never ordered thewindows, wants tocharge her a restockingfee after she com-plained and said shewants her money back.

Ohio Attorney Gener-al Mike DeWine says hisoffice has receivedmore than 60 complaints

abouthomeimprove-ment con-tractorssinceJune. Mostof hiscom-plaintsinvolveasphalt,

concrete or pavingwork. The averageamount of money dis-puted is more than$3,000.

Most of those com-plaints involved shoddyresurfacing of the drive-way, rough spots orcracks in the concrete,improper drainage,driveways not level, andineffective and incom-plete sealing.

To protect yourselfalways check out a con-tractor with the BetterBusiness Bureau to

make sure they have agood record and havebeen in business for awhile. If they’re a mem-ber of the BBB so muchthe better because thenthe bureau can mediateany problems you mayencounter with the com-pany.

Make sure you get acopy of the company’sworkers compensationand liability insurancepolicies. If the firmdoesn’t have both pol-icies to give you, go toanother firm.

Avoid paying a lot ofmoney upfront so thecontractor has an in-centive to return and dothe work. I suggest fol-lowing the CincinnatiHome Remodeling Ordi-nance and limiting yourdown payment to nomore than 10 percent ofthe cost of the job, ex-cept for special order

Some contractors take money, run

HowardAinHEY HOWARD!

On May 30, PresidentObama signed into lawlegislation to award theCongressional Gold Med-al to theWorldWarIICivilAir Patrol veterans fortheir volunteer service

during thewar. Therewere morethan120,000volunteerswhostepped upin supportof the mili-tary effort

to keep our nation secure.Congress had approvedthe Congressional GoldMedal legislation a weekprior. Of the many veter-ans who are being award-ed the gold medals, 13arefrom Ohio.

One of the 13 veteranswho is being awarded aCongressional Gold Med-al is Lt.MargaretBarthol-omew, one of the firstmembers of the Cincin-nati Squadron based atLunken Airport, Squad-

ron 5111-1. Before she vol-unteered with Civil AirPatrol she studied danceunder Betty Gould, pianounder Dorothy Shelden-back, and danced withHorace Hanners, TomFinn and many others.Duringher timewithCivilAir Patrol she progressedto the position of flightleader of the all femaleflight, Flight C, and to sta-tion commander of theCincinnati Courier Ser-vice.

On Oct. 18, 1943, Bar-tholomew flew her lastmission, a Courier Mis-sion out of Williamsport,Pennsylvania. A suddensnowstormcausedvisibil-ity to drop to zero and iceto form on the wings ofher aircraft. Bartholo-mew flew lower as shetried to findasafeplace toland, but due to poor visi-bility she crashed into ahill 55 miles northeast ofPittsburgh. Bartholomewwas the only female CivilAir Patrol member lostduring the war.

World War II casualtyreceives medal for service

PROVIDED

Lt. MargaretBartholomew

People Working Coop-eratively, a Cincinnati-based nonprofit thatserves the Greater Cin-cinnati area, has teamedupwith theCity ofCincin-nati to offer the Cincin-nati Lead Education andRemediation Program incertain neighborhoods.

Youareeligible for thisleadprogramifyou live inthese city neighborhoods:

• Westend, Over TheRhine, Mt. Auburn, CUF,Corryville, Walnut Hills,Evanston, Madisonville,Avondale, Northside,South Cumminsville,North and South Fair-mount, West, East andLower Price Hill, or Car-thage.

This new program re-duces lead hazards fromyour home and could in-volve repairs such as awindow replacement orcovering lead surfaces.

Assistance is offeredasa loan that is totally for-

given if you remain in thehome for three years af-ter the work is complete.That make your workfree!

You may qualify if theall of the following applyto your household:

» A child under 6 re-sides in your home orspends at least six hoursper week in your home ona regular basis. It is rec-ommended that the child/childrenbetestedfor leadbefore we begin work.

» Youhaveownedyourhome for more than oneyear.

» You are a homeown-er residing in ahomebuiltbefore 1978.

If you are interested inlearning more about theprogram, call 513-366-4699. Space may be limit-ed

Weatherization in thewinter can reduce yourenergy bills and keepyour homewarmer, noted

Nina Creech, PWC vicepresident of operations.

“Weatherization cansave on energy usage upto 20 percent or more,”Creech said. Also, thewaiting list for income-qualified clients is short,she noted. “Call now andwe can serve you!”

All qualifying partici-pants receive a furnaceclean and tune, health andsafety check, energy effi-cient light bulbs, and en-ergy-saving tips. If need-ed, each participant canalso receive a hot waterheater wrap, weatherstripping, pipe wrap andmore.

PWC also offers homerepair andweatherizationservices to veterans inOhio and Kentucky.

To apply for the ser-vices or see if you qualifycall 859-331-1991 or 513-351-7921or apply online atwww.pwchomerepair-s.org.

PWC offers lead abatement,home weatherization

Page 13: Eastern hills journal 092414

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B6 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 LIFE

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ABOUT POLICE REPORTSThe Community Press publishes the names of all adults

charged with offenses. The information is a matter ofpublic record and does not imply guilt or innocence.To contact your local police department:

» Cincinnati, Capt. Jeff Butler, District 2 commander, 979-4440» Columbia Township, Hamilton County Sheriff's Office,Sgt. Peter Enderle, 683-3444» Fairfax, Steve M. Kelly, chief, 271-7250»Mariemont, Rick Hines, chief, 271-4089» Terrace Park, Jerry Hayhow, chief, 831-2137 or 825-2280.

CINCINNATI DISTRICT 2Arrests/citationsAbby Gumm, born 1981, theftunder $300, 3872 Paxton Ave.,Sept. 5.Derrick Gibbs, born 1961, break-ing and entering, possess drugparaphernalia, 2564 Erie Ave.,Sept. 6.Keith Allen, born 1983, assaultknowingly victim harmed,domestic violence-knowingly,4822Winona Terrace, Sept. 5.Mohamed A. Mohamed, born1987, city or local ordinanceviolation, city ordinance vio-lation, 3620 Marburg Ave., Aug.30.Ricky Richardson, born 1993,domestic violence-knowingly,4110 Homer Ave., Sept. 4.

Incidents/investigationsBreaking and entering4500 block of Eastern Ave., Sept.3.Burglary6700 block of East Ledge St.,Sept. 7.Criminaldamaging/endangering3700 block of Eastern Hills Lane,Sept. 5.5100 block of Conway St., Sept.4.6000 block of Dahlgren St., Sept.4.Criminal trespass3700 block of Drake Ave., Aug.31.Domestic violence4400 block of Verne Ave., Sept. 2.Theft1200 block of Herschel Woods

Lane, Sept. 2.2100 block of Madison Road,Sept. 3.2600 block of Madison Road,Sept. 3.2600 block of Madison, Sept. 5.3000 block of Madison Road,Sept. 3.3000 block of Markbreit, Sept. 5.3300 block of Erie Ave., Sept. 3.3500 block of Mooney Ave.,Sept. 6.3700 block of Eastern Hills Lane,Sept. 5.3800 block of Paxton Ave., Sept.5.4100 block of Eastern Ave., Sept.4.4400 block of Red Bank Road,Sept. 4.4800 block of Marburg Ave.,Sept. 3.4800 block of Whetsel Ave., Sept.

2.4800 block of Whetsel Ave., Sept.5.4900 block of Strathmore Drive,Sept. 3.5700 block of Luhn Ave., Sept. 5.700 block of Delta Ave., Sept. 4.

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIPArrests/citationsShanita Dye-Toyka, 32, 3579Wabash Ave., theft, Aug. 23.Jack Green, 42, 3652 ReadingRoad, carrying concealed weap-on, tampering with evidence,Aug. 24.Mriya Mitchell, 37, 1430 CarolinaAve., carrying concealed weap-on, tampering with evidence,Aug. 24.Shane Valentine, 33, 4623 Chick-ing Ave., theft, Aug. 22.

Laridra Jones, 32, 860 NebraskaAve., theft, Aug. 27.

Incidents/investigationsBreaking and enteringTools valued at $2390 at 8348Wooster Pike, Aug. 24.BurglaryResidence entered and cellphones, games, cash and watchvalued at $5,800 removed at5600 block of View Pointe Drive,Aug. 23.TheftCredit cards removed at 2800block of Ridgewood Ave., Aug.25.Reported at 5300 block of RidgeAve., Aug. 22.AC unit valued at $200 removedat 3500 block of Kenoak Lane,Aug. 27.Speakers and amp valued at$600 removed at 5600 block ofViewpointe Drive, Aug. 28.Catalytic converter removed at3400 block of Highland Ave.,Aug. 28.

FAIRFAXArrests/citationsRyan P. Dunphy, 27, 9942 Mead-ow Hills Drive, driving underinfluence, Aug. 20.Dominique Green, 26, 1954Rockland Ave. No. 2, theft, Aug.23.Shannon Barrett, 32, 730 DerbyAve. No. 4, theft, Aug. 23.Randall Pangburn, 24, 6624 CrullSt. No. 39, theft, Aug. 23.Osmin A. Chavez, 20, 315 S. WestSt., driving under suspension,Aug. 23.Scotty Kinmon, 25, 204 N. Main,theft, Aug. 24.AnnaMoi, 34, 3995 S. WhetselAve., driving under suspension,Aug. 25.Paul Reese, 36, 5907 MadisonNo. 101, open container, Aug.26.Antonio Evans, 43, 8902 CherrySt., receiving stolen property,driving under suspension, Aug.26.Meliqa Phelia, 26, 3548WabashAve., theft, Aug. 27.James W. Prior, 33, 511 Church St.No. 2, driving under suspension,Aug. 27.Rachel Merice, 32, 495 Lenke-nann Drive, driving undersuspension, Aug. 28.Asia M. Jordan, 24, 973 DebbieLane, theft, Aug. 28.Valerie Bell, 31, 810 Fred Shuttles-worth Court, theft, Aug. 28.Tyler Payton, 20, 4200 HomerAve., theft, Aug. 28.Ethan Blair, 23, 6792 RosecrestAve., driving under suspension,Aug. 29.Jazzma J. Williams, 29, 3733

Mayfield Ave., driving undersuspension, Aug. 29.Carl Sanderson, 29, 6214 RidgeAcres Drive, theft, Aug. 30.Thomas M. Barton Jr., 27, 5705Montgomery Road, drug abuse,paraphernalia, speed, Aug. 30.Tonya Jackson, 23, 703 Green-wood Ave. No. 2, drug para-phernalia, theft, Aug. 30.Nancy Hatch, 86, 3544 ForestOak Court, driving under sus-pension, Aug. 31.

Incidents/investigationsMisuse of credit cardReported at Wal-Mart; $1,514.82at 4000 block of Red Bank Road,Sept. 5.Reported at Wal-Mart; $2,524.70at 4000 block of Red Bank Road,Sept. 5.TheftClothes taken fromWal-Mart;$397 at 4000 block of Red BankRoad, Aug. 31.Baby items taken fromWal-Mart; $210 at 4000 block of RedBank Road, Aug. 31.Clothes, etc. taken fromWal-Mart; $54 at 4000 block of RedBank Road, Sept. 1.Ear buds taken fromWal-Mart;$7 at 4000 block of Red BankRoad, Sept. 1.Clothes taken fromWal-Mart;$40 at 4000 block of Red BankRoad, Sept. 1.Computer, headphones, etc.taken fromWal-Mart; $510 at4000 block of Red Bank Road,Sept. 2.DVD box set taken fromWal-Mart; $40 at 4000 block of RedBank Road, Sept. 2.Cellphone taken from vehicle;$600 at 3900 block of SouthernAve., Sept. 4.Credit card taken at 3900 blockof Germania Ave., Sept. 4.Make-up taken fromWal-Mart;$179 at 4000 block of Red BankRoad, Sept. 5.Clothes taken fromWal-Mart;$280 at 4000 block of Red BankRoad, Sept. 6.

MARIEMONTArrests/citationsDawn Bales, 30, 2958 HarrisonNo. 2, driving under suspension,Aug. 30.Karmin A. Digby, 36, 7002 GraceAve., driving under suspension,Aug. 28.Jessica R. Sissel, 31, 965 GrayRoad, driving under suspension,Aug. 29.Jennifer A. Nugent, 40, 6951Copper Glow Court, drivingunder influence, Aug. 29.Brian A. Barnes, 55, 5223 Roa-noke Court, driving underinfluence, Sept. 1.

POLICE REPORTS

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP7934 Ashley View Drive: Will,David L. & Nancy L. to Kerbel,Daniel & Miriam Kajomovitz;$440,000.6819 Vinewood Ave.: Wessel-man, Beatrice D. to Bishop, JeffW. & Niehaus Rhonda G.;$75,000.6829 Vinewood Ave.: Wessel-man, Beatrice D. to Bishop, JeffW. & Rhonda G.; $75,000.

FAIRFAX3708 Carlton Ave.: Frank, Chris-topher M. to TMT Homes LLC;$76,100.

HYDE PARK3778 Grovedale Place: McFad-den, Micah to Dunn, Caroline L.;$260,900.3647 Marburg Ave.: Mueller,Martin R. to Haas, CourtneyBavaro; $150,000.3583 Monteith Ave.: Welling-

hoff, David W. & Lori N. toGibson, Brian H. & Jennifer A.;$485,000.

MADISONVILLE5722 Chandler St.: Cody, Eileento Raineth IV Cincinnati LLC;$27,000.5820 Roe St.: Home OpportunityLLC to Jacob, Ben Shoushan LLC;$21,000.4726 Simpson Ave.: Nash, Thom-as Jr. to Waltz, Christine; $6,000.3724 Sonoma Court: Kruetz-kamp, Emily D. to Schirmann,Christopher Michael; $218,500.

MARIEMONT3828 Indianview Ave.: Baker,Franklin H. & Jennifer J. toBaumann, Ewart Holly;$310,000.3901West St.: Flannery HoldingsLLC to Cockwell, Stephen;

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

See REAL ESTATE, Page B8

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

of Hamilton County Auditor Dusty Rhodes. Neighborhooddesignations are approximate.

Page 15: Eastern hills journal 092414

SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • B7LIFE

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3850 E. Galbraith,Deer Park

Next to DillonvaleShopping Ctr

www.TrinityCincinnati.org791-7631

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

PastorCathy Kaminski

EVANGELICAL COVENANT

Experiencethe Light andSound of God

You are invited to theCommunity HU Song

2nd Sunday, 10:00 - 10:30 amECKWorship Service

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

7832 Five Mile RoadCincinnati, OH 452301-800-LOVE GODwww.Eckankar.org

Local(513) 674-7001

www.ECK-Ohio.org

ECKANKAR

First Church of Christ,Scientist,

Anderson Township7341 Beechmont Avenue

(near Five Mile Road)email:

[email protected]

christiansciencecincinnati.comSunday Service & Sunday School

10:30 a.m.Wednesday Testimonial Meeting

7:30 p.m.In Church Reading Rm/Bookstore

open after all services.Downtown Reading Rm/Bookstore

412 Vine Street, CincinnatiOpen M-F 9:00 a.m - 4:00 p.m.

CE-1001806789-01

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

School 10:30amWednesday Testimonial Meeting

7:30pmReading Room 3035 Erie Ave

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

CALVARY ALLIANCECHURCH

Senior Pastor, Rev. Dave Robinette986 Nordyke Road - 45255

(Cherry Grove turn off Beechmontat Beechmont Toyota)

Worship Service, Sunday 10:45 amClasses For All Ages, Sunday 9:15 amPrayer Service Wednesday, 6:45 pm

CHRISTIAN AND MISSIONARY

Hyde Park Baptist ChurchMichigan & Erie Ave

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

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

BAPTIST

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

Sunday Worship: 9:00 & 11:00 AM withChildrens Ministry & Nursery

PASTOR MARIE SMITHwww.cloughchurch.org

CHURCH OF THE SAVIOUR8005 Pfeiffer Rd. Montgomery 791-3142

www.cos-umc.orgTraditional Worship8:20am & 11:00am

Contemporary Worship 9:40amSunday School (All ages)

9:40 & 11amNursery Care Provided

Reverend Jennifer Lucas,Senior Pastor

7515 Forest Road Cincinnati, OH 45255513-231-4172 • www.andersonhillsumc.org

Children’s programs and nursery & toddlercare available at 9:30 and 11:00 services.

Plenty of Parking behind church.

TRADITIONAL WORSHIPSunday 8:30 & 11 am

CONTEMPORARY WORSHIPSunday 9:30 & 11 am

&1st Saturday of the Month

6 pm

UNITED METHODIST

Sunday Services 8 &10:30 amSunday School 10:30 am

Programs for children, youth and adults6000 Drake Road

561-6805

Indian HillEpiscopal-Presbyterian Church

Equipping Service:4:30 p.m. Sat. & 8:50 a.m. Sun.

Exploring Service:10:00 a.m. & 11:10 a.m. Sun.Birth thru high school programs

3950 Newtown RoadCincinnati, OH 45244

513 272-5800www.horizoncc.com

CE-100

1820

481-01

Equipping Service:4:30 p.m. Sat. & 8:50 a.m. Sun.

Exploring Service:10:00 a.m. & 11:10 a.m. Sun.Birth thru high school programs

3950 Newtown RoadCincinnati, OH 45244

513 272-5800www.horizoncc.com

CE-100

1819

829-01

INTERDENOMINATIONAL

MADEIRA-SILVERWOODPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

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

Sunday Worship9:00 am - Contemporary Service10:00am Educational Hour

11:00 am - Traditional Service

PRESBYTERIAN

Sunday 9:00 & 11:00 a.m.11020 S. Lebanon Road.

683-1556www.golovelive.com

Connections Christian Church7421 East GalbraithCincinnati, OH 45243

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

Jeff Hill • Ministerwww.connectionscc.org

Worship Service 10:30amSunday School 9:15 am

FAITH CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP CHURCH

~ Solid Bible Teaching ~6800 School StreetNewtown, OH 45244

Phone: 271-8442Web: www.fcfc.us

Dr. R. Edgar Bonniwell, Senior PastorPastor Justin Wilson, Youth Minister

Vibrant Teen and Children’s MinistriesSunday Worship 10:30 am

All ages Sunday School 9:30 amWed. Fellowship Meal 6:00 pm

Wed. Worship/Bible Study 6:45 pmAll are Welcome!

NON-DENOMINATIONAL

$$$)'&*5%03%.3)+(-

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Sundays9:15am &10:45am

Building HomesRelationships& Families

UNITED METHODIST

ABOUT RELIGIONReligion news is published at no charge on a space-

available basis. Items must be to our office no later than 4p.m. Wednesday, for possible consideration in the follow-ing edition.» E-mail announcements to [email protected], with “Religion” in the subject line.» Fax to 248-1938. Call 248-8600.»Mail to: Eastern Hills Journal, Attention: Religion news,394 Wards Corner Road, Suite 170, Loveland, Ohio 45140.

Anderson HillsUnitedMethodistChurchThe church has two contempo-rary services on Sundays at 9:30a.m. and 11 a.m., and twotraditional services at 8:30 a.m.and 11 a.m.The church is at 7515 ForestRoad, Anderson Township;231-4172; andersonhillsumc.org.

Jesuit SpiritualCenter“WomenWalking with God”willbe offered 6:30 p.m. to 8:30p.m. Thursday, Oct. 2, in theArrupe Building. Coffee anddessert will be served at 6:30p.m. The program begins at 7p.m. Rebecca Mastalerz and PatMeisner will lead the eveningon the stories of Deborah, MaryMagdalene and TheWoman attheWell, exploring how theirwalks with God strengthenedthem for the journey of becom-ing who they were created tobe. Gather with other seekers aswe reflect on the many wayswomen have inspired, taughtand encouraged us along thepaths of our lives. To RSVP, call513-248-3500 ext. 10.“Coming Home - A HealingRetreat Program for MilitaryVeterans”will be offered Oct.3-5, presented by MayslsakeMinistries. This two-night week-end retreat at the Jesuit Spiritu-al Center at Milford is offered atno cost to veterans and theirsignificant other (should theyalso wish to attend) in a place ofsafety, respite and support.Retreat leader Sister LindaMcClenahan, a veteran, servedas a communications sergeant inthe III Corps area of Vietnam.The retreat is free. A $25 regis-tration fee required per person,which is refunded to partici-pants upon attendance at theretreat. To register, visitmayslakeministries.org.Thomas Merton Retreat is Oct.17-19, presented by ChristopherPramuk, who will facilitate asustained meditation onWis-dom-Sophia, the divine pres-ence alive in the world

To learn more, or to make areservation, call 248-3500,ext.10, e-mail [email protected] visitthe center’s website.The campus of the Jesuit SpiritualCenter at Milford spreads morethan 37 acres overlooking theLittle Miami.The center is at 5361 S. MilfordRoad, Milford; 248-3500;www.jesuitspiritual center.com.

Milford First UnitedMethodist ChurchTheWAVE free communitydinners run throughMay 13.Dinners are at 6 p.m. Wednes-days. No reservations are need-ed, and all are welcome. Family-friendly meals will be served.There will be no dinners Dec. 24and Dec. 31.The church is at 541Main St.,Milford; 931-5500; www.mil-fordfirstumc.org.

Mount WashingtonPresbyterian ChurchThe fall rummage sale is 9 a.m. to6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 26, and 9a.m. to noon Saturday, Sept. 27.Featured will be men’s andwomen’s clothing, householditems, electronics, sports equip-ment and toys. There will alsobe a bake sale and bid and buyopportunity as well as a $3 bagsale on Saturday.The church’s mission focus is onarea hunger needs. It providesfood and volunteer time togroups such as the SEM Pantry,the Batavia YWCA Pantry,Tender Mercies, the Drop Inn

Center and similar organizationsthroughout the year.Sunday School and blendedworship is 9:30 a.m., and tradi-tional worship is 11 a.m. Coffeeand informal gatherings areoffered before and after theservices.The church is at 6474 BeechmontAve., MountWashington;231-2650; www.mwpc-church.org.

Mount WashingtonUnitedMethodistChurchOn the second Saturday of everymonth, the community is invitedto a free dinner from 5:30 p.m.to 6:30 p.m. at the church. Thedinner is provided and preparedby church members and isserved in the church fellowshiphall. The community is invited.The church is at 6365 CorblyRoad;231-3946;www.mtwashumc.org.

Rockdale TempleMembers of the temple inviteunaffiliated Jews and membersof all other faiths to join thecongregation in the celebrationof the Jewish High Holy Days.The Days of Awe start with RoshHashanah, New Year’s Day andend with Yom Kippur, a time ofreflection and repentance.Services will commence on RoshHashanah eve, Wednesday,Sept. 23, and continue throughYom Kippur Saturday, Oct. 4.Visit the temple’s website or callfor service times. Services will beat the Mayerson Jewish Com-munity Center, 8485 Ridge Road

in Amberley Village.Rockdale Temple’s Senior Rabbi,Sigma Faye Coran, explained“opening High Holy Day servicesto the community is a way forthose unacquainted with Juda-ism to become familiar with theholidays of Rosh Hashanah – theJewish New Year – and YomKippur, the Day of Atonement.This is not an attempt to per-suade anyone to convert toJudaism,” she said. “We hope itwill be an opportunity for thosenot acquainted with Judaism tobegin the process of discover-ing, exploring and understand-ing its many facets of faith,culture and tradition. We allneed to learn more about oneanother’s beliefs and practices.”The temple is at 8501 Ridge

Road, Cincinnati; 891-9900;www.rockdaletemple.org.

Sonrise ChurchSonRise Church is announcingthe launch of a CelebrateRecovery ministry group. Cele-brate Recovery is a Christ-centered recovery programbased on the Beatitudes ad-dressing many of life’s hurts,hang-ups and habits.The church is at 8136WoosterPike; 576-6000.

Trinity UnitedMethodist ChurchThe church will begin a six-weekall-church Bible study of the OldTestasment book Ecclesiatesentitled “Be Content.” All are

welcome.Weekly Sunday services aretraditional at 8:15 a.m. and 11a.m. and contemporary worship(and children’s Sunday school) at9:30 a.m.Trinity at 5767Wolfpen-PleasantHill Road, Milford; 831-0262;www.trinitymilford.org.

Village Church ofMariemontThe church has a traditionalchurch service at 10 a.m. Sun-days, accompanied by Sundayschool for nursery throughyouth. All are welcome.The church is at the corner ofOak andMaple streets, Marie-mont;villagechurchofmariemont.org.

RELIGION

Page 16: Eastern hills journal 092414

B8 • EASTERN HILLS JOURNAL • SEPTEMBER 24, 2014 LIFE

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2012Ram1500QuadCabOrange,4x4,Hemi,Loaded...................$27,8532013HondaAccordCoupeBrown,Snrf,Lthr,14kMiles,Sharp.....$23,7732008FordF-150XLTSuperCrew,4x4,V8,Auto,A/C...........................$20,9772008NissanFrontierP/USEV6,4x4,CrewCab,HardToFind........$18,9882007DodgeRam1500QuadCab,4x4,Al.Whls,StereoCD,ChrmTubes.........$18,9552007GMCAcadiaSLTLthr,Snrf,Auto,A/C,3rdRowSeat...................$16,3752010ToyotaRAV4Blue,4x4,Auto,A/C,PW,PL......................................$16,2952007JeepGrandCherokeeLimitedSlvr,Hemi,Leather,Sharp...........$14,9952014FordFiestaLowMiles,BalanceofWarranty................................$14,9882011FordE-250CargoVan White,V8,Auto,A/C,StereoCD,ExcellentCond.....$14,9882011HyundaiElantraBlack,Auto,A/C,PW,PL......................................$14,4292007Chrysler300CBlue,AWD,ChromeWheels.................................$13,9882010NissanRogueSSilver,AWD,Auto,A/C,Sharp..............................$13,8752011DodgeAvengerWhite,Auto,A/C,PW,PL,Alum.Whls..............$13,3752008FordMustangSilver,V6,Auto,A/C,PW,PL,LowMiles.............$12,9882009DodgeChargerSXTSilver,V6,Auto,A/C,PW,PL.........................$12,5532010ToyotaCorollaSBlue,Auto,A/C,Alum.Whls,Spoiler................$11,9732008MitsubishiEclipseBlack,Auto,A/C,Sunroof,PW,PL...............$11,8832007ChryslerPacifica#E8008,Wht,V6,Lthr,3rdRowSeat.........$10,9972004ChevroletMonteCarloSS ,Leather,Sunroof,Auto,A/C.........$10,3882006JeepLibertySportSilver,V6,4x4,Auto,A/C................................$10,2752005JeepGrandCherokeeLaredoV6,Auto,A/C,4x4.........................$9,9952006ChevroletHHRLTBlk,Auto,A/C,Lthr,Snrf,ChromeWhls.........$9,873

2009DodgeCaliber White,Auto,A/C,PW,PL,CD .....................................$9,4882008ChevroletCobaltSport Auto,A/C,PW,PL,Spoiler........................$9,4772005HondaAccordCoupeAuto,A/C,Sunroof..........................................$8,9952008PontiacG-5Silver,Auto,A/C,PW,PL.....................................................$8,9952001MitsubishiEclipseGT PatrioticRedPearl,Auto,A/C,Sunroof,PW,PL......$6,9882000FordMustangConvertible V6,Auto,A/C,PW,PL,FallCruiser....$6,9882003HondaOdysseyLXTan,V6,Auto,A/C,Clean..................................$6,7752002ToyotaCorolla,Tan,Auto,A/C,30+MPG,Hurry! ............................$5,9952003FordExplorerXLT 4x4,Auto,A/C,Sunroof,Leather.....................$4,9952004DodgeCaravanBlue,V6,RunsGreat,EverybodyRides!.........$3,9951999ToyotaCamryGold,Auto,A/C,PW,PL,LocalTrade.......................$3,8951994CadillacDeville,Green,Leather,CarriageTop................................$2,995

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The Barn in Marie-mont, home to the Wom-an’s Art Club of Cincin-nati, presents the sched-ule for a new year of pro-gramming for families.

Once amonth on Satur-day morning, “Marie-mont Preservation Pre-sents” unveils a new ac-tivity for families to sharetogether, whether it is anarts performance, a craftworkshop or amusical ex-perience. All programswill start at 10:30 a.m. andadmission is $5 per per-son. Please register foreach performance indi-vidually or the entire sea-son on the website,www.artatthebarn.org.The Barn is at 6980 Cam-bridge Ave. in Marie-mont.

The first MariemontPreservation Presents is“Rose and Thorn,” (a re-telling of “Beauty & theBeast”) by Playhouse inthe Park Off the Hill at10:30 a.m. Saturday Sept.27, at the Barn.

This is the openingshow inCincinnati for thiscomedic version of theoriginal story of beautifulRose, who sacrifices herown happiness to protecther father and family.Based on the18thCenturyversion of the story, theplay embraces slapstick,satire and high campstyles as it proves thattrue beauty is alwaysmore than skin deep. Rec-ommended for ages 7 andup. Register for ticketsatwww.artatthebarn.org.

MariemontPreservationpresents familyfun at The Barn

PROVIDED

“Rose and Thorn,” a Playhouse in the Park Off the Hillproduction, will be in Mariemont Saturday, Sept. 27.

$325,000.

MOUNT LOOKOUT1122 Beverly Hill Drive: Hein,Misty J. to Gustavsson, DavidHans & Krista Michelle Fehring;$399,900.3245 Griest Ave.: Wood, CharlesE. & Maureen K. to Ferguson,Andrew J. & Melinda R. Ryan;$238,000.1241 Herschel Ave.: Wittekind,Jason R. to Heekin, Mary Ann;

$235,000.3224 Lookout Circle: Bailey, EliseTr. to Crotty, Patrick M. & ShelbyO.; $482,285.

OAKLEY3738 Marburg Ave.: Bryant,Craig M. to Erpenbeck, Greg &Anne Cummings; $235,000.2731Minot Ave.: Morrison, MarkR. to Shuman, William L. &Courtney B.; $236,000.4134 Sherel Lane: Sonnier, Loret-ta A. & Dennis I. to Vanderhorst,Matthew; $236,000.

REAL ESTATE

Continued from Page B6