20
L OVELAND L OVELAND HERALD 75¢ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Your Community Press newspaper serving Loveland, Miami Township, Symmes Township Vol. 97 No. 23 © 2015 The Community Press ALL RIGHTS RESERVED News .......................... 248-8600 Retail advertising .............. 768-8404 Classified advertising ......... 242-4000 Delivery ........................ 576-8240 See page A2 for additional information Contact us Loveland City Schools is in- corporating more technology and collaborative work into school days throughout the dis- trict. “It is not just about teaching our students facts anymore, it is about getting them to ask pow- erful questions. We are prepar- ing our students for a future that is really a big question. We don’t know exactly where we are going, but we do know we need our students to be thinking differently about getting there,” Director of Technology David Knapp said. The district has bought 1,600 Chromebooks that are being used by students, Knapp said. The funds for the Chromebooks were generated by the 5.6-mill levy the district passed in 2014. The Chromebooks are being used in grades three to 12; 242 Android tablets are being used in per-kindergarten to second- grade, and 32 Chromebase desktops are being used to Loveland Primary School. “Over a seven-day period over 1,500 of our devices are be- ing used. This is a number we are all very happy with. These devices were new for most of the teachers and students. Just in the last six months, we have seen an instant spike,” Knapp said. The district’s Chromebook usage has increased 333 per- cent and with 2,100 weekly us- ers on Google Drive, which is the Google version of Microsoft Office. The district has also created three instructional technology coaches positions for Susan Craig, Laura Holtkamp and Bri- an Conaster. The three coaches LCS making Chromebooks part of school day Marika Lee [email protected] MARIKA LEE/ THE COMMUNITY PRESS Loveland Director of Technology David Knapp prepares the district’s 1,600 chromebooks before the start of school in August. By October, the district technology usage has increased by 333 percent. David Knapp See TECH, Page 3A When Brian Forschner be- gan researching his family tree, he didn’t expect to uproot a hun- dred-year-old murder mystery. Not just one - the rape and mur- der of his grandfather’s sister - but multiple murders of young girls in Cincinnati and Dayton during early 1900. Motivated to stay active in retirement after more than 25 years running retirement com- munities, Forschner began searching the roots of his fam- ily. That led him down a path to becoming the “accidental au- thor” of his first book “Cold Se- rial - The Jack the Strangler Murders.” The book was offi- cially released Oct. 6. “I started looking into Mary Forschner and her story got truncated,” Forschner said. “Another girl, at the same time, was found in a cistern down- town; possibly before Mary died. Then one thing led to an- other and the story started writ- ing itself.” Suddenly Forschner found himself looking at murders of several little girls including his great-aunt Mary. Dayton police lumped them all together. Then research revealed connections to murders in Cumminsville and Spring Grove Cemetery. In- stead of relaxing at his home in Loveland, he was searching ar- chives for more information. “Then I was living in the li- braries between Cincinnati and Dayton,” Forschner said. “Digi- tal photography made it all easi- er. Instead of pouring through things all day long, I’d take pho- tos of several volumes of news- papers, just take them home and read them.” Forschner has filed them all. The headlines and photos from more than 100 years ago are “kind of cool” to him. He gives away copies of them to help pro- mote the book. Hard-pressed to recall when he first knew it would be a book, he calls him- self the “accidental author” be- cause it developed so unexpect- edly. He talked about it with his wife, Joyce. Then Forschner took some online writing courses and writing groups where he met his editor. They ended up taking their com- ments offline. In those early days it was the editor who first said there was a book in it. That’s when he started writing it like a book, but struggled to tie it all together. “Then I came across an arti- cle by a crime reporter in the 1920s who made a reference to a guy,” Forschner said. “There was an unrelated crime. I went back and looked that up and boy everything just blew up. This guy was a predator for 10 or 15 years in Dayton.” Forschner began finding similarities to the typical serial killer. People came up missing clothing and jewelry. Girls were being snatched up from under- neath grandstands. He found stories about “this guy” running away, getting shot at, doing jail time and getting out again. That information tied it all together for him. It’s not a reach for Forschner Searching roots turns Loveland man into ‘accidental author’ Chuck Gibson [email protected] CHUCK GIBSON/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS “Accidental author” Brian Forschner displays his first book “Cold Serial - The Jack the Strangler Murders” during release day Tuesday, Oct. 6. ABOUT THE BOOK “Cold Serial” is now available online and at bookstores like: Amazon, Barnes and Noble, BAM, Powell’s, Chapters Indigo. More at: www.coldserial.com See AUTHOR, Page 3A APPLESHINE 7A A recipe Rita says is good for what ails you BALLOT PREP Find results from Tuesday’s election at http://cin.ci/1jfrmAt on Cincinnati.com OPEN HOUSE NOV 7 11 am-2 pm chca-oh.org Inspire & challenge your student to develop his or her one-of-a-kind gifts

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Page 1: Loveland herald 110415

LOVELANDLOVELANDHERALD 75¢

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2015 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Your Community Press newspaperserving Loveland, Miami Township,Symmes Township

Vol. 97 No. 23© 2015 The Community Press

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

See page A2 for additional information

Contact us

Loveland City Schools is in-corporating more technologyand collaborative work intoschool days throughout the dis-trict.

“It is not just about teachingour students facts anymore, it isabout getting them to ask pow-erful questions. We are prepar-ing our students for a futurethat is really a big question. Wedon’t know exactly where weare going, but we do know weneed our students to be thinkingdifferently about gettingthere,” Director of TechnologyDavid Knapp said.

The districthas bought 1,600Chromebooksthat are beingused by students,Knapp said. Thefunds for theChromebookswere generatedby the 5.6-mill

levy the district passed in 2014.The Chromebooks are beingused in grades three to 12; 242Android tablets are being usedin per-kindergarten to second-grade, and 32 Chromebasedesktops are being used toLoveland Primary School.

“Over a seven-day periodover 1,500 of our devices are be-

ing used. This is a number weare all very happy with. Thesedevices were new for most ofthe teachers and students. Justin the last six months, we haveseen an instant spike,” Knappsaid.

The district’s Chromebookusage has increased 333 per-cent and with 2,100 weekly us-ers on Google Drive, which isthe Google version of MicrosoftOffice.

The district has also createdthree instructional technologycoaches positions for SusanCraig, Laura Holtkamp and Bri-an Conaster. The three coaches

LCS making Chromebooks part of school dayMarika [email protected]

MARIKA LEE/ THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Loveland Director of Technology David Knapp prepares the district’s 1,600chromebooks before the start of school in August. By October, the districttechnology usage has increased by 333 percent.

David Knapp

See TECH, Page 3A

When Brian Forschner be-gan researching his family tree,he didn’t expect to uproot a hun-dred-year-old murder mystery.Not just one - the rape and mur-der of his grandfather’s sister -but multiple murders of younggirls in Cincinnati and Daytonduring early 1900.

Motivated to stay active inretirement after more than 25years running retirement com-munities, Forschner begansearching the roots of his fam-ily. That led him down a path tobecoming the “accidental au-thor” of his first book “Cold Se-rial - The Jack the StranglerMurders.” The book was offi-cially released Oct. 6.

“I started looking into MaryForschner and her story gottruncated,” Forschner said.“Another girl, at the same time,was found in a cistern down-town; possibly before Marydied. Then one thing led to an-other and the story started writ-ing itself.”

Suddenly Forschner foundhimself looking at murders ofseveral little girls including hisgreat-aunt Mary. Dayton policelumped them all together. Thenresearch revealed connectionsto murders in Cumminsvilleand Spring Grove Cemetery. In-stead of relaxing at his home inLoveland, he was searching ar-chives for more information.

“Then I was living in the li-braries between Cincinnati andDayton,” Forschner said. “Digi-tal photography made it all easi-er. Instead of pouring throughthings all day long, I’d take pho-tos of several volumes of news-papers, just take them homeand read them.”

Forschner has filed them all.The headlines and photos frommore than 100 years ago are“kind of cool” to him. He givesaway copies of them to help pro-mote the book. Hard-pressed torecall when he first knew itwould be a book, he calls him-self the “accidental author” be-cause it developed so unexpect-edly.

He talked about it with hiswife, Joyce. Then Forschnertook some online writingcourses and writing groupswhere he met his editor. Theyended up taking their com-ments offline. In those earlydays it was the editor who firstsaid there was a book in it.That’s when he started writingit like a book, but struggled totie it all together.

“Then I came across an arti-cle by a crime reporter in the

1920s who made a reference to aguy,” Forschner said. “Therewas an unrelated crime. I wentback and looked that up and boyeverything just blew up. Thisguy was a predator for 10 or 15years in Dayton.”

Forschner began findingsimilarities to the typical serialkiller. People came up missingclothing and jewelry. Girls werebeing snatched up from under-neath grandstands. He foundstories about “this guy” running

away, getting shot at, doing jailtime and getting out again. Thatinformation tied it all togetherfor him.

It’s not a reach for Forschner

Searching roots turns Lovelandman into ‘accidental author’

Chuck [email protected]

CHUCK GIBSON/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

“Accidental author” Brian Forschner displays his first book “Cold Serial - The Jack the Strangler Murders” duringrelease day Tuesday, Oct. 6.

ABOUT THE BOOK“Cold Serial” is now available onlineand at bookstores like: Amazon,Barnes and Noble, BAM, Powell’s,Chapters Indigo.More at: www.coldserial.com

See AUTHOR, Page 3A

APPLESHINE7AA recipe Rita says is good for what ails you

BALLOTPREPFind results from Tuesday’selection athttp://cin.ci/1jfrmAt onCincinnati.com

OPEN HOUSE NOV 7 11 am-2 pm chca-oh.org

Inspire & challenge your student to develop his or her one-of-a-kind gifts

Page 2: Loveland herald 110415

2A • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015 NEWS

LOVELANDHERALD

NewsRichard Maloney Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7134, [email protected] Marika Lee Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7577,[email protected] Sheila Vilvens Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7139, [email protected] SchroederReporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .768-6967, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . . .768-8512, [email protected] Scott Springer Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . .576-8255, [email protected]

Twitter: @sspringersports

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

[email protected]

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

Circulation Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .248-7110, [email protected] Pam McAlister District Manager. . . . . . . . .248-7136, [email protected]

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

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

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

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

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

Index

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Aspiring artists orthose looking for a funevening out have onemore option availablewith the opening of theI.C.I. Studio.

Located in DuffySquare near the Inter-state 275 exit ramp atMontgomery Road, thestudio offers a variety ofclasses for the hobbyists,aspiring artists, groupsand individuals. Ownerand artist JacquelineRohner of Montgomerysaid she’s looking forwardto bringing her “authen-tic” approach to teaching.

I.C.I. stands for Imag-ine, Create, Inspire and isat 10754 MontgomeryRoad.

Rohner has been draw-ing and painting since shewas 5. A health issue kepther indoors, which al-lowed her to dedicate timeat an early age to developher natural talent, shesaid. She received herbachelor’s of art in artwith an emphasis on stu-dio illustration from theDepartment of Art andDesign at Morehead StateUniversity.

Her interests and pro-fessional experienceshave involved both thecreative and performingarts. This backgroundprepared her for openingher own studio.

The I.C.I. Studio offersPaint & Sip classes, birth-

day and private parties,I.C.I. Kids classes, privatepainting and drawing les-sons, open drawing ses-sions and creative coach-ing. The Paint & Sip classis for individuals 18 andup, Rohner said. Howev-er, exceptions will bemade for 16- and 17-year-olds accompanied by a re-

sponsible adult. Partici-pants of this class canbring a beverage of theirchoice, including adultbeverages if 21 and over,and light snacks.

The I.C.I Kids classesare for children ages 7-9and 10-12. Rohner saidchildren of all skill levelsare welcome.

“I.C.I Studio truly rep-resents my passion andaccomplishes my dreamof being able to bring arteducation and entertain-ment to the community,”Rohner said. “I look for-ward to meeting, teachingand entertaining people ofall ages and of all levels ofexperience.”

Studio has something for all agesSheila [email protected]

THANKS TO JACQUELINE ROHNER

Jacqueline Rohner of Montgomery is holding the grand opening of her I.C.I Studio Sept. 19with a special paint and sip class.

Time to nominate‘Neighbors WhoCare’

Just as your family hasits holiday traditions, theLoveland Herald has atradition of which wewant you to be a part.

Every year, in our edi-tion between Christmas

brought you food duringan illness, or looked afteryour house while youwere gone, or clearedyour driveway duringsnow, or helped pick updebris after a storm – ormaybe they just provide afriendly face, or listenwhen you need to talk tosomeone.

No matter how theydisplay it, we want to rec-ognize them.

Email nominations [email protected], with “Neigh-bors Who Care” in the sub-ject line. Tell us a littleabout them, and includeyour name, communityand contact information,as well as theirs.

Veterans inputsought

In recognition of Veter-an’s Day, the CommunityPress is asking veteransof foreign wars to offeradvice to those startingtheir military careers, aswell as current militarypolicy. What was the mostimportant lesson youlearned in combat? Howcan we better support vet-erans after they arehome? One is the onething you would do less ormore? Send your respons-

and New Year’s, we salutelocal people who show usevery day what its meansto be a good neighbor.

We call it NeighborsWho Care, and we needyour help.

If you know someonewho regularly embodiesthe spirit of NeighborsWho Care – maybe they

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Page 3: Loveland herald 110415

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to investigate, solve andthen write a true crimemurder story. He beganhis long social servicescareer as a parole officer,probation officer; he ranhalfway houses andtaught crime at the Uni-versity of Dayton. In de-veloping the story of thefive girls murdered be-tween 1900 and 1909 — in-

cluding his great-auntMary — Forschner putsthe reader right at thescene of the crimes. Hisnarrative draws you intothe lives of the victims,the discovery of their bod-ies, the grief of the family,and through the investiga-tion, accusations, arrests,politics, reporting andeven trials.

Forschner set out totell the stories of thesegirls, to remember them,and to restore the dignityhe feels they deserve. He

was fascinated by theirstories and hopes readersare fascinated too. Maybean “accidental author,”but in “Cold Serial” hispowerful twist provides asurprise ending possiblyrevealing the nation’sfirst ever serial killer.

“I wanted to wrap thestory up with a bang,”Forschner said. “It justlent itself to that. It wasthe way to end it. Every-body who reviewed it didnot see that coming.”

AuthorContinued from Page 1A

and Knapp help teachersthink of new ways to in-corporate technologyinto the school day andinto lesson plans.

Craig works withteachers at the LovelandEarly Childhood Center,Loveland PrimarySchool and Loveland Ele-mentary School. She hashelped teachers and stu-dents learn to use appson the tablets that trackbasic math and readingskills.

Holtkamp, who workswith teachers at theLoveland IntermediateSchool/Loveland MiddleSchool campus, said shehas worked with an Eng-lish class where studentsare creating online playlists to show character

development in the novelthey are reading.

Conaster, who workswith teachers at Love-land High School, said hehas helped the foreignlanguage classes createonline portfolios.

“Google docs allowfor instant feedbackfrom teachers, havingstudents work togetherand we don’t need toprint, so it cuts down oncosts. This is a directionthe chromebooks allowus to go,” Knapp said.

School board studentrepresentatives seniorScott Kendrick and ju-nior Aniliese Deal bothshared experiences ofhow using Google docsmade working on papersin English class easier.

“Multiple times whenwe are editing an essaysin English we have usedGoogle docs to commenton each others’ papers

instead of having to re-sort to handing our paperover and then comingback the next class andgetting the comments,”Kendrick said.

Knapp said the dis-trict has about 1,800 de-vices and has reached a1:2.5 device to student ra-tio.

“So often nowadayswe are hearing about a 1:1ratio, where every stu-dent has a device. Wehave to be planning forthat environment atsome point and we aregetting closer to that,”Knapp said.

Want to know moreabout what is happeningin the Loveland CitySchools? Follow MarikaLee on Twitter:@ReporterMarika

TechContinued from Page 1A

es to [email protected].

Woman’s Club cardparty Nov. 18

If you are planning onattending the LovelandWoman’s Club annualcard party, you need to getyour tickets soon. Accord-ing to Laurie Gordon, co-chairman with Pat Furter-er, there are only a fewtickets left.

The event is scheduledfor noon Wednesday, Nov.18, at the Loveland Pres-byterian Church, 360 Rob-in Ave. Tickets are $12each and can be reservedby calling Gordon at 683-7760.

In addition to cards,

there will be lunch, 45-50baskets available for araffle including a $100Money Tree, 10 to 20 itemsin a silent auction as wellas a wine pull at $5 per bot-tle.

This is the group’s larg-est money raiser of theyear and all proceeds goto scholarships for stu-dents from Loveland areaschools. Last year the clubawarded two scholarshipstotaling $3,000. The goalthis year is to raise $4,000and offer an additionalscholarship.

Assisting with theevent is the Ways andMeans Committee whichincludes Vona Bales,Joyce Baron, K. Buckler,Laurie Gordon, MildredJones, Tammi Sandersand Carol Williams.

BRIEFLY

Continued from Page 2A

Page 4: Loveland herald 110415

4A • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015 NEWS

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Loveland High SchoolSenior Dean Parkerdreams of making theleap into the world of pro-fessional movie making.

He took one giant steptoward that leap with the“World Premiere” of hiscomedy short entitled

“No Love in Loveland”playing on the big screenin the Loveland HighSchool Auditorium.

More than 200 peoplewere on hand to watch thepremiere of the 12-minuteshort film written, direct-ed, and produced by Park-er during summer break.He cast his high schoolclassmates Matt Trues-

dell, Austin Bota, ErinWilmanns and Cami DeV-ille to star in the shortcomedy. The story was in-spired by the dating woesalmost any teen faces as ahigh school freshman.The comic portrayal ofthat stressful situation re-veals some of the creativemind of Parker at work.

Parker’s creativity and

budding film making tal-ent has earned “No Lovein Loveland” a selectionthat was screened in theprestigious 2015 AllAmerican High SchoolFilm Festival in New YorkCity in October. Followingthe “World Premiere”screening at LovelandHigh School, in typicalHollywood style, Parkerand his cast of classmatestook the stage for a ques-tion-and-answer sessionwith the audience.

Parker revealed hishopes to continue filmmaking as a professionalin the future. The actorscredited experience onstage with the LovelandShow Choir and some ex-perience in school musi-cal and drama produc-tions. None said they hopeto pursue acting as a full-time career choice. Allsaid they had fun workingwith Parker despite longhours filming in the hotsun which resulted in sun-burns for cast and crew.

There were even doorprizes awarded to fivelucky attendees of thepremiere showing ofParker’s film. Five of thefilm’s promotional post-ers featuring autographsof the director and four-member cast were givenaway at the close of theevening. Parker thankedfamily, friends, teachers,and the Loveland HighSchool for their supportand use of the school audi-

torium in the making andshowing of “No Love inLoveland.”

The entire film can beseen online at: https://vi-meo.com/deanparker

More about the AllAmerican High SchoolFilm Festival at: http://www.hsfilmfest.com/

LHS student premieres film headed for NYCChuck [email protected]

PHOTOS BY CHUCK GIBSON FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

“No Love in Loveland” writer, director and producer Dean Parker joined the cast Matt Truesdell,Austin Bota, Erin Wilmanns and Cami DeVille for a Q&A on stage following the premiere.

Promotional poster for “No Love in Loveland” a short filmcomedy by Loveland High School senior Dean Parker.

More than 200 people came out for the “World Premiere” of“No Love in Loveland” on the big screen at Loveland HighSchool auditorium Sunday, Sept. 13.

Page 5: Loveland herald 110415

NOVEMBER 4, 2015 • LOVELAND HERALD • 5A

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

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

Loveland High School

» For one day the LovelandHigh School senior class joinedtogether to give back to thecommunity.

Wednesday, Oct. 14, studentsparticipated in the fourth annu-al Senior Service Day. The sen-ior class volunteered their ser-vices at 11 Loveland and Cincin-nati-area nonprofit agencies.

“This year the focus was onpreparing students to be in-volved in service for the rest oflives – college, if they select togo to college, and even beyondin corporate,” teacher and Sen-ior Service Day director BreSambuchino said. “So that waywe are setting students up to besuccessful with service in thefuture no matter where they goafter the Senior Service Day ex-perience.”

The day began at The OasisConference Center in Lovelandwith a special session on corpo-rate giving featuring guestspeaker Bob Bedilion, seniormarketing manager at Luxotti-ca, and marketing lead for One-Sight Vision Center in Rwanda.Students formed groups to visitassigned nonprofits which in-cluded Cincinnati Parks, Grail-ville, Granny’s Garden, Gree-nacres, Loveland Care Center,Matthew 25: Ministries, NewLife Furniture, QPR Training,SPCA – Cincinnati, Saint Fran-cis Seraph School and Saint Vin-cent de Paul Society.

“It’s a great way for us togive back to the community,”senior Kelsey Beckstedt saidwhile working to package platesdonated to New Life Furniture,a nonprofit agency that helpspeople transition out of home-lessness. “I think it’s a reallynice way to show that there aresimple ways that you can help abunch of people that you don’teven know.”

Students highlighted theirservice work in real time usingthe Twitter #TigerVision – al-lowing the community to be apart of the learning experience.

Loveland Primary School» Sitting in front of his class,

Loveland Primary School stu-dent Phillip Rider was a modelfirefighter, literally.

The first-grader was nearlyhidden in layers of firefightingequipment, as he demonstratedthe uniform firefighters wearwhen working. The LovelandFire Department made the classpossible, volunteering theirtime Tuesday, Oct. 6, to presenta lesson in fire safety.

“This is exactly the type ofcommunity interaction our stu-dents can benefit tremendouslyfrom,” Principal Kevin Fanchersaid. “It is powerful for studentslike Phillip to be in the presenceof professionals who they lookup to, and get to hear such an im-portant safety message. We aregrateful to the firefighters formaking this class happen.”

In addition to the uniform,students also had the opportuni-ty to see a fire truck up close.

Loveland Schools» Loveland Early Childhood

Center, Loveland PrimarySchool and Loveland Elemen-tary School are now part of aFarm Fresh cafeteria programthat will take place each Fridayat lunch.

“Farm Fresh Fridays allowus to serve fresh vegetablesfrom Granny’s Garden once aweek,” said Kris Tracy, districtfood service coordinator. “Wewill incorporate fresh toma-toes, pepper and roasted pota-toes each Friday in addition toour daily menu for the remain-der of October.”

LECC, LPS and LES studentsalso celebrated The GreatLakes Great Apple Crunch DayOct. 22 with other schools inOhio, Indiana, Michigan, Illi-

nois, Wisconsin and Minnesota –consecutively offering local ap-ples in the cafeteria.

“We are always looking forways to partner with our localfarmers and increase our freshofferings to students,” Tracysaid. “These two programs pre-sented a perfect opportunity tomake this happen.”

» The Loveland City SchoolDistrict salutes the 24 studentsfrom Loveland Early ChildhoodCenter, Loveland PrimarySchool, Loveland ElementarySchool, Loveland IntermediateSchool, Loveland Middle Schooland Loveland High School whowere formally recognized Tues-day, Oct. 13, as part of the MyVoice, My Choice Campaign.

“My Voice, My Choice hasone primary focus – creatingand maintaining a positiveschool climate for all of our stu-dents,” Loveland Superinten-

dent Chad Hilliker said. “Spe-cifically, we are calling on ourentire student population tostand up for their peers throughboth their words and actions,and this group has exemplifiedthis call to action.”

Each student received a cer-tificate and a My Voice, MyChoice shirt.

The students recognized: LECC - Brady Carr, Madeline

Coe, Owen Mayer and LukeZicka.

Loveland Primary - HaileyNichols, Paige Sowder, BradyStidham and Ronan Wolfer.

Loveland Elementary -Avery Boland, Ryan Faesslerand Will Ramsey.

Loveland Intermediate - Pey-ton Chronister, Owen Kist, An-nabel Schamel, Meghan Smithand Kate Watson.

Loveland Middle School - Te-ri Clark, Max Flanders, Bella

McIntyre and Benjamin Wen-ger.

Loveland High School - JaredFrees, Olivia Henderson, Dan-iel Hopkins and Tarah Wagner.

St. Ursula Academy» When Saint Ursula Acad-

emy students Erin Smith, of An-derson Township, and GretchenShisler, of Landen, heard aboutthe number of homeless youthin the Cincinnati area, theyknew they had to take actionand bring awareness to this is-sue. Now, thanks to their part-nership with Lighthouse YouthServices, other high school stu-dents across the region have away to get involved.

Gretchen first learned ofLighthouse Youth Serviceswhile talking to her mother, asocial worker, about issues af-fecting teenagers in the Cincin-nati area. Her mother suggest-ed that she learn more aboutLYS so Gretchen and her friend,Erin, asked Dana Saxton, volun-teer and community involve-ment manager for LYS, to speakto a class at Saint Ursula. FromSaxton’s talk, students learnedthat each year, there are ap-proximately 4,200 children andteenagers sleeping on thestreets of Hamilton County.From that talk, an idea wasborn.

Gretchen and Erin decidedto host a clothing drive to bene-fit LYS and the response fromSaint Ursula Academy studentswas tremendous. There wasenough interest in the organiza-tion that the students proposedthe creation of a Student Advi-sory Council, which would planadditional events in the futureto benefit LYS. Students fromWalnut Hills High School, With-row High School and PurcellMarion are invited to the firstmeeting later this month to be-gin planning events throughoutthe school year. Other schoolswill be invited to participateonce events and dates havebeen determined. Events may

include clothing drives, per-sonal care drives, volunteeringat the Lighthouse warehouse,and food drives.

Gretchen is happy that shecan be a small part of bringingawareness to a huge problemfacing children and teens today.“I wanted to find a meaningfulway to volunteer and give backto my community. LighthouseYouth Services really struck achord with me because it helpschildren and teenagers – and Ilove children.”

At Saint Ursula Academy,students are encouraged to“build a better world.” StudentsGretchen Shisler and ErinSmith are living this mission asthey strive to bring a greaterawareness about teens in thearea suffering from homeless-ness.

» Several students were rec-ognized by the National MeritScholarship Corporation for2015-2016. Five seniors earnedhonors as National Merit semi-finalists, eight are NationalMerit Commended Students,and two were honored in the Na-tional Merit Hispanic Recogni-tion Program.

The semifinalists finished inthe top 1 percent of students na-tionwide who took that PSATexam as juniors. These aca-demically talented high schoolseniors will continue in the com-petition. They are among 16,000semifinalists who will have anopportunity to compete nextspring for 7,400 Merit Scholar-ship awards worth more than$32-million. Finalists will be no-tified in February and NationalMerit Scholarships will be of-fered in March 2016.

The semifinalists are: AnnaFeldkamp of Anderson Town-ship, Emma Maliborski ofGreen Township, Maria Raca-dio of Madeira, Shelby Schwarzof Hyde Park and Gabrielle Sil-vestri of Liberty Township.

The Commended Studentsare: Rachel Fagan of Loveland,Karly Hofman of Delhi Town-ship, Maureen Owens of Ander-son Township, Emma Reginelliof Montgomery, Elisa Russell ofPierce Township, CathrynSchoeppner of Price Hill, Mar-garet Schroeder of Cleves andCaroline Spurr of Indian Hill.

Students recognized by theNational Merit Hispanic Recog-nition Program are Rachel Fa-gan of Loveland and Elisa Rus-sell of Pierce Township.

“Our students choose SaintUrsula Academy for its consis-tent high standard of academicexcellence knowing the curri-culum and co-curricular activ-ities are designed to unlock thepotential in each one of them;academically, socially and spiri-tually. We are very proud ofthese students and of their hardwork to meet their academicgoals,” Principal Craig Malibor-ski said.

St. Ursula Academy teachersand students work together toparticipate in an educationalprocess that promotes criticalthinking, problem solving tech-niques, and higher level think-ing. All are necessary elementsfor success on the PSAT test,which determines those chosenfor the National Merit Programin all of the categories.

St. Vincent Ferrer» Sharks were spotted at St.

Vincent Ferrer in Kenwood. Eighth-graders dissected

dogfish sharks in science class.They examined the outer anato-my and then made incisions tothe sharks to open them and ex-amine their internal anatomy.They studied their internalstructures and what part eachorgan plays for the sharks, aswell as which fins were respon-sible for speed, buoyancy, etc...

According to teacher TraceyVicknair, they did a “fabulousjob!”

SCHOOLS NOTEBOOK

THANKS TO HEATHER HIGDON

Loveland seniors gathered at the end of Senior Service Day to pose for agroup photo at Greenacres, where they worked on a Prairie RestorationProject requiring them to transport, prep, and plant 5,000 native prairieplants at the environmental education site.

THANKS TO HEATHER HIGDON

Loveland Primary School first-grade student Phillip Rider wears a LovelandFirefighter uniform as part of a fire safety presentation.

PROVIDED

St. Vincent Ferrer eighth-gradersdissect a dogfish shark. From front:Ben Lohmeuller (Reading), JackAshmore (Loveland), MichaelBishop (Deer Park), Holland Faller(Silverton), Jack Berlage(Sharonville), Matthew Merritt(Deer Park), Elena Schreiber(Finneytown), Leo Rainey(Evendale), Shania Pressley(Silverton), Olivia Riggs (Indian Hill),Sydney Jacobs (Reading), teacherTracey Vicknair (Mason), ChristianHarris (Silverton) and MimwahWatkins. (Hartwell), GonzaloAndaluz (Sharonville), ThomasSieder (Evendale), JaWaun Binford(Roselawn).

PROVIDED

Some of the dogfish sharksdissected by St. Vincent Ferrerstudents.

THANKS TO HEATHER HIGDON

Loveland students from Loveland Early Childhood Center, Loveland PrimarySchool, Loveland Elementary School, Loveland Intermediate School,Loveland Middle School and Loveland High School gathered to berecognized during a girls varsity soccer game for promoting a culture ofkindness.

PROVIDED

St. Ursula Academy students who earned recognition from the NationalMerit Scholarship Program are, from left: front row, Maria Racadio, EmmaMaliborski, Gabrielle Silvestri, Shelby Schwarz, Margaret Schroeder,Cathryn Schoeppner and Maureen Owens; back row, Emma Reginelli,Rachel Fagan, Anna Feldkamp, Caroline Spurr, Elisa Russell and KarlyHofman.

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6A • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015

THURSDAY, NOV. 5Art & Craft ClassesFundamentals of Drawingand Painting for Adults withMary Lou Holt, 9:30 a.m. to12:30 p.m., Woman’s Art ClubCultural Center, 6980 CambridgeAve., The Barn. Learn line draw-ing techniques, basic eye/handcoordination and how to identi-fy positive and negative shapes.Light, shadow, tonal values andperspective taught using simpleshapes. Ages 18 and up. $220.226-3833; www.artatthebar-n.org. Mariemont.

Art ExhibitsGregg Litchfield: Watercolorand Digital Art Photography,9 a.m. to 6 p.m., River HillsChristian Church, 6300 PriceRoad, Exhibit continues throughNov. 29. Free. 677-7600. Love-land.

Cooking ClassesFestive Southern Dishes forthe Holiday with MarilynHarris, 6:30-9 p.m., Cooks’Wares, 11344 MontgomeryRoad, Southern dishes suited forbusy schedules. $67. Reserva-tions required. 489-6400;www.cookswaresonline.com.Symmes Township.

EducationNovel Writing in Community:NaNoWriMo Meets WWf(a)C,7-9:30 p.m., Women Writing fora Change, 6906 Plainfield Road,National Novel Writing Month(NaNoWriMo) is motivationalmovement of writers working tocomplete novel draft in just 30days. Ages 18 and up. $90.Registration required. 272-1171;bit.ly/nanof15. Silverton.

Home & GardenDesigning Hot Kitchens andCool Baths, 6:30-8 p.m., Neal’sDesign Remodel, 7770 E. Kem-per Road, Project consultantsand designers discuss trends inkitchen and bath design. Lightfare provided. Ages 18 and up.Free. 489-7700; neals.com.Sharonville.

Music - JazzJazz Concert, 7-8:30 p.m., Syca-more Presbyterian Church, 11800Mason Road, 5 members ofCincinnati Contemporary JazzOrchestra perform standard andcontemporary musical selec-tions. Benefits Loveland Initia-tive. Free. 683-0254; www.syca-morechurch.org. SymmesTownship.

FRIDAY, NOV. 6Art ExhibitsGregg Litchfield: Watercolorand Digital Art Photography,9 a.m. to 6 p.m., River HillsChristian Church, Free. 677-7600.Loveland.

EducationFall SoulCollage Circle: Be-coming the Conscious Hero-ine of Your Journey, 10 a.m. to1:30 p.m., Women Writing for aChange, 6906 Plainfield Road,$179. Registration required.Through Nov. 20. 272-1171;bit.ly/sclg-fl15. Silverton.

Exercise ClassesYoga Teacher Training andWellness School, RYT 200,5:30-8 p.m., Yoga Fit Boutique,10776 Montgomery Road,Well-rounded Yoga AllianceApproved course will teach youhistory and philosophy, anato-my, Thai Yoga, Ashtanga, Hatha,Rocket, Jaba, and Restorativeyoga so you are prepared toteach whichever style resonates.Ages 13-99. $2300. Registrationrequired. 237-5330;www.want2gofit.com. Syca-more Township.

On Stage - TheaterChristmas Belles, 8 p.m., Wal-ton Creek Theater, 4101 WaltonCreek Road, Church Christmasprogram spins hilariously out ofcontrol. Through Nov. 22. $20,$15 students. Presented byMariemont Players Inc.. 684-1236; www.mariemontplay-ers.com. Columbia Township.

Jekyll and Hyde: The Musical,7:30-10 p.m., Loveland StageCompany Theatre, 111 S. 2nd St.,Theatre. Epic struggle betweengood and evil comes to life onstage with score of pop rockhits. Ages 18 and up. $18. Pur-chase tickets online at www.lo-velandstagecompany.org.Presented by Loveland StageCompany. Through Nov. 22.443-4572; www.lovelandstage-company.org. Loveland.

SATURDAY, NOV. 7Art ExhibitsGregg Litchfield: Watercolorand Digital Art Photography,9 a.m. to 6 p.m., River HillsChristian Church, Free. 677-7600.Loveland.

Peter Max: A Retrospective1960-2015, 6-9 p.m., KenwoodTowne Centre, 7875 Montgo-mery Road, Meet-the-artistreceptions on Nov. 7 from 7-9p.m. and Nov. 8 from 1-4 p.m.Artworks are on exhibition andavailable for acquisition. Reser-vations required. Presented byRoad Show Company. ThroughNov. 8. 866-900-6699;www.roadshowcompany.com.Kenwood.

Cooking ClassesHoliday Cookie Decoratingwith Janice Plummer, noon to2:30 p.m., Cooks’ Wares, 11344Montgomery Road, Learn todecorate cookies with a wowfactor. Master art of piping andflooding along with propertools to make artworks. $40.Reservations required. 489-6400;www.cookswaresonline.com.Symmes Township.

Dining Events240th Marine Corps BirthdayBall, 6-10 p.m., MontgomeryInn, 9440 Montgomery Road,Cash bar, split the pot andraffles. Benefits Marine CorpsLeague Montezuma Detach-ment No. 270. $35. Registrationrecommended. Presented byMarine Corps League Mon-tezuma Detachment No. 270.382-9082; www.mcldetach-ments.org/Det270.htm. Montgo-mery.

The Great Ohio Brew N’ Quewith Great Lakes BrewingCompany, 4 p.m. to midnight,Fifty West Brewing Company,7668 Wooster Pike, All you caneat BBQ bash with suggestedbeer pairings. Guests receive 8beer tickets redeemable to-wards any beer on tap. Livemusic and Q&A with brewmasters. Ages 21 and up. $40.Registration required. 834-8789;fiftywestbrew.com/brewn-que2015. Columbia Township.

Drink TastingsCincy Wine Wagon WineryTour, 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.,Maggiano’s Little Italy, 7875Montgomery Road, Bar atMaggiano’s. Meet at restaurant,then head to Valley Vineyards,Vinoklet and Henke Wineries.Approximately 5 hour tour.Wine and snacks at each loca-tion. Ages 21 and up. $75.Reservations required. Present-ed by Cincy Wine Wagon.258-7909. Sycamore Township.

Exercise ClassesYoga Teacher Training andWellness School, RYT 200, 9a.m. to 4 p.m., Yoga Fit Bou-tique, $2300. Registrationrequired. 237-5330;www.want2gofit.com. Syca-more Township.

Health / WellnessFriends and Family Fall Fest, 9a.m. to 1 p.m., TriHealth Fitnessand Health Pavilion, 6200 Pfeif-fer Road, Wellness events andpresentations, group fitnessclasses, screenings, chair mas-sages, food samples, kid activ-ities, photo opportunity withWho Dey, giveaways. Free.985-0900; www.trihealthpavil-ion.com. Montgomery.

Music - Concert SeriesLinton Music’s Peanut Butterand Jam Sessions: Brasstac-ular, 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m. 1 p.m.,Good Shepherd LutheranChurch Kenwood, 7701 Ken-wood Road, Meet members ofbrass family at this concert seriesfor children ages 2-6. $5 perperson or 4 for $15. Free agesunder 2. Presented by LintonPeanut Butter & Jam Sessions.381-6868; www.lintonmusic.org.Kenwood.

On Stage - TheaterChristmas Belles, 8 p.m., Wal-ton Creek Theater, $20, $15students. 684-1236; www.marie-

montplayers.com. ColumbiaTownship.

Jekyll and Hyde: The Musical,7:30-10 p.m., Loveland StageCompany Theatre, $18. Purchasetickets online at www.loveland-stagecompany.org. 443-4572;www.lovelandstagecompa-ny.org. Loveland.

RecreationHealth Fair, Family Fun Festand Open House, 10 a.m. to 4p.m., Cincinnati Sports Club,3950 Red Bank Road, Interactiveevents and engaging activitiesdesigned to help attendeesbecome engaged in activelifestyle. Free. 527-4000;www.cincinnatisportsclub.com.Fairfax.

Quiz Night, 7 p.m.-9:30 p.m.,Congregation Etz Chaim, 8100Cornell Dr., Test knowledge oftrivia, enjoy snacks and drinks,dessert buffet, split-the-pot andmore. Prizes for each member ofwinning table. Tables assignedat door. Singles and coupleswelcome. $20, $15 students.Reservations recommended.489-3399; [email protected]. Sycamore Township.

Runs / WalksFighting Hunger 5K, 8:30-11:30a.m., Matthew 25 Ministries,11060 Kenwood Road, Family-friendly race also kicks offFighting Hunger Food Drive.Benefits Matthew 25: Ministries.$25 preregistered adult. Regis-tration required. 793-6256;www.hunger5k.org. Blue Ash.

SchoolsCincinnati Hills ChristianAcademy Open House, 11 a.m.to 2 p.m., Cincinnati Hills Chris-tian Academy High School,11525 Snider Road, Learn howCHCA graduates students fullyprepared to succeed in collegeand beyond. Free. 247-9944;www.chca-oh.org. SycamoreTownship.

ShoppingSt. Columban Fair Trade Sale,10 a.m. to 4 p.m., St. ColumbanChurch, 894 Oakland Road,Parish Hall, enter lower levelbehind church. Unique items,gifts, jewelry, scarves, decor, fairtrade coffee and chocolateprovided by Ten ThousandVillages, a fair trade retailer.Benefits St. Leo Parish. Free.683-0105; www.stcolumban.org.Loveland.

Fabletics Grand Opening, 11a.m. to 2 p.m., Kenwood TowneCentre, 7875 Montgomery Road,Activewear brand co-foundedby Kate Hudson celebratesgrand opening party. Lightrefreshments, performances byacro yoga artists, and specialdiscounts. Free. Presented byFabletics. 745-9100. Kenwood.

Support GroupsDiabetes Conversation Maps,10 a.m. to noon, Duck CreekYMCA, 5040 Kingsley Drive,Small group discussions of Type2 diabetes led by Jan Kellogg,certified diabetes educator. Classlimited to 10 participants toencourage conversation andquestions. Free. Presented byJan Kellogg, RN, MEd,CDE.791-0626. Duck Creek.

SUNDAY, NOV. 8Art ExhibitsGregg Litchfield: Watercolorand Digital Art Photography,9 a.m. to 1 p.m., River HillsChristian Church, Free. 677-7600.Loveland.

Peter Max: A Retrospective1960-2015, 6-9 p.m., KenwoodTowne Centre, Reservationsrequired. 866-900-6699;www.roadshowcompany.com.Kenwood.

Dining EventsTurkey Dinner, 3-7 p.m., St.Margaret of Cortona Church,6000 Murray Road, Includeshome-cooked turkey and dress-ing with sides, choice of dessertsand coffee or tea. Combinationraffle and split-the-pot avail-able. Benefits St. Margaret St.John Parish. $9, $5 children.Reservations required. 271-0856;smsjparish.com. Madisonville.

Exercise ClassesYoga Teacher Training andWellness School, RYT 200, 9a.m. to 4 p.m., Yoga Fit Bou-tique, $2300. Registrationrequired. 237-5330;www.want2gofit.com. Syca-more Township.

Home & GardenWoodland Vistas LuxuryTownhomes Open House, 1-3p.m., Woodland Vistas LuxuryTownhomes, 5983 WoodlandLane, Tour contemporary fur-nished model by John HueberHomes. Free. 703-2353. EastEnd.

On Stage - TheaterChristmas Belles, 2 p.m., Wal-ton Creek Theater, $20, $15students. 684-1236; www.marie-montplayers.com. ColumbiaTownship.

Jekyll and Hyde: The Musical,3-5:30 p.m., Loveland StageCompany Theatre, $18. Purchasetickets online at www.loveland-stagecompany.org. 443-4572;www.lovelandstagecompa-ny.org. Loveland.

Youth SportsCincy Swish Basketall Train-ing, 5-8 p.m., Mariemont HighSchool, 1 Warrior Way, Maingym. Grades 2-4 boys and girls5-6 p.m., grades 5-6 boys andgirls 6-7 p.m., grades 7-8 boysand girls 7-8 p.m. Ages 2-8. $20.Registration recommended.Presented by Cincy Swish Basket-ball. Through Jan. 31. 484-0526;cincyswishbasketball.com.Mariemont.

MONDAY, NOV. 9Art & Craft ClassesArtivity: After School ArtClass, 4-5:30 p.m., Woman’s ArtClub Cultural Center, 6980Cambridge Ave., The Barn. DaveLaug instructs kids grades 2-4making wild art projects afterschool. Ideal for creative kidswanting more art time. Diverse,project-based enrichmentactivities include origami, crayonresist, pet portraits, mosaics,crazy sculpture, cartooning andmore. $105 for 9 weeks. Regis-tration required. 885-5284;www.artatthebarn.org. Marie-mont.

Exercise ClassesTai Chi-Qi Gong-Yoga class,5:30-7 p.m., Peachy’s HealthSmart, 7400 Montgomery Road,Tai chi is gentle and relaxingway to exercise and get inshape. Ages 18 and up. $12.PeachysHealthSmart.com.315-3943, ext. text only;www.peachyshealthsmart.com.Silverton.

Yoga for Teen Girls, 4-5 p.m.,Woman’s Art Club CulturalCenter, 6980 Cambridge Ave.,Great introduction for young

women grades 8-12 to explorewhat yoga has to offer. Bringown mat. No cell phones permit-ted. $80 for 8 weeks. Regis-tration required. 760-2552;karenjohnsyoga.com. Marie-mont.

Health / WellnessUC Health Mobile DiagnosticsMammography Screenings, 9a.m. to 1 p.m., UC Health Pri-mary Care, 9275 MontgomeryRoad, Cost varies by insurance.Financial assistance available tothose who qualify. Registrationrequired. Presented by UCHealth Mobile Diagnostics.585-8266. Montgomery.

Literary - LibrariesPreschool Storytime, 10-11a.m., Loveland Branch Library,649 Loveland-Madeira Road,Enjoy books, songs, activities,crafts and more, while buildingearly literacy skills. For pre-schoolers and their caregivers.Ages 3-6. Free. 369-4476;www.cincinnatilibrary.org.Loveland.

Toddler Storytime, 11 a.m. tonoon, Loveland Branch Library,649 Loveland-Madeira Road,Encourage emerging languageskills with books, rhymes, crafts,music and fun. For ages 18-36months. Free. 369-4476;www.cincinnatilibrary.org.Loveland.

Music - ClassicalLaredo, Kalichstein and theCavani String Quartet, 7:30p.m., Congregation Beth Adam,10001 Loveland-Madeira Road,$30, $10 students. Presented byLinton Music. 381-6868;www.lintonmusic.org. Loveland.

TUESDAY, NOV. 10Art & Craft ClassesArt Club: After-School Art

Class, 4-5:30 p.m., Woman’s ArtClub Cultural Center, 6980Cambridge Ave., The Barn. Kidsgrades 5-8 have fun exploringart and focusing on drawingand painting in 9-week classwith Dave Laug. $105 for 9weeks. Registration required.885-5284; www.artatthebar-n.org. Mariemont.

Art ExhibitsGregg Litchfield: Watercolorand Digital Art Photography,9 a.m. to 6 p.m., River HillsChristian Church, Free. 677-7600.Loveland.

Business MeetingsISACA Cincinnati MonthlyDinner Meeting, 5:30-8 p.m.,Montgomery Inn, 9440 Montgo-mery Road, $35, $30 members,$25 retired, $10 students. Reser-vations recommended. Present-ed by The Greater CincinnatiISACA. No phone; bit.ly/1LydeJ3.Montgomery.

Cooking ClassesCold Weather Comfort Soupswith Ilene Ross, noon to 1:30p.m., Cooks’ Wares, 11344Montgomery Road, Simple,hearty soups to satisfy body andsoul. $40. Reservations required.489-6400; www.cookswaresonli-ne.com. Symmes Township.

Health / WellnessUC Health Mobile DiagnosticsMammography Screenings, 9a.m. to 1 p.m., UC Blue AshCollege, 9555 Plainfield Road,Fifteen-minute screenings. Costvaries by insurance. Financialassistance available to thosewho qualify. Reservations rec-ommended. Presented by UCHealth Mobile Diagnostics.585-8266, ext. 1. Blue Ash.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

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

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

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

THANKS TO JIM TALKINGTON

Mariemont Players are performing “Christmas Belles,” at the Walton Creek Theater, 4101 WaltonCreek Road, Columbia Township. In this play, the church Christmas program spins hilariouslyout of control. The show is open Nov. 6-22. Tickets are $20, $15 students. Call 684-1236; visitwww.mariemontplayers.com. Pictured are Peter Merten as Dub Dubberly, Lauren Woodiwessas Honey Raye Futrelle, Chris Bishop as Raymond Chisum and Patrick Kramer as Justin Waverlyin Mariemont Players’ “Christmas Belles.”

PUZZLE ANSWERS

S P A R E M E J O B C U T S F A R G OW I R E T A P A R A L S E A A L E R TA N I M A L S A N C T U A R Y A L L O TG E D S L O N E F R E T G A P E

D E N T B A R B A R A B O X E RA S C I I F A U N A R A ND I L L S H A R D E N S W O R E A TA L E E S O R A S T H E R I O M R IP L A T E N U M B E R M A I L F R A U DT Y R P A S L E D O U T O Z M A

G A R A G E R I T E S L I S B O AR O S E H O A G I E A S I N N EC O M I C B O O K P R I O R A R R E S TA S U H E L P E D T E N G O O C H O

E D W A R D S O H I S E E M A H O NT I E C A C T I C R O W S

C L E A N A N D J E R K O F F SL O F T L I R A E T A L S M U TO R I O N C O P A C A B A N A B E A C HV A L U E E M E R I T A C R U E L L AE X E R T R E D A R M Y Y E S D E A R

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NOVEMBER 4, 2015 • LOVELAND HERALD • 7ANEWS

This week we had a bunch of “sickies” in our family. GranddaughterEllery came down with the croup and her sister, Emerson, had a mild form

of it. Son Shane had a sore throat and me, well, I caught avicious sinus infection.

My first line of defense for the little ones was a drink oflemon and honey. For Shane’s throat I suggested a salt gar-gle. As for me, I drank lots of ginger tea. But here’s thetwist. I was testing a recipe for apple pie liqueur, also knownas apple pie moonshine. Of course, testing means tasting, soyou know I just had to taste as I went along making it. Now Idon’t know if it was a combination of the ginger tea andapple pie moonshine liqueur, but I never recovered fromanything upper respiratory so darn quick!

I’m sharing the recipe for the liqueur. I understand chefson the East and West coasts are now using this liqueur as an

ingredient in mixed drinks. It’s so popular, and you can say you found itfirst here in our Community Press kitchen!

No kidding, it’s a wonderful drink to offer guests as they arrive. I like toheat it up and serve with a thin apple slice on top. Of course, it can alwaysbe used as a “potion” but don’t overdo! This makes a unique gift from thekitchen, as well.

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is an herbalist, educator, Jungle Jim’s Eastgateculinary professional and author. Find her blog online at Abouteating.com.Email her at [email protected] with “Rita’s kitchen” in thesubject line. Call 513-248-7130, ext. 356.

Really easy apple pie moonshine liqueur

I used organic juice and cider. Everclear ispotent liquor and my brand is made from corn,with a proof of 151! That’s why you don’t needmuch of it. Everclear lasts forever in the pantry.The liqueur is delicious warm or chilled.

4 cups apple juice4 cups apple cider1/2 cup sugar4 cinnamon sticks, 2” or so each, pounded3/4 cup Everclear liquor

Bring apple juice, cider, sugar, and cinna-mon sticks to a gentle boil and cook about 5minutes to allow cinnamon flavor to infuse.Let cool. Strain. Add Everclear and stir. Keep inrefrigerator. Serve warm in mugs with cinna-mon stick or apple slice.

Tip:Recipe can be divided in half, or doubled.

Bev Nye’s delicious bread stuffing

I had a fun chat with Bev recently. Lots of you will remember Beverly from herdays here in Cincinnati. She was the first to have a radio cooking show and appearedregularly on the Bob Braun TV show. Her books, including “A family raised on sun-shine” still sell well. That’s because what Beverly espoused years ago has come backaround big time. Like simple recipes for canning and preserving, and tips to help fam-ilies thrive together.

The recipe for this stuffing comes from that book and is for Lisa, who lost therecipe in a move. “It’s easy and our go-to stuffing for Thanksgiving”, Lisa said.

Bev lives near Salt Lake City now with her husband, Dick. And she’s still on the go,traveling every month with her husband to scenic places.

Melt 2 sticks margarineAdd and cook until transparent:3/4 cup chopped onion1-1/2 cups celery, chopped

Add:

12 cups bread cubes1 tablespoon salt1 teaspoon pepper1 tablespoon dry sage

Enough broth or hot water to moisten. Mix well. Makes enough for a 12# turkey.Bev said a couple of beaten eggs added give a nice texture.

Cure what ails ya’ withapple pie moonshine

THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

The recipe for apple pie moonshine includes both apple juice and apple cider.

Rita HeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

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8A • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015

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

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

LOVELANDHERALD

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

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

A publication of

Some parents may be won-dering “What’s with the red

ribbon my kidcame homefrom schoolwearing?”

They werecelebratingbeing drugfree duringNational RedRibbon Week.“What’s RedRibbon week?”you ask. Na-tional Red

Ribbon Week is the oldest andlargest drug prevention pro-gram in the nation, celebratedin schools and communitiesacross America every Oct.23-Oct. 31by an estimated 80million people. The mission ofthe Red Ribbon Campaign is to

present a unified and visiblecommitment towards the cre-ation of a drug-free America.

National Red Ribbon weekserves as a catalyst to mobilizecommunities to educate youthand encourage participation indrug prevention activities. Themost important drug preven-tion messages children receiveshould start at home. Did youknow that teenagers whoseparents talk to them on a reg-ular basis about the dangers ofdrug use are 42 percent lesslikely to use drugs than thosewhose parents don’t?

You may feel like your teenis tuning you out but, the truthis, they’re listening more thanyou think. In fact, parents havebeen shown to have an impor-tant and growing influencewhen it comes to teens’ use of

alcohol and other drugs. Par-ents’ influence related todrinking has increased signifi-cantly over the last 10 years.

In a recent survey 83 per-cent of 10- to 18-year-olds saidtheir parents were their lead-ing influence in their decisionsabout drinking. When it comesto alcohol and other drug use,having a teen who talks to youcan make a world of differ-ence. How can you make themost of your influence? Re-search has shown that parentswho are warm, understandingand open to negotiating fairlimits are most likely to raisesocially competent, respon-sible adolescents.

Teens who feel they can talkto their parents are more likelyto share important informationabout where they’re going,

what they’re doing and whothey’re with. As a parent, hav-ing this information helps youto supervise your teen effec-tively and decrease the riskthat they’ll develop problemswith alcohol and other drugs.When you keep the lines ofcommunication open, you’llalso have more opportunitiesto guide your teen and shareimportant information withthem.

If you are passionate aboutkeeping youth in ClermontCounty drug free, please con-sider joining the Coalition for aDrug Free Clermont County.For more information on theCoalition call Mary Wolff at735-8143.

Greater Cincinnati Behav-ioral Health Services is themost comprehensive mental

health provider in SouthwestOhio serving people with men-tal illness and related barriers.GCB is a fully certified, nation-ally accredited 501c3 nonprofitorganization with a mission toassist persons with mentalillness and related barriers tolead productive and fulfillinglives. www.gcbhs.com

Through proven programsdelivered by supportive anddedicated professionals, Cler-mont Recovery Center offers apath to wellness for the pre-vention of and recovery fromsubstance abuse and relatedissues for individuals and fam-ilies in our community;www.recoveryctr.org.

Melissa E. Kaetzel-Cole isprevention specialist/counselorfor Clermont Recovery Center.

Red Ribbon Week emphasizes family ties

Melissa E.Kaetzel-ColeCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Oct. 28 questionShould college education be

free? Why or why not?

“No, my generation had topay for college, why shouldn’tthis generation pay for col-lege? Of course, we didn’t havesuch a idiot for a president.“

Mary Ann Maloney

“There is no ‘free.’ Taxpay-ers would eat it. People don’tvalue what they get for freeeither. Make it easier to pay offloans perhaps. Best answer Ican give while texting anddriving!”

D.H.

“No education is ‘free.’ Tax-payers pay for public educa-tion in their community, andsome residents pay additional-ly to provide a private/parochi-al education for their children.I think a more appropriatequestion would be: ‘Should allchildren attend college?’ Taxrebates to parents’ providingtuition assistance to college,trade school, or intern/appren-tice programs are certainlyencouraging to the parentswho know the most about theirchildren’s abilities and motiva-tions. The only non-revocablegift a parent can give to a childis an education. Whether thatis formal or by personal effort,makes little difference in de-termining the child’s long termsatisfaction.

“Certainly, America needsthe best education facilitiespossible to compete in theworld. This is why the hugeinflux of non American stu-dents, sent here by their par-ents from other countries.Scholarships based on perfor-mance have been around avery long time. I needed themto avoid the out of state fees Iwould have incurred if myschool of choice did not offerme that option. I was fortunateto be able to find good jobswhile going to school to pay forthe rest.

“Today, the ‘debt is OK’mentality is far more perva-sive than the ‘if it feels good,do it’ mantra of the ‘60s. Bothcan have devastating conse-quences on one’s future anddreams. There are as manydeserving students and par-ents who cannot find the jobsneeded to pay for the costsnow commonplace in a collegeor university. Early savingswith exempt taxation forschool, is only good if there is

income. Failure to appreciateor desire an education by those‘sent to college’ is a signalthere are many avenues tosuccess that must be exploredto find a satisfying vocation.

“It is disheartening to methat I hear so many youngpeople who think that there is a‘right way’ to find your calling,or a sense of despair in a 20-something who feels theyshould know what they want todo for the rest of their life. Adesire to learn, throughout life,is what makes us human andprovides happiness. True, mycollege experience providedmore opportunity to have op-tions placed in front of me, thatlet me choose something notvaguely related to my degree.

“Willingness to work andobserve those areas of life thatinspire you is far more impor-tant than having something‘given’ to you for ‘free.’ Work-ing at something you reallydon’t want to do, whether incollege or labor, still providesopportunity for the seeingwhat is available and enjoy-able.”

D.B.

“I don’t think college shouldbe free, however it should notbe so expensive that a studentcomes out of school with ahuge debt.

“I realize colleges are com-peting for students and there-fore upgrading facilities to tryand attract more students.

“There seems to be such anupgrade in living facilities,dining options and extracurric-ular facilities that I imaginethat drives the price up.

“Back in the more moderatedays, a dorm was just a roomwith a bed and a desk and youknew you should basicallysleep there and just go to thelibrary or lab to study.

“Dining hall food wasn’tgreat, but there were enoughoptions that you weren’t going

to starve and you could alwayseat cereal even Cap’n Crunch.

“I know we can’t go back-ward, but the cost has becomeso prohibitive, even with twomiddle class parents working,putting a chunk of each pay-check away, debt still has to betaken on.

“Private colleges will al-ways charge what the marketwill bear. However if therewere some way to reign incosts of state schools it wouldgo a long way to allowing morestudents into college and in thelong run we would have a bet-ter educated population.

“The students coming outwould have more disposableincome for items like cars orhomes.

“It seems like a broaderrange of businesses wouldbenefit with lower collegecosts as opposed to just thebusiness of a college.”

C.S.

“College education is free inAlaska thanks to their oil vastoil reserves and low popula-tion. In other states a publiccollege education is availableto many via scholarships, gov-ernment loans and of coursetuition. College is not for ev-eryone and the entry ACT/SATrequirements should not belowered. There are so manyneeded skills that do not re-quire a college education. Plusa college education does notguarantee a good job anymore.There are enough governmententitlements If some one wantsa free college education theycan always move to Alaska fora while. Go Figure!”

T.D.T.

CH@TROOM

THIS WEEK’SQUESTIONWhy did you go the polls Nov. 3,or why did you stay home?What were the most importantissues and races in your commu-nity?

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

MEG VOGEL/THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Xavier University's class of 2015graduates, during a morningcommencement ceremony at theCintas Center.

As the chief financialofficer of the Loveland CitySchool District it is my privi-

lege to serveour TigerFamily byensuring ourteam pre-pares stu-dents fortomorrow,today whilemaintainingthe fiscalhealth of ouroperations.

I want you– our investor – to know thatit is of the utmost importanceto my team to operate in afiscally conservative manner.One tool we use to projectour financial future is calledthe five year forecast – andeach fall, by state law, it ispresented to the LovelandBoard of Education. At theOct. 20 board business meet-ing, I was pleased with thenews we had to deliver: fi-nancial stability.

Our five-year model pro-jects a cash balance thatoffers the district one-timefunds to make significantinvestments in areas thatwere deferred during therecession. This opportunity isthe outcome of projectedstate funding being morethan anticipated, and healthinsurance costs being less.

When the Board of Educa-tion approved the financialforecast in April, the primaryfunding scenarios availableshowed a concept of penaliz-ing higher-income districts.While we still will see a re-duction in state funding dueto our income wealth factor,to the advantage of the dis-trict, the budget that wasultimately approved in Julyhas offered an increased perpupil amount for Loveland.In addition, the state moneythat our district is guaran-teed to receive over time hasincreased.

Our positive projections

are due in part to voters inthe Loveland City SchoolDistrict passing a 5.6-milloperating levy in May 2014;passage of the levy providedour team an opportunity tocontinue the excellent educa-tion we provide to our stu-dents, and – as always – weoffer a sincere thank you tothose who supported andcontinue to support our dis-trict. With that gratitudecomes an assurance that wewill continue to manage ex-penditures:

» the addition of energyefficient initiatives savingmore than $400,000 per yearsince 2011;

» the district is savingmore than $250,000 due toparticipation in two insur-ance programs;

» the district has reducedstaffing cost by $692,000(over three years);

» the district has savedmore than $1.5 millionthrough new initiatives andcost saving measures (overthree years).

It was also during the 2014levy campaign that the dis-trict first informed you thebond millage would be re-duced from 3.34 mills to 1.75mills (effective calendaryear 2015). The HamiltonCounty Budget Commissionapproved this reduction. Thismeans that taxpayers livingin the district will see a re-duction of approximately $48per $100,000 of appraisedreal estate due to the retire-ment of district bonds, andthe reduction will be reflect-ed when taxes are due incalendar year 2016. We arepleased that this promisemade to you, our investors,has been fulfilled.

Should you have any spe-cific questions about ourdistrict finances, I encourageyou to contact me directly.My door is always open.

Brett Griffith is LovelandCity School District treasurerand chief financial officer.

Stable financialforecast – taxesscheduled to bereduced

BrettGriffithCOMMUNITY PRESSGUEST COLUMNIST

Page 9: Loveland herald 110415

Moeller defeated Lakota West 3-1at Sycamore Junior High School Oct.31. Senior Mick Hamilton scoredtwice for the Crusaders and juniorMatt Bugada also found the net. TheCrusaders play Beavercreek Nov. 4in the Division I regional soccer tour-nament.

Moeller wins district title

PHOTOS BY JIM OWENS/FOR THE ENQUIRER

Moeller midfielder Will Lonneman and Lakota West midfielder Walt Zeller battle for control Oct. 31

Moeller goalkeeper Sam Frohman makesa leaping save from an attempted headshot from Lakota West’s Jack Nguyen.

Moeller forward Michael Curry and LakotaWest defender Wesly Coleman attempt tocontrol the ball near the Lakota goal.

Moellermidfielder JonRickert passesthe ball to ateammate Oct.31 in Moeller’s3-1 win overLakota West.

NOVEMBER 4, 2015 • LOVELAND HERALD • 1B

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

BLUE ASH – Field hockeyhas been part of Ursuline Acad-emy junior Jillian Shive’s lifesince her grade-school years. Ifall goes accordingly, it will con-tinue to be when she attends col-lege after next year.

Shive picked up the game atneighborhood YMCAs when shewas living in Louisville. Shecontinued to play when her fam-ily moved to Australia.

“When I started playing atthe YMCAs, I didn’t know it wasthe path I was going to take,”Shive said. “It’s so huge over inAustralia and I just wanted tokeep trying it.”

After returning to the states,the call became stronger. Ofcourse, it didn’t hurt that herolder sister and her friendsplayed field hockey and Jillianwanted to be like them.

Lions coach Elli Workum metShive at a winter league tourna-ment after Shive moved to thearea.

“I eventually found out whoher dad was, I went over andstarted talking to him,” thecoach said. “He told me she wasin seventh grade. She was play-ing with high school kids.”

Shive, voted Oct. 29 as theEnquirer’s Preps Athlete of theWeek, has continued to excelnow that she’s in high school.She led the Southwest OhioField Hockey League in scoringlast year and ran away with thescoring title this year.

“It’s great to lead the leaguein scoring again,” Shive said. “Icouldn’t have done it withoutmy teammates.”

She posted big numbers inthe first playoff game againstSummit Country Day, scoringsix goals and adding two assists.In the win against Oakwood, shescored twice and added an as-sist.

Scoring at that clip can behard to do. Workum, who runsthe league and operates thewebsite, sees how other coachesvote for player of the year. Theother teams are well-versedwith Shive’s abilities.

It’s not uncommon for Shiveto have two defenders at her hipand still create offense.

“I have to do what I can,”Shive said. “I see it as a chal-lenge.”

It’s also not unusual for her tobe on a college visit. Whenevershe has a free weekend, she’svisiting the sprawling campus-es and seeing what colleges,that are interested in her, inter-est her.

She’s gotten more comfort-able with the process and talk-ing with college coaches, andoverall, has enjoyed it. Shiveadded there is plenty of skill na-tionwide that she’s also compet-ing against.

That helps keep her focusedon the present, which has beenWorkum’s message since thepostseason began.

NICK ROBBE/COMMUNITY PRESS

Ursuline junior Jillian Shive makes arun up the field against Oakwood.She scored twice in the victory.

Field hockeya way of lifefor Ursuline’sJillian Shive Nick [email protected]

See SHIVE, Page 2B

LOVELAND - After a 10-0start, the Loveland HighSchool girls soccer team hit alull in late September. In a littlemore than two weeks fromSept. 29-Oct. 13 the Lady Ti-gers dropped three of fourgames.

Fortunately, right beforethe tournament, Loveland girlsregained their stride. They fin-ished the regular season 12-3-1(5-2 Eastern Cincinnati Con-ference) and downed Hamil-ton and Sycamore of the Great-er Miami Conference in thefirst two rounds.

“We had some key injuriesto some key individuals,”Loveland coach Todd Kellysaid. “That stretch of time waswhen it was cold and rainy.Those teams on those givennights were better than wewere.”

Recently, Kelly has said histeam is playing some of its bestsoccer. Younger players havetaken over scoring roles

“Brice Grieshop has reallystepped up and Brooke Hardenhas done a really good job,”Kelly said. “We have a lot ofpeople contributing from ourseniors down to our lone fresh-man. Everyone has understoodand accepted their role.”

In the Division I district fi-nal at West Carrollton, Love-land defeated Beavercreek 2-1

on Oct. 29. Junior Rachel Ernstand sophomore Colleen Swiftscored the goals.

Part of Loveland’s successcomes from Kelly’s ability toplay some of his substitutesearly in the season when theteam was rolling. When inju-ries came, those players againgained valuable minutes. Go-ing into the tournament, theteam had spirited practices asthe team as a whole playedwith more confidence.

“The expectation is wheth-er you’re coming off the benchor starting, we have a level of

play that is expected,” Kellysaid.

Seniors on this year’s teamare Courtney Spicer, HannahFischer, Andrea Gomez,Amanda Sugrue and Ali Wha-len. During their time theyhave won more games thanany group in Kelly’s 21 years

coaching at the school. Fischeris a four-year starter, Spicer afour-year varsity player andGomez has been with Kelly forthree years.

“Those three have kind ofled the charge,” Kelly said.

Loveland girlskick it in fortournament

PHOTOS BY GEOFF BLANKENSHIP/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Loveland midfielder Courtney Spicer lifts a head pass in early action forthe Lady Tigers Oct. 22

Taylor Nuncio of Loveland passesthe ball with concentration for theOct. 22.

See SOCCER, Page 2B

Scott [email protected]

Page 10: Loveland herald 110415

2B • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015 LIFE

WALNUT HILLS –Along with Walnut HillsHigh School golf coachLarry Klein, Katie Halli-nan is becoming a fixtureat the Division I state golftournament at Ohio State.

For the second year ina row, the “Katie andKlein” show graced theBuckeye bunkers andfairways successfully. Asa freshman, Hallinan shot76-81 for 157 and tied for16th.

This year, with the abil-ity to send thunderousdrives 260-270 yards, Hal-linan shot 79-70 and fin-ished tied for second withJacinta Pikunas ofYoungstown Boardman.Both were just twostrokes behind statechampion Kellen Alsip ofSycamore.

“I knew the coursemore and I was definitelymore comfortable withmy swing,” Hallinan said.“I was more confidentthan last year.”

The Loveland residentrebounded from her 79Oct. 23, to shoot 70, thelowest score of the week-end the next day on OSU’sGray Course.

“It was probably mybest round of the year asfar as overall golf,” Halli-nan said.

Her best round, score-wise, came earlier thisyear at the Grizzly Courseat the Golf Center atKings Island with a 68.

In the Eastern Cincin-nati Conference, shemade dramatic improve-ments. In 2014, she aver-aged 40 per nine holes andshot 86 at the league tour-nament. This season, sheaveraged 36 and won the

ECC going away with a 70,14 strokes ahead of thenext best score.

Of course, a year ago,Hallinan was playing withthe Walnut Hills boysteam out of necessity. Hit-ting from their tees, shestill made ECC secondteam. Moving up this yearmade her league Player ofthe Year hands down.

“Playing from the girlstees this year, the courseswere a lot shorter,” Halli-nan said. “I could usewedges most of the time.”

Hallinan has playedwith Sycamore’s Alsip be-fore, but wasn’t pairedwith her over the week-end. The Lady Aves qual-ified as a team so Alsipwas grouped with herteammates.

Either way, withoutlive scoring neither girlknew where they were aton the leaderboard.

“You have no clue untilyou finish,” Hallinan said.“It’s pretty much out ofyour hands. The onlything you can really tellyourself is you have to dothe best you can. I wasreally feeling it on the lasthole. I was telling myself,‘Finish this out, it’s proba-bly you’re last tourna-ment of the year.’”

Next on the agenda forHallinan is a break fromsending Titleists into or-bit. She will continue topractice some, but will fo-cus on conditioning,stretching and some car-diovascular work.

She has played out-of-town tournaments in thepast like the Callaway Ju-nior Worlds in California,but will likely wait untilthe weather warms againin spring before taking onsome national events likethe Junior Amateur, the

Women’s Amateur or theU.S. Open qualifier inMay in Chicago.

Though just a sopho-more, there is also collegeto consider. In addition toa high ACT score, explo-siveness out of the tee box

is also a marketable skill.“I’ve been talking to

three or four coaches andhave visited a few placesto get on their radar,” Hal-linan said.

Confidence aided WalnutHills’ Hallinan to 2nd at stateScott [email protected]

ADAM BAUM/COMMUNITY PRESS

Walnut Hills sophomore Katie Hallinan finishes her swing atthe OHSAA Division I state tournament Oct. 23 at Ohio StateUniversity’s Gray Course.

Girls tournament soccer

» Loveland beat Sycamore 3-1 inthe Division I sectional final Oct. 26.Goals were scored by sophomoresTaylor Nuncio and Brice Grieshopand freshman Brooke Harden.

The Lady Tigers won a Division Idistrict title with a 2-1 win over Bea-vercreek Oct. 29. The victory putLoveland in the regional tournamentagainst Centerville Nov. 3 at LakotaEast. That game was after Commu-nity Press deadlines. For the scorego to www.cincinnati.com.

» Mount Notre Dame defeatedOak Hills 4-2 on penalty kicks in theDivision I sectional at Hamilton Oct.26 after the game ended tied 1-1.MND advanced to play Springboroin Centerville.

On Oct. 29, MND lost to Springbo-ro 2-1. The Cougars finished 12-2-3.

Boys tournament soccer» Moeller defeated Turpin in the

Division I sectional at Princeton Oct.27. The Crusaders won 3-1 on penal-ty kicks after the teams finished tied2-2. On Oct. 31, Moeller beat LakotaWest 3-1 for the district champion-ship. The Crusaders play Beaver-creek Nov. 4 at Monroe in the region-al tournament.

» Summit Country Day blankedPurcell Marian 6-0 in the Division IIIsectional final Oct. 26. Summitthumped Yellow Springs 7-0 Oct. 31to win the district championship.The Silver Knights play Greene-view 7 p.m. Nov. 4 at Lebanon juniorhigh school.

Football» Loveland finished the season

with a 55-14 victory over Milford.The Tigers won their last five gamesto finish 6-4 (5-2 ECC). Junior LukeWaddell ran for 218 yards and fourtouchdowns and senior Drew Plittthrew touchdown passes to Waddelland Michael Peters in the first quar-ter. Cameron Beck added an 80-yardinterception return.

» Moeller beat the Canada PrepAcademy of Ontario 50-10 on Oct. 30.Thomas MacVittie was 22-39 pass-ing for 306 yards and five touch-downs. Three of those went to seniortight end Jake Hausmann who had13 catches for 163 yards on the night.Moeller finishes 5-5 (1-2 GCL-South).

» Cincinnati Hills ChristianAcademy continued its roll, beatingNew Miami 54-6 Oct. 30. In DivisionV, CHCA (9-1) is the No. 2 seed andplays host to Richwood North Union(5-5) on Friday night.

Girls tournament volleyball» Mount Notre Dame beat Kings

Oct. 24 in the Division I tournamentat Ursuline, 25-15, 25-14, 25-7. TheCougars advanced to play Beaver-creek at Vandalia Butler.

On Oct. 31, MND beat Beaver-

creek for the Division I districtchampionship, 25-18, 25-11, 25-12.The Cougars move to regional actionagainst Lakota East Nov. 4 at LakotaWest High School.

» Ursuline defeated SycamoreOct. 26 in the Division I sectional fi-nals at Withrow 25-17, 25-11, 25-16.Ursuline defeated Centerville 25-12,25-21, 25-19 Oct. 31to win the districtchampionship. The Lions play St.Ursula 6 p.m. Nov. 4 at Lakota West.

Tournament field hockey» Mount Notre Dame lost in the

Division I district semifinals to Ket-tering Fairmont 1-0 Oct. 28.

Girls tournamentcross country

» Loveland’s Ashley Mays wasthe top finisher for the Lady Tigersin the Division I regional meet atTroy Oct. 31. Mays was 62nd of 125 in20:09.30. Kayla Hartzler was 65th in20:11.11.

» At the regional meet in TroyOct. 31, Ursuline finished eighth tomiss qualifying for the state meet.Jenna Murdock was the Lions’ topfinisher in 27th at 19:30.1.

» Cincinnati Hills ChristianAcademy junior Rachel Haslem fin-ished ninth at the regional meet inTroy Oct. 31, and will advance to thestate meet. She crossed the line in19:23.1.

Boys tournamentcross country

» Loveland’s Karl Mueller fin-ished 47th of 130 at the Division I re-gional meet at Troy Oct. 31 in16:58.28.

State water polo» The wait is over.It’s been five years since the re-

boot of St. Xavier’s water polo pro-gram, and coach Mike Robertsspoke about how good it was to endthe drought. However, it’s actuallybeen a lot longer.

The Bombers’ last title in thesport came back in 1979. St. Xavier,bolstered by its strong defense andamorphous offense, defeated UpperArlington 9-4.

Junior Charles Leibson led theteam with three goals. Six otherBombers scored in the win.

SHORT HOPS

GEOFF BLANKENSHIP FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

St. Xavier’s Zack Groene launches a shotfor goal for the Bombers Oct. 31.

Scott Springer and Nick RobbeCommunity Press staff

“They will be very difficult to replacein the starting lineup. It’s a pretty tal-ented class.”

Gomez will go on to Wright State,Fischer to Northern Kentucky, Spicerto Southern Indiana and Whalen toThomas More. Sugrue’s college planshave yet to be determined.

Minus the five, the Lady Tigers arestill in good shape. The junior varsityteam was successful and the proverbi-al cupboard is far from bare.

“That’s what other coaches aroundthe city are saying to me,” Kelly said.“We’ll have a significant chunk com-ing back, but make no mistake, thefive we’re losing are pretty special.”

Loveland’s regional tournamentgame against Centerville was Nov. 3 atLakota East, after Community Pressdeadlines. Go to www.cincinnati.comfor the score.

SoccerContinued from Page 1B

GEOFF BLANKENSHIP/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Loveland’s Colleen Swift makes a break to the goal forthe Lady Tigers.

It was thought thatMount Notre Dame and UAwere on a collision course

for the district final, whichhas happened the last twoyears.

But, MND suffered a lossto Kettering Fairmont in thedistrict semifinal, a teamUrsuline then beat 3-1 Oct.31. They will take on Thom-

as Worthington at noon Nov.6 in Upper Arlington. If vic-torious, they will play thewinner of Columbus Acad-emy/Hudson at 1p.m. Satur-day, Nov. 7, at Upper Arling-ton.

ShiveContinued from Page 1B

SYCAMORE TWP. - De-spite a record-setting dayon the Scarlet Course atOhio State, Moeller HighSchool’s Jake Fox had to set-tle for second-place amongDivision I boys.

The runner-up finish wasamong a field of 72 golfers.

After day one on Oct. 23,Fox was just a stroke behindWill Kurtz of Hudson with a74. However, day two be-longed to Kurtz with a 69 asFox repeated with a 74.

Though he lost by sixstrokes, Fox still set a Moell-er state record of 148 for twodays, tying the score formerCrusader Neil Lykins had in1998 in winning the individ-ual championship.

“He had the putter roll-ing,” Fox said of Hudson’sKurtz. “He was makingpretty much anything. Any-thing he looked at betweenthe eighth hole and 14th, hemade. That’s where he real-ly separated himself.

“When someone doessomething like that, at theend of the round you justshake their hand.”

The 148 by Fox was 11strokes better than last yearwhen he shot 80 and 79 aspart of Moeller’s Division Istate championship team.

As a sophomore, he shot 85and 80, so the three-timestate participant made dra-matic strides to reach thepodium individually.

Though disappointed hisMoeller team didn’t qualify,the residual effect of thatwas having individualcoaching and advice fromMoeller coach Rick Bohne.

“It was really cool tohave Coach Bohne there forevery shot,” Fox said. “Usu-ally I only see him every fewholes as he looks after theteam. It was cool just tohave him as my caddy al-most.”

Most of the Crusadersgolf squad did make the trip

north, along with a numberof parents who have fol-lowed Fox through hisMoeller career.

Bohne’s family alsomade the trip to see Fox.

Along with the luxury ofhaving the veteran coach’swisdom, Fox had prowledthe Scarlet Course a time ortwo. The familiarity playeda role in his year-by-yearimprovement.

“I played it in tourna-ments over the summer,plus all the times at Stateand the practice rounds,”Fox said. “I played it about11 times coming into theevent.”

A commit for the Univer-sity of Cincinnati, Fox willnow take a month or so off.At some point, he’ll hit thegym to work on his strengthand flexibility. He also be-longs to Maketewah Coun-try Club, which has a winterindoor facility he can use towork on his swing and shortgame.

Once the weather breaksin early 2016, the state run-ner-up will be back on thecircuit.

Fox finished his career atMoeller by being namedfirst-team All-State a sec-ond time.

Fox sets new Moeller record

COMMUNITY PRESS/ADAM BAUM

Moeller senior Jake Fox, left,finished as runner-up in theOHSAA Division I state golftournament. Next to Fox ischampion Will Kurtz of Hudson.

Page 11: Loveland herald 110415

NOVEMBER 4, 2015 • LOVELAND HERALD • 3BLIFE

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I recently returnedfrom a trip to Paris,France, and thought I’dshare some of my experi-ences with you. For in-stance, I found it impos-sible to use my creditcard to buy a train ticketat the Paris Metro Sta-tion.

My card had the newchip in it, but it would notwork in the Metro ma-chine. Then someone toldme I needed to have aPIN number in order forit to work. Unfortunately,U.S. credit card compa-nies have not startedusing the PIN system yet– they just have you signyour name.

Finally, some helpfulMetro employees saw myplight and took me to themain ticket counterwhere I was able to usethe magnetic stripe onthe back of my creditcard. I simply slid thecard through the openingon their credit card ma-chine and I was able topay for my train ticket.

Fortunately, not ev-

eryonerequired aEuropeanCreditCard witha PIN num-ber, I wasable to usemy creditcard withthe newchip when

paying for a taxi, payingat a restaurant, and pay-ing at a lunch counter. Inaddition, there wereseveral times when Icould still use that mag-netic stripe on the backof the card.

Another thing that’snew is the system forgetting back the valueadded tax, VAT Tax,when you leave the coun-try. It used to be that youcould go to a specialcounter after goingthrough security, give allyour sales receipts, andget back that tax money.Now you must do all theVAT filing prior to goingthrough the extensivesecurity network at the

airport. If you travel overseas

make sure you find outwhere to file for the VATtax prior to goingthrough security. I wastold incorrectly that Icould do so after securityand it was entirely toolate to go back, file forthe refund, and then gothrough security all overagain.

When it came to get-ting around Paris, I foundthe Metro was greatbecause it goes every-where. I got all-daypasses so it didn’t costme any more to keep

using the train – and thatticket is also good for theParis bus system. I usedtaxicabs too and foundthe drivers to be veryknowledgeable of thecity.

Incidentally, I foundcabs to be quite expen-sive if you have yourhotel book one to pickyou up at a certain time.The cabs will charge youfor the time it takes themto get to your hotel ––before you even get intothe cab. The best thing todo is have the hotel callthe cab at the time youneed it and then that

prior charge will be a lotless expensive.

I had a mixed experi-ence when it came toUber drivers I encoun-tered. These are the pri-vately-owned vehiclesthat come to pick you upafter you ask for oneusing the Uber Ap onyour Smartphone. Thefirst time I tried Uberthe driver came rightover to the location and itwas considerably lessexpensive than taking ataxi. However, the sec-ond time I contactedUber the driver couldn’tfind my hotel. Granted

there was some construc-tion in the area but hekept driving around anddidn’t get there. Finally, Iwas forced to call a taxi-cab to get me to the air-port – and he found thehotel without a problem.

Hopefully these tipsabout credit cards, theVAT tax, and gettingaround town will be help-ful the next time you takea trip outside the coun-try.

Howard Ain appearsas the Troubleshooter onWKRC-TV Local 12News. Email him [email protected].

Howard divulges some helpful overseas travel tips

Howard AinHEY HOWARD!

Epiphany UnitedMethodist Church“Six Steps to a Generous Life:Living Your Commitment toChrist” is Nov. 21-22.

Contemporary services are 5p.m. Saturdays, and 9 a.m.Sundays. Traditional service is10:30 a.m. Sundays. Childrensprograms are available.

The church is at 6635 Loveland-Miamiville Road, Loveland;677-9866.

LovelandPresbyterian ChurchPastor Lonnie Darnell’s Fallsermon series through Nov. 15 is“To Rise Above What’s Keepingyou Down.” Nov. 8 is “Obscu-rantism is so Unpresbyterian”(Galatians 5:7); Nov. 15 is “Valu-ing our Blessings” (Proverbs10:10); and Nov. 22 is “Expecta-tions of the Future” (Jeremiah29:11).

RELIGION

See RELIGION, Page 4B

Page 12: Loveland herald 110415

4B • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015 LIFE

ANNE SAKERHealth Reporter

Every day, the world throws out informationabout medicine and wellness. How wein Greater Cincinnati abide in sicknessand in health gives a guide to the future.Anne Saker explains that journey of healthin compelling, meaningful ways.

LET’S CONNECT:apsaker [email protected]

First Church of Christ,Scientist, Anderson

Township7341 Beechmont Avenue

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

231-1020christiansciencecincinnati.com

Sunday Service & Sunday School10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Testimonial Meeting7:30 p.m.

In Church Reading Rm/BookstoreOpen after all services.

Downtown Reading Rm/Bookstore412 Vine Street, Cincinnati

Open Monday - Friday 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.

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

School 10:30amWednesday Testimonial Meeting

7:30pmReading Room 3035 Erie Ave

Experience the Light and Sound of God

You are invited to theCommunity HU Song

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

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

7832 Five Mile RoadCincinnati, OH 45230

1-800-891-7713EckankarOhio.org

Worldwide1-800 LOVEGODECKANKAR.ORG

3850 E. Galbraith,Deer Park

Next to DillonvaleShopping Ctr

www.TrinityCincinnati.org791-7631

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

PastorCathy Kaminski

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

www.stpaulcumc.org

SUNDAY MORNINGS8:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Traditional Worship

9:30 a.m. Contemporary Worship

9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.Sunday School

Nursery care at all services.

8221 Miami Road(CORNER OF GALBRAITH)

513-891-8181

7515 Forest Road Cincinnati, OH 45255 513-231-4172 • www.andersonhillsumc.org

3 Contemporary Worship Servicesin our Contemporary Worship Center

2 Traditional Worship Services in our Newly Renovated Sanctuary

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

Plenty of Parking behind church.

SUNDAY9:30 & 11:00

SUNDAY8:15 & 11:00

SATURDAY5:30

TRADITIONAL WORSHIPSunday 8:30 & 11 am

CONTEMPORARY WORSHIPSunday 9:30 & 11 am

681 Mt. Moriah Drive • 513.752.1333

mtmoriahumc.org

Active Youth • Outreach • Fellowship

Music Ministries • Bible Studies

Ark of Learning

Preschool and Child Care Ages 3 through 12

Sunday Worship: 8:30 & 11 a.m.Sunday School: 9:45 a.m.

Epiphany United Methodist Church Welcomes You!

Weekend Services:Saturday: 5pm

Sunday: 9am and 10:30am

Child care and Christian Education for all ages available

throughout the weekend.

Dr. Stephen Swisher, Senior Pastor

6635 Loveland-Miamiville Rd. 45140(513) 677-9866

www.Epiphanyumc.org

Rev. Brian K. Brown, Senior Pastor

Sundays9:15am &10:45am

Building HomesRelationships

& Families

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

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

PASTOR MARIE SMITHwww.cloughchurch.org

Come, connect, grow & serve

CHURCH OF THE SAVIOUR8005 Pfeiffer Rd. Montgomery 791-3142WWW.COS-UMC.ORG

Traditional Worship8:20AM & 11:00AM

Contemporary Worship 9:40amSunday School (All ages)

9:40 & 11AMNursery Care Provided

Reverend Jennifer Lucas, Senior Pastor

Connections Christian Church7421 East GalbraithCincinnati, OH 45243

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

Jeff Hill • Ministerwww.connectionscc.org

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

MADEIRA-SILVERWOODPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

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

Sunday Worship9:00 am - Contemporary Service

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

LOVELAND PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCHA Loving, Praying, Caring Church

Join us for Sunday Services

Sunday School .........9:15 - 10:00amWorship Service .....10:30 - 11:30amFellowship ........................... 11:30am

360 Robin Av (oL Oak St) Loveland OH

683-2525www.LPCUSA.orgTO PLACE AN AD: 513.768.8400

DIRECTORY

EMAIL: cin-classi@[email protected] CALL: 513.768.8184 or 513.768.8189

Hyde Park Baptist ChurchMichigan & Erie Ave

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

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

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

683-1556www.golovelive.com

A picture worth ...

THANKS TO LISA MAUCH

The Van Hemert family of Loveland donated a Loren Longprint to the Loveland Branch Library. Accepting the print fromDale Van Hemert, left, on the Librarys behalf is ChildrensLibrarian Sharon Sentney. Also pictured are Marissa andMitchell Van Hemert.

Worship times are: 9:15-10 a.m.,Sunday school; 10:30-11:30 a.m.,worship; and 11:30 a.m., fellow-ship.

The church is at 360 Robin,Loveland; 683-2525; [email protected];www.lovelandpresbyteri-anchurch.org.

Loveland UnitedMethodist ChurchSaturdays 5:30 p.m. – Contempo-rary service with a coffee caféstyle.

Sundays 9 a.m. – Traditionalworship with music featuringour chancel choir, bell choirsand other musical ensembles.

Sundays 10:30 a.m. – Contempo-rary service with music providedby a praise band.

The church is at 10975 S. Leba-non Road, Loveland; 683-1738;www.lovelandumc.org.

New BeginningsChurch of Belfast

A turkey and ham dinner will beserved from 4-7 p.m., Nov. 7.Adults are $8.50, seniors (55and up) are $4 and children(ages 3-12) are $4.

The church is at 2297 state Route131, Goshen.

Northstar, ACommunity of GraceNorthstar is made up of peoplewho want to experience Jesuson a deeper level. It exists toexperience Jesus and to equipothers to do the same. It’smission is to go the missing,love the marginalized and liveas God’s kids.

Worship times are 9 a.m. and 11a.m. Sunday mornings.

QUEST children’s ministry andthe Junior high ministry (grades5-8) are available at bothcelebrations.

The church is at 11020 S. Leba-non Road, Loveland.

Visit www.golovelive.com

Prince of PeaceLutheran ChurchWorship services are 5 p.m.

Saturdays and 8:45 a.m. and 11a.m. Sundays. Child care isavailable during the Sundaymorning services for childrenup to 3 years of age.

Engage – is an adult educationseries of discussion and discov-ery at 10 am on Sundays in theAtrium.

Sunday School for Pre-K throughadult is at 10 am.

There is a Bible study everyWednesday morning at 10 a.m.in the Atrium.

Free Zumba classes are in theParish Life Center on Mondaysand Thursdays at 7 p.m. Freewill offering at sign-in.

The church is at 101 S. LebanonRoad, Loveland; 683-4244;popluther.org.

River Hills ChristianChurchLoveland-area photographicartist Gregg Litchfield willdisplay his art at the churchthrough Nov. 29.

Gregg Litchfield is a watercolor-ist and digital art photographerwhose art is inspired by nature

and travel, the art of AnselAdams and the images inNational Geographic and Lifemagazines

The public is invited to viewGregg Litchfield’s art at RiverHills Christian Church. Thegallery is open daily from 9 a.m.to 6 p.m.; from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.,Sundays, and is closed onMondays. Call River Hills officefor extended hours.

The church is at 6300 Price Road,Loveland; 677-7600.

SycamorePresbyterian ChurchA contemporary instrumentaljazz quintet kicks off the con-tinuing music series at Syca-more Presbyterian Church at 7p.m. Nov. 5. Five members ofthe Cincinnati ContemporaryJazz Orchestra feature a piano,trumpet, sax, bass and drums.They will be performing stan-dard and contemporary musicalselections in the church’s mainsanctuary. (www.cincinnati-jazz.org) The intimate concert isfree and open to the public.Proceeds from a free will of-fering will benefit “The Love-land Initiative” which helpslocal children in need of schoolsupplies.

The annual Christmas sale is 9a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 14.Choose from wreaths, orna-ments and other holiday decor.Contact Nacny Roell at 489-1215or Carol Wilkinson at 683-8211with questions.

Sycamore Presbyterian PreschoolParent’s Auxiliary will be host-ing a Holiday Trunk ShowShopping Event from 6-8 p.m.Nov. 19. Come shop from over20 vendors and complete yourholiday shopping. Refresh-ments and raffle will be avail-able.

The church is offering a secondMarriage Night, “Respect andLove,” at 6:30 p.m. Saturday,Nov. 21, in the chapel. Fordetails, contact Wendy Grethelat 683-0254 or at [email protected].

“Did Christmas change theworld?” “Can how we cele-brate Christmas make a differ-ence to the lives of others?”

Explore these and other ques-tions in an interactive dis-cussion led by Pastor EliotWinks starting at 9:15 a.m. Nov.29, and running for four Sun-days.

A Thanksgiving Eve service isplanned for 7 p.m. Nov. 25.

Join Rev. Linda McClanahan fora six-week seminar on prayer:“Lord, Teach Us to Pray” is thetheme. Choose to attend 5:30p.m. on Tuesdays or 10 a.m.Thursdays in Room 120. Bothmen and women are invited.No registration is required.

MOPS stands for Mothers ofPreschoolers (birth throughkindergarten). Contact TrinaGunn at 518-9809 or [email protected] formore information.

Sycamore will be launching anew “GriefShare” ministry thisfall. SPC’s GriefShare will meet10:30 a.m. to noon on Wednes-days now through Dec. 16. A

participation fee of $15 formaterials and registration arerequired. Please contact SusieShaw at 520-7429 or [email protected] for moreinformation.

Women’s Bible study, Harmony,meets monthly at 7 p.m. on thethird Tuesday in Room 120.“Missing Pieces” by JenniferRothschild is the focus of thegroup discussion. Please contactMitzi Green [email protected] formore information.

Men’s Bible Study on Saturdaymornings at 8:30 a.m. in Room120. The group is resuming itsstudy of “Twelve OrdinaryMen” by John MacArthur anin-depth study of each of theDisciples. Contact Chris Dugle,658-0802, or Alan Greggo,573-0920.

The church is at 11800 Mason-Montgomery Road, SymmesTownship; 683-0254.

RELIGION

Continued from Page 3B

Page 13: Loveland herald 110415

NOVEMBER 4, 2015 • LOVELAND HERALD • 5BLIFE

CALL 513-407-4169 TODAY TO RSVP FOR THISEVENT OR TO SCHEDULE A PERSONALIZED TOUR

Gary Williams Presents:

MEDAL OF HONOR LEGACY -GUARDIAN OF GUADALCANAL

Please join Seasons as we celebXate VeteXans Day with this poweXful presentation

by GaXW Williams. Lunch and conversation in the Seasons restauXant to follow.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11TH AT 1:00PM

CamaraderieAT SEASONS

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CINCINNATI, OH 45236WWW.SENIORLIFESTYLE.COM

FREEDELIVERYwithin 30miles

Ask About Our Full Line ofHonda Generator Accessories!

POWER EQUIPMENT529 Ohio Pike (Beechmont Ave.) 513-528-8044www.hondaeastpowerequipment.com

» The Salvation ArmyToy Shop’s 59th annualfundraiser and doll auc-tion is Saturday, Nov. 14, atthe Armstrong ChapelUnited Methodist Church,5125 Drake Road in IndianHill.

Patrick Wilson of Indi-an Hill will conduct thelive auction which con-sists of 25 beautiful col-lectible dolls. The auctiondolls are one of a kind, allhand dressed by our tal-ented volunteers. Mosthave several extra outfits,shoes and even furnitureand bedding. To preview asampling of items in ourauction visit www.facebook.com/SalvationArmyCincinnati.

This event begins at 11a.m. The live auction be-gins at 12:45 p.m. with ashort program in whichthe award winning dolldressers receive their rib-bons.

The event is open to thepublic. Admission andparking are free.

Cash, checks or creditcards will be accepted atthe auction.

For additional infor-mation, contact ElaineHoward, 762-5600.

» Milford’s annualHometown Holidays isscheduled for Thanksgiv-ing weekend, Friday, Nov.27, and Saturday, Nov. 28,11 a.m. to 8 p.m. eachday.This annual familyfriendly event, which isfree, will feature a varietyof holiday happeningsalong the four block MainStreet (U.S. Route 50) his-toric district of Milford.

Visitors will revel inthe sounds and delights ofthe holidays as they shoplocal for unique giftitems, dine in the town’srestaurants and celebratethe spirit of the season. ASavings Passport full ofspecial offers will beavailable to each family toredeem at participatingbusinesses.

Strolling Victorian car-olers, antique fire enginerides, children’s storytimes with the Milford-Miami branch librarians,and Santa and Mrs. Clausat Kirk & Co. Jewelers(117 Main St., noon to 5p.m. each day) will fill theair with old town holidaycharm. Some of the busi-nesses, many familyowned and operated, willoffer special events andtreats. In addition, oldfashioned horse drawncarriage rides will beavailable.

Pick up a map and visiteach business to see cre-ative GingerbreadHouses where you will bethe judge by voting foryour favorite. For takingtime to cast a ballot, you

will be entered in a draw-ing for one of several priz-es donated by Milfordmerchants.

For more informationvisit www.downtownmilfordohio.com.

» One of Greater Cin-cinnati’s best holiday tra-ditions returns this yearwith Ohio National Finan-cial Services’ annual Vic-torian Holiday Village.Back for its 14th year, theVillage features a varietyof fun holiday activitiesthat will delight parentsand children alike – andit’s all free.

The Village is open Fri-day, Dec. 4, from 6 p.m. to8:30 p.m.; Saturday, Dec.5, from 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.;Thursday, Dec. 10, from 6p.m. to 8:30 p.m., and Fri-day, Dec. 11, from 6 p.m. to8:30 p.m.

This year will featureenchanting houses deco-rated with holiday scenes,thousands of lights andfree, family fun on thegrounds of Ohio Nationalat the intersection of I-71and Pfeiffer Road.

The ONtime Express, aminiature train that takesguests from the parkinggarage to the Village, willreturn as well as balloonartist elves. The Villagewill remain lit throughoutDecember, but the re-freshments, photos andentertainment will onlybe provided during thefour nights above.

Returning this year isthe Century House. Aminiature scale replica ofa Habitat for Humanityhome, this Victorian Holi-day Village home cele-brates Ohio National’s100th anniversary com-mitment to build 10 newHabitat for Humanityhomes in the Cincinnaticommunity. Ohio Nationalalso announced a newcommitment of fundingeight additional Habitathomes through 2017, for atotal donation of $520,000.Two new homes werecompleted on MulberryStreet in Lockland thisyear.

Guests will again this

year be able to take an “el-fie,” a selfie photo withspecial holiday backdropsand props at spotsthroughout the village.

While the event is free,all guests are asked tobring a nonperishablefood item (no glass con-tainers, please), whichwill be donated to the Fre-estore Foodbank.

Ohio National’s Victo-rian Holiday Village willbe open rain or shine. Dueto the outdoor terrain andgravel path, the Village isnot handicapped accessi-ble. For the safety of allguests, please, no pets.On-site covered parkingfor 1,000 vehicles is avail-able.

For more information,visit www.ohionational.com.

HOLIDAY EVENTS

PROVIDED

Victorian carolers regaled in their dress finery will sing your favorite holiday carols atHometown Holidays in Milford.

PROVIDED

Ohio National's VictorianVillage returns Dec. 4, Dec. 5,Dec.10 and Dec. 11.

Page 14: Loveland herald 110415

6B • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015 LIFE

A MEMBERS-ONLYPROGRAM FOR OUR

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purchase your Thanksgiving meal!

If you have a subscription, then you’re an Xtra! Member. CLICK HERE to log-inand start taking advantage of your Xtra! perks today.

The holidays are stressful enough. Don’t stressabout your Thanksgiving feast this year. Enter

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WATCH ALONG AT: Cincinnati.com

Join Paul Dehner Jr., Paul Daugherty, and guest Hue Jacksonplus other Enquirer Sports personalities at Moerlein Lager House.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10 AT 7PM

Jackson,Moerlein Lager House.

Robert EdwardJohnston Jr.

Robert Edward Johnston Jr.,74, of Loveland died Oct. 26.

Survived by wife, Mary Ann(nee Wells) Johnston; childrenKathy (Jeff) Lothian, Bob (Cindy)Johnston and Mark (Jennifer)Johnston; grandchildren Matt(Lindsey) Johnston, Kasey (Tyler)Parsons and Kevin (Emily) Lothi-an; great-grandchildren ChloeHarms, Finn Johnston, ColtonParsons and Lucas Lothian; and

sisters Patricia and Linda John-ston.

Preceded in death by parentsRobert Edward Johnston Sr. andRuth (nee Walker) Johnston;grandchildren Rob and DavidJohnston; and brother, TerryJohnston.

Services were Oct. 28 at TuftsSchildmeyer Family FuneralHome, Loveland. Memorials to:Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation,230 E. Ohio St., Suite 304, Chi-cago, IL 60611.

DEATHS

Loveland118 Brandenberg Drive: WellsFargo Bank NA to Penter,Albert Norman; $110,500.

220 Carrington Place: McNeil,Kerry to Drummond, Janice;$67,500.

243 Heidelberg Drive: Stevens,Matthew L. & Jennifer E. toPugh, Ronald; $172,500.

166 Shingle Oak Drive: Wukus-ick, Joseph & Theresa to Viars,Timothy P.; $340,000.

Symmes TownshipAddress not available: FischerSingle Family Homes III Ltd. toGeorgakopoulos, Konstantin &Angeliki; $415,900.

10790 Bentley Pass Lane: White,Jeanette M. to Pollitt, GregoryM. & Sandra A.; $320,000.

12066 Crestfield Court: Scott,Robert C. & Adrienne B. toKota, Ganesh & Deepik Lalkota;$267,000.

12054 Rich Road: U.S. Bank TrustNA Tr. to Getter, Harry R.;

$156,500.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

MIAMI TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsCriminal damageSink and vanity damaged invacant home at 5500 block ofGarrett, Oct. 3.

Touch screen damaged at CVS atOhio 131, Oct. 3.

Door and panel damaged onvehicle at 900 block of Ohio 28,Oct. 7.

Interior of vacant house dam-

aged at 5600 block of BettyLane, Oct. 8.

Domestic violenceAt 1100 block of Rainbow Trail,Oct. 4.

Drug paraphernaliaFemale possessed marijuanapipe, etc. at 300 block of Wilt-see, Oct. 3.

Marijuana pipe located in vehi-cle at traffic stop at 1200 blockof Ohio 28, Oct. 4.

Drug possession,

SYMMES TOWNSHIPIncidents/investigationsIdentity fraudReported on 11000 block ofSymmes Gate Lane, July 25.

TheftWallet and contents removedfrom 7800 block of KenwoodRoad, July 23.

Clothing valued at $45 removedfrom 7800 block of Montgo-mery Road, July 12.

$969 removed from 9700 blockof Pinto Court, July 23.

Oct. 4.Political sign taken at 1000 blockof Ohio 28, Oct. 4.

A Tablet was taken; $100 at 5600block of West Day Circle, Oct. 5.

Appliances taken; $1,000 at 1400block of Wade Road, Oct. 6.

Merchandise taken from Meijer;$64 at Ohio 28, Oct. 7.

Ring taken; $600 at 6500 blockof Arbor Crest, Oct. 7.

Cellphone taken from table atMcDonnell’s; $400 at Ohio 28,Oct. 7.

Merchandise taken from Meijer;$58 at Ohio 28, Oct. 7.

TV taken at 900 block of Ohio28, Oct. 7.

in vehicle at area of Branch HillGuinea Pike and Cook Road,Oct. 2.

RobberySubject was pushed off mopedand money taken from him;$110 at 6300 block of Der-byshire, Oct. 4.

TheftMerchandise taken from Meijer;$113 at Ohio 28, Oct. 4.

Lawn ornament taken; $75 at5700 block of Crabapple Way,

paraphernaliaSuspected marijuana, pipe, etc.located in vehicle at Pete’s Caféat Ohio 28, Oct. 4.

Suspect possessed suspectedheroin and hypodermic needleat Blackhawk Trail, Oct. 4.

FraudUnauthorized use of ID reportedat 5600 block of Baines Hold-ing, Oct. 7.

Open containerMale possessed open container

POLICE REPORTS

Page 15: Loveland herald 110415

NOVEMBER 4, 2015 • LOVELAND HERALD • 7BLIFE

Classic holiday song

Thaven’t heard of Peyton Manning, it’s

time you head back to your cave on

Borneo.

The Bengals will be in the national spotlight again tonight, when they face the Denver

THE TRUE COMPETITION COMES TO LIGHT

Credibility on line as Lewis’ team battles MNF block

MONDAY

DECEMBER 22, 2014

CINCINNATI.COM

KENTUCKY

for millennials 7B

team conscience, straight shooter and

ll-around most indispensable Bengal

last week:

game if we’re ever going to take the

next step, we have to win.

“You have to have everybody. You

have an opportunity to have the best

record around here in I don’t know

how long. We have a chance to be

11-4-1. (That would be the best Ben-

gals record since the ‘88 Super sea-

son.) You wouldn’t think that, if

you’ve been in this locker room all

year. It’s crazy.

“You’d think we’re somewhere

(around) .500. Guys have kind of over-

eacted to the way we’ve played in

think it’s guys com-

AP/FILE

The Bengals will be in the national spotlight again tonight, when they face the Denver Broncos on Monday Night Football.

BENGALS

Credibility on line as Lewis’ team battles MNF block

PAULDAUGHERTY

@enquirerdoc

I provoke honesty, whil

e always having

the backs of the fans. R

each me via

email at pdaugherty@enqu

irer.com.

Members of the General Assem-

bly clearly voiced their support for

a smoke-free Kentucky bill for the

2015 session last week that mirrors

previously failed legislation in 2014.

Denouncing the argument that a

smoke-free bill prohibiting smoking

in public places would kill business,

Brent Cooper, a business owner

from northern Kentucky, said not

only are businesses prospering

across the Ohio River in Cincinnati

with a smoke-free law, but that the

pubs in Ireland haven’t shut down

since the country put a ban on

smoking in the workplace 10 years

ago.Many legislators conferred that

public smoking was indefensible in

Kentucky given the state’s bad

health ratings compared to other

states throughout the U.S.

According to testimony from

Wayne Meriwether, CEO of Twin

Lakes Regional Medical Center,

second-hand smoke is just as dan-

gerous for those that don’t smoke.

“Twenty-six and half percent of

all Kentuckians smoke. We lead the

nation in lung cancer and lung can-

Kentuckysmoke-free

bill hassupportFayette House member

sees new hope in ’15

By Brad Bowman

The State Journal

See BILL, Page A4

addressing the world of

JIM OWCZARSKI &PAUL DEHNER JR.Bengals Columnist

Sports are more than justgames - they’re pillars of acity’s culture, and the peoplewho play them are a source ofa pride. They are people withgreat stories, Jim Owczarskiand Paul Dehner Jr. share themby bringing you out of thestadium and into their lives.

LET’S CONNECT:@JimOwczarski@pauldehnerjr

A crowd of Universityof Notre Dame faithful -including graduates span-ning from the class of 1947through 2014 - gathered atFirehouse Grill to cele-brate the Fighting Irish atthe Notre Dame Club ofGreater Cincinnati’s an-nual Universal NotreDame Night.

A primary theme of theevening was remember-ing The Rev. Theodore M.Hesburgh, who passedaway in Februrary at theage of 97. Affectionatelyknown as Fr. Ted, he wasthe president of the uni-versity for 35 years (1952-1987). Guest speaker Da-vid Harr, Notre Dame'sassociate vice presidentoperations, presented twovideos highlighting Hes-burgh’s leadership at theUniversity and around theworld and shared severalpersonal remembrancesbefore opening the floorfor attendees to sharetheir own memories.

The club presented itshighest honor, the Awardof the Year, to Mary BethLucian in recognition ofher many years of clubleadership and communi-ty service. As a key leaderof the Club for more than15 years, she developedand led many programs toassist prospective andcurrent Notre Dame stu-dents as chair of both theclub’s Alumni and ParentsAdmissions RecruitmentTeam and the Current Stu-dent Support Committee,and as a member of theScholarship Committee.

She is also a foundingco-chair of the local NDWomen Connect group.An accountancy majorand CPA, Lucian started

with Deloitte and Toucheand was assistant control-ler at Tipton Associatesbefore moving on to part-time and seasonal work,first as a sole proprietorand more recently withVon Lehman and Co. Hercommunity involvementis extensive, includingmany years as a volunteerfor the College & CareerCenter at Sycamore HighSchool, Boy Scouts, Im-pact 100, Kindervelt, herparish, and many PTO po-sitions. She and her hus-band, Bob (also a NotreDame graduate), havethree children and lived inSymmes Township beforerecently relocating toCalifornia.

At the end of the eve-ning, the club presentedHarr with a check for$15,000 to be added to theclub’s endowed scholar-ship fund, which is used togrant financial aid to localTri-state students attend-ing Notre Dame. Original-ly established by AlbertCastellini, a 1924 graduate

of Notre Dame, the Cin-cinnati endowment is oneof the oldest and largestNotre Dame club scholar-ship funds in the country.The fund has a currentvalue of more than $2 mil-lion, and is comprised en-tirely of contributionsfrom the club’s fundrais-ing efforts, individual do-nations and investmentincome. In 2014-2015, 33

local students received to-tal aid of $117,000 throughthe club’s endowed schol-arship program.

The Universal NotreDame Night event was or-ganized by co-chairsKeith Ruehlmann and Sa-rah Brown, along withcommittee membersTodd Foley and Marc Wol-nitzek.

Notre Dame Club award, donation celebrated

PROVIDED

Clara Chlon (Union Township), Kevin Moyer (Mount Adams), Maggie Wieland (Mount Adams)and Tim Chlon (Union Township).

PROVIDED

Todd Foley (South Lebanon), David Harr (Notre Dame,), MaryBeth Lucian (Malibu, California, formerly of SymmesTownship) and Marc Wolnitzek (Fort Wright).

PROVIDED

Melanie and Bob Stewart (Anderson Township), Mary Bethand Bob Lucian (Malibu, California, formerly of SymmesTownship).

PROVIDED

Immediate Past President Paul Dillenburger (Maineville), NotreDames Associate Vice President for Auxiliary Services DavidHarr, Club President Todd Foley (South Lebanon) andPresident-elect Marc Wolnitzek (Ft. Wright).

PROVIDED

Mary Alice and Richard Lajoie (Sycamore Township), MarianFurey (Symmes Township) and Mike McNamara (O’Bryonville).

Page 16: Loveland herald 110415

8B • LOVELAND HERALD • NOVEMBER 4, 2015 LIFE

FRAME JOBBY ZHOUQIN BURNIKEL / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

No. 1101

RE

LE

AS

E D

AT

E: 11/8/2015

ACROSS

1 “I’ve heard enough”

8 Consequences of downsizing

15 2014 Emmy-winning miniseries based on a 1996 film

20 Relative of a bug

21 Amu Darya outlet, once

22 Pop-up, sometimes

23 No-hunting zone

25 Mete out

26 Certifications in some college apps

27 Singular

28 Part of the neck?

30 Look shocked

31 What might result from a minor hit

32 Longtime California senator

36 Computer-dataacronym

40 Part of the biosphere

42 Flowed

43 Mt. Olive offerings

44 Get tough

45 Cursed

49 “Helm’s ____!” (nautical cry)

50 Marsh birds

51 World Series of Poker’s Vegas home

53 Order from a sports doc

55 Info on a parking ticket

58 Something that doesn’t follow the letter of the law?

60 Mars : Roman :: ____ : Norse

61 Father figures62 Expelled politely64 L. Frank Baum

princess65 Kind of rock67 Bar mitzvahs, e.g.68 City from which

Vasco da Gama sailed, to locals

71 Flower girl?72 It might be full of

baloney74 “Try ____ might …”75 Taipei-to-Seoul dir.77 It contains a lot of

balloons80 Rap-sheet entry84 Sun Devils’ sch.85 Cooperated with, e.g.87 Indie rock band

Yo La ____88 The black ball in

el juego de billar89 Kerry’s 2004 running

mate91 “Aha!”93 Capital of Minorca94 One-to-one, e.g.95 Homes for Gila

woodpeckers96 Boasts97 Weightlifting

technique103 Does in106 What a pitching

wedge provides107 Tip of Italy, once?108 Catchall abbr.

109 Google SafeSearch target

113 Where Rigel is115 Brazilian tourist

destination120 Algebraic input121 Honored academic

retiree122 First name in

Disney villains123 Apply124 Force under Stalin125 Spousal agreement

DOWN

1 Goodie bag filler2 Long3 Xeric4 Sleep stages5 Delta calculation,

briefly6 “Damage” director

Louis7 Big name in printers8 Primatologist Goodall9 Tolkien beast10 Giant image in

the sky over Gotham

11 Actor Gulager12 Andrews or Dover:

Abbr.13 Tertius planeta from

the sun14 Leo with the 1977 #1

hit “You Make Me Feel Like Dancing”

15 Evaluator of flight risks, for short

16 Used up17 “Chill!”18 Search blindly19 Furry frolicker

24 Elementary-school-science-class item

29 Distilled coal product31 Put-down32 Fay Vincent’s

successoras baseball commissioner

33 Suffix with hex-34 Hothead’s response35 ____ soap36 Follow the advice

“When in Rome …”37 Foolish sort38 Opaque39 “Before ____ you go

…”41 Like many OPEC

nations44 Survey unit45 Junior in the Football

Hall of Fame46 Plain to see47 Voice-controlled

device from the world’s largest online retailer

48 1998 Jim Carrey comedy/drama,with “The”

50 Minor setback52 Managed-care grps.54 Mrs. McKinley56 Dump site monitor,

for short57 Fix, as a pool cue59 Stick up63 Lyme disease

transmitter66 Outdoor-sports store67 Libertine69 Golfer Aoki70 What Marcie calls

Peppermint Patty in “Peanuts”

71 Home theater option

73 “My mistake!”

76 Some collars

78 Macy’s, e.g.

79 “Stop kidding yourself”

81 Hair extension?

82 The tiniest bit

83 Crowd sound

86 88-Across + cuatro

90 Circuit for Serena and Venus Williams, in brief

92 Derisive laugh sound

93 Ones putting on acts

97 Piece of garlic

98 Dr. Seuss environmentalist

99 Paperless I.R.S. option

100 More charming

101 Suffix with hippo-

102 Teased

104 Like black-tie affairs

105 Visible S O S

108 “Buy it. Sell it. Love

it” company

109 Nut, basically

110 Like father, like

son?

111 Home of the David Geffen School of Medicine, for short

112 “____ she blows!”114 After deductions116 Parseghian of Notre

Dame117 Street-sign abbr.118 Casino convenience119 Staple of a rock-

band tour

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30

31 32 33 34 35

36 37 38 39 40 41 42

43 44 45 46 47 48

49 50 51 52 53 54

55 56 57 58 59

60 61 62 63 64

65 66 67 68 69 70

71 72 73 74 75 76

77 78 79 80 81 82 83

84 85 86 87 88

89 90 91 92 93

94 95 96

97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105

106 107 108 109 110 111 112

113 114 115 116 117 118 119

120 121 122

123 124 125

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TRUCKS&SUVS2004DodgeRam1500.............................................$7,495SLT, QuadCab, V8, 5 Speed, 67KMiles2011KiaSportageLX..............................................$12,988Auto, A/C, PW, PL, CD, Alum.Wheels2005CadillacEscaladeAWD .................................$14,488Blue, V8, Leather, Sunroof, ChromeWheels, 3rdRowSeat2008DodgeRam1500QuadCab..........................$16,988Red, Hemi, 4x4, PW, PL, CD, Alum.Whls, #F82022011ChevroletSilverado1500ExtCab ...............$24,9754x4, V8, Auto, A/C, Chrome Tubes, Bedliner, 38KMi, Nice Truck, #F81322012FordF-150XLTSuperCab .............................$24,9834x4, Red, V6, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Bedliner, #F81412013DodgeRam1500Express ...........................$27,988CrewCab, 4x4, Hemi, ChromeWheels, Side Tubes, Excellent Cond.

HARDTOFINDMODELS2010KiaSoul ..........................................................$12,772Silver, Auto, A/C, PW, Alum.Wheels2012VolkswagenJetta ..........................................$12,8952.5SE, Grey, Leather, Auto, A/C, 55KMi., Stereo CD,#F819812012Chrysler200Convertible..............................$14,475White, Touring, Auto, A/C, FunSummerRide!2011ScionTCCoupe...............................................$15,990Silver, Auto, A/C, Sunroof, Alum.Wheels2014GMCSavanaCargoVan..................................$20,9852500, V8, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, 10KMiles

BUDGETBUYS2000MercurySable .................................................$2,495Burgundy, V6, Leather, Alum.Wheels2004ChryslerSebringConvertible .........................$4,882V6, Alum.Whls, LowMiles, Auto, A/C, #F81672003DodgeDurangoSLT .........................................$5,972Blue, V8, 4x4, Leather, RunningBoards, Great In TheSnow!2004LincolnTownCar..............................................$6,495Ultimate Edition, Sunroof, Leather, PW, PL,WoodGrain, LowMiles!2007ChryslerPacificaLimited................................$7,985Gold, AWD, V6, Sunroof, DVD, Excellent Condition!2009ChevroletCobalt ..............................................$7,995Coupe, Grey, Auto, A/C, 60KMiles, Great School Car!2007JeepCompassSport........................................$8,475Auto, A/C, PW, PL, CD, Sunroof, Great School Car!2011DodgeCaliber...................................................$8,988Black, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Alum.Whls, Great School Car, #F81212009DodgeJourneySXT..........................................$8,995Red, AWD, V6, Auto, A/C, Sunroof, #F81252007MercuryMarinerPremier ................................$9,9884x4, V6, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Sunroof, #F80302007JeepCommanderSport ..................................$9,988Silver, V6, 4x4, Auto, A/C, 3rdRowSeat, Great Value!2010DodgeAvengerR/T..........................................$9,995Black, Auto, A/C, PW, PL, Leather, Alum.Wheels, Rear Spoiler

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$19,775White, V6, Leather, DVD, Stow-N-Go,

Perfect for Fall Travels! #D8113

2014CadillacSRXLuxury$27,988White, 3.6 V6, Leather, Sunroof,PW, PL, Alum.Whls, #F8187White, 3.6 V6, Leather, Sunroof,PW, PL, Alum.Whls, #F8187White, V6, Leathe

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Page 17: Loveland herald 110415

Careers

Jobsnew beginnings...

Administrative

Real Estate

Homesstarting fresh...

Homes for Sale-Ohio

Real Estate

Rentalsgreat places to live...

��� ������� �� �� �� ��� �� �� ������� ���� ���� ����� �� ����� �� ������ � ���� ������������ ���� ��� �� �� �� ��� �� �������� ��� �� ��������� ������� ��� ����� �� ������� ��� ����� ����� �������� �� ����� ��� � ����� ���� ������ ���� ����� �� �� ���� �� ���� ��������� ������� ��� ����� ��� ��� � ��� ������� �� ��� ���� ������ ���� �� ���� �� �� ���������� �� ���������� !� ����� ��� ���� ������������� ���� " � ��� ����� ���� ��� ����������� ����� ���� �� ��������

ANDERSON TWP.SEM MANOR

Large updated apts. for Se-niors 55 & older or handicap-ped or disabled. Rent subsi-dized. Laundry on site, hair

salon, cable, nr busline, activ-ities, small pets ok. 513-474-5827 or tty 800-750-0750.

BATAVIA - 2 BR+, nice De-cor! Balcony, equipt kit w/D/W, crpt, prking, no pets.$585 +dep. 513-608-7823

BRIDGETOWN Spacious 1BR $560 & 2 BR $610, equip-ped eat-in kitchen, air condi-tioning, Pool, playground,Near Western Hills ShoppingCenter 513-574-0498

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

FELICITYGarrison Place Senior Apts.

62 and over, Rent SubsidizedFree Utilities, Secure Building

On-site laundryPets Allowed513-876-3590

TTY 800-750-0750EHO

FT. THOMAS- 1 & 2 BR apts& 1 BR twnhmes. On buslinenr NKU, fully eqpt kit, on sitelndry, most utils incl, mins toshopping & restaurants. 859-441-3158

Hamersville - 2 BR duplex,W/D hkup, large yard, offstreet prkg, storage, $585+dep. 513-582-5598

LOVELANDMACARTHUR PARK APTS.Spacious 2 & 3 BR units con-

veniently located in theLoveland School District. Nr.

shopping, parks and theLoveland Bike Trail. Play-

ground and on-site laundry.HEAT AND WATER PAID

[email protected]

MARIEMONT , NR- 1 BR, 2ndflr, 2 family, wall to wall car-pet, no pet, $475 + utils. 513-797-4153

MILFORD - Completely re-modeled lg 1BR, new crpt &flooring, D/W, ht & wtr pd,wooded setting, walk tostores. $695. 513-519-8512

MILFORD / Miami Twp 1BR,equipt kit, carpeted, recentlyrenovated. No Pets. $475/mo.513-239-6594

MILFORD- Studio apt, pvt,quiet, completely furnishedincl flat screen TV, 1 person,all utils paid incl direct TV.No pets. Must see! $600. 513-519-8512

Mt. Lookout

• Walk to Mt. Lookout Square• Minutes from Downtown• Fully Equipped Kitchens• Laundry facility• Heat & water paid• Swimming pool w/ sundeck

3451 Kleybolte Avenue (2 blocks from Mt. Lookout Square)

513.871.6419

1 & 2 bedroom Apartments

Milford Village- Updated 1BR, 2nd flr of older home,pvt ent, D/W, W/D, off stpkg, nr bike trail, no dogs.$625. 513-375-6658

Mt. Airy - 1BR, $350. In 4family. Free ht & wtr. Call513-661-3442

MT. Lookout - 1 & 2 BR aptsWalk to Mt. Lookout Square,minutes to Dwtn. Fullyequipt kit, pool, lndry facili-ty, heat & water paid. 513-871-6419

MT. WASHINGTON- 2 BR, clean qui-et bldg, h/w incl, balcony, keyed en-trance. $525 + dep. 513-231-8690

NorwoodHERITAGE HILL APTS.Modern 2 bedroom , 2 Full

Bath. Park-like setting. Car-pet & tile floors. $695/mo .

513-533-4634

OAKLEY- FURNISHEDclean 1 BR, a/c, non-smoker,

$95/wkly. 513-731-4008

ROSELAWN - Large, updat-ed 2 BDRM $650; 3 BDRM1.5 BATH, $895. Heat/water included. Near Con-don School. No Dogs. Sec-tion 8 ok. Call or text513-227-7280

WHITE OAK WOODSIDE APTS

Newly renovated deluxe 1 &2 BR apts, W/D hkup, pool

from $495mo. 513-923-9477

EASTGATE NR- 2 BR, 2.5 BA,bsmt, $825/mo. or with ga-rage $950/mo. 513-752-2888

Siesta Key Gulf Front Condoon Crescent Beach. Availablerentals November-January.Cincy owner. 513-232-4854.Don

FAIRFAX- 2 & 3 br brickcolonial, eqpt kit, full bsmt, 1car gar, $950/mo. + dep. 513-831-5959, 658-5766

LOVELAND - 9993 Union Ceme-tery Rd. 2.6 Acres serene countrysetting. Freshly painted, new car-peting, 3 BR, 2 BA Cape Cod, lgdeck, all new kit appls, $1100/mo.+ $1100 sec. dep. 513-206-2684

LOVELAND- Colonial home2-story, 2 kitchens, 2.5 BA,full bsmt, $1375/mo. Call513-340-3462

WILLIAMSBURG- 4 br, eqptkit, 2 BA, oversize gar, onacre lot, $1500/mo. + dep.513-831-5959, 658-5766

AVONDALE, BOND HILLELMWOOD - KENNEDYHGTS - MADISONVILLE

Furnished, laundry, kitchen,cable, bus, $80 & up/wk.

513-851-0617

Roommate needed. $250dep, $250/mo or $60/week.Call 513-718-0878

MADEIRA MOBILE HOME PARK

Mobile homes for sale, own-er financing, interest free,10% down & immediate pos-session. Mobile homes forrent low as $550/mo. + utils.,Madeira school district. Va-cant lots for rent, lot rent +utils., Madeira School Dist.For more info. please callMadeira Mobile Home Park@513/678-3995 or 513/984-4450.

ANDERSON TWP OPEN SUN 12-2

6270 TURPIN HILLS DR.Spectacular 5 BR, 5 BA, 3 car,

$649,000. Jerry Smithson513- 543-6856, Keller

Williams Advisors.

BEAUTIFUL MASON HOME 6387Tall Timbers Ct. Timbers sub/Mason,Ohio. 4br/3.5 bath. 3000sqft/finished basement/compool/club. 2 car garage. $274,900.513-227-5115.

Part-time Bookkeeper / Office Support

Mon. - Wed. $11 per hour.Springdale Location.

[email protected]

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

incl. dementia &alzheimers. Available 24/7.

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

I will care for your loved onein their home. Experienced

and dependable.Can do 24 hours.

513-304-1130

HOME INSTEAD SENIOR CARE

Cincinnati Officewww.hiscjobs.com

513-333-0563Weekend Positions

Guaranteed Hour Positions$10 per Hour and $11 per

Hour Positions

HOME INSTEAD SENIOR CARE

Cincinnati Officewww.hiscjobs.com

513-333-0563Weekend Positions

Guaranteed Hour Positions$10 per Hour and $11

per Hour Positions

MALE nurse aide to care forM adult. No exp necessary.Will teach on job. Must livein. 513-522-7668

BOOKKEEPERCPA needs bookkeeper/tax prep.

Must have knowledge ofQuickbook and tax office

software. Email resume and salary requirements to

[email protected]

������ ���������

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6900 PIN OAK CT.Super 2-sty on cul-de-sac w/large flat yard and huge multi-tiered deck. Has new carpet, fresh paint, oversized driveway, updated, ss appliances and eat-in kitchen. This is a good opportunity. Call Tom for more info.

Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

MASONJUST

LISTED

West Shell

CE-000

0635

086

CALL CENTERREPRESENTATIVES

DNA Diagnostics Center (DDC),located in Fairfield Oh, is

currently hiring experienced CallCenter Representatives. Primaryrequirements are: the ability to

manage a high volume ofinbound service calls, and the

ability to resolve complex clientservices issues. The hours of work

for this position is 9:30am to6:30pm, Monday through Friday.

DDC offers an attractivecompensation package as well as

a generous benefits packagewhich includes health, dental, life

and vision insurance, short andlong-term disability, 401(k) Planand Paid Time Off. Send resumes

to [email protected]

Cleaners WantedVarious ShiftsVarious Areas

August Groh & Sons513-821-0090

East Side Dry Cleaners is looking for energetic

route service representatives. Must

have cleaning drivingrecord and a valid driver’slicense. Willing to trainand opportunities for

advancement.Please contact Gary at513.470.0619 or email

resume to [email protected]

EXPERIENCED TREE TRIMMER

Jim Parton Tree Service nowhiring experienced climber.Call Don at 859-496- 0316.

Help Wanted - Part Time Position.

8:00am – 1:30pm M-F. Mustbe able to lift 30 lbs. Prepwork. Dishroom / Serving

Line and experienceusing register.

Please send resume to: [email protected]

JANITORIALPart time evening cleanerneeded in the Newtown

area Mon-Fri after 5:30pmApprox. 4-5 hrs per night.

Call 513-315-0218

Maintenance TechHardworking dependable

individual with plumbing andelectrical experience. HVAC

Certification required. Need to beon call after hours. Full benefits,hourly pay based on experience.Valid driver’s license. Drug Test

and background check.Please e-mail your resume to:

[email protected]

PART-TIME CLEANERSNeeded: Part-Time,

Evenings, Clean Offices.10-20 Hours a week $8.50

start. Work close to home.Call (513) 874-7730 x 1306

www.environmentcontrol.com

Assistant District Manager - Home DeliveryGannett Publishing Services (GPS) has a part-time AssistantDistrict Manager- Home Delivery position available with TheCommunity Press newspaper. We are seeking a highly motivated individual to join ourcirculation department in this part-time position. TheAssistant District Manager- Home Delivery oversees theJunior and Motor route delivery force in Forest Park,Springfield TWP, Finney Town, North college Hill and MtHealthy. As a member of the distribution team, you willwork with adult independent contractors as well as juniorindependent contractors and their parents, to meetdeadlines. In addition to meeting collection goals, resolvingcomplaints, and maintaining accurate records, this positionalso recruits, orients and develops carriers as independentcontractors. This position is approximately 20 hours perweek. Benefits include milage reimbursement and a bonusstructure. Requirements:•Two years relevant work experience, some supervisory andprevious distribution experience preferred. Previousexperience working with contractors is a plus.•Basic computer skills and the ability to use Microsoft Officeapplications, preferred.•Excellent written and verbal communication skills•Strong-problem solving and organizational skills.•Proficient clerical, math and calculator skills.•Ability to recruit and hire carriers and drivers.•Ability to work effectively in a fast-paced, deadline-drivenwork environment.•Must have a valid driver’s license, proof of insurance, adecent driving record and a reliable vehicle to perform theseduties. About Us:“Gannett Co., Inc. (NYSE: GCI) is a next-generation mediacompany committed to strengthening communities acrossour network. Through trusted, compelling content andunmatched local-to-national reach, Gannett touches the livesof nearly 100 million people monthly. With more than 110markets internationally, it is known for Pulitzer Prize-winning newsrooms, powerhouse brands such as USA TODAYand specialized media properties. To connect with us, visitwww.gannett.com.” Gannett Co., Inc. is a proud equal opportunity employer. Weare a drug free, EEO employer committed to a diverseworkforce. We will consider all qualified candidatesregardless of race, color, national origin, sex, age, maritalstatus, personal appearance, sexual orientation, genderidentity, family responsibilities, disability, education, politicalaffiliation or veteran status.

Apply at: http://bit.ly/AsstDistrictManager

POLICE OFFICERCITY OF LOVELAND

City of Loveland willconduct a civil service

process for full time PoliceOfficer. Starting annual pay

$56,286 and excellentbenefits. High SchoolDiploma or GED andOPOTA Certification

required at the time ofappointment.

Written examination will beon Saturday, December 5,

2015, at 10:00 a.m.,Loveland Middle School,

757 S. Lebanon Rd.,Loveland, OH 45140.

Applications available atwww.lovelandoh.com/employment. City of Loveland

is an Equal OpportunityEmployer.

SHIRT PRESSER &DRY CLEANER PRESSER

Needed at Griff’s CustomCleaners. St. Rt. 28. Please call

Danny or Ernie between7AM and 10AM(513) 831-1241

The Cincinnati Enquirer has carrierroutes available in the following areas:

CentralSt. Bernard @ Walnut Hills @ Wyoming @ Avondale

EastAmelia / Batavia @ Bethel @ Brown County @ Goshen @

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

WestColerain Twp. @ Groesbeck

Monfort Heights @ NorthsideWestern Hills / Westwood @ Wyoming

NorthFairfield @ Liberty Township @ Maineville @ Middletown

@ Morrow Mason @ Sharonville South Lebanon@ West Chester

KentuckyCold Spring @ Crescent Springs

Edgewood ErlangerFlorence / Burlington

Independence / Taylor MillPark Hills / Ft. Mitchell

Union @ Walton / Verona @ WarsawIndianaSt. Leon

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

WE HAVE MULTIPLE OPENINGS

No Experience NeededFull Training provided

Looking for MotivatedIndividuals to Start

ASAP

Call 513-906-4462

DME Delivery TechnicianDurable Medical Equipmentdelivery technician would be

responsible for the delivery, set-up,and pick-up of DME equipment, res-piratory, & supplies to acute, sub-

acute, long-term care, hospice, andhomecare accounts. Requiresexcellent driving record, strongwork ethic, excellent physical

condition, and able to multi-task.Ability to lift/carry 75 lbs

frequently. Pay range of $10-$15based on experience specific to the

DME industry.Email resume to: dom@

patriomedical.org or fax to216-221-8897.

NURSE PRACTITIONERNurse Practitioner position

available with interventionalspine and pain management

center. Full-time position 40 hoursper week. Outpatient only. No

evenings, weekends or callassignments. Primary location isAnderson Township/BeechmontArea (Cincinnati). Fax resume to:

(513) 624-0578 or [email protected]

NURSING STAFFTwin Lakes (Montgomery) & TwinTowers (College Hill) are lookingfor Nursing Staff committed toproviding exceptional care andservice. Must be team oriented.

Immediate openings forSTNA/LPN/RN positions.

Go to www.lecjobs.com tocomplete an application. EOE

JOBS HOMES RIDESPETS &STUFF

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

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post jobs.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Post your rental.

NOVEMBER 4, 2015 μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ 1C

Page 18: Loveland herald 110415

Community

Announceannouncements, novena...

Special Notices-Clas

Bring a Bid

Auctiona deal for you...

General Auctions

Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

Assorted

Stuffall kinds of things...

Tickets

Yard and Outdoor

Adopt Me

Petsfind a new friend...

CE-0000634895

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PHAMACISTAdams County Regional MedicalCenter is now seeking a Full Time

Pharmacist. Must have hospitalexperience. Competitive Wagesand Excellent Benefits For more

information please email resumesto [email protected]

WelderMust be able to set up andoperate automatic welding

equipment to weld metal piecestogether according to layouts,

blueprints, or work orders.Weld straight seams with

consistent acceptable results.Set up and maintain weldingequipment and operations.Weld metal parts togethermanually and/or by using

automated welding machinesalso perform minor

maintenance to weldingequipment.

Ability to read shop orders andwrite an order to complete

standard records. Have goodmath skills and also must havegood communication and skills

and work in a teamenvironment. Must be punctual,dependable, and able to meet

scheduled deadlines. Candidatemust also be competent in setup and operation of Pandjiris

and or Taylor Winfieldresistance rotary welders. Mayalso be asked to perform otherduties as assigned. High schooldiploma or equivalent and at

least five years weld shopexperience preferred. Send

your resume and references [email protected]

Machine OperatorBatavia Ohio. Multiple Shifts.

Starting at $11.25. Must be willingto train for 4 months on an

alternate shift before moving toprimary shift. Call: 513-685-1112

Email:[email protected]

LATERAL POLICE OFFICERThe Cold Spring Police

Department is accepting lateralapplications for the position of

full time police officer.Applicants must qualify for

certification and licensing underKentucky Law Enforcement

Council, Police OfficerProfessional Standards Act.

Applications are available at theCold Spring Police Department

located at5589 East Alexandria Pike,

Cold Spring Municipal Building at5694 East Alexandria Pike

or the city’s website atwww.coldspringky.com

Applicants should submit anapplication and resume no laterthan 2:00 p.m. EST on Thursday,

November 12th to the ColdSpring Police Department at 5589

East Alexandria Pike. The City of Cold Spring is an

EEOC employer.

Office AdministratorCurrently hiring for the position

of: Office Administrator/Full Time.Proficient in Microsoft Office

Suite. Office ExperiencePreferred.Email resumes to: [email protected]

LIVE IN NIGHT / WEEKEND

MANAGERFor retirement communityin Anderson Township, free1BR apartment w/a monthlystipend. Accepting resumes

by mail only, at1348 Pebble Ct.,

Cincinnati, OH 45255EOE

Vice President, New VentureMarketing (Mason, OH): Research,develop & implement best practices& high-level global businessconcepts for new technology,digital, web & media publishingventures; Conduct detailedmarketing research & statistic dataanalysis to understand marketpotential & user behaviors; Planbusiness development, manageinternal & global clients’ projects,develop workflow processes &systems to deploy market & launchnew products. Req: Mstr’s deg in BizAdmin. (Marketing) + 1yr relevantwork exp. Mail resumes to HR Mgr,Apex Industrial Technologies dbaApex Supply Chain Technologies.4393 Digital Way, Mason, OH 45040

NO DEGREE?NO PROBLEM!

Get paid like a lawyer!F/T & P/T POSITIONS

AVAILABLECALL BERT

888-386-5551

MECHANICS (DIESEL)All Experience Levels!

Competitive Pay, ComprehensiveHealth Benefits, Retirement &More! Experience in repairingand troubleshooting is a plus.

Penske Truck Leasing: 855-217-9391

DRIVERS$3,000.00 Orientation CompletionBonus! Dedicated, Regional, OTR& Point to Point Lanes! Great Pay,(New hires min 800.00/wk)! CDL-A

1yr. Exp. 1-855-314-1138

DRIVERSCDL-A 1yr. Guaranteed Home Time.

Excellent Pay Package. MonthlyBonus Program. 100% No-Touch.

BCBS/Dental/Vision. Plenty of miles.877-704-3773

Dump Truck DriversDump Truck Drivers wanted F/T &

P/T 3 yrs dump experiencepreferred. Reputable NKY Co.Health benefits & vacation.

Apply in person at 7000 ThelmaLee Dr. Alexandria, KY 41001 or

email [email protected] EOE

SHUTTLE DRIVERContinental Express, Inc is hiring

drivers in Florence.

We need:One night shift shuttle driver in

Florence. 10-12 hr shifts Mon thruFri, hourly pay

Several dedicated drivers to run toChicago area and back.

All positions are availableimmediately.

Call 800-497-2100 or applyonline at www.cejobs.com

Must have a class A CDL,preferably one year experience.

Christmas and Craft Bazaar,Orchard Terrace Church ofGod 1001 Orchard TerraceCold Springs, KYSaturday, November 7th10:00-3:00, (859)360-7780

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

incl. dementia &alzheimers. Available 24/7.

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

DID YOU WORK ATGENERAL ELECTRIC IN EVANS-

VILLE, OHIOBETWEEN 1956-1957?

WE WOULD LIKE TO TALK TOYOU.

PLEASE CONTACTMARILYN MILDREN

AT THE LAW FIRM OFHEARD ROBINS CLOUD LLP

Toll free at 866-517.952 0

KILL BED BUGS! Buy HarrisBed Bug Killers/KIT CompleteTreatment System.Available:Hardware Stores, The HomeDepot, homedepot.com

AUCTIONNOV. 7, 2015 9:30 A.M.

3760 WHEAT RIDGE RD.,WEST UNION, OH 45693

GOOD GUNS, GOLD & SILVERCOINS, GOOD TOOLS,

POCKET KNIVES.Visit www.auctionzip.com

#4988 for List.AUCTIONEER: Herbert Erwin

937-544-8252

SURVEYOR M-302 ’10. 34ft. travel trailer. Pictureslocated in lobby at eachSharefax Credit Unionbranch. Minimum bid$8850.00. Mail or dropoff sealed bids no laterthan November 5, 2015 toSharefax Credit Union,Attn: Michelle Stevens,10590 Reading Rd.,Evendale, OH 45241.

Maids & More by WindyWe offer the most professio-nal services for your family:

Housekeeping, mealpreperation, laundry (includ-ing ironing), grocery shop-ping as well as other con-

cierge services, after schooltransportation & care, & gar-

dening. Call 510-703-1286or email us at

[email protected]

Covington Estate Sale - 414Patton St. 11/8, Sunday only!9am-4pm. Contents of home- Ant. & collect., old quilts,rocker, Jenny Lind twin bed,coffee & end tables, trunk,sm oak dresser, upright pia-no, beds, lloyds radio,consolette stereo, Zenith ra-dio, lanterns, misc chairs &tables, china cabinet, pic-tures, figurines, oil lamps,mirrors, doll items, sewingmachine, high chair, stroller,refrig, gas stove, bath vanity,ladder, shelves, too much tolist. All priced to sell. Info &pics hsestatesales.com or859-992-0212. Dir: Patton St,between Eastern Ave &Maryland Ave. (Across fromAustinburg Apts)

2 Premier Cemetery Lots atArlington Memorial Gardens,located in Garden of Ever-lasting Life. Current Value$4800, $4000. (812)[email protected]

Firewood- Premium seas-oned hardwoods, $90 ½cord.

plus includes delivery513-633-8339

LOW PRICEDSeasoned & Split Firewood

WITH FREE DELIVERY513-574-3950

CASKETS & URNSSolid wood $795, Brass urns$99. Metal $895 floor modelspecial discounts hundreds inStock. Save thousands overany funeral home price!

Use our FREE layaway. Prear-range & visit 3640 Werk Rd.Call Bill For Information &

A Free Brochure: 513-383-2785

thecasketcompany.com

Dining room set- Solid ma-hogany double pedestaltable. 44x68 will expand to124". 2 capt chairs, 4 sidechairs, a lighted hutch.$3000. 1/3rd original cost.Call 937-470-9066 or 513-444-4940

FALL CLOSEOUT SPECIALS!Shop us before you buy!

Lowest Prices In CincinnatiSame Day Delivery

Bunk Beds 2x6 splitables solid wood $199

Bunkies (the very Best) $99 ea.

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

starting tonight!Hundreds of Sauders pieces

from $29Liv Rm Suites, 2 piece sets

from $399 Electric adjustable beds $795complete with memory foam

mattressHeadboards/all sizes, huge

selection from $29 MemoryFoam queen mat-

tress $379 King Prem Matt Sets 18"

thick $499-$799Compare from $2000-$60003640 Werk Rd; by Toys R Us,868 Eads Pkwy., Lawrence-burg, IN next to Krogers.

Call me, BILL,with your questions

513-383-2785! Mattress & Furniture Express

mattressandfurnitureexpress.comGuaranteed Financing!

Bengals Seat License "COA" -$1000+value of tickets re-maining. Great seats. Section134, row 15, seats 1-2, aisleseats. 15 rows up from field.Call 513-777-9988

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

#1 BUYER OF WWI, WWII, Civil War & Vietnam

US, German, Japanese &Special Forces

MILITARY RELICSWill consider any militaryitem depending on type,

condition & history. [email protected]

Don’t Let Other AdsFool You.

Call 513-309-1347

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

BUYING-RECORD ALBUMS &CDs, METAL, JAZZ, BLUES,ROCK, RAP, INDIE, R&B &REGGAE 513-683-6985

C A SH PAID for unopenedunexpired Diabetic Strips. Upto $32 per 100. 513-377-7522www.cincytestrips.com

Couple looking for classicconvertible or motorcyclew/sidecar. Call 937-681-5266

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

Records (513) 473-5518

Ohio Valley Veneer Cashbuyers of Standing Timber.Specializing in walnut, ash &hard maple. FREE estimates.Must be at least 15 ac ormore. Cut on shares also.Don Dewey 740-357-4008

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

ETC + VINTAGE STEREOEQUIP, DVDs & MEMORABIL-

IA. 50 YRS COMBINEDBUYING EXPERIENCE!

WE CAN COME TO YOU!513-591-0123

WANTED Used FurnitureAntiques, Estate & Mov-ing Sale Items, Old Toys

513-821-1604

John Deere 44" SnowbladeLT150, LT160, LT170, LT180,LT190. Tires, chains &weights. $450. 513-518-9675or 513-521-8225

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

[]

Adopt a Dog or Puppy Cat or Kitten!

All breed mixes, sizes andcolors. All are waiting for

loving homes! Adoption

Fees:

All Cats - $50.00 All Dogs - $95.00

Includes: Vet checked,spay/neuter, shots &

microchippedLeague For

Animal Welfare 4193 Taylor Rd.Batavia 45103

(Near Eastgate area)513-735-2299

non-profit no-kill shelterû www. LFAW .org û

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

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

Border Collie - Pups, AKC,8wks, blk & wht, m/f, 1stshots & wrmed, beautiful &sweet $375. 502-857-1500

CAVALIER KING CHARLES -A.K.C. World’s most undis-covered dog. Amazing, lov-ing lap dogs. Have all colors.Some ready now. Rest readyXmas. $1000. Call 513-404-1622

C H O W CHOW PUPPIES- AKC, 1stshots & dewormed, POP, F & Mcream color. Call 937-689-3396

UPD

ATED

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2C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ NOVEMBER 4, 2015

Page 19: Loveland herald 110415

Automotive

Ridesbest deal for you...

Your Source

Legalsfor the latest...

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

English Bulldog Pups $1600.AKC Bully pups. Ready 11/14.Taking deposits to hold. Callfor pictures and more info.(937)205-9413 [email protected]

English Mastiff Puppies,AKC, 60 Champions/GrandChampions in recentb loodl ine . 10 pups availa-ble: 6 males fawn & brindle,4 brindle females, showquality. Parents on premises.Sire is a 200 lb silver fawntop pick from Grand Cham-pion sired litter. Dam is a 165lb brindle top pick from litterof 20. Health guarantee, upto date vaccinations, well so-cialized, handdelivered/whelped inside ourhome. Each of these GentleGiants are looking for theirhealthy, loving, foreverhomes & are ready to leaveour farm as of 10/21/15. Tak-ing $500 non re fundable de-posits. M/F $1500, $2000 forbreeding rights. For informa-tion or appointments con-tact: Kind Creations Farm @740-698-3276 or [email protected]

german Shepards, i have amale n female left, $350.00,2 months old, black n brown(513)237-8444 [email protected]

Jack Russell - 8 weeks old,cute & small, 1st shots &wormed, dew claws re-moved, tails docked, lots ofcolor. $250. 513-625-9774

MALTI-POO PUPPIES - 2 Females, 14wks, shots & dewormed, $250 each.937-217-2822

Puppies & Supplies YOUR NEW PUPPY

7326 Yankee Rd.In Kroger’s Plaza

Liberty Twp, Oh 45044 513-755-7576

Exit #24 off I-75

Pure & Designer Mixes: Coton, Morkie, Cavapoo,Havachon, Yo-Ton, Daisy

Dog and OEBulldoggeYorkie Poo,

Cavalier-Shih Tzu, Dachs-hund, Whoodle, Cockalier,Bichon, Poo-Chi, Goldens.Havamalt, Bichapoo, Aus-

tralian Shepherd, MiniGoldendoodle,

Aussiedoodle, Yorkie-Pom,Toy Poodle, Shih-Tese,Yorkie, Maltese, Malti-

Poo, Cockapoo, Havanese,Shih-Poo. Visit our web for

pics and info www.yournewpuppyLLC.com LIKE US ON FACEBOOK

SHIH TZU PUPS- CKC,black/white, white, cream,gray, tricolor, shots, wormed,small/fluffy, $300. Call 937-515-0265

SIAMESE KITTENS ,Sealpoint, appleheads,

pure bred, not registered,$125-$160 each. Cash only.

937-584-4497

SIBERIAN KITTENS- Hypo al-lergenic, 3 M, 3 F, 12 wksold, red & cream tabby,$700. 513-724-0764

YorkiePoo, Male, $380 petgear inc, 1 year, great com-panion for seniors,rehoming, (513)328-0569

LEGAL NOTICE Sealed proposals will be ac-cepted by the Director ofPublic Service of the Villageof St. Bernard, Ohio, at theoffice of said Director, 110Washington Avenue, St. Ber-nard, Ohio 45217, until 10A.M., Local Time, MondayNovember 16th 2015, for St.Bernard Maintenance Op-tional Standby Generator,and at said time and place,

PUBLICATION OF LEGISLATIONOn August 3, 2015, the Council of theVillage of Newtown passed the fol-lowing legislation:Resolution 31-2015 Declaring thenecessity of levying a tax in excess ofthe 10-mill limitation and requestingthe county auditor to certify theamount of funds that a 12.05 milllevy would raise for firefighting andemergency medical services purposes.On August 4, 2015, the Council of theVillage of Newtown passed the fol-lowing legislation:Resolution 32-2015 Providing forthe submission to the electorate of a12.05 mill additional property taxlevy for fire protection, fire preven-tion, and emergency medical servicewithin the Village of Newtown anddeclaring an emergency.On August 11, 2015, the Council ofthe Village of Newtown passed thefollowing legislation:Resolution #33-2015 Approving acontract with Brandstetter/Carroll,Inc. for an engineering study of thestorm water drainage systems in theVillage in the amount of $18,800.00Resolution #34-2015 Approving achange order to a contract withAdleta Construction for repairs to astorm water drainage pipe in theamount of $51,718.20.00.The complete text of the legislationmay be obtained or viewed at the of-fice of the Fiscal Officer of theVillage of Newtown, 3537 ChurchStreet, Newtown, Ohio 45244.812271

PUBLIC NOTICEThe Village of Indian HillPlanning Commission willconsider the request by Ma-deira Indian Hill Joint FireDistrict for the constructionof a new Fire Station locatedat 6475 Drake Road. TheFire District operates as anapproved Special Exceptionunder the continuing juris-diction of the Planning Com-mission. The Fire Districtwill also be requesting var-iances for the location of thenew Fire Station. The hear-ing will be held in theCouncil Chamber of theVillage AdministrationBuilding, 6525 Drake Road,at 7:00 p.m., Tuesday De-cember 15, 2015INDIAN HILL PLANNINGCOMMISSIONBy:Dina C. Minneci,Secretary 827147

publicly opened and readaloud. There is no charge forbid packets.Specifications are availableat the office of the ServiceDirector. Each bid must beaccompanied by a certifiedcheck or bid bond in theamount of ten percent (10%) of the bid to guaranteethat if the bid is accepted, acontract will be entered intoand its performance proper-ly secured. Each bidder isrequired to furnish with itsproposal, a Bid Guarantyand Contract Bond. A 100%satisfactory performanceand payment bond shall berequired of the successfulbidder.Each bid shall be submittedin a sealed envelope andplainly marked, "St. Ber-nard Maintenance OptionalStand By Generator - 2015”on the outside of the enve-lope.All bidders must complywith the prevailing wagerates. All bids must be sub-mitted on a bid form provid-ed with the specifications.The Village reserves theright to reject any and allbids and to waive anyinformalities in the bidding.Eastern HillsIssues: November 4, 2015 November 11, 2015831388

In accordance with the provisions ofState law, there being due and un-paid charges for which the under-signed is entitled to satisfy an ownerand/or manager’s lien of the goodshereinafter described and stored atthe Uncle Bob’s Self Storagelocation(s) listed below. And, due no-tice having been given, to the ownerof said property and all partiesknown to claim an interest therein,and the time specified in such noticefor payment of such having expired,the goods will be sold at public auc-tion at the below stated location(s)to the highest bidder or otherwisedisposed of on Monday November23, 2015 @ 1PM 2950 RobertsonAve. Cincinnati OH 45209 513(631-0290)Johnson Brown Funeral Service1309California Ave Cincinnati, OH 45237Household Goods/ Furniture, Tools/Appliances, Office Furn/Machines/Equip, Boxes

Wanda Coogan 6815 Alpine Ave.Cinti, OH 45236Furniture

Andrea Carter 4543 Bristol Lane

Cincinnati, Oh 45229Household Goods/ Furniture, Tools/Appliances

Shirley Griffin 1534 Lakeland Cinti,Oh 45237Household Goods/ Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances,Landscaping/Construction Equip

Shauna Kirkland 402 Linden AveCovington, KY 41011Household Goods/ Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances,Office Furn/Machines/Equip. 812189

Legal Notice

The City of Loveland Board of ZoningAppeals will conduct a public hearingon Monday, November 16, 2015, at5:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers lo-cated at Loveland City Hall, 120 W.Loveland Ave., Loveland, Ohio 45140.

The purpose of the hearing will be tohear a request for a variance to theside yard setbacks within an "O-R"Office Residential District as deter-mined per Chapter 1156 of the Cityof Loveland Planning and ZoningCode. The request is being made topermit an addition at 434 W. Love-land to be constructed which doesnot meet the required side yard set-back requirements. Informationabout the variance request is availa-ble for review in the City’s Building &Zoning Department during permitwindow hours from 10:00 a.m. to2:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Interested persons may appear andbe heard with respect to the pro-posed variance. Comments may alsobe submitted in writing to EvaParker, Building and Zoning Supervi-sor, 120 W. Loveland Avenue, Love-land, OH 45140 or emailed to [email protected].

Individuals with disabilities requiringspecial accommodations that are par-ticipating in or wish to attend thishearing should call 513-683-0150 atleast seven (7) days in advance so ar-rangements can be made. 829844

LEGAL NOTICEThe Village of Newtown is now ac-cepting Requests For Proposal/ Quali-fications for Village Solicitor, VillageEngineer, Village Building/ZoningCommissioner and Village PropertyMaintenance Inspector. Each RequestFor Proposal/Qualification Packetmay be obtained from our VillageWebsite or Fiscal Officer, Keri L. Ever-ett. Village of Newtown 3537 ChurchStreet Newtown, Ohio 45244. www.newtownohio.gov, (513) 561-7097 ext.12, M-F 8:00am-4:00pm, keverett@villageofnewtown. 812303

Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk $200-$2000and more. Fair cash price,quick pickup. 513-662-4955

BUYING TOYOTAAND MERCEDES

Most years & models;need service records,

fair prices paid.Paul Padget’sVintage Sales

(513) 821-2143 Since 1962

Ford Mustang ’02 - Converti-ble, loaded, very clean,$6449. Call 513-482-1842

KIA Soul ’11. 5 spd, low 46Kmi, new tires & battery, goodcond, $7500. 513-265-4854

Mercedes Benz E350 4matic’08 - in great cond, silverw/grey int, 197k miles.$10,000. Call 513-785-9582

N I S S A N Murano SL ’04.AWD, like new, 1 fam.owned, never wrecked, non-smkr, new brks/ tires/transfercase, 123K, $8500. 513-641-6113

Toyota 2001 RAV4, SUV,113658 mi., 4 dr., Automatic,good cond., Gray ext., Tanint., 04 Cylinders, AWD,$2900. (513)800-1162

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

513-403-7386

Honda 2002 Odyssey,Minivan, Automatic, Silverext., Gray int., 04 Cylinders,FWD, 190000. New tires,$3500.00. (513)236-2202

**ALL**INTERESTING

CLASSIC CARS WANTED1920’s-1980’s

AUSTIN HEALEYS50’s-60’s

PORSCHE50’s-60’s: 356

Coupes, Roadsters60’s-80’s: 911, 912

All Models75-89 Turbos, Cabriolets77-89: Turbos,Cabriolets

MERCEDES40’s-70’s: 190SL, 230SL,

250SL, 280Sl, EarlyCabriolets, etc.

JAGUAR30’s-70’sALFA’S

20s-70’s: All ModelsMG, TRIUMPHS, VWs

50’s-60’sALL INTERESTING

CLASSICS CONSIDEREDRestored or Projects

Will accept cars in as iscondition.

**Fair Prices Paid**

Call Roy(602) 810-21791-800-522-8887

Chevy G10 Cargo Van ’93 -Vortec 4.3, 123k miles, runsgreat, body is a little rough,$2900. Northgate area. Call513-385-2799.

Ford 1998 F250, Cargo Van,130,000 mi., 4 dr., Automat-ic, good cond., White ext.,Gray int., Airbag: Driver,Bucket Seats, Leather Interi-or, $1900. Franklin Hawkins(513)271-7415

powering real estate search for over 365 newspapers

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

GOTEXTRASTUFF?VISITCLASSIFIEDSonline at cincinnati.com

Put it up for sale.

CHECKOUTCLASSIFIEDonline at cincinnati.com

GET READY FOR THEHOLIDAYS, CALL KAREN

FOR YOUR CLEANINGNEEDS. 513-301-9176.

Serving Milford, Loveland,Indian Hill areas.

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

pare. 513-248-2130

CE-000

0634

989

High & Hard to ReachFREE ESTIMATES

Fully Insured777-8719

Int/Ext.Painting

A & J Tree RemovalBrush Removal & Fire Wood.Fully Insured. 513-325-5172

CALL: 513-421-6300TO PLACE YOUR AD

Service Directory

Great Buys

Garage Salesneighborly deals...

**ALL**INTERESTING

CLASSIC CARS WANTED1920’s-1980’s

AUSTIN HEALEYS50’s-60’s

PORSCHE50’s-60’s: 356

Coupes, Roadsters60’s-80’s: 911, 912

All Models75-89 Turbos, Cabriolets77-89: Turbos,Cabriolets

MERCEDES40’s-70’s: 190SL, 230SL,

250SL, 280Sl, EarlyCabriolets, etc.

JAGUAR30’s-70’sALFA’S

20s-70’s: All ModelsMG, TRIUMPHS, VWs

50’s-60’sALL INTERESTING

CLASSICS CONSIDEREDRestored or Projects

Will accept cars in as iscondition.

**Fair Prices Paid**

Call Roy(602) 810-21791-800-522-8887

Maineville - Nov 6-7, 8a-4p.1188 Ascot Dr. Moving sale!Office furn, dining rm set,other misc furn, & lots ofother misc items.

Ohio River Artisans will hosttheir 10th annual Arts &Crafts Show. Nov 13th, 9a-7p. Nov 14th, 9a-5p. 3235Omni Dr. (Off Aicholtz)Eastgate area. Items include:wall hangings, paintings,jewelry, baskets, ornaments,florals, quilts, & much more.All items made in the USA.Supporting Safe Harbor ofHope Women’s Charity.

Anderson, Moving Sale,8024 Lancelot Dr, Sat: 8 - 12,Electronics, tools, games,toys, camping, backpacking,furniture, etc, Dir: CoughPike to Evanor to Lancelot

Anderson twp - Nov 6-7, 9a-3p. 7821 Stonehill Dr. MultiFamily. Over 500 Love in-spired romance/suspensebooks, new & used clothing(Lesuit suits), Xmas & craftitems, new appliances, &much much more.

Deerfield Twp- Sun, Nov 8,10a-2p. 5714 Fields Ertel.Huge Rummage Sale. Toys,housewares, books, collecti-bles, new & gently usedclothes, baby equipt, smallfurniture. Northern Hills Syn-agogue 1mi W of I-71, nearSnider

Dillonvale - Nov 7, 9a-430p.8458 Wexford. Shutters,rugs, keyboards, tools, misc.

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

UPDA

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4C μ NORTHEAST - COMMUNITY μ NOVEMBER 4, 2015