Northeast
SUBURBAN LIFE Your Community Press newspaper serving Blue Ash, Montgomery, Sycamore Township and other Northeast Cincinnati neighborhoods
WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2020 | BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS | PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK
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REAL ESTATE
Many more in fl ood danger
Thousands in Greater Cincinnati think they’re safe from fl ood waters. They aren’t. By Hannah K. Sparling, Katie Wedell, Kyle Bagenstose, Dinah Pulver and Kevin Crowe USA Today Network
More than 66,000 properties in Greater Cincinnati are at risk of fl ooding – double the number recorded by the federal government, according to a new modeling tool released June 29. The new nationwide tool paints a picture of the U.S. as a country woefully under-prepared for damaging fl oods, both now and in the future. In Ohio as a whole, 493,012 properties are at risk of fl ooding, according to the new model, more than double the federal government’s estimate of 219,885. In Kentucky, the federal government says 96,807 properties are at risk of fl ooding compared to the new estimate of 227,003. Experts say the analysis is the latest evidence of a decades-long bungling of fl ood planning and policy at multiple levels of government across the country. And it presents diffi cult new questions about who will pay billions of dollars to save communities from going underwater: homeowners, towns and cities, or the U.S. taxpayer? “Who is going to pay and how we are going to pay, is the ultimate question,” said A.R. Siders, a professor at the University of Delaware’s Disaster Research Center. The new analysis was conducted by the First Street Foundation, a nonprofi t organization that paired dozens of scientists and engineers with researchers from academic institutions. The team combined several existing models of sea level rise, riverine fl ooding, and simulations of extreme weather events into a single, nationwide fl ood assessment model that examined risk in all states
Loveland Canoe & Kayak Outfi tters on East Broadway St. in Loveland is flooded by the Little Miami River. PHIL DIDION/THE ENQUIRER
except Alaska and Hawaii. While insurance and investment companies have long used their own private models to make decisions, First Street conveyed its fi ndings in a report released June 29 and is giving academic researchers access to the data. The modeling performed by the group is “exactly what we need to be doing,” said Kerry Emmanuel, a professor of atmospheric science at MIT who serves on First Street’s advisory board. “Until recently we didn’t have people putting all these little pieces together,” he said. “We had really good people
working on that little piece of the problem and good people working on another little corner.” If nothing else, the new data can help people accurately understand their risk so they can properly prepare and insure their homes and businesses, said Rich Cogen, executive director of the Cincinnati-based Ohio River Foundation. Flood damage is not covered under regular homeowner’s insurance, Cogen said, but many people don’t know that. “Unfortunately, a lot of people don’t fi nd out until that fi rst claim,” he said.
Flooding in Hyde Park In Greater Cincinnati – including Hamilton, Butler, Warren and Clermont counties in Ohio and Boone, Kenton and Campbell counties in Kentucky – 66,566 properties are at risk, according to First Street’s data. That's 38,347 more than are included in the government’s estimates. In Cincinnati, specifi cally, First Street says more than 16,000 properties are at risk, nearly one in every 10, comSee FLOOD, Page 3A
Netfl ix series fi lmed at Summit Hotel in Madisonville Randy Tucker Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The Summit Hotel in Madisonville is one of the locations for Netfl ix's new "Say I Do'' series, which was scheduled to premiere on July 1. The eight-episode series fi lmed in diff erent states throughout the Midwest will follow couples as they overcome obstacles to plan a surprise dream wedding in less than a week. Interior designer, Jeremiah Brent, fashion designer, Thai Nguyen, stylist Johnny Wright and chef Gabriele Bertaccini will assist the couples in planning and designing their weddings. “One of the highest honors we have in the hotel business is to help a couple celebrate their love with an extraordinary wedding,” said Martin Pittman, vice president of operations. The Summit episodes will culminate with a lavish wedding on the hotel's rooftop terrace. The Summit - a Wyndham-owned hotel that opened in 2018 is located at 5345 Medpace Way in a building that was once the NuTone door chime factory and later Medpace's rainbow parking garage. The 239-room hotel is full of art and modern architectural fi nishes, including the round concrete pillars from the original building and a soaring atrium. And there are three dining spaces open to the public.
How to submit news
A king room at the new Summit Hotel.
The "Monumental Staircase" in the lobby at the new Summit Hotel in the Madisonville neighborhood of Cincinnati on April 18, 2018. PHOTOS BY SAM GREENE/THE ENQUIRER
To submit news and photos to the Community Press/Recorder, visit the Cincinnati Enquirer’s Share website: http://bit.ly/2FjtKoF
Contact The Press
News: 513-903-6027, Retail advertising: 768-8404, Classified advertising: 242-4000, Delivery: 513-576-8240. See page A2 for additonal information
The hotel features nine floors of rooms.
Vol. 57 No. 18 © 2020 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED $1.00
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Old Gamble estate property in Westwood for sale The property’s zoning would allow construction of one house per 10,000 square feet of land, Randolph said, but Greenacres isn’t necessarily interested in going that route – or in requiring top dollar for the property it believes is worth as much as $2 million.
Jeanne Houck Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The Greenacres Foundation wants to sell 22 acres it owns in Westwood and is seeking proposals for the residentially zoned property from developers and others. The property at 2918 Werk Road was home to the historic Gamble House, a Victorian mansion with a section that stood for more than 170 years and that was once owned by James N. Gamble, son of a founder of Procter & Gamble and the creator of Ivory soap. The house was torn down in 2013, to the dismay of some neighbors and preservationists, and is at the center of a court battle that is still being fought. Now, said Greenacres President Carter Randolph, the foundation has dropped 10-year-old plans to develop an environmental and agricultural education center for children in grades kindergarten through third grade on the property.
'We're not ruling anything out. We're not ruling anything in.'
The historic Gamble house in Westwood years before it was demolished in 2013. ENQUIRER FILE PHOTO
Randolph said Greenacres, a nonprofi t education, research and preservation group based in Indian Hill, sent the Home Builders Association of Greater Cincinnati a letter asking for propos-
als for the property. Greenacres expects word to get out and spark interest among other organizations besides developers, Randolph said.
The Greenacres Foundation, which was founded by Louis and Louise Nippert, is looking for proposals that would benefi t the community, Randolph said, such as perhaps a retirement home or a park. “We’re not ruling anything out. We’re not ruling anything in,” Randolph said. “The highest price might not be the best proposal. We’ve reserved the right to reject any and all proposals.” Randolph said Greenacres won’t take any action on the sale of the property until the beginning of next year, but, “We think the property should move forward to its next chapter.”
Columbus, Cincinnati boast fastest-selling homes in the U.S. pers had almost eight times as many homes to choose from as they do today. “I’ve been doing this almost 17 years now and for probably the past, almost four years, it’s been insanely hot in the Columbus area,” said Corey Burke, an agent with HER Realtors. “Anything priced under $550,000 is going extremely fast due to the lack of inventory.” Burke just sold a home on Montrose Avenue in Bexley that had been listed for $499,900. The home went into contract the fi rst day it was shown, four days after being listed.
Jim Weiker Columbus Dispatch
A new study confi rms what many central Ohio home shoppers already suspect: Nowhere in the country do homes sell faster than in Columbus. According to the real-estate service Zillow, homes in the Columbus area spent a median of fi ve days on the market before landing in contract, the shortest time in the nation. Second place? A tie between Cincinnati and Kansas City, where homes sold in a median of six days. Zillow based the fi gures on home sales during the second week of June. Nationally, homes that sold that week had been active for 22 days before going into contract – the fastest pace since June 2018. Home sales in central Ohio and nationally plunged in April and May when coronavirus shut down the economy. But there was no indication that sales fell because of lack of demand. Instead,
COMMUNITY PRESS & RECORDER NEWSPAPERS
Cincinnati ranks as one of the best cities for fi rst-time home buyers. FILE PHOTO
sales fell because the number of homes listed plummeted to record lows, as homeowners chose to stay put during the uncertainty. As of June 30, 2,602 homes were listed as “active” (not in contract) in central
Ohio, a record low for June, according to the Columbus Realtors trade group. A year ago, that number was 4,784, and in 2007, the number hit a record high of 19,820. In other words: This time 13 years ago, central Ohio home shop-
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Flood Continued from Page 1A
pared to the federal government’s estimate of one in every 25. First Street’s model found that approximately 14.6 million homes and other structures across the country currently face a 1% annual risk of fl ooding, representing about one out of every 10 such real estate parcels nationwide. But First Street calculated that current maps developed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency list just 8.7 million properties in the fl oodplain, a 40% undercount compared to what First Street found. And the situation is getting worse. In addition to a present-day analysis, First Street’s modeling incorporated 2050 projections from the International Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations’ primary scientifi c body on the issue. The conclusion: Another 1.6 million properties will be at 1% annual risk of fl ooding by 2050. The 1% threshold is the gold standard used by the federal government to assess which homeowners are required to purchase fl ood insurance. But experts say it’s also misleading, as it actually equates a 1-in-4 chance of fl ooding over the course of a 30-year mortgage. Many fl ood experts said the discrepancy between the two models wasn’t surprising, given the limitations baked into FEMA’s calculations. The federal agency is stretched thin, struggling to keep its fl ood maps up to date, the experts said, particularly for inland areas perceived to be less vulnerable than the coasts. FEMA also relies on historical data – how much rain did we get in the past? – instead of looking ahead to the future, said Eric Russo, executive director of The Hillside Trust, a nonprofi t dedicated to protecting and preserving hills in Greater Cincinnati. As climate change brings more severe rains, that will mean more disasters like landslides and fl oods, even in neighborhoods not accustomed to those types of events, Russo said. He thinks about his neighbors in Hyde Park and Oakley whose homes fl ooded in 2016 after a deluge of rain – 4.4 inches over the course of a few hours, according to Enquirer reporting at the time. “I’m not a weather expert, but I’ve counted probably what can be considered fi ve 100-year-storms in the last four to fi ve years,” Russo said, adding that the 2016 fl ood aff ected “people that had never, ever experienced fl ood damage before,” and they had “anywhere from three to fi ve feet of water in the garage or basement.” Outside of the risk to individual property owners, fl oodplain maps help cities plan how to approach development, Russo said, protecting natural areas that can help store water to prevent fl ooding. But if the maps are inaccurate, the plan will be, too, he said, and cities might allow development in areas that should have been left alone. “My belief is that any time you’re in an urbanized area, almost any place could be prone to fl ooding,” he said, “because of our dependence on human-made infrastructure to carry that water away.”
A resident looks at his flooded property with a Duke Energy employee on Strader Avenue in Hyde Park on Feb. 12, 2019. ALBERT CESARE / THE ENQUIRER
Not apples-to-apples
that will grow as Americans become more familiar with the tool and others like it. “This sounds like a CARFAX for homes,” said Larry Bartlett, the property appraiser for Volusia County, Florida, home of Daytona Beach. While Bartlett fi gures some will doubt the data, just like they doubt sea level rise, others, especially mortgage lenders, would fi nd the updated information invaluable. “If I was a lender, I’d want to know if the property I was lending money on stood a good chance of being underwater in 30 years,” Bartlett said. “If it gets to the point where people are relying on the data, it will defi nitely aff ect property values, but I don’t think we’re there yet.” Several experts urged caution, noting all models have limitations. William Sweet, an oceanographer with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said the new model may be a “big step forward” in understanding risk. But no model is perfect, he said, and there are still gaps in the understanding of how likely certain weather events are to occur. “We’ve only been well-positioned to monitor these things in the last 50 to 75 years,” Sweet said. “How do we make assumptions and assessments about today’s risk when we can’t really model and monitor all the components that go into calculating that risk?” Chad Berginnis, executive director of the Association for State Floodplain Managers, further warned that nationwide models by their very nature miss nuances at the local level. Urban fl ooding is particularly diffi cult to pin down and often requires detailed and expensive analysis of stormwater infrastructure. “There is not going to be a national model that is the panacea to answer all fl ood risk questions,” Berginnis said. Contributing: USA TODAY Data Reporter Theresa Diffi ndal and Savannah Morning News Reporter Mary Landers
A FEMA spokeswoman said the government fl oodplain maps and First Street’s model depict diff erent kinds of risk and serve diff erent purposes. FEMA works with local and state government offi cials to gather information to prepare and update maps and allows local offi cials to submit additional data to ask for map revisions, said press secretary Lizzie Litzow. The agency sees First Street’s model as a tool to inform a property owner’s decision to buy fl ood insurance or take steps to reduce individual fl ood risk, Litzow said. FEMA’s maps remain the backbone of eff ective fl oodplain management, said David Maurstad, the agency’s Deputy Associate Administrator for Insurance and Mitigation. Local adoption of minimum standards based on the maps helped avoid $100 billion in losses over the past 40 years, he said. FEMA’s regulatory maps depict the 1% chance annual event, but fl ood risks exist outside of that fl ood plain, Litzow said. By the agency’s own accounting, 20% of fl ood claims come from properties outside of high-risk fl ood zones. Although people try to compare fl ood maps to actual events, Litzow said, it’s “not an apples-to-apples comparison.”
'CARFAX for homes' In addition to releasing a report with its fi ndings, First Street has created a “Flood Factor” tool that the company promotes as a way for homeowners and buyers to evaluate any given property’s risk for fl ooding. The tool also allows users to review whether the property fl ooded in the past, and receive wider statistics for their ZIP code, county, and state. Some say the application has perhaps the greatest implications for any use of First Street’s model. While the tool will likely not have an immediate transformative impact on the real estate market, experts predict
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SCHOOL NEWS Cincinnati Country Day graduates 73 Cincinnati Country Day School celebrated its 94th Commencement on May 30, 2020. Seventy-three graduates were honored in front of the Upper School as fellow students, parents, and faculty cheered from their vehicles. Head of School Tony Jaccaci highlighted the grit the seniors displayed all school year, but most importantly, during the last nine weeks of remote learning. “You are agents of your own destiny,” Jaccaci said. “You were long before the arrival of the Covid-19 virus, and you will be long after it is gone.” Susie Lewis, Middle School math teacher, provided he invocation, and the Cincinnati Country Day School Choir, directed by vocal instructor Elana Elmore, sang the Alma Mater song. Joel S. Brant of Amberley Village, President of the Board of Trustees, delivered the graduation address. Board member David Briggs ’83 of Hyde Park recognized the 16 Class of 2020 Lifers who attended Country Day from at least fi rst grade through 12th grade. Joshua Nixon of Indian Hill, President of the Senior Class, and Natalie de Beer of Loveland, President of the Student Council, contributed remarks on behalf of their classmates. Diplomas were presented by Brant, Jaccaci and Upper School Head Jenn Weinheimer, who announced the graduates’ names and read a brief biography of each student. Jaccaci, who off ered fi nal remarks, said, “In these last nine weeks, our students have shown incredible kindness and service. “You have navigated the last quarter with resolve, resilience, grace, and humor. You have displayed an amazing adaptability that will serve you well as you navigate a VUCA world: one that is volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous.” The graduates received 380 college acceptances and were awarded $11.4 million in scholarships and grants. They will attend 45 colleges, including Columbia University, Dartmouth, and Universiteit van Amsterdam in the Netherlands. Cindy Kranz, Cincinnati Country Day School
CCDS Head of School Tony Jaccaci presents a diploma to Ethan Glosby of Mason at graduation on May 30.
Anika Minocha of Indian Hill poses for a family photo after receiving her diploma. PROVIDED
Will Horton of Anderson Township waves goodbye to his classmates after graduation. PROVIDED
to go into nursing, and currently co-ops through DePaul Cristo Rey at Mercy Health Anderson. ❚ Emma Krebs (West Clermont) wrote about challenges faced by women (including herself) pursuing a medical degree. Not only does she have the highest GPA in the history of her school, she also volunteers at the library, local hospital, Camp Cardiac, and a church group, and tutors students during her lunch bell. ❚ Dailey Moore (Taylor) wrote about being a self-advocate while living with a hearing impairment. She has traveled to Japan as a summer exchange student. She plans to attend the University of Cincinnati in the fall. ❚ Anastasia Pohlgeers (Campbell County) describes herself as “bent, not broken,” after her experiences in foster care. Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear recognized her as “a resilient, brave, and intelligent young woman when she spoke in the capitol rotunda for Children’s Advocacy Day.” WCC’s annual Feist-Tea fundraiser, held in December, helps raise the money for the scholarships. The awards also are funded by earmarked donations during our pledge drive, as well as the extraordinary generosity of an individual benefactor. Unlike most scholarships, WCC’s Seasongood Education Awards are presented in the form of a check to the student, and may be used for peripheral costs other than tuition if the awardee so desires. This year we are postponing our usual recognition event, but want to wish
our scholars congratulations on their graduation and new adventures. Anne Skove, Woman’s City Club
PROVIDED
WCC announces Seasongood Scholarship winners The Woman’s City Club of Greater Cincinnati established the Agnes Seasongood Education Awards to encourage responsible civic awareness among local high school seniors who identify as female. Students are invited to submit an essay on the topic of “Growing Into Citizenship: Trusting My Voice and Making It Heard,” with a letter of recommendation. Recipients are selected using a holistic approach with multiple readers who focus on what entrants have specifi cally done thus far and how they plan to continue to fi nd their voices and make them heard. This year we received nearly 50 submissions from nearly 30 area schools. Six $1,000 education awards were presented: ❚ Aissatou Barry (Taft) wrote about volunteering and her involvement in groups for young women, such as Girls in STEM and Women Writing for a Change, in her adopted city of Cincinnati. She is fl uent in four languages. ❚ Graciela Grunkemeyer (Beechwood) told us the story of her mother and her Abuelo Hector. She advocates for Latino students in Northern Kentucky, and is the fi rst student at Beechwood to be recognized by National Merit as a National Hispanic Scholar. ❚ Madison Kimber-Crutcher (DePaul Cristo Rey) wrote about her mother’s struggle with kidney disease. She plans
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Summit students participated in annual biomolecular modeling event While the coronavirus pandemic resulted in cancellation of the Milwaukee School of Engineering Center for Biomolecular Modeling MAPS and SMART Teams Poster Session, 11 Summit students Modeled a Protein Story in anticipation of participating in the annual event. The event was scheduled for March 18 at the Milwaukee School of Engineering. Summit students use hands on modeling activities and online digital resources to learn about protein folding See SCHOOL, Page 6A
Summit Country Day School sophomore CJ Replogle holds one of the hemoglobin models designed for a national biology conference. PROVIDED
COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
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CLIP AND SAVE
‘WE ARE NOT DONE WITH COVID-19’ – Dr. O’dell M. Owens, President & CEO, Interact for Health As the virus continues to spread, we need to find the right balance of resuming necessary activities and taking steps to protect our families.
Activity risks
HIGHEST RISK
Distance to other people, the environment, the activity and time spent together all play a role in the risk of coronavirus transmission. Social distancing, wearing masks and hand washing can reduce risks in most situations.
Indoor gatherings with people who do not live with you.
MEDIUM HIGH RISK
Questions to ask
Outdoor gatherings with large groups of people who do not live with you.
• Is the event indoors or outdoors? • How many people are attending? • Is it possible to social distance from others outside my family?
MEDIUM LOW RISK
• How likely are other attendees to be wearing masks?
Outdoor activities with small groups of people who do not live with you.
• Are hand washing facilities available? • Will food be served? How is food prepared? • Are COVID-19 cases increasing in my area or in the areas where others attending live?
LOWEST RISK Home alone or with housemates.
• Are others attending likely to have been exposed to COVID-19 through their work or leisure activities? • Are any of my family members at high risk for infection?
Everyday steps to clean, disinfect your home Regularly clean frequently touched surfaces, such as tables, doorknobs, countertops, desks, phones, keyboards, toilets, faucets, sinks, etc. For hard surfaces, wipe down first with soap and water and then use an ! ! EPA-registered disinfectant. For soft surfaces and electronics, ! follow manufacturer’s directions for cleaning or laundering. When cleaning, you may want to wear gloves and open windows or run a fan to ventilate the space. Use cleaning products as directed on label. Avoid mixing, and store away from children and pets. If someone in your household is ill, additional cleaning measures are necessary.Visit https:// www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/ and click “How to protect yourself.”
And remember to ... 6 feet
Wash hands often with soap and water. (If not available, use hand sanitizer.)
Wear a cloth face covering or mask when you go out.
Maintain 6 feet between yourself and others in public.
Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth and avoid contact with people who are sick.
Cover your mouth/nose with a tissue or sleeve when coughing or sneezing.
Stay home while you are sick and avoid close contact with others.
Learn more at www.interactforhealth.org/covid-19
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SCHOOL NEWS Continued from Page 4A
concepts. This year, students formed competed in four MAPS teams that chose a “protein story” related to globin proteins, a family of oxygen transport proteins. Each team modeled a unique globin protein and developed a poster presentation to explain their model hemoglobin story. The 3D printed models are used in the presentation of their work. This year’s protein stories focused on fetal hemoglobin as a treatment for sickle cell anemia, a mutated form of neuroglobin that can act as a carbon monoxide scavenger to treat carbon monoxide poisoning, the parasitic trypanosome complex of hemoglobin-haptoglobin-hemoglobin haptoglobin receptor and sickle cell hemoglobin stabilized with an antisickling agent. Each team submitted a scientifi c abstract on their globin story to the annual meeting. Students were junior Ellie Adam, Anderson Township; sophomore Bridget Baker, Anderson Township; sophomore Irene Calderon, Hyde Park; sophomore Katie Dobelhoff , Madeira; sophomore Jimmy Fraley, Covington; junior Mona Hajjar, Symmes Township; sophomore Thomas Lamarre, Hyde Park; sophomore Ellie Moran, Mason; sophomore CJ Replogle, Indian Hill; junior Sophia Stanisic, Hyde Park; and sophomore Alex Xiong, Loveland. Faculty advisors to the MAPS Team are Karen Cruse Suder and Jessica Replogle. Nancy Berlier, The Summit Country Day School
36 area grads receive National Merit scholarships Thirty-six greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky high school seniors will each receive a one time, $2,500 scholarship from the National Merit Scholarship Corp. Those tristate students receiving the scholarship, by high school, along with their probable career fi eld are: Kentucky *Covington Catholic: Joseph Kiely, aerospace engineering *Dixie Heights: Matthew Kane, aerospace engineering *Notre Dame Academy: Laura Neltner, actuarial science; Rebecca Hammill, bioinformatics
Ohio *Anderson:McKenzie Halpert, medicine; *Bethel-Tate: Trinity Donahue, business; Samuel Frondorf, medical research *Fenwick: Davis Zearley, secondary education *Indian Hill: Jonah Sorscher, theater; Kathy Ning, medicine; Kimberly Zwolshen, aerospace engineering *Madeira: Grant Breit, biomedical engineering; Olivia Hopkin, actuarial science; Zhuo-Nan Huang, chemical engineering *Mason: Naomie Gao, engineering; Tanushri Madichetti, business; Maanasa Mendu, medicine; Sruthi Parthasarathi, biochemical engineering *McNicholas: Madison Kouche, genetics *Moeller: Kyle Peters, computer science St. Xavier: Maxwell Fritsch, economics; Paul Jacobs, information technology; Robert Myers, medicine; Kellen Roddy, chemical engineering; Ronit Hiryur, chemical engineering; Lucas Meyer, fi nance *Seven Hills: Kevin Wang, biomedicine *Springboro: Alexander Berardi, accounting *Sycamore: Shaan Hershey, computer science; Hari Iyer, math; Caroline Skwara, law; James Hanus, chemical engineering *Ursuline Academy: Claire Hall, writing *Walnut Hills: Dhruv Rungta, business; Alan Zhang, medical research Sue Kiesewetter, Enquirer contributor
Summit community responds to call to help Northside school What started out as a refl ective prayer during a virtual meeting May 12 among members of The Summit Country Day School community ended up as a schoolwide service project to benefi t St. Boniface School in Northside. After putting out the call to The Summit community, families brought in hundreds of bags of puzzles, books and games – enough to fi ll two minivans. Summit Prayer Partners, under the leadership of Summit parent Suzanne McHugh, shifted to virtual meetings during the coronavirus pandemic. At
their May 12 meeting, the group was refl ecting on St. Julie Billiart’s call to “open our hearts as wide as the world.” The idea for action was planted by Sr. Rita Sturwold, a member of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur (SNDdeN), the order which founded The Summit. Sr. Rita mentioned at the meeting that she wanted to help her friend, Sr. Miriam Kaeser OSF, principal at St. Boniface, with her goal to collect puzzles for students who, because of the coronavirus pandemic, would be in their homes all summer with few resources. School was out for summer, but parents and students were still dropping off books, which made it convenient to drop off donations of gently used books and puzzles at the same time. Mrs. McHugh said she was moved by The Summit community’s rapid response when she and her son, rising Summit sophomore Patrick, arrived to help organize the donations. “The process of distributing everything was in full motion. The gym was divided into stations – books, games, puzzles, etc. and each station was divided again by age group,” Suzanne said. Each family’s gifts were put in a large plastic bag with the family name on it. “As we stood there looking at more than 100 individual bags lined up alphabetically with each family’s name, we took time to say a prayer over the bags… a prayer for all the children and their families for a safe and meaningful summer,” said the Prayer Partners leader. “I couldn’t help but think…God is so good.” Nancy Berlier, The Summit Country Day School
Indian Hill School District named ‘Best Communities for Music Education’ award recipient Once again, the National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM) has designated the Indian Hill School District as one of the best in the nation for music education. The NAMM Foundation awarded Indian Hill a Best Communities for Music Education award April 7. This is the fi fth consecutive year Braves have brought home this honor, and Indian Hill was one of 754 districts in the country to earn this recognition this year. “Our music education program delivers unparalleled opportunities for our Braves at every building within the Indi-
an Hill School District, and that is a result of our supportive community and the dedication of our award-winning faculty,” said Indian Hill Superintendent Kirk Koennecke. “We sincerely thank the NAMM Foundation for recognizing our District’s enduring excellence.” Heather Higdon, Indian Hill School District
CHCA students inducted into International Thespian Society Thirty-two Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy students were recently inducted into the school’s chapter of the International Thespian Society (ITS). Founded in 1929, the mission of ITS is to honor student achievement in the theater arts. Congratulations to the following CHCA students who were inducted to ITS: Jonathan Edgington (of Wilmington) ’20 Anna McSwain (of Glendale) ’20 Caylee Butrum (of Loveland) ’21 Riley Cebulskie (of Loveland) ’21 Faye Cuasay (of Mason) ’21 Tania de la Rosa (of Mason) ’21 Kenta Hagiwara (of West Chester) ’21 Noah Pessell (of Loveland) ’21 Pria Thompson (of Blue Ash) ’21 Brandon Wolf (of Mason) ’21 Connor Espenshade (of Mason) ’22 Henry Heimlich (of Loveland) ’22 Kaitlyn Lott (of Loveland) ’22 Chris Max (of Loveland) ’22 Claire Mitchell (of Montgomery) ’22 Brendan Murphy (of Loveland) ’22 Luke Pancioli (of Mason)’22 Colin Swayze (of West Chester) ’22 Liam Vanderwoude (of Montgomery) ’22 Hailey Wichard (of Montgomery) ’22 Wilbur Wiggins (of Maineville) ’22 Hailey Williams (of Sycamore Township) ’22 Ady Anderson (of Morrow) ’23 Reece Clary (of Cincinnati) ’23 Tyler Gage (of Milford) ’23 Alexa Gaudet (of Mason) ’23 Ainsley Keyes (of Fairfi eld) ’23 Carley Millette (of Mason) ’23 Isaac Mills (of Loveland) ’23 Rachael Reynolds (of Milford) ’23 Bianca Rodriguez (of Liberty Township) ’23 Abby Rosenfeldt (of Loveland) ’23 Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy
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SCHOOL NEWS CHCA senior recognized as King Legacy Youth Leadership Honoree Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy senior Quinlan Wilson was recently recognized as one of three 2019 King Legacy Youth Leadership Honorees at the 2020 King Legacy Awards Breakfast at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. Among the honorees, the awards featured keynote speaker Betty Daniels Rosemond, Freedom Rider and Businesswoman. Quinlan was one of 20 students in Greater Cincinnati accepted into the 2018-2019 Youth Docent Program at the Freedom Center – an opportunity for which he had to apply and interview. He was then one of only six invited into the King’s Legacy program (and one of three who completed their program). Through this intensive opportunity, he was given extensive training, completed approximately 100 service hours as a docent, and completed an independent research project on Segregation in Cincinnati Schools. He then presented at the Cincinnati High School Diversity Summit, as well as at the Award Breakfast, where he received a standing ovation to the sold-out crowd of 300 city politician, leaders, entrepreneurs, and change-makers on his topic. Quinlan’s mother, Christine Wilson, is extremely proud of his accomplishments through this program and shared of Quinlan’s work and the event, “Quin worked so hard on this; he was relieved that it came to fruition and loved sharing with folks and shaking hands and answering questions. He felt satisfi ed that it was worth the work. Of the three honorees, he was awarded the highest scholarship and was elated that he received that honor.” Afterwards, he was available for questions. It was there that he shook hands and shared his thoughts several city council members, state senators, and local newscasters. They then marched to Music Hall for another segment of the day, where he was announced again by WLWT’s Curtis Fuller and the Mayor of Cincinnati, John Cranley. CHCA’s Upper School Principal, Dr. Dean Nicholas, had this to share about Quinlan’s award, “As we work to become a more diverse and inclusive community at CHCA, Quin is out front in our student body and in the greater Cincinnati community. His research on the historical data of school integration in the Cincinnati area is insightful and his loving and generous spirit make him a powerful leader for change in our community. I’m proud of him for the person he has been at CHCA all these years, and I’m excited to see the continued impact he will have on the greater world!” Quinlan met with his principal to discuss opportunities at CHCA after his research, and they are very much looking forward to the impact his work could have on their school community. Please join us as we recognize the 2019 King Legacy Youth Leadership Honorees at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. The keynote speaker will be Betty Daniels Rosemond, Freedom Rider and
Source: https://freedomcenter.org/about-us Youth Docent Program: https://freedomcenter.org/ youthdocent/apply Tammy Rosenfeldt, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy
Indian Hill Middle School student-author wins regional writing competition and another student will be published
Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy senior Quinlan Wilson (right) was recently recognized as one of three 2019 King Legacy Youth Leadership Honorees. PROVIDED
Businesswoman. Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy’s Upper School is Cincinnati’s only Christ-centered six-year college preparatory school that exists to prepare students intellectually and spiritually for success in higher education and to impact and infl uence the world according to their unique gifts. CHCA is a private, 501(c)3 nonprofi t preschool-grade 12 academic institution with buildings in Symmes Township, Sycamore Township and downtown Cincinnati. To learn more about Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy, visit chca-oh.org. The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center is a museum of conscience, an education center, a convener of dialogue, and a beacon of light for inclusive freedom around the globe.
In a competition of 163 writers, one Indian Hill Middle School (IHMS) student earned the top spot! Congratulations to Lillie Waltz for her fi rst-place fi nish Saturday, March, 7, at the Power of the Pen Regional Tournament held at Wyoming Middle School. Six IHMS students participated along with students representing 30 other schools, and brought home multiple awards. One student, Grace Zhou, will be published. “Our writers hand-wrote 18 original stories throughout the course of the competition,” said Indian Hill Middle School Teacher Dr. Kim Given. “They shared a part of their lives and souls on the page, and we are incredibly proud of them.” Power of the Pen judges awarded six Indian Hill papers Superior ratings, and 10 earned Honors ratings. In addition to Waltz’s fi rst-place fi nish, Maria Nath brought home fourth place, and Grace Zhou won a Best of the Best award for her story “The Ice Queen” from the Power of the Pen District Competition in February. This designation earns Zhou a spot in the Book of Winners, published by Power of the Pen. “This is an amazing honor,” said Dr. Given. “According to Power of the Pen, this is the highest award a young writer can receive, and out of thousands less than 200 are published.” Waltz, Nath, and Zhou are eligible to compete in the Power of the Pen State Tournament held at the College of Wooster in May. Heather Higdon, Indian Hill School District
Six Indian Hill Middle School students joined students representing 30 other schools at the Power of the Pen Regional Tournament held at Wyoming Middle School March 7. PROVIDED
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Mary’s cherry bounce Mary used rock crystal candy. Sugar works, too. Cherries are usually left unpitted. A reader told me last year she pitted the berries.“Easier to eat and use,” she said. So do what you like. This year, I’ll make 2 batches: 1 with unpitted cherries and 1 with pit-ted. I’ll let you know if I fi nd a difference in taste. Ingredients 1 pound fresh dark cherries stemmed, unpitted or pitted Enough rock candy (on stick or string) to make 12 oz.. or more, to taste or 1-1/2 to 2 cups granulated sugar 1 bottle bourbon whiskey, 750 ml Instructions Put cherries in glass jar. Pour sugar and whiskey over. Put lid on. Shake daily until sugar dissolves. Let infuse 3-6 months. Remove sticks or strings from rock candy. Store in pantry. Great as a holiday cordial or as a topping for ice cream or cake. Write on label that cherries have pits if applicable, and note that the pits are not edible. How much to drink? A couple of spoons as a medicinal, or in a cordial glass as a liqueur. Tip: can’t fi nd fresh dark cherries? Use frozen, thawed cherries.
Cherry bounce. RITA HEIKENFELD/FOR THE ENQUIRER
Cherry bounce with sour pie cherries
Cherry bounce is ‘good for what ails you’ Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist
Our neighbor, Joan, told me she has wild cherry fi rewood for us from a tree she had cut down. We’ll sure enjoy the fragrant fi res this winter. When we were kids, there was a huge wild black cherry tree in our postage stamp size of a yard. Every summer the tree produced shiny, black, tiny berries. We’d feast, spitting out inedible pits. It got me thinking about using wild cherries for cherry bounce, an old fashioned liqueur trending now.
There’s several trees around here. The problem is they’d have to be seeded to make bounce, and that’s not only a real chore, but I can’t imagine how many tiny berries I’d have to pick to make a pound of pulp. Anyway, for now I’ll go with domestic cherries in season. As always, with heirloom recipes, there’s a story worth sharing. My recipe is from dear friend and Kentucky reader, Ann Rudloff ’s mother Mary, who’s probably making batches of bounce in heaven. “Good for what ails you, especially in winter,” Mary told me. Cherry bounce is multi-purpose – a good medicinal since cherries are anti-infl ammatory. Also a lovely cordial, or topping for ice cream and cake. Maybe you’d like to make cherry bounce, too. Just don’t imbibe too much at once – you may fi nd yourself “bouncing” around!
Use fresh, frozen, or canned packed in water, drained. I’ve not made it yet, but plan on making it soon. Ingredients 2 cups bourbon whiskey 4 cups tart pie cherries, pitted or not 1-1/2 cups sugar or 12 oz. rock crystal candy Instructions Place cherries and sugar in a jar. Stir to mix. Pour bourbon over. Seal and place in dark, warm place. Stir daily un-til sugar dissolves. Let infuse 3 months or more. Store in pantry. Adapted slightly from boulderlocavore.com/Toni Dash.
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SPORTS Summit Country Day alum using adversity as a tool Sierra Newton Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
We’ve all heard the phrase “hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard,” more than likely a few people come to mind when you hear it. Charlie Maciejewski will be another person to think of. The name Maciejewski may sound familiar due to the phenomenal high school soccer career he had, winning three state championships during his time at Summit Country Day. Maciejewski went on to further his career at Bowling Green State University, where he once again dominated the fi eld. Maciejewski, raised by a single mother living with a disability always knew what it meant to work hard. After his father Mark passed away while Maciejeski was young, he noticed how much his mother, Theresa did to make sure his family was taken care of. Maciejewski used that example on and off the fi eld. “At an early age I was exposed to high levels of dedication and hard work,” Ma-
ciejewski said. “Facing adversity at a young age, growing up with not that much, my mom didn’t make it feel that way but she was working as much as she could to provide for her kids.” Maciejewski was born in Colorado but soon after his father passed moved to Cincinnati. At a young age, he found soccer was not only an outlet but a place where he could strive to achieve more. The attitude of hard work comes honest for Maciejewski, although he didn’t get to learn fi rst hand: he took a lot from the examples he left. Maciejewski has the makings of an exceptional athlete in his blood. Mark had a great high school career in football and walked onto the University of Nebraska basketball team during his freshman year of college. During Maciejewski’s fi rst year at BGSU he played in only two games, he took the following summer to grow and build his skills. Maciejewski felt pressure from teammates and coaches to do better than his freshman year and reSee MACIEJEWSKI, Page 2B
Charlie Maciejewski, a 2019 Bowling Green State University 2019 soccer graduate. PROVIDED BY: CHARLIE MACIEJEWSKI
Larkin, MVPs want Landis’ name removed Dave Clark Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Moeller football players do conditioning drills on May 28, 2020. TONY TRIBBLE FOR THE ENQUIRER
Will high school football look the same this fall? Shelby Dermer Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
On June 28, Ohio High School Athletic Association executive director Jerry Snodgrass was asked on Twitter if the fall high school sports season was still on as scheduled. “As of June 28 at 12:58 p.m., fall sports are scheduled to move forward,” Snodgrass wrote back in a reply. “Also highlights the uncertainty and unknowns of the future.” While the OHSAA has remained confi dent, there have been multiple schools that have shut down activities following a positive coronavirus test. St. Xavier and Mount Healthy have postponed football activities until July 13 due to a student-athlete testing positive. Anderson High School had been aff ected after a student-athlete’s family member tested positive. The school was scheduled to resume practice on June 30 after the athlete tested negative. So, what will the high school football season look like in Ohio this fall? On June 29, Snodgrass hosted a Zoom meeting with Southwest District athletic directors who were able to ask questions about the upcoming season. The bottom line echoed Snodgrass’ Tweet from June 28 that athletic directors are still planning for fall sports practices to begin on August 1. “The plan is right now to move forward and have a season,” Taylor athletic director Larry Herges told The Enquirer. “Right now, I’m planning to start August 1 with my student-athletes because that’s
the fi rst day of practice. I’m planning on a 10-week season, but there’s so many wheels in motion and there’s no real answer.” Walnut Hills athletic director Steve Ellison said he has heard about a potential plan to have an eight-week football season that doesn’t start until after Labor Day, but added that all alternative scenarios are speculative for the time being. “There is across the board some uncertainty without a lot of guidance,” Ellison said. “A lot of it is rumor or assumption. I haven’t heard anything concrete.” One of the main points discussed in the June 29 virtual meeting was the possibility of fans in attendance. Both Herges and Ellison confi rmed the report that schools may have up to 2,500 in a stadium or 50% capacity, whichever number is the lowest. “We’re looking right now to mark off our bleachers to adhere to social distancing and stay within that 50% capacity,” Ellison said. Transportation was also discussed as safety guidelines allow just one student per seat on buses. More questions than answers surfaced on the topic as it could present logistic problems for some Cincinnati-area schools. Herges said that athletic directors were told to “start planning on alternate means of transportation.” “We got some guidance that it will have to be one kid per seat.That turns a three-bus trip into a six-bus trip for us,” Ellison said. “It’s another up-in-the-air situation because we have contracts with only a couple of vendors in the city
and if they increase those buses it may be a situation where we don’t have enough buses for every sport that will need transportation.” Herges added: “There’s no defi nite answer and there’s really nothing that’s pointing us in the direction to go in. You just plan on the season and when they tell us what we can and can’t do, that’s what happens.” With current coronavirus cases on the rise, there was no date to pinpoint when practices must be held safely by to ensure the season begins on August 24. Herges says the OHSAA does not feel that if one sport were to potentially shut down because of a further outbreak of COVID-19 that it would necessarily impact other fall sports. “Just because football gets shut down doesn’t mean we can’t still play tennis or golf,” Herges said. “I believe the OHSAA does not want to do that.” Wyoming athletic director and OHSAA Board of Directors Vice President Jan Wilking believes the time has come for urgency when it comes to a clear-cut plan. “We are four weeks from starting sports and at some point there has to be some urgency to communicate with member schools and (say), ‘this is the direction in which we’re going,’” Wilking said. “To think that we’re gonna learn about this the week before the season starts and all of us have to turn on a dime to make all of these things happen, I just don’t think that’s possible.”
National Baseball Hall of Famer and former Cincinnati Reds great Barry Larkin is among previous Most Valuable Player award winners calling for Kenesaw Mountain Landis’ name to be removed from the award. Landis was the fi rst Commissioner of Baseball, from 1920 until he died in 1944. He is from Millville, Ohio, a small town about fi ve miles west of Hamilton. No Blacks played in Major League Baseball during Landis’ tenure as commissioner. Jackie Robinson broke the barrier less than three years after Landis died. Larkin, who starred at Moeller High School and now serves as a special assistant of player development for the Reds, was the National League MVP in 1995. “Why is it on there?” said Larkin. “I was always aware of his name and what that meant to slowing the color line in Major League Baseball, of the racial injustice and inequality that Black players had to go through,” the Hall of Famer said this week. Larkin recalled that shortly after he was voted MVP, he got a call from twotime NL MVP Joe Morgan. The star Black second baseman of the Big Red Machine talked about Landis’ legacy and “he said it never sat well with him, having that name on there,” Larkin recalled. Larkin agrees. “His name should not be represented on a plaque or award of honor, especially at this day and time,” he said. “If his name was taken off , I would not be See LANDIS, Page 2B
DECEMBER 7, 1939: Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, fi rst commissioner of baseball, in Cincinnati, Ohio. No Blacks played in Major League Baseball during Landis’ tenure as commissioner. FILE
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Tony Blom Metropolitan Amateur Championship, June 24
Patrick O'Leary watches his tee shot in the Tony Blom Championship.
Michael O'Brien eyes his putt during the Round of 16 match play in the Tony Blom Metropolitan Amateur Championship in golf June 25 at Shaker Run Golf Club, Lebanon. PHOTOS BY JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER
Garrett Wood from Mason High watches his shot.
Maciejewski Continued from Page 1B
called the experience as humbling. He said the situation was exactly what he needed to push him to become the athlete he is now. In his sophomore year, he saw minutes in 12 games and started in six of those. That season forward Maciejewski became a key player for the Falcons. “If I was going to achieve anything from soccer it was going to be from my hard work,” Maciejewski said. “I’m not physically gifted. A lot of my success
2017 Met champion Alex Rodger watches his tee shot during the Tony Blom Championship.
Tommy Sullinger watches his shot during the Round of 16 match play.
comes from the amount of work I put in, fi ne-tuning my craft, and putting in more time than others. I always outwork my competition.” During his time at BGSU Maciejewski was named to All-MAC Second Team, All-MAC tournament team, an honorable mention from the Ohio Collegiate Soccer Association and was named among the top MAC’s Top-20 players in their Top Drawer Soccer Postseason list just to name a few. The hard work was noticed and Maciejewski had the opportunity to play for the Cincinnati Dutch Lions, an amateur level soccer club during the summer of 2018. That summer he was able to learn
and grow once again to better himself for his senior year at BGSU. After graduating Maciejewski played for the Columbus Crew, an American soccer league team for two seasons. Maciejewski decided to focus on his career instead of playing soccer but took a lot away from the experience. “I was also able to train with the Columbus Crew this past summer, which was also another fantastic experience; just being able to get that pro exposure,” Maciejewski said. Now Maciejewski is looking to accept a full-time job off er to start his career and continue to build his life in the Cincinnati area.
Robby Pickett, an Indian Hill graduate, watches his shot from the bunker.
Landis Continued from Page 1B
opposed to it at all.” Hired in 1920 as the sport’s fi rst commissioner to help clean up rampant gambling, Landis and his legacy are “always a complicated story” that includes “documented racism,” offi cial MLB historian John Thorn said. “Landis is who he is. He was who he was,” Thorn said. “I absolutely support the movement to remove Confederate monuments, and Landis was pretty damn near Confederate.”
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COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
COMMUNITY NEWS
The CSYO program allows students to hone their skills while performing advanced and exciting repertoire. PROVIDED
Youth Orchestra auditions scheduled for Aug. 27-30 The Cincinnati Symphony Youth Orchestras (CSYO) has been a vital part of Cincinnati’s musical culture since 1964. Its two full orchestras are comprised of talented and dedicated student musicians. The CSYO is investing in the future of music and the next generation of leaders. The program allows students to hone their skills while performing advanced and exciting repertoire. CSYO alumni go on to play in the world’s fi nest orchestras and are also found working as doctors, teachers, lawyers, community leaders, and business professionals. Whether or not a graduate continues music studies after their time in CSYO, students leave with increased self-confi dence, a strong sense of self-discipline, and a deeper appreciation for music and the arts. The CSYO was founded in 1964 as the Cincinnati Youth Symphony Orchestra by Max Rudolf, who was Music Director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, and by area music educators who recognized the importance of providing talented young musicians with the opportunity for an exceptional orchestral experience. The fi rst conductor of the CSYO was Sigmund Effron, CSO Concertmaster, who guided the CSYO until 1970 when he was followed by a series of distinguished conductors, including Keith Lockhart. The Cincinnati Symphony Youth Orchestras program is made up of approximately 200 musicians from high schools in southwestern Ohio, northern Kentucky, and southeast-ern Indiana. Applications are being accepted for the 2020-2021 season. Students in grades 7-12 who play woodwinds, brass, percussion, harp, violin, viola, cello, or double bass are invited to apply. Auditions for the program are scheduled for August 27-30. More information, audition excerpts, and the audition application can be found at cincinnatisymphony.org/csyo. Carol Dunevant, Cincinnati Symphony Youth Orchestra
Cincinnati’s 3rd annual Festival of Faiths to go virtual The 3rd Annual Festival of Faiths, the signature program of the interfaith group EquaSion, is going virtual to off er an 8-day program, Aug. 23 through 30, fi lled with worship, music, spiritual meditations, brown bag and webinar events, and a panel discussion for youth. The 2020 Festival of Faiths schedule of programs is available online at https://www.equasion.org/festival-of-faiths/2020-schedule/. The 2020 Festival of Faiths was expected to draw more than 3,000 participants to Xavier University’s Cintas Center, until the Festival’s leadership decided to cancel this year’s in-person event due to concerns surrounding the new coronavirus pandemic. Building on the momentum of our community’s interfaith collaboration and the “Turning to Faith” series, which attracted hundreds to online programs in April and May, the new program has been crafted for the unprecedented challenges we face. This year’s theme is “Compassion Through Action: 20/20 Vision for Hope, Healing and Justice,” and the activities being planned will again embrace the 30 faith communities and 13 world religions that have
The Cincinnati Symphony Youth Orchestras (CSYO) has been a vital part of Cincinnati’s musical culture since 1964. Its two full orchestras are comprised of talented and dedicated student musicians. PROVIDED
The CSYO is investing in the future of music and the next generation of leaders. PROVIDED
participated in previous festivals. Festival of Faiths Co-Chairs include Sandy Kaltman, Maria Munir, Bishop Marvin Thomas Sr. and Jaipal Singh. “The city and the country are keenly aware of the divisions that persist in our society at a time when we must all remain socially distant to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, yet Cincinnati’s interfaith commu-
PUZZLE ANSWERS C A T S P A W
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C H A T T E R F E T E R E B U K E S
Participants at the 2019 Festival of Faiths. PROVIDED
nity representing 13 world religions continues to fi nd ways to come together,” said Festival spokesperson Tamie Sullivan. For more information on EquaSion’s interfaith community and the Cincinnati Festival of Faiths, visit www.equasion.org. Tamie Sullivan, EquaSion
COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2020
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SCHOOL NEWS Madeira Elementary School creates culture of kindness
See SCHOOL , Page 8B
Worship Directory
Katie Jacobs is pictured on Earlham College’s campus last year. PROVIDED
Loveland student earns $36K Watson Fellowship
BAPTIST
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
Hyde Park Baptist Church
First Church of Christ, Scientist 3035 Erie Ave 871-0245
Michigan & Erie Ave
Sunday Service and Sunday School 10:30am Wednesday Testimonial Meeting 7:30pm Reading Room 3035 Erie Ave
513-321-5856 Bill Rillo, Pastor Sunday Worship Services: 11:00am & 6:00pm Sunday School: 9:45am Wednesday Bible Study: 7:00pm www.hydeparkbaptistchurch.org
MADEIRA-SILVERWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
8000 Miami Ave. 513-791-4470 www.madeirachurch.org Sunday Worship 9:00 am - Contemporary Service 10:00am Educational Hour 11:00 am - Traditional Service
Summit CDS junior scores in top fi ve percent of math test nationally Summit Country Day School junior Yunbo “Bonnie” Wang, Blue Ash, scored in the top fi ve percent nationally on the American Math Competition 12 exam. Her score on the test qualifi es her to take the American Invitational Mathematics Examination (AIME) on March 11. While Bonnie had the highest score among Summit students, the second and third highest scores were from junior Wanli “Vennis” Yang, Maineville, and senior Maliah Bricking, Sharonville, respectively.
PRESBYTERIAN
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Weekend Worship Saturday: 5 p.m. Sunday: 9 & 10:30 a.m. LIVE STREAMING go to our website, epiphanhyumc.org and click the link Nursery, Children’s & Youth available 6635 Loveland-Miamiville Rd. Loveland, OH 45140 513.677.9866 • www.epiphanyumc.org
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Childrens Ministry & Nursery PASTOR PAULA STEWART
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Loveland, Ohio’s Katie Jacobs just eearned one of the nation’s 47 prestigious Watson Fellowships, named after the late founder of IBM. Jacobs will graduate from Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana, later this spring. Watson recipients earn $36,000 in support of independent study and international travel. She is interested in issues related to environmental sustainability – and her project refl ects that. You can learn more by accessing our press release here: bit.ly/2UwIFkp. Brian Zimmerman, Earlham College
Yunbo “Bonnie” Wang
CE-GCI0394340-01
The world could use a little more kindness and Madeira Elementary School (MES) is ready to help. The school‘s Kindergarten through fourth grade students recently participated in The Great Kindness Challenge sponsored by the Kids for Peace Organization. MES students devoted the last week of February to performing as many acts of kindness as possible, creating their own “culture of kindness.” Classroom lessons included the importance of being kind, and every day students heard daily kindness quotes spoken by the school’s Fourth Grade Student Leaders on the morning and afternoon announcements. During lunch students sat at diff erent tables to “mix it up.” The week featured diff erent dress up days with input for themes from the Fourth Grade Student leaders. The days included Team Kindness (favorite team jersey), Aloha Kindness (tropical fl air), Wild for Kindness (camo or animal print), Mix it Up with Kindness (mix, mash and clash prints), and Color Your World with Kindness (grade level colors). At the end of the week the class winner of the kindness poster contest received a class pizza party. Grade level photos were also taken with students forming a heart. Nearly 15 million students in 27,000 schools around the world participated in the Great Kindness Challenge to create a culture of kindness. The over 250 million acts of benevolence they performed demonstrated a commitment to fostering positive, caring and respectful school environments. Elected each year by their peers, the Fourth Grade Student Leaders serve as positive role models for the building’s younger students. The group is coordinated by Brigid Williamson and Katie Naegeli . This is the fi fth year MES has been named a Kindness Certifi ed School. Diane Nichols, Madeira City Schools
The American Math Competition (AMC) 12 exam is sponsored by the Mathematical Association of America and is given to qualifying students in grades 11 and 12. It covers trigonometry, advanced algebra and advanced geometry. Students are given 25 multiple choice questions to answer in 75 minutes. In addition to this exam, several freshmen and sophomores took the
Children’s programs and nursery & toddler care available at 9:30 and 11:00 services. Plenty of Parking behind church.
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COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B
No. 0705 POWER-UPS
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BY JON SCHNEIDER AND ANDERSON WANG / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 17 Jon Schneider, of New York City, is a research scientist for Google, working on problems in machine learning and economics. Anderson Wang, of Mountain View, Calif., is a software engineer currently between jobs. They met at M.I.T. in the early 2010s, where they lived in the same hall. They’ve been making and solving puzzles together ever since. This is the first New York Times crossword for each of them. — W.S.
AC R O S S
RELEASE DATE: 7/12/2020
1 Not fine 7 Expedition 12 Savory jelly 17 T acks on 19 Mollycoddle 20 Sight on an English farm 21 Slacker role for Jeff Bridges in ‘‘The Big Lebowski’’ 22 Superenthusiastic 23 Spelman College graduate, e.g. 24 ‘‘____ is an emotion in motion’’: Mae West 25 See 30-Across 27 Morning weather phenomenon 29 See 33-Across 30 With 25-Across, get as much approval from an audience as possible 32 Dalmatians, e.g. 33 With 29-Across, like a deer in headlights 35 N.Y.C.’s first subway line 36 Singer Mann 38 Michelangelo masterpiece 40 Sunset Boulevard sight 42 Utah mountain range 45 What people tend to do when a rush-hour subway train arrives 47 See 50-Across 48 See 53-Across Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
50 With 47-Across, not change anyone’s mind, say 52 Forest of Fangorn resident, in fiction 53 With 48-Across, stops wasting time 57 Dawn 59 Eternally damned 61 Promptness 63 Default consequence 65 Have an influence (on) 69 Iraqi port city 70 Mathematical concepts suggested eight times in this puzzle 74 ‘‘I’m telling the truth!’’ 75 One of the Seven Dwarfs 77 Yeats’s ‘‘The Lake ____ of Innisfree’’ 78 Bad place for a fly, in a saying 80 Showy shrub 83 Arch supporter 85 See 90-Across 86 Flat-topped cap 88 See 92-Across 90 With 85-Across, uncomfortably accurate 92 With 88-Across, sacrificed 94 Place that processes ore 96 Eponym of the world’s largest church 101 Some team-bonding trips 103 State whose capital is Dispur
105 Drum that can be played with a brush 106 Hypotheticals 107 See 113-Across 109 Cleans, as a deck 112 See 116-Across 113 With 107-Across, bad sort of competition 115 ‘‘Freak on a Leash’’ metal band 116 With 112-Across, ‘‘Your misfortune is nothing special’’ 118 Jocular lead-in to ‘‘macation’’ 119 List ender 121 Abstract artist de Kooning known for her portraits 123 Obsessive cleaner, say 125 Important faculty for school 126 Brought home 127 Lively French dance popular in the Baroque era 128 Big name in nail polish 129 Rug rats 130 Brand whose sales skyrocketed after the release of ‘‘E.T.’’ DOWN
1 Person who’s being used 2 Sister of Laertes 3 They’re scored from 1 to 5 4 What’s found at one end of a rainbow 5 Comfy-cozy 6 Sources of Norse mythology
7 More throaty 8 Pale 9 Ukr., e.g., once 10 Spanish ‘‘I love you’’ 11 Kind of cuisine that’s often eaten with one’s hands 12 Tied, in scores 13 ____ vide (culinary technique) 14 Do some heavy lifting 15 ‘‘Don’t pay attention to that’’ 16 Idle gossip 18 Convince 19 Cracks 20 Actor Dev of ‘‘Lion’’ 26 Lick (up) 28 Stop the flow of 31 House call? 33 Playful growl 34 Run-____ (hip-hop trio) 37 Alternative to an ellipsis 39 Some clickbait articles 41 Potentially risky thing to drop in a relationship 43 ____ Woo-shik, co-star of 2019’s ‘‘Parasite’’ 44 ____ cuisine 46 Sanders who played in a World Series and two Super Bowls 49 Charon’s domain 51 Lead-in to self 53 They might be caught in the rain 54 ____ Bator 55 Stun, in a way 56 Hard-hit line drive 58 One variety of love
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60 Broadway’s ____-Fontanne Theater 62 Heckle 64 Part of a hammer 66 Butter alternative 67 ‘‘There warn’t no home like a raft ...’’ speaker 68 Lavish celebration 71 Hard Italian cheese 72 Level, for one 73 Isolated components 76 Deviation in flight
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79 Exterminator’s target 81 Was bested by 82 Title horror film locale 84 Wrote poorly 86 They have your life hanging by a thread 87 They might involve impersonating a dealer 89 Kingdom east of Babylonia 91 Mini-albums, in brief 92 Ship with three banks of oars
93 Fly catcher
111 Dishonest attack 95 Dead Sea Scrolls sect 114 Foe of the Morlocks, in 97 Envelope abbr. sci-fi 98 Juggling, singing, 116 Major export of magic, etc. Tuscany 99 Scholarly 117 Place to hang holiday 100 Tells off lights 102 Just peachy 120 Something drawn by 104 ____ Pro a jerk, maybe 108 Dental covering 122 Sanctuary similar to a crown 124 What a digitigrade 110 Water pipe stands on
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COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
SCHOOL NEWS Continued from Page 5B
AMC 10 test which covers the high school curriculum up to grade 10. Freshman Yiheng “Ethan” Wu, Norwood, had the top score for The Summit. Sophomore Nicholas Ciaccio, Plainville, came in second and sophomore Parker Bricking, Sharonville, came in third. Upper School Math Teacher Eric Unwin is the faculty mentor for the Math Club at The Summit and students who pursue mathematic competition. Nancy Berlier, The Summit Country Day School
Summit CDS opens annual Hands Across the Water fundraising initiative For the past 10 years, The Summit Country Day School has partnered with its founders, The Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur (SNDdeN), during Hands Across the Water, a campus-wide event that teaches Summit children about the global water crisis. A signifi cant part of the school’s annual initiative is donated during Christmas Eve Masses, the only time of the year when a collection is taken. This year, the amount donated totaled more than $5,500 to the SNDdeN Clean Water Fund. Last year, The Summit community raised more than $14,000 to provide clean water to people in developing countries. Since it began, the school-wide project has raised almost $150,000 and has saved thousands of lives. Nick Robbe, The Summit Country Day School
Upper School students at The Seven Hills School teach Lower School students about Lunar New Year Upper School Chinese students at The Seven Hills School shared their knowledge of the traditions and celebration of Lunar New Year with Doherty and Lotspeich Lower School students in early February. Teacher Mia Wu’s Chinese I and III classes and Nanyue Zhu’s English as a second language class taught students about the Lunar New Year, which celebrates the beginning of the New Year according to the traditional Chinese activity, and completed a fun activity. “The Upper Schoolers taught students the legend of the Lunar New Year and a New Year song in Chinese, and made lanterns,” Wu said. “The students loved singing the song, which they picked up quickly, and kept singing it during the entire session.” Wu said not only do the Upper School students enjoy teaching the younger students on campus, they are also enhancing their own learning experiences. “I think when Upper School students are preparing the teaching material, they are reinforcing the knowledge that they have learned,” Wu said. “Also, being able to use knowledge makes them more motivated in the class.” Taylor Evans, The Seven Hills School
Indian Hill Board of Education Member Dr. Eddie Hooker and Indian Hill School District Nurse Shelley Hoyer with surgical mask donation at University of Cincinnati Hospital Wednesday, March 18. PROVIDED
School district donates medical supplies to University of Cincinnati Hospital On March 18, the Indian Hill School District donated 3,600 surgical masks to the University of Cincinnati Hospital as part of Ohio Governor Mike DeWine’s call to help stock medical supplies. The surgical masks were stored at the Indian Hill School District, after the Hamilton County Civil Defense established Indian Hill as a crisis management center. “Being designated as a crisis management center
was something that happened years ago,” said Indian Hill School District Nurse Shelley Hoyer. “We hope seeing this donation will help other schools that were set up as crisis management centers look for the supplies they are storing so they can also help provide this needed protection to our medical professionals.” “We are thankful that as a District we are able to serve the greater cause of protecting those who protect others with these supplies,” said Indian Hill Superintendent Kirk Koennecke. “Helping each other, in any way that we can, is what we need to do.” Heather Higdon, Indian Hill School District
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2020
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COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Blue Ash Jareds Way: M/i Homes Of Cincinnati LLC to Johnson Cathy & William; $671,859 Deerfield Rd: Adkins Dale R@3 to Adkins Dale R@3; $175,000 10122 Crosier Ln: Bene Family Trust to Rusincovitch Jeffrey Allan & Marie Renee; $377,000 6511 Donjoy Dr: Leonard G Tod & Susan K to Gruber David & Donna; $375,000 9178 Scamper Ln: Klein Jerome J Iii to Oneill Bryan & Martine; $307,000 9557 Linfield Dr: Tomo Group LLC to Magner Anthony & Jillian; $385,000
Columbia Township 6935 Grace Ave: Mccollum Melonie M to Hoerst Rebecca; $180,000
Columbia Tusculum Strafer St: Rose Eric & Kathryn to Mcintyre Stacey L Tr; $875,000 413 Strafer St: Rose Eric & Kathryn to Mcintyre Stacey L Tr; $875,000
Deer Park 3829 Oleary Ave: Whitton Brooke to Schroeder Margaret; $157,000 4320 Schenck Ave: Ayers Russell S & Melody to Singh Yuvprakash; $179,000 4411 Redmont Ave: Larkins Ventures LLC to Johnson Marek; $210,000 7195 Maryland Ave: Siemer Katelin to Heffernan Jenna; $184,000 7833 Gail Dr: Anders Kelly E to Smith Kaitlyn Louise & James Marshall; $220,000
Hyde Park 1301 Cryer Ave: Herbert Susan to Hts Properties LLC; $250,000 2805 Ambleside Pl: Hurlburt Michael F Tr to Hager Bruce W & Lia B; $1,270,000 2881 Ziegle Ave: Polaski Evan Thomas & Nicole M to Jacobjames Properties LLC; $412,500 3535 St Charles Pl: Moore Bryan J to Lorenz Annette M; $547,000 3624 Erie Ave: Giannetti Peter to Craig Johnathan D & Lakeshia N Hyndman; $344,500
Indian Hill 3 Voorhees Dr: Brunner Gordon F Tr to Stafford Amy; $1,712,000 6660 Tupelo Ln: Whitt Leo T & Xia Wang to Schreiber Eric & Jessica B; $800,000 8450 Summerhouse Rd: Hill Ellen G to Ott Rohan Suzanne &; $835,000
8450 Summerhouse Rd: Hill Ellen G to Ott Rohan Suzanne &; $835,000
Loveland 1300 Bellwood Dr: Boatright Tracy to Hawkins Justin C; $177,000 208 Seminole Dr: Pugh Rickey D & Joetta K to Smith Teran R; $135,000
Madeira 6016 Arnett St: Maier Bruno E & Deborah S to Anderson Colt R & Keelie F; $655,000 6752 Rose Crest Ave: Hassman Steven E & Marsha R to Blackwelder Dennis & Mia; $215,000 7098 Juniperview Ln: Davis Thomas H & Dianna L to Rudibaugh Daniel & Abigail; $476,000 7227 Iuka Ave: Morrison Matthew C to Goodman Joshua & Danielle Reichman; $300,100 7238 Osceola Dr: Breitenbach Joseph T & Kelsey Kaye Lockwood to Vonderhaar Thomas P & Maria A; $290,000 7902 Tances Dr: Downing Robert & Allison to Ruscello Nicholas; $310,000
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Montgomery 10631 Weil Rd: Rink Jessica A Tr to Robert Lucke Homes Inc; $200,000 10658 Weil Rd: Guo Jicheng to Shaner Eric & Abigail; $284,500 10795 Deerfield Rd: Bertaux Michele S & Bruno A Zabaglio to Woods Jeremiah & Jessica; $285,000 5345 Cooper Rd: Mcnay Linda T to Johnson Joan; $234,000 7250 Huckleberry Ln: Stubbs Joel & Allison Sabitus to Deters William M; $474,500 9703 Bunker Hill Ln: Conrad Richard J to Rothstein Chelsea; $165,000
WE MOVE Your stuff out and back in
Mount Lookout 1013 Omar Pl: Ciani Clinton & Kara to Lewnard John M; $334,000 1215 Hayward Ave: Wunder Nikolas S & Heather K to Patton Danielle & Filloon Nicholas; $754,000 1334 Herlin Pl: Kurtz Wendy S to Zamulko Olga Y & Ryan J Smith; $349,900 2963 Linwood Ave: Allman Thomas to Gerken Drew N; $304,000 3045 Kinmont St: Allgeier Nancy Lee to Rednot Holdings LLC; $125,000 4841 Beverly Hill Dr: Schuermann Eric C & Arli E to Herkamp Scott & Laura; $619,133
Norwood Wesley Ave: Carson Willie to Burwinkel Joseph M & John A; $99,000 2156 Slane Ave: Rericha Nicholaus R & Alice C to Friedmann Michael J & Lindsey Rachael; $379,000 2223 Cameron Ave: Bigelow Matthew G & Laura L to Fischer Stephen & Avery Blair-wilson; $355,000 2223 Cameron Ave: Bigelow Matthew G & Laura L to Fischer Stephen & Avery Blair-wilson; $355,000 3909 Ivanhoe Ave: Mitsch Kristen L to Wilson Karen N; $184,000 4002 Jefferson Ave: J&t Top Remodel LLC to Fletcher Peter Derek & Mckenzie Stevens; $249,900 4905 Wesley Ave: Carson Willie to Broward Properties LLC; $122,100 4909 Wesley Ave: Carson Willie to Burwinkel Joseph M & John A; $99,000 5131 Rolston Ave: Duval Development LLC to Patterson Alex J; $89,000 5512 Carthage Ave: Erickson Brian W to Martin Kathryn A & Erick J; $137,000
Oakley 2722 Atlantic Ave: Ashcraft Joyce A to Whitacre Mark; $191,000 3329 Sterling Wy: Wilson Peter Michael & Natalja Leigh Stanski to Chaiken Phoebe Lynn; $250,900 3521 Rawson Pl: Baute Alyssa E to Zant Alexander J; $285,000 3545 Madison Park Ave: Wilcoxon Jeffrey D to Ramminger Ryan; $229,000 3579 Harrow Ave: Brown Corrine L to Green Ryan; $187,500 3880 Marburg Ave: Uthe Zachary to Tanner Seth B; $280,000 3911 Eileen Dr: Messer Michael to Hite Robert & Dana; $595,000 4139 Paxton Woods Dr: Dowty Tyler to Bell Margaret E & Andrew W Zolides;
WE STORE Your stuff securley onsite
$311,000 4419 Verne Ave: Molitor Edward & Donna to Ezzell Adam; $255,000 4518 Camberwell Rd: Eckroth Kenneth J & Joyce M to Gerdsen James T & Teresa; $199,500 4518 Camberwell Rd: Eckroth Kenneth J & Joyce M to Gerdsen James T & Teresa; $199,500
Pleasant Ridge 2545 Ridgecliff Ave: Schuckman Richard G to Rettinger Angela R & Cory Martin; $275,000 3270 Beredith Pl: Hts Properties LLC to Acree Molly & Bradley Acree; $575,000
Silverton 3945 Fordham Pl: Henskens Kees @ 2 to Heusman Colleen Mary; $179,900 4245 North Ave: Ballaban Gavriella to Phillips Kaely E; $176,000
Sycamore Township Deerfield Rd: Adkins Dale R@3 to Adkins Dale R@3; $175,000 11589 Deerfield Rd: Adkins Dale R@3 to Adkins Dale R@3; $175,000 5238 Elmcrest Ln: Collins Donna Russel @2 Co-trustees to Kurlemann Bernard; $389,500 5990 St Regis Dr: Gault Jean Ann Tr to White Patricia @3; $289,500 7961 Fawncreek Dr: Rc Properties Enterprises LLC to Leugers Claire L; $263,500 8572 Wicklow Ave: Glevicky Gavin & Stefanie to Hunt & Whitaker LLC; $183,000 8671 Darnell Ave: Dennis Christopher M & Detra M Price-dennis to Restored Renovations LLC; $90,000 8702 Sturbridge Dr: Banks Gregory K & Laurie L to Kranias Amanda & Efstratios; $605,000 8984 Plainfield Rd: Davenport Michael & Charlene R to Mckinney Charles C @ 3; $150,000
Symmes Township 11580 Symmes Gate Ln: Burkhardt Karen L to Bellegia Lindsay Tr; $170,000 11744 Gable Glen Ln: Dehner Jill to Fontova Pedro; $172,000 12001 Carrington Ln: Stein Alan L to Williams Diane M; $150,000 8524 Whisperwoods Ln: Bishop Natasha to Gurvich Felix; $320,000 9772 Union Cemetery Rd: Ogborn Gregory A & Amy E to Insco Jamie & Brooke; $374,500
WE FLOOR Your
GARAGE PATIO DRIVE WAY BASEMENT
Plus receive and additional 15% off your entire job!
Call today to get on schedule... 513-572-6126 CE-GCI0441078-07
Please see estimator for details, restrictions may apply, 15% off entire job, cannot combine with any other offers, Expires 7/31/2020
COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2020
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The following individuals are delinquent on their storage rental payments; their personal property will be sold by public sale on July 16th, at LANDEN STORE & LOCK, 2575 W. U.S. Route 22/3, Maineville, OH 45039 at 1:00p.m. HEATHER GIBSON-2355 HIBISCUS DR. LOVELAND OH 45140 SARAH WEST-356 THOMPSON ST. MORROW OH 45152 MARIE OSSAI-CHARLES- 9788 SUMMERS POND DR. LOVELAND OH 45140 LH,Jul8,15,’20#4266605
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2020
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COMMUNITY PRESS NORTHEAST
Your generous monetary donation provides shoes, coats, glasses and basic necessities to neediest kids right here in the Tri-state. With so many children living in poverty, it’s a great way for you to help the children who need it most. So, step up for Neediest Kids of All and send your donation today!
GIVE TO NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL Yes, I would like to contribute to NKOA. Enclosed is $___________________. Name______________________________________________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________________ Apt. No. ___________ City_______________________________________________________ State_________________ Zip___________ Please send this coupon and your check or money order, payable to: NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL, P.O. Box 636666, Cincinnati, OH 45263-6666
Make a credit card contribution online at Neediestkidsofall.com.
Neediest Kids of All is a non-profit corporation now in its 64th year. Its principal place of business is Cincinnati, and it is registered with the Ohio Attorney General as a charitable trust. Contributions are deductible in accordance with applicable tax laws.