tri county press 042314

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T RI- C OUNTY T RI- C OUNTY PRESS 75¢ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving Evendale, Glendale, Sharonville, Springdale, Wyoming Vol. 30 No. 32 © 2014 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED News .......................... 248-8600 Retail advertising .............. 768-8404 Classified advertising ......... 242-4000 Delivery ........................ 576-8240 See page A2 for additional information Contact The Press GRAND GOALS A8 Wyoming baseball seeks first CHL title since ‘07 GROWING HEALTHY Culinary herbs do a body good See Rita’s Kitchen, B3 More than 10,000 fans of the horror genre, from across the country and as far away as Aus- tralia, attended the 2014 Horror- Hound Weekend March 21-23 at the Sharonville Convention Center. The event featured celebrity appearances from cast mem- bers from “The Evil Dead,” “The Walking Dead,” “The Boondock Saints” and “Sons of Anarchy” among others. In ad- dition, the weekend included panel discussions, celebrity autograph signings and photo sessions, movie screenings and vendors. HorrorHound Weekend has grown from a small gathering for fans of the horror genre to a nationally recognized three-day event. Sharonville hotels expe- rienced increased business thanks to HorrorHound and the Sharonville Convention Center partnered with local businesses including Tom + Chee, the Shar- onville Skyline and LaRosa’s, who made pizzas on site. Prince- ton High School and Queen City Racquet and Fitness Club of- fered use of their parking lot for attendees. “We couldn’t be happier to welcome the HorrorHound weekend back to the region,” said Dan Lincoln, president and CEO of the Cincinnati USA Con- vention & Visitors Bureau. “This group brought more than an exciting and fun event to our region. With all of the attendees enjoying the great hotels, res- taurants, and attractions in the area, it was a major positive im- pact on the Sharonville econo- my.” Jim Downton, executive di- rector of the Sharonville Con- vention Center, said the expand- ed center made it an excellent facility for large public events like HorrorHound. “Hosting these events reinforces our mission to foster economic and cultural opportunities to the Northern corridor.” Celebrities in attendance at this year’s HorrorHound in- cluded headliner Bruce Camp- bell from The Evil Dead, Sean Patrick Flanery and Clifton Col- lins Jr. from “The Boondock Saints,” Michael Rooker from “The Walking Dead,” and Debo- rah Foreman from “Valley Girl.” Cast members from “Sons of Anarchy” also took part, as well as horror movie composers, costume designers and make-up artists. HorrorHound Weekend scares up thousands of fans Sharonville Convention Center Executive Director Jim Downton, center, chats with fans of HorrorHound Weekend.THANKS TO SHARONVILLE CONVENTION The union that repre- sents school bus drivers is refocusing after Prince- ton City Schools decided to outsource its bus ser- vice to First Student. After the district post- ed the announcement, along with a letter to par- ents, on its website, the union issued a statement of support for the drivers. “Due to the Board of Education’s decision to outsource the bus drivers, the Ohio Association Of Public School Employees will continue to represent these folks,” Derryl Hall, of the Ohio Association of Public School Employees, said in a statement. “We will continue to look out for their welfare and provide for the stu- dents we drive every day. “We will also attempt to work with the Board of Education to provide for a transition to the new em- ployer First Student,” Hall said. “However, due to the uncertainty of whether 100 percent of the employees will be hired by First Student, and the fact that Prince- ton will cancel their med- ical insurance in June, that will make these dis- cussions strenuous.” Local 174 is the union for the 66 Princeton em- ployees affected by the change, though the con- tract with First Students hasn’t yet been finalized. The Ohio Association of Public School Employees opposes the outsourcing of bus services being considered by Princeton City Schools.KELLY MCBRIDE/THE COMMUNITY PRESS Union stands behind drivers as Princeton outsources bus service By Kelly McBride [email protected] See UNION, Page A2 Wyoming High School has been ranked 107 th on a list of the nation’s most challenging public schools, according to The Washington Post. Wyoming was one of only three Cincinnati- area public schools on the list this year, with Walnut Hills High School at 88 and Indian Hill High School at 158. Education columnist Jay Mathews has been ranking “America’s Most Challenging High Schools” for more than 16 years, using a formula based on the number of Advanced Placement, In- ternational Baccalaure- ate and Advanced Inter- national Certificate of Education tests given that year, divided by the number of graduating seniors. Schools that had as many tests as they had graduates made the list. According to Math- ews’ report in “The Wash- ington Post,” only 9 per- cent of public high schools qualified. Mathews counts the number of tests given, not the scores. “Some schools brag about their high passing rates on AP or IB, mean- ing the percentage of test-takers who scored 3, 4 or 5 on the 5-point AP exam or 4, 5, 6 or 7 on the 7-point IB exam,” Math- ews said in the “Washing- ton Post” article. “Pass- ing scores make students eligible for credit at many colleges and uni- versities. “I decided not to count passing rates in this way because I found that many high schools kept Wyoming among 3 local public high schools listed as nation’s most challenging See WYOMING, Page A2 Meet two new additions to the west side. MAXX AND ELLEE HAMILTON, OHIO West Hospital CE-0000589089

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Page 1: Tri county press 042314

TRI-COUNTYTRI-COUNTYPRESS 75¢

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Your Community Press newspaperserving Evendale, Glendale,Sharonville, Springdale, Wyoming

Vol. 30 No. 32© 2014 The Community Press

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

See page A2 for additional information

Contact The PressGRAND GOALSA8Wyoming baseball seeksfirst CHL title since ‘07

GROWINGHEALTHYCulinary herbs do a bodygoodSee Rita’s Kitchen, B3

More than 10,000 fans of thehorror genre, from across thecountry and as far away asAus-tralia,attendedthe2014Horror-HoundWeekendMarch 21-23 atthe Sharonville ConventionCenter.

The event featured celebrityappearances from cast mem-bers from “The Evil Dead,”“The Walking Dead,” “TheBoondock Saints” and “Sons ofAnarchy” among others. In ad-dition, the weekend includedpanel discussions, celebrityautograph signings and photosessions, movie screenings andvendors.

HorrorHound Weekend hasgrown from a small gatheringfor fans of the horror genre to anationallyrecognizedthree-dayevent. Sharonville hotels expe-rienced increased business

thanks to HorrorHound and theSharonville Convention Centerpartneredwith local businessesincluding Tom+Chee, the Shar-onville Skyline and LaRosa’s,whomadepizzasonsite.Prince-tonHigh School andQueen CityRacquet and Fitness Club of-fereduseof theirparking lot forattendees.

“We couldn’t be happier towelcome the HorrorHoundweekend back to the region,”said Dan Lincoln, president andCEOof theCincinnatiUSACon-vention & Visitors Bureau.“This group brought more thanan exciting and fun event to ourregion.With all of the attendeesenjoying the great hotels, res-taurants, and attractions in thearea, it was amajor positive im-pact on the Sharonville econo-my.”

Jim Downton, executive di-rector of the Sharonville Con-ventionCenter, said theexpand-ed center made it an excellentfacility for large public eventslike HorrorHound. “Hostingthese events reinforces ourmission to foster economic andcultural opportunities to theNorthern corridor.”

Celebrities in attendance atthis year’s HorrorHound in-cluded headliner Bruce Camp-bell from The Evil Dead, SeanPatrickFlanery andCliftonCol-lins Jr. from “The BoondockSaints,” Michael Rooker from“TheWalkingDead,” andDebo-rah Foreman from “ValleyGirl.” Cast members from“Sons of Anarchy” also tookpart, as well as horror moviecomposers, costume designersand make-up artists.

HorrorHoundWeekend scares up thousands of fans

Sharonville Convention Center Executive Director Jim Downton, center,chats with fans of HorrorHoundWeekend.THANKS TO SHARONVILLE

CONVENTION

The union that repre-sents schoolbusdrivers isrefocusing after Prince-ton City Schools decidedto outsource its bus ser-vice to First Student.

After the district post-ed the announcement,along with a letter to par-ents, on its website, the

union issued a statementof support for the drivers.

“Due to the Board ofEducation’s decision tooutsource thebusdrivers,the Ohio Association OfPublic School Employeeswill continue to representthese folks,” Derryl Hall,of the Ohio Association ofPublic School Employees,said in a statement.

“We will continue to

look out for their welfareand provide for the stu-dents we drive every day.

“We will also attemptto work with the Board ofEducation to provide for atransition to the new em-ployer First Student,”Hall said. “However, dueto the uncertainty ofwhether 100 percent ofthe employees will behired by First Student,

and the fact that Prince-ton will cancel their med-ical insurance in June,that will make these dis-cussions strenuous.”

Local 174 is the unionfor the 66 Princeton em-ployees affected by thechange, though the con-tract with First Studentshasn’t yet been finalized.

The Ohio Association of Public School Employees opposes the outsourcing of bus services being considered by PrincetonCity Schools.KELLY MCBRIDE/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Union stands behind drivers asPrinceton outsources bus serviceBy Kelly [email protected]

See UNION, Page A2

WyomingHigh Schoolhasbeenranked107thonalist of the nation’s mostchallenging publicschools, according toTheWashington Post.

Wyoming was one ofonly three Cincinnati-areapublicschoolsonthelist this year,withWalnutHills High School at 88and Indian Hill HighSchool at 158.

Education columnistJay Mathews has beenranking “America’sMostChallenging HighSchools” formore than16years, using a formulabased on the number ofAdvanced Placement, In-ternational Baccalaure-ate and Advanced Inter-national Certificate ofEducation tests giventhat year, divided by thenumber of graduatingseniors.

Schools that had asmany tests as they hadgraduates made the list.

According to Math-ews’report in“TheWash-ington Post,” only 9 per-cent of public highschools qualified.

Mathews counts thenumber of tests given,not the scores.

“Some schools bragabout their high passingrates on AP or IB, mean-ing the percentage oftest-takers who scored 3,4 or 5 on the 5-point APexam or 4, 5, 6 or 7 on the7-point IB exam,” Math-ews said in the “Washing-ton Post” article. “Pass-ing scoresmake studentseligible for credit atmany colleges and uni-versities.

“I decided not to countpassing rates in this waybecause I found thatmany high schools kept

Wyoming among3 local publichigh schoolslisted as nation’smost challenging

SeeWYOMING, Page A2

Meet two new additionsto thewest side.MAXX AND ELLEEHAMILTON, OHIO West Hospital

CE-0000589089

Page 2: Tri county press 042314

NEWSA2 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014

TRI-COUNTYPRESS

NewsDick Maloney Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7134, [email protected] McBride Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .576-8246, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . . .248-7573, [email protected] Springer Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . .576-8255, [email protected]

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

[email protected]

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

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

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

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

Find news and information from your community on the WebEvendale • cincinnati.com/evendaleGlendale • cincinnati.com/glendale

Sharonville • cincinnati.com/sharonvilleSpringdale • cincinnati.com/springdaleWyoming • cincinnati.com/wyoming

Hamilton County • cincinnati.com/hamiltoncounty

Calendar .................B2Classifieds ................CFood ......................B3Life ........................B1Police .................... B8Schools ..................A7Sports ....................A8Viewpoints ............A10

Index

According to the letterto parents, from Superin-tendent Gary Pack, alldrivers will be offeredjobs with First Student,andbusingwill appearun-changed to the studentsand their families.

“In short, parents andstudents will not see achange in service,” Packsaid in the letter postedonthePrincetonwebsite. “Infact, Princeton’s school

buses will continue toread, ‘Princeton CitySchools,’ and all schoolbus drivers currentlywith Princeton will be of-fered a job with First Stu-dent for Princeton’s busroutes.”

Princeton’s task forceof staff and administra-tors evaluated the systemand made the recommen-dation to the board of edu-cation, after consideringproposals from Peter-mann and First Student.

A preliminary reportestimated cost savings at$1 million to $5 million if

Princeton outsourcesthose services, Directorof Student Services EdTheroux reported at aprevious school boardmeeting.

Princeton spent about$4,973,000 on transporta-tion during the 2012-2013school year, with approxi-mately $4,854,000 budget-ed for the current schoolyear.

The district’s bus fleetis aging, and keeping thetransportation service in-house would have forcedPrinceton to buy new ve-hicles.

UnionContinued from Page A1

those rates artificiallyhigh by allowing only topstudents to take thecourses. AP, IB and AICEare important becausethey give average stu-dents a chance to experi-ence the trauma of heavycollege reading lists andlong, analytical collegeexaminations,” he said.“Research has found that

even low-performing stu-dentswhogot a 2 on anAPtest did significantly bet-ter in college than similarstudents who did not takeAP.”

Wyoming City Schoolsreported that WyomingHigh School offers 24 Ad-vanced Placementcourses for all students,withmore than96percentof graduating seniors atWyoming High Schooltypically advancing to afour-year college.

“We are honored and

humbled to again be rec-ognized nationally,” Wyo-ming High School Princi-palAaronMarshall said ina news release. “Our for-mula for success beginswith outstanding studentswhoareeager to learnandserve, includes teachersand staff who challengeand motivate using expe-riential lessons, and endswith parents who arehighly supportive of oureducational model.”

WyomingContinued from Page A1

Four very talentedstudents from the Dia-mond Oaks Career De-velopment Campus, ac-companied by their in-structor, were at the AICCollege of Design inSpringdale.

Their art, as well asthat of 10 others fromDiamond Oaks, was ondisplay at AIC’s gallery.The exhibit ran throughApril 17, and it was a joyto view such imaginativework. These juniors andseniors showed extraor-dinary skill in variousartistic mediums that farsurpass the methodsemployed in the past.They used the latesttechnology in producingsomemighty fine im-ages.

Sandra Ramey, digitalarts and design instruc-

tor, hasbeenwithGreatOaksSchoolsas thecareertechnicalinstruc-tor since1994. Sheis also a

certified Internet web-master and an Adobecertified educator. San-dra taught for threeyears at Scarlet Oaks andhas been influential inguiding Diamond Oaksstudents toward theirpotential for the past 17years. She and AIC vicepresident and instructor,Cyndi Mendall, haveknown each other for along time, so when Cyndi

offered the gallery forthe exhibit, Sandra wasdelighted to accept.

Her digital arts anddesign program is grow-ing in popularity, and asof now, they have fallenrollment for next yearand the junior year en-rollment is full. One ofthe premier interests inthe program is to offerAdobe certified associatedegrees with two yearsof training in five majorcontent areas: graphic

design and illustrationusing Adobe Illustrator;visual communicationusing Adobe Photoshop;print and digital mediapublication using AdobeInDesign, and web au-thoring using Dream-weaver. The digital arts& design program offersstudents state-of-the-arttechnology as well as anopportunity to earn pro-fessional certificationwith Adobe.

Listed along with theirpicture titles and highschools are:

» “Colored Pencil” byMatt Wilhelm of Taylorand David Hunter of Mt.Healthy;

» “Vectored Illustra-tion” using Adobe Il-lustration by Raven Cof-

fey andMarissa Wismanof Harrison, Jess Adamsof Oak Hills, Micha Tank-sley of Mt. Healthy andHannah Lawless of Tay-lor;

» “Type Creatures”using Adobe IllustrationbyMiranda Bock andEmmie Green of Harri-son and Jess Adams;

» “Gibson Guitar”using Adobe Photoshopby Kylie Wheeler of Har-rison;

» “Wolves” in graphicpencil by Amanda Fay ofMt. Healthy;

» “Ice Bubble” in digi-tal photography by LoganDeGolyer of Harrison;

» “Self Portrait” usingAdobe Photoshop byAaronMcKenzie of Mt.Healthy;

» “Ladybug” usingdigital photography byMarissa Wisman, and

» “Fall Foliage” usingdigital photography byKes Balada-Binns ofWinton Woods.

Here’s hoping we willsee their works on thebig stage in years tocome. Sandra suggeststhat you connect to theirDiamond Oaks Facebookpage, the Adobe CertifiedAssociate page and theirGreat Oaks Page foradditional information.

Evelyn Perkins writes aregular column about peopleand events in the Tri-CountyPress area. Send items for hercolumn to 10127 ChesterRoad, Woodlawn, 45215, orcall her directly at 772-7379.

Instructor polishes Diamond Oaks artists’ talents

EvelynPerkinsCOMMUNITY PRESSCOLUMNIST

Diamond Oaks Career Technical Instructor, Sandra Ramey, along with seniors Logan DeGolyer, David Hunter, MatthewWilhelm and Kylie Wheeler pose with two works from the Digital Arts and Design Program. EVELYN PERKINS/FOR THE

COMMUNITY PRESS

HamiltonCounty prop-erty owners will again beable to see what they willpay in taxes if proposedlevies on the ballot onTuesday, May 6, in theirtaxing districts arepassed.

County Auditor DustyRhodes has added specif-ic information on new lev-ies on his websitewww.hamiltoncountyaud-itor.org. By accessingtheir property records,homeowners can go to theLevy tab on their proper-ty’s record main page tosee the effect of new lev-ies based on their proper-

ty’s current value.“This is vital informa-

tion which allows votersto seewhat theywill pay ifnew tax levies are ap-proved,” Rhodes said. “Itis all a part of holdinggov-ernment accountable tothe peoplewhopay for it,”he added.

The attachment is a ta-ble listing levies in Chevi-ot, Loveland, Milford andWoodlawn; Colerain andDelhi townships, theLoveland School Districtand the county-wide De-velopmental DisabilitiesProgramallwhichwill ap-pear on the May 6 ballots

in Hamilton County.The first two columns

identifythetaxingauthor-ity and the purpose of thelevy. Also listed is the re-quested millage, the typeof levy, its duration, thecurrent tax on a $100,000market value property,and the estimated annualamount the tax wouldraise if approved by thevoters.

Due to changes by thestate legislature theselevies will not receive thebenefit of the existing 10percent and 2.5 percentstate reductions on previ-ously approved levies.

Auditor announces tax levy service

CE-0000591653

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI MEDICAL CENTER

Baby on Board.At UCMedical Center, we take pride in the Bearcat babies we deliver

every day – from those healthy, full-term bundles of joy to those

pre-term babies full of fight and strength.

What does itmean to be a Bearcat baby?It means peace of mind and comfort

in knowing you are surrounded by our

world-class labor and delivery team.

We are here tomake sure you have the

healthiest baby possible – whether you

have a routine delivery or need themost

advance care available in the region.

To schedule a tour of our spacious, private labor and delivery suites,

please call: (513) 584-BABY (2229)

UCHealth.com/BearcatBaby

Page 3: Tri county press 042314

APRIL 23, 2014 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • A3NEWS

A major name brand hearing aid provider wishes to field test a remarkable new digital hearinginstrument in the area. This offer is free of charge and you are under no obligation.

These revolutionary 100% digital instruments use the latest technology tocomfortably and almost invisibly help you hear more clearly. This technology solvesthe “stopped up ears” and “head in a barrel” sensation some people experience.

If you wish to participate in this in-office trial, a complimentary hearing evaluation will beprovided to determine candidacy.

If you enjoy hearing with this new open technology, you may purchase these hearing instrumentsat a reduced charge. Otherwise, there is no charge whatsoever for participating in this field test.Special testing will be done to determine the increased benefits of this technology.

Benefits of hearing aids vary by type and degree of hearing loss, noise environment, accuracyof hearing test, and proper fit. This is a wonderful opportunity to determine if hearinghelp is available for your hearing loss while you evaluate your performance withthis technology.

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H E A LT H N O T I F I C A T I O NAre You Hard Of Hearing?

Page 4: Tri county press 042314

A4 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014 NEWS

Advertisers couldsoon find an audience atSharonville’s recreationfacilities.

Currently, the centeronly posts informationsubmitted by non-profitgroups, but if City Coun-cil passes an ordinanceto authorize advertising,the city’s recreation fa-cilities would create aplan for advertizing andsponsorship programs.

“This will help us re-coup the costs of runningthe Community Center,”Mayor Kevin Hardmansaid.

Details of duration,

quantity, size or other fi-nancial stipulationswould be established bythe safety service direc-tor and recreation de-partment manager.

Ads would be consid-erate of the familyatmosphere of the Com-munity Center, and theordinance would prohib-it the promotion of indi-vidual political candi-dates.

Council members ap-proved the ordinance atthe April 8 meeting, af-ter a second reading atthe March 25 meeting.

Sharonvilleconsiders adsat CommunityCenter

The Sharonville Community Center currently displaysannouncements from non-profits and community events,such as this one outside at the corner of Creek Road andThornview Drive.KELLY MCBRIDE/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

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thingstoDoCincyGet theapp now.

Page 5: Tri county press 042314

APRIL 23, 2014 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • A5NEWS

Advice to helpseniors simplify

Are you overwhelmedwith the amount of stuffyou have collected overthe years? Is your hometoo large for you to man-age it on your own? The“Making the Move: Help-ing Seniors Simplify,Lunch and Learn Series”presentation offered byMaple Knoll Village canhelp you simplify yourlife and start downsizing.

Bobbi Hosmer andLynne Steel of SweetHome Cincinnati will beleading the presentationand offering participantstheir expert advice ondownsizingandwhat todowhen a move is on the ho-rizon. This includes tipson what you will need inyour next home, how toget themost foryourvalu-ables, how to stage yourhome and more. Theevent will be held at theManor House RestaurantontheMapleKnollVillagecampusand includea freelunch prepared by theaward winning restau-rant. Tours of the campuswill also be offered afterthe presentation.

This event is free andopen to the public andwilltake place at11100 Spring-field Pike at 11a.m. April24. Call.782-2715 for moreinformation and to re-serve a spot.

WMKV part of‘Shred Day’

WMKV/WLHS publicradio is part ofTheSpringBetter Business BureauDocument Shred Day tohelp those in the commu-nity protect their identity.

The BBB hosts thisfree event every year togive back. This year,WMKV has signed on toplay music during theevent. Please stop in be-tween8 a.m. andnoonSat-urday, April 26, at UCBlueAshtoshredanydoc-uments.

Evendale Fine Artsexhibit openingreceptionMay 2

The opening receptionof the Evendale Fine ArtsExhibit 2014, welcomingthegeneralpublic, artists’families and friends, willbe 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday,May 2, in the CommunityRoom of the EvendaleRecreation Center at10500 Reading Road. TheEvendaleFineArtExhibitis sponsored by the Vil-lage of Evendale, theEvendale Cultural ArtsCenter and the EvendaleRecreation Department.

More than 80 artistsare exhibiting originalartworks in this showjudgedby local artist TomPost. This exhibit servestopromote andencouragethe appreciation of art inour local community; itprovides a public forumfor area artists to shareideas, sell and exhibittheir artwork. Enjoy livemusic and refreshments.

Awards presentationstarts at 7 pm.

Viewing times: Open-

ing night – Friday, May 2,6-9 p.m.; Saturday, May 3,noon-5 p.m.; Sunday, May4,1-4p.m.;Monday,May5,noon-4 p.m.

For additional infor-mation, call: 513-563-2247or 513-563-1350.

Goodwill hostsspringmini-fest

The Service Guild ofOhio Valley Goodwill In-dustrieswillbeholding itsannual springmini-fest atthe Woodlawn RetailStore, 10600 SpringfieldPike inWoodlawn, Friday,May 2, and Saturday,May3.

Hours for the festivalwill be from 9 a.m. to 4p.m.

A variety of activitiesare planned for the festi-val including:

» homemade bakedgoods and candy;

» elegant junque andrummage items;

» collectibles booth;»wonderful gift items

from the Treasure IslandGift Shop;

» books, tapes andCDs;

» hot dogs, chips anddrinks at lunch time.

The Goodwill ServiceGuild operates the Trea-sure Island Gift Shop in-side the Woodlawn retailstore. All proceeds fromthe festival will help tosupport Goodwill’s pro-grams and services formen and women with dis-abilities.

‘CincinnatiBroadcasting: TheFirst 50 Years’

Llanfairwill host apro-gram about Cincinnatibroadcasting, 11 a.m. tonoon Tuesday, May 6, inLlanfair Campus CenterGreat Room

Historian and radiohost Mike Martini ofWMKV will present “Cin-cinnati Broadcasting: TheFirst 50 Years,” for a lookback to the early days ofbroadcasting.Martiniwilldig deep into the originsofradioandtelevisionandshare with the group rarephotographsand fascinat-ing stories from the dayswhen Cincinnati wasranked behind only NewYork and Chicago in the“golden age of broadcast-ing.”

RSVP by May 2 to 591-4567 or [email protected].

Memorial Day essaycontest underway

Preparations for the28th annual Glendale Me-morial Day Essay Contestare underway.

This contest has be-come an iconic part of ourMemorial Day celebra-tion, one that is eagerlyanticipated by Glendalefourth-, fifth- and sixth-grade elementary stu-dents.

The theme is “WhatMemorial Day Means toMe.”

The writers of thethree chosen winning es-says are invited to partici-pate in Glendale’s Memo-rial Day parade; the win-

ning essay to be read byits author during the Me-morial Day program fol-lowing theparadeMay27.Each of the three winningauthors will receive amedal to commemoratethe day and their nameswill be engraved on abrass plague for perma-nent display in the villageadministration office.

» Entries are to be aminimum of 100 words toa maximum of 300 wordsin length, neatly hand-written or typed doublespaced. The author’sname, phone number,grade level, and name ofschool must appear in the

upper left-hand corner ofthe first page of the essay(this information will becovered during judging).

» All fourth- fifth- andsixth-grade students ei-ther residing in Glendaleor attending school inGlendale are eligible toparticipate. Students wholive inGlendale but do notattendschoolwithinGlen-dalemayenter bymailingtheir manuscript to Me-morial Day Essay Con-test, c/o Dr. Jenny Kil-gore, 200 E. Sharon Ave.,Glendale OH 453246. Ex-tra copies of the rules areavailable at the Glendaleadministration office.

» All Glendale studententries must be turned inthrough the school’s prin-cipal byMay11; entriesbystudents who attendschool outside Glendalemust be received at theabove address byMay 11.

» Essays are judged oncontent and must be thestudent’s original work.Students are encouragedto seek help to checkspelling and grammar,but the content is to be theproduct of the student’sefforts.

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A6 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014 NEWS

Committee membersare gearing up for the25th annual Take Backthe Night Cincinnati inApril.

Take Back the Night’smission is to increase thecommunity’s awarenessabout sexual assaultwhile empowering, uni-fying, and freeing thosewho have survived in-cest, rape, or assault andhonoring those who havenot. The event will again

coincide with ChildAbuse PreventionMonthand occur Thursday,April 24. The march willbegin at the PeaceBell inNewport and end at Saw-yer Point. This year’stheme is “Looking Back,Moving Forward.”

The event is still in theplanning stages andmore details will comeduring the next fewmonths. Organizers planto have activities for

children.The planning commit-

tee consists of NorthernKentucky and Cincinnatiagency professions, aswell as community vol-unteers. Anyone inter-ested in volunteeringthat evening or learningmore information shouldcontact contact HeatherGlenn-Gunnarson at 859-630-4185, or Diane Fer-nandez at 859-409-6839.

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Page 7: Tri county press 042314

APRIL 23, 2014 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • A7

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

TRI-COUNTYPRESSEditor: Dick Maloney, [email protected], 248-7134

Princeton City SchoolDistrict

In recognition of a commit-ment to quality and an ongo-ing dedication to the learningand development of children,the preschool programs atEvendale, Glendale, Spring-dale and Stewart elementar-ies have each received a Five-Star Step Up To QualityAward from the state of Ohio.

StepUpToQuality isOhio’srating system for learningand development programs.Participating programs canearn a one to five star rating.

In addition to meeting allstandards of a four-star rat-ing, programs with five starsmay also:

» have lower staff/child ra-tios;

» use child assessment re-

sults to plan activities thatbest support learning and de-velopment goals for eachchild;

» share assessment resultsand create goals for children;

» develop plans to supportchildrenas they transition to anew classroom or educationalsetting;

»work with other organi-zations or businesses withinthe community to supportchildren and their families;

» have an active and orga-nized parent volunteer group;

» use input from familiesand community partners’ in-form the program’s continu-ous improvement process;

» have accreditation by anapproved organization.

To learn more, visitwww.earlychildhoodohio.org.

SCHOOLS NOTEBOOK

One-hundred-nine Sharon-ville students in gradeskindergarten through

the fifth-grade stayed afterschool for “Stay and Play” toraisemoney to supportBethanyHouse.

This organization provides afull range of services which in-cludehousing, job training, par-enting, and life skills. The ser-vice project culminates on theschool’s annualBuddyDayNov.26. For a small fee, studentswere invited to play differentgames with the 18 staff whostayed after school. Some of thegames were Yahtzee, UNO,LRC, Pictionary, Mouse Trap,Bingo, Sorry, Apples to Applesamong many others. Studentsalso enjoyedhot dogs, chips andbottledwater. Sharonvillemademore than $300 for the BethanyHouse. If you would like tomake a monetary donation,checks are payable to Sharon-ville PFO, with “BethanyHouse” in thememo section putBethany House.

Logan Welch, Moncerrat Aguilar Lopez, Peyton Harmon and Dakotah Lyle enjoy bingo after school withSharonville teachers. THANKS TO CARLA SHROYER

Sharonville Elementaryfinds another fun way toreach out to help others

Sharonville second-grade teacher Lisa Wampler plays the card game“Apples to Apples”with Gabby Fishel, Kyra Reeves, Destiny Price andJamelet Trinidad during the Stay and Play fundraiser after school.Ricardo Foster and his buddies team up to play a game of checkers.THANKS TO CARLA SHROYER

Sharonville Elementary second-graders Moncerrat Aguilar Lopez,Peyton Harmon and Taylor Mason are enjoying a hot dog, chips and abottle of water before they play games with staff at the Stay and Playfundraiser after school. THANKS TO CARLA SHROYER

Braylin McCloud, Ayonna Mosley, Jose Cux-Saquic, Maliyah Broadnax, and Tucker Asari are playing the game“Sorry”with first-grade teacher Mrs. Ronda Drapeau during the Stay and Play fundraiser to raise money forBethany House.THANKS TO CARLA SHROYER

Sharonville first-grade studentsJennifer Barrera Mendoza andJermiah Bola play a card gameduring Stay and Play. Bola isasking for a certain card asBarrera Mendoza is looking forpairs. THANKS TO CARLA SHROYER

The Sharonville Elemen-tary School staff won the Oc-tober bronzed shoe for com-ing in first overall throughwalking.

The bronzed shoe will beplaced at Sharonville Ele-mentary.

The Princeton Admini-stration staff came in secondplace.

Each month staff mayplace a check on a calendarcalled “Does the S.H.O.E.fit?” each day that the staffmember walks. The buildingwith the most points that isaveraged by the number ofparticipants is recognized fortheir walking activity. In atime when stress is at an ulti-matehigh, it is important thatall students, families, andstaff takecareof theirownin-dividual health. TheWellness

and SHAC committees worktogether on implementingideas to increase health andwellness for all.

Sharonville building School Health Advisory Council/Committeerepresentative Carla Shroyer, Principal Jesse Kohls and secretaryVicki Selm accepts the bronze S.H.O.E. trophy to display atSharonville Elementary School. The Princeton District WellnessCommittee challenged all Princeton staff in every building duringthe month of October to earn points daily for walking. At the endof the month Sharonville Elementary Staff received the braggingrights. THANKS TO CARLA SHROYER

And the shoe fits

Princeton City School Districtbronze trophy S.H.O.E. whichstands for Stress, Heart health,Obesity and Exercise. TheS.H.O.E. fit and the Sharonvillestaff are proudly displaying thetrophy for the Octoberchallenge. THANKS TO CARLA

SHROYER

BENEATH THE HEDGE

Bethany School kindergartners were visited by animals fromthe Cincinnati Zoo to aid in their study of life sciences. KrupaDihora and JaLeah Spencer-Williams meet Ghana thehedgehog. Kindergarten is taught by Carolyn Lanenga andKathy Poto.THANKS TO SCOTT BRUCE

Page 8: Tri county press 042314

A8 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

Baseball» Princeton beatHughes12-1

April 12, but dropped its nextthree games, falling 11-0 and12-2 to LakotaWest April 14 and16, respectively, and losing 9-1toLakotaEastApril17.TheVik-ings are 2-7 on the season.

»Wyoming blanked Finney-town 14-0 on April 10. SeniorHenry Moore got the win andseniorWillMartywas 3-4with adouble, grand slam and sevenruns batted in.

TheCowboys shut outTaylor6-0 on April 12 as junior JoeRominger got the win.

On April 14, Wyoming tookdown Taylor again, 8-1. JuniorTucker Marty got the win andjunior Parker Chalmerswas 3-4with a double.

TheCowboysblanked IndianHill 5-0 onApril 16 as senior Ca-seyHowell struck out10. SeniorMoore was 2-4.

On April 17, Wyoming juniorJoeRominger got thewin as theCowboys beat Edgewood 7-2.Senior Will Marty had a homerun.

» Cincinnati Country Dayshut out North College Hill 10-0in five innings April 17. Fresh-man Charlie Sachs threw thethree-hit shutout to push the In-

dians to 6-0.» Cincinnati Hills Christian

Academy senior Cam Vargathrew a complete-game no-hit-ter April 17 against SevenHills.The Eagles won10-0 to improveto 7-0.

»Moeller swept a pair ofMichigan teams April 12. TheCrusaders beat Clio 13-2 in fiveinnings behind junior MitchBault. Junior Joe Vranesic was3-3 with a double, home run andfive runs batted in.Moeller alsobeat Lake Orion 9-2 with Vra-nesic striking out eight. SeniorsZach Logue and Cole Proia

drove in two runs each.

Softball» Princeton remains winless

on the season at 0-13 following a10-5 loss to Hamilton April 16and a 12-2 defeat at ColerainApril 17.

»Wyoming shut out RogerBacon 2-0 on April 10. Sopho-more Madeline Juergens hadthe win and freshman ReaganRaymer was 2-3.

» Cincinnati Country Daybeat New Miami 9-8 April 17 tolevel its record at 2-2. MissyDieckman-Meyer struck out 10

in the victory.» Cincinnati Hills Christian

Academy lost 13-12 to Cincin-nati Christian April 17 to fall to1-3 on the season.

»Mount Notre Dame beatSeton 9-3 on April 11. SeniorGabby Phillips struck out eightand was 3-3 with two doubles.

»Ursuline Academy im-proved to 6-1with a 9-1roadwinat MND April 16. The Lions areback in action April 24 at homeagainst Seton.

Boys tennis»Moeller blanked Lakota

EastApril11. SeniorKevinMor-rison, sophomore Michael TepeandfreshmanMaxBerkysweptsingles.

Girls lacrosse» CCD beat Miamisburg 16-5

April 17.»Mount Notre Dame

downedMercy 18-1 on April 16.»Ursuline climbed to the

winning side of the ledger at 5-4with a12-7 homewin over SetonApril 15.

Boys volleyball» Princeton still seeks its

first win of the season after los-ing in three sets againstMilfordApril 16. The Vikings fell to 0-9with the loss.

»Moeller beat Elder April15, 22-25, 25-17, 27-25, 25-27, 15-12.

Basketball» In the Ohio-Kentucky All-

Star Game at Thomas More onApril 13, Ohio beat Kentucky100-91. Moeller’s Grant Benzin-ger had eight points.

PRESS PREPS HIGHLIGHTS

By Scott SpringerandMark D. [email protected]@communitypress.com

Senior Griffin O’Gara works around the crease during Wyoming’s 13-3win over Miamisburg on April 16 at Bob Lewis Stadium. Frank Barzizzawas in goal to get the win for the Cowboys. THANKS TO ROD APFELBECK

Wyoming senior captain NikPlattenburg makes a play at thenet while partner Jeremy Smuckerguards the baseline during theCowboys’ 3-2 loss to Seven Hillson April 16. Taking their matchesfor Wyoming were Will Carterand Myles Bourbon at first andsecond singles.THANKS TO ROD

APFELBECK

WYOMING — A late Marchtrip to Tennessee was intendedto give Wyoming High School’sbaseball team an extra jump onthe Cincinnati Hills Leaguecompetition.

As for the best laid plans, theCowboys won just two of thefivegamesand thensatmuchofthe first week of April due torain.

“We started out 2-0 downthere, but lost the next three,”coachChris Fiehrer said. “Theywere all pretty good ballgames.Two of the three losses camewhen we had a lead in the sev-enth inning. Hopefully, welearned a little bit.”

In the end, despite the lossesand inactivity upon returning,Fiehrer was glad the Cowboyswent south. The weather was

good along with the caliber ofplay.OnceWyominggotbackonthe field April 9, they began toreel off wins.

At presstime, Fiehrer’s fear-less fielders were unbeaten intheCHL.Wyoming’s last leaguetitle was 2007 despite makingtournament runs the last twoseasons.

“I think our league is verycompetitive,” Fiehrer said.“Mariemont’s had a great startandMadeira’s had a great start.We’re taking that approach ofone day at a time, one game at atime.We’re hopingwe playwellwhen we finally get to Marie-mont andMadeira.”

PitchinghasbeenWyoming’sstrong suit in recent seasonsand theCowboysbring themostexperience to the CHL rodeo.Seniors Henry Moore, CaseyHowell and Michael Kelly havelogged significant innings the

last two springs.In the short term, Kelly has

been injured and should returnin about a week. Howell andMoore have lived up to theirbilling and some juniors havealso stepped up.

“Tucker Marty has throwntheball forwell forusandsohasJoe Rominger,” Fiehrer said.“He (Rominger) threwa two-hitshutout against Taylor.”

At thedish, seniorWillMartyhas been mashing. He leads theteam inextra-basehits andbelt-ed a grand slam against Finney-town.

Junior shortstop ParkerChalmers is also an offensiveleader.Asateam,Fiehrerwouldlike added contributions.

“Weneedtostepitup,”Fiehr-er said. “We haven’t put up runslike I knowwe’re capable of. As

Wyoming High School senior pitcher Henry Moore comes to the plate with a pitch during the Cowboys’ 14-0win over Finneytown April 10. TOM SKEEN/COMMUNITY PRESS

Wyoming baseball reelsoff wins, seeks CHL titleBy Scott [email protected]

SeeWYOMING, Page A9

SHARONVILLE — Glimmersof light peep through the tunnelof the Princeton High Schoolbaseball program.

The Vikings spent 2011 and2012 in the GreaterMiami Con-ference cellar andwere secondfrom last in 2010 and 2013. ButheadcoachRickWilsonpointedto senior center fielder JalenMitchell as a bright spot asPrinceton rebuilds.

“Last season was really astruggle for all of us, it beingmy first year with the pro-gram,” Wilson said. “It was ob-vious Jalenhad some talent andwe had him hitting third (tradi-tionally the spot for the team’s

best hitter).“Hehadbeenstruggling, but

I gave him a talk and said I be-lieved in him, that we weren’tgoing to jump ship on him. Sowe had a double header and be-tween games he came up to meand asked if we could talk afterthe game.

“Usually when a kid comesto youwith something like that,he’sreadytomakeexcusesortocomplain. But after the gamewe go down the line and start totalk and he askedme if I woulddrop him down in the order be-cause he said he was killing theteam.

“That never happens, yourbest hitter asking to be moved

Princeton findslight at end ofrebuilding tunnelByMark D. [email protected]

Princeton High School senior Jalen Mitchell (22) rips a first-pitchsingle during the seventh inning of a 9-1 loss to Lakota East April17.MARK D. MOTZ/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

See PRINCETON, Page A9

Page 9: Tri county press 042314

APRIL 23, 2014 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • A9SPORTS & RECREATION

RUNNING STRONG

Princeton High School graduate Darnell Gilbert fliesaround the 400 meter oval at the All-OhioChampionships at Gettler Stadium, April 12. TheUniversity of Cincinnati senior won this event with acareer best time of 46.95 seconds at this, his finaloutdoor meet on the home campus. Gilbert is anArchitectural Engineering Technology major. TERRENCEHUGE/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

down for the good of theteam. But that’s exactlythe kind of kid Jalen is.Hereally is a team-first guyand he really is a leader.”

WilsondidmoveMitch-ell down in the batting or-der eventually, but he’sback in the third spot thisseason.

“We’ve asked him to bemore aggressive early inthe count and he’s respon-ded,” Wilson said. “Whenpitchers are trying to getahead in the count you’regoing toseemorefastballsand you have to take ad-vantage.”

Mitchell did just that induring the seventh inningof a 9-1 loss to LakotaEast,ripping the first-pitch hesaw for a single.

“That’s what I likeabout him,” Wilson said.“He’s coachable. He buysin. He’s always battling.Down9-1intheseventh,hecould have just gone upthere and punched theclock,buthebattledforhisteam.”

Andmakenomistake,itis Mitchell’s team. Heshares the captaincy withclassmatesD’onMcCalleyand Andre Denson. ButMcCalley comes off thebench and Denson hasbeenoutwithakneeinjurysince the second game ofthe season (see sidebar).

It’s a role he takes seri-ously.

“It’s extremely impor-tant,” he said. “The twothings you can control areattitude and effort and Ihave to be the one to showthe rest of the team that.We all love the game weplay, and the wins aren’tcomingyet, butwehave tokeepplaying therightwayso the wins will come.”

Mitchell started play-ing baseball at age11aftergrowing up in basketballand baseball. Denson’s fa-ther encouraged him toplay and coached his firstteam.

“I never dreamed ofplaying baseball beforethat,”Mitchell said. “Iwasa pretty good athlete andthey saw I could swing alittle, so they encouragedme and I liked it rightaway.

“After my freshmanyearIthoughtIcouldmay-be do something with thisgame, so I really startedconcentrating on base-

ball.”With no regrets.“I like how hard it is,”

Mitchell said of the appealof the game he now hopesto play in college, possiblyat Capital University inColumbus. “I feel like hit-ting a baseball is the hard-est thing to do in sports.When you do hit it, whenthe ball cracks off the bat,there’s nothing like it. Nofeeling like that in theworld.”

PrincetonContinued from Page A8

Will (Marty) and Parker(Chalmers) go, I believeeverybody else will go.”

Because of construc-tion, the Cowboys homestable at school is not inuse. Wyoming is usingCrosley Field in Blue Ashas their home site.

The replica of the oldReds park is kind to pitch-ers, but not friendly tothose who enjoy the longballwith themajor leagueproportions.

“We don’t love havingto jump on the bus, but it’sa really nice park,” Fiehr-er said. “People in BlueAsh have been great to usand it’s definitely startingto feel like home.”

At last check, the Cros-leyCowboyshaven’thitorgiven up any round-trip-pers at the Blue Ash yard.As they prepare for astring of CHL games,they’ll host Mariemontthere April 23 in a Coach-es vs. Cancer benefitgame.

WyomingContinued from Page A8

Wyoming junior ParkerChalmers fields and throwsto first base for an outduring the Cowboys’ 14-0victory over FinneytownApril 10. TOM

SKEEN/COMMUNITY PRESS

Basketballtournaments

Check out all of the upcomingtournaments, leagues, or train-ing going on at Sports Plus,which includes AAU, Elite, andother basketball Programs, atwww.sportsplusbasketball.com.

Sports Plus has hosted morethan 30 youth, adult, boys, andgirls basketball tournaments,leagues, and training events justin the past year.

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Come down and join Paul Dehner, Jr., and fellowEnquirer Sports’ personalities at Moerlein Lager Houseon Thursday, April 24 at 5:30pm for our live show to

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Page 10: Tri county press 042314

A10 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014

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

TRI-COUNTYPRESSEditor: Dick Maloney, [email protected], 248-7134

TRI-COUNTYPRESS

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

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

A publication of

On May 6, voters in the28th Ohio House District willhave the opportunity to votein an election which reallywill have a major impact onOhio’s future.

Unfortunately, if historyhold true, only about 15 to 20percent of voters will exer-cise their right to vote.Please be one of the peoplewho take advantage of thisincredible right.

The current state repre-sentative has decided not toseek re-election. She will berunning for state treasurer inthe fall. It is certain that ourdistrict will have a new staterepresentative in 2015. Vot-ers need to weigh in to makesure you elect the personwith the right experience toeffectively represent you in

Columbus.This elec-

tion is differ-ent than manythat featurenothing be-yond a seriesof uncontest-ed races. Therace for the28th has threeRepublicancandidates, all

with quite different back-grounds and qualificationsfor the job. All three of ushave websites where you canlearn more baout our qual-ifications, political philoso-phies and key priorities if weare the one elected.

Philosophically, we do notsound very different. We alltalk about creating jobs,

growing the economy, fiscalresponsibility, protecting theConstitution and promotingstrong and effective schools.The real question in this raceis who has the experience toactually deliver results.

I have nearly 35 years ofsenior level business experi-ence. I worked for P&G,Totes and Jergens/Kao beforeretiring in 2003. I immedi-ately joined Cancer SupportCommunity as CEO in 2003and led this organization inits mission to provide freesupport to people battlingcancer for the next 10 years,retiring nine weeks ago torun for this seat.

When my country called, Ientered the U.S. Army andserved nearly 22 years activeand reserve from the Viet-

nam era through the firstGulf War. After retiring fromthe military, I began servingon Blue Ash City Council.More than 18 years later, I amstill serving the residents andbusinesses of Blue Ash.

During the 18-plus yearson Blue Ash City Council, I’veworked hard to keep our cityfiscally sound by attractingnew businesses and 21st Cen-tury jobs. During the greatrecession, we did not raisetaxes which are among thelowest in the region. We re-duced headcount throughattrition and lowered baseoperating expenses whilemaintain a high level of ser-vice to Blue Ash residentsand businesses. This is amodel that I can work to re-apply to our state govern-

ment.Linda and I have lived I

this district for nearly 35years. We raised our daugh-ters here and sent them K-12through Sycamore School,then on to two of our finestate universities. We’vebeen married more than 40years and are proud to havetwo married daughters andtwo grandsons.

I want to take my lifetimeof experience to Columbus toserve the people, businessesand their employees and ourlocal communities. On May 6,regardless of which candi-date you chose to vote for,please vote.

Rick Bryan is a candidate for theRepublican nomination for the 28thHouse District.

Taking Blue Ash’s success to Columbus

RickBryanCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Bryan true representativeof district

I am writing to support RickBryan as the Republican candi-date for the 28th Ohio Houseseat.

It is important to return thedistrict to representation that ismore reflective of the Republi-can constituency of the District.

Rick Bryan clearly is the bet-ter candidate to win the generalelection in November.

As a fellow veteran and pri-vate business person, Rich rep-resents the values that I holddear. I encourage a vote forRickMay 6.

Robert W. SaulMontgomery

Results count: Vote forBryan in 28th District

Rick Bryan is the best choiceas the Republican candidate forthe 28thOhioHouse seat.His ex-perience and record speaks foritself.

He is the only candidate withthe experience that we need inour state legislature.UnderBry-an’s guidance,BlueAshhasbeenrecognized as a city with the fi-nancial resources to provide forcritical operations of a munici-pality. Not many current mem-bers of the legislature have hadto oversee local governmentbudgets, set priorities and serveasadvocates for theirneighbors.

Bryan has served the resi-dents of BlueAshwith full devo-tion for more than 18 years, in-cluding four years as mayor. He

has 35 years of business experi-ence with P&G, Totes, Jergensand as CEO of Cancer SupportCommunity.Healsohas22yearsof service to our country in theArmy & Reserves.

When you voteMay 6 youwillbe voting for an individual torepresent our concerns and be-liefs inColumbus.Results count.Rick Bryan’s record not onlyspeaks to the city of Blue Ash’ssuccess, but also to the state’s fu-ture. He has earnedmy vote andwill continue to earn yours aswell in Columbus.

Lee CzerwonkaMayor, City of Blue Ash

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

ABOUT LETTERSAND COLUMNSWewelcome your comments

on editorials, columns, stories orother topics. Include your name,address and phone number(s) sowe may verify your letter. Lettersof 200 or fewer words and col-umns of 500 or fewer words havethe best chance of being pub-lished. All submissions may beedited for length, accuracy andclarity.Deadline: Noon ThursdayE-mail: [email protected]: 248-1938U.S. mail: See box belowLetters, columns and articles

submitted to The Tri-County Pressmay be published or distributedin print, electronic or otherforms.

His set of eyes magnetizedme.

Our group of Ukrainiansand visiting Americans had achauffeur assigned to trans-port us during our stay in thecity of Kharkov, Ukraine.This dark-haired Ukrainiandriver with his official Ukrai-nian VIP blue/yellow carmounted Ukrainian flag;never spoke a word that I canremember. He never cracked

a smile orlaughed, evenif someonemomentarilyjest, nor didhe respond toquestions.

This seem-ly cold, chill-ing individual,with thatfaraway stareappeared to

be focused in some secretworld, while his eyes seemedto be padlocked to their sock-ets, aiming straight ahead atthe road traffic. This storycould just be a commentaryon a fascinating Ukrainiandriver, but it really repre-sents a story of the dailytransformation of uncertain-ty the average Ukrainiansare facing in their lives to-day.

A day after transportingus, rumors quickly startedspreading among the vanpassengers that he really wasa KGB (Komitet Gosudarst-vennoy Beopasnosti) agent.The Ukrainian people, actingas hosts to our group, becamereluctant to converse in feartheir conversations could besecretly recorded. An un-settling paranoia atmospheresettles over the van as pas-sengers loaded. Even outsideof the van apprehension waspresent. We did have a trans-lator, but uneasiness of whathe did actually said in Rus-sian or English was left un-known to the ones listeningon either side of the languagecultural wall.

The eyes…those eyes,layered by thick mysteriouseyebrows, were the onlyconnection we had to him.What they did leave was acontext of space, anonymousthoughts, and concealedmeanings, lost in humantranslation. The eyes had adeafening silence with blindsdrawn on those so-called

windows to the soul. Wasn’t ablank stare as much of skep-ticism…doubt of life in gen-eral

The only other time I re-member seeing eyes similarto his, was years ago whilehitchhiking home from acollege break. A small towntruck driver pulled off a backroad to give me a lift. Thetruck driver seemed totallylost in space travel, not sureof where his destinationwould be, he just wantedsomeone to talk to after find-ing his wife in bed that morn-ing with his best friend. Theguy’s dazed eyes, glistenedwith stained moisture as hejust fixed his eyes staringstraight out beyond thetruck’s steering wheel, burn-ing the road’s yellow linewith his glare, repeatingthese words, “how can thisbe…how can this be…”

But our Ukrainian driver’seyes had moved on beyondthe lack of faith, into a deep-er complexity look of surviv-al at any cost. Somewherethere was a purpose, just notspoken…of each man forhimself. But the twinkle ofthe inspirational flame wasgone from the inner lenswhere passion once ruled.

This Ukraine, in standardsof newly formed govern-ments, was just a babe, a latetoddler still learning to walk,but always feeling the pres-sure of parents wanting cer-tain outcomes for their child.The old ways, leftovers of aCold War Soviet Union feast;hard to be forgotten by theold Eastern loyal RussianUkrainians, while the visionsfor a newWestern worldUkraine, can be found in theeyes of hope from the young.

But this lagging adoles-cent Ukrainian developmenthas left people cynical withso many broken promises bya dishonest government re-sulted in the recent take overby the opposition party.

Before the recent Febru-ary 2014 revolution, the Uk-raine government, manyclaimed, was a puppet withstrings pulled by Russianleaders in Moscow. The oldmethods of getting what youwanted still linger with cor-rupt officials, leaving thenew Ukrainian child in anxi-ety at not knowing whom totrust.

I have developed countlessmeaningful relationshipswith Ukrainian people duringmy two Cincinnati-KharkivSister City exchange trips toUkraine. I remember myrecent visit to the once gor-geous, picturesque KievSquare to watch a teenagedancing contest. The samesquare today is burnt withashes as consequence of itbeing the main stage for thebattleground of the revolt.Kiev Square is now bloodstrained and in ruins along-side with the phantom bodiesof 25 opposition protesterskilled there.

Those eyes express thefear of what is transpiring inUkraine today, the dazedanxiety of uncertainty, con-stantly weariness of figuringout what the next chessboardRussian move will be. As apassenger in his van…hiscountry, these were the eyesthat dare you to read or pon-der what they must be think-ing. Occasional during longerinterludes of traveling in thevan, I caught myself deliber-ating those eyes, probingthem for some clue of atranslational glimpse intoanother life?

(Parts of this story werepublish in the recent Fish-Food & LavaJuice LiteraryJournal.)

Wes Adamson is a resident ofWyoming. His work has beenaccepted for publication by twoliterary magazines, River andSouth Review and DriftwoodPress.

Ukrainian eyes tell tale

Wes AdamsonCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

The chaufferwho drove agroup of visitorsin Kharkov,Ukraine.THANKSTOWES ADAMSON

April 16 questionEarth Day is April 22. What, if

anything, do you do to observeEarth Day? Do you believe the dayis more or less important than itwaswhen itbegan in1970?Whyorwhy not?

“I will do absolutely nothingto observe EarthDay. I prefer toworship the Creator, rather thancreated things.”

R.W.J.

“Technically, theEarthDay isprobably more than what it wasback then when it started, espe-cially with all the cleanups andtree giveaways these days.

“My son and I are planning oncleaning up the trash in thewoods behind out house. It getswashed down the hill, throughthe storm drain from our street,

right down into Clough Creekwhich flows right into the LittleMiami.”

TRog

“I don’t do anything special,as I celebrate it every day by re-cycling, using cloth bags atstores, etc.”

C.H.

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’SQUESTIONHow could the federal govern-ment have better handled thestandoff with Nevada rancherClivan Bundy?

Every week we ask readers a questionthey can reply to via e-mail. Send youranswers to [email protected] with Ch@troomin the subject line.

Page 11: Tri county press 042314

LIFELIFE PEOPLE | IDEAS | RECIPES

TRI-COUNTYPRESS

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 2014

Mike Rank went to a work-shop in Arizona and came backwith a collection of photos thatare now part of The SharonWoods Photography Travel Se-

ries with pro-grams scheduledevery Friday eve-ning throughApril 25. There isno program GoodFriday, April 18.

The photo se-ries showcases

amateur photographers’ tripsaround theworldweaves travelstories with cultural history.

Here is a look at the seventhand final show, sponsored bythe Photography Club of Great-er Cincinnati:

‘Arizona: Canyons,Mesas and Ruins’

» Friday, April 25, 7:30 p.m.,at the Sharon Centre at SharonWoods, 11450 Lebanon Road.

» The photographer: MikeRanktraveled toArizonasever-al times since 2005.

» Trip highlight: The colorsand shapes of the Arizona land-scape.

“The highlight was photo-graphing upper and lower An-telope Canyons,” Rank said.“Experiencing Navaho and Ho-pi culturewas also a highlight.”

»What’s in the show: Thephoto presentation focuses oncentral and northern Arizona.

“I want my audience to un-derstand more of the NativeAmerican culture found in Ari-zona,” Rank said, “(and see) thegrandeur of the high desertlandscape and the amazingshapes and colors of AntelopeCanyon.”

The Photography Travel Se-ries is a free program, open tothe public, though a validGreatParks of Hamilton Countysticker is required for entry.

They can be bought at thepark for $3 a day, or $10 for theyear.

"Horse Shoe Bend ofthe Colorado River atDawn." This is nearPage, Ariz., just beforethe Grand Canyonbegins. You can walkright up to the edgeof the 1,000-foot cliff,if you dare. TheVermillion Cliffs are inthe farbackground.THANKS TOMIKE RANK

CANYON COLORS, DESERT LANDSCAPE FRAME

ARIZONA PHOTOS

"Clouds Over Red Rock Country." This was taken near Sedona, Ariz., on a day when the jet stream was rapidly blowing cloud formations across the sky.THANKS TOMIKE RANK

"Smoke in the Valley.” The background haze of this pre-dawn shot andadds to the the smoke coming from a Navaho hogan in the lower left.This proves that people actually live in Monument Valley.THANKS TOMIKE

RANK

"Monument Valley, Navaho Tribal Park, Totem Poles Formation." Thisformation, known as the Totem Poles, is very appropriate givenMonumeny Valley is part of the Navaho Nation, the largest nativeAmerican tribe in the country.THANKS TOMIKE RANK

Rank

By Kelly [email protected]

Page 12: Tri county press 042314

B2 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014

THURSDAY, APRIL 24AuditionsOpen Auditions, 7 p.m.-8:30p.m., St. Paul Lutheran ChurchELCA, 106 Maple St., FellowshipHall. Hotel Pickle Two Act com-edy by Sam Havens six men andfive women. Performance dates:Aug. 15-24. Free. 513-426-6504.Reading.

Community DanceWyoming Square Dance Class,6:30 p.m., Wyoming Civic Cen-ter, 1Worthington Ave., LearnModern Western Square Dance.$5. 513-874-1790.Wyoming.

Dance ClassesLine Dancing, 5:30 p.m.-6:30p.m., Fitness Physiques by NicoG, 9681 Kenwood Road, Musicfrom variety of genres. $10-$15.Registration required. 513-290-8217; www.fitnessphysiques.net.Blue Ash.Intro to Ballet and Jazz, 5:30p.m.-6 p.m., Cincinnati Danceand Movement Center, 880Compton Road, $10. Reserva-tions required. 513-521-8462.Springfield Township.

EducationActing Classes, 7 p.m.-9 p.m.,Sharonville Fine Arts Center,11165 Reading Road, Actorsbuild and expand their skills.Prepare for auditions, improv,cold reads, monologues, charac-ter development and agencyrepresentation. Ages 18 and up.$20. 513-615-2827; cincinnatiac-torsstudio.com. Sharonville.

Exercise ClassesZumba Class, 7 p.m.-8 p.m.,Hartzell United MethodistChurch, 8999 Applewood Drive,$5. Presented by Zumba withAshley. 513-917-7475. Blue Ash.

ExhibitsAntique Quilt Exhibit, noon-4p.m., Heritage Village Museum,11450 Lebanon Road, Viewmuseum’s collection of antiquequilts. $2, $1 ages 5-11, free ages4 and under and members.513-563-9484; www.herit-agevillagecincinnati.org. Shar-onville.Vintage Base Ball, 10 a.m.-5p.m., Heritage Village Museum,11450 Lebanon Road, Exhibitshowcasing different styles anderas of baseball equipment of19th century. Through Sept. 28.$2, $1 ages 5-11; free ages 4 andunder and members. 513-563-9484. Sharonville.

Health / WellnessLifeSteps Weight Manage-ment Program, 10 a.m.-11:30a.m., TriHealth Fitness andHealth Pavilion, 6200 PfeifferRoad, Led by registered dieti-tian, combines behavior-changetechniques with nutrition andphysical activity. Includes educa-tion, exercise, group support

and accountability. Registrationrequired. 513-985-6707.Mont-gomery.

Home & GardenTaking Root, 7 p.m.-8 p.m.,Pipkin’s Market, 5035 CooperRoad, Learn best practices forhealthy trees: planting, water-ing and feeding. Free. 513-719-3175; pipkinsmarket.com.Mont-gomery.

On Stage - ComedyJoe List, 8 p.m., Go BananasComedy Club, 8410 Market PlaceLane, $8-$14. 513-984-9288;www.gobananascomedy.com.Montgomery.

Senior CitizensLunch and Learn: HelpingSeniors Simplify, 11 a.m.,Manor House Restaurant, 600Maple Trace Drive, Learn aboutdownsizing and what to dowhen a move is on the horizon.Free lunch and tours of campus.For seniors. Free. Reservationsrecommended. 513-782-2715.Springdale.

Support GroupsMotherless Daughters Sup-port Group, 7 p.m.-8:30 p.m.,Montgomery CommunityChurch, 11251MontgomeryRoad, For adult women whohave lost or miss nurturing careof their mother. Free. Presentedby Motherless Daughters Minis-try. 513-489-0892.Montgomery.Codependents Anonymous, 7p.m.-8 p.m., The Community ofthe Good Shepherd, 8815 E.Kemper Road, Room 31. Litera-ture discussion group. Free,donations accepted. 513-800-0164.Montgomery.Codependents Anonymous,noon-1 p.m., Blue Ash Presby-terian Church, 4309 CooperRoad, Youth room. Big book/discussion meeting. Brown baglunch optional. Open to every-one who desires healthy lovingrelationships. Donations accept-ed. 513-673-0174; www.co-da.org. Blue Ash.Caregivers Support Group, 7p.m.-8:30 p.m., St. MichaelChurch of Sharonville, 11144Spinner Ave., Ministries Room.To support caregivers of elderlyor disabled parents (relatives).Ages 18 and up. Free. Regis-tration required. 513-929-4483.Sharonville.

FRIDAY, APRIL 25Art EventsPhotography Travel Series,7:30 p.m. Topic: Arizona: Can-yons, Mesas and Ruins withMike Rank., SharonWoods,11450 Lebanon Road, Free,vehicle permit required. 513-521-7275; www.greatparks.org.Sharonville.

Exercise ClassesSmall Group Personal Train-ing, 9:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m., Fitness

Physiques by Nico G, 9681 Ken-wood Road, Session coverschallenges in strength, stability,balance, core and metabolictraining. Ages 18 and up. $115per month. Registration re-quired. 513-290-8217; www.fit-nessphysiques.net. Blue Ash.

ExhibitsAntique Quilt Exhibit, noon-4p.m., Heritage Village Museum,$2, $1 ages 5-11, free ages 4 andunder and members. 513-563-9484; www.heritagevillage-cincinnati.org. Sharonville.Vintage Base Ball, 10 a.m.-5p.m., Heritage Village Museum,$2, $1 ages 5-11; free ages 4 andunder and members. 513-563-9484. Sharonville.

Karaoke and OpenMicKaraokeWithWendell, 8 p.m.,DJ’s Sports Tavern, 380 Glenspr-ings Drive, Karaoke and danc-ing. Ages 18 and up. Free.513-771-0888; www.payneenter-tainment.com. Springdale.

On Stage - ComedyJoe List, 8 p.m. 10:30 p.m., GoBananas Comedy Club, $8-$14.513-984-9288; www.gobana-nascomedy.com.Montgomery.

ShoppingUsed Book Sale, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.,Maple Knoll Village, 11100Springfield Pike, Prices start at50 cents. Floral arts arrange-ments, hand-woven items madeby residents, cookbooks, collect-ibles and more. Free. Through

April 26. 513-782-2400. Spring-dale.Ladies Night Out Open HouseJewelry Making, 5 p.m.-9 p.m.,The Silver Diva, 9797 Montgo-mery Road, Suite F, Make per-sonalized piece of jewelry. Ages21 and up. Pay for what youmake. Registration required.513-873-4561; www.thesilverdi-va.com.Montgomery.

SATURDAY, APRIL 26Art & Craft ClassesAmerican Girls CelebrateSpring, 5 p.m.-8 p.m., TheCenter for the Arts - Wyoming,322 Wyoming Ave., lower level.Make accessories and art for andinspired by your American GirlDoll. Ages 6-13. $40. Regis-tration required. 513-948-1900.Wyoming.

AuditionsOpen Auditions, 2 p.m.-3:30p.m., St. Paul Lutheran ChurchELCA, Free. 513-426-6504. Read-ing.

Cooking ClassesCulinary Journey: Escape toThe California Coast, 6 p.m.-9p.m., Glendalia Boutique Hotel,11 Village Square, $69. Reserva-tions required. 513-376-9645.Glendale.

ExhibitsVintage Base Ball, 10 a.m.-5p.m., Heritage Village Museum,$2, $1 ages 5-11; free ages 4 andunder and members. 513-563-9484. Sharonville.Just what the Doctor Ordered,11 a.m.-3 p.m., Glendale Heri-tage Museum, 44 VillageSquare, Glendale train depot.Collection of images, artifactsand stories that tells history ofmedical care in Village of Glen-dale, and doctors and nurseswho practiced there. Array ofphoto montages, narratives andfirst-person accounts that weavestory of how residents andmedical community had littledefense against epidemics thatraged in 19th and well into 20thcentury. Free. 513-771-8722.Glendale.

Health / WellnessNational DEA Drug Take BackDay: Medication DisposalEvent, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Wal-greens, 8210 Winton Road,Parking lot. Properly dispose ofexpired, unwanted or unusedmedication for destruction. Free.513-729-1300; www.spring-fieldtwp.org. Springfield Town-ship.

Holiday - Mother’s DaySmallprint Trunk Show, 1p.m.-4 p.m., Little Lords & LadiesChildren’s Boutique, 7816 Coop-er Road, Capture child’s finger-print in fine silver. Choose fromwide range of pendants, charms,cuff links and key chains. Pricevaries upon order. Registrationrequired. 513-891-1569.Montgo-mery.

Music - R&BBasic Truth, 9 p.m.-11:30 p.m.,Shades of Blue, 10088 Spring-field Pike, Free before 8 p.m., $5until 9 p.m., $10 after 9 p.m.513-671-2583.Woodlawn.

On Stage - ComedyJoe List, 8 p.m. 10:30 p.m., GoBananas Comedy Club, $8-$14.513-984-9288; www.gobana-nascomedy.com.Montgomery.

ShoppingUsed Book Sale, 9:30 a.m.-2:30p.m., Maple Knoll Village, Free.513-782-2400. Springdale.

SUNDAY, APRIL 27Art & Craft ClassesMe andMy Doll Tea andJewelry Making, 1 p.m.-2:30p.m., The Silver Diva, 9797Montgomery Road, Suite F,Bring favorite doll and makehand-stamped personalizedbirthstone necklace or charmbracelet for yourself and amatching one for your doll.Ages 6-12. $30. Registrationrequired. 513-873-4561.Montgo-mery.

ExhibitsVintage Base Ball, 1 p.m.-5p.m., Heritage Village Museum,$2, $1 ages 5-11; free ages 4 andunder and members. 513-563-9484. Sharonville.

Music - Big BandWMKV 89.3 FM Big BandDance, 2 p.m.-5 p.m., MapleKnoll Village, 11100 SpringfieldPike, Includes snacks and softdrinks. $11. 513-782-2427.Springdale.

On Stage - ComedyJoe List, 8 p.m., Go BananasComedy Club, $8-$14. 513-984-9288; www.gobananascomedy-.com.Montgomery.

RecreationSharonville Classic Car Show,9 a.m.-3 p.m., Downtown Shar-onville, Creek and ReadingRoads, View antique and classiccars and motorcycles. Prizes andtrophies awarded in variousclasses. Barbecue, drinks, ham-burgers, ice cream and more.Music by DJ. Free. 513-554-1722;www.sharonvilleclassiccarshow-.com. Sharonville.

Religious - CommunityYomHashoah Commem-oration, 2 p.m.-3:30 p.m.,Mayerson JCC, 8485 Ridge Road,Commemoration of Shoahincludes candle lighting bysurvivors, prayer and programthat remembers lives lost duringHolocaust and honors livessaved. Free. 513-487-3055;www.holocaustandhuman-ity.org. Amberley Village.TheWay, The Truth and TheLife Seekers, 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m.,Hartzell United MethodistChurch, 8999 Applewood Drive,Guided in self-examination withfocus on understanding lan-guage of faith. Dessert anddrinks. Free. 513-891-8527, ext. 1.

Blue Ash.Bible Inspiration Time forTeens, 9 a.m.-10 a.m., HartzellUnited Methodist Church, 8999Applewood Drive, Free. 513-891-8527, ext. 1. Blue Ash.

Youth SportsPitch, Hit and Run, 1 p.m.-3p.m., Helwig Park, 9990 WintonRoad, Official skills competitionof Major League Baseball. Boysand girls, ages 7-14 compete inbaseball skills competition. Bringcopy of birth certificate. Free.513-522-1410; www.spring-fieldtwp.org. Springfield Town-ship.

MONDAY, APRIL 28Dance ClassesCardio Dance Party DanceFitness Class, 7 p.m.-8 p.m.,Wyoming Recreation Center,9940 Springfield Pike, Variety ofdance styles, including jazz,hip-hop, Latin, jive and moredanced to popular music. Ages18 and up. $7-$12. Reservationsrecommended. 513-617-9498;www.cardiodanceparty.com.Wyoming.Intro to Ballet and Jazz, 5:15p.m.-5:45 p.m., Cincinnati Danceand Movement Center, 880Compton Road, $10. Reserva-tions required. 513-521-8462.Springfield Township.

Exercise ClassesSmall Group Personal Train-ing, 9:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m., FitnessPhysiques by Nico G, $115 permonth. Registration required.513-290-8217; www.fitnessphysi-ques.net. Blue Ash.

TUESDAY, APRIL 29Art & Craft ClassesRings Rings and Rings: Per-sonalized Jewelry MakingClass, 7 p.m.-8:30 p.m., TheSilver Diva, 9797 MontgomeryRoad, Suite F, Learn how tohandstamp aluminum rings withyour personalization and bendthem into shape in your size.Family friendly. $40. Regis-tration required. 513-873-4561.Montgomery.

Cooking ClassesEveryday Gourmet: Bread101,6 p.m.-9 p.m., Glendalia Bou-tique Hotel, 11 Village Square,$48. Reservations required.513-376-9645. Glendale.

Dance ClassesMovingWithMommy/Danc-ingWith Daddy, 6:30 p.m.-7p.m., Cincinnati Dance andMovement Center, 880 ComptonRoad, Movement class for ages2-4. Adult participates withchild. $10, includes parent andchild. 513-521-8462. SpringfieldTownship.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

The Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park's Off the Hill series is coming to Sharonville Fine Arts Center at 2 p.m. Saturday, April26 and the Evendale Cultural Arts center at 7 p.m. Saturday, April 26, with its production of "The Short Tree and the Birdthat Could Not Sing." The play is recommended for ages 5 and up, and is a wacky fable of a friendship between a treethat resents its roots and a bird with a horrible singing voice. Contact the individuals sites for tickets and prices. Visitwww.cincyplay.com, or call 345-2242. THANKS TO TONY ARRASMITH

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

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

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

SM

5343 Hamilton Avenue • Cincinnati, OH 45224 • www.lec.org

Twin Towers, a Life Enriching Communities campus, is affiliated with the West OhioConference of the United Methodist Church and welcomes people of all faiths.

If you’re 50 or older, we invite you to become a member ofThe Connection, the fitness and wellness center at Twin Towers –the area’s leading senior living community. You don’t have to bea resident to enjoy a wide variety of amenities that include:

• 75-foot heated pool• Whirlpool• State-of-the-art fitness room

• Classes including Yoga,Zumba and more• Newly remodeled locker rooms

Call 513-853-4100 for a free workout!

Sign up for a membership by April 30thand we’ll waive the $50 registration fee.

Get connected toa healthier lifestyle.GGGGGGeeeeeetttttttt cccccoooonnnnnnnnnnneeeeeecccctttttteeeeeeddddddd ttttttooooooaaaaaaa hhhhhhhheeeeeeeaaaaaaalllllltttttthhhhhhhiiiiiiieeeeeerrrrrrr llllliiiiiffffffeeeeeessssttttttyyyyyyyyllllllleeeeeeee...Get connected toa healthier lifestyle.

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CE-0000579920

Page 13: Tri county press 042314

APRIL 23, 2014 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • B3LIFE

I was out working inmy herb garden yester-day when it dawned onme how much I appreci-ate the healing qualitiesof common culinaryherbs that I grow andwhich I use when teach-ing classes. In fact, I

can’t thinkof oneculinaryherb thatdoesn’t doa bodygood.

Whenyou knowhowhealthy anherb is foryou, you’ll

tend to use it more andappreciate its qualities.

Right now our gar-den stores have anabundance of herbswith good prices, so Ihope this column en-courages you to grow,and use more herbs.And get the kids in-volved, too. You will beamazed at how adven-turous they becomewith eating when theygrow their own herbs.

» Dill: Used through-out the ages as a reme-dy for babies’ colic, it’sa calming herb for di-gestion, and helps pro-mote sleep, due to itscalcium content. Dillseed oil is antibacterial,and chewing a fewseeds after a mealhelps digestion andfreshens breath.

» Fennel: A cousin todill, fennel has a mildlicorice flavor. It helpsfreshen breath, aidsdigestion, balances

appetite and relievesgas. The bonus is theswallowtail butterflyloves fennel so if yousee a tiger-stripedgreen and black cater-pillar on fennel, let italone and you’ll be re-warded with a beautifulpollinator to your gar-den.

» Chamomile: Re-member when PeterRabbit’s mom gave himchamomile tea after hehopped home from Mr.McGregor’s garden?Chamomile makes anapple-scented tea thathelps calm the nervesand soothes digestion.

» Peppermint: Wheneach of us nine kids lefthome, we were allowedsprigs of Mom’s heir-loom peppermint. Aninvasive perennialherb, grow it in a con-tainer if you don’t haveroom for it. Awesomefor colds and coughswith its high vitamin Ccontent, and also formuscle aches and ten-sion headaches. Plusit’s a great digestiveherb, as well.

» Thyme: Like anherbal medicine chest.Thyme’s volatile oil,thymol, has both anti-septic and antibacterialqualities. Thyme andsage tea relieves sorethroats. The best culi-nary thymes are thebushy/mounding ones,like French and Eng-lish. French, to my pal-ate, has a sweeter, lesspeppery flavor, thanEnglish.

» Rosemary: Thispiney tasting herb has

lots of antioxidants andmay help prevent somecancers. It is good forthe memory, too.

» Basil: Potassiumand iron, along witharomatherapy qual-ities, makes this herbso good. With its clove/licorice like flavor,sweet green basil is themost common basil.

Want to learn moreabout herbs and‘yardening?’

Join Ron Wilson andme at Jungle Jims Fair-field for a special class,including a Cinco deMayo menu preparedwith my favorite herbs,on May 5, 11 a.m. to 1:30pm. Cost is $50. Seatingis limited. Call 513-674-6059 or register onlineat junglejims.com/cooking school.

Also check Natorp’swebsite for my specialweekend appearancesat their Mason outletstore. I’ll be in the herbsection where I hope tosee you, along withyour favorite Commu-nity Press recipes andtips to share!

Easy manicottiThe string cheese

will melt faster if it’s atroom temperature be-fore stuffing. Kids loveto stuff the shells.

1 package, 8 oz, ma-nicotti shells

1 pound lean groundbeef

1/2 cup onion, finelydiced

1/2 teaspoon Italianseasoning

1 teaspoon mincedgarlic

Jar favorite pastasauce, about 30 oz. or so- I like Marinara

12-14 pieces of stringcheese

2-3 cups mozzarella,shredded

Sprinkling of Parme-san

Preheat oven to 350.Slightly undercook

manicotti. Lay on tray acouple inches apart.Spray a bit with cook-ing spray for easierhandling. Meanwhile,sauté beef, onion, sea-soning and garlic untilmeat is cooked. Drainand stir in pasta sauce.If making this withoutmeat, just stir season-ings into sauce. Spray9x13 pan. Spread somemeat sauce on bottom.Stuff a piece of stringcheese into each shell.Place over sauce. Pourrest of sauce overshells. Cover and bakeuntil cheese melts fair-ly well, about 30 min-utes or so. Sprinklewith mozzarella cheese.Bake, uncovered, about10 more minutes oruntil cheese melts.Serve with Parmesan.

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is anherbalist, educator, JungleJim’s Eastgate culinary pro-fessional and author. Find herblog online atAbouteating.com. Email herat [email protected] with“Rita’s kitchen” in the subjectline. Call 513-248-7130, ext.356.

Culinary herbs do a body good

RitaHeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

Rita Heikenfeld chooses healing herbs and flowers fromher garden. THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

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Page 14: Tri county press 042314

B4 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014 LIFE

More than 200 middle schoolstudents visited the MayersonJCC for an educational demon-stration by the Koresh DanceCompany in partnership with theContemporary Dance Theater.

Performers from the Philadel-phia-based troupe taught the chil-dren about a wide range of dancestyles, from ballet and modern tojazz and hip hop. The demonstra-tion included an explanation of ba-sic moves from each style and aperformance highlighting therich, diverse history of dance. Stu-dents also were encouraged to en-gage with the dancers during aquestion andanswer session at theend of the performance.

The P&G Fund of the GreaterCincinnati Foundation providedthe grant that enabled the JCC toengage the Koresh Dance Compa-ny to create this unique enrich-ment opportunity. The JCC deliv-ered a significant cultural experi-ence to students from NativitySchool and the Academy of WorldLanguages.

“I am so pleased that we wereable to share this performancewith children from our surround-ingcommunity,” saidMarcFisher,CEO of the Mayerson JCC. “Ademonstration from the KoreshDance Company is a rare and in-valuable educational tool.”

Ronen Koresh founded the Ko-resh Dance Company in 1991 andcontinues to serveas its artisticdi-rector. He draws inspiration fromhis Israeli heritage, aswell as ava-riety of other genres and culturaltraditions. This blending of back-grounds distinguishes the dancetroupe, resulting in a poignant andvaried body of work. The studentshow was preceded by a lectureand demonstration at the JCC theprior evening, and the companygave a full performance at theAronoff Center for the Arts.

Koresh Dance Company performs at Mayerson JCC

Members of the Koresh Dance Company perform at Mayerson JCC.

Students watch the Koresh Dance Company perform at Mayerson JCC.PROVIDED

ArtWorks’ business de-velopment program forcreative entrepreneurshasanewnameandan im-proved curriculum.

ArtWorks Spring-Board has officially be-come CO.STARTERS.The enhanced nine-weekcourse leverages a cus-tomer-driven businessmodel basedonLeanStar-tup methodologies.

CO.STARTERS walksaspiring and seasoned en-trepreneurs through thelean business modelingmethods used by high-growth startups in a sim-ple and intuitive way.Rather than treating asmall business likea largecorporation and writing adetailed business plan,program participants areencouraged to build andtest smallmodels first. As

a result, the entrepre-neurs receive real-timecustomer feedback, up-date their models to meetcustomer needs and avoidbuilding a business basedon incorrect assumptions.

ArtWorkswill continueto rely on support fromthelocalbusinesscommu-nity to share their exper-tise with CO.STARTERSparticipants. More than70 professionals andsmall business ownersfrom Cincinnati area ac-counting firms, lawfirms,financing institutions andbranding agencies active-ly volunteer their time asguest presenters.

Course participantsalso receive the benefit ofa small class as enroll-ment is limited to nomorethan15 entrepreneurs persession.

CO.STARTERS is nowrolling out in other com-munities across the na-tion, providing past Art-Works SpringBoard grad-uates and future CO.S-TARTERS entrepreneurswith a national network ofsupport and exchange.

CO.STARTERS is of-fered through ArtWorksCreative Enterprise divi-sion,whichtrainsandpro-motes creative entrepre-neurs through education,mentorships, access tocapital and communityconnections.

To learn more, get in-volved or to apply for anArtWorks CO.STARTERSsession, visitArtWorksCincinnati.org.To learnmore aboutCO.S-TARTERS’ nationwidenetwork, visitcostarters.co.

ArtWorks’ SpringBoard programevolves into CO.STARTERS

The Cincinnati Play-house in the Park’s pro-duction of “The ShortTree and the Bird thatCould Not Sing,” by Den-nis Foon, will perform atthe Evendale CulturalArts Center at 7 p.m. Sat-urday, April 26.

The show is open to thepublic. There is no chargefor admission and is ap-propriate for ages 5 andup.Theevent ispartof the“Family, Food & A Play”series, so pack a picnicdinner and arrive at 6 pm.Stay after for dessert.Please call 563-2247 to re-serve your spot.

Adapted from Foon’spicture book of the samename, the play follows the

bird and tree’s relation-ship as it builds aroundthe joys of music, story-telling, the weather andthe stars. The two friendsmust navigate the ups anddowns of getting to knowoneanother,growingclos-er and suddenly findingthemselves apart.

Meggy Hai Trang,ChelseaD.Harrison, RicoReid, Sam Rueff, ShaynaSchmidt and Britian Seib-ert of the Playhouse’sBruce E. Coyle Acting In-ternCompanywill appearin the production, direct-ed by Lutwak.

Settings range fromthe forest and the sky tothe beach and the swamp,so bringing this story to

life is no easy task. Ittakes teamwork to createthe many characters andscenes in the play, includ-ing the bird and the shorttree, a boa constrictor,two lumber jacks, a seriesof balloons, an alligator, atourist, a circus lady, theNorth Wind and a verytoothy fish, amongothers.

The Evendale CulturalArts Center is located at10500 Reading Road.

For more information,call theEvendaleCulturalArts Center at 513-563-1350 or email [email protected] orvisit us online at www.e-vendalearts.org.

Evendale hosts ‘Off the Hill’

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(513) 475-8000UCHealth.com

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Page 15: Tri county press 042314

APRIL 23, 2014 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • B5LIFE

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This is real food for babies.Homemade is our inspiration.Just real, whole fruits and vegetablesare inside our jars. And nothing else.

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Page 16: Tri county press 042314

B6 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014 LIFE

Church by theWoods

The church buildingis the home of fourdifferent ministries.Church By the Woods isa multicultural andmulti-ethnic churchwhose mission is tolove and serve God,each other and ourneighbors. Sundayworship service is tra-ditional in English andbegins at 10 a.m. From10 a.m. to noon Sat-urdays, classes in Eng-lish as a Second Lan-guage are offered forages 14 to 94.

Taiwanese Presby-terian Ministry hasSunday traditionalworship at 2 p.m. intheir language of Tai-wanese. On Saturdaysthey offer a ministryon the UC campus.

Freedom Church hasits contemporary wor-ship service at 10:30a.m. in English. “It’sNot About Religion; It’s

About Relationships;”tinyurl.com/a7yroqe.

Seventh Day Ad-ventist Church, hasworship on Saturdaysat 10 a.m. in Spanish.“Loving, Caring, Shar-ing God’s Word”

The church is at3755 Cornell Road,Sharonville.

Sharonville UnitedMethodist Church

The church offersthree services: tradi-tional services at 8:15a.m. and 11 a.m. with acontemporary serviceat 9:30 a.m. There areSunday school classesand study groups at9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.and various studycourses.

Plans are underwayfor Vacation BibleSchool. There will be agathering from 9 a.m.to noon on Saturdays inthe choir room to de-sign, build and paintthe main set.

The Easter offeringthis year will be splitbetween the preschoolplayground and theFreeStore FoodBank.

The spaghetti dinnerfundraiser will be May7. The proceeds fromthe dinner will be usedfor the summer Mis-sion trip to Atlanta.

Registration forVacation Bible Schoolbegan April 6.

Healing Heartsmeets for lunch on thefirst Thursday of eachmonth.

Serendipity Seniorsmeet for lunch on thefourth Thursday.

Visitors are wel-come at all servicesand events.

The church is at 1751Creek Road, Sharon-ville; 563-0117;sharonville-umc.org.

RELIGION

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COMING SUNDAY,APRIL 27

CE-0000590441

United Methodist Church10507 “Old” Colerain Ave

(513) 385-7883Rev. Mark Reuter

Christ, the Prince of Peace

Sunday School 9:15amWorship 10:30am - Nursery Available

www.cpopumc.org“Small enough to know you, Big enough to care”

UNITED METHODIST

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

Faith Lutheran LCMC8265 Winton Rd.,

Finneytownwww.faithcinci.org

Contemporary Service 9amTraditional Service 11:00am

LUTHERAN

Christ Church Glendale Episcopal Church965 Forest Ave - 771-1544

[email protected] Reverend Roger L Foote

8am Holy Eucharist I9am Holy Eucharist II11am Holy Eucharist II

Child Care 9-12

EPISCOPAL

Wyoming Baptist Church(A Church For All Seasons)

Burns and Waverly AvenuesCincinnati OH 45215

821.8430Steve Cummins, Senior PastorSunday School..............................9:00 amCoffee & Fellowship...................10:00 amPraise & Worship........................10:30 amwww.wyomingbc.homestead.com

Visitors Welcome!

SHARON BAPTISTCHURCH

4451 Fields Ertel RoadCincinnati, OH 45241

(513) [email protected]

ServicesSunday School - 10:00 amSunday Morning - 11:00 amSunday Evening - 6:00 pmWednesday - 7:00 pm EveningPrayer and Bible Study

BAPTIST

FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH8580 Cheviot Rd., ColerainTwp741-7017 www.ourfbc.comGary Jackson, Senior Pastor

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

Active Youth, College, Senior GroupsExciting Music Dept, Deaf Ministry, Nursery

INDEPENDENT BAPTIST

VINEYARD CHURCHNORTHWEST

Colerain TownshipThree Weekend Services

Saturday - 5:30 pmSunday - 9:30 & 11:15 am

9165 Round Top Road1/4 mile south of Northgate Mall513-385-4888 µ www.vcnw.org

HIGHVIEW CHRISTIANCHURCH

“Life on Purpose in Community”2651 Adams Rd. (near Pippin)

Worship Assembly-Sunday 10:45amPhone 825-9553

www.highviewchristianchurch.com

NON-DENOMINATIONAL

Sharonville United Methodist8:15 & 11amTraditional Service & Kingdom Kids

9:30am Adult & Children’s Sunday School7:00pmWednesday, Small Groups for all agesInfant care available for all services3751 Creek Rd. 513-563-0117www.sharonville-umc.org

Mt HealthyUnited Methodist ChurchCorner of Compton and Perry Streets

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

Traditional Worship 10:00 - 11:00amContemporary Gathering: Bible &

Conversation 11:30 - 12:30Nursery Available Handicap Access"Come as a guest. Leave as a friend".

Monfort HeightsUnited Methodist Church

3682 West Fork Rd , west of North BendTraditional Worship 8:30 & 11:00am

Contemporary Worhip 9:45amNursery Available * Sunday School513-481-8699 * www. mhumc.org

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

CHURCH OF THE SAVIOUR8005 Pfeiffer Rd. Montgomery 791-3142

www.cos-umc.orgChildren’s Musical

9:40 & 11:00 amTraditional Worship 8:20 am

Contemporary Worship 9:40 amSunday School (All ages)

9:40 & 11amNursery Care Provided

Dr. Cathy Johns, Senior Pastor

UNITED METHODIST

CE-1001637197-01

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

Phone: 385-9077Rev. Michelle Torigian

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

Nursery Available/Handicap Accesswww.stpaulucccolerain.org

www.facebook.com/StPaulUCC

FLEMING ROADUnited Church of Christ691 Fleming Rd 522-2780

Rev Pat McKinneySunday School - All Ages - 9:15am

Sunday Worship - 10:30amNursery Provided

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST

Northwest CommunityChurch

8735 Cheviot Rd, by Colerain HSRev. Kevin Murphy, Pastor

513-385-8973Worship and Sunday School 10AMHandicap Accessible/Nursery Available

Salem White Oak Presbyterian

Northminster Presbyterian Church703 Compton Rd., Finneytown 931-0243Growing Faith, Sharing Hope, Showing Love

Sunday Worship ScheduleTraditional Services: 8:00 & 10:15am

Contemporary Services: 9:00 & 11:30amStudent Cafe: 10:15amChildcare Available

Jeff Hosmer, Rich Jones &Nancy Ross- Zimmerman - Pastors

PRESBYTERIAN

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 RdOffice: 2192 Springdale Rd

542-9025Visitors Welcome www.eccfellowship.org

At CHURCH BY THEWOODS

www.churchbythewoods.org3755 Cornell Rd.,

Sharonville , Ohio 45241You have a choice of Ministry:

1 . Traditional Sunday Worship at10:00 AM. Language: EnglishMulti-cultural, multi-generational, andmulti-ethnic.2 . Contemporary Sunday Worshipwith Freedom Church at 10:30 AM.Language: English

It’s not about Religion; it’s aboutrelationships!

www.freedomchurchcincinnati.com3. Taiwanese Traditional SundayWorship st 2:00 PM. Language:Taiwanese, UC Campus Fellowship onSaturdays,

www.cincinnatitaiwanese.org4 . Seventh Day Adventist SaturdayWorship at 10:00 AM.Language: Spanish

Loving - Caring - and SharingGod’s Word

Notes: Nursery School isprovided at each Worship time

English as a Second Language (ESL) istaught on Saturday 10-12 AM.

Various Bible Studies are available.

EVANGELICAL PRESBYTERIAN

Page 17: Tri county press 042314

APRIL 23, 2014 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • B7LIFE

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Page 18: Tri county press 042314

B8 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014 LIFE

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GLENDALEArrests/citationsMichael West, 43, 12090 Brook-way, Cincinnati, warrant fromSpringdale Mayor’s Court, April10.Justin Powers, 31, 829 Ohio Pike,Cincinnati, operating a motorvehiclewithout a valid licenseand warrant from HamiltonCounty Municipal Court, April14.Khadijah Rashid, 27, 5373 Blos-som St., Hamilton, two warrantsfrom the Glendale Mayor’sCourt, April 14.

Incidents/investigationsAttempt theft100 block of West Fountain;attempt to remove windowpanes from a detached garage;homeowner will board over the

windows to prevent furtherattempts, April 11.Property damage100 block of Annadale; damagedone to interior of vacantresidence; spray painting doneto wall and carpets; cabinetdoor and rear kitchen doordamaged; no estimate ondamages; two suspects havebeen identified; investigationongoing; April 12.Theft100 block of Annadale; wheel-barrow taken from in front ofresidence; the wheelbarrowhad been filled with yard waste;Rumpke did not take thewheelbarrow; property valuedat approximately $50; investiga-tion ongoing; April 16.

SHARONVILLEArrests/citationsAnne Fierst, 73, 11628 ChauceryLane, operating vehicle im-paired, April 6.Joseph Barry, 34, 6199 CreeksideWay, operating vehicle im-paired, April 4.AndrewWalker, 22, 11492 Lin-colnshire, drug trafficking, April6.Matthew Hernschemerer, 33,6480 Dawson, operating vehicleimpaired, April 1.Alexis Henneke, 21, 4020Wood-thrush, drug paraphernalia,April 5.Ali Scruggs, 34, 1268 Rosemont,drug abuse, April 5.Juvenile male, 13, disorderlyconduct, April 1.Raphaol Ball, 29, 11391 Lincoln-shire Drive, domestic violence,

April 3.Kijumm Pebb, 28, 443 McgregorAve., theft, April 2.Chad Smith, 39, 14 Mapleview,drug paraphernalia, April 2.Chad Smith, 39, 14 Mapleview,possession of drug parapheran-lia, April 2.Brian Hollingsworth, 40, 76Williamsburg Lane, domesticviolence, April 1.Thomas Schaible, 26, 6709Deerview Drive, drug parapher-nalia, April 3.Chad Smith, 39, 14 Mapleview,improper handling of firearm,April 2.Incidents/investigationsAggravatedmenacingVictim reported at 3400 block ofEast Kemper, April 3.AssaultVictim struck at 200 block ofVikingWay, April 14. BurglaryResidence entered and stereoand clothing valued at $920removed at 11000 block ofChester Road, March 31.DomesticVictim reported at Main Street,March 30.Victim reported at Fortney, April6.TheftCell phone of unknown valueremoved at 11000 block ofChester Road, April 1.$325 removed at 2300 block ofSharon Road, March 30.Trailer valued at $3,000 removedat 12000 block of ChampionWay, March 29.Reported at 12000 block ofChampionWay, March 26.

SPRINGDALEArrests/citationsBrian Smith, 19, 12020 BrookstonDrive, assault, April 6.Juvenile male, 17, assault, April 6.Juvenile male, 17, assault, April 6.Ryan Reese, 18, 55 Fawn Drive,assault, April 6.Christopher Henderson, 17, 10112Hunter Court, theft, April 5.Devin Zeisler, 22, 3586 Brook-haven Drive, abduction, April 6.Robyn Heyne, 27, 437 StateStreet, theft, April 5.Juvenile male, 13, robbery, April5.Juvenile male, 13, theft, April 5.Juvenile male, 16, disorderlyconduct, resisting arrest, April 4.

Juvenile male, 13, robbery, April4.Bart Taylor, 19, 116 Melanie Lane,theft, April 4.Andrea Hunter, 26, 603 Dew-drop, driving under the influ-ence, April 4.Charles Dunn, 22, 800 KemperRoad, domestic violence, April3.Dewayne Duke, 17, 2811 Burke-hart Ave., theft, March 31.Roderico Allen, 17, 7264 ReadingRoad, theft, March 31.Kelsi Holden, 21, 6 HorizaonCourt, drug abuse, March 31.Josh Fletcher, 27, 328 CameronRoad, possession drug par-aphernlia, March 31.Ayesha Copeland, 31, 261Mcmicken Ave., theft, March29.

Incidents/investigationsAggravated robberyVictim struck and $700 in cashand a phone removed fromvictim at 1300 block of Chester-dale Court, April 2.AssaultVictim struck at 11000 block ofLawnview, April 4.BurglaryResidence entered and itemsvalued at $1,390 removed at2700 block of Kenilworth,March 31.Criminal damagingReported at 400 block of Camer-on Road, April 4.DomesticReported at Lake Circle, April 4.Reported at 12000 block ofLawnview, April 1.Domestic violenceVictim reported at Glensprings,April 2.Passing bad checksVictim reported at 600 block ofKemper Commons, April 1.Sex offenseVictim reported at 11000 block ofVancamp Lane, April 4.Theft$500 removed at 500 block ofSmiley, April 4.Reported at 11700 PrincetonPike, April 3.$600 removed from apartmentat 1300 block of ChesterdaleCourt, April 2.Bike valued at $200 removed at12000 block of Lawnview, April1.

POLICE REPORTS

ABOUT POLICE REPORTSThe Community Press publishes the names of all adults

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

» Evendale, Chief Niel Korte, 563-2249.» Glendale, Chief Dave Warman, 771-7645 or 771-7882.» Sharonville, Chief Aaron Blasky, 563-1147.» Springdale, Chief Mike Mathis, 346-5790.»Wyoming, Chief Gary J. Baldauf, 821-0141.

Page 19: Tri county press 042314

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Purses 4 A Purpose an-nounces its next fundrais-er and beneficiary.

This year’s Purses 4 aPurpose event will be 6p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday,June 19, at The Club atHarper’s Point tennis andracquet club at 8675 E.Kemper Road in Montgo-mery. Doors open at 5:15p.m.

“We chose The AubreyRose Foundation becausethey are very passionateabout what they do andthey fill ahugeneed,” saidJulea Schuh, Founder ofPurses 4 A Purpose. TheMission of The AubreyRoseFoundation is to helpfamilies caring for chil-drenwith life-threatening

illnesses by providingemotional and financialsupport. The charity wasfounded in thememory ofNancy and Jerry Hollen-kamp’s daughter, AubreyRose, who passed away in2000 just before her 3rdbirthday.

To learn more about

TheAubreyRoseFounda-tion visit their websitewww.aubreyrose.org.

“This event adds awhole new element to ourLadiesNightOuteventwedo every year. Our volun-teers and supporters arecollectinghandbags aswespeak. Everyone loves

handbags. This will be agreat event for AubreyRose Foundation,” saidNancy Hollenkamp, foun-der of the foundation andmother to Aubrey Rose.

Advance tickets are$40 and can be purchasedon the Aubrey Rose Foun-dation website.

Those who purchasetickets in advance by no

later than 11 p.m. May 19will enter a special draw-ing to be able to “pre-shopand “pre-buy” at theevent. If tickets still re-main they will be $50 atthe door the evening ofthe event. Tickets includeappetizers, two drinktickets and a “swag bag”full of goodies.

To donate your new or

gently used designer, de-signer inspired or trendyhandbag, email:[email protected] and arrangea pick up. Designateddrop off points are TheClub at Harper’s Point(8675 E. Kemper Road,Montgomery) or at theAubrey Rose Foundationoffice (3862 Race Road).

Purses 4 a Purpose June 19 at Harper’s Point

This year's Purses 4 a Purpose event, benefiting the AubreyRose Foundation, will be 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday, June19, at The Club at Harper's Point tennis and racquet club at8675 E. Kemper Road in Montgomery. PROVIDED

Page 20: Tri county press 042314

B10 • TRI-COUNTY PRESS • APRIL 23, 2014 LIFE

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2012DODGECHALLENGERSXTPLUS

Orange,V6, Leather,A/C,Sunroof,ChromeWheels

2011 TOYOTACAMRYSE #E8039 .............................................................$17,482Barcelona Red, Rear Spoiler, Sunroof, Alum. Whls, Very Sharp2011 CADILLACCTS LUXURY #E8038 ......................................................$22,988Black, V6, Rear Camera, Alloy Wheels, Sunroof, Low Miles2014 FORD FIESTA #E8026 ........................................................................$15,988SE, Auto, A/C, 5K Miles, Like New2011 JEEPGRANDCHEROKEE #E8024 ....................................................$21,988Laredo, 4x4, V6, Auto, A/C, Pwr Windows, Pwr Locks2011NISSANSENTRASL #E8034 ............................................................$13,488Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Sunroof, Rear Spoiler, Leather2007 BUICK LUCERNE #E8027 ..................................................................$10,988Burgundy, V6, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Low Miles2006 SCIONTCCOUPE .........................................................................$10,988Blue, Auto, A/C, Sunroof, Sporty

Sale Price $11,988

2008MITSUBISHIECLIPSE

Black,Sunroof,Alum.Wheels,Auto,A/C

#E8001 #D8069

Over 100 Clean Used Vehicles In Stock!

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