20
NEED MORE INFORMATION? If you have questions you want answered about the levy, send them to jkey@com- munitypress.com and we’ll do our best to get answers for you before the election. Resi- dents can see and hear a presentation about the need for the levy made by Rowan for the board at the Dec. 9 meeting at bit.ly/roadplan. Colerain Township voters will find a a five-year, 2-mill levy for roads, parks and the senior center on the March 15 primary ballot. The proposed levy would generate about $2.1million an- nually if passed, and township officials said $1.5 million of that would be earmarked for road resurfac- ing. The cost of the levy to the owner of a $100,000 home would be about $70 annually. “Issue 3 fixes road and curbs, protects our parks and saves the services at our sen- ior center,” Colerain Town- ship Administratir Jim Rowan said. “Combined with other resources, the levy would al- low us to pave five to seven miles of road per year.” The township’s streets have been rated using a com- puterized pavement manage- ment system developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and implemented in the town- ship in 1989. About 70 percent of the township’s 447 streets are classified by Micropaver as poor/very poor or serious/ failed. The report is available for you to look up your street at pcireportcoltwp. 100-85 means your street condition is good, 84-70 is satisfactory, 69- 55 means fair, 54 to 40 is poor, 39-25 is very poor, and 24-10 means the street is in serious condition. A score lower than 10 indicates the street is failed. While the township has sent out information about township services and con- ducted a number of meetings to get information about the levy to residents, some still have questions. Q. The township has said some staffing cuts would be restored if the levy passes. Have specific positions been identified or were they just talking in generalities? A. Township administrator Jim Rowan says if the levy Colerain answers residents’ questions as levy vote nears Jennie Key [email protected] FILE PHOTO. If voters approve a 2-mill levy for roads, parks and the senior center, Colerain Township Administrator Jim Rowan said most of the $2 million annual that would be generated will be used to fix the township’s neglected roads. See ROAD, Page 2A Rowan Vol. 79 No. 7 © 2016 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED N ORTHWEST N ORTHWEST PRESS 75¢ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 2016 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving Colerain Township, Green Township, Groesbeck, Monfort Heights, Pleasant Run, Seven Hills, White Oak News ......................... 923-3111 Retail advertising ............ 768-8404 Classified advertising ........ 242-4000 Delivery ...................... 853-6277 See page A2 for additional information Contact The Press PERFECT FOR SEDER MEALS 7A Rita shares recipe for home made matzo. YOUR ONLINE HOME Find local news from your neighborhood at Cincinnati.com/ communities All private rehab studios Physical, occupational and speech therapies Fully-equipped therapy gym and occupational therapy center 1701 Llanfair Ave. Cincinnati, OH 45224 www.llanfairohio.org Rehab Center Call 513.681.4230 to learn more. Where quality care and resiliency are most important. CE-0000621110 Following problems with unruly teens at Northgate Mall, the Colerain Township shopping launched a Family Evenings Weekend policy be- ginning March 4 requiring all visitors under the age of 17 be accompanied by a parent or su- pervising adult after 5 p.m. Fri- day and Saturday. The adult must be at least 21-years-old. The policy will be enforced on all Northgate Mall property, including parking lots and sidewalks, with the ex- ception of Xscape Theatres, which offers an exterior en- trance. This policy will not af- fect mall employees working during Family Evenings hours. Theresa Dorlan, Northgate Mall spokesperson, said the mall wanted to be sure the chil- dren of the community are be- ing properly supervised and are using Northgate Mall for its intended purpose after dark. She said after reviewing community and tenant feed- back, as well as looking at past incidents, the Tabani Group, the Texas company that owns Northgate Mall, felt the Family Evenings policy is a solution that the community will appre- ciate and support. Colerain Township Police Chief Mark Denney said the police department did not ask for the policy, but his depart- ment supports the mall own- ers’ decision. “We had a flare up, and fol- lowing that it was quiet, with no further problems,” he said. “I think the mall is taking a proac- tive approach, and they want to be sure that the people who come to Northgate feel secure and have a good time.” The Northwest Local School District sent information about the policy change through its parent email communique and posted the infotmation on the school’s website. It’s not a popular decision with local teens. Emily Stephens, 15, says it seems unfair to punish teens who follow the rules because some teens didn’t. “It’s really not a fair way to deal with the problem,” she said. “It feels like they are discriminating against teens. Like they are saying we’re all the same. And we’re not.” She says perhaps the mall should have tried increasing security before making the mall an unwelcoming place for people her age. Charles Connor, 17, says while he doesn’t spend a lot of time at the mall, he agrees it doesn’t seem fair that a few people who caused problems can ruin things for others. “It will probably stop the people who were doing the wrong thing, But if the parents come and sit in the food court, is that going to solve the problem?” Cody Smith, 17, says people have to take responsibility for their actions, and suggested some 15-year-olds might need parental supervision. “I am not a big fan of punishing every- body, but I can understand why it’s happening,” he said. Teen policies at malls aren’t new. Tri-County Mall instituted a youth escort policy in 2010. The policy says on Friday and Saturday, anyone under the age of 18 visiting Tri-County Mall must be accompanied by a parent or adult escort 21 years of age or older after 4 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. JENNIE KEY Northgate Mall started a teen escort policy on weekends. Northgate Mall sets teen policy Adult supervision now required on weekend nights Jennie Key [email protected]

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Page 1: Northwest press 030916

NEED MOREINFORMATION?

If you have questions youwant answered about thelevy, send them to [email protected] and we’ll doour best to get answers foryou before the election. Resi-dents can see and hear apresentation about the needfor the levy made by Rowanfor the board at the Dec. 9meeting at bit.ly/roadplan.

Colerain Township voterswill find a a five-year, 2-milllevy for roads, parks and thesenior center on the March 15primary ballot.

The proposed levy wouldgenerate about $2.1million an-nually if passed, and townshipofficials said $1.5 million of

that would beearmarked forroad resurfac-ing. The cost ofthe levy to theowner of a$100,000 homewould be about

$70 annually.“Issue 3 fixes road and

curbs, protects our parks andsaves the services at our sen-ior center,” Colerain Town-ship Administratir Jim Rowansaid. “Combined with otherresources, the levy would al-low us to pave five to sevenmiles of road per year.”

The township’s streetshave been rated using a com-puterized pavement manage-ment system developed by theU.S. Army Corps of Engineersand implemented in the town-ship in 1989. About 70 percentof the township’s 447 streetsare classified by Micropaveras poor/very poor or serious/failed.

The report is available foryou to look up your street atpcireportcoltwp. 100-85

means your street condition isgood, 84-70 is satisfactory, 69-55 means fair, 54 to 40 is poor,39-25 is very poor, and 24-10means the street is in seriouscondition. A score lower than10 indicates the street isfailed.

While the township hassent out information abouttownship services and con-ducted a number of meetingsto get information about thelevy to residents, some stillhave questions.

Q. The township has saidsome staffing cuts would berestored if the levy passes.Have specific positions beenidentified or were they justtalking in generalities?

A. Township administratorJim Rowan says if the levy

Colerain answersresidents’ questionsas levy vote nearsJennie [email protected]

FILE PHOTO.

If voters approve a 2-mill levy for roads, parks and the senior center,Colerain Township Administrator Jim Rowan said most of the $2 millionannual that would be generated will be used to fix the township’sneglected roads.

See ROAD, Page 2A

Rowan

Vol. 79 No. 7© 2016 The Community Press

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

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

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resiliency are most important.CE-0000621110

Following problems withunruly teens at NorthgateMall, the Colerain Townshipshopping launched a FamilyEvenings Weekend policy be-ginning March 4 requiring allvisitors under the age of 17 beaccompanied by a parent or su-pervising adult after 5 p.m. Fri-day and Saturday.

The adult must be at least21-years-old. The policy will beenforced on all Northgate Mallproperty, including parkinglots and sidewalks, with the ex-ception of Xscape Theatres,which offers an exterior en-trance. This policy will not af-fect mall employees workingduring Family Evenings hours.

Theresa Dorlan, NorthgateMall spokesperson, said themall wanted to be sure the chil-dren of the community are be-ing properly supervised andare using Northgate Mall forits intended purpose afterdark. She said after reviewingcommunity and tenant feed-back, as well as looking at pastincidents, the Tabani Group,the Texas company that owns

Northgate Mall, felt the FamilyEvenings policy is a solutionthat the community will appre-ciate and support.

Colerain Township PoliceChief Mark Denney said thepolice department did not askfor the policy, but his depart-ment supports the mall own-ers’ decision.

“We had a flare up, and fol-lowing that it was quiet, with nofurther problems,” he said. “Ithink the mall is taking a proac-tive approach, and they want tobe sure that the people whocome to Northgate feel secureand have a good time.”

The Northwest Local SchoolDistrict sent information aboutthe policy change through itsparent email communique andposted the infotmation on theschool’s website.

It’s not a popular decisionwith local teens.

Emily Stephens, 15, says itseems unfair to punish teenswho follow the rules becausesome teens didn’t. “It’s reallynot a fair way to deal with theproblem,” she said. “It feelslike they are discriminatingagainst teens. Like they aresaying we’re all the same. And

we’re not.”She says perhaps the mall

should have tried increasingsecurity before making themall an unwelcoming place forpeople her age.

Charles Connor, 17, sayswhile he doesn’t spend a lot oftime at the mall, he agrees itdoesn’t seem fair that a fewpeople who caused problemscan ruin things for others. “Itwill probably stop the peoplewho were doing the wrongthing, But if the parents comeand sit in the food court, is thatgoing to solve the problem?”

Cody Smith, 17, says peoplehave to take responsibility fortheir actions, and suggestedsome 15-year-olds might needparental supervision. “I am nota big fan of punishing every-body, but I can understand whyit’s happening,” he said.

Teen policies at malls aren’tnew. Tri-County Mall instituteda youth escort policy in 2010.The policy says on Friday andSaturday, anyone under theage of 18 visiting Tri-CountyMall must be accompanied by aparent or adult escort 21 yearsof age or older after 4 p.m. onFriday and Saturday.

JENNIE KEY

Northgate Mall started a teen escort policy on weekends.

Northgate Mallsets teen policy Adult supervision now required on weekend nights

Jennie [email protected]

Page 2: Northwest press 030916

2A • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016 NEWS

NORTHWESTPRESS

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

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

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

Twitter: @adamjbaum

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

[email protected]

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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passes, the townshipwants to hire employeesin the public works, whowill help maintain town-ship streets, and parkmaintenance people tomaintaion parks.

Q. Why does thetownship need a levy?Why not just use themoney from theRumpke settlement orjust spend down ourcash reserves?

A. Rowan said thetownship needs approxi-mately $3.5 million a yearto maintain townshipstreets. Rowan says thesettlement proceeds willonly satisfy roughly halfwhat’s needed. The town-ship has not had dedicatedroad funds since the levyfailed in 2001. During theyears the township hasnot had a levy, the overallstreet condition on thepavement condition indexdropped from 71.6 in 2001to 40.1 in 2015 due to lackof funding.

Rowan said achievingpositive improvementwould require paving inexcess of $2.5 million peryear. $1.5 million wouldpave approximately 3.34miles at $448,800 per mile.If the levy passes, thetownship’s action planwould require $1.5 millionin levy funds plus the$1.75 million from theRumpke settlement, giv-ing the township $3.25million allowing the town-ship to 7.25 miles per year.“We are 10 years behindon road improvements,”Rowan said. “Without Is-sue 3, we will never catchup.”

Rowan said so far asspending down cash re-serves, a review of thetownship’s general fundbalance from 2011through 2015 shows thetownship has already re-duced its cash balance by$4 million, or 46 percent,during that period.

“In my view, to con-tinue that trend would bereckless,” he said.

LevyContinued from Page 1A

Art teachers at twoWest Side Catholic highschools have teamed up toorganize what they hopewill become an annualshowcase of student art.

Nine area Catholichigh schools are takingpart in the event – Elder,Mercy, La Salle, McAuley,Mount Notre Dame, Rog-er Bacon, Seton, St. Ursu-la and Ursuline Academy– and each school has atleast two works in theshow. There are a total of31 pieces in the exhibit.

“This show rose out ofinterest in connecting the

Catholic art programsfrom across the city,” El-der High School art teach-er Kim Plagge said.

“Last year the Elderand Mercy art depart-ments started talkingabout the possibility ofcreating an inclusive ex-hibition of art put on bythe Catholic high schoolsof Hamilton County with-in the Archdiocese of Cin-cinnati. We felt that theschools were creatingsome extraordinary andimaginative artwork thatshould be recognized andshared with the communi-ty.”

As a result, the inaugu-ral Catholic High SchoolArt Exhibition, titled

“Imagine Our Spirit,” willrun Friday, March 11,through Friday, April 8, atThe Flats Art Gallery,3028 Price Ave., in EastPrice Hill’s Incline Dis-trict.

Along with Plagge, El-der art teacher DavidBuetsche and Mother ofMercy High School artteachers Theresa Murphyand Murray Dwertmanworked together to orga-nize the exhibition.

An opening receptionis set for 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.Saturday, March 12, at thegallery.

“Artwork can be verypersonal to the artist,”Plagge said. “By exhibit-

ing the students’ work weare allowing their per-sonal vision to be shown ina forum that reaches outto a wide audience. It alsobegins to expose studentsto possibilities and oppor-tunities for creative indi-viduals beyond highschool.”

She said each art teach-er at the participatingschools was allowed tosubmit up to five pieces ofstudent work to be consid-ered for the exhibition.More than 70 works weresubmitted, and she saidMichael Paolercio, direc-tor of The Flats Art Gal-lery, brought in an inde-pendent juror who judgedwhich pieces would be inthe show.

The juror also picked abest of show, first runner-up, second runner-up andtwo honorable mentionwinners. A “people’schoice” award will be de-cided at the opening re-ception.

Plagge said studentswill be awarded a total of$1,000 in scholarships.Prize money ranges from$500 for the best of showto $100 for the people’schoice winner.

She said KB Partners

LLC donated the scholar-ship award money andPlaza Art Materials donat-ed gift cards for the hon-orable mention awards.

“Our dream is that thisevent becomes an annualexhibition that not onlyshowcases the nineschools we have this year,but all the high schoolswithin the Archdiocese ofCincinnati in years tocome,” she said.

“We hope that out ofthese efforts the public isuplifted by how alive thevisual arts are in thehearts and minds of thenext generation.”

One of the obstaclesfor many of the art con-tests and exhibitions inthe city is entrance feesfor each piece submitted,but Plagge said that obsta-cle has been eliminated

due to the collaborativesupport of The Flats ArtGallery.

The gallery is open 2p.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesdays,and 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Thurs-days, Fridays and Satur-days. Call 244-8044 for in-formation.

Exhibition showcases work from students at Catholic high schoolsKurt [email protected]

PHOTO PROVIDED

This painting by McAuley High School student Kendra Langwill be featured in the inaugural Catholic High School ArtExhibition at The Flats Art Gallery in East Price Hill.

PHOTO PROVIDED

La Salle High School student Cameron Nichols sculpted thispiece from a book. His work will be showcased along with 31other artworks at the inaugural Catholic High School ArtExhibition.

Page 3: Northwest press 030916

MARCH 9, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 3ANEWS

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In the wake of theshooting at Madison Ju-nior/Senior High School inButler County last week,officials in the NorthwestLocal School District senta message to parents, re-minding them of the stepsthe district has taken tokeep students and staffsafe at Northwest districtschools.

“The safety and well-being of our students andstaff are our number onepriority as a school dis-trict,” SuperintendentTodd Bowling said.

Colerain TownshipSafety Services DirectorDan Meloy said police willlook at the Madison Ju-nior/Senior High Schoolshooting to see what, ifanything, can be learnedfrom the incident that canhelp officers improve thecrisis plans for localschools. He praised theNorthwest district for in-cluding area parochialschools in their crisismeetings.

“It is important for par-ents and residents of thedistrict to know that peo-ple are working on plansto keep their students safeat school,” he said.

The Northwest districthas two school resourcepolice officers, one ateach high school building,and Colerain Township’spolice dog, Kudo, regular-ly visits high school andmiddle school buildings.Bowling said the district’ssafety partners includepolice departments fromGreen Township, ColerainTownship, SpringfieldTownship and the Hamil-ton County Sheriff’s Of-fice.

Each school and thedistrict works with locallaw enforcement to devel-op an emergency opera-tions plan that is in com-pliance with Ohio’s safetymandates and crisis re-sponse preparations.Each school conductsquarterly “crisis drills” inconjunction with the po-lice and fire departmentsto prepare for situations.

The district has buzzerentry systems in eachbuilding, so staff can canidentify visitors prior to

entering the building. Safety plans are in

place in each buildingsand flip charts are provid-ed to all staff to referenceif a situation would occurthat causes a threat to stu-dents.

Pauletta Crowley, as-sistant director of com-munity and student ser-vices for the NorthwestDistrict, said the districthas an alarm system thatwas recently tested witharea police departments,and training is ongoing.

“We are currentlyplanning a crisis teamtraining for our bus driv-ers, and are working withthe police in Green andColerain townships to findus experts in the field forthat training,” she said.

The district has alsomade its buildings avail-able for training, and offi-cers have used NorthwestHigh School and the va-cant Bevis ElementarySchool to train for activeshooter events. Crowleysaid Bevis is scheduled

for demolition, but areapolice departments havebeen using the buildingfor training, and will con-tinue to do so until is takendown.

Crowley says the dis-trict has focused onchanging the culture in-side its buildings as well,with anti-bullying pro-grams and other assem-blies. Colerain HighSchool played host for ananti-bully/anti-suicide as-sembly by Nick Vujicic,“Life without Limbs,”which was live simulcastto Northwest HighSchool, Colerain Middle,White Oak Middle, Pleas-ant Run Middle, Oak Hillssecondary schools, DeerPark secondary schools,Three Rivers secondaryschools and St. Bernard.The district followed upwith a parent night assem-bly.

The district also pur-sued the Sandy Hook pro-grams “No One EatsAlone,” which gives stu-dents tools to reach outand battle isolation, and“Tell Someone,” which en-courages parents and stu-dents to report possibleproblems when they be-come aware of them tosomeone who can and willact on the report.

Bowling said studentscan help keep buildingssafe by sharing informa-tion. The Safe Hotline forall schools is posted in ev-ery student planner for el-ementary, middle andhigh school. Any studentor parent can call or textthe number at 1-844-safe-roh or 1-844-723-3764.

Bowling says parentsin his district can help, aswell

“As a parent precau-tion, if you have guns inyour home, always knowwhere they are and keepthem locked up,” he said.

Northwest stresses safety following Madison school shootingJennie [email protected]

FILE PHOTO

A group of students at Pleasant Run Middle School committed to make the environment andculture safe emotionally and physically by working to include all students and avoid socialisolation earlier this school year. Programs such as No One Eats Alone encourage students to sitwith others and share conversation in the cafeteria.

FILE PHOTO.

Colerain Townshipfirefighter/paramedic DaveSchneberger checks ahallway during a 2013training exercise withColerain Township police atNorthwest High School.

Page 4: Northwest press 030916

4A • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016 NEWS

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Communitymeeting on opioidaddiction

It’s report card time. The Colerain Commu-

nity for Health Aware-ness, a group formed af-ter the township became aWe Thrive communitywith the Hamilton CountyHealth Department,wants to talk about heroinand opioid use in the com-munity. This year, thegroup wants to talk aboutwhat has happened in thepast year, what haschanged and share suc-cesses and challenges asthe struggle to help thoseabusing opioids continuesin 2016.

The meeting, “Focuson Hope” will be from 6:30p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Thurs-day, March 10, at the Col-erain Township Seniorand Community Center,4200 Springdale Road.

Speakers will includeCarol Badin, with the OhioAttorney General’s Of-fice, Dr. Shawn Ryan,Brightview Health, NanFranks, Addiction Ser-vices Council, RichardLynch, Skills in Demand,Craig Davidson, assistantcommissioner with theHamilton County HealthDepartment, and repre-sentatives from the Cole-rain Township police andfire department.

Craft fairGroesbeck United

Methodist Church spon-sors its 11th annual craftshow to support youthchurch camp and missiontrips.

The sale features morethan 50 vendors. It’s openfrom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sat-urday, March 19, at the

church, 8871 ColerainAve.

Lunch and a bake salewill be available.

Cardinal BazaarThe second Annual

Colerain Cardinal Vendorand Craft Fair will be 9a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday,March 12, at the highschool, 8801Cheviot Road.

Proceeds benefit Cole-rain High School BPA andDECA events.

Northwest BoostersFlea Market

Changing Hands, theNorthwest Boosters FleaMarket/ConsignmentSale will be from 9 a.m. to1p.m. Saturday, March 19,at Northwest HighSchool, 10761Pippin Road.

Terms of the sale are 70percent of sale to the sell-er and 30 percent of thesale to the Boosters

Contact Lori Spencefor a list of acceptableitems/table fee at 513-607-1745.

As always,

Free communitydinner

The congregation pre-sents a free communitydinner at Augsburg Lu-theran Church from 5:30to 7 p.m. Sunday, March20, at the church, 11676Hamilton Ave., PleasantRun.

Put on yourhistorical hat

Pioneer Antique &Hobby Association’s nextmeeting is at 7 p.m.Wednesday, March 16, atthe Nathanael GreeneLodge, 6394 WesselmanRoad, in the MulberryRoom.

This month’s programwill be presented by PatsyGaines, a “storyteller ofhistory” who does manyprograms. Her topic forthis program is “Hats:1850 – 2000.”

Call 451-4822 for moreinformation. Note: pro-grams start 30 minutesearlier, at 7 p.m.

College NightLa Salle High School

presents a College Nightfor students with disabili-ties and their parentsfrom 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday,March 15, at the highschool, 3091 North BendRoad.

Any student who has anIndividualized EducationPlan or 504 Plan is encour-aged to attend. The eventis free.

Students and parentscan learn more aboutwhat colleges and univer-sities provide, your stu-dent’s rights, and whatthey can expect in collegeunder the American forDisabilities Act. Theevent will begin with anintroductory addressfrom Stacy Mueller, Di-rector, Project EXCEL,Mount St. Joseph Univer-sity

Student and parentswill then proceed tobreakout sessions wherethey can meet with repre-sentatives from area col-leges and universities.The event will concludewith a general questionand answer session.

For further informa-tion contact Joe Muen-chen at [email protected] or 513-741-2319 orRosemary Rotuno-John-son at [email protected] or 513-741- 2305.

BRIEFLY

Page 5: Northwest press 030916

MARCH 9, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 5A

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

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

themselves visually,while demonstrating agreater understanding ofemotions and the way theworld can impact them.Allison hopes that morestudents will be inspiredto pursue the arts.

Jennifer Wallace choseto inspire others to lovenature and science asmuch as she does by cre-ating her project “A NotSo Silent Spring.” Wallaceknew that one of the bestways to do this was to de-velop a partnership be-tween her local park, Far-bach-Werner NaturePark, and the ColerainHigh School’s ScienceClub. This partnershipwent on to create a plays-cape, bat habitats, parkclean up days, and new ac-tivities for visiting stu-dents. Jennifer sees thisrelationship growing andinspiring more studentsto join the high school Sci-ence Club, which in turnwill benefit the park by in-creased attendance. Theidea of conservation andcooperation will continueto spread as the involvedstudents take the lessonsthey learned back intotheir lives and share itwith others. She hopesother women will see thatthey can make a differ-ence in their community,too.

Both young womenworked more than twoyears to prepare, plan,and complete their pro-jects, all the while con-tinuing to be involved inactivities at ColerainHigh School and graduat-ing with high honors: Alli-son was a cum laude honorgraduate and Jenniferwas a summa cum laudehonor graduate at Cole-rain High School. Bothgirls received scholar-ships to attend college. Al-

Colerain HighSchool

» All parents of 8thgrade students attendingWhite Oak Middle School,Colerain Middle School,and any private/parochialschool in the Northwestdistrict are invited to aninformational meeting atColerain High School.

The meeting will be at7 p.m.Wednesday, March9 in the Colerain HighSchool auditorium, 8801Cheviot Road.

Enrollment packetswill be available for newstudents. An administra-tor and counselor willhold an additional sessionfor any new student/fam-ily that will be enrolling inthe district.

A tour will immediate-ly follow the informationsession.

» 2015 Colerain HighSchool graduates AllisonCooper and Jennifer Wal-lace, received the GoldAward, the highest awardin Girl Scouts.

Cooper chose to createan Art Wall at the HoustonEarly Learing Center. Arthas played a large part inAllison’s life, so when shesaw the decline in fundingand education, she knewshe had to take action. Af-ter looking deeper, Allisondecided to build a creativespace for young studentsto inspire them to pursuethe arts. She approachedthe district’s pre-schoolprincipal, Barbara Hill,and collaborated to createthis simple art program.With this space, teachersand young students areable to use simple activ-ities and lesson plans toexplore art concepts. Thewall can be used formallyor informally, allowingtrue creativity to prosper.Students can now express

lison is attending MiddleTennessee State Univer-sity studying music indus-try and audio production.Jennifer is attending Mi-ami University and study-ing physics.

These young womenhave been in scouting allthrough school, Coopersince kindergarten andWallace since first grade.Cooper also earned theGirl Scout’s Bronze andtwo Silver Awards.

Cindy Cooper, GirlScout Troop Leader saidshe couldn't be moreproud of these two youngwomen. “They beganscouting in my troop, be-came fast friends andhave continued scoutingas they grew up,” she said.“They remain very closefriends today. Theseyoung women demon-strate the core values ofGirl Scouts.”

Northwest schools » Students from North-

west and Colerain HighSchool Sports Medicine &Exercise Science student-sprograms competed inthe Health OccupationsStudent Association re-gional competitions re-cently.

More than 200 studentsfrom five school districtscompeted at the regionallevel. Students competedin various areas related tothe health sciences and/orleadership. Many of thecompetitions involved awritten test followed by askills demonstration. Oth-er competitions involvedportfolio presentations,interviewing skills andcommunication skills.

Of the Northwest dis-trict students who com-peted, 13 have qualifiedfor the state conferenceand competitions in Tole-do on April 5-6. State qual-

ifiers are: Lydia Bryant,Healthy Lifestyles; Kiar-ra Murphy, Ali Richard-son and SavanahSchwarm, HOSA Bowl;Mya Chapman, MedicalPhotography; McKenzieFoster, ExtemporaneousWriting; Kaylee Courter,Andre Eam, Garrett Hen-ry and Hayley Seibel, Cre-ative Problem Solving;Dylan Johnson, Re-searched PersuasiveSpeaking; George Wil-liams, Physical Therapyand Noah Hill, Job Seek-ing Skills.

Mount HealthyMount Healthy North

Elementary School kin-dergarteners in RachelBarnes’ and Julie Mor-gan’s classrooms recentlycelebrated the 100th dayof school with their class-mates.

Students made sillyhats with strips thatcounted by tens. The stu-dents also made 100-daytrail mix, counted andwalked 100 steps anddrew a picture of whatthey would look like wifthey were 100 years old.

McAuley HighSchool

» McAuley alumnae,parents, and other sup-porters are invited tomake a real difference onMarch 17, McAuley’s Dayof Giving. Donations tothe McAuley Fund will bedoubled that day, thanksto matching funds provid-ed by generous donors.

On March 17, gifts canbe made online atwww.mcauleyhs.net/dayofgiving2016, orchecks can be mailed toMcAuley. A donation ofany size will have a hugeimpact on current and fu-ture McAuley students.

As an extra incentive,donors who use socialmedia can post commentson Facebook, Twitter, and/or Instagram, and who usethe hashtag #McAuley-DayofGiving, will be en-tered to win one of several$100 gift cards.

For more information,please contact BrigitteFoley at [email protected].

La Salle High SchoolLa Salle High School

celebrated its second an-nual Veterans Apprecia-tion Day Feb. 16. A servicewas held in the gym andthe crowd was composedof veterans from differ-ent branches of military,families and friends ofthose veterans, faculty,staff, administration, andcurrent students.

The service startedand ended with prayer,led by senior Zach Seimer,who plans to enlist in theU.S. Marines Corps andpursue a career in com-munications next year.The Pride of La Salle Bandaccompanied by the VocalEnsemble performing thesongs of each servicebranch. Veterans stoodand were recognized astheir branch’s musicplayed.

Lt. Col. Brad Wenstrupwas the special guestspeaker and he providedLa Salle students with amessage about leader-ship, faith, and the value ithas in their life. TimWaechter, class of ’64,spoke on the value of vot-ing, noting that one way toshow appreciation for ourveterans is to utilize thefreedoms they fought toprotect.

Matt Dierkers ‘91, di-rector of advancementand liaison to the VeteransAppreciation Day com-

mittee, reflected on theservice, “It’s importantfor kids today to under-stand the sacrifices thatpeople before them madefor the freedoms they en-joy today,” he said. “It’s agreat learning opportuni-ty for students and a greatengagement piece foralumni who have servedour country.”

» There are more than50 clubs and organiza-tions at La Salle HighSchool that are availableto any student. One of themore popular organiza-tions is the IntramuralBasketball Associationwith more than 140 stu-dent participants.

The basketball leagueis runs throughout LaSalle’s Christmas break.Students sign up to playand are drafted by seniorcaptains who have playedin the league throughouttheir four years at LaSalle.

This year, the team ledby seniors Jake Kaiserand Paul Broxterman wonthe tournament champi-onship. They defeated theteam led by Jon Ham-brick and Jake Lawson insudden death double over-time. Senior Frank Piercehit the game-winning shotfrom the right corner onthe baseline.

The championshipteam members were JakeKaiser, Paul Broxterman,Frank Pierce, Jake Ernst,Nick Farwick, PatrickLuning, Will Efkeman,Michael Stewart, KeithNewland, Sean Feeley,and Logan Tabor.

The league’s MostValuable Player was JeffBogenschutz, OffensivePlayer of the Year wasTimmy Casey, and the De-fensive Player of the Yearwas John Taphorn.

SCHOOL NOTES

THANKS TO PAULETTA CROWLEY.

The Northwest Local School District Board of Education recognized Colerain High School’sfootball team for their Ohio Division I Final Four football performance as well as recognizingthe team’s All State student athletes. From left are Dylan Bigner, Anthony Fries, Tyler Bigner,Tom Bolden, Deshaunte Jones, Noah Kennedy (front), Amir Riep, Khalil Lambert (front),Christian Dinevski, Phill Joseph, Sam Denton.

THANKS TO JULIE WAKEFIELD.

Mount Healthy North Elementary School students celebrate 100 days of school.

THANKS TO MICHAEL CLIFTON

The La Salle High School Class of 1985 reunion captains along with John Wissel presented to LaSalle High School the proceeds from their fundraising efforts. From left are: Pat Meehan, GregSteinmetz, John Wissel, Dan Veite, Jamey O'Connor, and Matt Dierkers, La Salle director ofadvancement.

THANKS TO MICHAEL CLIFTON

Some members of the 2016 Intramural Basketball championship team led by seniors Jake Kaiserand Paul Broxterman posed with the trophy.

Page 6: Northwest press 030916

6A • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016

THURSDAY, MARCH 10Business SeminarsEPA Lead Renovator Training,8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Proactive SafetyServices Training Center, 1500Kemper Meadow Drive, ThisLead Renovator CertificationInitial course is 8 hours in lengthand includes both EPA-HUDapproved lead safety trainingand certification. Ages 18 andup. $240. Registration required.Presented by ProActive SafetyServices. 372-6232; www.proac-tivesafetyservices.com. ForestPark.

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

Exercise ClassesDance Jamz, 6:45-7:45 p.m.,Sayler Park Community Center,6720 Home City Ave., Dancefitness class incorporates highintensity interval training. Ages18 and up. $5 per class or $40 for10 classes. Presented by DanceJamz. 706-1324. Sayler Park.

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

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

Pure Potential ChiKung/TaiChi,9:30-11 a.m., Gather Studio, 6110Hamilton Ave., Second Floor; offparking lot behind Marty’s; goin/go left/go up. Learn to en-gage with own internal vitalitybased upon traditional Chinesetechnique of ChiKung/Qigong/TaiChi, done through purposefulrelaxation/breath/posture. $50.pre-registration discount. Pre-sented by Harmonic PulseWellness. 405-1514; www.har-monicpulsewellness.com. North-side.

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

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

March Introduction to Yogafor Beginners, 6-7 p.m., Earth-Connection, 370 Neeb Road, Forparticipants who have nevertried yoga. $85 for 10 class pass.Reservations recommended.Presented by Yoga by Marietta.675-2725; www.yogabymariet-ta.com. Delhi Township.

Health / WellnessFree Hearing Screening, 8:30a.m. to 4:30 p.m., The Place forBetter Hearing, 3302 West-bourne Drive, Free. Reservationsrequired. 922-0123; www.hea-ringbetter.net. Green Township.

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

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

On Stage - TheaterShe Loves Me, 7:30 p.m., Cov-edale Center for the PerformingArts, 4990 Glenway Ave., Warmromantic comedy featuringmusic by Jerry Bock and SheldonHarnick. $26, $23 seniors andstudents. 241-6550; www.cincin-natilandmarkproductions.com.West Price Hill.

FRIDAY, MARCH 11Business SeminarsEPA Lead Renovator Training,8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Proactive SafetyServices Training Center, $240.Registration required. 372-6232;www.proactivesafetyservi-ces.com. Forest Park.

Dining EventsTroop 471 Lenten Fish Fry,5-7:30 p.m., Our Lady ofLourdes, 2832 Rosebud Drive,Cafeteria or carry out. 347-2662.Westwood.

Fish Fry, 5-7:30 p.m., PleasantRun Presbyterian Church, 11565Pippin Road, Fish or chickennuggets and choice of two sides:macaroni and cheese, greenbeans, coleslaw and applesauce.Meal also includes bread, des-sert and either coffee, lemonadeor iced tea. Dinner: $8.50, $4.50per child; carryout: $8, $4 perchild. 825-4544; www.pleasan-trunpc.org. Colerain Township.

Fish Fry, 5-7 p.m., St. MatthiasCatholic Church, 1050 W. Kem-per Road, Lonsway Hall. Dinnersand a la carte items. $7 perdinner. 513-851-1930. ForestPark.

Fish Fry, 5 p.m.-7:30 p.m., VFWGlobe Trotters Post 6428 Addys-ton, 140 Main St., Fish, BBQ,choice of 2 sides. Dine in or carryout. $9, $7. 941-6428;www.vfw6428.org. Addyston.

American Legion Post 485Fish Fry and Barbecue, 5-7:30p.m., American Legion Post 485,29 E. State Road, Eat in or carryout. Benefits Miller StockumAmerican Legion Post 485.941-1643. Cleves.

Fresh Fish Fry, 4:30-7 p.m.,Western Hills Cheviot Lodge 140,4353 West Fork Road, Dine inlower level or carryout entranceat rear of building. Dine in orcarry out. Sides: fries, mac andcheese, onion rings, green beansand slaw. $9, $6 children. Pre-sented by Western Hills CheviotLodge No. 140. 919-1065. Mon-fort Heights.

Fish Fry, 5-7 p.m., St. AntoninusParish, 1500 Linneman Road,Undercroft. Dine-in, drive-thruor carryout. Fish, shrimp, pizzaand grilled cheese. All dinnersinclude choice of 2: french fries,green beans, onion rings, bakedpotato, coleslaw, soup of theday or macaroni and cheese.Soft drinks and desserts extra.Price varies. Presented by St.Antoninus Boy Scout Troop 614.616-4298; www.saintantoninu-s.org. Green Township.

Dine-in Fish Fry, 5:30-7 p.m.Drive thru only, Our Lady of theRosary Church, 17 FarragutRoad, Menu includes salmon,baked cod, fried cod, shrimp,pizza, salted rye bread andmore. A la carte items available.Credit cards accepted. $8. 825-8626; www.wintonwyoming-pr.org. Greenhills.

Fish Fry, 4:30-7:30 p.m., Amer-ican Legion Post 513, 7947Hamilton Ave., Cod, catfish,fantail shrimp, popcorn shrimp,crab cakes and chicken strips.Dinner include fries or maccheese or onion straws andcoleslaw, cupcakes. $6-$8.729-0061. Mount Healthy.

St. William Fish Fry, 4:30-7:30p.m., St. William Church, 4108W. Eighth St., Church undercroft(handicap accessible from West8th Street). Drive-thru open 4-7p.m., dine in/carry out open4:30-7:30 p.m. Fried and bakedfish, salmon, shrimp, crab cakes,pizza, grilled cheese, fries,roasted potatoes and greenbeans, mac and cheese andhome made soup of the week.Desserts and beverages availableinside. Live entertainmentweekly. $1 and up. 921-0247.West Price Hill.

Fish Fry, 5-7:30 p.m., MooseLodge No. 2, 8944 Colerain Ave.,5oz cod and choice of 2 sidesand 2 Hush Puppies. Bakedgoods and drinks available atadditional cost. Dine in or carryout. $6. 385-5689. ColerainTownship.

St Teresa Boy Scout Troop 271Fish Fry, 4:30-7:30 p.m. Combodinner special., St. Teresa ofAvila Church, 1175 OverlookAve., Price varies. Presented bySt. Teresa Boy Scout Troop 271.720-9755. West Price Hill.

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

Engage Your Inner Healer,6:30-8 p.m., Gather Studio, 6110Hamilton Ave., Second Floor/enter through door saying,Marty’s. Go left, through doorand upstairs. Create personal

plan for health enhancementand energetic empowerment.Learn how to engage with innervitality based upon traditionalChinese technique of ChiKung(Qigong). $50. Registrationrecommended. Presented byHarmonic Pulse Wellness. 405-1514; www.harmonicpulsewell-ness.com. Northside.

Cardio Tennis, 8:30-9:30 a.m.,Western Tennis and Fitness Club,5490 Muddy Creek, Get greatworkout while playing tennis.Intermediate to advanced levels.Ages 18 and up. $15. Reserva-tions required. 451-4233;www.westerntfc.com. GreenTownship.

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

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

Vinyasa Flow Yoga, 6-7 p.m.,EarthConnection, 370 NeebRoad, $50 for 10 class pass, $11single. Presented by Yoga byMarietta. 675-2725; www.yoga-bymarietta.com. Delhi Town-ship.

Health / WellnessFree Hearing Screening, 8:30a.m. to 4:30 p.m., The Place forBetter Hearing, Free. Reserva-tions required. 922-0123;www.hearingbetter.net. GreenTownship.

Music - Classic RockQuiet Storm, 9:30 p.m. to 1:30a.m., Club Trio, 5744 SpringdaleRoad, Free. 385-1005. ColerainTownship.

On Stage - TheaterShe Loves Me, 8 p.m., CovedaleCenter for the Performing Arts,$26, $23 seniors and students.241-6550; www.cincinnatiland-markproductions.com. WestPrice Hill.

ShoppingLadies Night Out, 6-9:30 p.m.,Cheviot United MethodistChurch, 3820 Westwood North-ern Blvd., Preschool. Night ofshopping with many differentvendors, silent auctions, foodand hourly door prizes. $2.Presented by Cheviot UnitedMethodist Church Preschool.389-3060; cumcpreschool.com.Cheviot.

Support GroupsDiabetic Support Group, 1:30-3p.m., Journey to Hope, 703Compton Road, Health careprofessionals share the newestand latest information, as wellas answer your specific ques-tions. Free. 931-5777. Finney-town.

SATURDAY, MARCH 12CivicRally for Hope: Stop Separat-ing Families, 1-3 p.m., HolyFamily Church - Price Hill, 814Hawthorne Ave., Free. 579-8547;www.ijpcincinnati.org. EastPrice Hill.

Drink TastingsWine Tasting, noon to 5 p.m.,Henke Winery, 3077 HarrisonAve., Receive 7 tastes and takehome souvenir glass. Appetizersand meals available to accompa-ny tasting. Ages 21 and up. $10.Reservations recommended.662-9463; www.henkewine-.com. Westwood.

EducationBeyond Concealed CarryCourse, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tacti-cal Intelligence Group, 6111Morgan Road, Course helpsdevelop critical real world pistolskills. Ages 21 and up. $150.Registration required. 579-1405;bit.ly/1SvG19C. Cleves.

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

P90X Live, 8-8:50 a.m., WesternTennis and Fitness Club, 5490Muddy Creek, Adult fitness classfeatures cardio, strength andflexibility. Ages 18 and up. $12.513-451-4233; www.westerntfc-.com. Green Township.

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

Green Township.

Health / WellnessHealing Touch Level I, 8 a.m. to5:30 p.m., Journey to Hope, 703Compton Road, Enhance well-ness in self by using gift ofenergetic touch. Ages 18 and up.$365. Registration required.931-5777; www.jtoh.org. Finney-town.

On Stage - TheaterShe Loves Me, 8 p.m., CovedaleCenter for the Performing Arts,$26, $23 seniors and students.241-6550; www.cincinnatiland-markproductions.com. WestPrice Hill.

SUNDAY, MARCH 13Clubs & OrganizationsGreater Cincinnati DecorativeArtists Monthly Meeting,11:45 a.m., Springfield TownshipSenior and Community Center,9158 Winton Road, Presented byGreater Cincinnati DecorativeArtists. 522-1154; www.gcda-painters.org. Springfield Town-ship.

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

ExhibitsDelhi in Bloom and The Lan-guage of Flowers, 12:30-3p.m., Delhi Historical SocietyFarmhouse Museum, 468 An-derson Ferry Road, Learn historyof Delhi Township through itsfloriculture with new exhibits.Delhi in Bloom explains howgrapes, growers and green-houses shaped history of DelhiTownship and The Language ofFlowers explores Victorian’s loveof flowers. Free. Presented byDelhi Historical Society. 720-0942; www.delhihistoricalsocie-ty.org. Delhi Township.

Music - ClassicalWestwood First ConcertSeries: Pipe Organ Concert,3-5 p.m., Westwood First Presby-terian Church, 3011 HarrisonAve., sanctuary. Todd Wilsonand Heather MacPhail presentconcert of organ favorites onWestwood First’s 67-rank pipeorgan. Free. 661-6846, ext. 105.Westwood.

On Stage - TheaterShe Loves Me, 2 p.m., CovedaleCenter for the Performing Arts,$26, $23 seniors and students.241-6550; www.cincinnatiland-markproductions.com. WestPrice Hill.

ShoppingRhea Lana’s Spring Children’sConsignment Event, 11 a.m. to7 p.m., Forest Fair Village, 600Cincinnati Mills Drive, Semi-annual children’s consignmentevent with boutique-like feel.Free. Presented by Rhea Lana’sof North Cincinnati. ThroughMarch 17. 258-3699. Forest Park.

Western Hills Bridal Fair, noonto 4 p.m., The Meadows, 59 E.Main St., Grand Ballroom. Westside vendors. Door prizes, foodsampling, giveaways. Ages 18and up. $3, free for brides.941-7638; www.themeadows-banquet.com. Addyston.

MONDAY, MARCH 14Business SeminarsEPA Lead Renovator Training,8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Proactive SafetyServices Training Center, $240.

Registration required. 372-6232;www.proactivesafetyservi-ces.com. Forest Park.

Dining EventsGourmet Monday NightBuffet, 4-8 p.m., The Meadows,59 E. Main St., The Grand Ball-room. Menu changes weekly.$15. Reservations for largeparties available. 941-7638;www.themeadowsbanquet-.com. Addyston.

Exercise ClassesDance Jamz, 6:45-7:45 p.m.,Sayler Park Community Center,$5 per class or $40 for 10 classes.706-1324. Sayler Park.

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

Zumba, 6-7 p.m., Keeping FitStudio, 7778 Colerain Ave., Highenergy dance fitness class for alllevels of fitness. For Ages 16 andup. $5. 720-4142. ColerainTownship.

Cardio Tennis, 8-9 p.m., WesternTennis and Fitness Club, $15.Reservations required. 451-4233;www.westerntfc.com. GreenTownship.

Zumba, 7:05-8 p.m., Keeping FitStudio, 7778 Colerain Ave., Highenergy dance fitness class for alllevels of fitness. For 16 and up.$5. 720-4142. Colerain Town-ship.

Dance Fit, 4:45-5:45 p.m., Keep-ing Fit Studio, 7778 ColerainAve., Dance exercise class withstrength training for all levels offitness. For ages 16 and up. $5.720-4142. Colerain Township.

Vinyasa Flow Yoga, 6-7 p.m.,EarthConnection, $50 for 10class pass, $11 single. 675-2725;www.yogabymarietta.com.Delhi Township.

SeminarsJob Search Seminar, 1:30-3p.m., Journey to Hope, 703Compton Road, Weekly speak-ers advise job seekers on how toconduct an effective job search.Free. Registration required.931-5777. Finneytown.

Senior CitizensIndoor Cornhole, 10 a.m. tonoon, Green Township SeniorCenter, 3620 Epley Road, 385-3780. Green Township.

ShoppingRhea Lana’s Spring Children’sConsignment Event, 10 a.m.to 9 p.m., Forest Fair Village,Free. 258-3699. Forest Park.

TUESDAY, MARCH 15EducationYMCA Lifeguarding Class,6:30-10 p.m. undefined, Gamble-Nippert YMCA, 3159 MontanaAve., Participants must be atleast 16 years of age by last dayof class and pass prerequisiteswim test. Tuition reimburse-ment available. Upon successfulcompletion, participants certi-fied in YMCA Lifeguarding andeligible for employment withYMCA. Ages 16-99. $200. Regis-tration required. 661-1105;myy.org. Westwood.

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

Circuit Fit Training, 4:45-5:45p.m., Keeping Fit Studio, $5.720-4142. Colerain Township.

Dance Fit Express, 7:05-7:40p.m., Keeping Fit Studio, 7778Colerain Ave., Fast dance fitnessclass that incorporates weightsand is done on feet. For ages 16and up. $5. 720-4142. ColerainTownship.

March Introduction to Yogafor Beginners, 6-7 p.m., Earth-Connection, $85 for 10 classpass. Reservations recommend-ed. 675-2725; www.yogabyma-rietta.com. Delhi Township.

ShoppingRhea Lana’s Spring Children’sConsignment Event, 10 a.m.to 3 p.m., Forest Fair Village,Free. 258-3699. Forest Park.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

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

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

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

THANKS TO MIKKI SCHAFFNER

“She Loves Me,” a warm romantic comedy featuring music by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick,is being performed March 10-April 3 at the Covedale Center for the Performing Arts, 4990Glenway Ave., West Price Hill. Tickets are $26, and $23 for seniors and students. Call 241-6550;visit www.cincinnatilandmarkproductions.com.

PUZZLE ANSWERS

F L O I M A G E F O T O A G A I NB A R F O D O R T R A I N B R U T EO U R C O M R A D E O F M E R C U T I OM R I R I O I N N O R E E O N SB A N Q U E T G H O S T T O T A L S

H U S S U E S H O R N T O WM A I D S E L D E R L Y M O N A R C H

F A T C A T S M A L A Y I D A H OA R C H E A R D O I A I R O D E SS C H E M E R A G A I N S T C A E S A R

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B E N E E G O E V E S O N M O O NL A L A W A L A M O G E A R I N GE V I L A N T A G O N I S T S P I C ED E N C O I F S S I B A C E

E M O T E R M A C A B R E T H A N EM I C E I D A A B E E E R C E LU N H A P P Y M A L C O N T E N T T R US C A L E E E L E D R A D I I O D DS A T Y R S S T S A N S E L R Y E

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MARCH 9, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 7ANEWS

One of my most memorable cateringevents was a Jewish Seder supper. Now Iwill tell you this was years ago, and I knewvery little about the Seder supper cele-brated on Passover.

Well, about that time, our Catholicchurch held a Seder supper and I helpedwith the food. One of the items we servedat our church dinner was matzo bread/crackers that we purchased.

During the Seder meal that I catered, Iremember vividly the Seder plate with thecrisp matzo that the hostess had made her-self, in the center of the plate, surrounded by othermeaningful foods, all of which were important tothe celebration.

Recently, one of my listeners to my Sonrisemorning show program on Sacred Heart radiowanted to make homemade matzo for a Passovercelebration for her family. I had a recipe tuckedaway in my files so last night I decided to make it.

The history behind matzo is that it shouldbe made, from start to finish, in 18 minutessince that’s the time frame believed to keepthe dough from starting to ferment or leavenfrom the moisture. It honors the quick de-parting of the Israelites from Egypt. Theyhad to make bread in haste so unleavenedbread took less time, and that’s what theymade.

Did I finish it in 18 minutes? No, I dawdledaround but the recipe was super easy andtasty. When I pulled it out of the oven I askedmy husband, Frank, if he would taste a piece.

“Only if you put butter on it,” he said. So much forPassover traditions!

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is an herbalist, educator,Jungle Jim’s Eastgate culinary professional andauthor. Find her blog online at Abouteating.com.Email her at [email protected] with “Ri-ta’s kitchen” in the subject line.

Easy homemade crisp matzo

This reminds me of the pita chips you buy. This is avery crisp cracker that is good for dipping or just breakingapart and eating. If you’d like to see step-by-step photos ofthe process, check out my abouteating.com site. This is afun recipe for the little ones to help with.

2 cups all purpose flour - you can also use wholewheat but you’ll need a bit more water

1 cup water1 tablespoon salt1 tablespoon olive oil plus extra for brushing on

matzo

Preheat oven to 475. Spray cookie sheets.Mix the flour, water, salt and olive oil. Knead briefly

on a floured surface until the dough comes together into asmooth ball, a few minutes. You’ll need to add a bit of flouruntil it’s no longer sticky. Bless the dough!

With your hands, roll into log and then cut into egg-sized pieces. Roll each piece out as thin as you can. Whenyou think it’s thin enough, keep rolling! Transfer to cookiesheet and prick all over to prevent puffing in the oven.

You can put the breads close together. I brushed somewith olive oil. Bake until crisp and golden brown in spots,5-7 minutes or so. After they came out of the oven, Ibrushed them again with olive oil.

Mini Easter egg nests like Russell Stovercandy

I love these nests since they can be made with differ-ent kinds of high quality chocolate. Desiccated coconut isquite dry and fine, with lots less moisture than regular. Isuppose you could use regular unsweetened flaked coco-nut, but I would chop it up a bit. Adapted slightly fromSerious Eats.

8 oz. finely chopped chocolate - your choice of milk,semisweet or white

1-1/3 cups unsweetened desiccated coconutDash green food coloring if you like for the white

chocolateTiny jellybeans or tiny pastel chocolate eggs

Melt half the chocolate very slowly. Stir in rest ofchocolate until smooth. Stir in food coloring if using. Stir incoconut and drop tablespoons of mixture onto sprayedcookie sheet keeping shape as rounded as you can. Makesmall indentation in center and put in 3 candies. Chill untilset.

Make Matzo at home for Jewish Seder supper

THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

Homemade Matzo is easy to fix for Jewish Seder supper.

Rita HeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

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513-268-1186

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8A • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016

NORTHWESTPRESS

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

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

A publication of

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

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

Hart urges support for levyColerain Township has approxi-

mately 113 miles of townshipstreets.

The Hamilton County Engi-neer’s office told me that it takesabout $3 million to replace a mile ofa two-lane township street withcurbs, cutters and storm drains.About 70 percent, or 67.8 miles oftownship streets are poor and fail-ing, and need to be replaced or re-surfaced at an estimated replace-ment cost of $203 million. Andstreets that need repair will add tothat cost.

The smart thing to do is repairthe streets that are in better shapebefore they get so bad that theyhave to be replaced. I use the oldseamstress motto a stitch in timesaves nine. The engineer’s motto isrepair it when it needs it or it willcost 10 times more to fix it.

Colerain Township has not had aroad levy to use to repair streets forthe last 15 years. And its financialsituation is much worse. Four yearsago the Ohio legislators and theGovernor of Ohio balanced an $8billion deficit to balance the statebudget by taking that money fromtownships, cities, villages andcounties. This was general fundmoney received by local govern-ments for two centuries.

We need to pass the ColerainTownship levy on March 15 to keepfrom having the cost escalate fur-ther.

We also need to elect state lead-ers who will restore what has beenthe rule in Ohio since inception ofthe State of Ohio. The levy will beused 71.4 percent for roads and therest for the parks and senior andcommunity center.

Vote yes for the levy.

Tom Hart Colerain Township

Track would hurt watercycle

I read that a three-lane trackaround White Oak Middle School’sfootball field is planned.

Is this necessary? A benefit of keeping the field the

way it is includes better drainageand infiltration of water throughthe soil. As permaculture educatorand former Green Township resi-dent Doug Crouch told me, thereare already too many impervioussurfaces in municipal areas. Thishas damaged the natural hydrolog-ic cycle.

The football field area is a nichefor wildlife. Adding a track wouldreduce the amount of soil whichbirds use to find worms.

There is already a park acrossBlue Rock Road with a half-mileloop.

Use funding to: 1) remediatehoneysuckle along the creek be-hind White Oak Middle School andthrough Blue Rock Park and 2)plant native trees and bushes whichsupport birds and other wildlife;prevent soil erosion; and clean theair.

Perhaps a mulched trail could becreated for residents and students.Students can learn more about thecreek in biology class. They mayconsider how everything we use –cosmetics, detergent, soap – getsinto the water supply. Creative asthey are, the students may come upwith strategies to improve the wa-ter.

Doris Schnetzer Colerain Township

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

March 2 questionA bill in the Ohio legislature would re-

quire private schools to publish some in-formation on their websites, includingenrollment and financial data. Other in-formation – reading lists and school by-laws, for example – would have to be ac-cessible to parents of enrolled students.Is this a good idea? Why or why not?

“While transparency should be therule for public schools or any institu-tion receiving tax money, I don’t thinkthat level of transparency should ap-ply to private schools.

“Any parent of a student attending aprivate school should have open ac-cess to information. If the parent isn’tsatisfied with the level of disclosurethey have the option of protest by with-drawing their student and sendingthem to another private school.

“As long as the private school isn’treceiving any public tax money thereis no reason for any information onthat school, other than what they deemneeded to attract students, to be avail-able to the public.”

C.S.

“I am not sure what the politicians’motives are to require private schoolsto post all that information. There arepublicly traded companies and pri-vately owned companies with differ-ent requirements for showing their‘books.’ Private schools have an annualopen house to show prospective stu-dents and their parents the informa-tion they need to make a decision. Aschool’s enrollment is easily garneredvia the division they are in for Ohioathletics (I to VII). Go Figure!”

T.D.T.

Feb. 24 questionShould the U.S. Senate hold confirma-

tion hearings if President Obama nomi-nates a successor to Supreme Court Jus-tice Antonin Scalia? Why or why not?

“Yes, the Senate should hold hear-ings when (not if) Obama nominatesour next Supreme Court Justice. How-ever, they should only accept that per-son if it is someone whose beliefs arethe same as mine. Therein lies theproblem: if the guy currently sitting inthe office chooses wisely (my versionof wise) all is well. If he chooses some-one I believe is fundamentally wrongthen it is not a good thing and the Sen-ate should delay, delay, delay. In reali-ty, it is within Obama’s purview tochoose a successor and he should be-cause if it was a Republican currentlyholding that seat you can be darnedcertain he would chose a justice. Thesad part is that a job for life with suchpower can change the balance of pow-er and direction of this country for along time.”

M.J.F.

“I went back and forth on this ques-tion before it was ever put forth in thisnewspaper. One might think therewould be hope for replacement of Jus-tice Scalia with a similar devotee of thelaw and the Constitution since the Re-publicans have control of the Senate.

However, no matter who Barack Oba-ma nominates and claims to be a non-partisan, that wouldn’t necessarily beso. Obama expects everyone to accepthis word as spoken because, as he hasnoted before, “he is the president” andhe can do what he wants and expectcompliance. He has the majority of themedia touting whatever he says overand over, even challenging anyonewho dares to say otherwise. Who intheir right mind would have everimagined that America would be socontrolled by the left-winged media;and so what we have got is over sevenyears of what one man’s ideology andanti-Constitutional behavior, support-ed by an aggressive inner circle, hasdone to our country.

“In the past, both Joe Biden and Ba-rack Obama have protested againstconfirmation hearings during thecountdown to a lame-duck presidency.Now, as is usual for the Democrats,they are protesting in the opposite di-rection because to do otherwise mightnot work out in their favor. Why? Be-cause, if hearings were to go forth,they believe they would be able to ma-nipulate and coerce enough Republi-cans (alas, those who are more inter-ested in keeping their posts than theyare for looking after the interests ofthe American people) into giving in tothem for confirmation of their chosenindividual; someone who may well lookfairly appropriate enough on the sur-face (think John Roberts,) so that theRhinos might feel easier about theircompliance. What America needs is toget the politics out of the judicial!

If a conservative is not voted in to bethe next president, the question of a bi-partisan nominee would be mute any-way. America would continue in the di-rection that Obama has taken it, vul-nerable on the world stage and withinits own borders as well as further eco-

nomic despair and erosion of the liber-ties that made American great. There-fore, I would not even entertain theidea of hearings for a replacement jus-tice to the Supreme Court until nextyear.”

S.N.

“The Constitution clearly statesthat the president ‘shall nominate, andby and with the Advice and Consent ofthe Senate, shall appoint Ambassa-dors, other public Ministers and Con-suls, Judges of the Supreme Court.’This is just another transparent at-tempt by Republicans to subvert theConstitution and the rule of law… busi-ness as usual… in line with voter sup-pression, gerrymandering and sup-porting the interests of the few at theexpense of the majority.”

B.M.

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’S QUESTIONWill Cincinnati’s new professional soccerclub, FC Cincinnati, which opens its seasonlater this month, be successful? Doyouplan to attend any games? Why or whynot?

Every week we ask readers a question they canreply to via email. Send your answers [email protected] with Ch@troom inthe subject line.

Making ColerainGreat!

H. Jackson Brown, Jr.stated “The best prep-aration for tomorrow isdoing your best today.” AsI reflect on this quote, Ican’t help but think aboutthe impact Issue 3 willhave on our communitytoday and into the future.

In our effort to engageas many residents as pos-sible, we have conducteda scientific survey, heldnumerous outreach meet-ings, and engaged a focusgroup on the issues facingour roads, parks and com-munity center. What wefound in this process isthat our residents havedifferent values as to whythey chose to call ColerainTownship home.

Issue 3 is about makingcertain we maintain thatvalue to our families,youth and elderly. Issue 3provides vital funding tofix our roads, protect ourparks, and save our com-munity center. By now,you should have receiveda post card outlining theinformation and factsabout this important issueand its impact on ourproperty values and qual-ity of life.

As you drive throughColerain, take a momentto consider the invest-ment being made in our

neigh-borhoodsand com-mercialcorridor.Business-es andresidentschoosecommuni-ties thatshowpromise

and a means of communi-ty values. While govern-ment has no obligation toprovide parks for its resi-dents and youth or com-munity centers for ourseniors, I believe tremen-dous value is gained withthese amenities and pro-vide a real sense of com-munity.

Issue 3 is about invest-ing in our community byfixing our public infra-structure (where 70 per-cent of our streets arepoor or failed), protectingour parks with adequatestaffing and restoringprograms like the Fourthof July, and by keepingour community centeropen for our seniors.

The biggest question Ihave been asked aboutIssue 3 is why it is neededwhen the township justsettled with Rumpke. Theanswer is simple. Thetownship needs approxi-mately $3.5 million a year

just to maintain our 114road miles, and the settle-ment proceeds will onlysatisfy roughly half ofthat amount. We are 10years behind on road im-provements. Without Is-sue 3, we will never catchup.

I have also heard somesuggest that we shouldcontinue to spend downour cash reserves or makeadditional spending re-ductions. A close reviewof our General Fund bal-ance from 2011 thru 2015will indicate that we havealready reduced our cashbalance by $4 million, or46 percent, during thatperiod. In my view, tocontinue that trend wouldbe reckless.

Some feedback re-ceived at our focus groupmeeting was to closeparks and the communitycenter.

I believe this would beirresponsible without atleast giving our residentsa vote.

Issue 3 is a referendumon the type of communityyou want to live in. Pleaseconsider Making ColerainGreat with your yes voteon March 15.

Jim Rowan is the Col-erain Township adminis-trator.

Administrator says levynecessary for township

JimRowanCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

ABOUT LETTERS AND COLUMNS

We welcome your comments on editori-als, columns, stories or other topics impor-tant to you in The Northwest Press. In-clude your name, address and phonenumber(s) so we may verify your letter.Letters of 200 or fewer words and columnsof 500 or fewer words have the bestchance of being published. All submissionsmay be edited for length, accuracy andclarity. Deadline: Noon Thursday E-mail: [email protected] Fax: 853-6220 U.S. mail: See box below

Letters, columns and articles submittedto The Northwest Press ay be published ordistributed in print, electronic or otherforms.

Page 9: Northwest press 030916

MARCH 9, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 1B

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

Roger Bacon’s sixth boysbasketball district title in sev-en years is not a tale of re-demption.

Last season’s team was tal-ented, but young, and theSpartans’ streak of fivestraight district champion-ships was broken. The teamgraduated just one senior andentered this season with con-fidence. The Spartans werenot thinking about or motivat-ed by last year’s postseasonshortcomings. Instead, theywere focused on playing up totheir abilities this year.

“This is one of the more tal-ented groups I’ve had,” saidhead coach Brian Neal.“We’re a year older, a yearwiser, and a year better. An-other year of maturity cer-tainly helps.”

Despite all their talent, theSpartans are still a relativelyyoung squad. Of the six play-ers averaging between 7.6and 15.2 points per game, onlytwo are seniors (senior ElijahFulton leads the squad with15.2 points per game). Add inthe fact that GCL Coed Cen-tral Division rival PurcellMarian is loaded with seniortalent, and Roger Bacon hadto learn how to play a differ-ent role this season.

The younger players had tolearn that they cannot get byon skill alone. Once they start-ed buying into selfless teambasketball, the Spartans be-gan rolling.

“We started accepting whowe are. We have talent, but wehave to do more to wingames,” said Neal. “We’veembraced the challenge thatwe’re not the favorite.”

It's taken a total team ef-fort. Despite 19 wins andcounting, no Spartans playersearned All-District recogni-tion.

Since back-to-back lossesto Purcell Marian and Elder toclose out January and beginFebruary, the Spartans havereeled off seven straight winsby an average margin of vic-tory of 28 points per game.

Three dominant wins in thesectional tournament werefollowed by a hard-fought 47-42 win over Northridge in thedistrict final. While thatwasn’t the tempo or style ofgame that the Spartans like toplay, it showed that they can

battle and win by makingclutch plays in clutch mo-ments.

“This stretch, we’re reallydoing a nice job of taking careof each other and making theright plays at the right time,”said Neal. “We’ve workedhard on making those littleplays that make a differencedown the stretch. I’m proud ofour guys for gutting it out.”

The Spartans are playingtheir best at the most impor-

tant time of the year. That isanother product of the team’soverall maturity. Every play-er on the roster has contribut-ed to the steady improve-ment. Practices have been in-creasingly competitive,thanks to the contributions ofall 15 young men on the roster.

“Honestly, we just startedplaying really good basket-ball the past couple weeks,”said Neal. “We don’t feel likewe’ve reached the end of the

line yet. Hopefully, we’repeaking at the right time.”

The Sweet Sixteen beginswith a contest on March 9 atKettering Fairmont againsteither Grandview Heights orCenterburg, who square off ina district final on March 4. Awin would propel Roger Ba-con to the Elite Eight, wherethey will meet a local rival ineither Purcell Marian or Sum-mit Country Day on March 12.

Maturity helps RogerBacon capture district title

Adam [email protected]

SAM GREENE FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Roger Bacon forward Justin Johnson goes up for a layup against Fenwick earlier this season.

DAYTON - After beatingteams, 95-30, 84-31 and 88-48 toadvance to this point, the 47- 42win against Northridge was a bitof a jolt to the Roger Bacon Spar-tans, who had played well in thepostseason.

The Spartans have now wonsix district titles in the last sevenyears.

“Survive is probably a goodterm,” coach Brian Neal said.“In the sectional, we were play-ing really well. No disrespect tothe teams we beat, but they prob-ably aren’t the quality of North-ridge. We didn’t exactly play ourbest game tonight. Credit to ourguys, we still found a way towin.”

Neither team shot the ballwell in the first half. The Spar-tans canned just six of the 23shots they took. Northridgemade 35 percent.

Both teams were playing at afrenetic pace. Bacon opted toslow it down in the second half.

“We felt like we are capable ofplaying both ways,” Neal said.“We are capable of playing fastand capable of playing a half-court game. We felt like theywere really good playing fast.We wanted to be opportunistic,but we wanted to make it a 5-on-5, grind-it-out game.”

In the second half, with the of-fense at a more even pace, theSpartans shot the much better.In the third quarter, they hit al-most 50 percent of their shots.

The thing Neal will empha-size in practices getting readyfor the next game is taking careof the ball. The Spartans had 16miscues.

“We turned it over way toomany times,” the coach said.“Looking ahead, we have to fixthat.”

The Spartans will play thewinner of the Columbus 1 Dis-trict March 9 at Kettering Fair-mont.

NICK ROBBE/COMMUNITY PRESS

Roger Bacon’s Alec Pfriem nails ajump-hook against Northridge.

Roger Bacongets first testin playoffs,and passesNick [email protected]

Girls state bowling» McAuley senior Madi-

son Baker led the Mohawksat the Division I state tourna-ment March 5 in Columbus

with a 590 three-game series,which ranked 21st overall atstate. Senior Julie Lasonczykfired a 490 series, followedby freshman Ashley Bush-man and senior Natalie De-Meo with a pair of 489 series.

It was McAuley’s first ap-pearance as a team at state

since 2012.

Boys tournamentbasketball

» La Salle lost 58-38 to Cen-terville in a Division I districtfinal at Wright State’s NutterCenter March 5. It’s the third

season in a row the Lancershave fallen in the district fi-nal.

La Salle’s 38 points was itslowest scoring game of theseason. Senior Jeremy Lar-kin led La Salle with 12 pointsand junior C.J. Fleming add-ed 11.

SHORT HOPS

Adam Baum and Nick RobbeCommunity Press staff

Page 10: Northwest press 030916

2B • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016 SPORTS

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513.621.ARTS

MONFORTHEIGHTS - La Sallewrestling coach AveryZerkle knew his stableof Lancers were capa-ble of a run to state, andhe was right.

The Lancers sent aschool record six wres-tlers to the Division Istate tournament.

“We actually lookedit up,” Zerkle said. “Webelieve in the ‘80s, ei-ther ’82 or ’83 they hadfive. This is the most LaSalle’s ever had. It’s ex-citing, we’ve been work-ing hard to get the pro-gram going in this di-rection and it’s finallyhere. We’re very excit-ed.”

Zerkle said beforethe postseason startedthat the focus was onone day, one tourna-ment at a time.

But March 3-5 at OhioState University’sSchottenstein Center,the season ran out ofroad. There were nomore tournaments, nomore weight checks, allthat remained wasblood, sweat and grap-pling for greatness.

La Salle’s six statequalifiers were fresh-man Lucas Byrd, juniorCorey Shie, junior EricBeck, junior HunterPerdue, sophomoreBlake Wilson and fresh-man Michael Baker.

Byrd, Shie and Beckall secured a spot on thepodium.

Corey Shie, a three-time district championand state qualifier,

could become known asthe “Overtime Assas-sin” after his perfor-mance on the final dayof the state tournamentMarch 5.

In a 132-pound conso-lation semifinal, Shiepulled off a reversal andpin in overtime, fol-

lowed by an 11-4 over-time decision to clinchthird place.

“It felt great to getback in the semis like Idid freshman year,”said Shie, who finishedthe year with a 43-4 rec-ord. “It’s definitelygreat to have my team-

mates with me, support-ing me.”

Byrd placed seventhat 106 and Beck wres-tled through a nastyhand injury to placeseventh at 138.

“It’s a lot differentbecause I wrestled in ju-nior high and I was in

the finals three times,”said Byrd. “It’s just adifferent experiencebecause you’ve got hun-dreds of people watch-ing you.”

The Lancers knowwith all six of their statequalifiers being under-classmen, the future

could be very bright. “We’ve got one more

school record we’ve got-ta break,” said Zerkle.“They placed second (asa team) in the state backin the ‘70s, so if we couldobviously tie or breakthat record it would bepretty awesome.”

6 from La Salle wrestle at state Adam [email protected]

ADAM BAUM/COMMUNITY PRESS

La Salle junior Corey Shie clamps down a pin to advance to the semifinals at 132 pounds in the Division I state tournament March 4 at Ohio State.

The state bowling tour-nament is one of Ohio’smost exciting high schoolathletic events. WayneWebb’s Columbus Bowlwas packed with families,fans, coaches, and admin-istrators supporting thetop Division I bowlers inthe state on March 4-5.

Cincinnati was repre-sented by two girls teams,McAuley and Glen Este.Individual qualifiers in-cluded Loveland’s TaylarHayden and Oak Hills’Mandi Chafins on the girlsside and Anderson’s JoeyStevens on the boys side.

Stevens rolled a 744 se-ries at districts to qualify,then followed that up witha 647 series at state. Thatwas enough for the Red-skins senior to finish in25th place out of the 82bowlers who rolled threegames at state.

Glen Este junior Court-ney Chaffin finishedeighth in the state with a640 series to lead the lo-cals. Her team finished10th. Most exciting for theTrojans, every bowler onthe team is an underclass-man who will be back nextyear.

“I hope they take awaythat this is a once-in-a-life-time experience and thatthey are only one of twoCincinnati teams to makeit,” said Glen Este coachKevin Briggs. “This ishuge for our school and theindividuals who compete.We’ve got the bodies tocontinue this success.”

Chaffin was joined at

state by classmates DrewCoulter, Casey Richardson,and Becca Rainwater,sophomore Danielle Coop-er, and freshman TaylorNeal.

The Mohawks were ledby senior all-district bow-ler Madison Baker, whorolled a 590 series. UnlikeGlen Este, McAuley is asenior-laden squad. Theywill need to reload afterfour seniors – Baker, Nat-alie Demeo, Julie Lasonc-zyk, and Emma Papania –led the Mohawks back tothe state team tournamentfor the first time since2012.

Another senior, Love-land’s Hayden, enjoyed hersecond straight trip to thestate tournament. She wascheered on by her family,coach, principal, superin-tendent, and athletic direc-tor. The Tigers faithful saw

Hayden roll a 543 series.“I had a lot of adrenaline

at first, but I just wanted tostay calm and have fun,”said Hayden, who will bowlat Morehead State. “I had alot of people who came outto support me, which I real-ly appreciated.”

Chafins became thefirst Oak Hills bowler toqualify as an individual(Highlanders teams havequalified before) and rep-resented the Greater Mi-ami Conference at state.She rolled a 521 series, nother best, but still a goodshowing.

“It was a big deal forher, a great achievement,”said Oak Hills coach RobinHoernschmeyer. “Ourwhole school and all theGMC coaches are proud ofher.”

Local teams, individualbowlers compete at state Adam [email protected]

THANKS TO MCAULEY

McAuley High School’s bowling team competed at theDivision I state tournament this weekend.

Page 11: Northwest press 030916

MARCH 9, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 3BLIFE

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Page 12: Northwest press 030916

4B • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016 LIFE

CE-0000643575

For Issue 3Fixes ROADS

Protects PARKSSaves SENIOR Ctr.

Paid for by Colerain Residents Improving the Future, Scott Taylor, Treasurer, 8025 Spring Leaf Dr., Colerain Township, OH 45247

Bread From HeavenOutreach Ministry

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

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

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

Christ Church Glendale Episcopal Church965 Forest Ave - 771-1544

[email protected]@christchurchglendale.org

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

11am Holy Eucharist IIChild Care 9-12

EVANGELICALCOMMUNITY CHURCH

Sunday School Hour (for all ages)9:15 - 10:15am

Worship Service - 10:30 to 11:45am(Childcare provided for infants/ toddlers)

Pastor: Rich LanningChurch: 2191 Struble Rd

Office: 2192 Springdale Rd542-9025

Visitors Welcome www.eccfellowship.org

Trinity Lutheran Church, LCMS5921 Springdale Rd

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

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

www.trinitylutherancincinnati.com385-7024

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

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

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

Mt. HealthyUnited Methodist ChurchCorner of Compton and Perry Streets

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

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

“Come as a guest. Leave as a friend.”

FLEMING ROADUnited Church of Christ

691 Fleming Rd 522-2780Rev Pat McKinney

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

Nursery Provided

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

Northminster Presbyterian Church703 Compton Rd., Finneytown 931-0243

Growing Faith, Sharing Hope, Showing LoveSunday Worship Schedule

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

Student Cafe: 10:15amChildcare Available

Nancy Ross- Zimmerman - Pastors

DIRECTORY

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

» Corpus ChristiChurch, 2014 SpringdaleRoad, will have a fish fryfrom 5 to 7 p.m. Friday,March 11. Menu includesfish, homemade soups,many side choices with a

weekly special feature.Beer and Soda availablefor purchase.

» Pleasant Run Presby-terian Church will pre-sent a series of Lentenfish fries is being spon-

sored by the Womens’ As-sociation and Cub ScoutPack 5 at the church, 11565Pippin Road. These fishfries are 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.Fridays, March 4 and 11.The menu includes choiceof fish or chicken nuggetsand choice of two sides:macaroni and cheese,green beans, cole slaw, orapplesauce. The meal alsoincludes bread, dessertand either coffee, lemon-ade or ice tea. Cost is $8.50per adult and $4.50 perchild. Carry-out pricesare $8 per adult and $4 perchild. The profits will beused for mission projectsand Cub Scout projects.Call 513-825-4544, or visitthe website at pleasan-trunpc.org.

» Fish frys for Our La-dy of Grace School are atLittle Flower Church,Mount Airy, 5560 KirbyAve., in the cafeteriaMarch 4, 11 and 18 from 5to 7:30 p.m.

Choose from fried andbaked fish, pizza, mac-n-cheese, cole slaw, hushpuppies, green beans, on-ion rings, fried picklesand more. Draft and bot-tled beer including localcraft breweries. Weeklydessert booth hosted byvarious school youth pro-grams. Split the pot of-fered at 6 p.m. and 7 p.m.Call 513-541-5560.

» God & Cod is back atSt. James the Greater.Menu includes fried orbaked fish dinners,shrimp dinners, sand-wiches, LaRosa's pizza,North College Hill Bakerybread, Servatii's pretzelsand desserts. Drinksserved include coffee,soft drinks and domesticand craft beers.

The fish fry is from4:30 to 8 p.m. Fridays,

March 4, 11, and 18 in theSt. James Church Hall,3565 Hubble Road. Thereis no fish fry on AshWednesday or Good Fri-day.

Dine in or carry-out. Toorder carry-out ahead,call 514-741-5311 between4:30 and 7:30 p.m.

» Madonna Knights ofColumbus in MountHealthy has a fish fryfrom 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.March 4, 11, 18 and 25 at7700 Seward Ave.

» St. William Parish inWest Price Hill’s annualFish Fry will be open forbusiness all Fridays inLent except Good Fridaythrough March 18. Pa-trons can enjoy dine in,carry out or drive throughservice Drive thru hoursare 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.; dine-inservice is available from4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Liveentertainment weekly in-cluding Fat Friday.

Visitstwilliamfishfry.com forour complete menu, enter-tainment lineup and otherdetails.

St. William Church is at4108 W. Eighth St. in WestPrice Hill.

» Moose Lodge No. 2,8944 Colerain Ave. (be-hind Jeff Wyler Honda),hosts a fish fry every Fri-day thru Good Friday,March 25. Dine in or carryout.

Dinner includes five-ounce cod, choice of twosides (macaroni andcheese, fries, slaw) andtwo hush puppies for $6.

Baked goods anddrinks available for addi-tional cost.

» » The 36th annual St.Teresa of Avila Boy ScoutTroop 271 fish fry runs4:30 p.m. to7:30 p.m. everyFriday through March 18.

Dine-in service isavailable in Avila Hall,carry-out orders in theScout Room, and drive-thru service in the circledrive on Overlook. Eachweek will feature a dinnerspecial. Girl Scouts willbe selling desserts andcookies throughout thefish fry.

St. Teresa of Avila is at1175 Overlook Ave.

» Annual Fish Fry Fri-days at Hartzell UnitedMethodist Church, 8999Applewood Drive, BlueAsh, are scheduled everyFriday through March 11.

Cost is $10 for adults,$5 for ages 6-11. The din-ner is free ages 5 and un-der. Carry-out two piecefish sandwich is $5. Formore information, call891.8527, Ext 1.

» Guardian AngelsParish hosts a fish fry inthe church undercroft ev-ery Friday in Lent. Itemsavailable for purchase in-clude: fried and bakedfish, shrimp, cheese pizza,mac-n-cheese, fries, coleslaw and bake sale items.Dinner is available from 5p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and allitems are available fordine-in or carry-out. Sen-ior dining will be avail-able in nearby Room B.They will also be a kidcraft corner set up for thechildren. Children mustbe accompanied by anadult at all times.

» Anderson AmericanLegion Post 318 will hostits first fish fry dinner 5p.m. to 7 p.m. Fridaysthrough March 25 at theirPost known as the PatriotCenter, at 6660 CloughPike in Anderson Town-ship. You can dine-in orcarry-out.

Basic dinners will beinclusive of fried or baked

fish, or shrimp, or chickennuggets, with a variety oftasty side dishes to ac-company your meal andbeverage, all rangingfrom $5 to $8.50. Desserts,many home-made, willalso be available. Softdrinks and bar drinks willalso be available for pur-chase.

Call 513-231-6477 orvisit website atwww.post318.org.

» Our Lady of the Sa-cred Heart Church Men’sClub’s annual fish fry is 5p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Fridaysthrough March 18, in theActivity Center at Our La-dy of the Sacred HeartParish, 177 SiebenthalerAve., Reading.

Dinners cost: $8.50. Avariety of offerings for aKids meal is $5.

Call for carry out: 513-733-0614.

» St. Joseph Knights ofColumbus will sponsor afish fry on Ash Wednes-day and every Friday inLent from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30p.m. at Visitation’s multi-purpose room at the cor-ner of Werk and Southroads.

Will call, drive-thruand shut in delivery isavailable at 513-347-2229.

Special children activ-ities are scheduled for ev-ery Friday.

For additional infor-mation, visit www.stjo-sephkofc.org.

» The Men of St. Jo-seph of St. Mary Churchin Bethel will sponsor afish fry every Fridaythrough March 18 at St.Mary Church, 3398 stateRoute 125 just east of Be-thel. The hours are from4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

LENTEN FISH FRIES

Page 13: Northwest press 030916

MARCH 9, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 5BLIFE

As Cincinnati’s only academic health system, we see more. More people restarting their lifeafter a stroke. More Parkinson’s patients living tremor free. And more people with cancer,heart disease and neurologic disorders returning to the life they always imagined.Here, we see the promise of academic medicine every day.

more hope for the most serious illnesses,so you can enjoy all of the possibilities ahead.

Cincinnati West Chester

call (513) 475-8000 l UCHealth.com/WeSee

© 2016 UC Health

Willard A. DavisWillard A. Davis, 72, passed

away Feb. 3.Survived by children Barbara

(James)Stephensonand Jona-than (Bran-dy) Davis;grandchil-dren Christa,Heather,Mariah,Faith, Vin-cent, andMax; ninesisters.

Preceded in death by wife of50 years Sandy Davis.

Visitation and funeral ser-vices were Feb. 9 at the Ogleand Paul R. Young FuneralHome, Mount Healthy.

Interment at ArlingtonMemorial Gardens.

Memorials to the AmericanLung Association and theAmerican Diabetes Associa-tion.

Patricia Sue KroegerPatricia Sue (nee Pinkerton)

Kroeger, 67, of Colerain Town-ship passed away Feb. 2.

Survived by children Tammy(John Barlow) Date and KarinKroeger; grandchildren Isabel,Preston, Ivy, and John “Bub”;siblings Thomas B. PinkertonIII, Jayne Bedore and June Ball;former husband Greg Kroeger.

Preceded in death by long-time companion BJ Heheman;siblings Betty Norman andCamille Hudgins.

Visitation and funeral ser-vices were Feb. 5 at Neidhard-Young Funeral Home, MountHealthy. Interment at Arling-ton Memorial Gardens.

Memorials to the AmericanHeart Association or the Edu-cational Theatre Association.

Lillian Elizabeth OrrLillian Elizabeth Orr, 99, of

Mount Healthy and ColerainTownship passed away Jan. 21.She was a longtime employeeof Cincinnati Milacron.

Survived by nieces/nephewsCynthia and Gregory Male,James and Sue Peters, MaryBeth Peters, SC and Diane andSteven Ahlers; great-nieces/nephews Kevin (Gena) Male,Thomas (Maria) Male, Brendan(Hannah) Male, JonathanMale, Amy (Brian) Baum,Joseph Ahlers, Eryn Ahlers,Andrew Ahlers; great-great-nieces/nephews Eleanor andKieran Male.

Preceded in death by par-ents Clarence and Clara (neeSchick) Orr; siblings Jane(William) Peters and BuddyOrr; great-niece ChristinaMale.

Visitation and services wereJan. 29 at Twin Towers GuldenCenter.

Private burial service at St.Mary Cemetery MountHealthy. Neidhard YoungFuneral Home served thefamily.

Memorials to Twin TowersBenevolent Fund.

Eunice L. PlotnerEunice L. (nee Smith) Plotn-

er, 89, of Colerain Townshippassed away at ClovernookHealth Care Pavilion Jan. 27.

She was a former member ofthe Springdale Senior Center.

Survived by brother SonnyMosley; nieces/nephews JohnHeld, Tina Hampton and FredHeld.

Preceded in death by hus-band William Plotner.

Services were held Jan. 30 atthe mausoleum complex ofArlington Memorial Gardens.Neidhard-Young Funeral Homeserved the family.

Memorials to the Shriner’sHospital for Children or thecharity of the donor’s choice.

DEATHS

Davis

ABOUTOBITUARIES

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

COLERAIN TOWNSHIP2542 Byrneside Drive: Wehrle,Adam & William R. to Woods,Jamie; $80,000.

7240 Creekview Drive: Dona-hue, Michael A. & Mary Ann toRosing, Randall Robert;$41,900.

5513 Desertgold Drive: Stone,Roger L. to Fasbender, Antho-ny J.; $200,000.

3196 Deshler Drive: CinfedFederal Credit Union to DoriOh-B LLC ; $45,000.

4161 Eddystone Drive: U.S. BankNA to Hilton Capital Group LLC; $55,650.

10320 Fay Lane: Eder, ElizabethA. & Rodney M. Herrin II toSteinke, Matthew & Brie N.Starcevich; $185,000.

Flick Road: Fagaly, Marilyn A. toRiedel, Jerome L. & Diane C.;

$23,000.2571 Highgrove Court: NurnetCapital LLC to VinebrookAnnex B. Ohio LLC ; $45,000.

7544 Hunters Creek Lane: JohnHenry Homes Inc. to Hollman,Jeffrey M. & Joanne R.;$259,662.

Magnolia Woods Way: GrandCommunities Ltd. to FischerSingle Family Homes III Ltd.;$102,166.

2338 Miles Road: Willis RealtyLLC to Hilton Capital GroupLLC ; $24,501.

3990 Olde Savannah Drive:Collins, Andrew S. to Jefferson,Larry & Elizabeth Jefferson;$74,900.

2929 Overdale Drive: U.S. BankNA to Rex Residential PropertyOwner LLC ; $70,000.

8893 Planet Drive: Cinfed

Employees Federal CreditUnion to Dori Oh-B LLC ;$35,000.

2899 Sheldon Ave.: Sears, JerryJr. & Jamie L. to GenerationTwo Properties LLC ; $42,000.

10265 Snowflake Lane: Curry,Malcus V. to Steverson, StevenT. & Kelley Moore Steverson;$115,000.

12031 Spalding Drive: Schlosser,Richard D. & Kimberly K. toMcReynolds, Dewann; $70,000.

10013 Voyager Lane: Sullivan,Jeffrey Tr. to Bank of New YorkMellon The; $252,687.

2564 Willowspring Court:Stanko, Christopher M. &Jessica N. to Smith, Charles Jr.;$159,900.

11964 Wincanton Drive: Burkey,Janette & Robert L. to WellsFargo Bank NA; $38,000.

GREEN TOWNSHIP4951 Arbor Woods Court: U.S.Bank NA to Steinmetz, MicheleK. & Harry E.; $57,500.

6189 Berauer Road: U.S. BankNA Tr. to GTO Investments LLC; $75,000.

6937 Bluebird Drive: Davis,Estelle M. to Brown, Austin J.;$76,500.

7025 Boulder Path Drive:McCaffrey, Catherine L. &Patrick J. to Johansing, Leon-ard; $255,500.

6510 Bridgetown Road: Smith,Val H. & Gale A. to Moyer,James M. & Brenda M.;$355,000.

5203 Clearlake Drive: Meisel,William E. & Viola J. to Meisel,Dennis W.; $128,000.

Devils Backbone Road: FirstCollateral Inc. to Klosterman,

Chad M. & Christie L.; $45,000.2012 Devils Backbone Road:Owens, Thomas to Johnson,George & Lisa; $125,000.

3658 Ebenezer Road: Krieg,Pamela Gindele to Krieg, Kyle& Ben; $50,000.

5790 Eula Ave.: Primestar FundII Trs. Inc. to Vinebrook AnnexB. Ohio LLC ; $74,000.

3979 Grace Ave.: Palmisano,William F. Tr. to Thomas, WadeA. Jr. & Sarah Nichol; $88,000.

3605 Hader Ave.: John HenryHomes Inc. to May, Grant P.;$169,900.

6746 Hearne Road: KVH LLC toSchloemer, Robert A. & KarenA.; $85,570.

5420 Julmar Drive: Mack, DavidC. & Jeremy L. Cheek to Cheek,Jeremy L.; $65,350.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

Page 14: Northwest press 030916

6B • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016 LIFE

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Page 15: Northwest press 030916

MARCH 9, 2016 • NORTHWEST PRESS • 7BLIFE

CINCINNATI DISTRICT 5Incidents/investigationsAssault2900 block of Highforest Lane,Feb. 14.

4800 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 11.

4900 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 15.

Burglary2600 block of W. North BendRoad, Feb. 4.

4900 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 8.

5000 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 4.

5300 block of Bahama Terrace,Feb. 6.

Criminaldamaging/endangering2400 block of W. North BendRoad, Feb. 9.

2600 block of Fairhill Drive, Feb.12.

4800 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 16.

4900 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 11.

4900 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 15.

4900 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 16.

5400 block of Kirby Ave., Feb. 7.5800 block of Pameleen Court,Feb. 7.

Domestic violence4900 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 8.

5300 block of Bahama Terrace,Feb. 11.

5400 block of Kirby Ave., Feb. 13.5800 block of Willowcove, Feb.14.

Felonious assault2300 block of W. North BendRoad, Feb. 14.

Gross sexual imposition5300 block of Eastknoll Court,Feb. 8.

Improperly dischargingfirearm at/intohabitation/school5400 block of Kirby Ave., Feb. 3.Theft2200 block of Raeburn Drive,Feb. 3.

2300 block of Whitewood Lane,Feb. 5.

2600 block of Allaire Ave., Feb.13.

2600 block of W. North BendRoad, Feb. 3.

2700 block of W. North BendRoad, Feb. 11.

5100 block of Hawaiian Terrace,Feb. 12.

5300 block of Eastknoll Court,Feb. 4.

5300 block of Eastknoll Court,Feb. 9.

5500 block of Colerain Ave., Feb.20.

5500 block of Colerain Ave., Feb.21.

COLERAIN TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsBurglaryReported at 9900 block ofGreenriver Drive, Jan. 8.

Reported at 3500 block ofAlamosa Drive, Jan. 12.

Criminal damagingVehicle damaged at 2600 blockof Tiverton Lane, Jan 7.

Reported on Banning Road, Jan.11.

DomesticReported on Hidden MeadowsDrive, Jan. 12.

Misuse of credit cardReported on 3100 block ofHyannis Drive, Jan. 9.

RapeReported in Colerain Township,Jan. 10.

Reported on Blueacres, Dec. 22. RobberyReported at 11000 block ofHamilton Ave., Jan. 8.

Taking Identity of anotherReported on 9100 block ofTripoli Drive, Jan. 7.

TheftClothing valued at $350 re-moved from 3600 block ofStone Creek Blvd., Jan. 12.

Clothing valued at $622 re-moved from 9500 block ofColerain Ave., Jan. 12.

TV valued at $150 removed from8400 block of Colerain Ave.,Jan. 11.

Purse and contents removedfrom 9500 block of ColerainAve., Jan. 11.

Battery valued at $100 removedfrom 3400 block of JosephRoad, Jan. 11.

Leggings valued at $45 removedfrom 3600 block of Stone CreekBlvd., Jan. 11.

Clothing valued at $165 re-moved from 3600 block ofStone Creek Blvd., Jan. 11.

Punching bag removed from10000 block of Colerain Ave.,Jan. 10.

Reported on 9600 block ofColerain Ave., Jan. 10.

XBox removed from 3200 block

of Deshler Drive, Jan. 10. Reported on 3700 block ofBrockton Drive, Jan. 9.

Stereo equipment removedfrom 4300 block of HanleyRoad, Jan. 6.

Speakers valued at $800 re-moved from 3600 block ofStone Creek Blvd., Dec. 31.

Drugs removed from 9500 blockof Colerain Ave., Jan. 8.

Dealer plates removed fromvehicle at 8700 block of Col-erain Ave., Jan. 7.

iPod removed from 2600 blockof Cranbrook Drive, Jan. 7.

Items valued at $62 removedfrom 3400 block of JosephRoad, Jan. 7.

Trailer removed from 7300 blockof Colerain Ave., Jan. 7.

Credit cards removed from 3200block of Rockacres Court, Jan.7.

Reported on 8700 block ofColerain Ave., Jan. 7.

$55 removed from 2500 block ofBracebridge Drive, Jan. 7.

Merchandise removed from3700 block of Stone CreekBlvd., Jan. 7.

Computer and iPad removedfrom 4900 block of Blue Mead-ow Lane, Jan. 9.

$5 removed from 9200 block ofSilva Drive, Jan. 9.

Credit card removed from 11000block of Swissvale Court, Jan. 8.

Items valued at $39.00 removedfrom 8400 block of ColerainAve., Jan. 9.

GPS removed from 8600 block ofRedhawk Court, Jan. 9. Drugsremoved from 8600 block ofRed Hawk Court, Jan. 9.

Reported on 3400 block ofBanning Road, Jan. 9.

GREEN TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsAssaultReported at 3200 block Ebenez-er Road, Feb. 26.

Reported at 4400 block Bridge-town Road, Feb. 27.

BurglaryReported at 3600 block Edge-brook Drive, Feb. 23.

Tablet computer and moneyreported stolen at 5200 blockRelluk Drive, Feb. 23.

Reported at 5900 block CheviotRoad, Feb. 28.

Criminal damagingReported at 5700 block Lau-derdale Drive, Feb. 22.

Reported at 4400 block JessupRoad, Feb. 23.

Reported at Colerain Ave. andLoretta Drive, Feb. 24.

Reported at 4000 block Ebenez-er Road, Feb. 27.

Reported at 6600 block HearneRoad, Feb. 28.

Domestic disputeReported on Biscayne Ave., Feb.22.

Reported on Muddy Creek Road,Feb. 22.

Reported on Oakapple Drive,Feb. 24.

Reported on Emerald LakesDrive, Feb. 24.

Reported on Edalbert Drive, Feb.25.

Reported on Raceview Ave., Feb.25.

Reported on Hearne Road, Feb.25.

Reported on Woodmere Court,Feb. 26.

Reported on Cheviot Road, Feb.26.

Reported on Rybolt Road, Feb.27.

Reported on Locust Lane, Feb.27.

Reported on Rybolt Road, Feb.29.

Reported on Hearne Road, Feb.29.

TheftSuspect attempted to stealclothes from Meijer at 6500block Harrison Ave., Feb. 22.

Wallet and contents reportedstolen at 4200 block Running-fawn Drive, Feb. 22.

Reported at 3000 block DiehlRoad, Feb. 23.

Reported at 5700 block CheviotRoad, Feb. 23.

Suspect attempted to steallaundry detergent and house-hold items from Meijer at 6500block Harrison Ave., Feb. 24.

Cellphone reported stolen atDiamond Oaks at 6300 blockHarrison Ave., Feb. 25.

Reported at 5600 block HarrisonAve., Feb. 25.

Cellphone reported stolen at5600 block Bridgetown Road,Feb. 24.

Reported at 5600 block HaubnerRoad, Feb. 26.

Towels and drapes reportedstolen from Meijer at 6500block Harrison Ave., Feb. 26.

Registration papers reportedstolen from vehicle at 6300block Springmyer Drive, Feb.

27.Money reported stolen at 5700block Bridgetown Road, Feb.27.

Bicycle reported stolen at 6300block Springmyer Drive, Feb.27.

Bicycle reported stolen at 5500block Bridgetown Road, Feb.27.

Purse and contents reportedstolen at 5700 block CheviotRoad, Feb. 28.

Reported at 1500 block Linne-man Road, Feb. 29.

TrespassingReported at 4900 block RaceRoad, Feb. 24.

Reported at 5400 block North-crest Lane, Feb. 28.

SPRINGFIELDTOWNSHIP

Incidents/investigationsAssaultReported on 8300 block ofCottonwood Drive, Dec. 14.

Breaking and enteringReported on 6200 block of DalyRoad, Dec. 14.

BurglaryReported on 1500 block Mer-edith Drive, Dec. 14.

Reported on 8600 block ofMelody Lane, Dec. 17.

Reported on 8700 block ofGrenada Drive, Dec. 17.

Criminal damagingReported on 8000 block ofHamilton Ave., Dec. 14.

Reported on 800 block of Gal-braith Road, Dec. 15.

Reported on 1800 block ofWindmill Ave., Dec. 15.

DomesticReported on Elmtree Ave., Dec.17.

FalsificationReported on 10000 block ofHamilton Ave., Dec. 14.

ForgeryReported on 10000 block ofHamilton Ave., Nov. 20.

Misuse of credit cardReported on 8000 block ofCongresswood Lane, Dec. 15.

TheftReported on 1200 block ofBellune Drive, Dec. 18.

Reported on 1000 block ofHempstead Drive, Dec. 18.

Speaker removed from 2000Miles Woods Drive, Dec. 18.

Vehicle removed from 900 blockof Thunderbird Drive, Dec. 17.

Purse and items removed from9300 block of Winton Road,Dec. 18.

Cell phone removed from 10000block of Hamilton Ave., Dec. 17.

Items removed from 8400 blockof Winton Road, Dec. 17.

Reported on 8400 block ofWinton Road, Dec. 14.

Reported on 1000 block ofWellspring Drive, Dec. 15.

Reported on 9600 block ofWinton Road, Dec. 15.

Reported on 700 block of Comp-ton Road, Dec. 15.

Gift certificates removed from7900 block of Burgundy Lane,Dec. 16.

Reported on 8100 block of VineSt., Dec. 16.

Reported on 9100 block of TagDrive, Dec. 16.

Trimmers removed from 8400block of Winton Road, Dec. 17.

Reported on 1900 block ofKemper Road, Dec. 18.

POLICE REPORTS

Page 16: Northwest press 030916

8B • NORTHWEST PRESS • MARCH 9, 2016 LIFE

IN CHARACTERBY DAVID J. KAHN / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

No. 0306

RE

LE

AS

E D

AT

E: 3/13/2016

ACROSS

1 Spokesperson in TVinsurance ads

4 Candidate’s concern9 Snap13 “Not ____!”18 Manhattan

developer?19 Big name in

travel guides20 Track runner21 “Et tu” follower22 Sharing word23 See blurb26 It may detect a

break, for short27 Hit 2011

animated film28 Stay here29 Source of iron30 An eternity31 See blurb35 Crashes badly37 Czech

reformer Jan38 Press (for)39 Cut off40 Request after a

breakdown43 Some cleaners45 See blurb50 Billionaire sorts52 ____ Peninsula53 Borah Peak locale54 Part of a foot55 Music appreciation

57 Lead-in to care or dare

58 Nike ____ Max61 Dedicated works62 See blurb67 How to play solitaire68 Some conversation

interruptions69 See blurb79 Italian fine?80 Big head81 Figure in “The

Garden of Earthly Delights”

82 Hal, to Henry IV83 Titania or Oberon, in

space84 Former NBC drama86 National alternative88 Getting ready, with

“up”90 See blurb95 Jazz (up)96 Place for plaques97 Dos98 Bro or sis100 Mound great101 Ham103 See blurb109 Squeakers111 Best Foreign

Language Film of 2014

112 Fiver113 Always, to

Shakespeare114 One carrying

a toon?115 See blurb120 Har-____ (tennis

court surface)

121 Part of a legend

122 Hunted for morays

123 Sides of sectors

124 Atypical

125 Lascivious sort

126 Some speedsters, for short

127 PhotographerAdams

128 Seedy type?

DOWN

1 Rude thing to drop

2 First lady before Michelle

3 Senate’s president pro tempore after Patrick Leahy

4 Movie co. behind “Boyhood” and “Transamerica”

5 He played Bond seven times

6 Allows in

7 Not follow orders or guidelines

8 Timeremembered

9 Phony persona

10 Stumblebum

11 One of two New Testament books

12 Like some old schoolhouses

13 “Scandal” airer

14 Food for Oliver Twist

15 Major Italian highway

16 See 69-Down

17 Modernists,informally

20 Kind of column24 Giorgio’s god25 Like comebacks?32 Brunch pie33 Food-safety org.34 Commander’s place36 Years at the

Colosseum39 Christopher ____,

tippler in “The Taming of the Shrew”

41 Earthy color42 “____ asking?”43 Singer Anthony44 Metal marble46 Duchamp’s

movement47 Sci-fi race48 It may come

in sheets49 Flaps50 Fourth parts in series

of eight51 It’s a wrap56 Reached, numerically58 Dumas swordsman59 Arctic weather

phenomenon60 “I Wanna Be

Sedated” rockers63 ____ Jemison, first

African-Americanwoman in space

64 Tag end?65 Didn’t move66 Some newcomers’

study, in brief69 With 16-Down, what

“stet” means

70 Real-time messaging system

71 ____ piccata72 Move, informally73 Three-time

All-Star Longoria for the Tampa Bay Rays

74 It’s good for the long haul

75 Lottery winner’s cry76 Mel Blanc, notably

77 Daughter of Nereus78 Director Lee79 Sucked dry85 City on the

Brazos River86 Loretta Lynch and

Eric Holder: Abbr.87 Greek summit89 Pit-____91 Penalty for poor

service, maybe

92 Colors 1960s-style

93 Many ski lodges

94 Like Lhasa apsos

99 Lhasa apso and others

102 Like polenta

103 Some electrical plugs

104 First string?

105 Inc. cover subj.

106 “Journey to ____,” recurring segment on “Sesame Street”

107 Unhip108 Lose, in a way109 Tousle110 ____ Empire116 Pay-view connection117 Keyboard abbr.118 Packers’ org.?119 Up to, briefly

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

18 19 20 21

22 23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30

31 32 33 34 35 36

37 38 39 40 41 42

43 44 45 46 47 48 49

50 51 52 53

54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61

62 63 64 65 66

67 68

69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78

79 80 81 82 83

84 85 86 87 88 89

90 91 92 93 94 95

96 97 98 99 100

101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108

109 110 111 112 113 114

115 116 117 118 119 120

121 122 123 124

125 126 127 128

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

Note: The answers to 23-, 31-, 45-, 62-, 69-, 90-, 103- and 115-Across are themselves clues to the names spelled by their circled letters.

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWERS ON PAGE 6A

Sales: Service:

Page 17: Northwest press 030916

Careers

Jobsnew beginnings...

Homes for Sale-Ohio Homes for Sale-Ohio

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

Real Estate

Rentalsgreat places to live...

4921 NORTH ARBOR WOODS

We helped these people find their pot of gold! A 2BR, 2BA beautiful condo with a walkout to a private yard. Let us find your next pot of gold! Call Tom & The Deutsch Team!

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

BRIDGETOWN

West Shell

BUYER

BOUGHT

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

FINNEYTOWN

West Shell

JUST

SOLD

9628 PEPPER CIRCLELook at what we just sold! A beautiful no step ranch, 3BR, 2BA on a huge flat lot situated on a quiet cul-de-sac street across from the YMCA. If you are in the market for a dependable realtor to get the job done you have to call Tom & The Deutsch Team immediately!

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

Avondale-2BR-1BA in 4 unit build-ing, $600/mo, building has securealarm system, garage, laundry facili-ty, No pets. Please call for info513-307-1442

Cincinnati Low Income Apartments.Section 8. Very nice West side loca-tions. 2-3 BR Equal OpportunityHousing. 513-929-2402

Clifton-Gas Light area,Newly dec., 2BR, equip. kit.,DR, LR w/gas FP, screenedporch, gar, W/D hk-up, NoPets, $875/mo + dep. 513-923-1651

Bridgetown - 6256 EaglesLakeDr2432Bdm/2.Ba$109,900 Dir: HearneRd.or Harrison Rd. to EaglesNest to street..H-8505

OPENSUNDAY12-1:30

Doug Rolfes

Bridgetown - 4341Regency RidgeCt 201 2Bdm/2.Ba$95,000 Dir:WestwoodNorth. - NearHarrison Intersection toRegencyRidge..H-8724

OPENSUNDAY1:30-3

Jeanne Rieder

Bridgetown - 5490MichellesOakCt H 2Bdm/2.Ba $94,900 Dir: Rybolt toRuwesOak toMichellesOak, 1st bldg. on left..H-8752

OPENSUNDAY1:30-2:30

Elisa Ibold

Cheviot - 3516 St. MartinsPlace4Bdm/2.Ba$114,900Dir: Glenmore to St.Martins Place..H-8874

OPENSUNDAY2-3:30

Jennifer Hamad

Cleves - 198 Edgefield Dr4Bdm/2.1Ba$314,900Dir: Bridgetown toLaurelwood toEdgefield..H-8859

OPENSUNDAY3:30-5

Heather Claypool

Delhi - 503HappyDr 3Bdm/2.Ba$139,900 Dir:AndersonFerry toCannasto right onHappy..H-8858

OPENSUNDAY12-1

Elisa Ibold

Delhi - 5558Rapid RunRd3Bdm/1.1Ba$99,900 Dir:BetweenNeeb&AndersonFerry..H-8843

OPENSUNDAY2-3:30

Jeanne Rieder

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

OPENSUNDAY3:30-5

Steve Florian

GreenTwp - 1629AndersonFerryRd2Bdm/2.Ba$174,900 Dir:Glenway toCrookshank toAndersonFerry.H-8786

OPENSUNDAY12-1:30

Wissel Schneider Team

Miami Township - 3816Foxtail Ln4Bdm/3.1Ba$317,900 Dir: BridgetownRd. toDeer Path to Foxtail..H-8653

OPENSUNDAY11:30-1

Steve Florian

Miami Township - 5140DeerviewParkDr 4Bdm/4.1Ba $519,900 Dir:Bridgetown to Zion toDeerviewParkDrive(private drive).H-8641

OPENSUNDAY1-3

Dan Grote

North Bend - 50EdinburghPlace3Bdm/3.1Ba$399,900 Dir:ShadyLane toAstonOaks toLonStratford to L onMuirfieldR onSt. AndrewsRonAbbey Hill to st. H-8875

OPENSUNDAY1:30-3

Steve Florian

Westwood - 3051 CoralParkDr 3Bdm/1.2Ba$119,900 Dir:Werk toMayridge to left onPickburytoCoral Park.H-8867

OPENSUNDAY2-3:30

Jeanne Rieder

Westwood - 3504DaytonaAve2Bdm/1.Ba$76,900Dir:Glenmore (betweenMontanaandSchwartz) toEast onStreet.H-8716

OPENSUNDAY12-1:30

Jeanne Rieder

Deer Park - 8 yr cust blt home in theheart of Deer Park. Closeto shopping & hospital, thishome has it all. Ex lg gar,hugemstr BR& manyextras.$190,000H-8670

Dan Nieman

Fairfield - Sharp 2BRTownhouse.LR/DRcombow/hdwd flrs,finLLw/wbfp&wlkout topatio.Updated kit &ba.Baon each flr. Carport & 2assigned spots$95,000H-8800

Vicki Schlechtinger

Groesbeck - Brick 3 bedroom1.5story.Been in thesamefamily for 61 years!Covedceilings & hdwd flrs!Basementwaterproofed! 1car attachedgar$49,900H-8866

Elisa Ibold

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

Jeanne Haft

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

Jennifer Hamad

Monfort Hts. - 2 BR condo 2nd flrw vaul ceilings. Relax onthe largedeckw/viewoflake. All newcarpet & paint.1 car gar. Quiet community,won't last. $84,900 H-8819

Vicki Schlechtinger

Monfort Hts. - Beautiful 1st floorcondo.Builtwithexpandedkitchen option. Split bdrm flrplan. Lrg living rmwith gasfp.Wlk/patiowith access topkg. $81,900 H-8842

Joe Darwish

Mt. Airy - GorgeousRanch condo!Superb cond!Manyupgrades! Attach gar, frpl,2decksoverlookwoodedsanctuary, fin LLw/wet bar,Taxabatement!$144,900H-8854Wissel Schneider Team

Ross - Great three bedroom, 3 bathhomewithbonus room.Fullyupdatedcontemporarystyle. Amust see gem.Motivated sellers.$209,900H-8546

Doug Rolfes

Springfield Twp. - Sooo affordable!6 rm, 3 bd, br cape! Hdwdflrs. Lg eat-in equipt kit!NewrWsh/Dryer incl. NewrHVAC/HWH/winds/roof. NrHartwell Elem.$49,900H-8873

Jeanne Rieder

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

Joe Darwish

College Hill- Remod 1BR $550/mo &2BR $650/mo heat/wtr paid, on bus,lndry, a/c, off st prkg, 1/2 off dep.513-802-5545

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

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

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

PRICE HILL --FOR RENT. 3BR,1BA, Apt of 2 fam house. Water& kitchen appls incl. $600/mo. +$600 dep. HUD accepted. 1223Beech Av 513-240-3648

White Oak-Deluxe 1 & 3BR in a 4Family with w/d hkup, Completlyupdated. Northwest SD. Call forSpecials. 513 227-4220 or 513-315-9990

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

Hamilton/Fairfield/Middletown Homes 1BR-4BR $450-$1995!

513-737-2640 orWWW.BBRENTS.COM

Trenton New ConstructionHomes- 3BR $1345-$1395!

513-737-2640OR WWW.BBRENTS.COM

WEST SIDEDeluxe office for Lease. 4-8 rooms,

513-532-0857

DAYCARE PRESCHOOL Immedopenings for newborn to 7 yrs.Licensed daycare, 18 yrs in businesshours of operation 5:30am-7pm M-FKim 513-328-0907

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

Driving Instructor

Bick’s Driving School is currentlylooking for Full-time & Part-time

behind the wheeldriving instructors.

Requirements:•21 years old

•Drivers license for 5 years•No more than 4 points on

driving record •Background check, physical, andsexual harassment online course

•Ohio BMV rules/laws test &driving portion will be required

Hours will be 3-9 Mon-Fri9-5 Sat-Sun

Summer Hours 9-9

Apply in person at Bick’s DrivingSchool at 6367 GLENWAY AVE

CINCINNATI, OH 45211

FACULTY CAREER FAIRBrown Mackie College-

CincinnatiApril 1, 201611:30a-5:00p

Medical AssistantInstructors and otherdisciplines needed!

Call: 513-672-1952 fordetails!

Substitue TeachersLocal private school

seeks substitute teachers.8:15 - 3:15 -- Daily rate$105. Applicant musthave undergraduate

degree in education orrelated field. To apply

send resume [email protected]

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

Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566

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

CORNERSTONEWe’re In Your Corner.

812.637.2220 WWW.CSTONEREALTY.COMMASON: NEW LISTING! Well maintained updated 3 bed, 1 bath brick ranch w/hardwood flrs, 1 car attached garage, 2 car detached garage, mature trees and fenced rear yard. $167,500BRIGHT: Uniquely designed 4 bed, 3 bath quad level w/ eat in kitchen, stone WBFP in LVR, concrete drive, and oversized garage. $159,900YORKVILLE: Picturesque 42 ACRES with a lake, woods, 20 acres are tillable plus a 2,180 sq. ft. brick ranch home, full basement, family room with WBFP, breakfast nook, 1st floor laundry, 2 car attached garage plus 24x38 insulated detached garage. $499,900.SUNMAN: Clean 2 bed brick ranch on large country lot with 24x24 detached garage. $114,900NEW ALSACE: Country setting! Nice 3 bed, 2 bath ranch on over an ac, full LL, oversized 2 car attached garage, & large eat-in kitchen. $159,900YORKVILLE: Nice level 5 ac lot on Chapel Thorne Estates. $84,900ST. LEON: NEW LISTING! 56 acres zoned Highway Exchange. 2,000 ft interstate visibility, over 600 ft on SR 1 of visibility. 42 ac usable w/15 ac unusable for I-74 right of way. $1,100,000.

JOBS HOMES RIDESPETS &STUFF

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

VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD

Homes of Distinction

HANDOUT THECIGARS!Celebratewith aannouncement.

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

HANDOUT THECIGARS!

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Celebratewith aannouncement.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

MARCH 9, 2016 μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ 1C

Page 18: Northwest press 030916

Community

Announceannouncements, novena...

Special Notices-Clas

Assorted

Stuffall kinds of things...

Management

CE-0000643558

BOONE COUNTY SHERIFFMICHAEL A. HELMIG

P.O. BOX 198BURLINGTON, KY. 41005-0198

Phone: 859-334-2175FAX: 859-334-2234

Boone County Sheriff’s DepartmentDeputy Sheriff Position

The Boone County Sheriff’s Department is now accepting applications for the position of deputy sheriff. Applicants must be at least 21 years of age and be capable of passing a physical agility, written, and oral interview testing. Applicants must have a high school diploma (or equivalent), be a citizen of the United States, possess a valid driver’s license, have no felony convictions, have not been prohibited from carrying a firearm and have the physical strength/agility to perform the duties of a peace officer. Candidates must pass post-offer medical and psychological examinations, polygraph testing, drug testing, and an in-depth background investigation. As a condition of employment, recruits must successfully complete an extensive twenty-three (23) week training course in Richmond, Kentucky where they will obtain their Peace Officer Professional Standards (P.O.P.S.) certification.Applications are available for pickup at the Boone County Sheriff’s Department located at 3,000 Conrad Lane in Burlington, Kentucky 41005 Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. & Saturday 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Completed applications must be returned to the Sheriff’s Department by Wednesday, April 20, 2016 by 5:00 p.m.

The Boone County Sheriff’s Department is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

DELIVER.happiness

We know what you want in a job.

Kelly Services® is now hiring seasonal deliverydrivers for assignments with FedEx Ground®.Don’t miss out!

Details:• 21 years or older• Business-related drivingexperience required

• Weekly pay• Safety bonus plan

kellyservices.usFedEx Ground is a registered trademark of the Federal Express CorporationAn Equal Opportunity Employer © 2014 Kelly Services, Inc. Z0758D

Apply today!Inquire in person forimmediate consideration:Monday - Friday 9am - 3pm11000 Toebben DriveIndependence, KY 41051Resumes to:[email protected]

Project Analyst II (Mason, OH):Design testing scenarios & testingscripts across different time zoneswith multiple teams; Documentsoftware product functional & userinteraction specs & diagrams basedon business reqmnts; Track projectstatus, analyze bug reports, providefeedback & suggestions for bug fixesto development team; analyzetesting results & document theissues; discover error pattern, SQLerrors, transaction errors & reportthem to system development teamfor the appropriate level ofattention. Req: Bach’s deg inManagement Information Systems.Mail resumes to HR Mgr, ApexIndustrial Technologies dba ApexSupply Chain Technologies. 4393Digital Way, Mason, OH 45040.

SOFTWAREKalioCommerce, Inc. seeks a

Software Engineer (Front-endDeveloper) at its Cincinnati, OH

location. To view the complete joblisting, requirements, and

application screeningrequirements, see

www.kaliocommerce.com, careersand link to application form;

relocation benefits not provided.EOE. Send resume (include job

title in subject line) [email protected]

FISCAL OFFICERThe Village of North Bend isaccepting resumes for theposition of Fiscal Officer.Preferred – accounting

background with budgetingand forecasting.

Please send your resumes [email protected]

APRIL FRESH MAID SERVICE

Part Time, flexible hours forresidential cleaning.

Call 513-208-8896

Chemical Operators

Nease is looking for Chemical Operatorsand will hold a WALK-IN APPLICATION

DAY for qualified applicants.When : Thursday, March 10, 2016

from 9 am to 11 am Thursday, March 10,2016 from 1pm to 4 pm

Where : Nease Co. LLC (plant site)10740 Paddys Run Rd., Harrison, OH 45030

Come prepared to complete anemployment application and speak with

HR and plant management. Qualified candidates will possess:

• Ability and willingness to work shifts• A High School Diploma or GED

• Mechanical aptitude• Ability to follow safety rules and

regulations including wearing appropriatePPE

• A positive attitude• Ability to follow directions and meet

deadlines• A good attendance record

• Initiative to learn• Good communication skills

Nease is an Equal Opportunity EmployerNO PHONE CALLS ACCEPTED

Drivers: New DedicatedLanes!

Excellent Pay & Benefits!Great Home time.

No-TouchNew Equipment.

Sign-0n BonusRecent Grads Welcome.

CDL-A 1yr Exp.855-202-5066

EVENT PLANNERSeeking experienced Event

Planner. Must be a team player,self-starter, well organized,

creative, highly communicative,provide outstanding customer

service, with 3 yrs. proven skills.Some wknds req. AA req., BApreferred. Competitive salary

w/benefits. Email resume, coverletter and salary to

[email protected]

FULL TIME CLEANER Cleves Area, 3rd ShiftAugust Groh & Sons

513-821-0090

Gamble-Nippert YMCAIs Hiring:

Lifeguards, Swim InstructorsLead Teachers, Camp Counselors,

Kid’s Club StaffCall 513-661-1105 or email

[email protected]

GOLF COURSEGROUNDS

Western Hills Country ClubFull or Part Time

Apply in person at 5780 ClevesWarsaw Ave, Cincinnati 45233or FAX 513-922-6935 or email

[email protected]

HOUSEKEEPER23 year old residential cleaning

service company is looking for anhonest, dependable housekeeper

who can work 3-5 days/week &transition into a Shift Leader.Pay is weekly & depends on

experience: $10-13/hour. FT/PThours available. Workday is

approximately 8:30am-4:30pm.Paid lunch and time for travel.2-5 years experience preferred.

High School graduate. Must havecurrent driver’s license, insuredvehicle and cell phone. Duties

include light dusting, vacuuming,bed changing, dust/wet mopping,

bathroom cleaning, kitchencleaning. Email resumes to

[email protected] call 513-467-1731

The Cincinnati Enquirer has carrierroutes available in the following areas:

CentralSt. Bernard @ Walnut Hills @ Wyoming @ Avondale

EastAmelia / Batavia @ Bethel @ Brown County @ Goshen @

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

WestColerain Twp. @ Groesbeck

Monfort Heights @ NorthsideWestern Hills / Westwood @ Wyoming

NorthFairfield @ Liberty Township @ Maineville @ Middletown

@ Morrow Mason @ Sharonville South Lebanon@ West Chester

KentuckyCold Spring @ Crescent Springs

Edgewood ErlangerFlorence / Burlington

Independence / Taylor MillPark Hills / Ft. Mitchell

Union @ Walton / Verona @ WarsawIndianaSt. Leon

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

AMAZINGCommerical 43 Year Old Pest Management

Company has Two (2) Trainees and Pest SpecialistPositions Available

We offer Paid Training, Company Vehicle,Clothing, Paid Vacation and More.

Work week/day Mon thru Fri 8AM to 5PMGREAT FOR FAMILY PERSON

Currently working as a PMP? Call immediatelyOHIO 513-621-3028 OR

N KY 859-431-5611All Calls are Confidential

PART-TIME POSITION$9.00 PER HOUR

Sporty’s, the world’s largest pilot shop, has been trainingand equipping pilots for over 50 years. We have a positionfor responsible, well-groomed person to work afternoonsin our embroidery department (no experience needed).

Apply in person Tues - Fri 10AM - Noon or 1:30 - 5PM

Sporty’sClermont County/Sporty’s Airport

2001 Sporty’s DriveBatavia, OH 45103

(An equal opportunity employer)

MAINTENANCEASSISTANT - FT

Covenant Village, a 99-bed, skillednursing facility, has an opening fora full-time Maintenance Assistant.This individual will work part-timeat the facility and part-time with

the corporate MaintenanceDirector. We offer competitive payand benefits, a generous time off

bank, and a supportive staff.

Please e-mail a resume [email protected]

or fax to: 513-605-3037

OVERHEAD CRANE TECHNICIAN

Field Service technician needed toperform inspections, repairs, &

maintenance on overhead cranes& hoists for our customers. Mustbe willing to travel, be able to

perform inspections toOSHA/ANSI criteria, and be ableto work independently under

pressure & deadlines. Send resume to

[email protected]

PART-TIME CLEANERNeeded:

Part-Time, Evenings,Clean Offices.

10-20 hours per week$9.00 start. Work close to home.

Call (513) 874-7730 x1204or apply at

www.environmentcontrol.com

REPLACEMENT WINDOWINSTALLER TRAINEES

Starting @$15.00/hrFull benefit package

Great Full-Time OpportunityConstruction experiencepreferred but will train

Background and drug screenrequiredApply to

Gilkey Window Company3625 Hauck Rd.

Sharonville, OH 45241513-587-6242

SI Pool Care Is Hiring for the following positions:

pool technicians & maintenance,concrete workers & finishers,laborers, and retail. Apply in

person at 3145 Dixie Highway,Erlanger, KY 41018.

SPECIALISTCommerical 43 Year Old PestManagement Company has

Two (2) TraineePositions Available

We offer Paid Training,Company Vehicle, Clothing,

Paid Vacation and More.Work week/day Mon thru Fri

8AM to 5PMGREAT FOR FAMILY PERSONCurrently working as aPMP? Call immediatelyOHIO 513-621-3028 OR

N KY 859-431-5611All Call are Confidential

MAIN STREETMANAGER

The City of Dayton, KY isaccepting resumes for the

position of Main Street Manager.Ideal candidates must possess a

Bachelors degree from a Collegeor University, a valid driver’s

license, strong oral and writtencommunication skills, knowledge

of marketing, businessadministration and revitalization

issues confronting downtownbusinesses. Experience with

grant writing a plus.Resume and references to:City of Dayton, 514 Sixth

Avenue, Dayton, KY 41074.Submission deadline is March 11 ,2016 at 5:00PM . Salary based on

experience and qualifications.EOE.

Print Production Manager Schawk USA Inc. is seeking a

Global Print Production Managerin Cincinnati, OH with the

following requirements: Bachelor’sdegree in Printing Technology orGraphic Arts and 5 years related

experience. Prior experience mustinclude: analyze hair color

packaging graphicconcepts/options to pre-determine

print feasibility and printabilityissues and lead the technical

resolution of problematic graphicsissues between designfirm and

printers; provide technical supportthroughout the artwork process toenable timely delivery of accurate

artwork color separations andprint tools; attend production

print runs and approve/establishcolor standards to ensure

coloraccuracy and design intent onall printed hair color packaging

and regulateprinter’s/convertor’sadherence to client’s Print Quality

Programs and supply chainrequirements; provide

consultation to client’s businessresources (Purchases, Package

Development, Design, etc.) withthe technical assessment of

capabilities and the qualificationof new printers/convertors usedfor printing the various primaryand secondary packages. Apply

on-line at www.schawk.com,Careers and search for Auto Req

ID 2851BR.

Help Needed! We are a large family owned CNC

deep-hole drilling and precisionmachining company located in

Forest Park, Ohio. We are in exten-sive growth mode and are seekingqualified individuals for the follow-ing positions on both 1st and 2nd

shifts:

•CNC lathe and mill machinist andoperators

•CMM Programmer (PCDIMIS)

Please send resumes to [email protected] or faxto (513) 851-4927. Company of-fers competitive salary and bene-

fits package after 60 days.

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTIONFLAT WORK

Looking for experienced finishers.Must have own transportation

Call 859-653-5371

Drivers: Local, Cincinnati Mon-FriFlatbed Curtain Side Openings!

No Tarping! Safety Bonus!CDL-A, 1yr Exp. Req.

Estenson LogisticsApply www.goelc.com

1-866-336-9642

Local Class A Drivers Home Daily - Looking forClass A or B drivers that

are at least 22 yrs old Mustpossess Valid CDL license.Must have a minimum of12 months of Verifiable

Commercial driving withinlast 36 months or 24

months in last 5 years.Contact info:

Call 937-242-6988or apply online at

www.centerlinedrivers.com

Cincinnati State Warning,Cincinnati State College:aprox. 75% drop out rate.Sonography General Imaging0% male graduation. Racistand sexist remarks by staff. Ihave complained to the DOEand DOJ- they do nothing.Millions of dollars in YOURtax money wasted on thesecriminals. Contact me formore info. [email protected],

East Central High SchoolDrama Department, Josephand His Amazing TechnicolorDreamcoat, Friday, March11th, 7:00p, Saturday March12th, 2:00 and 7:00p. Ticketsare $8.00 for adults, $6.00for students. 812-576-4811

office Non Profit space forlease, Office space up to5,000 square feet, Secondfloor location, Space includesfree employee and visitorparking, Use of the 6,200square foot Fifth Third Con-vening Center at United Wayis included, Rent is not-for-profit friendly at $16.10 asquare foot per year and in-cludes all other occupancy-related costs, Available April1, 2016 (approximately), Spe-cial offer United Way will of-fer two months free rent ona five-year lease term!

, (513)762-7168

OH RESIDENTS - EARN $50FOR 2 HOURS OF YOURTIME! One-time only surveygroup on Thurs, March 17,6-8pm in Covington, KY.Registered voters only be-tween the ages of 25-65.Space is limited. [email protected] or call859-261-0267.

Fine China Noritake Savannah 10pc place settings w/2 serving bowls& lg platter, salt & pepper shakers,seldom used, $300. 513-753-0446

GREENHILLS SHOWS Open Every Saturday

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

11100 Winton Rd.

Grand Opening SpecialAll Tables $10

Call 513-825-3099 for reservations.

Firewood - seasoned ash, cut,split, delivered, & dumped. 1cord - $200. Call 859-393-5002

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

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

Same Day DeliveryBunk Bed 2x6 splitables sol

wd $199Bunkies (the very Best)

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

starting tonight!Hundreds of Sauders pieces

from $29Liv Rm Suites, 2 piece sets

from $499Elec adjustable beds $795

complete with memory foammattress

Futons- wood & metal & fu-ton mattresses

Memory Foam queen mat-tress $379

King Prem Matt Sets 18"$499-$799

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

868 Eads Pkwy.,Lawrenceburg, IN

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

513-383-2785!Mattress & Furniture Express

mattressandfurnitureexpress.com

GUARANTEED FINANC-ING!

EVERYONE’S APPROVED!

3 piece SLATE POOL TABLE& Accessories great condition, unas-sembled, $350, 513-481-9460

#1 ALWAYS BUYING-RetiredVet pays top cash for anti-ques and vintage items. Sin-gle item or complete estate513-325-7206

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

www.cincytestrips.com

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

Slot Machines, Tools,Electronics, Firearms

& CollectiblesWith 2 Locations

3236 W. Galbraith3621 Harrison Ave

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

Absolute HighestCash Buyer!

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

Records (513) 473-5518

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

INSTANT CASH PAID For Baseball Cards Coins, Gold,

Silver, Paper Money, Antiques, OldToys, Watches, Comics, Nascar, Caseknifes Military, Trains, autographs,

estates, Many Others! We Pkup513-295-5634

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post your rental.Honey Do HandyMan All types interi-or, exterior house work. 30 yrs Exp.Insured & Ref’s. 513-417-7459

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

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

CALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

Service Directory

2C μ NORTHWEST - COMMUNITY μ MARCH 9, 2016

Page 19: Northwest press 030916

Adopt Me

Petsfind a new friend...

Automotive

Ridesbest deal for you...

Your Source

Legalsfor the latest...

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

INDOOR SWAP MEET & CAR EXPOC I N C I N N A T I ’ S L A R G E S T

Sponsored by:

www.NCRS.org/OC

GM CARS AND PARTS

COLUMBIA CHEVROLET9750 Montgomery Road • Cincinnati, OH 45242

Food & Refreshments & Ample Parking!$5.00 ADMISSION

Sunday, March 13, 2016 • 8am - 2pm

For more info or to register contact:For more info or to register contact:Steve Hack 513-553-2080 or Bruce Slattery 513-741-0848

or email: [email protected]

DON’T MISS THE 22ND ANNUAL

CE-0000642018

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

ETC + VINTAGE STEREOEQUIP, DVDs & MEMORABIL-

IA. 50 YRS COMBINEDBUYING EXPERIENCE!

WE CAN COME TO YOU!513-591-0123

R12 FREON, Certified 609buyer looking to pick up andpay cash for cylinders andcases of R12 Freon. , $10.(312)291-9169 [email protected]

WANTED BENGALS SEAT LICENSE.Lower Level, Mid-field only, CallDanny 513-479-2025

WAR RELICSUS, German, Japanese

Paying Top DollarCall 513-309-1347

WE ARE LOCAL COLLECTORSLOOKING FOR OLD TOYS- ES-PECIALLY STAR WARS! Wepay CASH for toys made inthe 1980s, 70s, 60s and earli-er, and can come to YOU!Buying STAR WARS, Trans-formers, GI JOE, Alien,M.A.S.K., He-Man, and mostother action figure-relatedtoys older than 1994. WEARE LOOKING FOR EX-KENNER and HASBRO EM-PLOYEES who have uniqueitems like service awards andpre-production items likeprototypes, quote or packag-ing samples, catalogs, paintguides, sculpts or molds.Have a Kenner EmployeePhone Book? We give youup to $300 Cash for it! WEARE BUYING ALL YEARLONG, so please save this adfor when you clean out yourgarage, closet, or attic! Wewill pay thousands of dollarsfor the right items. Call ortext 513.477.2557 or513.324.6563 or email us at [email protected]. We can meet within 24hours in most cases. Pleaseleave a voicemail if we don’tanswer.

AKC English Labrador Retriever Puppies $1500,2 Litters born 01/15/16 and02/19/16. Colors are Blackand Yellow. Beautiful EnglishChampion Bloodlines. Pups willhave Limited AKC Registration,1st set of shots, microchippedand wormed every 2 weeks$250 will reserve your place-ment for one of our BeautifulPups. Please call Stephanieat (740)636-0645 [email protected]

BOXER-- Pups. AKC reg. Excbldline. White, Fawn,

Blk/White. 1st shots. $500/ea.937-587-3024

CAVALIER KING CHARLESPuppies- AKC, M & F, Healthguaranteed, 513-316-1737

Dog, Mini Labradoodle,Males, $900.00, 10 weekoid, 1 Black and 1 CreamThese Min Doodles will bebetween 30 -40 pounds Theyare Pee pad Train, You canText or Call . We are also onFacebook at Turkey RidgeMini Labradoodle of Ohio(513)678-2330 [email protected]

German short hair Pionters pupsborn Jan 25th, ready end of April,taking deposit. Call 937-509-3391

Lab Easter Puppies- AKC, Yellow &Black, shots, wormed. storykennels.com,$800; 513-941-5935 or 513-293-6660

YORKIE/POM MIX, Female, Born6/1/2015 loves everybody, pottytrained, Loveable lap dog, $300, 513-213-8223

Found - Blue male pit bull,W. Fork Rd area, red collar,513-379-1013

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

Week. 513-605-0063

BMW 2002 325 - High miles,auto, 4dr, 6cyl, $2,200. 513-521-6277

Cadillac Eldorado ESC 200279,000 miles, good tires, Exc Condasking $4,700. 513-574-0024

HONDA 2016 ACCORD SPORTSPECIAL EDITION, 1 of a kind,full warranty, Not a dealer, 513-662-4211

Toyota 2002 Camry, 98000miles, no accidents, non-smoker, smells good, wellmaintained, $2500 for moreinfo feel free to call or eventext, $2500. Louis (248)733-3815

Toyota 2007 Camry Hybrid,62600 miles, silver, automat-ic, leather, navigation, sun-roof, excellent condition,[email protected], $2500.(614)268-8249

Toyota 2009 RAV4, SUV,79000 mi., 4 dr., Automatic,Excellent cond., Silver ext.,Gray int., 04 Cylinders, 2WD,A/C: Front, A/C: Rear, Airbag:Driver, Airbag: Passenger,Airbag: Side, CD Player,Cruise Control, Power Steer-ing, Single Owner. Non-Smoker. Mostly Highwaymiles. New battery and andnew tires replaced in the lasteight months. Well main-tained and records availableat local dealer. Text for moreinfo., $11000. Pat k (901)359-5238

FORD 1992 F-150 XLT5.0L engine, 89K mi, auto,A/C, $1800obo, 513-922-3040

GMC ’02 Sierra 1500 Ext Cab, 2-WD& 2003 Keystone Hornet 27BH Trav-el Trailer. Both for $12,750. Trailerfront bdrm, 3 rear bunks, ductedheat/air, newer awning, no old foodsmell, not used for long termcamping/living, Non smoker, dealermaint., Exc Cond, a true must see.Perfect starter camper, a guyshunting camper or contractor work-ing out of town. 2002 GMC pickuptruck-1 owner, 200K miles mostlyhighway miles, hard cover, Line-Xsprayed in liner, E rated tires ingood cond, full sz spare, Body notwrecked, tinted windows, CD, ev-erything works, pullout side mir-rors, above avg cond a must see,runs great. 859-485-1235. Photos toemail upon request. Both must see.Start planning your family fun now.

The following legislation waspassed at the March 2, 2016Springdale City Councilmeeting:

ORDINANCE No. 4-2016REPEALING CHAPTER 153OF THE SPRINGDALE CO-DIFIED ORDINANCES INITS ENTIRETY ANDADOPTING A NEW CHAP-TER 153, ZONING CODE,AND AMENDING THEZONING CODE MAP TOREFLECT REVISED DIS-TRICTS CONSISTENTWITH THE NEW ZONINGCODE

Kathy McNearClerk of Council/Finance DirectorPub:203TRI,Mar9,’16#1100450

Village of Glendale30 Village Square

Glendale, Ohio 45246RFP for Banking Services

Sealed bids will be receivedby the Clerk/Treasurer ofthe Village of Glendale,Hamilton County, State ofOhio, 30 Village Square,Glendale, Ohio 45246 until12:00 noon, Tuesday, April 5,2016, for an initial three yearperiod commencing May 2,2016 through May 2, 2019with the option to renew fortwo additional one-year peri-ods. Each bid must besealed and contain fourbound copies and one elec-tronic copy on a flash driveand must be accompaniedby a performance bond or acertified check in theamount of $100 as a guaran-tee that should said bid beaccepted a contract will beentered into. A signed affi-davit stating the biddingbank is current in the pay-ment of their state and localtaxes is additionally re-quired. All bids must bereceived prior to 12 noonTuesday, April 5, 2016 withno exceptions and will pub-licly opened at 12:10pm.Minimum services and spec-ifications are on file in theGlendale Municipal Office,30 Village Sq., Glendale Ohio45246 and available online atwww.glendaleohio.org under“Special Notices” TheVillage of Glendale reservesthe right to reject any or allbids and bid submissionsshall be plainly marked“Glendale Banking ServicesBid 2016-2021”

John G. EarlsVillage of GlendaleClerk/TreasurerPub:203TRI,Mar2,9,’16#1081282

Public NoticeIn accordance with the pro-visions of State law, therebeing due and unpaid charg-es for which the undersignedis entitled to satisfy andowner and/or manager’s lienof the goods hereinafter described and stored at theUncle Bob’s Self Storagelocation(s) listed below.And, due notice having beengiven, to the owner of saidproperty and all partiesknown to claim an interesttherein, and the time speci-fied in such notice for pay-ment of such having expired,the goods will be sold at pub-lic auction at the below stat-ed location(s)to the highestbidder or otherwise disposedof on Monday, March 21,2016 @ 11AM, 11378Springfield Pike, Springdale,OH 45246, (513)771-5311

Kiara M. Torres1812 Drexel LaneCincinnati, OH 45246Household Goods/Furniture.

Charmayne L. Reaves10290 Panola Dr.Woodlawn, OH 45215Household Goods/Furniture;Tools/Appliances.

Joseph RodriguezP.O. Box 13273Phoenix, AZ 85002Household Goods/Furniture;Boxes.

Jeffrey G. Moore11799 Hamlet DriveForest Park, OH 45240Household Goods/Furniture,TV/Stereo Equipment;Tools/Appliances; OfficeFurniture/Machines/Equipment

Ashley Jordan1079 Ledro St.Cincinnati, OH 45246Household Goods/Furniture;TV/Stereo Equipment.Pub:203TRI,Mar2,9,’16#1079026)

NOTICE:

The Colerain TownshipBoard of Zoning Appeals willhold a second public hearingon Wed., March 23, 2016 at6:30 p.m. at the ColerainTownship Government Com-plex, 4200 Springdale Rd.,Cincinnati, OH for the fol-lowing case: BZA2016-02 –Conditional Use for Recrea-tion Facility– Article/Section7.2.3 and a Variance requestfor parking design and spacerequirements-Article/Section13.3.2(B). Locations: 8650and 8666 Cheviot Rd., Cincin-nati, OH. Applicant: RickBlankenship. Owner:Friendship Missionary Bap-tist Church. The applicationmay be examined Mon.-Fri.,8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. at the Coler-ain Township GovernmentComplex, Planning & ZoningDept., 4200 Springdale Rd.,Cincinnati, OH 45251.Pub:201-NWP,Mar9,’16#1080779

MEETING NOTICEThe Board of Trustees of theCommunity ProgrammingBoard Regional Council ofGovernments will meet onWednesday, March 16, 7:00PM, at 2086 Waycross Road,Forest Park. 935254

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Garage Sales

Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

Anderson, OH-45255, 7333Riverby Dr 3/11 & 3/12, Fri 9-4, #’s @8:45, Sat. 9-4. Con-tents of Custom home, bsmt& garage, Signed Artwork,Rookwood, Roseville,Hummels, Noritake China,Oak 2 dr bookshelf, Oakdressers, Oak China cabinet,leather sectional, Wood &glass coffee tables, Rockers,Secretary, Dining tablew/6chairs, china hutch, Ar-moire, Dressers, Chests, Ent.Centers, Cedar chest, Kingbed, queen brass bed, nightstands, kitchen tables, chinacabinet & server, youth bed,cradle, art supplies, linens,sewing machine, treadmill,Xmas, file cabinets, oldtrains, clocks, dehumidifier,rugs, books, cds, patio furni-ture & swings, ladders, rustfurniture, lots of kitchenitems & supplies. Too muchto list, all priced to sell. Info& pics hsestatesales.com or859-992-0212. or 859-468-9468, Dir. 275 to 52E, LAsbury L on Riverby, @ 7351Take Drive on Left.

Bridgetown-5696 Bridgetown Rd 45248Sat & Sun Sale. 3/12 & 3/13Sat 9a-4p, #’s @ 8:45. Sun 9a-4p:Contents of home & basementRom Weber 1 pc dining rmset, table-6chairs, china cabi-net, buffet & server, kitchentbl w/4chairs, stools, chest ofdrawers, old chrome tables,costume jewlery, piano, re-cords, old books, Cincy En-quirer weekly War pictorial,The Solider of our Civil War,furs, vintage sweaters, oldnewspaper dating back to1800’s, pics, lamps, old dolls,old sheet music, glassware,china, cd’s, stereo, linens,stain glass making items, keymaking items, tools, oldmachinst tool chest, sm kitappliances, freezer, patioswing, treadmill, lots still tobe unpacked, to much to list.All priced to sell. Info & pics-hsestatesales.com or 859-468-9468 or 859-992-0212.Directions" I74 to Montana,R-Harrsion L-Bridgetown.5696 on the right, drivewaysits between medical bldg &bank.

Springfield Twp Estate Sale by CT ofTri-County, Fri. 3/4 & Sat. 3/5; 9a-2p;8748 Empire Ct. Cincinnati 45231Antique wardrobes, amish elect. FP,metal storage cabs., LR sets, vtg.ktch table 3 BR sets, vtg & reto itemsthrougout, DR table, credenzas, chinasets, silverplate flatware, linens,quilts tools, cost. jewelry, pocketwatches, gar items, kitch. items, twinspindle bed & much more.513-680-0276.

COLLEGE HILL - Rummage Sale.Sat, March 12th, 9a-1p. 1st UnitedChurch of Christ 5808 Glenview Ave.

Vendors N e e d e d for Mt.Healthy Alumni Garage/CraftSale. Sat April 9 For detailscall 513-729-0784

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

BOUGHTA NEWCAR?VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Sell your old one.

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