AUGUST
How Early Detection Saved Natalie Herbick's Life
Faced with breast cancer, the Fox 8 anchor elected for a double mastectomy.
The 2023 Heart of Cleveland Heart and Stroke Ball was a night to remember.
Purpose and passion ignited, as hearts came together to save lives and drive equitable health for every member of our community.
The event was a culmination of the Heart of Cleveland, an American Heart Association campaign centered around every individual to address critical issues and drive work to equitably improve and save lives for everyone everywhere. The Heart and Stroke Ball marked a special moment in time to reflect, honor and celebrate the progress made through the determination, dedication, and passion of all who support the Heart of Cleveland.
The Association’s lifesaving work right here in Greater Cleveland is illustrated through the story of a very brave six-year-old little girl, our heart hero, Emma. Emma is an extraordinary little girl who brings a magnetic joy to everyone around her. You would never know she is a heart transplant survivor.
Emma was diagnosed with a congenital heart defect known as Hypoplastic Right Heart Syndrome (HRHS) – Pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular septum. The pulmonary artery that brings blue blood to the lungs did not develop. On Emma’s third day of life, she needed surgery and during that surgery she went into cardiac arrest. At just six years old, Emma has had over 25 procedures.
As Emma’s mom said, “helping fund associations like the American Heart Association are helping create devices that are truly saving lives, and it saved Emma’s life.”
Emma’s not alone. Each year, more than 40,000 children are born with a congenital heart defect (CHD), the most common birth defect. The Association’s lifesaving work is helping Emma and countless others in our community live a longer, healthier life. The Heart of Cleveland has taken this campaign beyond the ballroom and onto the city block, bringing the work of the American Heart Association to life through the dedication and determination of special volunteers and companies.
The mission of the American Heart Association is broad, and our reach is wide. This year, alone the Heart of Cleveland campaign focused on:
• Reducing health risks in women at all life stages, including during pregnancy and delivery – focusing on the number one killer of new moms – heart disease.
• Partnering with local healthcare systems and federally qualified health clinics resulting in coverage of more than 400,000 patients locally.
• And improving access to heart healthy foods for those members of our community who are food insecure.
All this was done to fuel the mission forward, coming out of a difficult few years – with all eyes on the future. Yet there is so much work to be done. Focusing on health equity for all remains a top priority –meeting people where they are is mission critical.
Together, we are the Heart of Cleveland.
David Jacobs 2023 Heart of Cleveland Chair, Oswald Companies, A Unison Risk Advisors Company Heart Hero Emma and her family2023 Heart of Cleveland Guiding Values Awards
Extending & Improving People’s Lives Award
Bringing Science to Life Award
Live Fierce. Stand for All Award
Dr. William Lewis Cardiologist and Chief Operating Officer & President of the Ambulatory Division, The MetroHealth SystemThis award recognizes the importance of promoting the goals of the American Heart Association as a healthcare clinician. This award can be given to any practicing healthcare provider, such as a physician, nurse, physicians’ assistant, or other clinical role.
Healthcare clinicians are a critical link between using the AHA science and best practices, and the general population of our community. They help keep us safe, healthy, and cared for, in both the healthy times and difficult times.
With cardiovascular disease remaining the #1 killer of all Americans and stroke the #5 killer and #1 disabler, it is so vital that we have healthcare practitioners who help with prevention, risk reduction, symptom management, care plans and beyond.
Dr. David Van Wagoner
Researcher at Cleveland Clinic’s Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Sciences, and an Associate Professor with Case Western Reserve University, Department of Molecular Medicine
This award recognizes a local American Heart Association funded researcher, for their steadfast and innovative research work, bringing science to life through their research related to cardiovascular and/or neuro health. For many advancements, the American Heart Association relies on volunteer scientists and lay stakeholders to ensure funding for the most-high-impact and groundbreaking research. As we develop the future treatments and protocols for these devastating diseases, we will need to ensure a robust pathway of AHA research remains available. This award celebrates and honors one such researcher for their contributions!
Meet our 2023 Heart of Cleveland League of Leaders
In 2024, the American Heart Association will celebrate 100 years as a relentless force for longer, healthier lives. And as we look ahead, we recognize the work of the AHA is more important now than ever before. Our centennial milestone is coupled with our 2024 Impact Goal of ensuring every person has the opportunity for a full, healthy life. Every person means working with every community and that is why our Executive Leadership is so important. The Heart and Stroke Ball Campaign is a catalyst for this work.
Lindsay Davis
Advocate for Lindsay’s Law, Actress and Miss Ohio 2011
This award recognizes an individual who not only Live Fierce for themselves and their loved ones, but also serve as a catalyst for longer, healthier lives for everyone, everywhere, regardless of who they are or where they live. This person is a champion of our mission, whether it be around advocating for our policies to advance equity, creating a sustainable health program to improve more lives or providing education and resources to a population in our community who is at greater risk for developing cardiovascular disease or stroke.
Meet our Leaders of Impact
Every year across 150 cities, community leaders step up to join Leaders of Impact in an effort to bring the work of the American Heart Association to life! Eleven individuals were nominated by community members to take a stand and give all Americans healthier lives by engaging their networks in 7-week fundraising campaign that made a lasting impact. They educated our communities on the risk factors and warning signs of heart disease and stroke, pioneered new advances in care and treatment of heart disease, built a culture of health where the healthy choice is the easy choice,and raised much needed funds so less people suffer the devastating effects of heart disease and stroke.
Collectively, this team ranked 7th in the Nation and 4th in the Midwest, making a financial impact of over $90,000 – a record breaking year for Cleveland’s Leaders of Impact campaign!
Congratulations to Rustom Khouri III for making the greatest impact and being awarded the 2022 Leaders of Impact Winner!
Rustom Khorui III, Vice President Carnegie Management & Development Corp.ON THE COVER
37 BEST DOCTORS Follow Fox 8 anchor Natalie Herbick's journey with breast cancer detection and treatment. Then, delve into the top-rated reputable healthcare professionals of Northeast Ohio.
Edited by Dillon Stewart and Ron Ledgard
Photo by Megann Galehouse
Assisted by Magan McLaughlin
FEATURED
31 UNDER THE LAKE Journey through the industry, nautical wreckage and biodiversity of Cleveland's Great Lake.
Edited by Annie Nickoloff
8 FROM THE EDITOR
10 CONVERSATION
LAY OF THE LAND
13 DARK SKY PARKS Wander just outside of Cleveland to Observatory Park for unrivaled night sky viewing of the cosmos.
15 DOG WHISPERER Anna Rencz’s dog training camp helps owners build better relationships with their pets.
16 BAKER ELECTRIC What happened to the Cleveland company that successfully created electric cars 100 years ago?
FOOD & DRINK
21 CHICKEN AND COMMUNITY How The Crispy Chick became a pillar of its community — and a hub for the tastiest tenders.
24 FOOD FLIGHTS From coffee to soup to a full pound of bacon, if you can think of a delicious dish, there's likely a flight for it in Cleveland.
27 DINING GUIDE Breakfast-infused, savory or even slightly sweet, dine your way through these iconic local burgers.
HOME & GARDEN
127 NO MOW MAY Looking back at the conservation-minded trend and how it affected Cleveland neighborhoods.
SPECIAL SECTIONS
88 OUTSIDE THE BOX Cleveland schools, students and camps are attracting more kids to STEM by redefining it as a challenging, creative path for the future.
Addiction can affect anyone regardless of job title, career field or educational background. At The Bluffs Rehab, we understand the importance of work and outside commitments. At our private facility, patients work with a dedicated treatment team to develop a personalized treatment plan to address their specific substance misuse and mental health needs. The Bluffs is proud to be an in-network provider for most
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and goes ballistic."
A few hours after telling him to shove it, I got to thinking. Though a bit insensitive, he wasn't wrong.
Why do humans lack the foresight we need to save our own lives? Why do we require tangible, in-your-face evidence to respect a threat? Too often,
tures rising and connected that rise to greenhouse gases and extreme weather. Yet, even as the effects become unavoidable, we're not doing enough.
We treat our health the same way. A staggering 45% of cancers could be prevented with lifestyle changes. Furthermore, cancer survival rates are as much as 50-100% higher when caught early.
Natalie Herbick took precautions due to her family history with breast cancer. Her story, told in this month's Best Doctors feature, is harrowing — but she's still here to tell it. Now, she hopes it can inspire others to take the early steps necessary to save their own lives.
Dillon Stewart, editor stewart@clevelandmagazine.comCommunity Support
Many readers responded with heartfelt support for East Palestine following our July cover story delving into the communal impact of a February train derailment.
From the readers:
@dublafullsleeveyats: so sad… the government needs to make things right #eastpalestine
PLANT LIFE
@bdot_boban: This is an extraordinary cover! Not only is it striking now, but it will bear historical significance for research and issue collectors. I love the opening scene at the bar. I like how the column of smoke becomes its own character.
@clevelandvibes: Thank you for covering this ❤
@chadfedorovich: Can’t believe it’s been this long without hearing more about this
@patmcmanamon: Compelling information and writing. Great read. Journalism at its best.
@newagevoyager: Unbelievable, thanks for covering this
These four native plants, recommended by the owners of Meadow City Native Plant Nursery, add a piece of Ohio to any garden or backyard with free space. clevelandmagazine.com/nativeplants
MINIATURE DELIGHT
With the last days of summer waning, there’s still just enough time to hit Northeast Ohio’s bevy of mini golf courses. Try to best your friends and family at locations like the candy-filled Sweeties Golfland Park or the castle-adorned Swings-N-Things. Find more in our 2023 Miniature Golf Guide at clevelandmagazine.com/minigolf
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CLEVELAND MAGAZINE SILVER SPOON AWARDS PARTY |
Cleveland Magazine and the Arthritis Foundation hosted 450 guests and 40 eateries at the 2023 Silver Spoon Awards Party, one of Cleveland’s most outstanding social and culinary evenings.
Guests indulged in delicious signature dishes from Northeast Ohio’s best restaurants and international wineries.
All proceeds benefited the Arthritis Foundation. Arthritis is the nation’s No. 1 cause of disability, affecting nearly 60 million Americans (one in four), including 300,000 children.
The Arthritis Foundation is boldly pursuing a cure for Arthritis, while championing the fight to conquer chronic pain with lifechanging resources, science, advocacy and community connections.
BEST OF THE EAST |
Cleveland Magazine celebrated the best places to dine, drink, play and shop on the East Side at the 2023 Best of the East Party on April 27 at Eton Chagrin Boulevard.
More than 900 guests indulged in an array of culinary delights, handcrafted cocktails and other samples from more than 50 Best of the East finalists who were on hand to showcase what makes them a local favorite.
Participating finalists included East Side staples such as Jim Alesci’s Place, Pacific East Japanese Restaurant and The Fairmount.
The event was graciously sponsored by Bradley Stone, Cleveland’s Star 102 and Cuyahoga Community College.
May 24, 2023
InterContinental Hotel Cleveland
April 27, 2023
Eton Chagrin Boulevard
Out and About
BEST OF THE WEST |
More than 700 guests joined Cleveland Magazine in celebrating the best West Side restaurants, bars, boutiques and more at the 2023 Best of the West Party on May 11 at Market Square at Crocker Park.
Attendees enjoyed tasty samples and displays from more than 50 Best of the West finalists, including fresh catches from Pier W, tasty brews from Fat Head’s Brewery and more from Gunselman’s Tavern.
At the end of the night, each attendee was given the chance to vote for their favorite finalist in each category.
The event was made possible through the generous support of Bradley Stone, Cleveland’s Star 102, Cuyahoga Community College and Trollbeads.
May 11, 2023
Market Square at Crocker Park
THE LAND
LAY OF
ARE YOU THE BOSS OF YOUR DOG?
16
WHY OUR ELECTRIC CARS FAILED
19
STYLE GUIDE: BACK TO SCHOOL
STARRY NIGHT
MOST
daytime visitors
visitors
flick on as the sun sets, illuminating the path toward the planetarium and Oberle Observatory buildings. Trees rustle in a breeze, crickets chirp in the distance and, as the final tones of dusty red and orange seep out of the sky overhead, starry clusters pop into vision. “We’re only 32 miles from Public Square,” says Observatory Park naturalist Chris Mentrek, “and already, there’s just such a difference in the view of the night sky.”
Observatory
Observatory Park is one of just 201 places certified by the International Dark Sky Association in the world. Founded in 2012, the Montville grounds seek to preserve pristine nighttime views just as other parks preserve other natural phenomena like rivers, mountains and rock formations.
“There are a lot of places where they’ll have the really great planetarium and a telescope, but they’re in one of the major cities in the U.S. — or there are a lot of places where they have a great view of the sky, but you’re in the wilderness,” Mentrek says. “Observatory Park is this fun in-between, where we’re not too far away from the city, but we’ve still got access to a reasonably dark sky and a
bunch of telescopes that we share with the public.”
Observatory Park and Stark County’s Fry Family Park make up Ohio’s only two dark sky parks. Other astronomy organizations, such as Lorain County’s Black River Astronomical Society and Hocking Hills’ John Glenn Astronomy Park, also offer stargazing opportunities.
But it’s not always an unmarred view of the night sky in Ohio: a state famous for its unpredictable weather.
“Clouds are something we have to contend with,” Mentrek says. “That’s part of why we schedule so many night sky programs at Observatory Park.”
Six nights out of every month, visitors can stop by Observatory Park to peer through either its massive Oberle telescope or nearby Nassau Observatory telescope, or a few mobile telescopes that wheel out onto a concrete pad. On cloudy nights, visitors instead enjoy a live planetarium show from Mentrek, showcasing what they would see behind the mist.
Amateur astronomers also regularly bring their own telescopes to the field, often happy to share a peek at a faraway planet or star — one that’s significantly clearer than what you’d see in downtown Cleveland. Nearby communities limit nighttime electricity use, keeping light pollution to a minimum.
It’s so clear that, on a good night of a summer’s New Moon, you can catch a solid view of the Milky Way winding its way across the sky.
Meanwhile, falls and winters give great views of rotating planets. This autumn, expect to see Saturn and Jupiter on full display.
In October and April, be prepared to visit the park for daytime festivities surrounding upcoming partial and full solar eclipses, says Mentrek.
“Nature’s always putting on a good show somewhere, somehow.”
Who's the Boss?
Anna Rencz’s dog training camp, Boss K9, helps improve relationships between owners and their pets.
MCCLANE, A 7-YEAR-OLD English Bulldog with an attitude, has found himself back at Boss K9 for a check-in with business owner Anna Rencz. The family pet of Jeff and Nicole Kelleher has developed issues around boundaries and control. When things don’t go his way, the generally lovable mutt turns irascible and stubborn.
“McClane has a very pushy, cocky and confident personality,” says Rencz. “The dog knows the weaker of the two. He senses it.”
Though Jeff raised McClane from puppyhood, Nicole is the more regular presence. “He respects Nicole more," Jeff says. “He likes to challenge me.”
McClane spent five to six weeks in Boss K9’s board and train program learning behaviors to make him a successful family pet. The facility, which recently expanded to a new location in the Superior-St. Clair neighborhood, specializes in behavioral training.
“We lay down the foundation of communication, so we can clearly let them
know what we want, what we don’t want, and do the bond-building work that builds trust and respect.”
Dogs were bred for specific purposes and require mental and physical stimulation as much as they need to learn how to relax and do nothing. “Our dogs are so smart,” says Rencz, “way smarter than we give them credit for.”
Taking McClane by the leash, Rencz feels him out, starting with a basic heel command. Pressed for more, McClane expresses displeasure with a toothy snarl and a warning snap meant to intimidate. Rencz doesn’t flinch. Her job is to remain neutral, redirect and guide.
Boss K9 exists because of a dog named Bubbles, a struggling foster pit bull, that changed everything for Rencz. “I realized I had an instinctual gift. I could see how impactful communication could be.”
Despite the hard work and compassion, Rencz is keenly aware that not every story has a positive outcome. Bubbles’ image is the focal point of the company’s branding and yet, after years of managing the dog’s severe, irreparable behavioral issues, Rencz made the decision to choose behavioral euthanasia.
“She brought me into this world of dog training. I was the one who had to take her out of this one,” says Rencz. “It was the hardest decision, after seven years of hard work.”
“I realized I had an instinctual gift. I could see how impactful communication could be," says Anna Rencz.
Though difficult to talk about, Rencz believes her transparency can help others. “Not all dogs will be successful.”
A lot of the work done at Boss K9 involves mending relationships.
The “prescription” for McClane is more focused time with Jeff and a regular schedule of behavioral work that will reestablish their relationship through routine, and mental and physical stimulation.
“Structure first," she says, "so you can have freedom later."
BY LISA SANDSElectrified Before Its Time
A Cleveland company, made electric cars go 100 years ago. What happened to Baker Electric?
IN AUGUST OF 1909, the news of the day concerned a pair of insurgencies.
Joe Cannon, even today considered one of the most powerful men to serve as Speaker of the House, fended off a challenge from Victor Murdock. Mexican President Porfirio Diaz, planning for a summit that fall with William Howard Taft, was trying to keep a lid on a potential revolution — unsuccessfully, as it would turn out.
But news in Cleveland focused on another head of state: The King of Siam, who had just ordered a new electric vehicle from a Cleveland company, the Baker Motor Vehicle Co.
“Unquestionably, this is the most elegantly appointed automobile ever built in America,” the company boasted in an ad, saying that the vehicle would be on display in Cleveland for a week before being sent to Bangkok. The car would have a top, dashboard and fenders finished in leather, and the body and running boards would be finished with ivory.
It was the latest feather in the cap for an automaker that had distinguished itself in its decade of existence. Bakers were celebrated for their luxury, and founder Walter Baker pursued — and broke — land speed records. There was a Baker Electric in the White House garage. Diamond
Jim Brady owned one. And the first car purchased by Thomas Edison was a Baker Electric. He thought they would soon dominate the market. “If you continue to make your present caliber of automobile and I my present quality of battery,” Edison told Baker, “the gasoline buggies will be out of existence in no time.”
But before too long, Baker disappeared into a morass of mergers, continuing to make vehicles of various types, but never selling passenger cars again. The early 20th century was dotted with electric manufacturers like Baker all ending up in the automotive graveyard — undone in no small part
by one of the same issues that plague electric cars today.
Walter Baker came from an innovative family. His father, George Baker, helped Thomas White found the Cleveland Sewing Machine Co. Though Walter Baker was born in New York — and his family could trace their roots back to Massachusetts and the days of the pilgrims — the family came to Cleveland so George Baker could help White start an eponymous sewing machine company. (A spinoff,
1900s.
White Motors Co., would also become a major player in the auto and truck manufacturing industry.)
Walter Baker formed the American Ball Bearing Co., which revolutionized wheeled vehicles. He would take a sulky with his new technology to horse tracks and set speed records in harness racing.
“Walter Baker was very, very smart,” says Bradley Brownell, the director of the Crawford Auto-Aviation Museum, which has four Baker Electrics in its collection. “He did a lot of research and development with speed because he knew that speed got headlines.”
In 1898, the Baker Motor Vehicle Co. was formed. The auto industry was far less developed at the time, with companies that manufactured bicycles, carriages or other products turning to auto manufacturing.
And there were several methods of propulsion at the time. There were steam-powered cars, relying on boilers that could take an hour to heat. There were gasoline-powered cars, finding a new use for a byproduct of oil refining, which, at that point, was mostly done for kerosene or paraffin for home heating and lighting. Those were nasty and smelly, and needed to be cranked to start. Occasionally, the car would backfire while starting, sending the crank into the wrist of the person starting it and usually breaking it. It happened so often that doctors started calling it a chauffeur’s fracture.
Electric cars, on the other hand, were quiet and easy to start with just the push of a button. “Electric cars were primarily marketed to people who didn’t want to deal with the nastiness of driving,” Brownell says. “They were get-in-and-go. And they were easier to drive, too.”
By 1900, thanks in part to a fleet of electrified cabs in New York City, electric cars accounted for a third of the motorized vehicles on the road. But eventually, the internal combustion engine came to rule.
In 1908, Henry Ford started making
the Model T. Prior to then, cars had been vehicles for the wealthy. Ford wanted to make it possible for everyone to own a car. The Model T cost $850 when introduced, but economies of scale brought it down to about $260 by the 1920s. Even at $850, the car was still significantly cheaper than a Baker Electric, which started around $2,000.
Although Walter Baker envisioned an infrastructure of charging stations around Cleveland and ultimately the United States, it never came to pass.
But soon gasoline, which had previously only been available in jugs at blacksmith shops or apothecaries, could now be purchased at garages, many of which offered repair services for cars.
But the real death knell for electric cars, Brownell says, came in 1912. That
year, Cadillac became the first car to offer an automatic starter. (Charles Kettering, also an Ohio native, received a patent for it three years later.) The combination of convenience
of plentiful gas and a car that no longer needed to be cranked to start then stunted and ultimately killed the electric auto industry.
“Walter Baker was beat out by a more prolific technology,” Brownell says.
In 1915, Baker merged with Rauch & Lang, a carriage company that had started building gas-powered cars a decade earlier. After a brief attempt at making a gaspowered car with a forerunner to an automatic transmission — the Owen Magnetic — Baker R & L got out of the passenger car business entirely, focusing instead on professional vehicles like trucks, forklifts and taxis, and building auto bodies for other car companies.
Walter Baker died at his home in 1955 — a year after Baker R & L had
become a subsidiary of the Otis Elevator Co. That year, American automakers manufactured a record 9.2 million vehicles. They were exclusively gas-powered.
Interest in electric cars recharged in the 1970s when Congress, seeing the effects of a gas shortage, passed a law supporting more research and development into electric vehicles. Toyota started selling the Prius, a hybrid, in Japan in 1997, and Honda introduced an electric car in 1998. But it’s only been in the last decade that electric car sales have really increased.
The benefits of driving an electric car are the same benefits in place when Nellie Taft drove one. They’re easy to drive, quiet and afford a calming, luxurious ride.
But the same question remains from the early 1900s. Where do you recharge?
“The big thing holding us back now is infrastructure,” Brownell says. “It’s still a problem, but it’s less of a problem. It’s still an inconvenience compared to gasoline, but it’s becoming less so every day.”
“The big thing holding us back now is infrastructure. It’s still an inconvenience compared to gasoline, but it’s becoming less so every day.”The National Register of Historic Places added Baker Electrics' former East 71st Street showroom (left), now home to commercial tenants, in 2007.
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DRINK
FOOD &
24
FANCY AND FUN FOOD FLIGHTS
26
BEANS BECOME BUILDING BLOCKS
27
GUIDE: BURGERS BEYOND BELIEF
The Crispy ChickThe Crispy Chick's Wholesome Fast Food
Despite opening six months before the pandemic, African immigrant Senayt Fekadu’s chicken tender restaurant quickly became a champion for the local community.
When business owners pass the nondescript stretch of Woodland Avenue at East 55th Street in central Cleveland, most keep driving. You’ll find few restaurants and several churches near Woodland Cemetery in the transitioning area that just recently started experiencing investment. But when Senayt Fekadu noticed the lack of wholesome food and employment options, she chose to make it the locale for her next restaurant.
In 2016, the building was boarded up and unoccupied, but today, after a complete renovation, stands a clean, no-frills storefront with a modest dining room. Now more than three years old, the Crispy Chick draws patrons in to devour its prized scratch-made chicken tenders.
The business has become a fixture in the community: Fekadu feeds the homeless, mentors teens and takes so much pride in her food that she hands out her phone number inviting feedback from every guest.
“I’ve always had this love for food,” says Fekadu. “It is primarily because of my Eritrean heritage. Food is a central part of my culture and it is often the way we express our love.”
She says the pride-fueled sensation is the only Black-owned business in
the area.
During college at the University of Houston, Fekadu studied business. As an immigrant “you don’t always have the choice of pursuing your passion and your dreams because you really want to make sure that you actually
survive,” she says. “But serving quality food is my passion and I’ve been able to actualize it through the Crispy Chick.”
Fekadu immigrated to the U.S. as a teenager. She persevered through the challenges she faced living in a new country without her parents while working at fine dining restaurants to put herself through college.
“I came to Cleveland for a job offer after college and thought it would be temporary,” Fekadu says — but now she’s here to stay. “I really fell in love with the city and the people.”
Quality customer service and quality food in this urban stretch may seem odd to some, but that’s Fekadu’s goal every day.
“I owned a Little Caesars franchise for 10 years, and it was in the inner city.
And it always bothered me how customer service and the quality of food was never as good as it would be in the suburbs,” Fekadu says. “That has always been apparent to me and something I wanted to change. I believe that no matter where you are, you should have access to high-quality standards, which is my aim at the Crispy Chick.”
After selling the Little Caesars franchise in 2016, Fekadu started her next dream, a quick hibachi restaurant concept, Shoga (2016 to 2018), inspired by her Japanese travels — in the same storefront that the Crispy Chick now resides in.
Unfortunately, the concept was short-lived. The menu was too ambitious for the area, she says. But the Korean BBQ wings were well-loved, so Fekadu tested more than 17 chicken recipes before landing a new hit.
In October 2019, the Crispy Chick was born. Only six months later, COVID-19 emerged — and hit local businesses like Fekadu’s hard.
During the pandemic, when restaurants were closed down, Fekadu and
just a few other employees kept the doors open, or rather, the drive-through steaming. Despite financial setbacks, she persevered.
“People love to talk about the end, but the middle is where it happens,” Fekadu says. With faith and hard work, she says, anyone can grow a successful business.
During the beginning stages of the pandemic, Fekadu came up with the idea of putting a thank you card in every order, adding a touch rarely seen at fast food spots. The card asks for any comments, positive or negative — with the owner’s cell phone number on it.
Yes, customer service is so essential to Fekadu that she encourages patrons to call her directly. “I want to be different,” she says.
Fekadu’s commitment to positively impacting the lives of other people extends even further. The business owner strives to employ and mentor inner-city youth. She recently began a mentorship program with a few teens where she teaches them the ins and outs of building a small business. She
hopes to empower young Black people by showing them someone who looks like them succeeding.
After emerging from a tough two years, the Crispy Chick is booming, in no small part due to social media, word of mouth, and a well-loved menu. Hungry fans find the usuals: chicken tenders, Texas toast, coleslaw, crinkle-cut fries and the famous chicken wrap. Patrons may notice the similarities to another brand. But what keeps fans returning is the scratch-made seasonings, sauces and antibiotic-free chicken.
Fekadu’s tenders are made with tender meat — not breast — prepared with garlic and black pepper, then soaked in buttermilk overnight. And she’s proud to locally source her ingredients from Hillcrest Foods, a local food distributor, she says.
Fekadu, who owns the restaurant and raises her two children singlehandedly after their father passed away, has her eyes on the prize. Her vision is that one day there will be a Crispy Chick on the corner of every underserved community.
Taking Flight
Greater Cleveland restaurants have embraced the trend of shareable menu items in unique ways. Take a bite (or two) of these interesting food flights.
Most breweries offer some kind of flight board with a few different sips of their concoctions. But who says flights need to be limited to beer? Northeast Ohio’s culinary scene offers a variety of flights of everything from sausage to ice cream to guacamole and more. The menu option offers an opportunity to try a bit more of the restaurant’s menu without biting off more than you can chew. “I think if you were to ask chefs now why they do it, I think we would have the same answer,” says Momocho and El Carnicero chef-owner Eric Williams. “It’s the guest experience; it’s being able to taste multiple flavors; it’s a way to sample stuff.”
ALL SAINTS PUBLIC HOUSE’S SAUSAGE BOARD
Head to All Saints Public House to try some of the restaurant’s rotating sausages, perfectly paired with charcuterie board bites like pickled onions, pickles, mustards and homemade braised sauerkraut ($19). Executive chef Jared
Bazil sources most of the restaurant's selection of sausages from the West Side Market, occasionally mixing in off-the-wall options like wild game sausages, too. “We sell a lot of them, for sure,” Bazil says. “We’ve got one of the best patios, so a lot of groups come in. They get a bunch of share-
able plates and get to try five different dishes instead of having just their one entree.” 1261 W. 76th St., Cleveland, allsaintspublichouse.com
ALMOST HEAVEN’S ICE CREAM FLIGHT
Six rounded scoops of Almost Heaven are available for order, in flight format ($6), from this group of Summit and Stark counties ice cream shops. Multiple visits may be required to work your way through the brand’s entire beloved 20-flavor menu. Various locations, almostheavenicecream.com
AVO MODERN MEXICAN’S DIPS TRIO
Three unique dips can arrive at your table, all at the same time, at Avo Modern Mexican — and you get to choose from the Ohio City restaurant's range of salsas, guacamoles and fundido ($13+). “It’s really popular,” says Avo co-owner Julie Mesenburg. “If certain people in your party don’t like something or have never had something, it offers you the opportunity to try something new.” 2058 W. 25th St., Cleveland, avo-ohiocity.com
COOL BEANS CAFE’S COFFEE AND SOUP FLIGHTS
Customers can sample much of this Medina cafe’s menu, all at once, by ordering a couple of flights. The shop regularly offers hot and iced coffee flights ($10.99) — and this past winter, introduced a soup flight option, too. “You can come three days in a row and get three different flights,” owner Laura Cavey said in a Cleveland Magazine interview. 103 W. Liberty St., Medina, coolbeansmedina.com
DAIRY GROVE’S ICE CREAM FLIGHT
Waiting in line at an ice cream shop presents some difficult choices. For those who can’t make up their mind at North Ridgeville’s Dairy Grove, there's a bit of good news: on the menu the shop offers a four-choice flight of ice cream flavors ($7.50). “We’ve noticed a lot of people come and not know what to get,” says Dairy Grove co-owner Kathy Salvo. “It’s so easy to suggest, ‘How about a flight?’ That way you can try a smaller scoop of four ice screams instead of having just one flavor.” 35455 Center Ridge Road, North Ridgeville, dairygrove.com
GIBBS BUTCHER AND BREWS’ BACON FLIGHT
Four hefty 4-ounce pieces of bacon (calculating … yes, that is one entire pound of bacon) make up Gibbs Butcher and Brews’ impressive bacon flight. Black pepper, cajun and maple flavors remain consistent, with the fourth flavor rotating through tastes like balsamic, Jamaican jerk and even “everything bagel” seasoning. Owner Jim Dixon sources the meat from his other business, Gibbs Butcher Block. “Customers love it. It looks awesome. It’s a pound of bacon and it’s on these big sticks,” Dixon says. “It’s one of those items where when you walk through the dining room, you’ll sell two or three more because somebody saw it and says, ‘What’s that?’ Well, that’s the pound of bacon they ordered.”
8154 Columbia Road, Olmsted Falls, gibbsbutcherbrews.com
LITTLE BIRDIE WINE NEST’S BEVERAGE FLIGHTS
Sip a cold-brew latte flight ($15) — and maybe make it boozy, if that’s your thing ($17) — at Little Birdie Wine Nest’s Morning Owl coffee bar in Parma. As if there weren’t enough options to sample, the shop rotates its coffee concoctions seasonally and recently introduced its summer menu. Beyond the caffeine, the shop also offers alcoholic slushie, mimosa and sangria flights ($17). 6060 Broadview Road, Parma, littlebirdiewinenest.com
EL CARNICERO AND MOMOCHO’S MARGARITA, GUACAMOLE AND SALSA FLIGHTS
The best things come in threes at Momocho and El Carnicero. Here, you can get tasters of guacamole ($25), salsa ($9) and margaritas ($15), enjoying a mashup of the Mexican restaurants' menus in flight form. Chef-owner Eric Williams has offered them since Momocho opened 17 years ago and since El Carnicero opened 10 years ago. “We’re appeasing the guests, but we’re also creating a different kind of environment, a snack-and-share. Who doesn’t like chips and dip? It just obviously caught on.” 1835 Fulton Road, Cleveland, momocho.com
SAUCED LAKEWOOD’S SAUCE FLIGHT
Try the namesake of this Lakewood restaurant with this unique menu option. A flight of sauces are available for dipping with either chicken nuggets ($9.50) or fries ($9.50). It mirrors the restaurant’s craft beer offerings, too, says co-owner Geoff Mathias. “Flights are kind of a very natural thing in that world, so we’ve always had beer flights,” Mathias says. “I know when I go out with my wife, we almost always eat off each others’ plates. When you go out with friends, who doesn’t like to share appetizers? We like to try stuff. One of the best things about going out to eat is trying something you can’t eat at home. A flight gives you a little bit of everything.” 14701 Detroit Ave., Lakewood, saucedtaproom.com
FOOD NEWS
LAKEWOOD SOCIAL HOUSE
This new bar and grill offers plenty of fun vibes and American fare offered into the late-night hours. But there’s some extra oomph in the side “amber room,” which will soon be tricked out in 1920s prohibition-style luxury.
An aperitivo bar and cafe joined the far-ranging vendors inside the Vitrolite building in Hingetown.
This black-and-white ramen restaurant quietly opened in AsiaTown, offering dishes inspired by chef-owner Jo Li and manager Tina Xu’s favorite anime shows. Don’t skip the bubble tea, provided by Kent-famous Ha Tea.
PACHAMAMA KITCHEN AND GARDEN
This new small-plate haven in Lakewood marks a big offshoot from the family behind the Tomato Guys catering company. Here, find freshly made cocktails, a solid wine list and a farm-to-fork-styled tapas menu.
For more food news, visit clevleandmagazine.com/fooddrink or subscribe to our CLE Eats newsletter at bit.ly/3zfyh5m.
Coffee With a Kick
Christopher Feran raises funds for a local, small-batched roastery to focus on quality over quantity.
Christopher Feran wants you to know that coffee shouldn’t cost pennies on the dollar. The longtime coffee consultant, who spent about six years as the director of coffee at Phoenix Coffee Co., is passionate about ensuring that java is both economically and environmentally responsible — and that simply can’t be done, he says, at rock-bottom prices.
“Across the industry, whether we’re looking at service staff, roasters, the production line or farms, the reality is that specialty coffee is reliant upon low and unpaid labor,” says Feran, a coffee buyer for roasteries in New York and Los Angeles. “In conjunction with the climate crisis, the result is that coffee is not a sustainable way for people to make a living anymore.”
Feran doesn’t expect to single-handedly change the industry, but he’s certainly going to try his best. This summer, he launched a Kickstarter campaign that was fully funded in just 11 hours. He set a goal of $10,000 but raised $25,000 to launch Aviary, a hyper-focused, small-batch roastery here in Cleveland. Though he’s yet to decide on a location, Feran is looking for a production facility with a small overall
footprint — maybe just 400 square feet in total.
“The entire premise is that we can do things more efficiently, with less waste and less oil, so that we can still maintain profitability while selling less volume,” he says. In such a small space and with conscientiousness at Aviary’s core, Feran won’t be churning out new coffees at regular intervals. He’s much more focused on quality than quantity.
In fact, the only permanent offering on Aviary’s menu will be Finca Esperanza, named for the organic, environmentally conscious Guatemalan farm where its beans are produced. Feran has become friends with owner Ana Vizcaino, a third-generation coffee producer, and often stays with her when he visits the region. It was there that he came up with the name Aviary when, still awake at dawn after a restless night, he listened in awe to the sounds of nature all around him.
“On this shade-grown coffee farm, you have three layers of forest canopy full of native birds,” he muses. “A healthy coffee farm really is an aviary.” He also chose the resplendent quetzal, a small, tropical bird native to the area, as Aviary’s logo.
Feran has no interest, at the moment, in opening a retail shop. Instead, Aviary’s coffee will be sold online, with Finca Esperanza always available and other roasts offered only for short periods of time.
While Cleveland’s lower cost of living makes it a perfect place to live and roast, Feran’s target audience extends far beyond Northeast Ohio. Most people here don’t know his name, he says — but as a coffee micro-influencer and industry veteran, he’s developed professional relationships and personal friendships with producers, exporters and cafe owners around the world. When Aviary finally opens, they’re the ones he hopes are paying attention.
Dining Guide
CLEVELAND’S BEST BURGERS
BILLY’S A CAPPELLI MARTINI BAR
WHY WE LOVE IT: Known for its long list of fabulous cocktails and happy hour, this intimate, casual, chic spot is perfect for a burger with a specialty martini sidekick. TRY THIS: The delectable Shroom Burger ($16) is topped with grilled mushrooms and melted Swiss cheese. Don't forget that all burgers are served with homemade potato chips. 7338 Industrial Park Blvd., Great Lakes Industrial Park, Mentor, 440-585-8815, billysacappellimartinibar.com
BLACK BOX FIX
WHY WE LOVE IT: This Legacy Village favorite whips up gourmet street food and sandwiches by chef Eric Rogers who began his restaurant journey as an 8-yearold helping out at his grandparents’ restaurant. TRY THIS: You'll crave the hibachi burger ($12.50), featuring houseseasoned Angus beef, grilled shrimp, mozzarella, provolone, mushrooms, onions, peppers, a toasted brioche roll and yum yum mayo. 25359 Cedar Road, Lyndhurst, 216-675-3129, blackboxfix.com
BREWDOG
BEARDEN’S
WHY WE LOVE IT: Since 1948, this iconic family steakburger joint, which stars shakes and hand-cut, battered onion rings, shines with nostalgia thanks to a model train in the dining room and a friendly bear mascot. TRY THIS: “Our signature items are never frozen singlesource steakburgers, like the Peanut Butter Bear ($8.35), featuring a steakburger with peanut butter and sweet pickles,” says owner Jim Griffiths. 19985 Lake Road, Rocky River, 440-331-7850, beardens.com
BETTY’S BOMB ASS BURGERS
WHY WE LOVE IT: “The personality of the truck is really fun and easy,” says Lena Brown, chef and owner of the 10-yearold military-themed food truck. TRY THIS: This restaurant on wheels whips up delicious scratch-made burgers and tots, like the award-winning Boeing Fortress ($12) topped with chunky peanut butter, peppered berry preserves, bacon jam, Coca-Cola braised onions and Tillamook cheddar. Cleveland, 440-719-9196, bettysbombassburgerscle.com
WHY WE LOVE IT: This newer Scottish brewery is home to the adult “Hoppy” meal, including a delectable burger, fries and a beer, and a massive funfilled patio complete with yard games, river views and firepits. Don’t forget the 28 taps pouring a mix of BrewDog and other craft beers. TRY THIS: Order the Fast Joe ($16.45) with a seven-ounce, freshly ground beef patty from Fire River Farms, cheddar cheese, lettuce, tomato, mayonnaise, pickles, red onion and Elvis Juice bacon jam, served with French fries. 1956 Carter Road, Cleveland, 216-367-2494, brewdog.com/usa/ bars/usa/cleveland
BUCKEYE BEER ENGINE
WHY WE LOVE IT: Ask Lakewood locals where to grab a burger and Beer Engine is sure to be named. This low-key gourmet burger haven offers six specialty burgers and a German-focused beer list with 25 taps. TRY THIS: The cooked-to-order West Side burger ($11.75) has caramelized onions, New York sharp cheddar, Rudy's Strudel potato and cheddar pierogi and sour cream. 15315 Madison Ave., Lakewood, 216-226-2337, buckeyebeerengine.com
BURGERS 2 BEER
WHY WE LOVE IT: With pubs in Concord, Twinsburg, Highland Heights and more, this funky local chain offers customizable 100% grass-fed beef burgers and 16 house-picked specials. TRY THIS: Devour the Luther ($12), a pretty basic combo of American cheese and crispy bacon — until you get to the toasted glazed-doughnut bun. Various locations, burgers2beer.com
EUGENE KITCHEN
THE FAIRMOUNT
WHY WE LOVE IT: This chic family-owned American bar and grill concept with 10 beers on tap (and frosé) at the outside bar boasts an enormous secluded patio, making it a Cleveland favorite. TRY THIS: Vegetarians love the Fairmount black bean burger ($15), a house-made black bean patty with avocado, pickled red onion, lettuce and chipotle aioli, served with fries or a Caesar salad. 2448 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland Heights, 216-229-9463, thefairmount.net
FLIP SIDE
CLEAVELAND GROCERS
WHY WE LOVE IT: "We use high-quality Halal meat briskets that are all choice grade or higher that we process ourselves,” says restaurant, grocer and deli owner Fasih Syed. As the only HFSAA-certified Halal restaurant in Ohio, this two-year-old family business offers beef, chicken or lamb. TRY THIS: Locals love the (house-ground daily) double cheddar smash burger ($12.99) with burger sauce and fries. Add-ons like egg, beef bacon or grilled onions take it to the next level. 13425 Snow Road, Brook Park, 216-644-3340, instagram.com/cleavelandgng
WHY WE LOVE IT: Chef Michael Schoen started serving his famed Tin Man burger at the former Ohio City Galley. While the West 25th food hall didn't survive — closing just before the pandemic in late February 2020 — that iconic smash burger is alive and well in a permanent space at BotteHouse Brewery. TRY THIS: “The Tin Man Burger ($14) is our flagship with two quarter-pound smash patties made with all-Ohio beef and toasted challah bun, Great Lakes American cheese with special sauce with homemade pickles and onions," says chef/owner Mike Schoen. "Every burger gets slices of the house-made, sweet and spicy pickles, a fan favorite.” Honorable mention: Vegan burger ($13) with house-made roasted beet and pistachio patty 13368 Madison Ave., Lakewood, 216-401-9473, eugenecle.com
HEART OF GOLD
WHY WE LOVE IT: Stop by your nearest Flip Side for savory burgers, including turkey burgers and tasty shakes by restaurateurs Shawn and Tiffany Monday and Michael Schwartz. On top of Ohio-raised and grass-fed beef, you’ll find a range of beers on tap as well as a lovely cocktail selection. Plus, don't miss out on the Brisket Fries with pickled jalapenos. TRY THIS: The aptly named Green Eggs and Ham Burger ($12.49) is topped with prosciutto, a fried egg, warm spinach, crispy Parmesan and basil mayo. Various locations, flipsideburger.com
FRESH & MEATY BURGER
WHY WE LOVE IT: Hailing from Los Angeles, this Black-owned business offers a traditional American hamburger stand experience with simple fixings sure to entice any flavor palate. TRY THIS: The turkey burger ($7) is the most popular burger in California, where the business began. The leaner option is quickly gaining in popularity with Clevelanders looking for a delicious red meat alternative. 13187 Cedar Road, Cleveland Heights, 216-371-4400, facebook.com/freshandmeatyburgerlandb
WHY WE LOVE IT: In Ohio City, this casual spot mixes industrial trends with soft, bright aesthetics thanks to its inviting, white-and-brick dining room. While we typically come for the burger, house-made Lunchables, everything-spiced waffle fries and other seasonal options, including cocktails, are great to enjoy on the patio. TRY THIS: "While every season brings a newly crafted lineup of dishes, the Heart of Gold Smash Burger ($15) reigns supreme as our all-time best-seller," says executive chef Joe Zegarac. "The use of 70-30 Certified Angus Beef blend (meaning 70% lean, 30% fat) accompanied by an oversized milk bun from Tremont's Leavened Bakery sets us apart from the many burgers in town. Melty American cheese, thin sliced onion, dill pickle chips and maggi mayo seal the deal." 14133 Lorain Ave., Cleveland, 216-938-8711, heartofgoldcle.com
GOOD COMPANY
WHY WE LOVE IT: With casual retro vibes and a menu full of American comfort food, including boozy milkshakes, Good Company crafts legit burgers with a savory flavorful kick in Detroit Shoreway's Battery Park neighborhood.
TRY THIS: The Good One ($15) has two Certified Angus Beef patties made with a custom sirloin and beef belly blend and topped with griddled onions, malted pickles, shredded lettuce, American cheese and Company sauce on a house-made poppyseed milk bun, served with a side of red relish. 1200 West 76th St., Cleveland, 216-331-0318, goodcompanycle.com
GUNSELMAN'S TAVERN
WHY WE LOVE IT: Locally sourced meat cooked on a cast iron skillet has made Gunselman’s Tavern, formerly Fairview Park Public House, a Cleveland mainstay for burgers since 1936. TRY THIS: Regulars chomp on the Gunny BBQ bacon burger ($13) with spicy BBQ sauce, hickory-smoked bacon, cheddar and onion straws. Gunselman's Tavern, 1490 Lorain Road, Fairview Park; Gunselman’s To-Go, 21800 Center Ridge Road, Rocky River, 440-331-5719, gunselmans.com
HECK’S
WHY WE LOVE IT: Heck’s iconic juicy burgers and fries are must-orders at the casual-yet-cool American eatery with
MIDWAY OH BOY
WHY WE LOVE IT: This independently owned and family-operated diner showcasing handdipped milkshakes, homemade soups and burgers blessed by Michael Symon himself
“is a place lots of generations bring back their own kids” as the restaurant celebrates 70 years, says Kim Disbrow, manager and a daughter of the owners. TRY THIS: “What we’re known for is the original Oh Boy” ($6.29), named after what the original owner proclaimed out loud when he landed on the perfect recipe, featuring a double-decker burger with lettuce, sauce and cheese, with a bun in middle (created before the Big Mac), says Disbrow. “It’s all about the sauce.” Various locations, midwayohboy.com
cocktails, beers and on-trend friendly vibes. TRY THIS: You’ll love the Burger Au Cheval ($16) with bacon, cheddar, fried egg and sour cream. Various locations, heckscafe.com/cleveland
JOHNNY'S LITTLE BAR
WHY WE LOVE IT: The longtime Downtowner is an old-timey dive bar and a true hidden gem. TRY THIS: Order up the Little Bar burger ($8.75) with chips (add choice of cheese for $1). 614 Frankfort Ave., Cleveland, 216-861-2166, facebook.com
NOBLE BEAST BREWING CO.
WHY WE LOVE IT: This lively Downtown microbrewery is known for its friendly industrial atmosphere and elevated American brewpub kitchen that often uses spent grains in its menu items. TRY THIS: Opt for the Beyond Burger ($16.50) for a Beyond Burger meatless patty, thick-cut American cheese, snakebite pickles, hefeweizen ketchup, beer mustard, Alegar macerated onion and sesame seed challah bun with slaw or chips. 21470 Lakeside Ave., 216-4178588, noblebeastbeer.com
ROWLEY INN
WHY WE LOVE IT: A Tremont icon, the Rowley Inn is a no-frills kind of joint.
“Our menu is very Cleveland comfort food-centric with unique and flavorful dishes like pierogi, kielbasa and housemade corned beef,” says owner Jon Oberman. TRY THIS: Stop by for the delicious hand-shaped burgers mixed with a special blend of spices served on On the Rise brioche buns. “Our most popular besides our basic burger is the Breakfast Burger ($16) made with egg,
bacon, home fries (on the burger), cheddar and spicy mayo, served with fries," says Oberman. 104 Rowley Ave., Cleveland, therowleyinn.com
SIMPLY GREEK
WHY WE LOVE IT: Greek cuisine with attention to all the details. “We do all the little things that you don’t think of,” says coowner Pete Moissis, who grew up in Greek restaurants. TRY THIS: The flat-top burger ($10) might be an oddity for a Greek restaurant, but it stands out thanks to a half-pound certified premium Black Angus burger made from humane, vegetarianfed Kansas meat. The beef has so much flavor, it doesn’t need extra toppings, says Moissis. 33700 Aurora Road, Solon, 440-4984976, simplygreekfood.com
STEVENSON'S BAR & GRILL
WHY WE LOVE IT: The East Side's favorite smash burger might have moved away from its original Lakeshore Boulevard location in 2013, but the East 200th Street location retains all the dive-bar charm that's made it a Euclid-Cleveland staple since 1920. The prices haven't gone up much either, with everything but the double under $10. TRY THIS: The Cheese burger with The Works ($8.95) is a classic done right with lettuce, onion and tomato. It's served as inspiration for dozens of burger-flipping chefs, including Michael Schoen's Tinman Burger at Eugene's Kitchen in Lakewood. 800 E. 200th St., Cleveland, 216-999-7156, facebook.com
SUDS MAGUIRE'S
WHY WE LOVE IT: This hidden gem bar and grill serves up a dang good burger crafted with a premium blend of ground chuck, short rib and brisket in a no-frills
atmosphere with a spacious pet-friendly patio and all your favorite drafts (and Tuesday trivia night). Don't write this off as a sports bar; this is a longtime Berea favorite. TRY THIS: The Angry Abby ($14.50) stays true to its name and lays on some heat: lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle, jalapenos, Ohio pepper jack cheese and Sriracha mayo, served with fries. 1270 W. Bagley Road, Berea, 440-973-4243, sudsmaguires.com
WANT MORE?
Check out more recommendations at clevelandmagazine.com/ food-drink
UNDER the LAKE
What lurks within Lake Erie? Dive into impressive industry, nautical wreckage and outlandish biodiversity: all of it, under the surface of Cleveland's Great Lake.
Step Inside the Cargill Salt Mines
On Whiskey Island, a large, cage-like hoist travels 1,800 feet beneath Lake Erie at a four-minute pace — a rapid trip that feels like a hellish eternity to an outsider. For Cargill employees, the descent, which can reach a top speed of 500 feet per minute, is more akin to the mundane morning elevator ride, en route to one of Cleveland’s most unique workplaces: the underground mine, a cavernous world unto itself where the salt used to clear winter’s icy roads is harvested each day.
Encompassing a total of 16 square miles beneath the lake, the mine’s primary tunnel extends four miles north of the lakefront. From this central line, a growing number of tunnels running
east and west are mined through a tried-and-true process used since the site’s earliest excavation, after the salt deposit was first accessed in the late 1950s and extraction began in 1962.
“It’s surprisingly similar to how it was mined 50 years ago, as far as the cycle goes,” says David Harris, an engineer in the Cleveland mine. “We have adopted some underground wireless things, but most of the technology above ground doesn’t work underground, because we can’t see satellites.”
To begin the mining cycle, the salt deposit’s face is drilled with holes, which are “powdered,” or filled with explosives. These explosives are detonated through the process of “shooting,” which leaves a cleared space filled with
salt and rock, just over 20 feet deep.
A bulldozer-like loader “mucks,” or clears, the area, and the deposit’s fresh faces are scraped for loose salt rocks. The ceiling of the cleared tunnel is filled with six-foot bolts, long enough to reach the layer of rock above the salt to secure the structural integrity of the newest stretch of the tunnel.
Twelve miles of conveyor belts and sorting machinery carry salt and rock from the heart of the mine, and usable salt is transported above ground through a production hoist, to be loaded on a shipping vessel or stored for later use. April begins Cargill’s boatshipping season, which runs through the end of the year, during which two to three vessels, such as the “Mark Barker,” a 639-foot ship produced by the Interlake Steamship Co., carries 18,000 to 20,000 tons of salt per shipment.
Bob Nelson, an engineering manag-
er who earned a bachelor's degree in mining engineering at Virginia Tech University and has worked in different Cargill locations for the last 15 years, says working in salt is pretty stable, at least when compared to other areas of the niche industry, such as metals and coal, where the demands fluctuate with the markets.
Given the inherent danger an icy winter poses to drivers in Cleveland and abroad, it’s no surprise that this local operation runs around the clock each day, as 223 employees coordinate to fulfill a daily average target of 12,000 tons of salt.
What is surprising? During my return from a tour of the mine, the chilly spring winds off the coast of Lake Erie nearly had me rushing back underground, where the temperature constantly hovers around 70 degrees.
Part of this environmental control is due to sets of sealed doors, which close off the primary corridor from the mine shaft to separate the incoming fresh air, transported via the pull of the descending hoist, from outgoing fumes and exhaust. Anyone spending substantial time in the mine will carry a heavy gasoline scent upon exit, but breathing in the mine isn’t difficult or nauseating, thanks to its ventilation system.
Fresh air carries through the mine’s spine: the dark, central corridor from which each new extraction begins. After mining is complete, these spaces are back-filled with rock, unusable salt, and even retired equipment, before being covered by berms and curtains that better direct fresh air to the mine’s furthest depths.
On the side of the path, mechanics and engineers can be found oiling up the heavy-duty machinery that remains operational due to the mine’s lack of humidity. Were the equipment to once again see the light of day, it would likely rust out of usability within
a month. A central hub within the mine includes shops and vending machines, where Cargill employees can find spare parts and equipment for repairing all of the tools used below ground.
The headlights of vehicles akin to oversized golf carts, two rows deep, cut through the darkness of the mine, carrying Cargill’s workers the miles between entry and wherever they are stationed for the day’s shift.
While away from the stalks of floodlight found occasionally throughout the mine, my tour guide, Greg Jacknewitz, an eight-year employee of Cargill who has been the Cleveland mine’s manager for close to a year, cuts our cart’s headlights to introduce me to the special kind of darkness that exists within the mine — the kind where you can’t see your hand just a couple of inches away from your face.
For this reason, headlamps are an imperative for miners and visitors alike. Any person entering the mine begins the trip by taking one of many numbered, battery-powered headlamps, which can be tracked throughout the mine. A metal dog tag, with the headlamp’s number, is registered above ground and carried beneath, as an added measure of precaution.
The intricate, danger-filled mining operation requires a great deal of safety measures and clear communication among the miners. Color-coded reflectors line the central tunnel, guiding miners to exit paths in the event of a necessary evacuation. Over 100 FEMCO phones, used like walkie-talkies, are found in strategic locations. Each features a detailed map that shows where to find emergency breathing equipment and the mine’s safe rooms, which can sustain inhabitants for three days in a perilous situation.
For Nelson, it was the company’s “safety culture” that initially attracted him to Cargill when first entering the niche industry out of college.
“The most important thing to come out of the mine is the miner, so it’s one of the things that drew me to Cargill and has kept me here.”
Sink, Sank, Sunk
Famous Shipwrecks in Lake Erie
The Lake Serpent: Located in 2018, this 47-foot schooner is believed to be the oldest known shipwreck in Lake Erie.
The Marquette & Bessemer No. 2: This railroad car ferry is presumed to have sank in 1909 between Conneaut and Port Stanley, Ontario, but it’s never been found. It remains the Holy Grail of Lake Erie shipwrecks.
The Great Lakes have more shipwrecks per square mile than any other body of water in the world — estimated at more than 8,000. Of those, 2,000 occurred on Lake Erie, which, as the shallowest and southernmost of the Great Lakes, can be particularly susceptible, says Carrie Sowden, archaeological and research director for the National Museum of the Great Lakes in Toledo.
“We’re closer to the jet stream, so we get greater shifts in weather because we’re so far south,” says Sowden, of Rocky River.
A surprising number of shipwrecks were minor enough that the vessel could be repaired, or in shallow enough waters that they could be raised and reused. But she estimates there are still 250 shipwrecks in Ohio waters, “and that’s just a guess,” she says. “We don’t know, because nobody’s ever mapped the entire floor of Lake Erie.”
But they’re trying. Sowden, herself
a certified diver, works with Cleveland Underwater Explorers to map out the lake floor. The project starts in a library, searching for information about shipwrecks, trying to pinpoint, as close as possible, where a boat may have sank.
“Sometimes, you can get a search area within a square mile, or sometimes it can be within 20 square miles,” she says.
The next step is what Sowden calls “mowing the lawn” — going over the search area by boat, traveling as slowly as less than two knots, with a side-scan sonar device, laboriously plotting out the lake floor.
“You review your findings as you go and then review later for something that looks like it’s sticking up off the lake floor,” she says.
And there’s no sign it’ll ever be completed.
“It’s a forever process,” she says. “There are still a lot of shipwrecks out there.”
The Success prison ship: Famed as a tourist attraction (even if its history is, uh, dubious, to say the least) in Cleveland and at world fairs, the headline-making ship was towed to Port Clinton, where vandals set it on fire in 1946.
The Morning Star: The ship sank after colliding with another vessel in 1868. It was raised for salvage, and was being towed to Lorain three months later when it sank again.
Hundreds of shipwrecks lurk beneath the surface of Lake Erie, the Great Lakes’ shallowest body of water. B y V ince G uerriri
Lake Erie Monsters
While some of Lake Erie's creatures have disappeared, new and old species continue to live in its sandy waters — some of which stand as a surprise. B y B ecky B o B an
Lake Erie’s biological saga has mysterious origins. Roger Thoma, retired Ohio EPA environmental scientist, speculates inner glacial lakes and rivers — including the Maumee, Wabash and Ohio rivers — allowed species to funnel into the lake prior to the glacial retreat, which would explain the presence of southern species. “[Yet] there’s some species that do not show any indication they’ve been there for 10,000 years,” Thoma says, citing human introduction, anoxia and habitat loss in the last century. Its tumultuous history chapters many unusual critters. “There’s far more going on than we give them credit for,” says Roberta Muelhleim, assistant curator of vertebrate zoology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.
FRESHWATER DRUM
Haunting croaks from below the boat are likely the world’s only freshwater drum species creaking a love song. Though culinarily worthless, drums eat zebra mussels, crushing them in their throat and blowing out the inedible splinters through their gills.
SEA LAMPREYS
Lampreys start life as tiny filter feeders. The adult fish sports a mouth that looks like a disheveled knife drawer — used to kill 40 pounds of fish per year, says Muehlheim. “Nature always has something that can out-do a science fiction movie.”
GIZZARD SHAD
These wedge-shaped, silver fish arrived in Lake Erie in the mid-1900s. Ill-adapted to its winters, they enter Ohio’s warm rivers only to die in droves as if part of a cultish pact that short-circuits the food web. “Ninety percent of them die,” Thoma says.
OPOSSUM SHRIMP
Opossum shrimp swim upside-down, a tradition started by their ancestors. Millions of these cold-water primitive crustaceans call Lake Erie home. And have, Thoma says, since the glaciers retreated, or, “since the lake was a lake.”
FRESHWATER JELLYFISH
Harmless to humans, craspedacusta sowerbyi principally exist as hydras. When water quality suffers, hydras transform into jellyfish, swarming in two-week blooms to reproduce before perishing. They look like tiny translucent umbrellas.
SPOTTED GAR
Minnows mosey through an underwater jungle, oblivious to the crocodile-like snoot of a spotted gar awaiting. These endangered, dappled three-foot fish are rare, even in the Sandusky and island areas where they’re typically spotted.
ROUND GOBY
In 1986, Thoma was one of the first to collect and record round goby in Fairport Harbor. Native to foreign seas, round goby have a love-hate relationship with Erie. They prey on zebra mussels, but drive out native benthic species, like darters.
LAKE ERIE STURGEON
Growing up to 10 feet long and weighing 200 pounds, sturgeon are toothless vacuums that troll Lake Erie’s bottom for snails, mussels, and crayfish with electroreceptive barbels. Their bodies were once harvested by fishermen for caviar.
2023 Best Doctors
By Lynne Thompson PHOTOGRAPHED BY MEGANN GALEHOUSEFox anchor Natalie Herbick shares her breast cancer story and how she hopes to use it to empower others.
Natalie Herbick is happy, energetic and camera-ready as she hurries into her local Panera on a late Sunday morning in early June. The 39-year-old Fox 8 news anchor and New Day Cleveland co-host, dressed in flowing white palazzo pants and a band-collared chambray shirt, stands out among a steadily increasing line of patrons in jeans, leggings and T-shirts. Her dark-brown hair, tastefully streaked with a few golden highlights, appears freshly blown dry, and her makeup is perfectly applied.
Herbick wins a spirited battle for the lunch check by refusing to pay for her order at the counter register until I place mine, then leads the way to a corner booth. The conversation ranges from the advantages of square-shaped nails and hard-gel manicures to eyebrow pencils — her favorite is Benefit’s Goof-Proof.
“My sister still tells me I put it on too thick,” she says as she pulls a tube of it out of her purse to show off.
But talk eventually turns to the subject we’ve met to discuss.
This year, Herbick was diagnosed with breast cancer. She subsequently opted for a double-mastectomy and reconstruction. She’s still recovering from the latter, performed almost two weeks before our meeting, a fact amazingly at odds with her picture-perfect appearance and effervescent demeanor to which viewers of her daily, twohour lifestyle show are accustomed.
“I have to really stop myself from trying to do too much because I feel pretty good,” she says between spoonfuls of chicken-noodle soup.
The experience has launched a personal mission to reinforce the impor-
Ntance of regular breast-cancer screenings and to disseminate information that she feels she should have had, even if she’d never developed the disease. She informed viewers of her diagnosis and planned treatment in a taped interview with Fox 8 morning and noon news co-anchor Stefani Schaefer that aired during the station’s news broadcasts and addressed her upcoming absences from New Day Cleveland
“I was just in survival mode before,” she says during a phone call the day before her implant surgery. “Now let’s start to analyze: What exactly did I have, and how can I help people moving forward?”
“I don’t remember everything that went through my mind,” she says. “The world just kind of stopped.”
It was a diagnosis Herbick had wondered if she’d ever face. Her grandmother was diagnosed with breast cancer in her 80s. And her mother died in March 2019, at age 63, after a 3½-year battle with ovarian cancer. Although doctors determined neither cancer was hereditary in nature, the diagnoses spurred Herbick to begin scheduling annual mammograms at age 37. The first two showed no signs of cancer.
“I was told that I had dense tissue,” she says. “I never knew that was anything to be concerned about.”
NATALIE HERBICK LEARNED she had cancer on cloudy-but-mild Monday, Jan. 30, while driving to the Department of Motor Vehicles. She picked up a call from a nurse navigator at the Cleveland Clinic who told her a biopsy taken from her right breast was cancerous. Herbick remained silent as the woman explained that doctors would be calling to discuss a treatment plan. “O.K., have a nice day,” she said before disconnecting the call and beginning to cry as she drove west on Interstate 480.
But in fall 2022, Herbick’s Cleveland Clinic gynecologist, Dr. Tammy Parker, suggested she get a breast-cancer risk assessment at the clinic’s Breast Health Center at Fairview Hospital because of her family history. After a physical exam, study of previous mammograms and review of Herbick’s mother’s genetictesting results and father’s family medical history, a nurse practitioner determined Herbick had a 21.4% chance of developing breast cancer at some point in her life
taking precautions at a younger age than most.
BREAST CANCER SCREENINGS SHOULD BEGIN BY AGE 40
It’s the advice we've heard for years: Begin scheduling annual mammograms at age 50. But in May, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independent volunteer panel of national experts in disease prevention and evidence-based medicine, changed its guidelines. It now recommends “all women get screened for breast cancer every other year starting at age 40.”
The reason is simple, says Cleveland Clinic breast surgery specialist
Dr. Zahraa AlHilli, “Starting screening at the age of 40 saves the most lives” — a message she says organizations such as the American Cancer Society, American Society of Breast Surgeons, American College of Radiology and Society of Breast Imaging have endorsed for years. She adds that the clinic actually recommends beginning annual mammography at age 40 and continuing for as long as good health permits, advice echoed by University Hospitals, says Dr. Holly Marshall, division chief of breast imaging at University Hospitals.
“When you do a screening mammogram, you can detect a large percentage of cancers before they can be felt,” Dr. AlHilli says. “Because of that, we’re able to provide women with treatments that can really allow them to be cured of their cancer.”
Dr. AlHilli urges people to initiate a conversation with their doctors about any risk factors they might have that indicate a need for earlier screenings: previous radiation treatments, dense breast tissue, abnormal mammograms that detect high-risk lesions, multiple family members diagnosed with breast and ovarian as well as other cancers. She explains that the risk of developing breast and ovarian cancers is increased most commonly by a mutation of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes.
“[But] other cancers such as pancreatic cancer, prostate cancer can be related to the BRCA gene as well,” she says. And other genes have been discovered that, if mutated, increase the risk of developing breast cancer and other cancers, such as colorectal, endometrial/ uterine, melanoma thyroid cancers and others.
“Some people that can be identified as … having a gene mutation may benefit from being referred for genetic counseling and genetic testing,” she says.
and a 2.6% chance of developing it in the next 10 years. She explained that while dense breast tissue is common and normal, it can make it more difficult to detect cancer on a mammogram. For that reason, she suggested Herbick alternate scheduling mammograms with MRIs at six-month intervals. The news was frightening but empowering.
“I didn’t know I could be more proactive about it,” she says.
Herbick confirmed her health insurance paid for the biannual screenings, then scheduled an MRI in January, when she normally got her annual mammogram. On Jan. 18, she got a call from a nurse that the MRI indicated “an area of suspicious enhancement” in her right breast. She went in the next day for an ultrasound.
“The ultrasound looked normal,” she says. “At that point in time, I sat there, crying on a table, thinking, I’m worrying about nothing. This is such a relief!”
Then, after undergoing an MRIguided biopsy to confirm the findings, she got that dreaded call.
Herbick spoke to Dr. Anna Chichura, Cleveland Clinic breast surgical oncologist and benign gynecologist, within the hour. She explained that she’d been diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ, cancer that starts in the cells lining the milk ducts that typically doesn’t spread beyond the ducts. It is also called Stage 0 breast cancer. Herbick recalls Dr. Chichura reassuring her that because the tumor had been discovered in its earliest stage and appeared to be noninvasive in nature, her prognosis was excellent.
“I thought, OK, I hopefully have a good shot at taking care of this and living a normal life,” she says.
The tumor Herbick subsequently saw on her MRI showed up not as a lump but a spidery growth that covered a large portion of the outer side of her right breast — a threat she may not have felt during a routine self-exam until it was more advanced. Further
testing, including a mammogram, revealed the tumor was very close to the skin as well as around the nipple. After several conversations with her doctors, Herbick opted for a double mastectomy. Surgery to remove such a large tumor, she reasoned, would leave her right breast misshapen anyway. And she was determined to do everything in her power to make sure she never faced a breast cancer diagnosis again. The memory of her mother’s battle with ovarian cancer still haunted her.
“Watching someone you love go through what she went through for years was horrific to witness,” Herbick says, her voice breaking as she fights back tears. “It was just so hard to see someone you love go through that.”
She also remembered how valiantly her mother fought through surgeries, chemo and radiation. That memory filled her with determination.
“She took it like such a fighter, such a warrior. I never in my life have seen someone so strong,” Herbick says. “I said, She showed me how to get through it — I’m going to get through this. I went into fighter mode.”
Concerns about how she would look after surgery — or what others might think about it — didn’t enter her mind. She was prepared to go through life flat-chested, dependent on prosthetics to fill out bras and clothes, if for some reason she wasn’t a candidate for reconstruction. She hoped a partner would love her exactly as she was.
“I just wanted to be healthy and alive,” she says. The decision represented a leap in personal growth. “I’m always asking others in my life, ‘What do you think I should do?’ But when it came time to make this decision, I, for the first time in my life, did not listen to anybody but myself. I realized, This is me taking control of my life right now.”
surgery specialist Dr. Zahraa AlHilli performed Herbick’s double mastectomy at the clinic’s main campus on Feb. 8, Herbick came out of the anesthesia with one question clearly on her mind: “Did you get everything?”
Removing the tumor required taking so much skin, along with the nipple, that it precluded direct-to-implant surgery. Instead, plastic surgeon Dr. Risal Djohan inserted saline-filled tissue expanders above the muscle that would be replaced once the skin had stretched enough to accommodate silicone implants appropriate for Herbick’s body type.
The final pathology report revealed the presence of lobular carcinoma in situ and atypical lobular hyperplasia,
which Dr. AlHilli defines as “high-risk lesions” in Herbick’s left breast. “Basically, if somebody has these findings on biopsy, they make somebody have an elevated risk for breast cancer,” she says. Herbick considered it a confirmation that getting a double mastectomy was the right decision for her.
“I know for every woman, it’s different,” she stresses. “And they should do, once they speak with their doctors, what they feel is best for them.”
The report also stated that two of three lymph nodes, removed to confirm cancer had not spread, had isolated cancer cells on them. AlHilli confirms that patients diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ who choose to have a double mastectomy typically
require no further treatment. But those isolated cancer cells, even though few in number, made Herbick’s case more complex. Doctors couldn’t conclude whether the cells represented a microinvasion of the tumor or an inadvertent transfer during biopsy and/or surgery.
For that reason, Herbick will be taking Tamoxifen for the next five years. The drug blocks the effects of estrogen on hormone-receptor-positive cells in estrogen-positive cancers such as Herbick’s. If Tamoxifen is in the receptor, estrogen can’t attach to the cancer cell; therefore, the cell can’t receive estrogen’s signals to grow and multiply.
Herbick can stop taking Tamoxifen in two to three years to conceive and carry a child, then start taking it again. (AlHilli explains that, like many drugs, it should not be taken during pregnancy because it can affect the developing fetus.)
But Herbick does not want to interrupt treatment. And she realizes age may become a factor in her ability to become pregnant. So she chose to have eggs retrieved from her ovaries and frozen before she started taking the medication in March to preserve her option of having a child via in vitro fertilization and surrogacy.
The morning after the mastectomy, a nurse suggested Herbick take a quick look at her chest before she left the hospital that afternoon. Herbick lifted the tops of the sports bra and hospital gown nurses had dressed her in after surgery and saw two horizontal incisions, identical in length and location under the surgical tape, that ran from the center of where her breasts, now replaced by the aforementioned expanders, had been to the sides of her chest.
“I was shocked,” she says. “My lines were so thin they were basically nonexistent.” She was jarred not by the physical change but by what it represented: “Wow, I just went through that.”
HERBICK WAS BACK ON the air 2½ weeks later, despite her doctors’ advice to take four weeks off work to recover. She’d been able to manage the post-op pain by taking Tylenol and Advil rather than the prescribed painkillers — in fact, she says nausea from the anesthesia was worse than what she describes as “soreness,” and now she could drive.
“I needed to feel normalcy,” she says. “I needed to feel that I didn’t have cancer anymore. It was out of my body, and I wasn’t sick in some way. I wanted to just get back to my day-to-day living.”
The surgical tape covering her incisions adhered so well that she was given the OK to shower without anything else covering them on the second day after surgery. Lifting her arms to perform the repetitive motions involved in wielding a blow-dryer and brush, however, prevented her from drying and styling her hair. A friend came into the station to do it that first day back at work. Herbick concedes that she “cheated a little bit” and started drying her hair during the third-week post-op instead of waiting until the fourth.
“I was still not lifting anything over 10 pounds,” she says. “But I felt very good at that point.”
There were a couple of emotional breakdowns. The most notable occurred at least three weeks after the mastectomy in Dillard’s department store at Beachwood Place, where Herbick was looking for bras to augment the two Masthead-brand surgical ones her younger sister Lauren had found for her.
“I was still sore, and I’m trying on things, and nothing was fitting me, and I was just getting frustrated,” she says. “I started sobbing by myself in the dressing room.”
The others resulted from those moments when she wondered if cancer would return, even though she understands the odds are in her favor that it won’t.
“If I have a child and then something
comes back, or I’m not there for that child — I don’t ever want to do that to a kid,” she says. “But I can’t let that fear stop me.”
Herbick was amazed to see her incisions had healed completely when Dr. Djohan removed the surgical tape four weeks after surgery. But a month later she began to see a discharge from an incision on the left side of her chest, evidence that the sutures weren’t dissolving properly. The complication kept her from resuming full workouts until well after her implant procedure. It also prevented filling the tissue expanders with more saline, a process that involves inserting a needle through the skin into each device, as Dr. Djohan had done twice after her mastectomy. Herbick discounts the effect on the final result.
“I was never very, very small,” she says. “It wasn’t a huge difference, even from before surgery.”
Herbick will complete breast reconstruction when she gets around to it. An oncologist friend suggests she wait until the year anniversary of her implant surgery, when “everything is settled, where it’s supposed to be.” Dr. Djohan left small portions of her areolas, which he’ll use to fashion nipples. (Although
her left nipple and areola initially were left intact during the mastectomy to give her some sense of normalcy, she had them removed during implant surgery. “I just want them to match,” she says.) She found an out-of-state artist who specializes in “nipple tattoos” to create areolas once she recovers from that last procedure.
“His work is incredible,” she says. “I took pictures of what I looked like before so I can just say, ‘Here’s about what size they looked like. Maybe we can match them.’”
Herbick’s work to drive home the importance of cancer screenings is just beginning. She’s received messages from women stating they got a mammogram simply after hearing her tell her story on Fox 8. One man sent a card in which he thanked her for sharing her journey. It motivated his daughter, whom he’d been nagging for years to get a mammogram, to schedule one finally. Men even told her they got a colonoscopy because of it.
Current projects include working with the New Day Cleveland team on an hour-long show on breast cancer awareness. She'll tell stories on other people who have battled the disease and promote the station’s Fox Trot run/walk on Aug. 13 at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. This year's annual event benefits the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
Her biggest goal is to work with legislators to ensure that all people in the state of Ohio can access the same tools she had to catch breast cancer in its earliest stages. While she acknowledges that every breast-cancer diagnosis is as individual as the patient, she is proof that it does not have to be life-ending, particularly for those who are proactive in protecting their health.
“I hope to show women that [my outcome] could be the outcome for [them], and it’s not so scary,” she says. “If your life is going to be saved, you can handle it.”
THREE DIFFERENT TYPES OF BREAST CANCER
SCREENINGS
Fox 8 news anchor and New Day Cleveland co-host Natalie Herbick learned that there were different kinds of breast-cancer screenings during her risk assessment. The following is information she wished she’d sought out much earlier.
The mammogram: Dr. Holly Marshall, division chief of breast imaging at University Hospitals, and Cleveland Clinic breast radiologist Dr. Laura Dean both describe mammography as “the gold standard” for breast-cancer screening. Dr. Dean says mammography has evolved from a two-dimensional to three-dimensional screening, known as 3-D mammography or breast tomosynthesis, that increases visibility through breast tissue, in turn increasing cancer detection. “It also decreases the false-positive rate,” she says. Dr. Marshall says that detecting cancers in people with dense breast tissue using this X-ray technology still can be challenging. “One of the early signs of breast cancer [on a mammogram] are calcifications,” the result of a proliferation of cancer cells that die and calcify. Those calcifications show up as white specs and dots in the dark fatty tissue. Dense breast tissue consists of more fibrous tissue, milk glands and milk ducts that also show up as white and can make calcifications as well as masses more difficult to identify.
The MRI: Dr. Dean says magnetic resonance imaging is used to supplement mammography for people at a 20%-plus risk of developing breast cancer during their lifetime because of dense tissue, radiation to the chest, abnormal mammograms or biopsies, and/or a family history of developing the disease. Dr. Marshall describes strong magnetic fields and radio waves that, along with a contrast administered by IV, create images that illustrate blood flow in breast tissue.
The whole-breast ultrasound: Dr. Marshall says that some people are not able to get an MRI. For them, the ultrasound is a viable screening alternative. Dr. Dean describes it as more of an anatomical exam. “Whereas a cyst is nice and smooth and round and black, meaning it’s fluid, on the ultrasound, most cancers tend to have almost what we call a shaggy appearance,” she says. She notes, however, that it isn’t quite as accurate. Dr. Marshall concurs. “It may pick up one to two additional cancers that weren’t seen on mammograms,” she says. “But by far, the more sensitive modality is MRI.”
Dr. Diana
Ponsky’s journey from a 5-year-old refugee to a mother of three and Beachwood’s premiere facial plastic surgeon.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY MEGANN GALEHOUSEOn any given day, Dr. Diana Ponsky barely has 15 minutes to spare. As the founder of Ponsky Facial Plastic Surgery in Beachwood — open since 2016 — and a volunteer at Case Western Reserve University, she balances her day on a tightrope.
On a Wednesday, for example, Ponsky is likely to perform surgeries all day before she zips over to Beachwood High School, where she gives a lecture on what the students need to consider if they’re interested in her field. On Monday, she's "half-mom, half-doctor" spending time with her three gradeschool daughters.
“She somehow runs the family, runs the household, can fix anything in the house, pays the bills, helps make dinner and never says a word about it,” says Dr. Todd Ponsky, Diana’s husband and pediatric surgeon.
For Diana, the hectic schedule is worth it when she steps back and looks at the impact of her work. Her practice offers most facial procedures, from simple injectables to the more invasive
rhinoplasty — a nose job.
OHowever, the doctor extended her reach into education and charitable initiatives long ago, working with local charities like Medworks where she provides free healthcare, no questions asked.
“When the Ukrainian war happened, my kids helped Medworks with collecting blankets and stuff so we could ship it overseas,” she says with a proud smile.
Similar humanitarian efforts have drawn Diana for years. Aside from Medworks, she’s done two free procedures for Faces to Faces — a charitable arm of the American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery — in which she helped survivors of domestic abuse recover from facial injury.
In college, even before med school, Diana took a trip to Siberia with Operation Smile, known for its work correcting cleft lips and palates.
At the mention of Siberia, the doctor makes a connection and chokes up a bit, thinking of her own family and the dozens of people they depended on through the years — for survival and to help them build a new life.
“When I came to this country,” she says, “it was through the help of others.”
BORN DIANA CHUONG , her family first came to the United States as South Vietnamese refugees.
Her parents were merchants living on the southern coast and there was ongoing war incited by the North, an authoritarian communist state known as the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, fighting for full control.
“This was toward the end of the war, when the North was burning everything in the South,” Diana says. “My family tried to stick around as long as they could. And they finally just decided it’s too much political unrest, very much like Ukraine [currently]. So they left. And back then, the country didn’t allow you to leave.”
What ensued was harrowing, with a 5-year-old Diana barely old enough to understand broad details.
They left in the middle of the night, buying their way with gold bars, she says, recalling the turbulent fall of Vietnamese currency at the time. The journey was not without incident.
“You never knew if your ship was going to make it,” she recalls decades later. “You had to go on hope and [trust] this little raft. My grandmother got captured [and] had to go back home; our whole family left but in different boats, and her boat got captured. And then she was thrown in jail in her late
'60s with my great-grandmother, who ended up dying there.”
The rest of the Chuong family eventually completed the voyage. They ended up on a neutral island in Indonesia, where they awaited sponsorship from another country. Housing was bare and crowded, but they were more or less safe — finally.
Following that fateful getaway, Diana could’ve ended up in Canada, the United States, Australia or Paris — all open countries accepting refugees.
However, it was a branch of the Catholic Church in the U.S. that granted them refuge. The church brought Diana’s family to the country and moved them as close as possible to distant relatives in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
Diana pauses for a moment recounting the story, crying in a consultation room as she thinks again about her children sending blankets to Ukraine.
“I was telling them, ‘That’s how we were helped when we were younger,’” she says.
In Allentown, Diana’s mother took up work at a Dunkin' Donuts and her father washed dishes at a local restaurant. All the while, her parents stressed the importance of studying, of getting good marks in school for the sake of a brighter future.
After a few years, they made the move to New York City in search of better opportunities. While they stayed there
FOUR THINGS TO CONSIDER BEFORE YOU OPT FOR PLASTIC SURGERY
The uses of plastic surgery can range from functional, necessary operations to cosmetic self-esteem boosters. Before you consider that brow lift, here are four things to consider before pursuing facial plastic surgery, courtesy of Dr. Diana Ponsky.
Consider your overall health. As with any medical procedure, the healing process and procedure itself will likely go more smoothly if you take care of yourself. It’s as simple as drinking water, working out regularly, abstaining from cigarettes and maintaining a generally healthy diet.
Correct mindset. Dr. Ponsky stresses that a proper mindset goes a long way. “We want someone who knows that cosmetic surgery is not something you need, but something that you want to help you feel better about yourself.” Understand that surgery, while it can help boost confidence, will not solve every problem in your life.
It takes time to heal. Understand that healing doesn’t happen quickly and ask someone to help you during recovery. Ponsky warns that procedures like a rhinoplasty can take at least 10 days for social healing — looking well enough to go out — and even longer for physical activity like exercise. Having a friend or loved one that can help you buy groceries or lift heavy things while you heal goes a long way.
Do your research. There will always be shadier options for cosmetic surgery — we’ve all heard the back-alley Brazilian butt lift horror stories — so look into your local surgeons and ensure that they are board-certified for surgery. “Qualifications of your physician is so important in this day and age of everything being on the internet. You don’t know what to believe or who to believe.”
for a time, Diana’s mother eventually moved back to Allentown, bouncing Diana back and forth between Pennsylvania and New York City before she decided to attend Stuyvesant High School, a specialized and prestigious college prep school in the big city.
“[My mother] thought I was just goofing around in New York and she threatened to take me back to Allentown,” Diana says. “And we convinced her — a teacher of mine and his wife convinced her — to let me stay to go to the high school there."
It was at this time that Diana first glimpsed the medical profession. Along with attending Stuy, she found herself working for Dr. Lilianna Sauter, a Swiss dermatologist on N.Y.C.’s Park Avenue, who took Diana under her wing. A few times, she brought Diana with her to the National Academy of Science’s lectures or to local museums, making the young student take notes.
In retrospect, she became Diana’s role model — both as a medical professional and as a woman navigating a male-dominated space. Before her passing, Sauter was honored as a Fellow of the American Academy of Dermatology and worked as a foreign medical graduate for the Mount Sinai staff in N.Y.C. — achievements worth celebrating, Diana says.
working regularly with Medworks, too.
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, he told them that he would not be relocating.
WHEN
THE TIME FINALLY CAME
for med school, Diana set her sights on Georgetown University, where she graduated in 2000 and eventually met Todd, who would become her husband.
As a college student, the urge to pay back years of help kicked in fast. She took that opportunity in Siberia assisting with Operation Smile. But it didn’t take long after graduating for Diana to involve herself with Ponsky Family charity work, assisting with MedWish — founded by Todd’s Brother, Dr. Lee Ponsky — which provides medical surplus supplies to people in need.
By 2012 she took part in her first Faces to Faces surgery and continues
While things progressed quickly for Diana, so too did Todd’s career. Going into helper mode once again, she dedicated herself to his success — at times putting her own momentum on the back burner. With Todd’s career in the driver’s seat, Diana followed him from place to place.
When Todd needed to finish training in Washington, D.C., Diana stayed and worked a temporary job at the Veterans Affairs Hospital. When Todd needed needlescopic surgery training in Denver, Diana followed.
So when the time came for Diana to focus on her goals — namely, establishing a private practice with worklife balance in mind — Todd knew it was time to hand over the reins. Diana opened Ponsky Facial Plastic Surgery in 2016 in Beachwood after the couple returned to the Cleveland area. When Todd later accepted a position at the
“My wife who followed me all over everywhere and never said a word about it? Well, now it’s her turn,” Todd insists. “They asked me to move down there, and I said I cannot because it’s Diana’s turn. So, I drive there.”
In the past six years, Diana has been able to grow her practice into one of the most successful in the area, serving upwards of 300 patients a year. In tandem with her work-life balance goals, the surgeon finds time to give back to her community through charitable healthcare and lessons she teaches at local high schools and Case Western Reserve University.
“I've had mentors and role models who’ve shown me that persistence and hard work are always admired," she says. "I want to continue to pay that forward by helping others and being an example to others."
How We Did It
The doctors in this feature were selected by Professional Research Services (PRS), which conducted an online peer-review survey of area physicians in Northeast Ohio. Physicians were asked to nominate fellow physicians they deemed the best in their field of practice. Many votes were cast honoring excellence in all fields of medicine. The featured doctors were screened and selected through the verification of licensing and review of any infractions through applicable boards, agencies and rating services. Cleveland Magazine was not involved in the selection process. Please consult a professional before making any decisions regarding your personal care. Inclusion in the list is based on the opinions of responding doctors in the region and the results of our research campaign. We take great time and energy to ensure fair voting, but this list is only a sampling of the huge array of talented professionals within the region. For additional information, visit prscom.com.
Please refer to the following addresses when none is listed for these institutions.
Akron Children’s Hospital
1 Perkins Square, Akron 330-543-1000 akronchildrens.org
Cleveland Clinic/ Cleveland Clinic Children’s 9500 Euclid Ave., Cleveland 216-444-2200 clevelandclinic.org Lake Health
Various locations 800-780-7781 lakehealth.org
Addiction Medicine
William Goldman ACH 215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-5015
Akhil Anand CC 1730 W. 25th St. Cleveland 216-636-5860
David Streem CC 1730 W. 25th St. Cleveland 216-636-5860
Youssef Mahfoud VA 216-791-3800
Christina M. Antenucci MH 216-778-5500
Theodore V. Parran SV 2351 E. 22nd St. Cleveland 216-861-6200
Sybil Marsh UH 440-623-7708
Adolescent Medicine
Crystal Cole ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-8538
Jessica Castonguay ACH 215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-8538
Ellen Rome CCC 216-444-5437
Tornia Wyllie CCC 216-444-5437
Veronica Issac CCC 216-444-5437
Margaret M. Stager MH 216-778-2222
Rina Lazebnik RB 216-541-1945
Key
ACH: Akron
Children’s Hospital
CC: Cleveland Clinic
CCC: Cleveland Clinic Children’s
LH: Lake Health
VA: Louis Stokes
Cleveland VA Medical Center
MH: MetroHealth System
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center 10701 East Blvd., Cleveland 216-791-3800 cleveland.va.gov
MetroHealth System 2500 MetroHealth Drive, Cleveland 216-778-7800 metrohealth.org
Allergy and Immunology
Richard Lavi
Allergy Asthma & Sinus Relief Center
3618 W. Market St., Fairlawn 330-423-4444
Devi Jhaveri
Allergy/Immunology Associates
5915 Landerbrook Drive, Mayfield Heights
216-381-3333
Haig Tcheurekdjian
Allergy/Immunology Associates
5915 Landerbrook Drive, Mayfield Heights
216-381-3333
Robert W. Hostoffer
Allergy/Immunology Associates
5915 Landerbrook Drive, Mayfield Heights
216-381-3333
David M. Lang CC
551 E. Washington St., Chagrin Falls
440-893-9393
James M. Fernandez CC
216-444-6933
Lily Pien CC
216-444-3386
Ahila Subramanian CC
16761 S. Park Center, Strongsville
440-878-2500
Sandra Hong CC
16761 S. Park Center, Strongsville
440-878-2500
Julie K. Sterbank MH
216-778-2213
Kathryn Ruda Wessell RB
216-541-1095
Princess Ogbogu RB
216-946-4668
Southwest General Health Center 18697 Bagley Road, Middleburg Heights 440-816-8000 swgeneral.com
St. Vincent Charity Medical Center 2351 E. 22nd St., Cleveland 216-861-6200 stvincentcharity.com
Summa Health System 525 E. Market St., Akron 330-375-3000 summahealth.org
University Hospitals/ University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital 11100 Euclid Ave., Cleveland 866-844-2273 (main) 216-844-5437 (children’s) uhhospitals.org
SG: Southwest General Health Center
SV: St. Vincent Charity Medical Center
SH: Summa Health System
UH: University Hospitals
RB: UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital
Samuel Friedlander UH 34055 Solon Rd. Solon 440-836-9366
Anesthesiology
Kasia Rubin CC 6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights
440-312-5181
Mariel Manlapaz CC
216-445-4940
Megan Rodgers McCormick CC
216-444-5437
Pilar Castro CC
216-445-7282
Shelly-Anne Rodriguez CC
216-444-6331
Ursula Galway CC 216-444-6326
Wai Sung CC
216-444-4208
John F. Bologna Jr.SG
440-816-8990
David Glasser UH
3999 Richmond Road, Beachwood 216-541-1122
Daniel Asher UH
216-541-1053
Daniel Wyler UH
440-870-9799
David Dininny UH
216-541-1074
Heather McFarland UH
216-220-9106
Soozan Abouhassan UH
440-703-6226
Cardiology
Michael F. Deucher Cardiovascular Medicine Associates, Inc.
7255 Old Oak Blvd., Middleburg Heights
440-816-2708
Matthew Kaminski CC
26900 Cedar Road, Beachwood
216-839-3000
Jonathan Scharfstein CC
6801 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights
440-449-8890
Chonyang Albert CC
216-444-6697
Christine Jellis CC
216-444-6697
Maria Mountis CC
216-636-6101
Mohamed Kanj CC
216-444-6697
Oussama Wazni CC
216-444-6697
Samir Kapadia CC
216-444-6697
Peter Aziz CCC 216-445-5015
Saima Karim MH 216-778-2328
William Wolf UH 3999 Richmond Road, Beachwood 216-844-3800
Barry Effron UH 216-844-3800
Chantal ElAmm UH 216-844-3800
Daniel I. Simon UH 216-844-3800
Eiran Gorodeski UH 216-844-3800
Ellen Sabik UH 216-844-3800
Heather Gornik UH 216-844-3800
Judith Mackall UH 216-844-3800
Mehdi Shishehbor UH 216-844-3800
Michael Zacharias UH 216-844-3800
Atul Hulyalkar UH 29101 Health Campus Dr., Westlake 440-899-2423
John Coletta UH 29101 Health Campus Dr., Westlake 440-899-2423
Chad Raymond UH 1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-844-3800
Joseph Restivo Western Reserve Physicians, Inc. 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7989
Joseph Rinaldi Western Reserve Physicians, Inc. 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7989
Michael Bage Western Reserve Physicians, Inc. 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7989
Cardiothoracic Surgery
Robert D. Stewart ACH 215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-8030
A. Marc Gillinov CC 216-445-8841
The
Improving Access to Healthcare. Impacting the Next Generation of Dedicated Physicians.
At MetroHealth, we relentlessly pursue healthier outcomes for every person. As we work to eliminate barriers that impact health, we recognize and celebrate these doctors. Their tireless work to improve access to health care lives on as they teach students and residents through the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine.
NOT PICTURED:
Nora G. Singer, M.D. Rheumatology John H. Wilber, M.D. Orthopedic Surgery Melissa L. Times, M.D. Colon and Rectal Surgery Jared Placeway, D.O. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Kimberly E. Resnick, M.D. Gynecologic Oncology, Obstetrics and Gynecology Lorella Luezas Shamakian, M.D. Geriatric Medicine Rocio Moran, M.D. Medical Genetics Georges Saab, M.D. Nephrology Otolaryngology Edward L. Warren, M.D. Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Disease Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation James M. Persky, M.D. Vascular Surgery Deven Reddy, M.D. Neurological Surgery Robert C. Kalayjian, M.D. Infectious Disease Gregory Y. Kitagawa, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology Matthew S. Eisen, M.D. Internal Medicine Paula V. Hendryx, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology Gustaf M. Van Acker III, M.D., Ph.D. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Richard D. Wilson, M.D., M.S. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Lisa S. Roth, D.P.M. Podiatry Margaret M. Stager, M.D. Adolescent Medicine Ari D. Levine, M.D. Orthopedic Surgery R. Justin Mistovich, M.D. Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery Harry A. Hoyen III, M.D. Hand Surgery Michael W. Keith, M.D. Hand Surgery Jaividhya Dasarathy, M.D. Family Medicine Catherine E. Ferguson, D.P.M. Podiatry Linda-Dalal J. Shiber, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Julie K. Sterbank, D.O., MPH Allergy and Immunology Saima Karim, D.O. Cardiology Vidya Krishnan, M.D. Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Disease Charles L. Emerman, M.D., F.A.A.E.M. Emergency Medicine Corrilynn O. Hileman, MD Infectious Disease Aparna Roy, M.D. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine Thomas L. Steinemann, M.D. Ophthalmology Christina R. Vargas, M.D. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Marc D. Winkelman, M.D. Neurology Roger Ove, M.D. Radiation Oncology Amy J. Ray, M.D. Infectious Disease Benjamin D. Li, M.D. Surgical Oncology Charles S. Modlin, Jr., M.D. Urology David H. Ludlow, M.D. Otolaryngology Timothy A. Moore, M.D. Orthopedic Surgery Natalie E. Joseph, M.D. Surgical Oncology Chong H. Kim, M.D. Pain Management, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Marina Durán-Castillo, M.D. Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Disease David T. Hehemann, D.P.M. Podiatry Melissa O. Jenkins, M.D. Infectious Disease Michael L. Kelly, M.D. Neurological Surgery Katherine C. DiSano, M.D. Dermatology Kelly S. Gibson, M.D. Maternal and Fetal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology Roger G. Wilber, M.D. Orthopedic Surgery Barbara B. Rhoads, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology John P. Spirnak, M.D. Urology Robert Needlman, M.D. Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics Deborah M. Prinz-Gentile, M.D., Ph.D Obstetrics and Gynecology Carvell Nguyen, M.D. Urology Heather A. Rainey, M.D. Sports Medicine, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clodagh R. Mullen, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology Robert R. Pollard, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology Irma J. Lengu, M.D. Urology Beth L. McLaughlin, M.D. Hospice and Palliative Medicine Adrienne Lee, M.D. Hand Surgery Christopher R. McHenry, M.D. General Surgery Steven M. Houser, M.D. Otolaryngology Bram R. Kaufman, M.D. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery David R. Crowe, M.D. Dermatology Garietta Falls, M.D. Vascular Surgery Carol M. Delahunty, M.D. Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics Tracy L. Lemonovich, M.D. Infectious DiseaseLOOK INSIDE for the complete list of Best Doctors.
HEALTHCARE IS ABOUT MORE THAN MEDICINE.
It’s about hope, equity, and a healthier community.
Dr. Airica Steed, President & CEO MetroHealthAt MetroHealth, we believe every person in our community deserves access to high-quality care. With vision and innovation, our President and CEO, Dr. Airica Steed — alongside the more than 8,000 dedicated providers, specialists, nurses, and staff who call MetroHealth home — will shape a future dedicated to a healthier community.
metrohealth.org
When you need medical imaging or diagnostics, you don’t want to deal with long waits to get in, surprisingly high prices, or delayed results. With same and next-day appointments, we provide patients and providers with clarity, fast. Our hospital-grade medical imaging provides results read by qualified radiologists within 24 hours, so you and your doctor can focus on the next step in your journey to health. With a check-in process that gets you from our parking lot to your appointment with no wait, an easy concierge pre-authorization process, and low transparent pricing, we’re able to provide a clearly distinct experience for patients and their medical providers.
Alejandro Bribriesco CC
216-445-6860
Daniel Raymond CC 216-636-1623
Eric Roselli CC 216-444-0995
Lars Svensson CC 216-445-4813
Nicholas Smedira CC 216-445-7052
Shinya Unai CC 216-445-5902
Siva Raja CC 216-445-6860
Sudish Murthy CC 216-444-5640
Tara Karamlou CCC 216-442-8278
Eric A. Espinal SH 75 Arch St. Akron 330-384-9001
Philip Linden UH 216-844-0065
Alan Markowitz UH 216-844-4004
Cristian Baeza UH 216-844-4004
Joseph Sabik UH 216-844-4004
Kelsey Gray UH 216-844-4004
Marc Pelletier UH 216-844-4004
Pablo F. Ruda Vega UH 216-844-4004
Yakov L. Elgudin UH 216-844-4004
Yasir Abu-Omar UH 216-844-4004
Colon and Rectal Surgery
Bradley Champagne CC 18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-476-6961
David Rosen CC 18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-476-6961
Joseph Trunzo CC 18101 Lorain Ave. Cleveland 216-476-6961
David Liska CC 216-444-9219
I. Emre Gorgun CC
216-444-7000
Jeremy Lipman CC
216-444-4093
Michael A. Valente CC
216-445-6297
Scott Steele CC
216-444-7000
Stefan Holubar CC
216-444-7000
Tracy Hull CC
216-444-7000
Thomas Garofalo CC
8701 Darrow Road, Twinsburg
216-444-7000
Eric Marderstein VA
216-791-3800
Melissa L. Times MH
216-778-4391
Michael J. Cullado SH
95 Arch St., Akron
330-434-5978
Meagan Costedio UH
1000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood
216-593-1315
David Dietz UH
216-930-3556
Emily Steinhagen UH
216-304-2416
Ronald Charles UH
216-699-8752
Sharon Stein UH
216-304-2416
Michael Liu UH 29099 Health Campus Dr., Westlake 440-250-2468
Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Disease
Eduardo Mireles-Cabodevila CC
216-444-6503
Joseph Parambil CC
216-444-6503
Marcela Azevedo CC
866-320-4573
Peter Mazzone CC
216-444-6503
Edward L. Warren MH
216-778-5864
Marina Durán-Castillo MH
216-778-5864
Vidya Krishnan MH
216-778-5864
Charles Fuenning
Unity Health Network
1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-253-1411
Hitesh Makkar Unity Health Network
1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-253-1411
Benjamin Young UH 216-844-3201
Frank Jacono UH
216-844-3201
Rana Hejal UH
216-844-3201
Robert Schilz UH 216-844-3201
Dermatology
Angela L. Funovits
Allied Dermatology and Skin Surgery 3624 W. Market St., Akron 866-377-6631
Justin G. Woodhouse
Allied Dermatology and Skin Surgery
3624 W. Market St., Akron 866-337-6631
Lauren K. Guren
Allied Dermatology and Skin Surgery 5915 Landerbrook Drive, Mayfield Heights
216-382-3806
Jorge Garcia-Zuazaga
Apex Dermatology & Skin Surgery Center
5800 Landerbrook Drive, Mayfield Heights 440-646-1600
Brandie Tackett Styron Associates in Dermatology
26908 Detroit Road, Westlake 440-482-8323
Karen L. Turgeon Associates in Dermatology
26908 Detroit Road, Westlake 440-482-8323
Michael D. Reep Associates in Dermatology
26908 Detroit Road, Westlake 440-482-8323
Mihir Shah Associates in Dermatology
26908 Detroit Road, Westlake 440-482-8323
Aziza Wahby Chagrin Valley Dermatology
7185 Chagrin Road, Chagrin Falls 440-999-3035
Sherry Yu CC
303 Chestnut Commons Drive, Elyria
866-320-4573
Pamela H. Davis CC
14601 Detroit Ave., Lakewood 216-237-5500
Allison Vidimos CC 216-444-5729
Alok Vij CC 216-444-2651
Anthony Fernandez CC 216-444-5725
Christine Poblete-Lopez CC 216-444-5724
Jennifer Lucas CC
440-213-4019
John Anthony CC
440-878-2500
Joshua Arbesman CC 216-444-5725
Melissa Piliang CC 216-444-5725
Rashmi Unwala CC 216-444-5725
Shilpi Khetarpal CC 216-444-4004
Wilma Bergfeld CC
216-444-5725
Eric Baud
Cleveland Dermatology Group, LLC
2001 Crocker Road, Westlake 440-617-1522
David R. Crowe MH
216-778-3376
Katherine C. DiSano MH
38 Main St., Westlake
216-778-3376
Miriam Finkel
Radiant Dermatology
6990 Lindsay Drive, Mentor 440-290-9616
Meghan Crute Spectrum Dermatology
19637 Center Ridge Road, Rocky River
440-444-4445
Renuka Diwan
The Laser & Skin Surgery Center 29101 Health Campus Drive, Westlake 440-871-9832
Sonal Shah UH 216-868-8843
Danny Barlev UH 216-508-7664
Kevin Cooper UH 216-508-7664
Neil Korman UH 216-508-7638
Ari Konheim UH
3000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood 216-799-0319
Christina Wong UH
3000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood 216-799-0319
Jeremy Bordeaux UH
3000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood
216-799-0319
Mara Beveridge UH
3000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood
216-799-0319
Developmental-
Behavioral Pediatrics
Jessica Foster
Akron’s Children’s Hospital - Neuro-
Developmental Science Center
215 W. Bowery St., Akron
330-543-8050
Carrie Cuffman CC
2801 MLK Jr. Dr. Cleveland
216-448-6110
Marie Trace CC 2801 MLK Jr. Drive, Cleveland
216-448-6110
Mary Wong CC
2801 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Cleveland
216-448-6110
Catherine Lipman CCC
18099 Lorain Ave. Cleveland
216-448-6110
Katherine M. Myers CCC
18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-448-6110
Carol M. Delahunty MH
1299 Industrial Pkwy., Brunswick 216-778-2222
Robert Needlman MH 216-778-2222
Elizabeth Diekroger UH 10524 Euclid Ave., Cleveland 440-940-8757
Nancy Roizen UH
10524 Euclid Ave., Cleveland 440-940-8757
Diagnostic Radiology
Abraham Levitin CC 216-444-2244
Andrei Purysko CC 216-445-9005
Brian Herts CC 216-445-7406
Hakan Ilaslan CC 216-445-4326
Mark Baker CC 216-444-6638
Paul Ruggieri CC 216-445-7035
Peter Liu CC 216-444-0889
William C. Baughman MH 216-778-3456
Preet S. Kang Riverside Radiology and Interventional Associates 100 E. Campus View Blvd., Columbus 991-834-7747
Donna Plecha UH 216-844-1700
Michael Coffey UH 216-844-1700
Peter Young UH 216-844-1700
R. Chip Gilkeson UH 866-940-1477
Sree Tirumani UH 216-844-1700
Emergency Medicine
Jeffrey Ruwe CC 18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-476-7080
Lauren Mientkiewicz CC 6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights 440-312-7337
Marina Molinari-Zuzek CC 6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights 440-312-7337
Danielle Hoover CC 216-445-4500
Stephen Meldon CC 216-445-4557
Steven Dorsey CC 216-445-4500
Thomas Waters CC 216-445-4545
Charles L. Emerman MH 216-778-5500
Jessica R. Goldstein UH 216-844-1636
Matthew Stull UH 216-844-1610
Riley Grosso UH 216-220-6653
Jerri Rose RB 216-844-8716
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
M. Cecilia Lansang CC 216-444-6568
Pratima Sood VA 216-791-3800
Baha Arafah UH 216-844-2152
Betul Hatipoglu UH 216-844-2152
Valerie Hadam UH 5850 Landerbrook Dr., Mayfield Heights 440-681-8959
Revital Gorodeski Baskin UH 3909 Orange Place, Beachwood 216-716-7607
Brian E. Burtch UH 8300 Tyler Blvd., Mentor 440-266-5000
Family Medicine
Meighan Patton Acropolis Health 72 Village Way, Hudson 234-269-6300
Lisa Cloud CC 450 Avon Belden Road, Avon Lake 440-930-6800
Donald Ford CC 440-312-8294
Amy Zack CC 20050 Harvard Road, Warrensville Heights 216-839-3000
Robert Bales CC 20050 Harvard Road, Warrensville Heights 216-491-1010
Sarah Gerhardstein CC 2570 SOM Center Road, Willoughby Hills 866-320-4573
Jessica Cook LH 6270 N. Ridge Road, Madison 440-428-8292
Christine A. Alexander MH 216-778-5731
Jaividhya Dasarathy MH 4757 Lorain Ave. Cleveland 216-778-5500
Nancy Li
Neighborhood Family Practice - Puritas Community Health Center 14625 Puritas Ave., Cleveland 216-281-0872
John P. Gerace NOMS Healthcare 29257 Center Ridge Road, Westlake 440-899-7677
Seamus J. Walsh NOMS Healthcare 29257 Center Ridge Road, Westlake 440-899-7677
Ann Witt Senders Pediatrics 2054 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-291-9210
Angela Bennett UH 440-508-8171
Michelle Caster UH 216-541-1058
Stephanie Mesko UH 5133 Ridge Rd. Wadsworth 234-248-3749
Dominic Lefoer UH 9318 State Route 14 Streetsboro 330-422-0916
Gastroenterology and Hepatology
Costas H. Kefalas Akron Digestive Disease Consultants 570 White Pond Drive, Akron 330-869-0124
Michael Pollack CC 6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights 440-461-2550
Ari Garber CC 216-444-7000
Carol Burke CC 216-444-7000
Gregory Zuccaro Jr.CC 216-444-7000
Jean-Paul Achkar CC 216-444-7000
Jessica Philpott CC 216-445-7692
John J. Vargo II CC 216-444-7000
Scott Gabbard CC 216-444-7000
Ashley Faulx VA 216-791-3800
Mohamed S. Naem
NorthShore Gastroenterology & Endoscopy Centers
850 Columbia Road, Westlake 440-808-1212
Rinjal Brahmbhatt
NorthShore Gastroenterology & Endoscopy Centers
850 Columbia Road, Westlake 440-808-1212
Michael K. Koehler
The Endoscopy Center at Bainbridge, LLC
8185 E. Washington St., Chagrin Falls
440-708-0582
Rami Abbass
The Endoscopy Center at Bainbridge, LLC
8185 E. Washington St., Chagrin Falls
440-708-0582
Amitabh Chak UH 216-815-0220
Anthony Post UH 216-716-7964
Jeffry Katz UH
216-844-2178
Dany Raad UH
6707 Powers Blvd., Parma
216-899-7090
Sapna Thomas UH
32800 Lorain Road, North Ridgeville 440-529-2417
Brooke Glessing UH
3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood 216-424-4668
John Dumot UH 3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood 216-465-7274
Eric Shapiro UH
1161 S. Green Road, South Euclid 440-955-7817
Corey Sievers Western Reserve Physicians, Inc.
1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-926-3313
John S. Park
Western Reserve Physicians, Inc.
1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-926-3313
General Surgery
Diya Alaedeen CC
18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 440-673-0100
James Malgieri CC 6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights 440-449-1101
Kalman Bencsath CC 6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights
440-449-1101
R. Matthew Walsh CC 216-444-6664
Steven Rosenblatt CC 216-444-6664
Stephanie Valente CC
18200 Lorain Road, Cleveland 216-252-2235
Walter Cha CC 8701 Darrow Road, Twinsburg
440-449-1101
Andrew Smith CC 20455 Lorain Road, Fairview Park 440-673-0100
Christopher P. Brandt MH 216-778-4391
Christopher R. McHenry MH 216-778-4391
Vladimir Dubchuk SG 7215 Old Oak Blvd., Middleburg Heights 440-816-5500
Jeffrey M. Hardacre UH
216-304-2416
Jeffrey Marks UH 216-304-2416
Raymond Onders UH 216-230-0965
Leena Khaitan UH
1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-930-5154
Jeffrey Parks UH 3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood 216-488-3676
John Jasper UH 3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood 216-468-5131
Rick Gemma Western Reserve Physicians, Inc. 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7753
Geriatric Medicine
Ronan Factora CC
5001 Rockside Road, Independence 216-444-5665
Ardeshir Zia Hashmi CC 216-445-4415
Kenneth Koncilja CC 216-445-2435
Luke Dogyun Kim CC 216-444-5665
James W. Campbell MH 4229 Pearl Road, Cleveland 216-957-2100
Lorella Luezas Shamakian MH 4229 Pearl Road, Cleveland 216-957-2100
Amanda T. Lathia UH 3619 Park E. Dr., Beachwood 216-464-6445
Gynecologic Oncology
Chad Michener CC 216-445-0226
Mariam AlHilli CC 216-445-0747
Peter Rose CC 216-444-6601
Robert DeBernardo CC 216-444-6601
Roberto Vargas CC 216-444-6601
Kimberly E. Resnick MH 216-778-7328
Amy Armstrong UH
5805 Euclid Ave., Cleveland 216-844-3971
Anna Strohl UH 216-844-3097
Sarah Lynam UH 216-844-3097
Lindsay Ferguson UH 3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood 216-844-3954
Kristine Zanotti UH 960 Clague Road, Westlake 216-844-3954
Hand Surgery
Steven Maschke CC 26900 Cedar Road, Beachwood 216-445-6426
Dennis Kao CC 18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-476-7000
Steven Bernard CC 216-444-6900
Joseph Styron CC 16761 S. Park Center, Strongsville 216-444-6260
Nathan A. Monaco Crystal Clinic Orthopaedic Center - Fairlawn
3925 Embassy Pkwy., Akron 330-668-4055
Thomas J. Reilly
Crystal Clinic Orthopaedic Center - Fairlawn
3925 Embassy Pkwy., Akron 330-668-4055
Adrienne Lee MH 216-778-4393
Blaine T. Bafus MH 216-778-4393
Harry A. Hoyen III MH 216-778-4393
Kyle J. Chepla MH 216-778-4393
Michael W. Keith MH 216-778-4393
Mehrun K. Elyaderani
Orthopaedic Associates
24723 Detroit Road, Westlake 440-892-1440
Gregory Hill
Unity Health Network - Western Reserve Orthopedic & Upper Extremity
Surgery
1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls
330-922-1922
Scott Zimmer UH
13170 Ravenna Road, Chardon 844-542-6363
Kevin Malone UH
1000 Auburn Drive, Beachwood 216-868-8871
James Anderson UH 216-785-2255
Stephen Evans Jr. UH
25200 Center Ridge Road, Westlake 440-871-6560
Andrew Grier UH
1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-844-0516
Jonathan B. Macknin UH
13207 Ravenna Road, Chardon 440-732-4848
Hematology
Alan Lichtin CC 216-444-6823
Christy Samaras CC 216-444-0293
Dana Angelini CC 216-444-1730
Evi Stavrou VA 216-791-3800
Tonjeh M. Bah MH 216-778-7328
Alvin Schmaier UH 216-844-3951
Koen van Besien UH 216-844-3951
Lalitha Nayak UH 216-844-3951
Molly Gallogly UH 216-844-3951
Richard Chang UH 29325 Health Campus Dr., Westlake 440-617-4700
Jennifer Payne
Western Reserve Physicians, Inc. 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7892
Mehool Patel
Western Reserve Physicians, Inc.
1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7892
Hospice and Palliative Medicine
Katherine Eilenfeld CC 18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-445-0941
David Harris CC 216-444-6833
Hemangini Bhakta CC 216-444-4998
Kathleen Neuendorf CC 216-444-6833
Krista Dobbie CC 216-444-6833
Laura Shoemaker CC 216-444-5193
Kevin F. Dieter Hospice of the Western Reserve 17876 St. Clair Ave., Cleveland 216-383-2222
Beth L. McLaughlin MH 216-778-2343
Shirley Thomas UH 3999 Richmond Road, Beachwood 216-593-5500
Abdul Rab Razzak UH 216-844-3951
Noam Stern RB 855-642-9600
Infectious Disease
K. Gopalakrishna CC 18101 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-476-7106
Carlos Isada CC 216-444-8845
Kristin Englund CC 216-444-8845
Maja Babic CC 216-444-8845
Steven Gordon CC 216-444-8845
Steven Schmitt CC 216-444-8845
Susan Rehm CC 216-444-8845
Thomas Fraser CC 216-444-8845
Muhannad Tello Infectious Disease Consultants of Northeast Ohio, Inc. 18660 Bagley Rd. Middleburg Heights 440-586-6720
Robert Bonomo VA 216-791-3800
Usha Stiefel VA 216-791-3800
Niyati P. Sheth Infectious Disease
Mercy Health - Lorain Infectious Disease
3600 Kolbe Rd. Lorain 440-233-0138
Amy J. Ray MH 216-778-8305
Ann K. Avery MH 216-778-8305
Corrilynn O. Hileman MH 216-778-8305
Melissa O. Jenkins MH 216-778-8305
Robert C. Kalayjian MH 216-778-8305
Tracy L. Lemonovich MH 216-778-8305
Shanu Agarwal SH
75 Arch St. Akron 330-375-4851
Thomas M. File SH
75 Arch St. Akron
330-375-3894
Rajiv Sahni
Unity Health Network 3033 State Rd. Cuyahoga Falls 330-253-9727
Keith Armitage UH 216-541-1304
Michelle Lisgaris UH 216-844-8500
Robert Salata UH 216-815-0220
Scott Fulton UH 216-465-7274
Internal Medicine
Baljit Bal CC 26900 Cedar Rd. Beachwood 216-839-3350
Gasan Nemr CC 24651 Center Ridge Rd. Rocky River 216-221-7642
Ann Awadalla CC 5001 Rockside Rd. Independence 216-986-4000
Joshua Miller CC 5001 Rockside Rd. Independence 216-986-4000
Amy Lynn Teleron CC 216-444-5633
Andrea Sikon CC 216-444-9896
Christopher Whinney CC 216-444-0933
Craig Nielsen CC 216-444-5665
Demetra Gibson CC 216-444-0933
J. Harry Isaacson CC 216-444-5665
Moises Auron CC 216-445-1472
Raul Seballos CC 216-444-6840
Megan Moini Emerald Direct Primary Care 3619 Park E. Dr. Beachwood 216-260-3550
Matthew S. Eisen MH 216-778-2273
Mohamed Shahed Signature Meds, LLC 19050 Lorain Rd. Fairview Park
216-252-8000
Roy Buchinsky UH
1000 Auburn Dr. Beachwood
216-285-5050
Scott Massien UH
1000 Auburn Dr. Beachwood
216-285-5050
Daniel Fleksher UH
23250 Mercantile Rd. Beachwood
216-464-7878
Nathan Stehouwer UH
216-851-8860
Rajesh Chandra UH
216-541-1248
Kristin Kaelber UH
25001 Emery Rd. Warrensville Heights
216-859-6094
Suzana Sarac-Leonard UH
1611 S. Green Rd. South Euclid
216-297-2084
David Headen UH
3909 Orange Pl. Beachwood
216-464-1115
Malka Bannet UH
3909 Orange Pl. Beachwood
216-464-1115
Scott Yasinow UH
3909 Orange Pl. Beachwood
216-464-1115
Debra Leizman UH
3909 Orange Pl. Beachwood
216-424-4668
Alan Hirsh UH
1000 Auburn Dr. Beachwood
216-285-4056
Jill Miller UH
5850 Landerbrook Dr. Mayfield Heights
440-995-3838
Crystal Lantz-DeGeorge UH
1611 South Green Rd. South Euclid
216-297-2084
Robert Cirino UH
1611 South Green Rd. South Euclid
216-297-2084
Andrew Filiatraut UH
26908 Detroit Rd. Westlake
440-250-8660
Interventional Cardiology
Victor Kairouz Cardiovascular Medicine Associates, Inc.
7255 Old Oak Blvd. Middleburg Heights
440-816-2708
Amar Krishnaswamy CC
216-636-2824
Jaikirshan Khatri CC 216-445-3991
Samir Kapadia CC
216-444-6697
William Wolf UH
3999 Richmond Rd. Beachwood
216-844-3800
Anene Ukaigwe UH
216-844-3800
Mehdi Shishehbor UH
216-844-3800
Steven Filby UH
216-844-3800
Michael Cunningham UH 3909 Orange Pl. Beachwood
216-844-3800
Jun Li UH
6525 Powers Blvd. Parma
440-882-0075
Paul Poommipanit UH
6525 Powers Blvd. Parma 440-882-0075
John Coletta UH
29101 Health Campus Dr. Westlake 440-899-2423
Nadim Al-Mubarak UH 29101 Health Campus Dr. Westlake 440-899-2423
Maternal and Fetal Medicine
Katherine Wolfe ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-4500
Maeve Hopkins CC 18101 Lorain Ave. Cleveland
866-320-4573
Amanda Kalan CC
6770 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights
440-312-2229
Stacey Ehrenberg CC
6770 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights
440-312-2229
Edward Chien CC
216-445-4406
Jeff Chapa CC
216-444-9615
Katherine Singh CC
216-476-7144
Justin Lappen CC
8701 Darrow Rd. Twinsburg
330-888-4000
Kelly S. Gibson MH
216-778-4444
Christopher Nau UH
216-714-2138
David N. Hackney UH
216-998-4097
Melissa March UH
216-998-9084
Tani Malhotra UH
216-868-8760
Ellie Ragsdale UH
216-910-7611
Mae-Lan Winchester RB
5805 Euclid Ave. Cleveland
216-868-8953
Medical Genetics
Carrie Costin ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8792
Charis Eng CC
800-998-4785
Harry Lesmana CC
866-320-4573
Julie Kaplan CC
866-320-4573
Marvin Natowicz CC
216-636-1768
Rocio Moran MH
216-778-4323
Anthony J. Wynshaw-Boris UH
216-844-3936
Anna Mitchell UH
216-844-3936
Suzanne DeBrosse UH
216-844-3936
Aditi Parikh RB
216-844-3936
Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine
Anirudha Das CCC
216-444-2568
Firas Saker CCC
216-444-2568
Allison Peluso CCC
480-330-7656
Hany Aly CCC
216-444-2568
Natalie Yeaney CCC
216-444-2568
Sabine Iben CCC
216-444-2568
Arielle Olicker UH
216-844-3387
Jessica Madden UH 216-844-7770
Margaret Kuper-Sasse UH
216-844-7770
Moira Crowley UH
216-844-7770
Allison Payne RB
216-844-3387
Ana Paula Ribeiro RB
216-844-3387
Deanne Wilson-Costello RB
216-844-7700
Monika Bhola RB
216-844-3387
Stephanie Ford RB
216-844-3387
Nephrology
Saurabh Bansal
Americare Kidney Institute
805 Columbia Rd. Westlake
216-228-5500
Wassim El-Hitti
Americare Kidney Institute
805 Columbia Rd. Westlake
216-228-5500
Ali Mehdi CC
216-444-4926
Joshua Augustine CC
216-444-6771
Richard Fatica CC
216-444-6771
Saul Nurko CC
216-445-8628
Georges Saab MH 216-778-2323
Andrew E. Lazar
Cleveland Kidney Disease Associates, LLC
3619 Park E. Dr. Cleveland
216-896-0639
Rajat Maheshwari
Premier Renal Care Ohio - Main Office
421 Portage Trl. Cuyahoga Falls 330-331-4466
Aparna Padiyar UH
216-798-7642
Arksarapuk Jittirat UH
216-844-3689
Lavinia Negrea UH
216-844-8305
Mahboob Rahman UH
216-844-8305
Mirela Dobre UH
216-844-1636
Arash Rashidi UH
29325 Health Campus Dr. Westlake 440-414-9400
Neurological Surgery
Ajit Krishnaney CC
216-636-5860
Alireza Mohammadi CC
216-445-4290
Andre Machado CC
216-444-4270
Gene Barnett CC
216-636-0007
Lilyana Angelov CC
216-636-0007
Mark Bain CC
216-445-6575
Megan Jack CC
216-636-5860
Michael Steinmetz CC
216-445-5754
Pablo Recinos CC
216-636-0007
Peter Rasmussen CC 216-445-9897
Richard Schlenk CC 216-445-4318
Sean Nagel CC
216-636-5860
Varun Kshettry CC
216-636-0007
Violette Recinos CCC 216-444-4549
William Bingaman CCC
216-444-5050
Deven Reddy MH 216-778-8822
Michael L. Kelly MH 216-778-8822
Gabriel A. Smith UH 29101 Health Campus Dr. Westlake 440-827-5088
Abhishek Ray UH 216-868-2133
Brian Rothstein UH 216-844-5741
Jonathan Miller UH 216-930-3770
Manish Kasliwal UH 216-424-5740
Nicholas Bambakidis UH 216-455-8604
Seth Hoffer UH 216-424-5740
Tiffany Hodges UH 216-424-5740
Yin C. Hu UH 216-424-5740
Warren Selman UH 216-868-2133
Neurology
Allison Weathers CC 216-442-6511
Andrew Russman CC 216-445-1148
Daniel Ontaneda CC 216-444-0151
Kerry Levin CC 216-444-5551
Steven Shook CC 216-444-5559
Agnieszka A. Ardelt MH 216-778-3958
Marc D. Winkelman MH 216-778-3958
Daniel T. Benson MH 12301 Snow Rd. Parma 216-778-3958
Bashar Katirji UH 216-868-2892
Camilla Kilbane UH 216-424-5740
Cathy Sila UH 216-868-2133
David Preston UH 216-868-2133
Neel Fotedar UH 216-455-8042
Amanda Opaskar UH 29101 Health Campus Dr. Westlake 216-859-6078
Rami Hachwi UH 950 Clague Rd. Westlake 216-455-8019
Aasef Shaikh UH 1611 S. Green Rd. South Euclid 216-455-8646
Mark Adamczyk, MD Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery
Micah Baird, MD Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
James Besunder, DO Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
J. R. Bockoven, MD Pediatric Cardiology
Scott Boulanger, MD
Christine Carter-Kent, MD Pediatric Gastroenterology
Jessica Castonguay, DO, MPH Adolescent Medicine
Stephen Cha, MD Pediatric Nephrology
Tsulee Chen, MD Pediatric Neurological Surgery
John M. Clark, MD Pediatric Cardiology
Curtis Clark, MD
Bruce H. Cohen, MD Pediatric Neurology
Crystal Cole, MD Adolescent Medicine
Joseph Congeni, MD, FAAP Sports Medicine
Kathryn Cook, DO
Carrie Costin, MD Medical Genetics
John Fargo, DO Pediatric Hematology & Oncology
Michael Forbes, MD, FAAP, FCCM Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
Jessica Foster, MD, MPH, FAAP Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics
Reinaldo Garcia-Naveiro, MD Pediatric Gastroenterology
William Goldman, DO Addiction Medicine
Nathan Heinzerling, MD
Jeffrey Hord, MD Pediatric Hematology & Oncology
Gwyneth Hughes, MD Pediatric Neurological Surgery
Kerwyn Jones, MD Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery
Ravi Karnani, MD Pediatric Allergy & Immunology
Joel Katz, DO Pediatric Neurological Surgery
Costas H. Kefalas, MD, MMM, FACG, FASGE, AGAF Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Jyoti Krishna, MD, FAAP, FAASM Pediatric Sleep Medicine
John Lane, MD, FACC Pediatric Cardiology
John Leonard, MD, FAAP Pediatrics (General)
Alicia Lowes, DO Pediatric Endocrinology
Shefali Mahesh, MD Pediatric Nephrology
Kimberly Martin, MD Pediatric Endocrinology
Starla Martinez, MD, FAAP Pediatric Pulmonology
Eric Massanyi, MD
Janice McDaniel, MD Vascular/Interventional Radiology
Ananth Murthy, MD, FACS Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery
Marc Nelson, MD, MS Pediatric Otolaryngology
Nicholas Nguyen, MD Pediatric Dermatology
Gregory Omlor, MD, FAAP Pediatric Pulmonology
Niyant Patel, MD Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery
Chandrakant R. Patel, MD Pediatric Cardiology
John Pope, MD Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
Patricia Raimer, MD Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
Rupesh Raina, MD Pediatric Nephrology
Patrick Riley Jr., MD Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery
Todd Ritzman, MD, FAAOS, FAOA
Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery
Eric Robinette, MD, MPH
Pediatric Infectious Disease
Ian Rossman, MD, PhD Pediatric Neurology
Megan Sampson, MD
Pediatric Hematology & Oncology
Stephanie Savelli, MD Pediatric Hematology & Oncology
Robert D. Stewart, MD Cardiothoracic Surgery
Naveen Uli, MD Pediatric Endocrinology
Shankar Upadhyayula, MD Pediatric Infectious Disease
M. Cristina Victorio, MD Pediatric Neurology
Palak Wall, MD Ophthalmology
Kevin Watson, MD, FAAP
Pediatric Gastroenterology
Katherine Wolfe, DO, FACOG Maternal & Fetal Medicine
Erin Wright, MD
Pediatric Hematology & Oncology
Mark Wulkan, MD, FACS, FAAP
Matthew Wyneski, MD
Pediatric Gastroenterology
62 of our doctors made the list.
Hundreds more made a difference in a child’s life.
Congratulations to our physicians who made Cleveland Magazine’s Best Doctors list –and to all of our health care workers who make a difference in children’s lives every day.
Suresh Kumar UH 7255 Old Oak Blvd. Middleburg Heights
440-586-6220
Daniel Miller UH
19800 Detroit Rd. Rocky River 216-844-2724
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Gretchen Fisher CC 6770 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights 440-461-9060
Monica Svets CC 6770 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights 440-312-2229
Ashley Brant CC 5001 Rockside Rd. Independence 216-986-4000
Linda Bradley CC 216-444-6601
Margaret McKenzie CC 4180 Warrensville Center Rd. Warrensville Heights 2164917100
Suchetha Kshettry CC 850 Columbia Rd. Westlake 440-835-3883
Barbara B. Rhoads MH 216-778-4444
Clodagh R. Mullen MH 216-778-4444
Linda-Dalal J. Shiber MH 216-778-4444
Paula V. Hendryx MH 216-778-4444
Robert R. Pollard MH 216-778-4444
Gregory Y. Kitagawa MH 7800 Pearl Rd. Middleburg Heights 216-778-4444
Deborah M. Prinz-Gentile MH 12301 Snow Rd. Parma 216-778-4444
Maura K. O’Shea OBGYN Associates 605 N. Cleveland Massillon Rd. Akron 330-668-6545
William K. Hahn Jr. SG 7255 Old Oak Blvd. Middleburg Heights 440-816-5390
John A. Alton SG 7255 Old Oak Blvd. Middleburg Heights
440-816-5390
Lulu Zhao UH 1000 Auburn Dr. Beachwood 216-285-5039
Rachel Pope UH 29001 Cedar Rd. Lyndhurst 216-844-5661
Tyler Katz UH 216-998-9084
Corinne Bazella UH 5850 Landerbrook Dr. Mayfield Heights
216-910-7611
Angelina Gangestad UH 216-929-7805
Sarah Tout UH 216-910-7611
Stephanie Teal UH 216-910-7611
Maria Shaker RB 5805 Euclid Ave. Cleveland
216-541-1268
Susan Lasch UH
960 Clague Rd. Westlake
216-278-7294
Oncology
Joel Saltzman CC
6770 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights
440-312-4569
Vinit Makkar CC 6770 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights
216-986-4555
Alok Khorana CC
216-444-6833
Bassam Estfan CC
216-444-6833
David Peereboom CC
216-445-6068
Jame Abraham CC
216-445-0150
Jessica Geiger CC
216-444-6833
Marc Shapiro CC
216-445-2067
Megan Kruse CC
216-444-6386
Michael McNamara CC
216-444-5110
Moshe Ornstein CC 216-445-6592
Smitha Krishnamurthi CC
216-444-6833
Abdo Haddad CC
18200 Lorain Rd. Cleveland
216-986-4555
Hamed Daw CC
18200 Lorain Rd. Cleveland
216-986-4555
Charles Nock VA
216-791-3800
Afshin Dowlati UH
216-844-3951
Alberto Montero UH
216-844-3951
David Bajor UH
216-844-3951
Debora Bruno UH
216-844-3951
J. Eva Selfridge UH
216-844-3951
Jorge A. Garcia UH
216-844-3951
Melinda Hsu UH
216-844-3951
Prateek Mendiratta UH
216-844-3951
Puja Arora UH
29325 Health Campus Dr. Westlake
440-617-4700
Richard Chang UH
29325 Health Campus Dr. Westlake 440-617-4700
Jennifer Payne
Western Reserve Physicians, Inc.
1900 23rd St. Cuyahoga Falls
330-971-7892
Mehool Patel Western Reserve Physicians, Inc.
1900 23rd St. Cuyahoga Falls
330-971-7892
Ophthalmology
Palak Wall ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-5290
Marina Eisenberg CC 2000 Auburn Dr. Beachwood 216-444-2020
Nicole Bajic CC 5001 Rockside Rd. Independence 216-444-2020
Arun Singh CC 216-444-2020
Daniel F. Martin CC 216-444-0430
Elias Traboulsi CC 216-444-2030
Fatema Ghasia CC 216-444-2020
Gregory Kosmorsky CC 216-444-2020
Jeffrey Goshe CC 216-444-2020
Jonathan Sears CC 216-444-7152
William Dupps CC 216-444-2020
Allison Babiuch CC
16761 S. Park Center Strongsville 216-444-4821
William F. Wiley Cleveland Eye Clinic
7001 S. Edgerton Rd. Brecksville 440-526-1974
Augustine J. Kellis Kellis Eye & Laser Center 150 7th Ave. Chardon 440-285-2020
Bernard Perla LH 36100 Euclid Ave. Willoughby 440-946-9555
Gregory Eippert
Lasik Vision Centers of Cleveland 6500 Rockside Rd. Independence 216-674-6400
Elisa Bala MH 216-778-5830
Thomas L. Steinemann MH 216-778-5830
E. Shanika Esparaz
NorthEast Ohio Eye Surgeons
2013 State Rt. 59 Kent 330-597-9977
Carrie S. Happ-Smith
Ophthalmology
Ophthalmic Physicians, Inc. 8140 Norton Pkwy. Mentor 440-255-1115
David G. Miller
Ophthalmology
Retina Associates of Cleveland, Inc.
24075 Commerce Park Beachwood 216-831-5700
Llewelyn J. Rao
Ophthalmology Retina Associates of Cleveland, Inc. 24075 Commerce Park Beachwood 216-831-5700
Shawn A. Lewis
Ophthalmology
Retina Associates of Cleveland, Inc.
24075 Commerce Park Beachwood 216-831-5700
Thomas P. Hull
Retina Associates of Cleveland, Inc.
24075 Commerce Park Beachwood 216-831-5700
Julie Belkin UH 216-249-6462
Douglas Rhee UH 216-249-6399
Linda Ohsie-Bajor UH 216-249-6399
Mark Prendes UH
216-553-1835
Faruk Orge UH
6001 Landerhaven Dr. Mayfield Heights
440-720-4525
Orthopedic Surgery
Glenn Wera CC
33300 Cleveland Clinic Blvd. Avon
440-695-4000
Brendan M. Patterson CC
216-444-6260
Eric Ricchetti CC
216-445-6915
Lukas Nystrom CC
216-445-7164
Nathan Mesko CC
216-444-4603
Robert Molloy CC
216-444-2606
Trevor Murray CC
216-444-2606
Viktor Krebs CC
216-445-3834
Alan Davis CC
33100 Cleveland Clinic Blvd. Avon
440-695-4000
James Rosneck CC
5555 Transportation Blvd. Garfield Heights
216-518-3444
Lutul Farrow CC
16761 S. Park Center Strongsville
216-518-3444
Ari D. Levine MH
216-778-4393
John H. Wilber MH
216-778-4393
Roger G. Wilber MH 216-778-4393
Timothy A. Moore MH
216-778-8822
Laurel A. Beverley MH 12301 Snow Rd. Parma
216-778-4393
Michael M. Lew
Orthopaedic Associates
24723 Detroit Rd. Westlake
440-892-1440
Robert Wetzel
Orthopedic ONE
5500 N. Meadows Dr. Grove City 614-488-1816
Mark Panigutti
OrthoWest Ltd.
7255 Old Oak Blvd. Middleburg Heights
440-816-5380
Robert Coale
OrthoWest Ltd.
7255 Old Oak Blvd. Middleburg Heights
440-816-5380
Christopher Furey UH 216-844-7822
Michael Salata UH 1000 Auburn Dr. Beachwood 216-859-6309
Robert Gillespie UH
1000 Auburn Dr. Beachwood 216-815-0110
Brian N. Victoroff UH 216-868-8871
George Ochenjele UH 216-279-6570
James Voos UH 216-455-7068
Patrick Getty UH 730 SOM Center Rd. Mayfield 216-859-6309
Jacob Calcei UH 9318 State Route 14 Streetsboro 330-577-9991
Otolaryngology
Brandon Prendes CC 216-444-8500
Eric Lamarre CC 216-444-8552
Joseph Scharpf CC 216-445-8252
Michael Fritz CC 216-444-8500
Paul C. Bryson CC 216-444-8500
Raj Sindwani CC 216-445-2845
Robert R. Lorenz CC 216-444-6689
Troy Woodard CC 216-445-7157
Diana Ponsky
Diana Ponsky Facial Plastic Surgery 3700 Park East Dr. Beachwood 216-508-4055
David H. Ludlow MH 216-778-5791
David W. Stepnick MH 216-778-5791
Steven M. Houser MH 216-778-5791
Hassan Abbass Ohio ENT Associates - Hassan Abbass, MD 5850 Landerbrook Dr. Mayfield Heights 216-488-4800
Matthew B. Lutz Unity Health Network - Ohio ENT & Allergy 4275 Steels Pointe Rd. Stow 330-923-0399
Akina Tamaki UH 216-851-8303
Jason Thuener UH 440-596-5845
N. Scott Howard UH 216-220-9621
Nicole Fowler UH 216-294-4944
Nicole Maronian UH 440-873-3263
Rod Rezaee UH 440-596-5845
Jay Shah UH 216-647-0898
Pierre Lavertu UH 440-613-3094
Sarah Mowry UH 216-294-4944
Samuel Kerns UH 7580 Auburn Rd. Concord 440-352-1474
Kenneth Rodriguez UH 3909 Orange Pl. Beachwood 216-541-1117
Nipun Chhabra UH 29099 Health Campus Dr. Westlake 440-827-2968
RANKED AMONG CLEVELAND
BEST DOCTORS OF 2023
to
Maroun Semaan UH
1611 S. Green Rd. South Euclid
440-596-5845
Pain Management
Jianguo Cheng CC
216-445-7370
Samuel Samuel CC
12300 McCracken Rd. Garfield Heights
216-587-8830
David Esparaz Cleveland Pain Care 3619 Park E. Dr. Beachwood
440-306-3200
Patrick McIntyre LH 8655 Market St. Mentor
440-205-5799
Henry Vucetic LH
8655 Market St. Mentor
440-205-5799
Chong H. Kim MH
4330 W. 150th St. Cleveland 216-957-4325
Melinda Lawrence UH
216-844-3771
Salim Hayek UH
216-844-3771
Kutaiba Tabbaa UH
6305 Powers Blvd. Parma
440-743-4333
Roger Goomber UH
6305 Powers Blvd. Parma
440-743-4333
Samer Narouze Western Reserve Physicians, Inc.
1900 23rd St. Cuyahoga Falls
330-971-7246
Pathology
Jesse McKenney CC
216-444-1058
John Goldblum CC
216-444-8238
Richard Prayson CC
216-444-8805
Christina Bagby UH 216-844-1817
Hannah GilmoreUH
216-844-7118
Jay Wasman UH
216-844-7118
Joseph Willis UH
216-844-8292
Mark Barcelo UH 36000 Euclid Ave. Willoughby 440-571-7772
Pediatric Allergy and Immunology
Ravi Karnani ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-0140
Devi Jhaveri
Allergy/Immunology Associates
5915 Landerbrook Dr. Mayfield Heights
216-381-3333
Haig Tcheurekdjian
Allergy/Immunology Associates
5915 Landerbrook Dr. Mayfield Heights
216-381-3333
Alton Melton Jr. CCC
216-444-6817
Brian Schroer CCC
216-445-0957
Jaclyn Bjelac CCC
216-445-1449
John McDonnell CCC
216-444-5437
Kara McNamara CCC
216-444-4828
Leigh Ann Kerns CCC
216-444-6340
Joao Pedro Matias Lopes UH
216-220-9534
Eli Silver UH
730 SOM Center Rd. Mayfield
440-940-2269
Kathryn Ruda Wessell RB
216-946-4668
Princess Ogbogu RB
216-844-1636
Pediatric Cardiology
Chandrakant R. Patel ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-2778
John M. Clark ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8521
John Lane ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-3850
J. R. Bockoven ACH
3733 Park E. Dr. Beachwood
216-896-0351
Akash Patel CCC
216-444-1270
Bradley Marino CCC
216-636-5042
Francine Erenberg CCC
216-445-5015
Gerard J. Boyle CCC
216-444-5437
Holly Nadorlik CCC
216-445-5015
Kenneth Zahka CCC
216-445-7146
Malek El Yaman CCC
216-445-5015
Patcharapong Suntharos CCC
216-445-5015
Peter Aziz CCC
216-445-5015
Rukmini Komarlu CCC
216-444-5437
Shahnawaz Amdani CCC
216-444-5437
James Strainic UH
216-844-3278
Carolyn Wilhelm RB
216-249-6421
John Lozier RB
216-541-1062
Sarah Plummer RB
440-870-9678
Janine Arruda RB
216-541-1062
Martin Bocks RB
216-844-5795
Melanie Gropler RB
440-569-6556
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
James Besunder ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8639
John Pope ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8639
Michael Forbes ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8639
Patricia Raimer ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8639
Bradley Marino CCC
216-636-5042
Kshama Daphtary CCC
216-445-2748
Orkun Baloglu CCC
216-445-7965
Samir Latifi CCC
216-444-6018
William Hanna CCC
216-636-1168
Aparna Roy MH
216-778-5500
Ingrid Anderson RB
216-844-3310
Richard Speicher RB
216-844-3310
Steven Shein RB
216-844-3310
Pediatric Dermatology
Nicholas Nguyen ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-3376
Joan Tamburro CCC 216-444-5725
Mahwish Irfan CCC 216-445-3643
Sonal Shah RB 216-714-2114
Pediatric Endocrinology
Alicia Lowes ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-3276
Kimberly Martin ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-3276
Naveen Uli ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-3276
Andrea Mucci CCC 216-444-7987
Anzar Haider CCC
216-444-5437
Roy Kim CCC
216-444-5437
Sumana Narasimhan CCC
216-445-5158
Beth Kaminski RB
216-844-3661
Jamie Wood RB
216-844-3661
Rose Gubitosi-Klug RB
216-844-3661
Ryan Farrell RB
216-844-3661
Sarah MacLeish RB
216-844-3661
Sarah Chaaban UH
960 Clague Rd. Westlake
216-844-3661
Pediatric Gastroenterology
Christine Carter-Kent ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-2778
Kevin Watson ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-2778
Matthew Wyneski ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-2778
Reinaldo Garcia-Naveiro ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-2778
Deborah Goldman CCC
216-444-9000
Jacob Kurowski CCC
216-445-9394
Jessica Barry CCC
216-444-8950
Kadakkal Radhakrishnan CCC
216-444-9322
Karen Murray CCC
216-444-9380
Lisa Feinberg CCC
216-444-9000
Marsha Kay CCC
216-444-9000
Mohammad Kabbany CCC
216-444-8950
Nila Mistry Ambani CCC
216-444-6915
Sophia Patel CCC
216-444-9000
Vera Hupertz CCC
216-444-9000
Ali Khalili UH
4176 State Rt. 306 Willoughby
216-844-3661
Denise Young UH
6115 Powers Blvd. Parma
440-940-8144
Jonathan Moses UH
4001 Carrick Dr. Medina
216-946-4668
Maricruz Crespo RB
216-844-1000
Ramy Sabe RB
440-940-8757
Senthilkumar Sankararaman UH
960 Clague Rd. Westlake
216-859-6919
Thomas J. Sferra UH
960 Clague Rd. Westlake
216-799-0934
Pediatric Hematology and Oncology
Erin Wright ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8580
Jeffrey Hord ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-8580
John Fargo ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8580
Megan Sampson ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8580
Stephanie Savelli ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8580
Peter Anderson CCC
216-444-5517
Rabi Hanna CCC 216-444-6479
Ravi Talati CCC
216-444-3360
Seth Rotz CCC 216-442-8806
Stacey Zahler CCC 216-445-3588
Stefanie Thomas CCC 216-444-5517
Lisa Hackney RB 216-541-1088
Rachel Egler RB 216-541-1088
Sanjay Ahuja RB 216-541-1088
Pediatric Hospital Medicine
Stephanie Jennings CCC 6700 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights 216-476-7213
Katie Pestak CCC 6770 Mayfield Rd. Mayfield Heights 440-312-4222
Anika Kumar CCC 216-444-4998
Arnaldo Zayas-Santiago CCC 216-444-4998
Colleen Schelzig CCC 216-444-4998
Julie Cernanec CCC 216-444-4998
Moises Auron CCC 216-445-1472
Rita Pappas CCC 216-444-4998
Sangeeta Krishna CCC 216-444-4998
Allayne Stephans RB 216-844-8260
Amanda Lansell RB 216-844-8260
Erin Frank RB 440-745-7823
Keith Ponitz RB 440-623-7006
Michael Dell RB 440-745-7823
Pediatric Infectious Disease
Eric Robinette ACH 214 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-8395
Shankar Upadhyayula ACH 214 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-8395
Blanca Gonzalez CCC 216-444-5437
Camille Sabella CCC 216-445-6862
Charles Foster CCC 216-444-5437
Frank Esper CCC 216-444-5437
Heather Daniels CCC 216-444-5437
Arlene Dent UH 3263 Chadbourne Rd Shaker Heights 216-371-9838
Sahera Dirajlal-Fargo UH 254 Cleveland Ave. Amherst 216-714-8056
Amy Edwards RB 216-844-7700
Ankita Desai RB 216-844-7700
Claudia Hoyen RB 216-844-7700
Pediatric Nephrology
Rupesh Raina ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8950
Shefali Mahesh ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8950
Stephen Cha ACH
214 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8950
Amy Bobrowski CCC
216-444-5437
Charles Kwon CCC
216-444-6420
Katherine Dell CCC 8950 Euclid Ave. Cleveland
216-444-5437
Raed Bou Matar CCC
216-444-6123
Christina Nguyen UH 9000 Mentor Ave. Mentor
216-844-1389
Emily Joyce UH 9000 Mentor Ave. Mentor
216-844-1389
Pediatric Neurological Surgery
Gwyneth Hughes ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8050
Tsulee Chen ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8050
Joel Katz ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8050
Violette Recinos CCC
216-444-4549
William Bingaman CCC
216-444-5050
Brian Rothstein UH
216-844-5741
Krystal Tomei UH
216-844-5741
Pediatric Neurology
Bruce H. Cohen ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8050
Ian Rossman ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8050
M. Cristina Victorio ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron
330-543-8050
Sudeshna Mitra CCC
36901 American Way Avon
440-930-6250
Elaine Wyllie CCC
216-636-5860
Gary Hsich CCC
216-636-5860
Mohammed Aldosari CCC
216-636-5860
Sumit Parikh CCC
216-445-8124
Deborah Rukin Gold UH 26300 Hendon Road Beachwood 2168443691
Jennifer Waldron UH
5850 Landerbrook Dr. Mayfield Heights
216-844-7700
Edward Gilmore RB
216-844-3691
Max Wiznitzer RB 216-220-6360
Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery
Kerwyn Jones ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-3500
Mark Adamczyk ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-3500
Patrick Riley Jr. ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-3500
Todd Ritzman ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-3500
Paul Saluan CCC
5555 Transportation Blvd. Garfield Heights
216-444-2606
Ernest Young CCC
14601 Detroit Ave. Lakewood
216-444-2606
David Gurd CCC
216-444-2606
Ryan Goodwin CCC
216-444-2606
Thomas Kuivila CCC
216-444-2741
R. Justin Mistovich MH
216-778-4393
Allison Gilmore UH
216-400-6970
Christina Hardesty UH
216-844-8350
Jochen Son-Hing UH
216-455-7068
Michael Glotzbecker UH 216-400-6970
Raymond Liu UH
216-868-8871
Marc Nelson ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-4930
Pediatric Otolaryngology
Brandon Hopkins CCC 216-444-8500
Rachel Georgopoulos CCC 216-444-8500
Samantha Anne CCC 216-444-8500
Swathi Appachi CCC 216-444-0322
Tekin Baglam UH 440-613-3094
Jay Shah UH 216-647-0898
Todd Otteson UH 440-613-3094
Matthew Gropler RB 216-294-4944
Pediatric Psychiatry
Barry Simon CCC 551 E. Washington St., Chagrin Falls 216-636-5860
Jason Lambrese CCC 14601 Detroit Ave. Lakewood 216-444-5812
Molly Wimbiscus CCC 1730 W. 25th St. Cleveland 216-444-5812
Joseph Austerman CCC 216-636-5860
Elise Bonder Cleveland Health and Wellness Center 21625 Chagrin Blvd. Beachwood 216-777-8834
John Hertzer
The Behavioral Wellness Group 8224 Mentor Ave. Mentor 440-392-2222
Sunita Mathew
The Nord Center - Lorain 6140 S. Broadway Lorain 440-233-7232
Mary Gabriel UH 10524 Euclid Ave. Cleveland 216-844-3881
Molly McVoy UH 10524 Euclid Ave. Cleveland 216-844-3881
Pediatric Pulmonology
Gregory Omlor ACH
215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-8885
Starla Martinez ACH 215 W. Bowery St. Akron 330-543-8885
Meeghan Hart CCC 857 Graham Rd. Cuyahoga Falls 216-444-7489
John Carl CCC 216-445-7572
Laura Milgram CCC 216-445-6239
Nathan Kraynack CCC 216-445-2200
Parevi Majmudar CCC
216-444-5437
Silvia Cardenas-Zegarra CCC
216-444-8453
Jeffrey Lobas UH 4176 State Rt. 306 Willoughby 440-732-3747
Amy DiMarino RB
440-732-3747
Daniel Craven RB
216-844-7700
Erica Roesch RB
440-732-3747
Kristie Ross RB
216-844-7700
Ross Myers RB
440-732-3747
Pediatric Sleep Medicine
Jyoti Krishna ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron
330-543-8885
Lauren Goldman CCC
216-444-2165
Vaishal A. Shah CCC 216-444-2165
Kristie Ross RB
216-844-7700
Moshe Y. Prero RB
440-732-4364
Sally Ibrahim RB 216-844-7378
Pediatric Surgery
Mark Wulkan ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-6060
Nathan Heinzerling ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron
330-543-6060
Scott Boulanger ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-6060
David A. Andrews
Akron Pediatric Surgical Associates
300 Locust St., Akron
330-434-5341
Timothy P. Pittinger
Akron Pediatric Surgical Associates
300 Locust St., Akron
330-434-5341
Anthony DeRoss CCC
8950 Euclid Ave., Cleveland 216-445-7878
Darrell Cass CCC
216-445-7878
David Magnuson CCC
216-445-4051
Jason Robertson CCC 216-445-3495
John DiFiore CCC 216-445-7878
Eiichi Miyasaka UH 216-844-3015
Edward Barksdale RB 216-844-3015
Michael Dingeldein RB 216-844-3015
Pediatric Urology
Curtis Clark ACH 215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-376-3332
Eric Massanyi ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-376-3332
Audrey Rhee CCC
216-444-5600
Jessica Hannick RB 216-844-5661
Lynn Woo RB 216-844-5661
Pediatrics (General)
John Leonard ACH
9150 Market Square Drive, Streetsboro 330-626-4080
Scott Francy CCC 36901 American Way, Avon 440-930-6250
Jacalyn Hazen CCC 26900 Cedar Road, Beachwood 216-839-3000
Heidi Szugye CCC 6801 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights 440-473-0010
Richard So CCC 5001 Rockside Road, Independence 216-986-4000
Roopa Thakur CCC 5001 Rockside Road, Independence 216-986-4000
Kimberly Giuliano CCC 216-444-4367
Allison Effron
Greater Cleveland Pediatrics 3311 Richmond Road, Beachwood 216-236-5446
Marni Turell LH 510 5th Ave., Chardon 440-279-1590
Kathryn M. Corrigan MH 3838 W. 150th St. Cleveland 216-957-5000
Jill Sangree Senders Pediatrics 2054 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-291-9210
Laura Caserta Senders Pediatrics 2054 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-291-9210
Shelly Senders Senders Pediatrics 2054 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-291-9210
Zizzy (Elizabeth) Bucchieri Senders Pediatrics 2054 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-291-9210
Alexander Namrow UH 1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 440-681-2442
Elizabeth Hellerstein UH 1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 440-681-2442
Joseph Borus UH 1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 440-681-2442
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Eva Johnson RB 216-220-3112
Lauren Beene UH 20220 Farnsleigh Road, Shaker Heights
216-991-4180
Lyn Dickert-Leonard UH
20220 Farnsleigh Road, Shaker Heights 216-991-4180
Peter Catanzaro UH 20220 Farnsleigh Road, Shaker Heights 216-991-4180
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Micah Baird ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-8050
Santhosh Thomas CC 33300 Cleveland Clinic Blvd., Avon 216-636-5860
Erin Murdock CC 2801 MLK Jr. Dr., Cleveland 216-448-6110
Lainie Holman CC 2801 MLK Jr. Dr., Cleveland 216-448-6110
Francois Bethoux CC 216-636-5860
Geraldine Dapul CC 216-636-5860
John J. Lee CC 216-636-9987
Travis Cleland Crystal Clinic Orthopaedic CenterCuyahoga Falls
437 Portage Trl., Cuyahoga Falls 330-929-9136
Gustaf M. Van Acker IIIMH 216-778-4414
Jared Placeway MH 216-778-4414
Juliet C. Zakel MH 216-778-4414
Richard D. Wilson MH
4229 Pearl Road, Cleveland 216-778-4414
Victoria C. Whitehair MH
4229 Pearl Road, Cleveland 216-778-4414
Antimo Paul Gazzillo UH
5901 E. Royalton Road, Broadview Heights 216-238-9805
Michael Schaefer UH
210-455-7068
Anna Serels UH
7500 Auburn Rd. Concord Twp. 440-285-7256
Yevgeniya Dvorkin Wininger UH 13207 Ravenna Road, Chardon 440-431-3372
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Ananth Murthy ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron
330-543-2778
Niyant Patel ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron
330-543-2778
Bryan Michelow CC
551 E. Washington St., Chagrin Falls
216-444-9400
Antonio Rampazzo CC
216-444-6900
Brian Gastman CC
216-444-2501
Dane Genther CC
216-444-8500
Francis Papay CC
216-444-6821
Graham Schwarz CC
216-444-8512
James Zins CC
216-444-6821
Michael Fritz CC
216-444-8500
Raymond Isakov CC
216-444-6900
Risal Djohan CC
216-444-5725
Steven Bernard CC
216-444-6900
Derek Cody
Crystal Clinic Plastic Surgeons
3925 Embassy Pkwy., Akron
330-668-4055
Lewis A. Diulus III
Crystal Clinic Plastic Surgeons
3925 Embassy Pkwy., Akron
330-668-4055
Diana Ponsky
Diana Ponsky Facial Plastic Surgery
3700 Park East Dr., Beachwood
216-508-4055
Alanna Foglietti Fostyk
Foglietti Fostyk Plastic Surgery
22901 Millcreek Blvd., Beachwood
216-292-6800
Jonathan Frankel
Frankel Facial Plastic Surgery
5885 Landerbrook Dr., Mayfield Heights
216-294-4277
Jennifer Greer
Greer Plastic Surgery
6101 Heisley Road, Mentor 440-276-2692
Habib Khoury Khoury Plastic Surgery
25200 Center Ridge Road, Westlake 440-331-3645
Christi Cavaliere VA 216-791-3800
Bram R. Kaufman MH 216-778-4450
Christina R. Vargas MH 216-778-4450
Kyle J. Chepla MH 216-778-4393
Michael H. Wojtanowski
Ohio Clinic for Aesthetic and Plastic Surgery
2237 Crocker Road, Westlake 440-808-9315
Joyesh Raj Raj Plastic Surgery, LLC 30400 Detroit Road, Westlake 440-808-8030
David Rowe
Rowe Aesthetics - MetroHealth Medical Center
216-778-4450
Ali Totonchi
Totonchi Plastic Surgery 29017 Cedar Rd. Lyndhurst 440-461-7999
Cyrus Rabbani UH 216-616-9753
Edward Davidson UH 216-946-5321
Joseph Khouri UH 440-446-8600
Bahman Guyuron Zeeba Clinic 29017 Cedar Road, Cleveland 440-461-7999
Podiatry
Mark A. Hardy
Balance Foot & Ankle 3600 Kolbe Road, Lorain 216-658-0111
Jordan Grossman CC 224 W. Exchange St., Akron 330-344-2663
Patrick McKee CC
5001 Rockside Road, Independence 216-986-4000
Georgeanne Botek CC 2570 SOM Center Road, Willoughby Hills 216-444-2606
Megan L. Oltmann
Foot & Ankle Associates of Cleveland 33790 Bainbridge Road, Solon 440-903-1041
Catherine E. Ferguson MH 29001 Cedar Road, Lyndhurst 216-778-2457
David T. Hehemann MH 216-778-2457
Lisa S. Roth MH 216-778-2457
William E. Donahue NOMS Healthcare 1013 Rockside Road, Parma 216-459-8616
Joseph R. Bartal SG 7255 Old Oak Blvd., Middleburg Heights 440-816-2735
Nicholas A. Campitelli Unity Health NetworkDr. Nicholas Campitelli, DPM 2660 W. Market St., Fairlawn 330-926-3231
Elizabeth Confalone UH 26908 Detroit Road, Westlake 440-835-6142
Psychiatry
Mayur Pandya ACE Sports Psychiatry 2000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood 216-378-7635
Benjamin Spinner Benjamin Spinner, MD 3601 Green Road, Beachwood 216-285-1799
Adele Viguera CC 216-636-5860
Elias A. Khawam CC 216-445-8121
Leopoldo Pozuelo CC
216-445-3583
Leslie Walker
Leslie Walker, MD
20600 Chagrin Blvd., Shaker Heights
216-767-0440
Eric Reed UH
216-844-2400
Jaina Amin UH
10524 Euclid Ave., Cleveland
216-844-2400
Jeanne Lackamp UH 10524 Euclid Ave., Cleveland
216-844-2400
Radiation Oncology
Michael Weller CC 6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights
440-312-4700
Lanea Keller CC 5001 Rockside Road, Independence 216-447-9747
Chirag S. Shah CC 216-444-1923
Erin S. Murphy CC 216-445-4895
Gregory Videtic CC 216-444-9797
John Suh CC 216-444-5574
Kevin Stephans CC 216-445-8285
Rahul Tendulkar CC 216-445-9869
Samuel Chao CC 216-636-0007
Shauna Campbell CC 216-444-5571
Shlomo Koyfman CC 216-444-7552
Sudha Amarnath CC 216-444-5571
Anthony Mastroianni CC 18200 Lorain Road, Cleveland 216-476-7606
Andrew Vassil CC
16761 S. Park Center, Strongsville
440-878-3210
Aryavarta Kumar VA
216-791-3800
Roger Ove MH 216-778-7328
Joel H. Elconin
Northern Ohio Regional Cancer
Center
5260 Smith Road, Brook Park
216-265-4580
Jon S. Prescott
Northern Ohio Regional Cancer
Center
5260 Smith Road, Brook Park 216-265-4580
Prashant Vempati UH
216-844-3951
Daniel Spratt UH
216-844-3951
Janice Lyons UH
3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood 216-896-1755
Jennifer Dorth UH 216-844-3951
Serah Choi UH 216-844-3951
Suzanne Russo UH
2075 Healthway Dr., Avon 440780-2944
Eli Scher UH 9485 Mentor Ave., Mentor 440-205-5788
Radiology
Andrei Purysko CC 216-445-9005
Charles Martin CC 216-444-6640
Hakan Ilaslan CC 216-445-7050
Peter Liu CC 216-444-0889
Rekha Mody CC 216-445-8158
Stephen Jones CC 216-386-9767
Michael Coffey UH 833-912-0317
Peter Young UH 855-518-0612
Sree Tirumani UH 855-825-0050
Reproductive Endocrinology / Infertility
Elliott Richards CC 26900 Cedar Road, Beachwood 216-839-3150
Jenna Rehmer CC 26900 Cedar Road, Beachwood 216-839-3150
Marjan Attaran CC 26900 Cedar Road, Beachwood 216-839-3150
David M. Nash
Reproductive Gynecology & Infertility
95 Arch St., Akron 330-375-7722
Priya B. Maseelall
Reproductive Gynecology & Infertility
95 Arch St., Akron 330-375-7722
Shweta J. Bhatt
Reproductive Gynecology & Infertility
95 Arch St., Akron 330-375-7722
Joseph Findley UH
1000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood 216-285-1490
Rachel Weinerman UH
1000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood 216-285-1586
Rebecca Flyckt UH 1000 Auburn Dr., Beachwood 216-285-1586
Rheumatology
Kathryn Cook ACH
215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-8574
Sirada Panupattanapong CC 216-445-1099
Niharika Sharma CC 4125 Medina Road, Akron 330-344-7820
Nikita Hegde CC 4300 Allen Road, Stow 330-344-7820
Abby Abelson CC 216-444-5632
Aditi Patel CC 216-444-5257
Alexandra Villa-Forte CC 216-445-9437
Andrew Zeft CC 216-444-8950
Brian Mandell CC 216-444-5632
Cassandra Calabrese CC 216-445-6996
Chad Deal CC 216-444-6575
Elizabeth B. Brooks CC 216-445-1099
Juliette Yedimenko CC 216-445-2228
Leonard Calabrese CC 216-444-5632
M. Elaine Husni CC
216-444-5632
Matthew Bunyard CC
216-444-5632
Rula Hajj-Ali CC
216-444-5632
Soumya Chatterjee CC
216-444-5632
Maria J. Antonelli MH
216-778-2323
Nora G. Singer MH 216-778-2323
Rachel Waldman
Unity Health Network - Fairlawn
2660 W. Market St., Fairlawn
330-926-3240
Marina Magrey UH 216-716-7607
David Blumenthal UH
3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood
216-465-7274
Sleep Medicine
Carlos Rodriguez CC 216-445-1352
Louis Kazaglis CC
216-444-2165
Nancy Foldvary-Schaefer CC 216-444-2165
Dennis H. Auckley MH 216-778-5864
John C. Carter MH 216-778-5864
Hitesh Makkar Unity Health Network 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls
330-253-1411
Kingman Strohl UH
216-844-7378
Susheel Patil UH 216-844-7378
Eric Yeh UH
3909 Orange Pl., Beachwood 216-844-7378
Sally Ibrahim RB 216-844-7378
Nardine Zakhary UH 960 Clague Road, Westlake
216-844-7378
Spine Surgery
R. Douglas Orr CC 1730 W. 25th St., Cleveland 216-636-5860
Ajit Krishnaney CC 216-636-5860
Dominic Pelle CC
216-444-6191
Edward Benzel CC 216-636-5860
Jason Savage CC
216-444-8126
Michael Steinmetz CC
216-445-5754
Richard Schlenk CC 216-445-4318
Thomas Mroz CC
216-445-9232
Richard S. Brower
Crystal Clinic Orthopaedic Center - Cuyahoga Falls 437 Portage Trl., Cuyahoga Falls 330-929-9136
Jonathan E. Belding MH
216-778-4393
Christopher Furey UH
216-844-7200
Gabriel A. Smith UH 29101 Health Campus Dr., Westlake
440-827-5088
Jason Eubanks UH 216-785-2255
Manish Kasliwal UH 216-424-5740
Nicholas Ahn UH
216998-9082
Zachary Gordon UH 216-400-6970
Sports Medicine
Joseph Congeni ACH 215 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-8260
James Rosneck CC
5555 Transportation Blvd., Garfield Heights 216-518-3444
Mark Schickendantz CC
5555 Transportation Blvd., Garfield Heights 216-518-3444
Richard Figler CC
5555 Transportation Blvd., Garfield Heights
216-839-3734
Lutul Farrow CC
16761 S. Park Center Strongsville 216-518-3444
Anne Rex CC
2570 SOM Center Road, Willoughby Hills
440-943-2500
Sarah Gerhardstein CC
2570 SOM Center Road, Willoughby Hills
866-320-4573
Brian Juriga LH 8655 Market St., Mentor
440-833-2010
Heather A. Rainey MH
216-778-4414
Blossom M. Heindel SH
2875 W. Market St., Fairlawn 330-835-5533
Nilesh Shah SH
5655 Hudson Dr. Hudson 330-835-5533
James Voos UH 216-455-7068
Robert Flannery UH 216-400-6970
Mary Solomon UH 34055 Solon Road, Solon 440-914-7857
Amanda Weiss Kelly UH
1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-859-6309
Susannah Briskin UH 1611 S. Green Road, South Euclid 216-859-6309
Surgical Oncology
Daniel Joyce CC
216-444-6665 R. Matthew Walsh CC 216-444-6664
Robert Simon CC 216-444-6665
Stephanie Valente CC
18200 Lorain Road, Cleveland 216-252-2235
Mita S. Patel
Mercy Health - Elyria Breast Surgery
41201 Schadden Road, Elyria 440-934-8344
Benjamin D. Li MH
216-778-7328
Natalie E. Joseph MH
216-778-7328
Lee M. Ocuin UH 216-930-3577
John Ammori UH 216-930-5154
Jeffrey M. Hardacre UH 216-304-2416
Jordan Winter UH 216-304-2416
Luke Rothermel UH 216-930-5154
Urology
Ryan Berglund CC
6770 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights
216-444-5600
Georges-Pascal Haber CC
216-444-5600
Hadley Wood CC
216-444-2146
Howard Goldman CC
216-444-5600
Jihad Kaouk CC
216-444-5600
Kenneth Angermeier CC
216-444-5600
Samuel Haywood CC
216-444-5600
Sandip Vasavada CC
216-445-0296
Steven Campbell CC
216-444-5600
Nima Almassi CC
18200 Lorain Road, Cleveland
216-444-5600
Sarah Vij CC
33100 Cleveland Clinic Blvd., Avon
440-695-4000
Charles S. Modlin Jr. MH
10 Severance Cir., Cleveland Heights
216-778-4257
Carvell Nguyen MH
216-778-4257
Irma J. Lengu MH 216-778-4257
J. Patrick Spirnak
SouthWest Urology
6900 Pearl Road, Middleburg Heights
216-778-4391
Kevin A. Spear SH 95 Arch St, Akron
330-374-1255
Irina Jaeger UH
29001 Cedar Road, Lyndhurst
216-844-5661
Adam Calaway UH
440-613-4285
Jonathan Shoag UH
440-613-4285
Lee Ponsky UH
440-613-4285
Nannan Thirumavalavan UH
216-285-5036
Adonis Hijaz UH
29101 Health Campus Dr., Westlake
216-710-4731
Jason Jankowski UH
29101 Health Campus Dr., Westlake 216-710-4731
Anne Sammarco UH
5850 Landerbrook Dr., Mayfield Heights 440-646-2211
Aram Benjamin Loeb UH
6681 Ridge Road, Parma 440-887-9139
Christopher S. Reese Urology Partners, LLC
18099 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-941-0333
Juan Antonio Jiménez Urology Partners, LLC 18099 Lorain Ave., Cleveland 216-941-0333
Vascular / Interventional Radiology
Janice McDaniel ACH 214 W. Bowery St., Akron 330-543-8300
Amanjit Gill CC 216-444-6640
Charles Martin CC 216-444-6640
Ihab Haddadin CC 216-444-6640
M. Shazam Hussain CC 216-636-5860
Christopher Sutter UH 216-844-3363
Salim-Tamuz Abboud UH 216-844-3363
William Pedersen UH 216-844-3363
Vascular Surgery
Anthony Rizzo CC 6801 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights 440-461-1150
Francis Caputo CC 216-444-4508
Jarrad Rowse CC 216-444-4508
Lee Kirksey CC 216-444-4508
Sean Lyden CC 216-444-4508
Christopher J. Smith CC 20455 Lorain Road, Fairview Park 440-333-8600
Gilles Pinault VA 216-791-3800
Garietta Falls MH 216-778-4811
James M. Persky MH 216-778-4811
Ferdinand M. Plecha SG 7255 Old Oak Blvd., Middleburg Heights 440-816-2786
Drazen Petrinec SH 623 E. Market St., Akron 330-375-6363
Jae Cho UH 216-844-3800
Karem Harth UH 216-844-3800
Virginia Wong UH 216-844-3800
Woosup Park UH 36000 Euclid Ave., Willoughby 216-844-3800
Jeffrey Stanley Western Reserve Physicians, Inc. 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7758
Nicole Ramon Western Reserve Physicians, Inc. 1900 23rd St., Cuyahoga Falls 330-971-7758
DR. KELLY S. GIBSON, DR. PAULA V. HENDRYX, DR. GREGORY Y. KITAGAWA (NOT PICTURED), DR. CLODAGH R. MULLEN, DR. ROBERT R. POLLARD, DR. DEBORAH M. PRINZ-GENTILE, DR. BARBARA B. RHOADS, DR. LINDA-DALAL J. SHIBER, DR. KIMBERLY E. RESNICK
THE METROHEALTH SYSTEM OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
2500 MetroHealth Drive, Cleveland, Ohio 44109 216-778-4444, metrohealth.org/obgyn
SPECIALTIES: Annual gynecologic exams, complex gynecological issues, gynecologic cancers, pregnancy care, high-risk pregnancy, menopause, urogynecology, GYN surgery and LGBTQ+ care. LOCATIONS: 10 locations in Greater Cleveland: The MetroHealth Glick Center, Parma Medical Center, West 150th Health and Surgery Center, Westlake Health Center, Middleburg Heights November Family Health Center, Ohio City Health Center, Brooklyn Health Center, Beachwood Health Center, Bedford Medical Offices and Cleveland Heights Medical Center. PHILOSOPHY: As an academic health center, MetroHealth is home to leaders in obstetrics and gynecology. The hospital’s physicians publish research and are known around the country and the world. These experts work as a team to provide each person with individualized care.
WHAT SETS US APART: Ranked as a Center of Excellence in Women’s Health Care and Research, MetroHealth’s compassionate providers put you first. This reflects, among other things, the hospital’s regional and national recognition, high-quality patient care, specially trained doctors and active involvement in
clinical research trials. The Birthing Center at The MetroHealth Glick Center was named one of America’s Best Maternity Hospitals in 2023 by Newsweek, an honor MetroHealth has earned for several years in a row. The MetroHealth Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine is internationally renowned for its long history of clinical and academic excellence. The first Maternal-Fetal Medicine fellowship in Cleveland, it is the most respected program in the region and is one of only 12 centers in the country selected to participate in the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Maternal-Fetal Units research networks. TECHNOLOGY: Our Certified Level III Neonatal Intensive Care Unit has the most advanced monitoring technology in Northeast Ohio. For complex gynecological issues, surgeons in our Center for Advanced Gynecology are experts in minimally invasive laparoscopic and robotic surgery. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF OUR WORK: Making sure every person in Cleveland has access to the highest-quality and compassionate women’s health care.
DR. JARED PLACEWAY, DR. VICTORIA C. WHITEHAIR, DR. RICHARD D. WILSON, DR. JULIET C. ZAKEL, DR. HEATHER
A. RAINEY, DR. GUSTAF M. VAN ACKER III (NOT PICTURED), AND DR. CHONG H. KIM (NOT PICTURED)
THE METROHEALTH SYSTEM PHYSICAL MEDICINE & REHABILITATION
4229 Pearl Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44109 216-778-4414, metrohealth.org/rehabilitation
SPECIALTIES: Inpatient care for people recovering from serious medical conditions, including spinal cord injury, brain injury, stroke, orthopedic concerns, trauma and surgery. Outpatient care includes pain management as well as treatment and therapy for amputations, back and neck pain, brain injury, pediatric development concerns, spinal cord injury, sports injuries, stroke, swallowing problems, total joint rehabilitation, dizziness, vocational rehabilitation, voice changes, women’s health, and hand, elbow and shoulder injuries. LOCATIONS: Four locations in Greater Cleveland: MetroHealth Old Brooklyn Medical Center, Cleveland Heights Medical Center, Broadview Heights Sports Medicine and Physical Therapy, and West 150th Health and Surgery Center. PHILOSOPHY: As one of the nation’s first hospitals dedicated solely to rehabilitation, the MetroHealth Rehabilitation Institute restores function, social participation and quality of life to persons with significant disabilities due to a serious injury or accident. The hospital’s approach delivers outstanding rehabilitation care, trains the next generation of rehabilitation clinicians and
scientists, and discovers new knowledge that becomes part of the institution’s standard of care. WHAT SETS US APART: The MetroHealth Rehabilitation Institute keeps patients moving and treats some of the most medically complex patients in the nation. The MetroHealth Rehabilitation Institute is the top rehabilitation institute in Ohio and No. 24 in the country, according to US News and World Report. MetroHealth Rehabilitation Institute is the top-funded physical medicine and rehabilitation medical school department in the country for National Institute for Health (NIH) grants. The institute is also fully integrated into a Level I Trauma Center, a comprehensive stroke center and a federally designated spinal cord injury model system. The innovative work being done by the hospital’s researchers and clinicians is used to find healthier outcomes for all patients. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF OUR WORK: Finding healthier outcomes for medically complex patients and providing access to high quality care for every person the hospital serves.
K. GUREN
ALLIED DERMATOLOGY AND SKIN SURGERY
5915 Landerbrook Drive, Suite 120, Mayfield Heights, Ohio 44124
1-866-337-6631, alliedderm.com
SPECIALTIES: General medical and surgical dermatology, aesthetic dermatology, Mohs skin cancer surgery and reconstruction. LOCATIONS: We have 11 providers in four locations: Akron, Mayfield Heights, Mentor and Uniontown. TECHNOLOGY: Mohs micrographic surgery, neurotoxins and injectable fillers, microneedling, hair laser, anti-aging and ablative laser, vascular laser and tattoo removal laser EDUCATION: Dr. Funovits: Graduate of the BS/MD program of Northeast Ohio Medical University, Academic chief resident during residency at MetroHealth Medical Center/Case Western Reserve University. Dr. Guren: Undergraduate from University of Michigan; Graduate of Temple University School of Medicine; internship and residency at the Cleveland Clinic. Dr. Woodhouse: Graduate of University of Iowa College of Medicine, Chief Resident during residency at the Cleveland Clinic, two-year fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic. AFFILIATIONS: Cleveland Clinic, Summa and Lake Health/University Hospitals. WHAT SETS THEM APART: Dr. Funovits, Dr. Guren and Dr. Woodhouse collaborate to provide patients with
excellent dermatology care grounded in the philosophy that patients and staff should be treated as we would wish for our family. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF THEIR WORK: Dr. Funovits: “In dermatology we are in a unique position to help patients with a wide array of conditions. I aim to provide expert diagnosis and management in a comforting atmosphere.” Dr. Guren: “It is certainly satisfying to clear people’s skin from a variety of skin conditions, allowing them to live their lives with more confidence and fewer symptoms. What is truly gratifying though is getting to know my patients and their families.” Dr. Woodhouse: “Each day brings a unique satisfaction in knowing that our team at Allied is equipped to professionally address the needs of every patient with a wide array of skills and tools, regardless of the complexity of their dermatological condition.”
MISSION STATEMENT: Allied is working together to realize a shared vision of uncompromising excellence in dermatology. To fulfill this mission, the practice is committed to listening to patients, earning the trust of the community, creating a compassionate work environment and improving continuously.
DR. ANGELA L. FUNOVITS, DR. JUSTIN G. WOODHOUSE AND DR. LAURENASSOCIATES IN DERMATOLOGY, INC.
26908 Detroit Road, Suite 103, Westlake, Ohio 44145 440-249-0274, healthyskinmd.com
SPECIALTIES: General Dermatology, Surgical Dermatology, including Mohs Skin Cancer Surgery and Cosmetic Dermatology. LOCATIONS: Westlake, Middleburg Heights and Lorain. TECHNOLOGY: State-of-the-art, vertically integrated facility delivering cutting-edge treatments in Medical Dermatology, Aesthetic Dermatology and Mohs Surgery. PHILOSOPHY: Providing compassionate, value-based, patient-centric dermatologic care. EDUCATION: Dr. Mihir Shah: Medical Degree, Northeast Ohio Medical University; Dermatology Residency, SUNY Stony Brook; Mohs Surgery Fellowship, The Laser and Skin Surgery Institute of Indiana. Dr. Brandie Styron: Medical Degree, Case Western Reserve University; Residency, Indiana University School of Medicine. Dr. Michael Reep: Medical Degree, Medical College of Ohio; Residency, Henry Ford Health System. Dr. Karen Turgeon: Medical Degree and Internship, Northwestern University Medical Center; Residency, Metro Hospital; Dermatopathology Fellowship completed at Cleveland Clinic Foundation. AFFILIATIONS: Dr. Mihir Shah: Cleveland Clinic Avon, Fairview
Hospital, University Hospitals St. John, and Southwest General. Dr. Brandie Styron: Fairview Hospital, University Hospitals St. John. Dr. Michael Reep: Fairview Hospital, Southwest General. Dr. Turgeon: University Hospitals St. John, Fairview Hospital and Southwest General. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF THEIR WORK: Dr. Mihir Shah: “Building relationships with patients through the treatment of their skin cancer and the satisfaction of not only curing their cancer, but also creating an excellent cosmetic result.” Dr. Brandie Styron: “Treating patients of all ages and sometimes many members of the same family. Making people feel more confident in their skin is a great privilege.” Dr. Michael Reep: “Being able to interact with patients and improve their skin conditions, allowing them to have overall healthier skin and a better quality of life.” Dr. Turgeon: “Seeing patients and their families in continuity over the years. It is rewarding to integrate their skin health into their overall health care and see the positive effect healthy skin can have.” MISSION STATEMENT: To provide the highest quality patient care and to promote and sustain healthy skin.
CHAGRIN VALLEY DERMATOLOGY
7185 Chagrin Road B, Chagrin Falls, Ohio 44023 440-999-3035, chagrinvalleyderm.com
SPECIALTIES: Dermatology. LOCATIONS: Chagrin Falls. PHILOSOPHY: Chagrin Valley Dermatology utilizes the latest medical technology with old school values. The basis of good medicine is strong collaboration and trust between the physician and patient. EDUCATION: Medical School: Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine; NY Residency: University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center. AFFILIATIONS: Wade Park VA Medical Center, University Hospitals of Cleveland. WHAT SETS HER APART: Chagrin Valley Dermatology is a small practice of just one physician. Many dermatologic conditions are chronic, so the staff likes to get to know patients well and build a base of trust and open communication. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HER WORK: Dr. Wahby loves diagnosing and treating skin conditions to relieve physical discomfort and to help patients feel confident in their daily lives. MISSION STATEMENT: Chagrin Valley Dermatology provides compassionate dermatologic care for the entire family.
FRANKEL FACIAL PLASTIC SURGERY
5885 Landerbrook Drive, Suite 150, Mayfield Heights, Ohio 44124 216-399-9550, clevelandfacialplastics.com
SPECIALTIES: Facial Plastic Surgery. LOCATIONS: Mayfield Heights.
TECHNOLOGY: Dr. Frankel has extensive experience in the most advanced techniques of facial rejuvation, including the Extended Deep Plane Facelift. This procedure results in a profoundly refreshed, youthful appearance without the “pulled tight” look seen with more traditional techniques. Dr. Frankel offers skin-resurfacing treatments with a state-of-the-art CO2 fractionated laser. Dr. Frankel utilizes Piezo ultrasonic technology to achieve precise rhinoplasty results, minimizing discomfort and recovery time. PHILOSOPHY: The goal of cosmetic surgery is to help patients look and feel their best while maintaining individual beauty. EDUCATION: B.A. University of Pennsylvania, magna cum laude; Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine; Head & Neck Surgery Residency CWRU; American Academy of Facial Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery Fellowship. AFFILIATIONS: Clinical Instructor CWRU SOM HNS, University Hospitals. WHAT SETS HIM APART: Dr. Frankel is a double board-certified, fellowship-trained surgeon specializing in cosmetic
surgery of the face and neck. He has a dedicated focus in rhinoplasty and facial rejuvenation procedures such as facelift, blepharoplasty, fat grafting and skin resurfacing. Dr. Frankel performs surgery within his AAAASF fully accredited operating room, located within his aesthetic center. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HIS WORK: Dr. Frankel was drawn to the field by his interests in fine arts and surgery, but the most rewarding part of his work is the relationships he forms with his patients. He values the trust patients place in him and is motivated by patients’ smiles and improved self-confidence.
MISSION STATEMENT:
To enhance lives by combining artistry, expertise and compassion to deliver exceptional facial plastic surgery solutions. Dr. Frankel’s mission is to empower individuals to embrace their unique beauty and achieve natural, transformative results. Through meticulous surgical techniques, innovative technologies and personalized care, Frankel Facial Plastic Surgery is committed to making a positive impact on the lives of patients and promoting overall well-being.
NORTHERN OHIO REGIONAL CANCER CENTER
5260 Smith Road, Brook Park, Ohio 44142 216-265-4580, norcc1.com
SPECIALTIES: Adult oncology. LOCATIONS: Brook Park, Middleburgh Heights. TECHNOLOGY: State of the art linear accelerators integrated with imaging capabilities enabling targeted image-guided radiation therapy and stereotactic body radiotherapy. The latest ultrasound-guided technology for prostate brachytherapy, a noninvasive treatment for prostate cancer. PHILOSOPHY: To provide patient-centered, cutting-edge cancer treatment in a compassionate and comfortable environment. Our goal is to empower patients through open communication, ensuring they are well informed and actively involved in their care. EDUCATION: Brown University School of Medicine: Radiation Oncology Residency at the Cleveland Clinic. AFFILIATIONS: American Society
of Radiation Oncology, American Board of Radiology. WHAT SETS HIM APART: Taking pride in delivering Individualized patient and disease-focused care in a community setting. Northern Ohio Regional Cancer Center prioritizes creating a caring and compassionate environment where patients feel supported throughout their cancer treatment. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HIS WORK:
To see patients leave an initial consultation with a deeper understanding of their diagnosis and a reduced sense of anxiety. MISSION STATEMENT: To deliver patient-centered, innovative cancer care with compassion. By fostering a supportive environment, Northern Ohio Regional Cancer Center seeks to enhance quality of life and inspire hope in every individual we treat.
PONSKY FACIAL PLASTIC SURGERY
3700 Park East Dr., Suite 160, Beachwood, Ohio 44122 216-508-4055, drdianaponsky.com
SPECIALTIES: Plastic surgery with exclusive focus on face, head and neck.
LOCATION: Beachwood. TECHNOLOGY: Dr. Ponsky’s boutique practice makes it possible to ensure long-term patient satisfaction by providing the latest technology and highest level of care and experience. PHILOSOPHY: Build relationships and trust with careful education, attention to detail and care, focusing on results that exude an authentic, approved appearance and confidence. EDUCATION: New York University, undergraduate studies; Georgetown University School of Medicine, Doctor of Medicine degree and residency in otolaryngology. Fellowship training in facial aesthetic and reconstructive surgery at Case Western Reserve University Medical Center.
AFFILIATIONS: Assistant Professor, Department of Otolaryngology, University Hospitals; Double board certified in facial plastic and reconstructive surgery and otolaryngology head and neck surgery. WHAT SETS HER APART: Dr. Ponsky’s goal is to provide each patient an individualized, concierge
experience for their cosmetic surgery journey. Her expertise comes from years of experience creating natural, beautiful faces, and she strives to connect patients’ physical and emotional health to their external appearance by projecting their physical vitality and helping them to stay ahead of the aging process. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HER WORK: Helping patients find a more refreshed version of themselves. MISSION STATEMENT: Dr. Ponsky’s aim is to enhance the natural beauty of patients by providing personalized facial aesthetic services with the highest level of expertise, integrity and compassion. She strives to exceed clients’ expectations by delivering exceptional results that improve their confidence and quality of life. Dr. Ponsky’s commitment to ongoing education and innovation ensures that the practice stays at the forefront of the latest techniques and technologies in facial plastic surgery. The practice values clients’ trust and treats each one with the utmost respect and care throughout their journey.
REPRODUCTIVE GYNECOLOGY & INFERTILITY
95 Arch St., Suite 250, Akron, Ohio 44304
6701 Rockside Road, Suite 220, Independence, Ohio 44131 330- 375-7722, rgiohio.com
SPECIALTIES: Reproductive endocrinology and infertility, obstetrics and gynecology LOCATIONS: Cleveland, Akron, Canton, Youngstown and Columbus PHILOSOPHY: Providing compassionate, state-of-the-art fertility care. EDUCATION: Dr. David M. Nash: Medical degree, Northeast Ohio Medical University; residency, Akron General Medial Center; and reproductive endocrinology and infertility fellowship, University of Connecticut. Dr. Priya B. Maseelall: Medical degree, Wright State University; residency, Summa Health System; and reproductive endocrinology and infertility fellowship,
UMDNJ, New Jersey. AFFILIATIONS: Summa Health System, Aultman Hospital and Western Reserve Hospital WHAT SETS THEM APART: Personalized care. Reproductive Gynecology & Infertility guides patients through all consults and procedures. TECHNOLOGY: State-of-the-art infertility services from initial testing all the way through IVF/ICSI, egg, sperm and embryo cryopreservation MOST GRATIFYING PART OF THEIR WORK: Building relationships with people while helping them realize their dream of becoming parents and watching their families grow. MISSION STATEMENT: “We fulfill dreams by building families.”
TOTONCHI PLASTIC SURGERY LLC
29017 Cedar Road, Lyndhurst, Ohio 44124 440-461-7999, drtotonchi.com
SPECIALTIES: Plastic Surgery, Rhinoplasty, Eyelid, Facelift and face and body cosmetic procedures. LOCATIONS: Lyndhurst and Westlake. TECHNOLOGY: Invasive and noninvasive procedures. PHILOSOPHY: Patients come first. EDUCATION: General and plastic surgery residency at University Hospital Case Western Medical Center. Cosmetic facial fellowship and craniofacial fellowship at the same institution. AFFILIATIONS: Professor at Case Western Reserve University. WHAT SETS HIM APART: Attention to details and patient care make Dr. Totonchi stand out. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HIS WORK: Helping patients to be the best version of themselves. MISSION STATEMENT: Providing a unique patient experience and to become their practice of choice.
ZEEBA CLINIC
29017 Cedar Road, Lyndhurst, OH 44124
440-461-7999, drbahmanguyuron.com
SPECIALTIES: Plastic surgery of the nose, face and migraine surgery.
LOCATIONS: Lyndhurst. PHILOSOPHY: Because of its scholarly and academic nature, the practice is on the forefront of new developments and state-ofthe-art technology and is often pioneering new techniques. EDUCATION: Tehran University Medical School; General Surgery at Boston University; Plastic Surgery Training at Cleveland Clinic; Facial Training at Toronto University. AFFILIATIONS: Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals. WHAT SETS HIM APART: Forty-three years of experience in plastic surgery is irreplaceable, particularly when the focus is narrowed to a particular part of plastic surgery. This is not only Dr. Guyuron’s specialty, but he has also taught it internationally for decades. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF
HIS WORK: Seeing patients’ quality of life improve because of the elimination of migraine headaches or the facial flaws that result in improved image and self-confidence. MISSION STATEMENT: “No matter how rich a life is in every regard, when the quality of life is marred by pain or self-image, then satisfaction is not going to be there,” Dr. Guyuron says. That is why his team strives to improve this part of life for everyone. “We strive to provide the best care possible for the patients that can be provided in the world,” he says. “It is gratifying to see that our colleagues have voted for me as one of the top two plastic surgeons in rhinoplasty in the country as it is the most challenging plastic surgery procedure. Mastering this technique makes other plastic surgery procedures less of a challenge.”
DR. RICHARD F. LAVI
ALLERGY, ASTHMA AND SINUS RELIEF CENTER
8054 Darrow Road, Suite 2, Twinsburg, Ohio 44087 330-423-4444, aaasrc.com
SPECIALTIES: Allergies and Immunology. LOCATIONS: Twinsburg and Fairlawn. TECHNOLOGY: Telehealth visits are an option for those who can’t commute. PHILOSOPHY: Dr. Lavi strives to be honest, helpful and caring for individuals and families with every encounter.
EDUCATION: Undergraduate and Med school: Brown University, Internal Medicine and Pediatrics residencies at Metro Health Medical Center, Fellowship in Allergy and Immunology at University of South Florida All Children’s Hospital. AFFILIATIONS: University Hospitals, Cleveland Clinic, Summa Health, Akron Children’s Hospital. WHAT SETS HIM APART: In Dr. Lavi’s private office, humor, friendliness and willingness to go above and beyond make the experience special.
MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HIS WORK: Doing the right thing for patients and seeing their anxieties relieved; getting people back to their lives without undue health burdens. MISSION STATEMENT: To treat each patient as the doctor would treat members of his own family.
DR. JORGE GARCIA-ZUAZAGA
APEX DERMATOLOGY AND SKIN SURGERY CENTER
29111 Cedar Rd. Mayfield Heights, OH 44124 833-279-7546, apexskin.com
SPECIALTIES: Mohs micrographic surgery for skin cancer. LOCATIONS: Apex has 14 locations in Ohio, including a new headquarters in Mayfield Heights. FELLOWSHIP: Harvard Medical School, Residency: University Hospitals/Case Western Reserve University, United States Marine Corps: Senior Flight Surgeon, Medical School: Penn State University, MBA: Weatherhead School of Management, Case Western Reserve University. WHAT SETS HIM APART: Experience counts when it comes to skin cancer surgery. Dr. Garcia has diagnosed and treated over 30,000 skin cancer surgeries in his career. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HIS WORK: At Apex, patients are patients for life. Dr. Garcia’s passion for cancer care really resonates when he treats his patients. “For me specializing in skin cancer is a calling, not a job. I love connecting with my patients and get to know their life story”, he adds. MISSION STATEMENT: Dr. Garcia says “At Apex, we are transforming lives through healthy skin, every day. This is a very powerful purpose. I’m very proud our team, and our story. Come check us out!”
DR. ALANNA FOGLIETTI FOSTYK
FOGLIETTI FOSTYK PLASTIC SURGERY
22901 Millcreek Blvd., #145, Beachwood, Ohio 44122 216-292-6800, allnewyou.com
PHILOSOPHY: To make her customers feel more confident in their own skin. EDUCATION: Dr. Foglietti Fostyk earned her undergraduate studies bacheor’s degree with a biology minor, graduating cum laude, from the honors program at The Ohio State University and her medical degree from Ohio University’s Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine. She is board-certified in plastic and reconstructive surgery and became a fellow of the American College of Osteopathic Physicians last year. AFFILIATIONS: Faculty of the Cleveland Clinic Department of Plastic Surgery and clinical faculty for OUHCOM. WHAT SETS HER APART: As a young woman, she contributes a fresh and advanced perspective to an acclaimed and established nationally recognized plastic surgery practice. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HER WORK: Being able to give back to the community by participating in international surgical mission trips such as an annual trip for pediatric hand and burn reconstruction surgery in Colombia. MISSION STATEMENT: To provide a listening ear, compassion and empathy by working together to create a realistic plan and deliver beautiful results.
DR. JENNIFER GREER
GREER PLASTIC SURGERY
6101 Heisley Road, Mentor, Ohio 44060 440-974-8577, greerplastics.org
SPECIALTIES: Breast surgery including augmentation, reduction and lifts, as well as body contouring. LOCATIONS: Mentor and Chagrin Falls. TECHNOLOGY: The practice utilizes Halo laser, BBL laser, Vivace RF microneedling. PHILOSOPHY: Dr. Greer and her team tailor treatments to address each patient’s unique concerns, rather than using a “one size fits all” approach. EDUCATION: University of Chicago, Case Western Reserve. AFFILIATIONS: Beachwood Medical Center. WHAT SETS HER APART: Greer Plastic Surgery boasts an allfemale team. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HER WORK: Dr. Greer’s ultimate goal is to help women feel comfortable in their bodies. MISSION STATEMENT: Greer Plastic Surgery’s diverse and impactful cosmetic and plastic surgery treatments help patients achieve lasting, natural-looking results and a confidence boost unlike any other.
DR. KEVIN DIETER
HOSPICE OF THE WESTERN RESERVE
200 E. 185th St., Cleveland, Ohio 44119 216-383-2222, hospicewr.org
SPECIALTIES: Hospice and Palliative Medicine. LOCATIONS: Hospice of the Western Reserve. PHILOSOPHY: Dr. Dieter believes that dying is much more than a medical event; the emotional, psychological and spiritual aspects need recognized, addressed and protected.
EDUCATION: Walsh College; NEOUCOM. Dr. Dieter also gained immeasurable wisdom and training as an Anamcara through the Sacred Art of Living Center. WHAT SETS HIM APART: Dr. Dieter has been a hospice physician for over 30 years. His TEDx talk “WE are the Medicine” details how he was called to this career. Although Dr. Dieter has provided palliative care in a variety of settings and venues, it is the bedside care of the dying that he is drawn to. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HIS WORK: The privilege of being with people at the end of life, and being able to educate medical students about appropriate end of life care. MISSION STATEMENT: Dr. Dieter’s personal “mission statement” is to remember that the dying are our teachers and healthcare professionals like him are the medicine.
DR. AUGUSTINE J. KELLIS
KELLIS EYE & LASER CENTER
150 Seventh Ave., Suite 100, Chardon, Ohio 44024 440-285-2020, kelliseyeandlasercenter.com
SPECIALTIES: Dr. Kellis’ practice specializes in ophthalmology and oculoplastic surgery. LOCATIONS: Chardon, Youngstown and Sandusky. TECHNOLOGY: CO2 laser incision used on all eyelid procedures. PHILOSOPHY: Dr. Kellis strives to treat patients as if they were family. EDUCATION: Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.
AFFILIATIONS: LakeHealth/UHHS. WHAT SETS HIM APART: Dr. Kellis boasts an incredible level of expertise in his field with trademarked techniques to back it up. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HIS WORK: The chance to restore a blind person’s vision; removing eyelid and orbital cancers while restoring the structure and function of the eye; providing the cosmetic surgery and excellent outcome that leaves patients with a refreshed and natural look. MISSION STATEMENT: Dr. Kellis ensures patients the best possible vision performance by providing the highest quality vision and eye health care possible in a comfortable and professional environment.
DR. MEGAN OLTMANN
FOOT & ANKLE ASSOCIATES OF CLEVELAND
33790 Bainbridge Rd # 201, Solon, OH 44139 440-903-1041, solonfootandankle.com
SPECIALTIES: Diabetic Limb Salvage, Sports Medicine, Bunion and Hammertoe Surgery. LOCATIONS: Solon, Richmond and Bedford.
TECHNOLOGY: Minimally invasive surgery, advanced wound care including biological skin substitutes and hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
PHILOSOPHY: Medicine is a beautiful art that requires patience, perseverance and compassion. EDUCATION: Podiatry School: Kent State University of Podiatric Medicine, Residency: Cleveland Clinic/ Mercy Health. AFFILIATIONS: Board Certified through American Board of Foot and Ankle Surgery, University Hospitals Podiatric Surgery Residency, Kent State University College of Podiatric Medicine, Medical Director of the UH Bedford and Richmond Wound Centers, University Hospitals Ahuja Medical Center, Cleveland Clinic Hillcrest Hospital. WHAT SETS HER APART: Dr. Oltmann takes great pride in educating patients, medical students and residents with the latest medical education. She is also known as the best selling co-author of Chronicles of Women in White Coats 3. MISSION STATEMENT: Dr. Oltmann’s Mission is to educate patients while alleviating their pain and discomfort.
DR. RENUKA DIWAN
LASER AND SKIN SURGERY CENTER
29101 Health Campus Drive, #300, Westlake, Ohio 44145 440-871-9832, laserandskinsurgerycenter.com
SPECIALTIES: Dr. Diwan specializes in cosmetic dermatology, dermatologic surgery. LOCATIONS: Westlake, Ohio. TECHNOLOGY: Lasers and Microneedling with radiofrequency, Botox and Daxxify treatments, fillers, Sculptra, Sclerotherapy, microdermabrasion, peels, dermaplaning, Coolsculpting, Tumescent Liposuction, mini facelifts, blepharoplasty and Mohs Surgery. PHILOSOPHY: Dr. Diwan believes in empowering each patient to take control of their skin health for the best aesthetic and medical outcomes. EDUCATION: Board certified in dermatology, fellowship trained in dermatologic surgery/procedural dermatology. AFFILIATIONS: St. John Medical Center, University Hospital of Cleveland. WHAT SETS HER APART: Dr Diwan believes in understanding patients’ goals and delivering individualized care for natural results. MOST GRATIFYING PART OF HER WORK: Helping patients get the results they want, to look and feel their best. MISSION STATMENT: Dr. Diwan believes in helping patients achieve their best skin through education and treatment.
BEST DOCTORS
Dr. Alton is a board-certified obstetrician/gynecologist providing high-quality maternity and gynecological care for women, from adolescence through menopause. Dr. Alton is experienced in the latest surgical techniques, including minimally invasive surgery. His practice was one of the first in the Cleveland area to perform robot-assisted surgery for women.
PRIMARY PRACTICE
SOUTHWEST GENERAL MEDICAL GROUP INC. — WOMEN’S HEALTH
7255 Old Oak Blvd., Suite C-202, Middleburg Heights, Ohio 44130 440-816-5390
HOSPITAL AFFILIATIONS
• Southwest General Health Center
AREAS OF PRACTICE
• Obstetrics • Gynecology
PRIMARY PRACTICE
Dr. Bartal is a board-certified podiatrist specializing in the medical and surgical treatment of disorders of the foot, ankle and related structures of the leg. He has several years of experience in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of a wide range of conditions resulting from injury or disease. Dr. Bartal focuses on providing individual care and attention to each patient, combining clinical expertise with advanced technology to offer high quality, compassionate care.
SOUTHWEST FOOT AND ANKLE ASSOCIATES — SOUTHWEST GENERAL MEDICAL GROUP INC. 7255 Old Oak Blvd., Suite C-308, Middleburg Heights, Ohio 44130 440-816-2735
HOSPITAL AFFILIATIONS
• Southwest General Health Center
AREAS OF PRACTICE
• Podiatry
Dr. Brahmbhatt is a board-certified gastroenterologist and hepatologist at North Shore Gastroenterology & Endoscopy. She provides exceptional comprehensive and individualized GI care that is timely and patient-centered. She is highly skilled and compassionate, engaging in shared decision making with each patient to improve their quality of life.
PRIMARY PRACTICE
NORTH SHORE GASTROENTEROLOGY
850 Columbia Road, Suite 200 Westlake, Ohio 44145 440-808-1212
HOSPITAL AFFILIATIONS
• Cleveland Clinic Fairview and Avon
• University Hospitals St. John
AREAS OF PRACTICE
• Digestive Disorders • Liver Diseases
• Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
• Colonoscopy & Upper Endoscopy
THESE PHYSICIANS HAVE BEEN SELECTED AS TOPS IN THEIR FIELDS BY THEIR PEERS.
RESOURCE GUIDE
Dr. Elconin is a board-certified radiation oncologist providing expert and compassionate care for adults needing radiation treatment for breast, prostate, GI, lung and other malignancies. Dr. Elconin believes in a team approach with strong collaboration with other providers. He maintains up-to-date standards for treatment quality, safety and clinical research.
PRIMARY PRACTICE
NORTHERN OHIO REGIONAL CANCER CENTER
5260 Smith Road Brook Park, Ohio 44142 216-265-4580
HOSPITAL AFFILIATIONS
• Cleveland Clinic
• Mercy Health
• St. John Westshore
AREAS OF PRACTICE
• Adult Radiation Oncology
Dr. Plecha is a board-certified surgeon providing high-quality surgical care for carotid, aortic and lower extremity arterial and venous disease. Dr. Plecha is experienced in the latest surgical techniques and has special medical interests in abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, carotid disease, dialysis access, peripheral vascular disease and venous disorder treatment.
PRIMARY PRACTICE
SOUTHWEST GENERAL MEDICAL GROUP INC.
— VASCULAR SURGICAL ASSOCIATES
7255 Old Oak Blvd., Suite C-108, Middleburg Heights, Ohio 44130 440-816-2786
HOSPITAL AFFILIATIONS
• Southwest General Health Center
AREAS OF PRACTICE
• Vascular Surgery
PRIMARY PRACTICE
Dr. Hahn is a board-certified obstetrician/gynecologist. He provides high-quality maternity and gynecological care for women from adolescence through menopause. Dr. Hahn is experienced in the latest surgical techniques, including minimally invasive surgery. His special medical interests include osteoporosis, uterovaginal prolapse, urinary incontinence, abnormal Pap tests and periods, and family planning.
SOUTHWEST GENERAL MEDICAL GROUP INC. — WOMEN’S HEALTH
7255 Old Oak Blvd., Suite C-202 Middleburg Heights, Ohio 44130 440-816-4930
HOSPITAL AFFILIATIONS
• Southwest General Health Center
AREAS OF PRACTICE
• Obstetrics
• Gynecology
DR. MICHAEL H. WOJTANOWSKI
Dr. Wojtanowski is founder and medical director of Ohio Clinic for Aesthetic and Plastic Surgery. Certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, Dr. Wojtanowski specializes in cosmetic procedures of the face and body. He performs surgery at his Quad A accredited outpatient surgery center, Surgiplex, located at his Westlake practice.
PRIMARY PRACTICE
OHIO CLINIC FOR AESTHETIC AND PLASTIC SURGERY
2237 Crocker Road, Suite #140 Westlake, Ohio 44145 440-808-9315 • ohioclinic.com
HOSPITAL AFFILIATIONS
• University Hospitals
St. John Medical Center
• Cleveland Clinic Fairview Hospital
AREAS OF PRACTICE
• Cosmetic Plastic Surgery
• Nonsurgical Cosmetic Procedures
STEM Styles: Something for Every Learner
Evolving STEM programs expose students to the wows, what-ifs and wonders that hook them on hands-on, curiosity-based experiences.
Bea Hardacre wasn’t exactly sure what area of study she would pursue — but if she could spend every moment of every day outdoors, she would. “I love being outside and I’m passionate about making sure there is sustainable, accessible healthy access to the outdoors,” says the 17-year-old rising senior at Hawken School.
Climate change is real, Hardacre says. She sees it every day and wants future generations to get the mud-puddle, hike-the-woods, explorative experiences she has enjoyed since she was young.
So, she dove into the school’s three-semester STEMM (Science Technology Engineering Math & Medicine) program “to try it out,” she says. “I thought it would be a good
taster to see if it’s something I’m interested in.”
What she learned about herself, she never expected.
For one, failing is tough.
“It’s hard to come to terms with going through so many rounds of failure to get a success and that can be hard to comprehend,” Hardacre says. “There were days of failed experiments where one variable needed to
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be switched or one degree needed to be changed. When you grow up and go through school, that’s not usually how it is — there isn’t that hands-on, repetitive trial and error process that you find in research-based experimentation.”
Hardacre also figured out how persistent she could be. “And I learned that I need that hands-on collaboration in a future career,” she adds.
Specifically, Hawken’s threesemester Science Technology Engineering Math & Medicine program is a professional development-based co-curriculum that “takes a concrete look at the scientific process, how it works and how to integrate it into our daily lives,” says Lacy Chick, science teacher and director of the Paepke Research Program at Hawken Upper School.
It begins with Scientific Research I where students learn how to build a resume, identify mentors and study journal articles, which discuss what’s credible science. The second semester includes a summer internship that goes far beyond shadowing. They work directly with a mentor in a lab, conducting research that is selfdirected based on their topic of choice. The program wraps up with a semester of peer and professional review and the annual STEMM Symposium, where projects are presented and judged.
Hardacre’s topic: biomimetic composites with natural fiber reinforced, recyclable biobased benzoxazine resins. She partnered with Case Western Reserve University’s Dr. Hatsuo Ishida in the Department of Macromolecular Science and Engineering.
It’s a mouthful. In plain English, Hardacre wanted to find out how natural resources could be used to create a biodegradable, recyclable polymer resin — the stuff in everyday products.
This way, petroleum-based polymers used in everything from grocery bags to cars could be replaced with a sustainable alternative that would
not harm the environment.
Think about the junk and trash clogging waterways or landing in places they shouldn’t. Hardacre thinks about that all the time, so it inspired her research project.
She wound up placing in the top three at the school’s STEMM Symposium, moving on to grand-prize winner at the Northeastern Ohio Science and Engineering Fair, which meant a trip to the International Science and
Engineering Fair in Dallas. “I got to talk to high school students from Japan to South Africa to Germany, and that was truly amazing,” she says.
“I had a lot of support from Dr. Chick and other teachers at school who helped me prepare by practicing public speaking and how to present research.”
Ultimately, she learned through her research that there’s more work to do — a STEMM life lesson. Basically,
the esterification procedure she used to create renewal resources needs to be adapted.
But beyond the science, during the process, Hardacre made great friends and connections with doctoral students from around the world. “It was an insane experience to talk to people
who have grown up all over and how that contributed to where they are today,” she relates.
STEM is so much more than lab experiments.
“STEM has become an acronym that is so commonplace we aren’t always thinking about what’s really behind it and real-world examples,” says Jerry DeCarlo, science department chair at Saint Ignatius High School. “When we can make connections, it shows what real science can be — it allows students to learn about research, get excited about it or even discover that maybe they’re interested in something else.”
SAMPLING STEM CAREERS
This was definitely the case for Gustav Kotlarsic, who graduated from Saint Ignatius this spring and will attend Kent State University to study aerospace engineering.
“I’ve always been interested in pilots and engineering since I was 3 years old,” says Kotlarsic, now 18, who participated in the school’s
partnership capstone program with the NASA Glenn Research Center. Student teams are guided by NASA engineers via Zoom as they design and execute projects like designing a lunar rover wheel or a solar power circuit system that “fires” based on conditions.
With the lunar rover project, students generated plans that were NASAreviewed.
“Then, they 3D printed those and tested them over rough terrain to see how they did, writing about the results,” DeCarlo describes.
Kotlarsic says, “We were given the supplies and what was required, but we had to put it all together. Building the robot was perfectly fine, the wiring — but learning how to code to make sure the robot would do specifically what we asked like drive forward or backward and turn was tricky.”
During the project, Kotlarsic could ask the NASA scientists questions, including how they landed in their careers and the obstacles they experience creating rovers for Mars and the moon. “This helped put my dream
“When we can make connections, it shows what real science can be—it allows students to learn about research, get excited about it or even discover that maybe they’re interested in something else."
– Jerry DeCarlo, science department chair at Saint Ignatius
into a concrete reality and set it in stone: This is what I want to do,” he says.
The capstone project concluded with a conference at NASA involving other schools that participated in the project. “Being on location at NASA was a great experience because we got to tour their facility, see where they do their resting for rover wheels that get sent to Mars, and the fact that this is in Cleveland is amazing,” Kotlarsic adds.
Sometimes STEM programs help students realize that a field of study really isn’t their thing.
At Saint Ignatius High School, an anatomage table offers a virtual cadaver dissection experience and is paired with lessons from guest physicians. The table includes lessons about suturing and laparoscopic
procedures. The 3D models include complex cardiovascular and nervous systems and are true to life. And for some students, that can be a lot.
“In the Health Sciences Program that is open to students in all grades, we had a few who said, ‘I don’t think this is for me,’” DeCarlo relates. “STEM programs like this allow students to see what they like about it and what they don’t, so it works both ways. They can get really excited — or say, ‘Maybe I’m interested in something else.’”
Hardacre gets it.
A surprise she discovered during her lab experimentation: She loves chemistry.
“I come from a family of surgeons who love biology, so I figured I’d be a biology kid — but I’m much more of a chemistry person because I love
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experimentation,” she says. And, the STEMM program settled that “lost” feeling she had about careers before enrolling in the experience.
Not to mention, the STEMM program’s structure is designed to promote skills students will need to be
successful in the real world, Chick says. “And one of my favorite parts about it is how they can take their projects and see beyond their niche or narrowed scope and make connections to other fields of science,” she says.
Several students have published papers in scientific journals during their time in the STEMM program.
“In science, publication is currency,” Chick says.
CREATIVE CONNECTIONS
As DeCarlo says, STEM is more than the acronym suggests. It demands creativity, innovation, a handson nature — areas where students inclined in language and fine arts shine. Sarah Brown is the middle school science teacher at Laurel School, and she describes an artistic student who
“STEM programs like this allow students to see what they like about it and what they don’t, so it works both ways."
– Jerry DeCarlo, science department chair at Saint Ignatius
clung to STEM projects.
“She wasn’t strong at memorizing facts but being creative was her strong suit, so STEM projects allowed her to learn concepts better than if we had just done cookie-cutter labs, a reading project or had students take notes on a topic,” Brown says. “Letting her tap into science as a creative person allowed her to make it all real.”
STEM is a fixer-upper, try-andtest, let’s-see-what-happens pursuit.
And STEM is outdoors.
“When people think of STEM, they tend to think of the T and E — technology and engineering,” says Mary Rouse, director of outdoor experiences at Cleveland Metroparks. “And while it sounds counterintuitive, those things are part of nature-based learning.”
Consider the design of a honey-
comb or how plants flower, and why animals adapt over time. “There is a lot of engineering there, and as humans, we take what happens in nature and do what we call biomimicry, which is imitating that,” Rouse says.
In fact, there’s a ton of STEM in environmental sciences with evolving technology, Rouse points out. So your outdoor lovers end up adopting STEM skills — and tech-oriented students can grow a love of nature. It’s symbiotic. For instance, the Metroparks has a few drones that can be equipped with sensors and cameras that help plot and map invasive species. They can be connected to infrared sensors to map and trace wildlife activity like an unusual sighting.
Through the outdoor recreation unit, participants can sign up for The STEM of Sailing. “Sailing is all about
wind speed, wind direction, resistance,” Rouse explains. “There is a lot of physics involved, and understanding that is key to being a good sailor.”
For the younger set, drop-in STEM days like Mad Science at Parma’s Watershed Stewardship Center include weekend programs with hands-on exploration. “We find intriguing science and nature topics like ‘the science of Grossology,’” Rouse says.
Immersive learning with a STEM cart equipped for hands-on experiments happens monthly at the North Chagrin Nature Center. And the Metroparks is focusing on access to STEM with its second summer of Euclid Beach STEM Adventure Camp based at the Wildwood Marina. The free, full week of camp for participating underserved communities includes science and adventure like
“Allow kids to tinker at home and let things not work out sometimes. Encourage them to recommit and try again. This is the curiosity we want to cultivate."
– Sarah Brown, middle school science teacher at Laurel School
kayaking.
STEM also inspires “playing around.” After all, tinkering is a life skill.
At Laurel School, students participate in Rube Goldberg experiments, building whimsical cause-andeffect machines that “bridge the gap between forces and energy,” Brown says.
“It’s awesome to see resiliency come into play because they will get the machine to work 10 times in a row, she says. But when it’s time to videotape or watch them, they go for it, and something is off by a centimeter, and it doesn’t work,” she says. “I had students who had to reset their machines 15 and 20 times before they got it to work. It was cool to watch them make those small adjustments.”
Another one of Laurel’s middle
school’s interdisciplinary STEM programs is its Space Week where students are on a mission to colonize Mars. They create a multi-faceted proposal, considering scientific challenges, governing challenges and what the colony will look like. “There is a series of tasks they go through during the course of the week that include research and projects like creating mission patches on Canva,” says Sean Abbott-Klafter, social studies and English teacher.
“The project gives them choices to make and some creative freedom over the learning,” he adds. “So that’s part of the challenge, too. And, it generates a lot of investment and excitement for the project.”
These benefits extend beyond the classroom, Brown points out.
“Allow kids to tinker at home and
let things not work out sometimes. Encourage them to recommit and try again. Let them in on fixing things around the house — sometimes they have ideas we haven’t thought about. This is the curiosity we want to cultivate.”
Now more than ever, naturally occurring trial and error is key for healthy development.
“Kids have so much information at their fingertips and have gotten used to using the internet when they have questions — and that can result in us losing momentum on letting kids be curious and wonder things,” Brown says.
At school and home, Brown says, “the payout of STEM learning is massive in terms of student engagement, learning, growth and mastery of concepts.”
EAST Best of the
Italian M ITALIAN
We asked you to nominate your East Side favorites in dozens of categories. Then, we compiled the top three vote-getters in each one and asked you to cast your ballot at the Best of the East party at Eton Chagrin Boulevard April 27. Read on to learn about the winners.
Stories by:
Lesley Gibson, Kristen Hampshire, Chrissy Kadleck, Myra Orenstein, Lynne Thompson and Sarah Webb
Cacio e pepe only requires a few ingredients to make — the name of the classic Roman pasta dish translates to “cheese and pepper.” And that’s what makes it so good, according to Tony Rotello, director of culinary for M Italian’s Chagrin Fallsbased owner Monven Group. Its popularity among American diners, ordered as a shared course served before the entree or as the entree itself, has increased over the last three years, prompting Rotello to add it to the restaurant’s menu in February.
“It’s so delicious you’d think there’s more to it,” he says. “Italian food, traditionally, is simple ingredients, but high-quality ingredients — and not a lot of them.”
The pasta. M Italian uses bucatini, which he describes as a thick, long, spaghetti-like variant with a hole through it. “Basically, it’s hollow,” he says. “As the sauce gets incorporated, it can fill in the holes of the longcooked pasta, which makes it that much more flavorful.”
The freshly cracked black pepper. Rotello explains that grinding peppercorns in a peppermill right before using produces pepper that is much stronger in flavor than a preground counterpart. Toasting it in extra-virgin olive oil over medium heat in a saute pan while the bucatini cooks, he adds, releases the pepper’s natural oils. “Once drawn out into the oil that you’re going to use to complete your sauce, every bite has that peppery taste.”
The unsalted butter. M Italian adds a tablespoon per serving. “Butter is a multiplying agent,” Rotello says. “Once we get ready
to add the pasta water, it will blend everything to a creamy texture.”
The pasta water. Rinse pasta in cold water and pour the water in which it was prepared down the drain, Rotello warns, and you lose the starch released as it cooked.
“It’s the starch in the pasta that is a binder for the sauce” and helps make it creamy, he explains. M Italian reserves three ounces of that salted water per serving — he goes so far as to call it “liquid gold” — to add, along with the strained-but-unrinsed bucatini, to the “layers of flavor” he’s building in the saute pan.
The freshly grated pecorino Romano. Rotello observes that the sheep’s-milk cheese is “stronger, more pungent” and saltier than parmesan. The recipe M Italian uses calls for a whopping 3.5 ounces per serving for the sauce. “Because the cheese will be the thing that really tightens it up, [the pasta] will actually twist and get a little height on it,” he says.
Fitness Instructor: Josh Mekota, Results Fitness
At Results Fitness, success is not just about results — it’s also about helping clients do what they love for as long as possible. That might be playing golf, hiking or playing with the grandkids.
“That process allows [clients] to be a better version of themselves,” says Josh Mekota, owner and director of training at Results Fitness in Mayfield Heights. “The gym is just where the process happens.”
While Results Fitness’ small group personal training sessions and highintensity interval training classes tout the benefits of connection by working out outside of the home, Mekota offers ways people can stay active between workouts and break up sedentary workdays.
1 WALK. Stand up and walk between 5,000 and 10,000 steps a day. Setting a timer and moving for five minutes will increase mental clarity and loosen up muscles.
2 STRETCH. Cross one foot over the opposite thigh or sit in a figureeight position to open hip muscles.
3 STRENGTHEN. Do pushups with your hands on the desk or a traditional pushup on the floor.
6005 Landerhaven Drive, Suite C, Mayfield Heights, 440-684-0460, resultsfitnessforlife.com
Music Instruction: The Fine Arts Association
A community hub for all things arts, the Fine Arts Association is a playground for creativity, exploration and discovery in dance, painting, sculpture and music. Dr. Tim Minnis, a piano instructor for more than 50 years — 33 of those at the Fine Arts Association — says it’s never too early to foster a lifelong love of music. “Children are magnificent creatures. If they see you perceiving them as talented, intelligent, thoughtful, good people, they’ll work to live up to that perception, and it brings out the best that they have.”
The piano is a great place to start as it provides the foundational elements of harmony and structure. From there it’s all about teaching to the child’s skill level by ear, reading or hand:
1 First let the child pick a song such as “Mary Had a Little Lamb” or “Happy Birthday” that they can learn by hearing and watching. “It’s a very exciting moment when they realize that they can do it and that they have this big instrument,” Minnis says.
2 Children can learn to play by reading music and then “the whole world of music opens up and you can play any piece by any composer and any style.”
3 Children can learn by matching the sound they hear by putting their fingers on the keys and finding the right places to go based on the sound. “They can reproduce the sound they get by experimenting on the keys,” Minnis says.
38660 Mentor Ave., Willoughby, 440-951-7500, fineartsassociation.org
Organic Food: Sage Karma Kitchen
Good vibes abound at this sustainable mecca for people with dietary restrictions. Diners are greeted by scents of Palo Santo and sage incense at this two-yearold scratch kitchen, which showcases a mural of the 12 laws of karma and a “what goes around comes around” tagline.
“People have this misconception that we’re a vegan restaurant. We cater to people who are vegan and gluten free, but we are offering a healthier option for everyone — that’s our main goal,” says owner Teanna Vitantonio, adding that it has dishes with organic chicken and grass-fed beef. “We’re all about good energy, good people, good food, good drinks.”
Our pick: The cauliflower appetizer
Organic cauliflower is quick blanched and hard seared then served with house-made date jam and finished with harissa seasoning. The jam combines fresh dates, local maple syrup and spices. The dish is finished with toasted pistachios.
4051 Erie St., Willoughby, 440-946-2300, sagekarmakitchens.com
Best of the EAST
Interior Designer: Jill Calo, Payne & Tompkins Design Renovations
By the seamless way Jill Calo blends modern and traditional elements in her designs, one might think the lead designer at Payne & Tompkins Design Renovations in Chardon had been in the business forever. But Calo originally worked as an accountant before going back to school to pursue interior design.
“I wanted to do design when I was 18, but I ended up going into finance,” Calo says. “I would advise others to follow their gut and their passion.”
Calo describes her personal style as updated traditional, but her expertise doesn’t stop here.
“I design anything from modern to rustic based on a client’s needs,” Calo says. “You really get to build a personal relationship with your clients in the process.”
Calo started working with Payne & Tompkins when it was Payne & Payne in 2017 and hasn’t looked back since.
“I love going to work every day — I truly believe I will retire from here,” Calo says. “The best part about the design work that we do is that it doesn’t feel like work.”
TOP THREE TRENDS
Brewery: Crooked Pecker Brewing Co.
This popular and growing brewery is the brainchild of the Stewart nuclear family of four who each are equal stakes — dad Scott, mom Karen, daughter Heather and son Erik, who is the brewer concocting the “balanced beer.” With a busy tap room, new beer garden and relaxed outdoor area and fire pit, it’s an inviting spot to imbibe year-round.
Here are three great beers and pairings to try:
ARCHES. Incorporate archways and arched cabinets into the home.
The company offers everything from whole-home renovations to kitchens and bathroom renovations to basement upgrades and master suite and porch additions.
“We’re design-build, so design is incorporated in the whole building process,” Calo says.
WOOD TONES. Muted earth tones are coming back.
1 Accidental Anderson, the brewery’s most popular IPA. It’s a 7.7% New England-style hazy IPA. “It’s good with just about anything from burgers and barbecue to fish,” Erik says.
10690 Mayfield Road, Chardon, 440-226-5040, payne-tompkins.com
2 Liquid White, a 5% milk stout. This sweet stout is brewed from local roasted coffee from Heartwood Roasters. “It’s an awesome beer with a steak,” Stewart says. “People think I’m crazy, but I’ll be at the brewery dunking chocolate chip cookies in it … it’s amazing. People try it and they’re like, ‘you’re not nuts, you’re a genius!’”
3 Probably Pils, a 4.5% German pilsner. “It’s a crisp, clear refreshing pilsner that is another great burger beer.”
8284 E. Washington St., Chagrin Falls, 440-384-3452, crookedpeckerbrewing.com
1 2 3 COURTESY CROOKED PECKER BREWERY
Chinese: Hunan by the Falls
“Seasonally, we try to keep the menu interesting by incorporating a variety of food flavors from different cultures in addition to Chinese,” says David Cameron, partner in Hunan by the Falls with Kenny Chau and Aileen Chan.
The Balado Shrimp dish was created about 20 years ago when Cameron summoned the flavors he tasted at Bali’s, an Indonesian restaurant in the seaport town of Scheveningen, Netherlands. “The spices were bursting with flavor, the aromatic notes loud and yet the sweetness of the tomato sauce reined in what would otherwise have been an overwhelming, intense heat from red chilis,” he explains.
So this favorite summer special was born. And it culminates flavors that are sweet, hot, sour and salty. “It’s not overly challenging for the many customers of ours who love big flavors but are not seeking daringly ’hot’ bragging rights,” Cameron says.
Here’s why you will enjoy the Balado Shrimp dish:
• Savor the tomato-based Balado sauce with garlic, tamarind, chilis, shallots and fish sauce
• Order with shrimp, chicken, beef, pork, tofu or mixed vegetables
• Toss this on wheat pasta
“The tangy-spicy sauce is absorbed by the pasta, which continues the great taste with a textural experience,” Cameron relates.
With customers as the ultimate judges of success, the dish’s popular-by-demand status sustained it beyond the summer special season. It’s now part of the permanent menu and a crowd favorite.
Birthday Party Location: Master Crafter Paint n’ Splatter
Picture this: You and a dozen of your closest friends — clad in full body suits, goggles and hair caps and armed with paint brushes, five neon paint colors and glitter bombs — are set up in a UV light room and told to let loose.
What do you do? You splatter — each other, the floor, the boards you decorated beforehand with masking tape, stickers and decals.
That’s the idea behind Master Crafter Paint n’ Splatter in Twinsburg.
“It just goes everywhere, and yet it’s like fingerpaint, with super easy cleanup,” says Michelle Hehr, creator of the studio. “Some people act like they’re casting spells or fishing. It’s just great to laugh and have joy in your spirit and soul.”
A counselor and therapist with a creative flair to boot, Hehr first opened the studio, which centered on good coffee, community and DIY crafts, in early 2020.
However, with the pandemic, Hehr was forced to improvise: She sold nearly all of her craft samples and created bundles of DIY crafts that customers could pick up and make at home.
While her studio did include a splatter room at that time, the idea really made a splash after a mother and her children came into the studio asking if there were any other activities they could do.
“She said to me, ‘I don’t want to go back home; we’re just now allowed out of the house,’” Hehr recalls. “I told her, ‘You could splatter. You’re the only ones here.’”
After that visit, Hehr says she booked 53 splatter appointments within a month — all because that customer posted about the fun opportunity on social media.
“There are so many things that bring people down, and that can be defeating,” Hehr says. “To play and be silly and get creative — it’s a great connection activity. You don’t have to be an artist to throw paint. Most of us are told to not color outside the lines, but this is one of those activities where you can express yourself.”
In addition to splatter parties, the studio provides 30-plus activity options including:
1 BROKEN GLASS AND RESIN. Choose from a variety of broken glass pieces and create a floral design that catches everyone’s eye.
2 SEASONAL DOOR MATS. Select from a variety of designs to give your front door a boost.
3 RESIN CHARCUTERIE BOARDS. Create a charcuterie board using a pour painting technique to dazzle guests at your next event.
Charitable Event: Rescue Village’s Woofstock
This year marks the 30th anniversary of Woofstock, Northeast Ohio’s biggest outdoor dog party and fundraiser to benefit the homeless animals under the care of Rescue Village, which is also the Geauga County Humane Society. The festival attracts as many as 2,500 dogs with nearly 5,000 humans tagging along for food trucks, live music, dog games and activities. There’s even a dog parade, known as the Ramble. But the most important activity is dog watching. “It’s the No. 1 favorite event for everybody because it’s just a lot of dogs all in one spot,” says Kenneth Clarke, Rescue Village’s executive director. “There’s small ones, big ones, crazy ones, calm ones.” Once again, there will be a beer garden, but new for this year, it is being sponsored by a local brewer, Four Paws Brewery from Medina, which is brewing a Woofstock Ale for the event.
10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun., Sept. 10, 2023, Cleveland Metroparks Polo Field, rescuevillage.org/woofstock.fun
Best of the EAST
Wedding Venue: Sapphire Creek Winery and Gardens
Nestled in a woody corner of Chagrin Falls, a dreamy indooroutdoor venue that seamlessly melds rustic charm with sophisticated elegance awaits. Guests dine on inventive dishes created with locally sourced ingredients in a breezy space under lofted ceilings. They gaze out on a wall of windows that opens up onto a serene terrace, set aglow by flickering fire pits that flank a tranquil 28-foot reflecting pool and later mingle on plush grounds ensconced by a wall of oak and beech trees. After years of catering to happy couples, owner Kathleen Dangelo stresses the importance of prioritizing the basics when planning a wedding. “A lot of couples get lost in the little stressors of the day,” she says. “Focus on the big things — the venue, the food, the music. Those are what make an event memorable. Nobody forgets a beautiful backdrop.”
16965 Park Circle Dr., Chagrin Falls, 440-543-7777, sapphire-creek.com
HANDMADE MARKET
VENDOR // CHAGRIN
VALLEY SOAP & SALVE
Using high-quality, natural ingredients, Chagrin Valley Soap & Salve creates products to “cleanse, soothe, heal and protect.” For a sweet shower that awakens the senses, try the Citrus & Sugar Cleansing Scrub ($22.50). Multiple locations, chagrinvalleysoapandsalve.com
PET BOUTIQUE // BARKTOWN WILLOUGHBY
Pamper your pooch at Barktown Willoughby. For extra-fancy four-legged friends, try the pet-safe hair dye and nail paint. When it’s all said and done, treat your good boy or girl to a special toy or treat from the boutique. 4074 Erie St. Unit 2, Willoughby, 440-510-8646, barktownwilloughby.com
WINE STORE // RED, WINE & BREW
Shop, wine, dine and gather. Red Wine & Brew offers a wide selection of wines, beers, spirits and more. Visit the lounge to enjoy live music, and don’t miss the cigar patio, equipped with TVs, plenty of comfy seating and a cozy fireplace for the colder months. Multiple locations, redwineandbrew.us
MEN’S FASHION // TICKNORS MEN’S CLOTHIER
Offering high-quality suits, tuxedos, pants, accessories and more, Ticknors stores are stocked with garments hand-picked by the creative director and expert style advisors. In addition, an inhouse tailor is available to ensure a perfect fit. Multiple locations, ticknors.com
The J has everything you need for fitness and wellness with all your favorite workouts under one roof. Plus, a new RecoveryZone that’s ideal after workouts, for stress relief or injury recovery.
If you haven’t checked out The J lately, you’re in for a surprise.
Stop in and mention “Cleveland Magazine” and get a 7-day guest pass.
Dry Cleaner: Summers Cleaners
With 12 locations throughout Northeast Ohio and upward of 1,000 drop-off lockers in about 50 downtown buildings, D.O. Summers is a laundry staple — founded in 1881 and on its fourth generation with brothers Dustin and Drew Goldberg at the helm.
“I’ve been told my whole life it gets more difficult to keep a family business as time goes on, but we have clearly defined roles and a great working relationship. We work really hard to find the best personnel,” Dustin Goldberg says.
D.O. Summers operates six laundering plants, so there’s bandwidth to back sameand next-day service promises.
Goldberg says the traditional pieces — think blue collared shirt and suit jackets — are down in volume, while specialty garments are up. “We’re more casual, but when the time comes to dress up, patrons are going all out with luxury pieces.”
Multiple locations, dosummers.com
A COUPLE TIPS FROM THE EXPERT:
Silk, linen and wool swell when exposed to water. “When you dry them, they shrink back into place, and not necessarily the same as when you bought it,” Goldberg says. “Dry cleaning is a process that does not use water and, therefore, creates no shrinking.”
Hangar shape and size matter. “We always advise keeping garments on hangars that will help keep the correct form,” he says.
Best of the EAST
Quick Bite: Jim Alesci’s Place
Our advice? Go with a big appetite. Menu item recipes date back from four generations of the Alesci family. There are many quick grab-and-go items like the Muffaletta, the restaurant’s signature sandwich with capicola, ham, provolone, Genoa salami, tomato and housemade olive tapenade on crusty, housemade bread (Be forewarned: It almost always runs out of stock.); varieties of sheet pizza, pepperoni bread and salads. There are also hot, made-from-scratch specials like ravioli, cavatelli, lasagna, pasta with clam sauce, meatballs, sausage and wedding soup. Oh, and there are daily specials, too. Have room for dessert? Grab a cannoli, Amaretto cake, cheesecake or gelato.
32910 Solon Road, Solon, 440-498-0888, alescis.com
One thing has not changed for over 140 years; D.O. Summers Cleaners keeps Clevelanders looking good! Over the decades we have always lived by the Cleveland tradition of quality—keeping up with state-of-the-art improvements while always holding on to a personal commitment to excellence and quality service to our neighbors and neighborhoods. We celebrate that legacy and remain committed to building upon its foundation.
CALL 216.402.5141 OR VISIT DOSUMMERS.COM
TO LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR SERVICES & LOCATIONS.
Best of the East Winner - 10 Years in a Row!
“BEST DRY CLEANER”COURTESY SUMMERS CLEANERS / COURTESY JIM ALESCI’S PLACE
Best of the EAST
Winners List
FOOD
Best Restaurant Hook & Hoof New American Kitchen and Cocktail Willoughby
Best Patio The Fairmount Cleveland Heights
Best View 17 River Grille Chagrin Falls
Best Lunch Spot Burntwood Tavern
Multiple Locations
Best Late Night Food Barrio Tacos Cleveland Heights
Best Brunch Sol Willoughby
Best Organic Food Sage Karma Kitchen Willoughby
Best Vegetarian Aladdin’s Eatery Multiple Locations
Best Seafood Pickle Bill’s Lobster House Grand River
Best Sushi Pacific East Japanese Restaurant Cleveland Heights, Woodmere
Best Steak RED the Steakhouse Orange Village
Best Independent Coffee Shop Versare Café + Market Chesterland
Best Quick Bite
Jim Alesci’s Place Solon
Best Ice Cream Mitchell’s Homemade Ice Cream Multiple Locations
Best Bakery Luna Bakery Cafe Cleveland Heights, Moreland Hills
Best Smoothie Pulp Juice and Smoothie Bar
Multiple Locations
Best Pizza Guido’s Pizza Haven & Restaurant Chesterland
Best Burger Pub Frato Chagrin Falls, Painesville
Best Wings Winking Lizard Tavern Multiple Locations
Best Mexican Don Tequila Bar & Grill Eastlake, Mentor
Best Italian M Italian Chagrin Falls
Best Chinese Hunan by the Falls Chagrin Falls
Best Farmers Market Miles Farmers Market Solon
Best Deli Jim Alesci’s Place Solon
Best Family Dining
Yours Truly Multiple Locations SERVICES
Best Wedding Venue Sapphire Creek
Winery & Gardens
Chagrin Falls
Best Day Spa Spa Walden Aurora
Best Mani Pedi
Avanti Salon Chesterland
Best Salon Avanti Salon Chesterland
Best Dry Cleaner D.O. Summers Cleaners
Multiple Locations
Best Senior Living Ohio Living Breckenridge Village Willoughby
Best Car Wash
Zappy’s Auto Washes
Multiple Locations
Best Fitness Center Mandel Jewish Community Center of Cleveland Beachwood
Best Yoga Studio Harmony Yoga Willoughby
ENTERTAINMENT
Best Happy Hour Burntwood Tavern
Multiple Locations
Best Golf Course
Manakiki Golf Course Willoughby
Best Live Music Venue Beachland Ballroom Cleveland
Best Brewery Crooked Pecker Brewing Co. Chagrin Falls
Best Charitable Event
Rescue Village’s Woofstock
Russell Township
SHOPPING
Best Jeweler
Steven DiFranco
Jewelers
Willoughby
Best Pet Boutique
Barktown Willoughby
Willoughby
Best Wine Store
Red, Wine & Brew
Chesterland, Mentor
Best Beer Selection
Red, Wine & Brew
Chesterland, Mentor
Best Florist
Mayfield Floral
Mayfield Heights
Best Garden Center
Gale’s Garden Center
Maple Heights, Willoughby Hills
Best Bike Shop
Eddy’s Bike Shop
Willoughby Hills
Best Boutique Village Trends
Boutique
Chesterland
Best Handmade Market Vendor
Chagrin Valley Soap & Salve Solon
Best Men’s Fashion Ticknors Men’s Clothier Beachwood
Best Home Décor Etc. on Erie Willoughby
Best Health Foods (Retail)
SweetBerry Fresh Market
Wickliffe
Best CLE T-Shirt Shop
CLE Clothing Co.
Shaker Heights
Best Consignment Shop
UpScaleIT Solon
Best Antique Shop
Magnolia Blossoms
Eastlake
CHILDREN
Best Dance/Theatre Instruction
Fine Arts Association Willoughby
Best Gymnastics Lake Erie Gymnastics School Mentor
Best Music Instruction Fine Arts Association Willoughby
Best Birthday Party Location Master Crafter Paint n’ Splatter
Twinsburg
PEOPLE
Best Chiropractor Code Chiro
Mayfield Heights
Best Chef Hunter Toth (Hook & Hoof) Willoughby
Best Bartender Stephanie Weber (Pub Frato) Chagrin Falls, Painesville
Best Stylist Shelby Nicoletti Bachnicki (Luce Del Sole Studios) Mentor
Best Interior Designer Jill Calo (Payne & Tompkins Design-Renovations) Chardon
Best Fitness Instructor Josh Mekota (Results Fitness)
Mayfield Heights
Best Photographer Pulsart Media Photography
Willoughby
AVANTI SALON
8027 Mayfield Road Chesterland, Ohio 44026 440-729-9008 avantisalon.com
Avanti Salon is an award-winning Aveda Concept Salon and home to some of Northeast Ohio’s premier beauty professionals specializing in hair, skin and nails
D.O. SUMMERS
216-291-1177 dosummers.com
Cleveland’s oldest and finest dry cleaners, proudly servicing Northeast Ohio for over 140 years with multiple locations and free pick-up and delivery.
HOOK AND HOOF NEW AMERICAN KITCHEN AND COCKTAIL
4125 Erie St. Willoughby, Ohio 44094 440-571-5312 hookandhoofdtw.com
Hook & Hoof is an award-winning New American Kitchen and WhiskeyCentric Cocktail Bar located in the heart of historic Downtown Willoughby.
MANDEL JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER
26001 South Woodland Road Beachwood, OH 44122 216-831-0700 mandeljcc.org
The J offers programs and classes for everyone – from early childhood to seniors. Voted Best Fitness Center and finalist in Best Yoga/ Pilates, Fitness Instructor, and Youth Dance/Theatre.
SAPPHIRE CREEK WINERY & GARDENS
440-543-7777 sapphirecreek.com
Your wedding will be a memorable occasion at Sapphire Creek Winery & Gardens with our modern, exquisite winery and extensive gardens that serve as the perfect setting. The photo opportunities at Sapphire Creek are endless. Additionally, you and your guests will be in awe of the amazing culinary creations and white-glove service. Our entire staff is geared toward exceeding your wedding expectations.
UpScaleIT DESIGNER CONSIGNMENT
33533 Aurora Road Solon, Ohio 44139 440-287-0104
shopupscaleit.com
UpScaleIT is Solon’s Exclusive Designer Consignment. We have amazing, curated Ladies Clothing, Bags, Shoes & More! We BUY LUXURY & carry everything from Chanel, to brands you wear every day. Find your Fabulous for Less and join our GREEN consignors who are turning their closets into cash. We can’t wait to SHOP with you!
VILLAGE TRENDS
8177 Mayfield Road, Chesterland, Ohio 44026 440-688-4104 New Location 5864 Mayfield Road Mayfield Heights, Ohio 44124 440-421-9508 villagetrendsboutique.com
Village Trends Boutique brings you fun, trendy, and affordable apparel, accessories, gifts and handmade items. We are a small woman-owned business that rallies around our community and strives to create a welcoming atmosphere that makes our customers feel like family.
ZAPPY’S AUTO WASHES
8806 Mentor Ave., Unit D Mentor, Ohio 44060 844-927-9274
Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm, Sat 9 am-3 pm, Sun Closed zappysautowashes.com
Zappy’s Auto Washes offers it all with more to come including thirteen car washes, four detail centers, mobile detailing, retail store, gas store and an auto care center.
WEST Best of the
Burger: GUNSELMAN’S TAVERN
When it comes to creating an award-winning burger it takes more than placing a ground chuck patty on a commercially produced bun. To David Grace, Joe McDonough, Scott Eppler and John Caine, proprietors of Gunselman’s Tavern, it means doing research to find just the right combination of meats. As staunch supporters of local purveyors, they looked to Cleveland-based businesses for the best available ingredients. Their search, seven years ago, resulted in their approaching Foster’s Meats in the West Side Market.
21490 Lorain Road, Fairview Park, 440-331-5719, gunselmans.com
We asked you to nominate your West Side favorites in dozens of categories. Then we compiled the top three vote-getters in each one and asked you to once again cast your ballot at the Best of the West party at Market Square at Crocker Park on May 11. Read on to learn about the winners.
Stories by:
The meat: “Foster’s grounds a secret blend of short rib and beef brisket for us,” says Grace. “It took some tasting and testing, but we arrived at a blend that has the flavor combination we wanted and is always guaranteed fresh.”
The seasoning: Enhancing the flavor led to the creation of gunny seasoning. “We listened to our guests and gunny seasoning was the result. We think the result is the creation of burgers with a smile,” says Grace.
The bun: While most of Gunselman’s burgers are served on a brioche bun, the restaurant relies on its Fairview Park neighbor, Sauced Wood Fired Pizza, for the freshest, best product for Gunselman’s Burger of the Month.
The toppings:
The Plain Jane is pretty much what you’d expect (although it’s available with chicken or as the “impossible” burger aka the vegetarian variety.) Condiments adhere to Gunselman’s vow to support local. Cleveland Ketchup and Cleveland Mustard are its go-tos. Its version of A-1 steak sauce and spicy gunny bbq sauce are both made in-house by Kitchen Managers Jacob Meese and Todd Barry.
Amp it up: For a spicier option, try the Gunny BBQ Bacon with spicy gunny bbq sauce, hickorysmoked bacon, cheddar and onion straws. The Black & Bleu features a Cajun dry rub, spicy blue cheese butter and gunny housemade steak sauce. Other varieties include sunny side eggs, waygu and bison beef, avocado, house Buffalo sauce or a host of Italian deli meats.
Wedding Venue: The Elliot
At The Elliot, a seemingly typical Tremont neoByzantine church, houses a flexible event space that’s bright and airy, converted to accommodate everything from micro weddings to 200 people events. Historical details, like the border of an intricate rose-themed stained-glass window and the stained glass in the bell towers, were left intact, while the basement hides a sleek speakeasy where guests can convene for cocktails and hors d’oeuvres. The Elliot offers creative Cleveland couples the perfect space to craft a wedding that reflects their personalities.
“We want to change the wedding game and give couples a brand-new experience,” says owner Stephanie Ridgely. “We’re starting to see people move away from the very traditional type of wedding — now it’s more important to make sure your guests are having a good time.”
Her tips? “Add personal touches everywhere so you walk away remembering the day is about you.”
1415 Kenilworth Ave., Tremont, 216-200-8506, theelliotcle.com
Lunch Spot: Niko’s Bar & Gyros
Early each morning, you’ll find Niko’s Bar & Gyros owner Nick Moulagianis making hummus in his restaurant kitchen. His 76-year-old dad is there, too, making the “secret sauce,” aka tzatziki (a combination of yogurt, garlic cucumbers and herbs).
There are six kinds of hummus on the menu ranging from garlic to cilantro jalapeno, roasted red pepper, Buffalo and spicy feta.
His famous gyros include the more traditional lamb and beef variety, but he’ll be the first to tell you that, “we put everything on a pita.” And does he ever. Chicken, pork, BLT, grouper, corned beef, cheeseburger, reuben and vegetarian are but a few of the many options. There are 25 craft beers on tap here, too, but only one Fat Niko.
Created by Fat Head Brewery, this signature beer has become so popular that it’s now available in cans at his restaurants as well as other Northeast Ohio locations.
12766 Royalton Road, North Royalton, 440-237-6456, nikosbarandgyros.com
Florist: Precious Petals
When Olympic Gold Medalist Pole Vaulter Katie Nageotte-Moon challenged Precious Petals owner Melinda Borczuch to design an asymmetrical wedding backdrop that would surround them both with flowers that would leave her guests in awe, she delivered a display that cleared Nageotte-Moon’s very high bar.
The gorgeous design was created in florals, cages, attached with zip ties and shaped with an amazing array of greens, red and white roses, stock and hydrangeas.
“Once the ceremony was completed, all the florals were transported over to the reception area, which flanked the sides of the head table and along the front of the head table,” she says. “Guests were seated at tables with tall and short centerpieces matching the floral structures. ”
Borczuch, who creates floral masterpieces for about 50 weddings a year along with help from her husband Joe, uses a variety of elements and textures to create her unique bouquets and designs that always have a signature flower, greenery or element that was grown in her own garden.
“I’m blessed and lucky to be able to design and create florals for our couples within their budget and exceed expectations not only for the bride and groom, but their guests, too,” she says. “Without the hard work of my husband, children and my talented designers, we would not be here today.”
26672 Osborne Road, Columbia Station, 440-241-0083, preciouspetalsweddings.com
Mani-Pedi: Stella & Shay Beauty Bar
“Chrome is one of the biggest nail trends we’ve seen since last year, and it’s back with more natural and softer looks,” says Becca Gordon, owner of Stella & Shay Beauty Bar in Lakewood and Westlake.
Think Hailey Bieber glazed donut nails — pearly pastel with a copper chrome dust finish.
Combine blue with blue chrome, pastels with gold chrome — “the possibilities are endless,” Gordon says. If you prefer to go French, check out colored tips rather than classic white or a pointed shape rather than curved.
18225 Detroit Ave., Lakewood, 216-777-0345; 25951 Detroit Road, Westlake, 440-570-0664; stellaandshay.com
Best Bartender: Jeff Gresko, Bistro 83
When Bistro 83’s Jeff Gresko isn’t cheersing the weekend every Friday at 6 p.m. (you can follow him on Facebook as he goes live each week), he’s mixing up some seasonal cocktails. His new favorite summertime splash is the refreshing (and hydrating)
Watermelon Mojito. First you need fresh mint and fresh lime, then rum (he prefers silver) and finally juiced/blended watermelon. Muddle the mint and lime in the glass, put in some ice with rum, a quick pour of simple syrup and your fresh pressed watermelon and there you go. “It’s pretty damn tasty,” he says. “It’s clean, crisp, and when it’s hot outside, you’re going to want something to sip and cool off, right?”
36033 Westminister Ave., North Ridgeville, 440-353-2828, bistro83.com
THINGS right now we love
HANDMADE MARKET VENDOR // OCÉANNE STUDIO AND BOUTIQUE
Founder Anne Harrill, who grew up in France, brought her studio to Cleveland, where she creates buzzed-about vintage-inspired jewelry. Pick one out to help celebrarte a special occasion.
6519 Detroit Ave., Cleveland, 216-862-7043, oceanne.net
Find
HOME DÉCOR // WILD IRIS HOME
Your home is your sanctuary so you probably want to outfit it with justright finds that fit your personality. You can find wall tapestries that make a statement, plant-inspired decor that brings the outdoors inside, accessories to make your next get together pop with flavor and more.
36840 Detroit Road, Avon, 440-937-8110, wildirishome.com
BOUTIQUE // KNUTH’S
Sometimes you just want to get yourself something extra — and you will find that here. The only dilemma will be deciding whether you want an outfit your friends won’t have, a fabulous and fun accessory to spice up your home or a pair of shoes made for strutting around.
26141 Detroit Road, Westlake, 440-871-7800, shop-knuths.com
With over 20 years of experience in the health and fitness industry, we excitedly announce the launch of FWRD FITNESS, a private personal training studio located conveniently in Westlake, Ohio. Whether you’re looking for a customized fitness program to support weight loss and increase physical strength, need resistance training guidance, or feel that you would benefit from accountability, a personal trainer is the best resource when it comes to achieving long-term health and fitness goals.
www.forwardfitnesscle.com
Kevin Johnson (Owner/Lead Trainer) Cleveland Magazine’s BOTW Fitness Instructor/2022 Leigh Johnson (Owner/Trainer/Nutrition Coach)Leigh Roth Photography is an award-winning boutique photography studio located in Westlake, Ohio. We pride ourselves on our lifestyle approach to studio photography, and our ability to create experiences that authentically capture life’s most precious moments. Thank you for voting Leigh Roth-Johnson as Cleveland’s Best Westside Photographer since 2018! www.leighroth.com
Best of the WEST
Stylist: Christine Dopoulos, Foxy Salon
“I look at hair as an art,” says Christine Dopoulos, owner of Foxy Salon in Lakewood, a nine-chair, consultation-only studio (meaning: no walk-ins) in Lakewood that’s bringing a bespoke hair experience to the West Side. Dopoulos works closely with her clients to craft a personalized look that works best for their hair, and she has built a reputation for meticulousness and precision through top-quality looks that won’t damage their locks. “I care about giving my clients not only what they want, but keeping the integrity of their hair as pristine as I can,” she says.
Dopoulos shares some tips on what’s hot in the world of hair this summer.
1 The wolf cut. “It’s like a ‘modernized shag,’ with heavier curtain bangs and lots of layers. It’s super popular and fun,” she says. “You can do so much with it: it’s nice to have some hair in the front that frames the face when you put your hair up, plus a ton of volume in the back.”
2 Warm it up. “People are going more into the warm tones for highlights right now, which give you some lift and bulk. It’s a great beachy look, and your growout is seamless. You’ll only have to come in every three months or so to maintain it.”
Deli: Joe’s Deli
It’s all about the people at Joe’s Deli, which celebrates a legacy of treating customers like houseguests and staff like family. “It’s more of a ministry than a business,” relates Jeanette Kanaan, who opened Joe’s Deli in Rocky River with her husband Joe in 1994. “I have customers who come in for breakfast, lunch and dinner — they love the food, and they come for the company. They become great friends.”
Kanaan adds, “You’re only as good as your employees. Without them, we can’t do much. They are what make the restaurant what it is.”
Those are a couple reasons for Joe’s Deli’s staying power, along with the quality ingredients, scratch-made menu and kitchen where there’s “no cutting corners,” Kanaan says. “If I’m not proud of it, I’m not going to sell it.”
The Joe’s Deli story started long before the couple built its new restaurant
on Hilliard Boulevard, a move to expand from its previous location up the road. Jeanette’s brother emigrated from Lebanon in 1956 at age 21 and eventually moved to Cleveland with a cousin. They opened a grocery and deli across from what is now Cleveland State University.
The business grew and he helped the rest of the family move to Cleveland in 1965. When he took over Larry’s Ham and Eggs on St. Clair Avenue, all of the siblings worked at the restaurant — including Kanaan. The restaurant’s name changed to Slyman’s, which Kanaan credits for the integrity of one of Joe’s Deli’s menu favorites: corned beef.
The Kanaans went on to open Joe’s Deli, and the business has evolved into a West Side community institution. The secret recipe? “We have the best people, we take good care of them and we have always concentrated on serving the best food.”
19215 Hilliard Blvd., Rocky River, 440-333-7890, myjoesdeli.com
3 The need for beads. Almost a third of Christine’s clients come to her for invisible bead extensions, a technique that seamlessly weaves small beads into the hair to create long, lush locks that are a breeze to maintain. “The attachment site is undetectable, there are no beads or bonds that show,” she says. “Once in, the hair does not shed. You can put it up in a high bun, you can wear a hat, and with regular maintenance the extensions can last eight to 10 months.”
1 2 3
Corned Beef Reuben Classic
Corned beef, piled high with Swiss cheese and sauerkraut on grilled rye bread.
Cranberry Chicken Salad
Grilled Amish chicken sits on a bed of romaine tossed with balsamic vinaigrette and topped with sundried cranberries, crumbled bleu cheese, pears and strawberries.
Lebanese Delight
A sampler platter with hummus, tabbouleh, two spinach pies and two grape leaves.
Brewery Avon Brewing Company
With brewer Mathias Hauck, Chef Brian Weaver and patriarch/go-to-guy Ken Weaver leading the charge here, Avon Brewing Company has accumulated its share of awards. “We tell people to come for the beer and stay for the food,” Hauck says.
ORDER IT:
Try Medicinal Wheat, an American wheat ale with a little citrus (a “patio pounder”) and pair it with a mixed berry salad topped with candid pecans, goat cheese and house vinaigrette. The Orhana, first brewed 15 years ago after the family visited Hawaii, is a pale ale of citra and mosaic hops, conditioned with Hawaiian pineapple puree and tropical notes. It pairs well with wings tossed in pineapple, Caribbean sweet and savory spice sauce. (Available in vegan made with fried Brussels sprouts.)
Or, opt for its first beer, the King Kokonut, an award-winning, malt-forward, imperial porter with flavors of toasted coconut. Go all out and pair it with a 10-ounce strip steak, grilled with roasted red sweet potatoes and Brussels sprouts, topped with bacon/truffle butter and drizzled with a balsamic glaze.
37040 Detroit Road, Avon, 440-937-1816, avonbrewingcompany.com
Best of the WEST
THREE TO TRY
Gymnastics Center: Little Stars Gymnastics
Taking turns, following directions, building confidence — these may not be the first skills that come to mind when thinking of gymnastics, but they’re part of the deal at Little Stars Gymnastics, a recreational gymnastics studio in Middleburg Heights.
“Gymnastics teaches kids to believe in themselves,” says Sophia Porter, owner. “If a student can’t do a cartwheel today, we show them the technique, and, like a lot of things in life, it’s about repetition. Once they get that cartwheel, the smiles are well worth it.”
Students will also sharpen abilities traditionally associated with gymnastics such as coordination, strength, flexibility, concentration and balance.
A lifelong gymnast and retired firefighter, Porter opened the gymnastics studio in 2003, in part because of how much the sport helped her as a child.
“Growing up, I had low self-esteem, and gymnastics got me out of that bubble to have confidence in myself,” Porter says. “It’s important to have children start gymnastics at a young age.”
Classes are 45 minutes long, take place once a week and include children 18 months to 10 years old. Sessions range from four weeks in the summertime to seven weeks during the school year. Co-ed and broken up by age groups, classes are small, with two safety-certified instructors per class.
The studio also offers open gym and holiday events and birthday parties.
6876 Pearl Road, Middleburg Heights, 216-410-7637, littlestarsgymnastics.com
Seafood: Salmon Dave’s
There’s something here for every pescetarian who appreciates a grandly presented display of premium-grade picks from the ocean. The Chilled Seafood Tower is essentially a raw bar delivered to your table. “It’s great for sharing, and it’s a little bit of everything for your guests,” says General Manager Carolyn Miller.
Taking apart the tower, you land on six Blue Point oysters, a half-dozen Gulf shrimp, Ahi tuna poke and blue crab cocktail with avocado and Dijon mustard aioli served with saltines for spreading.
“Our Blue Point oysters are the star of the Chesapeake Bay, and the Ahi tuna is top-level sashimi trade, served raw,” Miller describes.
With a generous side of mignonette and Bloody Mary cocktail sauce, the dish begs for dipping.
19015 Old Lake Road, Rocky River, 440-331-2739, salmondaves.com
Best Wings:Boss ChickNBeer
It comes across like the beginning of an old joke…”A guy walked into a restaurant…,” but Heather Doeberling, co-owner with Emily Moes of Boss ChickNBeer, will says she would not be serving their mainstay wings had it not been for a regular customer who told her he’d eat at her restaurant seven days a week if they were always on her menu.
Doeberling was up for the challenge — mediocre wings could not be part of the plan. “The wings have to be really well seasoned,” she says. “They shouldn’t need sauce. Sauce should be like the icing on the cake.”
Boss ChickNBeer began selling wings on a Wednesday. It sold 40 pounds. The following week it sold 80 pounds. By the third week, it sold 120 pounds.
Now she faced a problem: She was cooking on a tiny fryer. “I was selling out increasingly earlier. People were calling at 11 a.m. to order them for dinner. We knew we were onto something.”
While she won’t reveal her secret recipe, Doeberling acknowledges that the wings are brined in a special recipe for 12 hours, baked and seasoned and flash fried when ordered. “It takes 24 hours for us to get the wings ready for someone’s plate.”
Sauces are all made from scratch and include buffalo jalapeno with caramelized garlic, lemon dill ranch or gold (as in Nashville or Carolina gold, but Boss’ is Cleveland gold) with “a little heat, a little sweet and Cleveland Stadium Mustard.”
27321 Wolf Road, Bay Village, 440-455-9686; 120 Front St., Berea, 440-532-7660; 7305 Broadview Road, Seven Hills, 216-264-8165; bosschicknbeer.com
Jeweler: Kleinhenz Jewelers
Jewelry is personal. “When choosing that gift to commemorate a special occasion, it’s important to ensure the recipient has that connection and wants to wear the piece proudly,” says Ken Kleinhenz, owner, adding that for centuries, jewelry has served as a cherished token to honor all kinds of celebratory events in life.
“At Kleinhenz, we strive to remain on trend and not trendy,” he adds. After all, jewelry gifts should be timeless — even something to pass on to next generations. Not sure what to select from the enticing cases of baubles? Here are his suggestions.
Anniversary: Putting aside the Hallmark list of gifts for every year (5th is wood, 10th is tin, 20th is china), you can’t go wrong with diamonds — earrings, a tennis bracelet, necklace, ring. “Diamonds are always the answer,” he quips.
Birthday: Yellow gold reigns and a layered look is appealing. Think stackables. And gemstones with vibrant color stand out — the most popular are ruby, emerald and sapphire. Why not treat yourself? “We are seeing lots of self purchases — people choosing their own jewelry and celebrating themselves,” Kleinhenz says.
Retirement: Timepieces are a classic way to honor a retirement or graduation, Kleinhenz says.
Graduation: Timeless pearls make a memorable graduation gift — earring studs, necklaces.
25979 Detroit Road, Westlake, 440-892-1020, kleinhenzjewelers.com
Winners List Best of the WEST
FOOD
Best Restaurant Pier W
Lakewood
Best Patio Georgetown | Vosh
Lakewood
Best View Pier W
Lakewood
Best Lunch Spot
Niko’s Bar & Gyros North Royalton
Best Late Night Food Barrio Tacos
Multiple Locations
Best Brunch Pier W Lakewood
Best Organic Food TownHall
Cleveland
Best Vegetarian
Aladdin’s Eatery
Multiple Locations
Best Seafood
Salmon Dave’s Rocky River
Best Sushi Shinto
Strongsville
Best Steak Strip Steakhouse Avon
Best Coffee Shop
Black Key Coffee Avon
Best Quick Bite
Aladdin’s Eatery
Multiple Locations
Best Ice Cream Mitchell’s Homemade
Ice Cream
Multiple Locations
Best Bakery
Blackbird Baking Co.
Lakewood
Best Smoothie
Pulp Juice and Smoothie Bar
Multiple Locations
Best Pizza Angelo’s Pizza Lakewood
Best Burger Gunselman’s Tavern
Fairview Park
Best Wings Boss ChickNBeer Bay Village, Berea
Best Mexican El Carnicero
Lakewood
Best Italian
Luca West Westlake
Best Chinese King Wah
Rocky River
Best Farmers Market West Side Market
Cleveland
Best Deli
Joe’s Deli & Restaurant
Rocky River
Best Family Dining Avon Brewing Co. Avon
SERVICE
Best Wedding Venue
The Elliot Cleveland
Best Day Spa
Sacred Hour Wellness Spa
Lakewood
Best Mani Pedi
Stella & Shay
Beauty Bar
Lakewood, Westlake
Best Salon
Charles Scott Salons and Spas
Avon, Rocky River
Best Dry Cleaner
Tide Cleaners
Multiple Locations
Best Senior Living
O’Neill Healthcare
Multiple Locations
Best Car Wash
Sgt. Clean Car Wash
Multiple Locations
Best Yoga Studio
Inner Bliss Yoga
Studio
Rocky River, Westlake
Best Fitness Center
UH Avon
Fitness Center
Avon
ENTERTAINMENT
Best Happy Hour
Burntwood Tavern
Multiple Locations
Best Golf Course
Big Met Golf Course
Fairview Park
Best Live Music Venue
The Brothers Lounge
Cleveland
Best Brewery
Avon Brewing Co.
Avon
Best Charitable Event
Prayers From MariaSunflower Wine Festival
Rocky River
SHOPPING
Best Jeweler
Kleinhenz Jewelers
Westlake
Best Pet Boutique
Style Mutt
Cleveland
Best Florist
Precious Petals
Columbia Station
Best Garden Center
Petitti Garden Centers
Multiple Locations
Best Wine Store
Rozi’s Wine House
Lakewood
Best Beer Selection
Minotti’s Wine & Spirits
Multiple Locations
Best Bike Shop
Century Cycles
Rocky River
Best Boutique
Knuth’s
Westlake
Best Men’s Fashion
Geiger’s Lakewood
Best Home Décor
Wild Iris Home Avon
Best Health Foods (Retail)
Whole Foods Market
Rocky River
Best CLE T-Shirt Shop
GV Art + Design
Lakewood
Best Consignment Shop
Chelsea’s Consignments
Westlake
Best Antique Shop
All Things For You
Cleveland
Best Handmade Market Vendor
Océanne Studio and Boutique
Cleveland
CHILDREN
Best Dance/Theatre
Instruction
Beck Center for the Arts
Lakewood
Best Gymnastics
Little Stars
Gymnastics
Middleburg Heights
Best Music
Instruction
School of Rock
Strongsville, Westlake
Best Birthday Party Location
Bay Lanes
Bay Village
PEOPLE
Best Chiropractor
River Chiropractic & Wellness
Rocky River
Best Chef
Jill Vedaa (Salt+)
Lakewood
Best Bartender
Jeff Gresko (Bistro 83)
North Ridgeville
Best Stylist
Christine Dopoulos (Foxy Salon)
Lakewood
Best Interior Designer
Ida Gawthrop (IDA Designing Inc.)
Westlake
Best Fitness Instructor
Gina Shaffer (UH Avon Fitness Center)
Avon
Best Photographer
Leigh Roth
Photography
Westlake
AVON BREWING CO.
37040 Detroit Road
Avon, Ohio 44011 440-937-1816
avonbrewingcompany.com
Tue-Thu 3 pm-Midnight
Avon Brewing Co. is a family-owned brewery featuring 22 award-winning ABC Beers on tap, a chef-inspired menu, daily specials and a large patio overlooking French Creek.
BECK CENTER FOR THE ARTS
17801 Detroit Ave. Lakewood, Ohio 44107 216-521-2540 beckcenter.org
Beck Center for the Arts offers dance, music, theater, visual arts education for all ages, abilities, and skill levels. Experience professional theater and youth theater productions and free art exhibitions.
CHARLES SCOTT SALONS & SPAS
19025 Old Lake Road, Rocky River, Ohio 44116, 440-333-7994 34970 Detroit Road, Avon, Ohio 44011, 440-899-1957 charlesscott.com
Take time for you! Self care is not an indulgence, it’s a necessity. Whether its a brow wax, haircut or day of beauty, Charles Scott Salons & Spas helps people to reconnect with taking care of themselves. At Charles Scott, you are given that escape.
GUNSELMAN’S TAVERN
21490 Lorain Road, Fairview Park Ohio 44126 440-331-5719
gunselmans.com
Since 1936, Gunselman’s Tavern has been a great place to meet friends and grab a drink. Award winning burgers are beefy and local comfort food is our wheelhouse.
SALMON DAVE’S
19015 Old Lake Road Rocky River, Ohio 44116 440-331-2739
salmondaves.com
Hours: Sunday - Thursday, 3-9 pm; Friday-Saturday, 3-10 pm; Happy Hour Daily 3-6 pm
Salmon Dave’s eclectic fusion of classic coastal cuisine and comfortable Midwestern staples is a hit! Boasting one of the West Side’s busiest happy hours and best wine lists, you don’t want to miss out on this iconic restaurant nestled in the historic Old River neighborhood.
PIER W
12700 Lake Ave. Lakewood, Ohio 44107 216-228-2250 pierw.com
Pier W features a critically acclaimed menu emphasizing fresh seafood and an award-winning wine list. Also known for its extensive brunch, Pier W remains a city favorite for the best dining with a panoramic view of Cleveland.
STYLE MUTT
3525 Warren Road Cleveland, Ohio 44111 440-409-0451
Mon-Sat 7 am-5 pm
stylemutt.com
Celebrating its 16th year anniversary in September, Style Mutt is a dog and cat boutique, dog daycare and grooming center.
TIDE CLEANERS
Multiple locations throughout NE Ohio 440-792-4090 tidecleaners.com
Hours: Monday through Friday, 7 am-7 pm; Saturday 8 am-5 pm
Tide Cleaners is America’s #1 trusted brand in dry cleaning. We offer conveniences like next day service and home pickup and delivery.
DESIGN LOOK BOOK
Elevate your home’s style with inspiration from local design experts.
WINDOW NATION
Window Nation solves problems by designing solutions to home dilemmas. From windows and doors to siding and roofing, Window Nation implements a customer-oriented approach with attention to detail. Its team of exterior design consultants are trained for more than 100 hours before stepping foot in a customer’s home, ensuring each consultant’s success in providing owners with the best possible solutions to their home improvement needs. In addition to this expertise, Window Nation also offers locally made, customizable products in a variety of brands, styles and color options. During the past decade, Window Nation has installed nearly 2 million windows in over 150,000 homes and backs all of its products with comprehensive lifetime warranties.
DESIGN SECRET
Spend a little extra on FlexScreen, a high-performance window screen that won’t scratch, bend or break. This helps keep homes free from pests and dust, while still allowing adequate air flow.
TIMAN CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS
TIMAN CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS are family-owned window covering professionals who have been operating across Northeast Ohio for over 35 years. They have an expertly trained team to answer customers’ questions, from measurements and right product selection to financing and installation. They know that — when done right — they are adding light protection, privacy and the right design element to customers’ homes. This is so much more than a detail or a finishing touch to Timan; this is about the way their customers live.
DISCOVER MORE DESIGNS: Cleveland Design Center, 4533 Willow Parkway, Cleveland, 44125, 216-741-8285; Chagrin Falls Window Treatment Showroom, 22 N. Main St., Chagrin Falls, 44022, 440-247-8285; Rocky River Window Treatment Showroom, 19317 Detroit Road, Rocky River, 44116, 440-331-0185
FIBER-SEAL
FIBER-SEAL COMBINES SUPERIOR FABRIC PROTECTION
TREATMENTS with exceptional follow-up service. Partnering with homeowners, design professionals, facility managers and architects throughout Northern Ohio, Fiber-Seal helps keep fine fabrics, area rugs and carpet looking and performing their best. The Fiber-Seal Fabric Care System makes the pretty practical and the luxurious livable.
DISCOVER MORE DESIGNS: 23860 Miles Road, Suite E, Cleveland, 44128, 216-581-4144, fibersealnorthernohio.com
REMODEL ME TODAY
OFFERING THE HIGHEST QUALITY CABINETRY, counters, tile, hard and soft surface flooring. Not a box store or factory outlet. Schedule a visit with our team of designers and skilled tradesmen with combined experience of more than 100 years. A portion of every sale is contributed to a scholarship for the arts high school program in our community. Family owned and community driven.
DISCOVER MORE DESIGNS: 25564 Bagley Road, Olmsted Falls, 44138, 440-249-7665, RemodelMeToday.com
GARDEN HOME &
TO MOW OR NOT TO MOW?
130
BUILDING A BEEFRIENDLY YARD
COULD WE ALL PLAY a part in preserving pollinators? At what cost? That’s the question Cleveland Heights residents, business owners and officials contemplated during “No Mow May.” The city-wide campaign temporarily suspended ordinances that mandate grass must be kept short for the month to allow for foliage to grow and help bees, butterflies, moths and pollinators flourish. From May 1 to May 31, many once-tidy lawns, medians and landscapes throughout the city were left undisturbed to allow for nature to take its course. That meant knee-length grass, wildflowers, weeds and whatever critters they would inevitably bring. The community’s reviews? Quite mixed — and quite strong.
While some praised the initiative as an experiment to draw awareness to the environment and the ability to do their small part in attracting pollinators, others shared grievances surrounding the unkempt look of the city as well as safety concerns.
We dug in to the science and the outrage behind Cleveland Heights' initiative and found some ways you can promote pollinator health in your yard.
POLLINATORS ARE FACING PERIL
A harsh reality is that pollinators are on the decline.
In fact, honey bee hives have decreased by 59% in the past 60 years.
Researchers cite myriad reasons for this, including poor nutrition, pesticide use, pathogens and more.
Pollinators are important not only to keep our beautiful gardens alive but also to sustain the world’s agricultural crops that feed animals and people. On their quest for food, pollinators move from plant to plant, picking up and delivering pollen they brush up against along the way. Because plants themselves are stationary, pollinators are critically important to plant reproduction. According to the nonprofit group Bee City USA, lawns cover 2% of land in the United States. That’s more than 40 million acres.
The problem with lawns is that they are monocultures, which is one species of one plant in a large area.
“That doesn’t happen naturally, ever, because of competition and diversity,” says Margaret Lehnert, Ph.D., an associate professor of biology at Cuyahoga Community College. "You have a lot of different organisms that would be in the same space. They’re going to compete with each other for resources and they ensure that no single organism grows a whole bunch more than everything else."
HOW ‘NO MOW MAY’ CAME TO BE
The concept of “No Mow May” emerged in the United Kingdom in
2019 from a group called Plantlife. Research from the organization, cited by Country Living, found that small changes in mowing could lead to enough nectar for 10 times more pollinators. Studies from a small Wisconsin town produced the same result two years ago.
Outcomes like these inspired Cleveland Heights’ new mayor Kahlil Seren to implement “No Mow May” here in Northeast Ohio.
“When we talk about … the concerns that people have about the impact that we’re having on the populations of pollinators, we could either continue talking about it and do nothing or we can really ramp up what we’re allowing ourselves to do,” Seren says.
Seren says he believes as many people were for “No Mow May” as they were against it, based on the feedback he’s received from the community.
Opponents of “No Mow May” main-
ly have cited safety concerns. Most lawns may grow between 12 and 24 inches in a month, and tall grass can obstruct driveways, sidewalks and corners, making it unsafe for pedestrians and drivers.
Michael Fisher purchased a home in Cleveland Heights’ Potter Village neighborhood last year and participated in “No Mow May” as a new resident.
The choice to do so was both for environmental reasons and out of convenience. Fisher had been traveling through the months of March and April, so he allowed his lawn to grow right through May before cutting it for the first time in 2023.
Seren participated in “No Mow May” at his own Cleveland Heights residence and found that the experiment to be “really rewarding.”
“We saw violets; we saw other plants [like] daisies coming up in our yard
that we never would have seen if we had been diligently mowing,” he says. “From my perspective, I thought it added a great deal of color and interest to the yard.”
That said, some plant experts question the efficacy of a "No Mow May," including Ohio State University Horticulture Professor Dr. David Gardner.
“In Ohio, dandelion peak bloom is April, clover peak bloom is late May into June,” Gardner is quoted saying in the University's Buckeye Yard and Garden Online blog. “Peak grass growth is May. To me it almost makes more sense to tell folks not to mow in April or June or both and properly mow to ensure turf density in May. The weeds that peak in May for bloom are some of the winter annuals, like Veronica, but also ivy and violet and these are not the weeds we necessarily want to give an agronomic advantage.”
THINKING BIGGER AND INTO THE FUTURE
Beyond residential lawns, Seren is also taking a look at how to transform public spaces to be more helpful.
Those solutions could be to replace grass with other plants that are better for the soil, such as clover.
Seren wouldn’t confirm whether or not he’d re-institute “No Mow May” in 2024, though he says he is “leaning towards yes.”
“I am cognizant of the need to allow the process to evolve significantly so we continue to learn from our experience and make this something more and more people can buy into,” he says.
Fisher says that if “No Mow May” returns next year, he hopes it sparks better dialogue amongst his neighbors.
“We’re all doing this for a reason,” Fisher says. “Use it as your opportunity to ignite community rather than separate it.”
PRO TIPS
How to Make Your Yard Pollinator-Friendly: There are options for you, says Margaret Lehnert, an assistant professor of biology at Cuyahoga Community College. She offers these tips:
Check With Your City. “The biggest thing would be to check your city ordinances” to see if you are permitted to participate in a No Mow May. Otherwise, “someone might show up to your door with a citation.”
Implement a Hybrid “No-Mow” System. Instead of allowing your entire yard to run wild, you could allow some parts of your yard to grow, and mow a pathway to walk through. Leaving portions untouched “would still benefit the diversity of insects and plants in that space,” Lehnert says.
Add Native Plants to Your Yard. When adding pollinator-friendly plants to your yard, you want to make sure they are native to your area, Lehnert says. Here are a few local options:
Spring: Wild Blue Phlox, Eastern Redbud Tree, Common Blue Violet
Summer: Common Milkweed, Black-Eyed Susans, Purple Coneflower
Fall: New England Aster
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The one thing that hasn’t changed: the people.
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Look Back
ONE NIGHT IN THE PRESS BOX at Cleveland Municipal Stadium in August 1975, Cleveland Indians owner Ted Bonda said, “I can hit a 5-iron shot over the center field scoreboard from home plate.” He even offered to back the boast up with some legal tender — for charity, of course.
A total of $1,000 in bets were made that he couldn’t, including $25 from Cleveland Press writer Bob Sudyk, and the “Bonda blast” was on. At 9 a.m. on Aug. 19, 1975 (early, since the Indians would host the Texas Rangers that evening and Sudyk noted it was payday at the Press), Bonda stood at home plate with Charlie Sifford, who, after being the first Black golfer on the PGA Tour, had become the club pro that year at Sleepy Hollow Golf Course in Brecksville. Sifford, with his ever-present cigar and Panama hat, paced off the
distance 400 feet to the center field wall and said, “No way it can be done with a five.”
In front of a gallery estimated around 50 people — including stadium groundskeeper Harold Bossard and U.S. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum — Bonda took six shots with his 5-iron at the 74-foot-high scoreboard, marked as 194 yards from home plate. Sifford was able to clear the scoreboard using a three wood. Bonda was able to do so with a driver, but the closest he came with a five iron was hitting the fireworks box in the bleachers. That ball ricocheted over the scoreboard. “He claimed a moral victory and was booed,” Sudyk wrote.
When the Indians left Cleveland Municipal Stadium for good in 1993, no baseball player had ever hit a ball into the center field bleachers either.