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A mother s story: Lauren Berg s journey | Local News | americanisraelite com

  An excited toddler in a pink tutu stands at her open front door in mid-February 2021, shouting with glee: “Mommy! Daddy! Mommy! Mommy!” The tiny dancer is Lia Berg, the daughter of Lauren and Justin Berg of Amberley Village—and the joy she felt came from seeing her mother for the first time since October 4, 2020. On that fateful October day, with just one minor misstep in an unfamiliar environment, Lauren Shmalo Berg, 37, tumbled down an unlit flight of cellar stairs and suffered a C3-C4 Spinal Cord Injury that, presently, has left her paralyzed from the neck down. Justin, her husband, explains, “After hearing her scream, I ran to see if she was okay. She was breathing when I asked her if she could move anything. Lauren answered ‘No’ and then she stopped breathing.” After being given CPR, first by Justin and then by the paramedics, she was taken to a local hospital. She required immediate surgery and was airlifted to Miami Valley Hospital in

Four Photographers on Their Favorite Local Spots for a Spring Photo Op

Cincinnati Magazine April 29, 2021 As those swirling, turquoise blue days arrive, the pull of the weather is too much to resist and it’s a perfect photographer’s backdrop. Looking to snap a few family portraits this spring? We asked some local photographers about their favorite spots to take photos around the city. Photograph courtesy Kenyatta Davis French Park Route 50 scenery in Dale Park (corner of Route 50 and Plainville Road in Mariemont) because both locales have a range of scenery to use as backdrop. Consider French Park, which boasts rustic hiking trails, wooden bridges, and the two-story brick French House. Photograph courtesy Kenyatta Davis

A Sprawling Work-From-Home Paradise in Amberley Village

A Sprawling Work-From-Home Paradise in Amberley Village
cincinnatimagazine.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cincinnatimagazine.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Chauvin verdict: Cincinnati reacts after officer is guilty on all counts

The Enquirer A Minnesota jury found former police officer Derek Chauvin guilty of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter Tuesday in the death of George Floyd last May. Outside the Hamilton County Courthouse Tuesday night a crowd of about 30 gathered in response to the verdict. Barriers had been in place all week in the anticipation of the news out of Minneapolis. “Guilty on three, a man shouted through a megaphone. Banners were hung from the barriers saying: Jail killer cops and Reopen all cases. “I felt such relief I had tears running down my face when I saw he was found guilty,  Azzy Quinones said.  There’s so many cases where we see cops obviously kill people and that doesn’t happen.

From the Pages

By Samuel Bruel (Continued) In 1825 N. Longworth for one dollar added by a deed of gift fifty feet in the rear of the first lot [of the first Jewish cemetery in Cincinnati], which increased it to twenty-five by one hundred. In 1836 the congregation purchased the adjoining lot of twenty-five feet from N. Longworth, which comprises the entire lot. This ground was used for twenty-eight years until December 1849, when it was finally closed, although not quite filled. — July 28, 1854 150 Years Ago Mr. S. N. Pike has made the sensible and pleasing decision to change his beautiful hall in this city into a still more beautiful and attractive opera-house. With characteristic energy, he commenced the work on Tuesday last a few hours after his arrival in the city, and he intends to have the alterations completed in six weeks, say by June 1. Thus Cincinnati is for a second time indebted to Mr. Pike for an opera-house, an improvement the city never needed more urgently than now.

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