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Prosecutor: Four victims now tied to accused serial rapist Kevin Grasha Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
A serial rapist suspect who is charged in three attacks in Hamilton County dating back two decades is expected to be charged in Northern Kentucky with raping a fourth female, prosecutors said Monday. After William Brian Blankenship was indicted earlier this month on multiple charges including rape and kidnapping, Hamilton County Assistant Prosecutor Mark Piepmeier said a Northern Kentucky woman contacted him. "She positively identifi es Mr. Blankeship as her rapist back in the year 2000," Piepmeier told Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Terry Nestor at an arraignment. Piepmeier said he expects Campbell County prosecutors to pursue charges against Blankenship in connection with that woman. Blankenship, a 55-year-old resident of Southgate, Kentucky, also could face charges in Kenton County after prosecutors there connected his name to at least one prior investigation in that county. In Hamilton County, Blankenship is accused of breaking into three homes in the Mount Washington/ Anderson Township area from 1999-2001 and raping two girls and a woman. The fi rst incident occurred on July 25, 1999. Court documents say Blankenship broke into a woman’s apartment and raped her. In August 2001, prosecutors say he took a 10-year-old girl out of a pop-up trailer in her driveway where she was sleeping with friends and raped her. Blankenship also is accused of raping a 14-year-old girl in her bedroom on Oct. 10, 2001, according to court documents. Investigators believe Blankenship has been living in the Greater Cincinnati area ever since the incidents in Mount Washington and Anderson Township, although no other rape cases in those neighborhoods have been connected to him. Blankenship didn't speak during Monday's arraignment. His attorney, Scott Rubenstein, entered a not guilty plea on his behalf. Rubenstein said Blankenship is a lifetime resident of the area and has no criminal record. He has a home in Southgate. Nestor set bond for Blankenship at $1.5 million. Speaking to reporters afterward, Hamilton County
William Blankenship, 55, at far right, is arraigned on multiple rape charges dating back to 1999, before Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Terry Nestor, Monday, February 24, 2020. Blankenship's attorney is Scott Rubenstein, who entered a not guilty plea for Blankenship. Hamilton County Prosecutor Jim Deters is far left. Mark Piepmeier, chief assistant prosecuting attorney, is center. Bond was set at $1.5 million. PHOTOS BY LIZ DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER
Prosecutor Joe Deters shed more light on how DNA led to charges against Blankenship. Investigators went through his trash and took a DNA sample from a bottle, Deters said. That DNA matched evidence from one of the Hamilton County
William Blankenship, 55, is arraigned on multiple rape charges.
victims, he said. Investigators used a genealogy website to identify Blankenship. "He's a very dangerous person," Deters said. "Our goal is to put him away forever."
Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters talks to media after the arraignment.
Newport woman pleads guilty after crash killed white supremacist leader Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
A Newport woman charged with murder in a crash that killed a former white supremacist leader pleaded guilty to a lesser charge Thursday, Feb. 20, according to court documents. Emily Sherry, 24, was arrested in 2018 after police said she struck another vehicle driven by Robert Ransdell. Sherry’s blood-alcohol level was 0.422, more than fi ve times the legal limit to drive, during the crash.
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Ransdell, of Florence, was pronounced dead at the scene, police said. He was 37. Sherry was charged with murder in July 2018. On Feb. 20 she accepted a plea deal and pleaded guilty to manslaughter, court records state. Ransdell was a write-in candidate for U.S. Senate in 2014 and a former Cincinnati leader of the National Alliance, a white supremacy group. He campaigned with a sign telling voters “With Jews We Lose.” Sherry will be sentenced on March 31, according to court records.
Emily Sherry
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2A ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
NKU off ers free tuition to some graduates of six high schools Chris Mayhew Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Due to falling sandstone, the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge will be closed to traffic beginning Wednesday, April 17, 2019. The west side will remain open to pedestrians. The 1,057 foot span opened in 1867 and was the longest suspension bridge in the world until 1883 when the Brooklyn Bridge opened. The bridge connects Cincinnati to Covington. The bridge is owned by the Commonwealth of Kentucky. LIZ DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER
Roebling bridge could be closed for most of 2021 for restoration work Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Repairs to the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge could take up to nine months, closing the bridge off to motorists for most of 2021, offi cials said. Kentucky Transportation Cabinet District 6 chief engineer Bob Yeager spoke to the Covington Business Council and Foundation Thursday, Feb. 20 at a luncheon. Members of the council were told that "more aggressive work" is needed on the limestone portion of the upper towers when work resumes. The project will take a proposed $9 million, according to an update from the Covington Business Council. The bridge closed in April 2019 after softball-sized chunks of rock fell from one of the bridge's towers. Initially, Kentucky Transportation Cabinet spokeswoman Nancy Wood said it would take about two weeks for the cabinet to come up with a temporary repair plan. COMMUNITY PRESS & RECORDER NEWSPAPERS ❚ 312 Elm Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202 ❚ 2116 Chamber Center Drive, Fort Mitchell, KY 41017 NEWS TIPS ........................................513-903-6027 HOME DELIVERY..............................859-781-4421 ADVERTISING...................................513-768-8404 CLASSIFIEDS ....................................513-242-4000 SUBSCRIPTIONS...............................513-248-7113
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That plan resulted in netting installed on the bridge's north tower to catch falling sandstone. Contractors began removing loose stone from the structure and motorists were detoured to the Clay Wade Bailey or Taylor Southgate bridges in July. Nearly 10 months have passed since the report of falling rocks and a defi nite timeline on the restoration project has yet to be set. At the luncheon, Yeager advised Council members that the project could start as early as mid summer, although that initial work would not likely close the bridge to motorists or pedestrians. The "more aggressive" repairs may start in February 2021, according to the Cabinet. Those repairs may take up to nine months, until October 2021, to complete. During that time the bridge would close to motorists. Pedestrian traffi c could be maintained on at least one side of the bridge, according to the Cabinet. Bidding for the restoration eff ort is scheduled for June. Yeager told the Covington Business Council that a more defi nitive scope of the project will be determined following the bidding process. The bridge's April closing was an "inconvenience" at best to businesses located near the southern entrance of the bridge. The Council and the City of Covington are advocating for aff ected business, the Council said.
Northern Kentucky University will make college free for low-income students from six high schools who qualify for federal Pell grant assistance. The catch is students have to complete 60 credit hours of courses for an associate degree at Gateway Community and Technical College fi rst. Gateway2NKU off ered 70 diff erent academic tracks including business administration, early childhood education, anthropology, and Spanish in the current academic year, according to the Gateway2NKU website. The Gateway tuition is also free. The new River City Promise Program builds on the existing Gateway2NKU dual admission program, according to an NKU release. The program starts with members of the class of 2020. Graduates from Bellevue, Dayton and Newport high schools in Campbell County will be eligible, as will graduates from Holmes, Lloyd and Ludlow high schools in Kenton County. Students in the River City Promise Program will have a new service center
for them on Gateway’s campus to make the transition to NKU, according to the release. Increasing access to college takes a holistic approach for students, said NKU President Ashish Vaidya. “As we were renewing the successful Gateway2NKU program, it became clear that we could make a greater impact by extending it to high school students, so they begin their higher education journey with support from both institutions,” Vaidya said. The Gateway2NKU program started in 2013, has graduated 465 Gateway transfer students so far, according to the release. The announcement boosts the region’s eff orts to grow and retain talent, said Gene Kirchner, vice president and COO of the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce. “Northern Kentucky is experiencing a workforce shortage,” Kirchner said. “Partnerships like this are critically important to ensuring that young people have access to educational opportunities which directly align with the current and future demand for skilled workers.”
The campus of Northern Kentucky University. RYAN TERHUNE / THE ENQUIRER
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4A ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
Lost and found: This 200-year-old painting tells a story about early Kentucky history Maggie Menderski Louisville Courier Journal USA TODAY NETWORK
Every time the 26-foot truck hit a pothole, Tim Tomes became increasingly aware of the 200-year-old treasure trailing behind him. The jarringly large painting — 8-feet-by-10-feet — had been gingerly sealed in a custom crate for its trip to Cleveland. But that didn’t ease Tomes’ white-knuckle grip on the steering wheel. Or keep him from worrying that with each bump, another fl eck of paint would fall from the aging, damaged canvas that off ers a rare glimpse into the culture of 19th century Kentucky. He was transporting a lost state treasure, and the magnitude of that wasn’t lost on him. Still he glanced down just long enough to check the clock as he crossed the Ohio River from Covington into Cincinnati. It was 12:11 p.m. on March 21, 2017. “I made note of the time because that’s the fi rst time the painting) left the state of Kentucky in 194 years, and that was a big deal,” he told me. Tomes wasn’t an art expert. He wasn’t even a truck driver. He was just a normal guy who’d felt a strong connection to a painting, and it sent him on a journey much longer than the six hours and 350 miles it would take to transport the aging work of art to northern Ohio for restoration.
Spoiler: The painting survived the trip By the time I met Tomes in late January, nearly three years had passed since his nerve-wracking drive to Cleveland. The colossal painting, known as “The Dead Christ Mourned (The Three Maries) After Carracci,” by Kentucky painter Matthew Harris Jouett and his apprentice John Grimes, had been successfully restored. People had been viewing it at The Speed Art Museum, 2035 S. Third St., in Louisville, since October. Today, he’s employed by the Archdiocese of Louisville and charged with digitizing all of the church’s records, but rewind a few years and he was just a passionate volunteer in its archives. He remembered seeing the painting years before at St. Vincent de Paul Oratory where the archives were stored, but he came across it again damaged and propped up against a wall at Holy Family Catholic Church, 3926 Poplar Level Road, in 2015. The massive painting dwarfed even his own 6-foot-6-inch frame, and because of its size and unusual position on the fl oor, he found himself eye-level with the fi gures. “It draws you in, and it makes you part of it,” he told me.
Matthew Harris Jouett's 1824 painting "The Dead Christ Mourned" after the restoration. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF LOUISVILLE
In 1824, Jouett and Grimes painted Jesus dead in his mother’s arms after the crucifi xion. Three other women, or “The Three Maries” as they’re referred to in the pieta’s title, are consumed with grief. That emotion stuck with Tomes. So did the damage to the piece. Jesus’s face had a traumatic rip across it, and one of the Maries was missing all her fi ngertips. The other faces were intact, but the canvas looked as though something had clawed at it — fl aking paint from throughout the image and leaving one, dynamic scrape along the far right side. The line cut one of the Maries in half and sliced through the feet of Christ. Someone, likely with poor judgment but good intentions, had attempted to mend the painting with duct tape and plaster of Paris. That caused even more damage to the piece. The original wooden frame was there, too, but it was so splintered and broken it looked more like fi rewood. Its original 22-karat gold coating was buried under seven diff erent layers of paint. The painting had been a fi xture in the choir loft
above the organ at the Cathedral of the Assumption in downtown Louisville until a renovation in 1975. For years it had been misclassifi ed as one of the church’s European paintings that were gifts from overseas royalty to Kentucky’s earliest Catholic churches. “The Dead Christ Mourned” was, after all, a copy of the work by Italian Baroque artist Annibale Carracci, which hangs in the National Gallery in London. It was an easy mistake to make. But it was one that kept the work’s importance to Kentucky history as tucked away as the painting itself had been since the 1970s.
A hidden Kentucky treasure Erika Holmquist-Wall, a curator at The Speed, often takes questions from the community about personal treasures. In a way, it’s a bit like Antiques Roadshow on PBS. Part of her job is helping people realize what they See PAINTING, Page 8A
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6A ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
COMMUNITY NEWS City of Union hosts annual Easter Egg Hunt The City of Union will host the annual Easter Egg Hunt event on Saturday, April 11, 2020. This year’s event will be held at the Union Presbyterian Church, 10259 US 42 Hwy, Union, from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. The event is free, and open to the public. The event will begin at 8:30 a.m. with registration, followed by the 6 to 13-year old egg hunt at 9 a.m. and the 2 to 5-year old egg hunt following the older group at approximately 9:30 a.m. The hunt has become an annual tradition in the City of Union, where children can come to have their photos taken with the Easter Bunny while enjoying donuts and juice. For adults, there will also be hot coff ee available. Tickets are not required, but the city does request an RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/myevent?eid=95636273669 to help with an anticipated crowd count. There is also no charge for photos with the Easter Bunny, but attendees should provide their own cameras for photography. There will also be a crafts area for children, a face painter, balloon artist and other special activities. The city will also hold a drawing for door prizes among all attendees. For information regarding the event, contact Melissa Hinkle, Communications and Operations Director, The City of Union, 859-384-1511 or melissah@cityofunionky.org Melissa Hinkle, City of Union
Jamming for Hope makes fi rst donation to St. Elizabeth Cancer Center The added expenses that accompany a cancer diagnosis can put tremendous strain on many patients’ budgets. The med student musicians with Jamming for Hope are doing their best to alleviate that pressure so cancer patients can concentrate on what’s important — getting well. The local non-profi t recently made what it hopes is the fi rst of many contributions to the Cancer Center currently under construction on the Edgewood campus of St. Elizabeth Healthcare. Jamming for Hope is a charity comprised primarily of medical students that raises money through music, according to Chris Harwood, who started the charity with the help of his father. The band that makes up Jamming for Hope plays in local venues and collects donations to benefi t cancer patients. To date, the group has collected more than $2,000. The money donated to St. Elizabeth will help provide support through the Holbrook Minning Legacy Fund. The Holbrook Minning Legacy Fund off ers critical support to cancer patients while undergoing treatment. “It feels really good when we draw up that check. It makes me feel more engaged in my community,” said Harwood, who plans to hold one event per month and make, “small, frequent donations” to the Cancer Center. “That kind of support is huge,” said Diane Neltner, Clinical Social Worker at St. Elizabeth. Neltner works with cancer patients who have limited resources. “If we didn’t have the support from the community and the St. Elizabeth Foundation there are so many people who would fall through the cracks,” she said. Neltner uses the money from groups like Jamming for Hope “to help cover the basic needs that have to be met to allow them to focus on their treatments.” All types of community involvement are vital to the success of the new Cancer Center, according to Dan Flora, MD, Medical Oncologist at St. Elizabeth. “We’ve all been touched by cancer,” said Dr. Flora. “The more we raise the more we can help with the dayto-day needs of cancer patients. This money helps provide needed ancillary support. If we can take that stress off our patients it will help them get through their treatments easier.” Providing “whole person care” is one of the cornerstones the new Cancer Center is based upon, according to Dr. Flora. The 250,000 square-foot facility is scheduled to open in fall 2020 and will become a beacon of hope for those in Greater Cincinnati suff ering from cancer.
The Easter Bunny and friend welcome participants to the City of Union Easter Egg Hunt. PROVIDED
Services at the Cancer Center will include: ❚ New precision medicine program ❚ Increased education, screening and prevention services ❚ Extensive clinical research ❚ Multidisciplinary care and expertise in one location ❚ The most advanced diagnosis and treatment options available in the region ❚ Genetic screening “We’ve centered the care around the patient,” said Dr. Flora. “Everything we’ve done, every decision we’ve made, we’ve done with the patient in mind.” Contributions from the community are an integral component of that vision. The players of Jamming for Hope are committed to doing their “part.” “I created this charity to combine the two things I love the most: music and medicine,” said Harwood. “We are fi ghting, one song at a time, to ensure that our friends with cancer will receive their treatment and will not be forgotten.” Visit www.jammingforhope.org for more information about the charity and a schedule of their upcoming performances. St. Elizabeth Healthcare operates fi ve facilities throughout Northern Kentucky and more than 115 primary care and specialty offi ce locations in Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio. A member of the Mayo Clinic Care Network, St. Elizabeth is a mission-based organization committed to improving the health of the communities it serves, providing more than $116 million in uncompensated care and benefi t to the community in 2018. For more information, visit www.stelizabeth.com. Guy Karrick, St. Elizabeth Healthcare
Michael Monks to guest on Redwood’s WRED-TV FORT MITCHELL – Michael Monks, host of WVXUFM (91.7) Cincinnati Edition – Cincinnati Public Radio’s weekday news and information talk show – will guest on Redwood’s WRED-TV, Thursday, Feb. 27. The announcement was made jointly today by Carol Serrone and John McCoy – Executive Director and Executive ProMonks ducer for the broadcast, respectively. The broadcast – What’s Good from the Wood – will air on Cincinnati Bell Channel 821 and Spectrum Channel 185, Tuesday, March 3 at 3:30 p.m. and Wednesday, March 4 at 7 p.m. in conjunction with the Telecommunications Board of Northern Kentucky. Redwood is a nonprofi t, special needs facility in Northern Kentucky and services some 800 clients from six-weeks of age to 85 years old. The weekly cable TV broadcast – the only one of its kind in Northern
Kentucky – is produced and hosted by Redwood clients. Monks is also the publisher/editor/chief reporter for Northern Kentucky’s River City News website and spends his weeknights covering city government or school board meetings. The 39-year-old Covington native also has produced and written WXIX-TV newscast; reported and anchored news for 700-WLW Radio; moderated forums on Northern Kentucky issues; and appeared in community theater productions. “I love the intimacy of conversations on the radio,” he told John Kiesewetter on his media blog. “There’s nothing to distract you. No visual pop-ups, no breaking news banners.” Monks has been covering Northern Kentucky news since he was 15, when he hosted and produced Clover Meadows Wrap-Up about his Covington subdivision for a cable TV public access channel. He also “the morning news guy” for Scott High School announcements his sophomore, junior and senior years (199698). His River City News site regularly covers Covington, Newport, Bellevue, Dayton, Erlanger, Edgewood, Florence, Fort Mitchell, Fort Wright, Ludlow, Taylor Mill and the Kenton and Campbell counties fi scal courts. The site, which has been profi table last year and this year, generates 100,000 unique monthly users, he said. It also has 25,000 Facebook followers. “We’re fortunate – and lucky – to have Michael clear time from his busy schedule to spend time with us at Redwood,” Serrone said. Andy Furman, Redwood
Region’s bourbon history takes center stage March 29 Few things are more Kentucky than bourbon, and a local trio wrote a musical to celebrate part of the beverage’s more infamous history. Songwriting team Janet Yates Vogt and Mark Friedman, the team behind Tenderly: The Rosemary Clooney Musical, and their partner, lauded playwright Joseph McDonough, will off er a sneak preview of their new musical, GEORGE REMUS, at The Carnegie on March 29, 2020. Tickets are $35 for show and tasting, $15 for show only, and available at thecarnegie.com. The musical tells the fascinating, true, and sometimes unbelievable history of George Remus, a German immigrant, pharmacist, and bootlegger who moved from Chicago to the Cincinnati area during prohibition to be near 80% of the country’s bonded whiskey after fi nding a loophole in the enforcement of prohibition. “Returning to The Carnegie and having my own work performed on this beautiful stage, produced by their amazing staff , is a thrill and a dream realized,” said Friedman. “I am excited that the audience for GEORGE REMUS will experience this story and hear the music for the fi rst time ever. It is also a delight that the musical will be performed mere blocks away from where Remus lived the last twenty years of his life, and in a place that holds so many memories for me.” The fi rst song from the musical, “Who the Hell is Andrew Volstead?” was released October 28 on the 100th anniversary of the Volstead Act. The Act was passed to enforce the 18th Amendment, prohibiting the production, sale, and transport of intoxicating liquors. The song can be found on The Carnegie’s Facebook page, along with a link to purchase tickets for the premier staged reading of the full show on March 29, 2020. “I was so excited when Janet, Mark, and Joe brought this project to The Carnegie,” said Carnegie Theatre Director Maggie Perrino. “George Remus has so many ties to the area, and I think it’s perfect to debut this musical, not in New York or Los Angeles, but in the heart of bourbon country where he really lived.” The March staging will be accompanied by bourbon and whiskey tastings including Jim Beam Black, Maker’s 46, Knob Creek Single Barrel, and Basil Hayden’s Dark Rye. Following the staged reading the writer and composers will host a Q&A session. Tickets for the show and tasting are $35, $15 for the show only and available at thecarnegie.com. Cincinnati-based Yates Vogt and Friedman are award-winning composers, lyricists, and playwrights. Their musicals have played worldwide in the United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, Australia, New Zealand, The Philippines, Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan. Teaming up with Yates Vogt and Friedman is playwright Joseph McDonough, two-time winner of the Mickey Kaplan New American Play Prize. McDonough has had several of his plays premier at the Ensemble Theatre and Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. The Carnegie’s 2019-20 Theatre Series is presented by the Otto M. Budig Family Foundation. Additional support comes from the Kentucky Department of Tourism. Mikayla Williams, on behalf of The Carnegie
Woodland Art Fair
From left: Tiffany Horn, Cancer Center Nurse; Angelina Johnson, Cancer Center Associate; Chris Harwood, Jamming for Hope member and University of Kentucky College of Medicine student at Northern Kentucky University campus; Dr. Dan Flora, St. Elizabeth Medical Oncologist; Mary Lynn Brunemann, St. Elizabeth Foundation AVP Development; and Diane Neltner, St. Elizabeth Clinical Social Worker. PROVIDED
The 2020 Woodland Art Fair is the Lexington Art League’s premiere event. This year marks the 45th year the Woodland Art Fair has been held. The Woodland Art Fair has received several national, regional and local honors including being voted a Top 200 Fine Art & Design Show in the nation in 20072019 by Sunshine Artist Magazine, a Top 20 Event by The Southeast Tourism Society and a Top 10 Festival by The Kentucky Travel Industry Association. Adrienne Dixon, Lexington Art League
SUBMIT YOUR LETTERS, COLUMNS The Community Press & Recorder newspapers have a new email address you can use to send in letters to the editor and guest columns. Send your letters (200 words or less) or guest columns (500 words or less) to: viewpoints@communitypress.com As before, please include your first and last name on letters to the editor, along with the name of your community. Include your phone number as well. With guest columns, include your headshot (a photo of you from shoulders up) along with your column. Include a few sentences giving your community and describing any expertise you have on the subject of your column.
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8A ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
Painting Continued from Page 4A
have. Sometimes they’re holding junk, and other times they have relics they can retire on. She was the one who answered Tomes’ call from the church. Like the women in the painting, “The Three Maries” was in a state of utter despair, but Holmquist-Wall also saw the value in the feeble, fl aking canvas. This wasn’t just a damaged old painting — it was a piece of Kentucky history. Jouett hailed from Lexington and specialized in portraits. His family home in Woodford County, built in 1797 and named for his father Jack, is among the oldest and most historic homes in the state. Photographs were still futuristic in the early 19th century, and so he supported a wife and several children by painting Kentucky icons in their monumental moments. Players like Henry Clay, Isaac Shelby and John J. Crittenden all sat for Jouett to commemorate weddings and political gains. He’s considered one of the most talented painters from the Commonwealth, and his “The Skater (Portrait of William Grant)” from 1782 is on display in the National Gallery of Art, just outside of Washington D.C. He rarely signed his work, so the more than 300 portraits he completed are diffi cult to track. Losing an 8-foot-by-10-foot painting takes a little more eff ort, though. Because of its immense size, it’s relatively easy to track in old notices and records, but it’s hard to know exactly when the Archdiocese came into possession of it even though the monstrosity does appear in Kentucky newspaper clippings over the years. There’s even an auction notice from 1824 that lists its value at $100, more than $2,600 in modern dollars. Painted on three portrait-sized pieces of canvas hand-stitched together, The Three Maries is an oddity in the Jouett collection. Not only is it his largest work, but it’s also his only religious painting. The painting wasn’t commissioned. No one asked for a life-sized, Kentucky-esq copy of Carracci’s interpretation of Jesus and four grieving women, which made fi nding a home for something that large all that much harder. The way Tomes and Holmquist-Wall tell it, Jouett likely used the piece as a teaching moment for his apprentice, Grimes. Picture the two painters in Jouett’s Lexington studio in the early 19th century. Jouett, who wouldn’t have seen Carracci’s work in person, likely pulled out the 1813 Adam Clarke folio bible from a bookshelf and fl ipped open to a page with a small black and white engraving of the piece. Tomes imagines the artist stitching together the canvas and giving his apprentice a directive — the 1824 equivalent of “go big, or go home,” he told me. Jouett wouldn’t have known the real “The Dead Christ Mourned” from 1604 was only about 3-feetby-3-feet or that the Italian interpretation of the scene was done in vibrant, Renaissance-like colors.
Workers at Gold Leaf Studios in Washington, DC, repaired and restored the original frame. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF LOUISVILLE
Instead, the two Kentucky men painted their Maries in the muted and mild tones they would have known from the clothing women and children wore in early 19th century Lexington. “When you think of early Kentucky in the 1820s, we’re the edge of the frontier,” Holmquist-Wall told me, and a painting of this size and technique speaks to culture and even the sophistication of the time. “That tells a great story about how Kentucky was really growing at this time,” she said. But keeping that story in one piece would take about $80,000 and a team of art and restoration experts. So Tomes launched a fundraising campaign to send The Three Maries to ICA Art Conservation in Cleveland to be restored. Over the course of two years, he gathered monies from 48 donors so the conservation experts at ICA could repaint those missing fi ngertips, reattach the face of Christ and remove as much of that plaster of Paris as possible. They sent the frame to Gold Leaf Studios in Washington D.C. to peel back the layers of paint on the original frame, coat it and put it back together. Although Tomes spearheaded the restoration movement, he is quick to give credit where credit is due. He didn’t repair the canvas, restore the face of Christ, stabilize the back of the painting, fi x the original frame or build the crate that it traveled in. There were so many hands and donors involved in this process, he told me. His hands just raised the funds and drove the truck. That’s how Tomes found himself driving Jouett’s piece six hours north almost three years ago. And two years of meticulous preservation techniques later, that’s how the painting ended up in its fi rst public showing in more than 40 years.
fessionals, but even so, they noted the time for Tomes. He wanted to know the exact moment it came home. Nearly six months later, it made its debut at The Speed Art Museum because sending it back to the cathedral didn’t make sense. Large organ pipes now cover the spot in the choir loft where it once hung, and they really didn’t have a spot for it. The painting still belongs to the Archdiocese, but as Tomes says, it’s more of a Kentucky treasure than a Catholic one. He believes it should be accessible to everyone. Originally he’d intended to welcome donors, conservationists and dignitaries to the restored painting’s big reveal, but as time passed on, he extended the invitation to his mailman and strangers he met on the street. He wanted everyone to have a chance to see it. On the day of the event, there was no curtain to pull back or veil to be lifted. The painting was too large for that kind of fanfare. Instead, he let people wander into the gallery and have their own moment with it. And from a few steps away, he saw a few clutch a hand to their heart and catch their breath. He heard the small gasps and the utterances of surprise. He saw the same kind of raw, powerful emotions that sent him on that white-knuckled, extraordinary journey to restore a lost Kentucky relic. Features columnist Maggie Menderski writes about what makes Louisville, Southern Indi and Kentucky unique, wonderful, and occasionally, a little weird. If you’ve got something in your family, your town or even your closet that fi ts that description — she wants to hear from you. Say hello at mmenderski@courierjournal.com or 502-582-7137. Follow along on Instagram and Twitter @MaggieMenderski. Support strong local journalism by subscribing today: courier-journal.com/maggiem.
The University of KY is accepting applications for the position of:
County Extension Secretary The position is full time 37.5 hrs at $12.00 -$15.00 hr. Duties will include updating social media & website computer skills, data entry, and many other secretarial duties. HS or GED required with two or more years of experience. To apply for RE 22392 a UK online application must be submitted to: www.uky.edu/ukjobs
Bringing the painting, and its emotion, home
The major job responsibilities can be viewed at Kentoncountyextension.org
The Three Maries returned to Jouett’s home state on April 9, 2019 at about 12:55 p.m. Tomes wasn’t there to look at the clock as it crossed the Ohio River back into Kentucky — one whiteknuckled trip was enough. This time it was insured and in the hands of art pro-
Application deadline is March 5, 2020. For more information or assistance call Kenton County Extension 859-356-3155 The university is an equal opportunity employer and encourages applications from minorities and women.
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Warm your winter night with high roasted Middle Eastern-style chicken with veggies and couscous Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist
I was hoping to share a recipe I’ve been wanting to try for New England maple mustard roasted chicken. That isn’t happening. It’s not because I don’t have chicken and mustard. It’s the maple syrup not anywhere to be found on my little patch of heaven. I was hoping for enough sap from our maple tree to boil into homemade syrup. We tapped it weeks ago. (Check out my site to see granddaughter Ellery helping tap the tree). Well, the tree still hasn’t produced much sap, so even though it’s maple syrup season, I’m way behind. I decided to roast the chicken Middle Eastern style, with high heat for a crispy crust. That’s a long way from New England! But you know what? Served with a side of couscous, we agreed it was a perfect winter supper. Stay tuned for a maple syrup update!
High roasted Middle Eastern style chicken. RITA HEIKENFELD FOR THE ENQUIRER
High roasted chicken with green beans, tomatoes and olives The beans are blanched and added during last few minutes of roasting, so they retain color and flavor. Go to taste on marinade ingredients.
quarters
Roast 40 minutes.
1 pound fresh green beans, blanched
Meanwhile, blanch beans. You’ll add those with rest of tomatoes after chicken cooks.
Instructions
Ingredients About 3 pounds favorite chicken pieces, bone in, skin on (I used thighs) ⁄ 2 cup fresh lemon juice
1
6 tablespoons honey, divided 1 1⁄ 4 teaspoons dried oregano ⁄ 2 teaspoon dried thyme
1
1 very generous tablespoon garlic, minced
Marinate several hours or overnight in refrigerator.
Bring pot of salted water to boil, add beans and cook 2 minutes. They’ll turn bright green and be crisp tender. Drain, rinse under cold water to stop cooking. Can be done ahead but bring to room temperature. (You can use frozen beans. Thaw, then bring to room temperature).
Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
Add rest of tomatoes and beans
Remove chicken from marinade. Save marinade as you’ll use this to cook chicken.
After 40 or so minutes, add beans and remaining tomatoes. Nestle into pan juices so they pick up flavor. Cook few more minutes until chicken is cooked through, about 10 minutes.
Whisk lemon juice, 3 tablespoons honey, oregano, thyme, garlic, oil, salt and pepper together. Place chicken in baggie. Pour marinade over. Seal, pressing out air.
Arrange chicken in sprayed casserole, skin side up.
⁄ 3 cup olive oil
1
Place half of tomatoes around chicken. Sprinkle olives all over.
Salt and freshly ground pepper 4 nice sized tomatoes, cut into quarters or a container grape tomatoes. Divide tomatoes in half. 1 generous cup Greek or Mediterranan olives, cut into
Pour marinade over all. Drizzle remaining 3 tablespoons honey on top of chicken and tomatoes.
Couscous cooking tips: I always use a flavorful broth instead of water. And I add a nob of butter or a swirl of olive oil after it’s cooked, which only takes 5 minutes for quick cooking couscous.
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Sports Dixie Heights girls fi nish 4th in state swim meet James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
LEXINGTON – They will be on opposing teams beginning next year, when they start swimming in one of the top college conferences in the land. Kenady Beil and Selina Reil plan to always be teammates, even when they’re no longer wearing Dixie Heights swimming gear. The pair of Colonels seniors with very similar but distinct names closed out their high school careers in successful fashion at the KHSAA state championships conducted at the University of Kentucky natatorium. They left with four state medals and a fourth-place team trophy. “I was excited our whole team was here,” Beil said. “We battled through this whole season. We had fun tonight, even if it wasn’t the swims we wanted. We had a really good day. We’ve just been a team this whole season and I really hate to leave it.” Beil and Reil are both headed to swim in the Southeastern Conference: Beil with Florida and Reil with Alabama. Both suff ered similar heartbreak Friday at the hands of Sacred Heart sophomore Mackenzie Lanning, who came from behind to edge each one of them by a small margin to win a state championship. Beil fi nished second in the 200-yard freestyle in 1:49.72, while Reil lost to Lanning by just 0.25 seconds in the 500 freestyle. Beil fi nished third in the 100 butterfl y and Reil was eighth in the 100 breaststroke. “Both our senior girls had the goal of winning state this year, and this is a big learning experience for them,” said Dixie head coach Chris Schoettker. “They can have their best swims but that doesn’t mean they’re going to win. They put themselves into position to win the race, and that’s the most important thing. They may not have won, but they still had a great accomplishment, fi nishing fourth in the state.” For the second straight year, the Colonels took home a team trophy with just four Colonels scoring points. Besides future Gator Beil and future Crimson Tide Reil, sophomore Mackenzie Tucker returned to the state stage and scored a pair of ninth-place fi nishes in solo events. That trio and seventh-grader Dahlia Kissel combined to place top-fi ve in two relays. Dixie also had four other qualifi ers compete in the tournament. “Even though our team is really small, we’re powerful,” Reil said “It’s fun to see all of us go out there and kill it, and knowing that even though we’re small we can go out there and scare people. It’s great to know we tried our hardest.” Team leaders Beil and Reil will be in the same pool at times next year competing against each other. “Training in practice, we always compete against each other, but at the end of the day, we’re best friends,” Beil said. “We’ll be going against each other, but when we step out of the water we’ll be teammates
Dixie Heights fi nished fourth in the KHSAA girls swimming state tournament on Feb. 21. PHOTOS BY JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER
Dixie Heights senior Selina Reil checks her time.
even though we’re not on the same team. It will be a diff erent environment and I’m excited to see what she does. Said Schoettker: “They are two of the best swimmers in the history of Dixie. They’re going to learn from this experience. They are going to go on to great things in the SEC. This is just a starting point for them. Their careers were exceptional.” Northern Kentucky won 18 state medals for a topeight fi nish on Friday, in addition to the fourth-place fi nish in the state diving competition by Cooper’s Peytton Moore last Thursday. Notre Dame freshman Lainy Kruger had an outstanding state debut, with two top-three fi nishes in All-American times. St. Henry freshman Emily Littrell fi nished third in the 100 freestyle.
KHSAA STATE SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS Team standings: 1. Sacred Heart 503, 2. Manual 159, 3. Christian Academy-Louisville 149, 4. Dixie Heights 139, 7. Ryle 124, 9. Notre Dame 96, 15. St. Henry 44, 20. Scott 24, 27. Cooper 15, 28. Highlands 12, 33. Beechwood 7, 37. Campbell County 5, 41. Holy Cross 2. 200 medley relay: 3. Dixie Heights (Beil, Reil, Tucker, Kissel) 1:48.25, 5. Notre Dame (Jordan, Kruger, Weidinger, Greenwell) 1:48.98, 11. Ryle (Arkenberg, Floyd, Robinson, Collins) 1:52.27. 26. Scott (Epperson, Giffen, Meister, Loftis) 1:58.10, 31. St. Henry (Stanchek, Freihofer, Lange, Kleier) 2:00.29, 33. Beechwood (Yauger, Argo, Bauer, Dietrich) 2:00.93, 34. Campbell County (Hedger, Morris, Deegan, Smallwood) 2:01.90, 35. Highlands (Combs, Walsh, Redden, Sutkamp) 2:02.02. 200 free: 2. Beil (Dixie Heights) 1:49.72, 13. West (Ryle) 1:58.08. 21. Bauer (Beechwood) 2:01.62, 22. Jordan (NDA) 2:01.64, 24. Weber (Ryle) 2:02.17, 27. Hammons (Ryle) 2:02.69, 31. Lynn (St. Henry) 2:03.86, 35. Brewer (Dixie) 2:05.28. 200 IM: 3. Kruger (NDA) 2:00.50 AAA, 4. Arkenberg (Ryle) 2:07.34, 9. Tucker (Dixie) 2:10.32, 11. Robinson (Ryle) 2:13.72, 16. Stanchek (St. Henry) 2:15.49. 17. Argo (Beechwood) 2:14.42, 19. Williams (Cooper) 2:14.96, 28. Skaggs (Dixie) 2:17.61, 31. Quinn (NDA) 2:19.33, 33. Floyd (Ryle) 2:19.57, 34. Combs (Highlands) 2:20.06. 50 free: 9. Littrell (St. Henry) 23.97, 12. Meister (Scott) 24.86, 16. Sand (Highlands) 26.00. 27. Moscona (Highlands) 25.32, 38. Kissel (Dixie) 26.05. 100 butterfly: 3. Beil (Dixie) 55.72, 9. Tucker (Dixie) 56.99. 19. Weidinger (NDA) 59.55, 24. Argo (Beechwood) 1:00.67, 27. Greenwell (NDA) 1:01.21, 31. Deegan (Campbell) 1:01.58, 36. Freihofer (St. Henry) 1:02.42. 100 free: 3. Littrell (St. Henry) 52.74, 6. Meister (Scott) 53.70, 8. Sand (Highlands) 55.95. 24. Hammons (Ryle) 55.72, 30. Moscona (Highlands) 56.05, 32. Kissel (Dixie) 56.75, 38. Lynn (St. Henry) 57.55 500 free: 2. Reil (Dixie) 4:55.58, 8. Alexa Arkenberg (Ryle) 5:14.77, 10. Rosie Bauer (Beechwood) 5:10.43, 13. Robinson (Ryle) 5:15.67. 22. Weidinger (NDA) 5:24.95, 25. Brewer (Dixie) 5:25.74, 28. Deegan (Campbell) 5:26.51, 33. McDaniel (Ryle) 5:29.62, 35. Stanchek (St. Henry) 5:32.17, 39. Thomas (Conner) 5:37.04. 200 free relay: 7. Ryle (West, Weber, Hammons, Floyd) 1:41.63, 13. St. Henry (Littrell, Lynn, Hill, Freihofer) 1:42.39. 17. Highlands (Moscona, Bryant, Willis, Sand) 1:44.08, 22. NDA (Clark, Quinn, Donnelly, Judy) 1:45.11, 27. Scott (Epperson, Giffen, Loftis, Meister) 1:46.65, 34. Dixie Heights (Skaggs, Slone, Brewer, Skaggs) 1:49.07, 35. Beechwood (Bauer, Yauger, Dietrich, Argo) 1:50.02, 39. Conner (Tucker, Stewart, Thomas, Thomas) 1:53.21. 100 back: 12. Jordan (NDA) 58.78. 23. Weber (Ryle) 1:01.38, 24. Greenwell (NDA) 1:01.59. 100 breast: 2. Kruger (NDA) 1:02.20 AAA, 5. West (Ryle) 1:05.52, 8. Reil (Dixie) 1:07.44, 10. Floyd (Ryle) 1:07.43, 16. Kinross (Ryle) 1:09.32. 19. Williams (Cooper) 1:08.93, 32. Quinn (NDA) 1:10.49, 35. Maycie Skaggs (Dixie) 1:10.69, 37. Broering (Holy Cross) 1:11.89. 400 free relay: 4. Notre Dame (Kruger, Weidinger, Greenwell, Jordan) 3:36.46, 5. Dixie Heights (Beil, Tucker, Kissel, Reil) 3:37.97, 6. Ryle (Weber, West, Hammons, Arkenberg) 3:39.52, 12. St. Henry (Littrell, Hill, Stanchek, Lynn) 3:45.48. 24. Highlands (Combs, Willis, Moscona, Sand) 3:52.55.
Highlands sets records in historic state meet James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
LEXINGTON– Emotion and determination sent the Highlands High School swimming team to rarely seen heights Saturday night. The Bluebirds had a strong performance at the KHSAA state swimming meet at the University of Kentucky’s Lancaster Aquatic Center. Highlands won the night against teams not named St. Xavier. The Louisville power Tigers won their 32nd straight team championship and had the bulk of the individual champions. But the Bluebirds fi nished second in the team standings to the Tigers, and adding in the points the girls team scored on Friday, Highlands won the combined state championship. The Bluebirds edged Louisville Eastern by three points to win their fi rst combined title since 1995. Senior Caroline Sand posted all 12 Highlands points on Friday. “I don’t think I’ve ever been this happy at a swim meet before,” Highlands junior Jack Banks said. “Winning a title for my school is diff erent than anything else. Where I go to school seems like I’m representing something bigger than myself. Club swimming is more individual.” Highlands fi nished second to St. X in the fi nal event of the meet, the 400-yards freestyle relay. The Bluebirds set a school record in that event, pushing them past Eastern for one title and clinching second place in the boys division. Swimmers were Banks, Mac Russell, Will Griffi th and Sam Jones. [Get your tickets now for the Cincinnati.com Sports Awards] More: Rose Lavelle to headline 2020 Cincinnati.com Sports Awards at Music Hall More: Nominate your favorite high school team for Top Team: Fan Vote 2020 More: Vote now for the I AM SPORT Award at the 2020 Cincinnati.com Sports Awards “Our team is super tight,” Russell said. “It’s like a See BOYS, Page 2B
Highlands teammates celebrate their second-place fi nish in the 400 freestyle relay during the KHSAA state championship boys swimming fi nals Feb. 22 at the University of Kentucky's Lancaster Aquatic Center. JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER
2B ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
SHORT HOPS Alex Harrison Cincinnati Enquirer USA Today Network
Boys basketball ❚ Boone County lost to Campbell County 78-57 Feb. 18 and Dixie Heights 72-65 Feb. 21. ❚ Conner won its 14th-consecutive game and improved to 20-5 after beating Holmes 65-60 Feb. 18 and Newport Central Catholic 55-52 Feb. 20. ❚ Cooper was edged by Dixie Heights 49-48 Feb. 18 before beating Scott 50-42 Feb. 21. ❚ Falling to 12-16 on the year, Ryle fell to Scott 59-56 Feb. 18 and Campbell County 74-47 Feb. 20. ❚ St. Henry improved to 22-4 after beating Highlands 68-51 Feb. 19 and Holy Cross 74-59 Feb. 21. Against Highlands, Wyatt Vieth scored 30 points and had 10 rebounds. ❚ Holy Cross topped Ludlow 88-51 Feb. 18 before losing to St. Henry 74-59 Feb. 21. The Indians then started the 35th District tournament with a 76-19 win over Covington Latin Feb. 23. ❚ Walton-Verona lost to South Oldham 86-55 Feb. 18, but beat Carroll County 81-73 Feb. 20. ❚ Scotty Draud led Beechwood with 34 points and 11 rebounds in a 73-65 win over Lloyd Feb. 18. The Tigers then lost to Highlands 78-63 Feb. 21. ❚ After losing just its fi fth game of the year, Covington Catholic responded with a 58-48 win at Madison Central Feb. 21. ❚ Dixie Heights edged Cooper 49-48 Feb. 18 then won at Boone County 72-65 Feb. 21. ❚ Holmes ended the regular season with a 65-60 loss to Conner Feb. 18 and a 77-71 loss at Simon Kenton Feb. 20.
❚ Lloyd fell to Beechwood 73-65 Feb. 18 then ended a two-game losing skid by edging Trimble County 63-62 Feb. 21. ❚ Scott beat Ryle 59-56 Feb. 18 then lost at Cooper 50-42 Feb. 21. Grant Profi tt led the Eagles in scoring in both games. ❚ Simon Kenton improved to 20-9 with an 87-64 win over Woodford County Feb. 18 and a 77-71 win over Holmes Feb. 20. ❚ Bishop Brossart dropped its fi fth game of the year, a 69-62 decision to Mason County Feb. 18 before doubling up Bellevue 56-28 Feb. 20. ❚ Campbell County beat Boone County 78-57 Feb. 18 then topped Ryle 74-47 Feb. 20 when Dane Hegyi scored 34 points. ❚ Highlands lost to St. Henry 68-51 Feb. 19, then beat Beechwood 78-63 Feb. 21 to put its record at 24-3. ❚ Newport improved to 14-13 with an overtime 7465 win at Breathitt County Feb. 21. DaeShawn White scored 31 points in the victory. ❚ After winning fi ve-straight, Newport Central Catholic ended the regular season with a 55-52 loss to Conner Feb. 20.
Girls basketball ❚ Boone County lost to Holy Cross 45-41 Feb. 17 and Notre Dame 53-42 Feb. 19. ❚ Conner topped Holy Cross 48-35 Feb. 19. ❚ Cooper lost to Newport Central Catholic 64-45 Feb. 18, but beat Dixie Heights 62-58 Feb. 20. ❚ Ryle improved to 17-11 with a 61-40 win at Newport Central Catholic Feb. 21. ❚ St. Henry beat Trimble County 53-37 Feb. 18 then fell to Owen County 51-43 Feb. 20.
Boys Continued from Page 1B
second family. We all want the best for each other. Seeing one person break a school record is great for everyone. I love this team with all my heart.” The Bluebirds won two individual titles: Russell claimed the 50 freestyle and junior Jack Banks the 100 breaststroke. They are the fi rst individual swimming champions from the boys team since 2011. Russell’s championship, in the fourth event of the night, brought a fl ood of emotion from him as he yelled and cheered for several seconds while still in the pool. “It feels amazing,” Russell said. “It’s a dream come true. I worked hard and really sacrifi ced a lot to get to where I am right now. I was overjoyed. I thought it was a dream. I could imagine it but it was hard to believe that it actually happened.” Said Johnson: “Mac, last year he was fourth in the 50. He had all seniors in front of him and he’s been fi red up all year. He wanted to get under 21 (seconds) and break a school record, which he did. He’s very selfmotivated.” Banks was the third seed in the breaststroke after admittedly pacing himself in the preliminary round, but he turned it on when it counted. Banks defeated the top two fi nishers in last year’s breaststroke championship to take the event in 55.65 seconds, breaking his own school record and earning an All-American time. “I just had people to race,” he said. “I saw an opportunity in the last 25 (yards) and I just went for it. I wanted it so bad and I put it all out there for it.”
Covington Catholic junior Parker Knollman fi nished fi rst in the 100 butterfly. JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER
Russell fi nished second in the 100 freestyle and eighth in the butterfl y. Highlands won eight total medals, with two second-place fi nishes and one fi fth-place. Sam Jones fi nished fi fth in the 500 freestyle. Others scoring points included Will Griffi th, Matt Herfel, Harrison Pawsat and Reece Guthier. Northern Kentucky brought home 14 state medals, including diving, and 16 other performances scoring points from the consolation fi nals. Northern Kentucky celebrated a third state championship with Covington Catholic senior Jude Dierker winning diving on Thursday, becoming the area's 10th state champ in 11 years. Aidan Stigall of St. Henry fi nished second. Beechwood junior Eli Shoyat fi nished fi fth in the 200 freestyle and third in the 500 free. Covington Catholic junior Parker Knollman fi nished fi fth in the butterfl y and helped the 200 medley relay fi nish fi fth.
❚ Walton-Verona ended the regular season beating Owen County 58-53 Feb. 17 and Campbell County 4943 Feb. 19. ❚ Holy Cross beat Boone County 45-41 Feb. 17, lost to Conner 48-35 Feb. 19, beat Grant County 49-40 Feb. 20 and then lost to Dixie Heights in the regular season fi nale 54-48 Feb. 21. ❚ Improving to 21-6, Notre Dame beat Boone County 53-42 Feb. 19. ❚ Beechwood opened the 35th District tournament with a 37-31 win over Covington Latin Feb. 23. ❚ Dixie Heights lost to Cooper 62-58 Feb. 20 before beating Holy Cross 54-48 Feb. 21. Sydney Lockard scored 24 points agsint Cooper then had 25 points over Holy Cross. ❚ Holmes beat Mason County 56-45 Feb. 17 then topped Harrison County 59-55 in overtime Feb. 21. ❚ Lloyd beat Bracken County 63-33 Feb. 20 and Trimble County 59-54 Feb. 21. ❚ Ludlow improved to 24-6 with a 79-39 win at Bracken County Feb. 17. ❚ Simon Kenton beat Highlands 57-32 Feb. 19 to improve to a region-best 26-3. Mattie Vickers led the Lady Pioneers with 21 points. ❚ Bishop Brossart improved to 23-4 with a 56-51 win at Madison Southern Feb. 17. Marie Kiefer led with 31 points. ❚ Campbell County topped Pendleton County 81-64 Feb. 17 before losing to Walton-Verona 49-43 Feb. 19. ❚ Highlands lost to Simon Kenton 57-32 Feb. 19 before beating Beechwood 63-20 Feb. 21, fi nishing the regular season at 19-10. ❚ Newport Central Catholic beat Cooper 64-45 Feb. 18 and Bellevue 63-38 Feb. 19 before falling to Ryle 61-40 Feb. 21.
KHSAA STATE SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS Diving: 1. Dierker (CovCath) 525.65, 2. Stigall (St. Henry) 486.45, 10. Warning (Scott) 406.70, 12. Guthier (Highlands) 373.20, 15. Schneider (CovCath) 355.95. 17. Meadows (Highlands) 247.30, 21. Max McCauley (CovCath) 159.20, 22. Arnberg (Highlands) 155.30, 200 medley relay: 2. Highlands (Banks, Brown, Russell, Pawsat) 1:37.75, 5. Covington Catholic (Holt, Lester, Knollman, Kampinga) 1:39.87, 13. Beechwood (Shoyat, Richards, Bauer, Radford) 1:43.69. 22. Ryle (Bl. Koenigsknecht, Stephens, Collins, Coop) 1:47.22, 30. St. Henry (Cutcher, Durrett, Lange, Trapp) 1:51.09, 36. Cooper (Mihaljevic, Lugar, Hoffman, Perry) 1:53.56, 37. Dixie Heights (Hemingway, Brewer, O’Banion, Kautz) 1:53.73, 38. Conner (Haaser, Thomas, Petersime, Flick) 1:55.04. 200 free: 5. Shoyat (Beechwood) 1:42.72, 11. Jones (Highlands) 1:45.19, 13. Griffith (Highlands) 1:47.43. 20. Holt (CovCath) 1:48.67, 24. Be. Koenigsknecht (Ryle) 1:50.10, 30. Kopser (Ryle) 1:50.62, 33. Recht (Highlands) 1:52.33, 35. Collins (Ryle) 1:52.95, 37. Andreev (CovCath) 1:53.40. 200 IM: 12. Thomas (Conner) 1:58.63, 13. Berter (Dixie) 1:58.78, 16. Lester (CovCath) 2:05.65. 19. Herfel (Highlands) 2:01.19, 20. Connelly (Cov. Latin) 2:01.99, 23. Brown (Highlands) 2:03.24, 27. Bl. Koenigsknecht (Ryle) 2:06.11, 32. Stephens (Ryle) and Hopper (Highlands) 2:08.07. 50 free: 1. Russell (Highlands) 20.63. 20. Pawsat (Highlands) 22.61, 22. Furuta (Ryle) 22.71, 36. Kampinga (CovCath) 23.44. 100 fly: 5. Knollman (CovCath) 50.73, 8. Banks (Highlands) 51.08. 20. Griffith (Highlands) 54.53, 26. Richards (Beechwood) 55.66, 27. Furuta (Ryle) 55.76. 100 free: 2. Russell (Highlands) 45.81, 15. Reynolds (Ryle) 49.41. 28. Reil (Dixie Heights) 50.90, 33. Pawsat (Highlands) 51.27, 34. Opitz (Highlands) 51.29, 500 free: 3. Shoyat (Beechwood) 4:31.32, 5. Jones (Highlands) 4:43.08, 10. Thomas (Conner) 4:47.20. 20. Kopser (Ryle) 4:57.71, 24. Vaught (Highlands) 5:00.05, 26. Be. Koenigsknecht (Ryle) 5:01.14, 27. Andreev (CovCath) 5:01.32, 30. Brewer (Dixie) 5:01.88, 31. Recht (Highlands) 5:02.73, 35. Bright (CovCath) 5:05.84, 36. Jones (Highlands) 5:06.95, 37. Cutcher (St. Henry) 5:07.12, 200 free relay: 5. Highlands (Jones, Herfel, Pawsat, Griffith) 1:30.49, 12. Ryle (Furuta, Stephens, Kopser, Reynolds) 1:32.74. 18. Beechwood (Richards, Bauer, Radford, Shoyat) 1:34.22, 24. Dixie (Reil, Hemingway, Brewer, Berter) 1:36.48, 26. St. Henry (Tucker, Durrett, Trapp, Mabjish) 1:37.77, 28. CovCath (Conrad, Andreev, Bright, Kampinga) 1:38.22, 29. Simon Kenton (Hamilton, Smith, Theriot, Hutchinson) 1:38.62, 33. Scott (Camilleri, Schafer, Smith, Grubb) 1:40.29, DQ: Conner (Haaser, Petersime, Flick, Thomas). 100 backstroke: 9. Knollman (CovCath) 51.98, 16. Holt (CovCath) 54.83. 23. Reynolds (Ryle) 56.22, 25. Bl. Koenigsknecht (Ryle) 56.64, 26. Connelly (Cov. Latin) 56.81, 36. Vaught (Highlands) 58.78. 100 breaststroke: 1. Banks (Highlands) 55.65, 9. Berter (Dixie) 59.72. 17. Lester (CovCath) 1:01.64, 20. Richards (Beechwood) 1:02.08, 24. Brown (Highlands) 1:03.18, 28. Herfel (Highlands) 1:03.59, 39 Stephens (Ryle) 1:07.49. 400 free relay: 2. Highlands (Jones, Griffith, Banks, Russell) 3:10.76, 9. CovCath (Knollman, Lester, Kampinga, Holt) 3:17.70. 17. Dixie Heights (Reil, Hemingway, Brewer, Berter) 3:31.78, 28. St. Henry (Tucker, Cutcher, Lange, Mabjish) 3:38.88, 29. Cooper (Lugar, Perry, Hoffman, Mihaljevic) 3:39.51, 33. Simon Kenton (Hamilton, Carpenter, Smith, Hutchinson) 3:43.38, 36. Scott (Camilleri, Schafer, Smith, Grubb) 3:47.28, DQ: Ryle (Furuta, Collins, Be. Koenigsknecht, Reynolds).
THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD
THURSDAY, FEB. 27 Art Galleries & Exhibits From Rituals to Runways: The Art of the Bead Behringer-Crawford Museum, 1600 Montague Road, Covington. $5-$9. 859-491-4003; bcmuseum.org. Runs Feb. 4-May 10. bcmuseum.org.
Concerts & Tour Dates Manic Focus 9 p.m., Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington. $15-$18. ticketmaster.com. Town Mountain and Buffalo Wabs & the Price Hill Hustle 8 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. $15-$20. southgatehouse.com. Whitney Fenimore, Daniel Wayne 9:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. Free. southgatehouse.com.
Food & Wine Flight Night Beer Series 4-11:30 p.m., Coppin’s at Hotel Covington, 638 Madison Ave., Covington.
Fundraising & Charity Holy Cross High School Mulch Sale Holy Cross High School, 3617 Church St., Latonia. hcmulch.com or call 859-392-8999.
Literary & Books Discover a New Hobby: Try Astronomy 6:30 p.m., Boone County Public Library, Hebron Branch, 1863 North Bend Road, Hebron. Registration required. Ages 10-up.
FRIDAY, FEB. 28 Concerts & Tour Dates Chicago Farmer Full Band Record Release Show 9 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. $15-$18. southgatehouse.com. John Boyle and Jake Book 9:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. Free. southgatehouse.com. Jon1st & Shield 8 p.m. Feb. 28-29, Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington. ticketmaster.com.
About Calendar To submit calendar items, go to Cincinnati.com/share, log in and click on “submit an event.” Send digital photos to kynews@communitypress.com along with event information. Items are printed on a space-available basis with local events taking precedence. Deadline is two weeks before publication date. To fi nd more calendar events, go to Cincinnati.com/calendar.
Psychostick 8 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. Third St., Newport. Rock Showcase 6 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. Third St., Newport. Two Inch Winky 7” Release Party 10 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. Free. southgatehouse.com.
Food & Wine 1792 Bourbon Tasting 6:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. $45. southgatehouse.com. Father Bealer Knights of Columbus Fish Fry 605 Lytle Ave., Erlanger. Runs Feb. 28-April 10. Lunch 11 a.m.-2 p.m. and dinner 4:30-8 p.m. Father DeJaco Knights of Columbus Fish Fry 4-8 p.m., 11186 S. Licking Pike, Alexandria. $6.50-$9.50. Runs Ash Wednesday and every Friday during Lent, including Good Friday. Holy Cross HS Fish Fry 5 p.m., Holy Cross High School, 3617 Church St., Latonia. Runs Feb. 28-April 3. Immaculate Heart of Mary Fish Fry 5-8 p.m., 5876 Veterans Way, Burlington. Sandwiches start at $6 and dinners start at $9. Runs Feb. 28-April 3. Mary, Queen of Heaven Fish Fry 4-8 p.m., 1150 Donaldson Hwy, Erlanger. Runs Feb. 28-April 3. Newport Elks 273 Fish Fry 4:30-7:30 p.m., 3704 Alexandria Pike, Newport. Every Friday all year. St. Augustine Church Fish Fry 4-7 p.m., 1839 Euclid Ave., Covington. staugustines.net. St. Joseph Camp Springs Fish Fry 4-7:30 p.m., 6833 Four Mile Road, Camp Springs. Runs Feb. 28-April 3. St. Mary Fish Fry 4:30-7:30 p.m., 8246 E. Main St., Alexandria. Runs Feb. 28, March 6, March 13. saintmaryparish.com/en.
Literary & Books Music by Kentucky Wild Horse 7 p.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington.
Nightlife & Singles Furious George 9 p.m., Olde Fort Thomas Pub, 1041 S. Fort Thomas Ave., Fort Thomas.
Performing Arts HMS Pinafore Northern Kentucky University Fine Arts Center, Patricia Corbett Theatre, 1 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. $10-$17. Runs Feb. 21-March 1. nku.edu/ theatre.
Sports Northern Kentucky University vs. Wright State University BB&T Arena, 500 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. ticketmaster.com.
SATURDAY, FEB. 29 Concerts & Tour Dates Armnhmr 9 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. Third St., Newport. Fire Fight 6 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. Third St., Newport. Hurts To Laugh, American Goon, the Katies, Adam Flaig & Friends 9:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. Free. southgatehouse.com. The Nothing CD Release Show 9 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. $5. southgatehouse.com.
Education Shadow Puppets: Visual Arts and Theatre Class 910:30 a.m., The Carnegie, 1028 Scott Blvd., Covington. $40 for 6-week class. Runs Feb. 29-April 4. For ages 7-12. thecarnegie.com. Sketch Comedy Theatre Class 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., The Carnegie, 1028 Scott Blvd., Covington. $40 for 6-week class. Runs Feb. 29-April 4. Ages 7-12. thecarnegie.com.
BOONE RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ 3B
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4B ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
FISH FRIES Most Catholic churches in the Cincinnati area hold at least one fish fry during the Lenten season; the majority hold them weekly. Parishioners and public alike can socialize and fellowship together, and funds raised help charitable causes. Some other groups and businesses also hold fish fries during Lent. We’ve gathered a list of local fish fries during the season, including Ash Wednesday. If you do not see your favorite listed, please send the details to calendar@cincinnati.com with "fish fry" in the subject line.
Week of Feb. 28 All Saints, 8939 Montgomery Road, Sycamore Township. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried cod, grilled salmon and tilapia, fish tacos, multiple sides, pizza, beer and wine. Cash only. Dine-in or carryout. 513792-4600. American Legion Post 72, 497B Old Ohio 74, Mount Carmel. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 10. Prices start at $8. Carryout available. 513-528-9909. American Legion Post 318, 6660 Clough Pike, Anderson Township. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 10. Dine-in or carryout. Fried and baked fish, shrimp and chicken tenders dinners range $5-$8:50. Variety of sides and desserts. Cash bar. Church of the Resurrection, 1619 California Ave., Bond Hill. 4-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Whiting dinner $7.50; tilapia and catfish dinner $8.50; fried shrimp dinner $7.00. Sides include mac and cheese, french fries, coleslaw, hush puppies, desserts and beverages. 513-242-0400. Father Bealer Knights of Columbus, 605 Lytle Ave., Elsmere. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. and 4:30-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 10. Carryout orders call 859-342-6643. Access Lytle Ave. from Dixie Highway via Garvey to right on Spring St. Father Kehoe Knights of Columbus, 828 Elm St., Ludlow. Feb. 28-April 10. Carryout available by calling 859-261-2704. Fernbank Golf Course, 7036 Fernbank Ave., Sayler Park. 4-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3.Fish and shrimp dinners plus two sides $9. Fish sandwiches $6. Beer and soft drinks extra. Carryout available 513-941-9960. Germania Society of Cincinnati, 3529 W. Kemper Road, Colerain Township. 5-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fish sandwich, fish dinner, New England clam chowder, cheese pizza. Sides include baked mac and cheese, french fries, coleslaw, collard greens and cornbread. Tea, coffee and lemonade included. Alcoholic beverages extra. Dine-in or carryout. $3-$13. 513-7420060. Good Shepherd, 8815 E. Kemper Road, Montgomery. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-March 20. Dine-in, carryout and drive-thru. All dinners include choice of sides, dinner roll, lemonade/iced tea, coffee/hot tea and dessert. 513-489-8815. Guardian Angels, 6531 Beechmont Ave., Mount Washington. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Menu includes fried and baked fish, shrimp, crab cakes, cheese pizza, mac and cheese, french fries, coleslaw, hush puppies, mozzarella sticks, and baked goods. Prices for food items range from $1-$14 (whole pizza). All items are available for dine-in or carryout. 513-231-7440. Harrison Kiwanis Club, corner of New Haven Road and Biggs Boulevard, Harrison. 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. and 4-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Concession trailer is set up at FCN Bank parking lot. Carryout only. Dinners $8, a la carte items 50 cents to $4. Hartzell United Methodist Church, 8999 Applewood Drive, Blue Ash. 4-7 p.m., Feb. 28-March 27. All-youcan-eat fresh North Atlantic cod $12, 2-piece Amish chicken, shrimp basket or 2-piece cheese pizza $10. Sides include homemade mac and cheese, homemade coleslaw, breads, beverages and homemade desserts. Carryout 2-piece fish sandwich with no sides $5, whole meal with sides $10. Dine-in only: all-you-caneat fish $12, other dinners $10 adults, $5 ages 6-10, free ages 5-under. Holy Cross High School, 3617 Church St., Covington. 5 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Holy Family Knights of Columbus, St. John Undercroft, 1300 First Ave., Middletown. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28April 10. Fried cod or baked tilapia, mac and cheese, green beans, coleslaw, french fries. Refreshments with soda, beer, and weekly specials extra. Dine-in or carryout. Holy Name of Jesus, 222 Hamilton Ave., Trenton. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Baked and breaded fish, baked potatoes, green beans, mac and cheese, coleslaw, dessert and drinks. $9, $3 ages under 12. 513-9886335. Holy Trinity, 2420 Drex Ave., Norwood. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28, March 6, March 20, March 27 and April 3. No fish fry on March 13. 513-366-4400. Immaculate Heart of Mary, 7820 Beechmont Ave., Anderson Township. 4:30-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. The menu includes baked and fried fish, fish tacos, shrimp Caesar salad, fries, hush puppies, pizza, mac and cheese, side salads, coleslaw, applesauce and desserts. $6-$9. After the fish fry, guests are invited to pray the rosary at 6:25 p.m., Stations of the Cross at 7 p.m. 513-388-0031. Immaculate Heart of Mary, 5876 Veterans Way, Burlington. 5-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried and baked fish dinners and sandwiches. Also crab cakes, fried shrimp, pizza, soups, grilled cheese and Tommy Boy sandwich. Sides include french fries, green beans, handmade coleslaw and handmade mac and cheese. Sandwiches start at $6 and dinners start at $9. Knights of Columbus Northside Council, 3144 Blue Rock Road, White Oak. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 10. 513-741-7700. Mary Queen of Heaven, 1150 Donaldson Highway, Erlanger. 4-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Call ahead for carryout orders at 859-371-2622 and pick up meals up inside the church narthex. MasterCard, Visa, Amex and Discover Card are all accepted. mqhparish.com. Nativity of Our Lord, 5935 Pandora Ave., Pleasant Ridge. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. 513-531-3164. Newport Elks #273, 3704 Alexandria Pike, Cold Spring. 4:30-7:30 p.m. year round. 11 a.m.-7:30 p.m. April 10 (Good Friday). Fish, steak, shrimp, chicken tenders, hamburgers, fries, onion rings, mac and cheese, coleslaw and hush puppies. Prices range from $3.50 to $9.50. Dine-in or carryout. Old St. Mary's Catholic Church, 123 E. 12th St., Overthe-Rhine. 4:30 p.m. Feb. 28 only. During Bockfest. 513-721-2988.
Our Lady of Sorrows, 330 Lebanon St., Monroe. 4:307:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. All-you- can-eat fried fish or one serving of baked tilapia or one serving of fried shrimp. Sides include french fries, mac and cheese, coleslaw, green beans, applesauce, drinks (water, lemonade or coffee). Pizza is $2 a slice. Soft drinks $1 and beer $2. $10 ages 13-up, $5 ages 3-12, $8 ages 60-up, free ages 3-under. Carryout available 513-5398061. Our Lady of the Rosary, 17 Farragut Road, Greenhills. 5:30-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Drive-thru only on Feb. 28, March 13 and March 27. Fish dinner, cheese pizza, sides and dessert. $8, credit cards accepted. 513825-8626. Pleasant Run Presbyterian, 11565 Pippin Road, Colerain Township. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-March 27. Dine-in or carryout. Fish or chicken nuggets; choice of two sides, which include mac and cheese, green beans, coleslaw, applesauce; and a dessert. 513-825-4544. Prince of Peace Montessori, 625 W. Pike St., Covington. 5-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Live music, bake sale. Beer available. Carryout 859-431-5153. Queen of Peace, 2550 Millville Ave., Millville. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28 dine-in only. 4-7 p.m. March 6-April 3 drive-thru only. 513-863-4344. Sacred Heart Father Roettele Council 8115 Knights of Columbus, 400 Nilles Road, Fairfield. 5:30-8 p.m. Feb. 28, March 20 and April 10. Fish, cheese pizza and more. 513-858-4210. St. Agnes, Murphy Hall, 1680 Dixie Highway, Fort Wright. Feb. 28-March 20. St. Aloysius, 3350 Chapel Road, Shandon. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-March 27. Fish, french fries, green beans, coleslaw, cheese pizza, mac and cheese, grilled cheese. Grocery store bingo on March 27. 513-7381014. St. Aloysius Gonzaga, 4366 Bridgetown Road, Bridgetown. 4:30-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 10. Fish, shrimp, french fries, cheese pizza, mac and cheese, desserts and more. Beer for purchase. 513-574-4840. St. Ann Groesbeck, 2900 W. Galbraith Road, Colerain Township. 4:30-6:45 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Dine-in and carryout, specialty items each week. Stations of the Cross, followed by a talk in church after dinner. 513521-8440. St. Augustine, 1839 Euclid Ave., Covington. 4-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. 859-431-3943. St. Barbara, 4042 Turkeyfoot Road, Erlanger. 4:30-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Drive-thru available. St. Bernadette, 1479 Locust Lake Road, Amelia. 57:30 p.m. Feb. 28-March 20. Fried fish dinner, fish sandwiches, baked fish dinners, shrimp dinners, pizza. Sides are french fries, hush puppies, salad, coleslaw, mac and cheese and drinks. Desserts available. Carryout and drive-thru. 513-753-5566. St. Bernard Catholic Church Annex, 745 Derby Ave., Spring Grove Village. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28, March 13 and March 27. Fried and baked fish, mac and cheese, green beans, coleslaw, beverages and desserts. Dinein or carryout. Credit cards accepted. $8. 513-7226899. St. Bernard Church, 401 Berry St., Dayton. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Shrimp, fish or salmon dinners with choice of two sides $7. Sides: french fries, mac and cheese, coleslaw, pasta salad. Also available grilled cheese, soup, tuna salad and fruit plate. Soft drinks and beer for purchase. Coffee and dessert free with meal. Carryout 859-638-4513. St. Boniface, 1750 Chase Ave., Northside. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried fish, baked fish, fried shrimp, mac and cheese, stewed tomatoes, green beans. $10 adults, $5 children. 513-541-1563. St. Catharine of Siena, Westside Brewery, 3044 Harrison Ave., Westwood. 5-9 p.m. Feb 28-March 27. Menu includes cod sliders on bun with fries and coleslaw or cod sliders on bun with fries and mac and cheese. Classic 3-piece cod dinner with fries and coleslaw or classic 3-piece cod dinner with fries and mac and cheese. 3-piece fish tacos topped with slaw and chipotle crema. The Westside Brewery party room has been reserved for St. Catharine friends and family to eat and fellowship. 513-661-0651. St. Catherine of Siena Fort Thomas, 1803 N. Fort Thomas Ave., Fort Thomas. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb 28April 3. In McCrystal Hall. St. Columban, 894 Oakland Road, Loveland. 5-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried cod, fried shrimp, salmon, fish tacos, buffalo shrimp wraps, pizza, mozzarella sticks, mac and cheese, fries, green beans, coleslaw, and applesauce. Great craft beers are also available. Drivethru option and credit cards accepted. 513-683-0105. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, 5890 Buckwheat Road, Miami Township. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fish sandwiches, fried shrimp, salmon (while supplies last), and lots of side choices. Every order also includes drink and dessert of your choosing. Cheese pizza and french fries are available for little ones. Eat-in and to-go orders available. 513-575-0119. St. Francis de Sales, 1602 Madison Road, East Walnut Hills. 5:30-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried and baked fish, pizza, famous DeSales slammer, mac and cheese. Eat-in or carryout. Call in orders to 513-961-1953. St. Francis de Sales Lebanon, 20 DeSales Ave., Lebanon. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Beer battered cod, grilled tilapia, fried shrimp, cheese pizza, french fries, onion rings, corn, and pasta. Meal includes salad, dinner roll, and dessert, lemonade or ice water. 513932-2601. St. Francis Xavier, 202 Second St., Falmouth. 4-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. 859-654-8241. St. Gertrude, 6543 Miami Ave., Madeira. 5-8 p.m. Feb. 28, March 13 and March 27 only. Hand-dipped fried haddock, roasted lemon and herb salmon, pizza, and sides made in-house. Beer and wine available. $6-$12. 513-651-5954. St. Ignatius of Loyola, 5222 North Bend Road, Green Township. 5-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried fish dinners, baked fish dinners, shrimp dinners. Mac and cheese, coleslaw, french fries. Cheese pizza and kid-friendly items along with delicious desserts. Dine-in or carryout: Cash only. 513-661-6565. St. James the Greater, 3565 Hubble Road, White Oak. 4:30-8 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried or baked fish dinners, shrimp dinners, sandwiches, LaRosa's pizza, North College Hill Bakery bread, Servatii's pretzels and desserts. Coffee, soft drinks, domestic and craft beer. Dine-in or carryout. Call-ahead carryout: 513-7415311. stjamesfishfry.org.
St. John Neumann, 12191 Mill Road, Springfield Township. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried fish, baked shrimp, cheese pizza, grilled cheese, mac and cheese, tossed salad, coleslaw, french fries, green beans. Dine-in or carryout. For carryout orders call 513-7422224. St. John the Baptist, 5361 Dry Ridge Road, Bevis. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fried or baked fish, popcorn or beer-battered shrimp, LaRosa’s pizza; fish tacos, baked potato, french fries, homemade mac and cheese, tossed salad, coleslaw, applesauce, green beans, dinner roll or North College Hill bakery rye or white bread. Kids' meals include slice of cheese pizza, applesauce and fries. Dinners include lemonade, iced tea and coffee. Soda, bottled water and beer available for purchase. Dinners cost $6-$8. Dine-in or drivethru available. 513-385-8010. St. John the Evangelist Knights of Columbus, 9080 Cincinnati-Dayton Road, West Chester. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Choice of meals: 8 oz. fried fish, 4 oz. baked or fried fish, baked tilapia, fish sandwich, shrimp, crab cake, combo, fish taco or cheese pizza. Sides include fries, mac and cheese, green beans and coleslaw or apple sauce. Desserts, milk, soda, tea, coffee and beer. Adult-supervised kids' room. 513777-6433. St. Joseph, 745 Ezzard Charles Drive, West End. 4:30-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Dinners for $12 with fish and 2 sides plus dessert and beverage. Choose from tilapia, whiting, baked cod or catfish. Sides include green beans, fries, mac and cheese and coleslaw. 513-381-4526 ext. 36. St. Joseph Camp Springs, 6833 Four Mile Road, Camp Springs. 4-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Dine-in or carryout. Menu features hand-breaded cod and catfish filet, shrimp, crab-cake, salmon and a wide variety of homemade sides and desserts. 859-635-2491. St. Lawrence Church, 542 Walnut St., Lawrenceburg. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28, March 6 and April 3 only. Dinein or carryout. New this year are shrimp baskets and live entertainment at each event. Call the school to order carryout at 812-537-3690. St. Louis Church, 250 N. Broadway, Owensville. 5-8 p.m. Feb. 28-March 27. Featuring local craft beer and Blue Oven Bakery. $5-$12. Carryout available. 513732-2218. St. Margaret of York, 9483 Columbia Road, Loveland. 5-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Hand dipped-beer battered cod, baked salmon, shrimp and lots of sides. Dine-in or carryout. Carryout call 513-697-3168. St. Margaret St. John, 4100 Watterson St., Madisonville. 5:30-7 p.m. Feb. 28-March 13. Fried fish dinner, crab cake dinner, Alaskan baked fish dinner for $9 with 2 sides such as mac and cheese, french fries, onion rings and more. A la carte items include fish sandwich, mac and cheese, baked beans, cheese pizza, dinner salad. 513-271-0856. St. Martin of Tours Boy Scouts & Girl Scouts, 3720 St. Martin Place, Cheviot. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Fish dinners, shrimp, cheese pizza, baked potatoes, green beans, and many side dishes to choose from and dessert. Dine-in or carryout available. Stations of the cross at 7 p.m. in church after each fish fry. 513-6612000. St. Mary, 214 Fifth St., Aurora. 4-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28, March 13, March 20, March 27 and April 10. Meals served in activity center on Fifth Street. Carryout available in school cafeteria at 211 Fourth St. Drivethru available. 812-926-1558. St. Mary, 8246 E. Main St., Alexandria. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28, March 6 and March 13. Fish or shrimp dinner includes 2 sides and dessert. Hand-breaded cod and catfish, baked tilapia. Pizza, mozzarella cheese sticks, fried pickles, homemade potato soup. Dine-in or carryout. 859-635-4188. St. Mary, 3398 Ohio 125, Bethel. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Menu items include fish (baked or fried), shrimp, grilled cheese, mac and cheese, french fries, baked potato, coleslaw, refreshments, home-make pies and cakes, and other desserts. Dine-in and carryout. Prices range from $5 for a fried fish dinner to $7.50 for a shrimp dinner. A la carte items available. Cash or check only. 513-734-4041. St. Mattias the Apostle, 1050 W. Kemper Road, Forest Park. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Choice of fish or shrimp dinner, many sides and a la carte items. Homemade desserts. $2-$9. Dine-in or carryout. 513-851-1930. St. Maximilian Kolbe, 5729 Hamilton-Mason Road, Liberty Township. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Combo platter includes a crab cake, beer-battered shrimp and cod, hush puppies and two sides for $10. Clam chowder, grilled salmon, baked cod, and Raymond’s cheese pizza. Soft drinks and beer for purchase plus weekly bake sale. Carryout until 7 p.m. 513-777-4322. St. Michael, 11144 Spinner Ave., Sharonville. 5-7 p.m. Feb. 28-April 3. Variety of entrees including fish, shrimp, pizza, grilled cheese, tomato soup. 513-5636377.
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6B ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B
No. 0223 NUMBER THEORY
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BY SAM EZERSKY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
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17 Sam Ezersky, 24, is the associate puzzles editor at The Times. A “puzzlehead” since childhood, he sold his first crossword to the paper, a Saturday, when he was 17. His job at The Times includes testing/fact-checking the daily Mini crossword and curating the daily digital Spelling Bee. This puzzle started when he noticed a curious property of 26-Across. — W.S.
46 Whom Harry Potter frees from serving 1 “Consarn it!” Draco Malfoy’s 5 Kind of case in family grammar 50 Spicy, crunchy snack 11 Shed some pounds tidbit 17 Edited, in a way 53 “Ars Amatoria” writer 19 Sister channel of HBO 54 Area the Chinese call Xizang 20 What the answer at 26-Across is written 55 “Make sense?” in 56 Hell 21 Low-level, as a class 58 Square up with 22 Question that might 59 & 60 Take control be asked when after a coup hurrying into a 61 SIXTEEN meeting 62 “Just ____ boy, born and raised in South 23 Duty for a property Detroit” (lyric owner from “Don’t Stop 24 Relative of Believin’ ”) marmalade 63 Specks 26 FIFTEEN 64 Sleep: Prefix 28 Oval Office V.I.P. 65 Not quite right 29 Transition point 66 Full of tension 30 Period preceding a 67 “Hallelujah, praise the school break Lord!” 34 What the answer at 71 Because 45-Across is written 75 TWO in 76 Cozy spots to stop 36 “Yes, captain” 77 Miss in the future, 40 Gaping opening maybe 41 Willem of “John Wick” 78 Buzz source 42 Toward the stern 79 Cocktail specification 43 Howe’er 81 Fictional creature made from slime 44 Chicago mayor 82 Restaurant handouts Lightfoot for calorie counters 45 ELEVEN 84 What the answer at 61-Across is written Online subscriptions: Today’s in puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, 86 Final authority nytimes.com/crosswords 88 Rainbows, e.g. ($39.95 a year). AC R O S S
89 Flour filter 90 & 92 Alternative title for this puzzle 98 On-the-go sort 10 1It’s SW of Erie, Pa. 103 See 106-Across 104 What the answer at 75-Across is written in 105 Life lessons? 106 With 103-Across, character in Episodes I through IX of “Star Wars” 107 Millennial, informally 108 Things passed between the legs? 109 “Butt out!”
RELEASE DATE: 3/1/2020
15 Team ____ 16 Major Southwest hub, for short 18 In store 19 Like some New Orleans cooking 20 Sloppy 25 Letter in the classical spelling of “Athena” 27 “Here’s something that’ll help” 29 Some battery ends 31 Amorphous creatures 32 Dreaded musician of the 1960s-’70s 33 Brisk 34 Luxurious affair 35 Symbols of failure 36 1974 Eurovision winner that went DOWN on to international 1 Title host of radio’s first stardom major quiz show 37 “Wahoo!” 2 Contact-lens-care 38 Immature stage of a brand salamander 3 Broadway opening 39 Letters of credit? 4 Declare for the draft, say 41 Drops on the ground? 5 Items that, ironically, 42 “Not on ____!” contain nickel 44 Where Wagner was 6 “Slumdog Millionaire” born and Bach died co-star ____ Kapoor 46 Scatterbrained 7 Be a snitch 47 Man’s name that 8 Wishy-washy R.S.V.P. sounds like two 9 Plant holder? consecutive letters of the alphabet 10 Funeral ceremony 48 At any time 11 Go across 12 Soldier on horseback 49 Oktoberfest vessels 51 Some unfair hiring 13 Word before card or managers fund 14 Sloan School of 52 “Go ahead,” in Management sch. Shakespeare
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56 Openly controversial opinions 57 Knock out 58 Invoice directive 59 Like most medicaljournal articles 60 High hairstyle 61 Club ____ 62 Egypt’s “king of the gods” 63 Excellent conductors 64 N.Y.C. neighborhood near NoLIta
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65 “Ciao” 66 Put in jeopardy 67 Muscle cars of the ’60s 68 Lyrical, as poetry 69 Facetious response to a verbal jab 70 “E.T.” actress Wallace 72 “Ugh, stop talking already!” 73 Sack 74 Sun ____, “The Art of War” philosopher
79 Where most of America’s gold is mined 80 Like the presidency of John Adams 82 Joint 83 Longtime Eagles QB Donovan 84 Suspect 85 Bible study: Abbr. 87 With a wink 89 Kisses, in Cambridge 91 Brown 92 Bring (out) for display
93 Candy wrapped in a tube 94 “I’ll come to you ____”: Macbeth 95 Eensy-weensy 96 New pedometer reading 97 Beginner, in modern lingo 98 Mammoth 99 Western tribe 100 ____ Salvador 102 What will happily sell its Soul?
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8B ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
SCHOOL NEWS MQH students brighten days Mary, Queen of Heaven students recently wrote positive messages on the sidewalks around their campus.
They hoped their words would help to make people smile on dreary winter days. Garri Hunt, Mary, Queen of Heaven School
Students recently wrote positive messages on the sidewalks around their campus. PROVIDED
Students recently wrote positive messages on the sidewalks around their campus. PROVIDED
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Hebron
Burlington 3005 Featherstone Drive: Karen and Steven Huebner to Barbara Foster and John Foster; $135,000 5495 N. Bend Road: Sugarcamp Properties, LLC to Heritage Bank, Inc.; $1,990,000 7432 Indian Ridge Way: Elizabeth and Justin Fontenot to Scott Wilson; $184,000
Florence 102 Rogers Lane: Edward Magliano to Emily Code and Sarr Sow; $140,000 1066 Lakspur Court: Jennifer Hughes to Josecelyn Davis; $103,000 6548 Summerfield Drive: The Boyd A. Cantrell Sr. Revocable Living Trust to Nicole Leap; $117,500 75 Circle Drive: Ruth Schwarte to Trevor Howard; $175,000
1649 Cherry Blossom Court: Amanda and Michael Dages to Jessica and Joseph Stewart III; $233,000 2293 W. Horizon Drive: Danielle and Rafael Lezcano to Kimberly Schwartz; $202,000 2783 Berwood Lane: Sherry and Charles Blu to Mohamed Mohamed; $171,000
Union
sey and Richard Gillespie; $637,000 3816 Sonata Drive: Nicole and Timothy Lutz to Jessica and Jarrod Wilder; $250,000 4004 Denny Lane: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Pamela Schulte; $312,000 9505 Raintree Trace: Shannon and Keith Heydt to Margaret and David Freson; $425,000 9962 Mardi Gras Way: Margaret and David Freson to Sabarie Mohhan; $244,000
Walton
10409 Masters Drive: Antonette Kearns to Love My Home, LLC; $195,000 12977 Pavillion Court: Meridith and Thomas Fox to Deborah and Robert Hageman; $445,000 1915 Whispering Trail: Karen and Richard Berhiet to Elizabeth and Greg Boddy; $247,500 2622 Twin Hills Court: Terry and Byrd Cain III to Lind-
12113 Old Lexington Pike: Rebecca Timerding to Janice Hamilton; $107,500 19 Plum St.: Wilmington Savings Fund Society to Maria Vasquez; $70,000 408 Rupp Court: Tia and Patrick Lemming to Amanda and Gregory Peebles; $258,000
your
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BOONE RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ 9B
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10B ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
Public Notices OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
public notices/legals email: legalads@enquirer.com or call: 855.288.3511
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
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Requests for a Legal Notice for the Enquirer or Community Press/Recorder
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OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
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BOONE RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ 11B To advertise, visit:
classifieds.cincinnati.com n Classifieds Phone: 855.288.3511 n Classifieds Email: classifieds@enquirer.com n Public Notices/Legals Email: legalads@enquirer.com
Classifieds
All classified ads are subject to the applicable rate card, copies of which are available from our Advertising Dept. All ads are subject to approval before publication. The Enquirer reserves the right to edit, refuse, reject, classify or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported in the first day of publication. The Enquirer shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from an error in or omission of an advertisement. No refunds for early cancellation of order.
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12B ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION LEGAL NOTICE The Boone County Board of Adjustment will hold a Public Hearing on Wednesday, March 11, 2020 at 6:00 P.M. in the Boone County Fiscal Courtroom of the Boone County Administration Building, 2950 Washington Street, Burlington, Kentucky. The public is invited to attend and comment. ****************************
LEGAL NOTICE (NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT) COMMONWEALTH OF KY ) COUNTY OF BOONE ) I, DAVID MARTIN, CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE COUNTY AND STATE AFORESAID, DO HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THE FOLLOWING PERSONS HAVE BEEN APPOINTED BY THE BOONE DISTRICT COURT AND HAVE QUALIFIED ACCORDING TO LAW. ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS AGAINST THESE ESTATES ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED TO FILE THEIR CLAIMS WITH THE FIDUCIARY WITHIN SIX (6) MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF APPOINTMENT. ESTATE & ADDRESS
FIDUCIARY & ADDRESS
ATTORNEY & ADDRESS
DATE OF APPT
THELMA PEARL HAYNES 6975 BURLINGTON PIKE FLORENCE, KY 41042
GARY D HAYNES 4698 CATALPA COURT BURLINGTON, KY 41005
01-13-2020
LEROY C MCKINLEY 5639 HAZEL DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
JULIE MCKINLEY 7722 WALNUT CREEK FLORENCE, KY 41042
01-06-2020
ADDIELEE KELLY 6975 BURLINGTON PIKE FLORENCE, KY 41042
MICHAEL A KELLY 370 MOLISE CIRCLE WALTON, KY 41094
MICHAEL T MCKINNEY PO BOX 688 BURLINGTON, KY 41005
01-21-2020
EDWARD GOOD 54 VIVIAN DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
MARTHA GOOD 54 VIVIAN DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
MICHAEL W LYONS 6601 DIXIE HIGHWAY FLORENCE, KY 41042
01-14-2020
PRESTON TODD DELPH 6297 RIVER ROAD HEBRON, KY 41048
DONNA JEAN DELPH 6297 RIVER ROAD HEBRON, KY 41048
DENNIS REPENNING 1005 MADISON AVENUE COVINGTON, KY 41011
01-15-2020
MARTHA AMANDA DENIGAN 5521 LIMABURG RD., APT. E BURLINGTON, KY 41005
MICHAEL ALLEN DENIGAN 1655 BURLINGTON PIKE, STE. 107 FLORENCE, KY 41042
DANIEL J URBON PO BOX 1176 FLORENCE, KY 41022
01-21-2020
DAVID LOUIS BRUNK, III 20 VIVIAN DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
CARRIE LEE BRUNK 20 VIVIAN DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
MATTHEW A RICH 255 E 5TH STREET SUITE 2400 CINCINNATI, OH 45202
01-13-2020
MARIAN HODGE RUSSO 6910 HOPEFUL ROAD APT. 2107 FLORENCE, KY 41042
VIRGINIA LYNN NIENABER 6508 COTTONTAIL TRAIL BURLINGTON, KY 41005
KIMBERLY W QUINN 4132 DIXIE HIGHWAY ERLANGER, KY 41018
01-07-2020
JUNE CARTER BIENZ 7025 GLEN KERRY COURT FLORENCE, KY 41042
BILLIE JOLENE WENDT 732 DRY CREEK COURT VILLA HILLS, KY 41017
LINDA D REEVES 7 ST JUDE CIRCLE FLORENCE, KY 41042
LISA INGRAM 2411 HICKORY GLEN LANE BURLINGTON, KY 41005
MILLS ROUSE 10 SOUTH MAIN STREET WALTON, KY 41094
01-13-2020
RUTH ANN ROBBINS 7087 MANDERLAY DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
JULIE ANN TERLAU 559 MASON ROAD TAYLOR MILL, KY 41015
MARCUS CAREY 3814 DIXIE HIGHWAY ERLANGER, KY 41018
01-22-2020
MARCUS CAREY 3814 DIXIE HIGHWAY ERLANGER, KY 41018
01-22-2020
01-08-2020
KATHY ANN JOYCE 4901 REIDLIN ROAD TAYLOR MILL, KY 41015 VERNON EUGENE ROBBINS 7087 MANDERLAY DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
JULIE ANN TERLAU 559 MASON ROAD TAYLOR MILL, KY 41015 KATHY ANN JOYCE 4901 REIDLIN ROAD TAYLOR MILL, KY 41015
LEGAL NOTICE Pursuant to KRS 65A.080, the Northern Kentucky Water District is publishing the location where its adopted budget, financial statements, and most recent audit reports may be examined by the public. The adopted budget, financial statements, and most recent audit reports are accessible via the Northern Kentucky Water District website at www.nkywater.org. Lindsey Rechtin/VP of Finance and Support Services Northern Kentucky Water District KY,Feb27,’20#4068214
FIND GOOD HELP! Post jobs. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
RUTH MAE JOHNSON 6271 MATTHEW CIRCLE BURLINGTON, KY 41005
JENNY I JOHNSON 222 TANDO WAY FT MITCHELL, KY 41017
WES WILLIAMS 6111B BURGUNDY HILL DRIVE BURLINGTON, KY 41005
01-08-2020
DOROTHY J MILLURE 235 CHAMBERS ROAD WALTON, KY 41094
JOSEPH O BUNTING 22984 OATLANDS ROAD ALDIE, VA 20105
DAVID V KRAMER 207 THOMAS MORE PARKWAY CRESTVIEW HILLS, KY 41017
01-14-2020
LILLIAN ELIZABETH HALL 10250 US 42 UNION, KY 41091
ROBERT F GREENE 2391 CREEDMORE COURT BURLINGTON, KY 41005
ROBERT F GREENE 7415 BURLINGTON PIKE, SUITE B FLORENCE, KY 41042
01-15-2020
WANDA B RANKIN 10037 WHITTLESEY DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
ROGER RANKIN 10037 WHITTLESEY DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
THOMAS A RAUF 36 WEST FIFTH STREET COVINGTON, KY 41011
01-28-2020
BETTY JOAN MITCHELL 4670 RIVER ROAD HEBRON, KY 41048
DONNA L WOLFE 4670 RIVER ROAD HEBRON, KY 41048
DENNIS C HELMER 7415 BURLINGTON PIKE, SUITE B FLORENCE, KY 41042
02-04-2020
JUNE SOWARD 6910 HOPEFUL ROAD FLORENCE, KY 41042
LAURA SOWARD 3104 BEECH AVENUE LATONIA, KY 41015
ALEXANDER F EDMONDSON 28 WEST FIFTH STREET COVINGTON, KY 41011
01-22-2020
TIMOTHY FREEMAN RUSSELL 232 MELINDA LANE FLORENCE, KY 41042
TIMOTHY A RUSSELL 232 MELINDA LANE FLORENCE, KY 41042
THOMAS R KERR 732 SCOTT STREET COVINGTON, KY 41011
01-13-2020
SARAH K HERRICK 10250 US 42 UNION, KY 41091
RICHARD HERRICK 9327 CARRIAGE RUN CIRCLE LOVELAND, OH 45140
CHAD S LEVIN 201 E FIFTH ST., SUITE 800 CINCINNATI, OH 45202
01-13-2020
STEVEN RAY ESTES 1284 FARMCREST DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
SONYA ESTES 1284 FARMCREST DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
JEFFREY R AYLOR 6900 HOUSTON RD., BLDG. 700, STE. 35 FLORENCE, KY 41042
01-27-2020
ROBERT KEITZ 5662 SNYDER LANE PETERSBURG, KY 41080
AMY KEITZ SEBREE 5676 SNYDER LANE PETERSBURG, KY 41080
MICHAEL T MCKINNEY PO BOX 688 BURLINGTON, KY 41005
01-21-2020
ROBERT ROY MILLER 7983 WOLFE ROAD BURLINGTON, KY 41005
RITA F MILLER 7983 WOFLE ROAD BURLINGTON, KY 41005
C.J. VICTOR 6601 DIXIE HIGHWAY FLORENCE, KY 41042
02-04-2020
PLEGE L SHARP 6004 BELAIR DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
KATRINA AVERY 600 BRANDTLY RIDGE DRIVE COVINGTON, KY 41015
STEPHEN M VENARD 463 COMMONWEALTH AVENUE ERLANGER, KY 41018
01-27-2020
CORA A SOWDER 6900 HOPEFUL RD., APT 210 FLORENCE, KY 41042
LONNIE E SOWDER 2270 DAPHNE DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
GRETA WALKER 7348 US 42, SUITE 202 FLORENCE, KY 41042
02-11-2020
MARY LOU RICE 70 CHURCH STREET WALTON, KY 41094
DELORES RICE 70 CHURCH STREET WALTON, KY 41094
MILLS ROUSE 10 SOUTH MAIN STREET WALTON, KY 41094
02-05-2020
JERRY LOUIS HULKER 8459 DIXIE HIGHWAY, APT 11 FLORENCE, KY 41042
ALICIA HULKER 5749 HINCKLEY COURT HUBER HEIGHTS, OH 45424
RYAN M BECK PO BOX 6910 FLORENCE, KY 41042
01-28-2020
ROBERT EARL PFEFFER 267 MERRAVAY DR FLORENCE, KY 41042
RONALD LEE PFEFFER, SR. 1549 MONTEGOR DRIVE CINCINNATI, OH 45230
DAVID A KOENIG PO BOX 6205 FLORENCE, KY 41042
01-28-2020
LEONE F BRADY 2947 BULLITTSBURG CHURCH ROAD PETERSBURG, KY 41080
RONALD G BRADY 2947 BULLITTSBURG CHURCH RD PETERSBURG, KY 41080
MICHAEL J MCMAIN PO BOX 6910 FLORENCE, KY 41042
02-05-2020
WANDA JEAN WEBER 10250 US 42 UNION, KY 41091
ERIC LEDFORD 265 CASH DRIVE DRY RIDGE, KY 41035
MICHAEL J KEENEY 7000 HOUSTON ROAD, SUITE 17 FLORENCE, KY 41042
01-27-2020
RONALD R NOEL 10741 OMAHA TRACE UNION, KY 41091
W KEITH NOEL 2316 PINNACLE COURT HEBRON, KY 41048
CLAIRE V PARRISH ONE EAST FOURTH STREET, SUITE 1400 CINCINNATI, OH 45202
02-04-2020
ALBERT THOMAS PULLEN 6510 ROGERS LANE BURLINGTON, KY 41005
SHARON GRIPSHOVER 3395 IDLEWILD ROAD BURLINGTON, KY 41005
ROBERT SCHRODER 142 BARNWOOD DRIVE EDGEWOOD, KY 41017
02-05-2020
JUDITH B PULLEN 6510 ROGERS LANE BURLINGTON, KY 41005
SHARON GRIPSHOVER 3395 IDLEWILD ROAD BURLINGTON, KY 41005
ROBERT SCHRODER 142 BARNWOOD DRIVE EDGEWOOD, KY 41017
02-05-2020
LINDSAY MITCHELL 155 SADDLEBROOK LN UNIT 541 FLORENCE, KY 41042
BETHANY MITCHELL 25 LINWOOD AVENUE ERLANGER, KY 41018
MARY CATHERINE TURNER 12320 GAINES WAY WALTON, KY 41094
KELLY SULLIVAN 10590 RIDDLES RUN ROAD UNION, KY 41091
SCOTT A BEST 300 BUTTERMILK PIKE, SUITE 100 FT MITCHELL, KY 41017
02-11-2020
LINDA ANDERSON 917 CAITLIN DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
JAMIE ANDERSON 2125 YALE ST. APT. 401 HOUSTON, TX 77008
PAUL HILL 2216 DIXIE HIGHWAY, SUITE 203 FT MITCHELL, KY 41017
01-28-2020
RONALD D’AMICO 2028 HOLDERNESS DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
JEFFREY D’AMICO 2028 HOLDERNESS DRIVE UNION, KY 41091
JOHN S “BROOK” BROOKING 909 WRIGHT’S SUMMIT PARKWAY, STE 220 FT WRIGHT, KY 41011
02-05-2020
MARY MAXINE ESTES BEAGLE 120 CENTER STREET FLORENCE, KY 41042
MELISSA A KRAMER 8856 BOONE VALLEY DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
JOSEPH M SCHULTE 127 EAST THIRD STREET COVINGTON, KY 41011
02-10-2020
STEVEN R SANDERS 6189 STRAWBERRY LANE FLORENCE, KY 41042
GREGORY T EGBERS 982 KINGSTON COURT UNION, KY 41091
KIMBERLY W QUINN 4132 DIXIE HIGHWAY ERLANGER, KY 41018
02-03-2020
GARNETT HONCHUL MILLS 6756 HIGHRIDGE AVENUE FLORENCE, KY 41042
DELORES WOODS BAKER 134 W THIRD STREET MAYSVILLE, KY 41056
DELORES WOODS BAKER 134 W THIRD STREET MAYSVILLE, KY 41056
02-05-2020
DIANNE B ROTHFUSS 8496 TULANE COURT UNION, KY 41091 BCR.Feb27,’20#4070159
JEFFREY W ROTHFUSS 975 GOLDEN GRAVE LANE FLORENCE, KY 41042
MICHAEL J MCMAIN PO BOX 6910 FLORENCE, KY 41022
02-12-2020
02-03-2020
BOONE RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ 13B BOBBIE SUE MOORE 2264 BLEU YACHT LANE UNION, KY 41091
MATTHEW D MOORE 2264 BLEU YACHT LANE UNION, KY 41091
MICHAEL W FEDERLE 4 WEST FOURTH STREET, STE. 400 NEWPORT, KY 41071
02-12-2020
BRADLEY T MOORE 1255 OSCAR DOWNEY ROAD WOODBURN, KY 42170 MARY LOUISE LUCAS 5343 COUNTRY CLUB LANE BURLINGTON, KY 41005
OMER LUCAS, JR 5343 COUNTRY CLUB ROAD BURLINGTON, KY 41005
ROBERT E BATHALTER PO BOX 92 ALEXANDRIA, KY 41001
02-12-2020
DENNIS R SHAW 3034 RIGGS ROAD ERLANGER, KY 41018
STEVE COLLINSWORTH 7992 EAST BEND ROAD BURLINGTON, KY 41005
GRETA WALKER 7348 US HWY 42, SUITE 202 FLORENCE, KY 41042
02-11-2020
SHIRLEY MAE AMEND 1835 KNOLLMONT DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
RICHARD M AMEND 1835 KNOLLMONT DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
W EDWARD CLORE 18 N FORT THOMAS AVE., SUITE 206 FORT THOMAS, KY 41075
02-18-2020
PATRICIA A DAULT 1846 MIMOSA TRAIL FLORENCE, KY 41042
MICHAEL R JUMP 3404 EMILY DRIVE PLANO, TX 75093
PAUL R MARKGRAF 1005 MADISON AVENUE COVINGTON, KY 41011
02-18-2020
MICHAEL LAWRENCE HALENKAMP 1521 MARIETTA DRIVE HEBRON, KY 41048
ERIN HALENKAMP 1521 MARIETTA DRIVE HEBRON, KY 41048
MARY P BURNS 635 MAPLE AVENUE NEWPORT, KY 41071
02-18-2020
CLYDE OLIVER 1873 EADS RD VERONA, KY 41092
PATRICIA JUMP 495 HARRISON RIDGE ROAD DRY RIDGE, KY 41035
JENNIFER T LEONARD 182 BARNWOOD DRIVE EDGEWOOD, KY 41017
02-18-2020
SUSAN P HUIET 8542 QUINN DRIVE FLORENCE, KY 41042
LARRY S PARR 20 S FOOTE AVENUE BELLEVUE, KY 41073
DAVID F FESSLER 14 NORTH GRAND AVENUE FT THOMAS, KY 41075
02-18-2020
DAVID HAYS WILLIAMS 12063 RACHEL ANN DRIVE WALTON, KY 41094
TRACEY BURNS 2768 BERWOOD LANE HEBRON, KY 41048
C.J. VICTOR 6601 DIXIE HIGHWAY WALTON, KY 41094
02-19-2020
BETTY J MCNEELY 6975 BURLINGTON PIKE FLORENCE, KY 41042
DAN MCNEELY 4839 BELLEVIEW ROAD PETERSBURG, KY 41080
MICHAEL T MCKINNEY PO BOX 688 BURLINGTON, KY 41005
02-19-2020
SEBERN R SCOTT 6324 PIKE STREET BURLINGTON, KY 41005
MARTHA A WOOD 6298 PIKE STREET BURLINGTON, KY 41005
MICHAEL T MCKINNEY PO BOX 688 BURLINGTON, KY 41005
02-19-2020
MARTHA A WOOD 6298 PIKE STREET BURLINGTON, KY 41005
MICHAEL T MCKINNEY PO BOX 688 BURLINGTON, KY 41005
02-19-2020
JAMES EDWIN SCOTT 6298 PIKE STREET BURLINGTON, KY 41005 GIVEN UNDER MY HAND THIS 19TH DAY FEBRUARY, 2020
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
BY: AMBERLY HARRIS, D.C.
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
BCR.Feb27,’20#4073134
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
UPDATED ALL DAY.
DAVID MARTIN, CIRCUIT CLERK
NOTICE (OF FILING OF SETTLEMENT) COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY) ) )
COUNTY OF BOONE
I, DAVID MARTIN, CLERK OF BOONE DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE COUNTY AND STATE AFORESAID, DO HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THE FOLLOWING SETTLEMENT OF ESTATES HAVE BEEN FILED IN THE BOONE DISTRICT COURT, AND ANYONE DESIRING TO TAKE EXCEPTION TO SAID SETTLEMENT MUST DO SO ON OR BEFORE TUESDAY, APRIL 7TH, 2020 @ 1:10 PM. SETTLEMENT
ESTATE
FIDUCIARY
FINAL
MARY ANN RUSSELL
KENNETH RUSSELL 360 EAGLE CREEK DR, DRY RIDGE
FINAL
STEPHEN P DENNY
JASON MATTHEW MILEY 2815 ASHLAND AVE, COVINGTON
FINAL
CHARLES DROZ
KATHRYN DROZ 2569 BETHLEHEM LANE, HEBRON
FINAL
BERTIE R VAN ARSDALL
JOHN ALLEN VAN ARSDALL PO BOX 176693, FT MITCHELL
FINAL
MARY VIVIAN SOWDER
MERRY VIVIAN PARKER 616 ADALIN DR, DEMOSSVILLE
NOW THAT’S REFRESHING.
CANDACE DARLENE TACKETT 640 BARLEY CIRCLE, CRITTENDEN FINAL
JEWELL N BANDY
JOHN D BANDY 8401 WOODCREEK DR, FLORENCE
FINAL
GARRY BROOKS
RHONDA BROOKS 80 SANDERS DR, FLORENCE
FINAL
DOROTHY BUTTS
JACQUELINE DETERS 112 LAWRENCE DR, FLORENCE
BY: AMBERLY HARRIS, D.C.
BCR,Feb27,’20#4070171
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO THE CUSTOMERS OF NORTHERN KENTUCKY WATER DISTRICT Pursuant to the Order of the Kentucky Public Service Commission in Case No. 2018-00291 dated March 26, 2019, Northern Kentucky Water District provides the following notice of adjusted rates to be effective March 26, 2020. Meter Size 5/8-inch 3/4-inch 1-inch 1 1/2-inch 2-inch 3-inch 4-inch 6-inch 8-inch 10-inch
Current Per Month $17.50 17.90 19.60 22.10 27.90 67.30 84.40 124.90 168.70 224.30
Phase 2 Per Month $18.50 19.00 20.80 23.40 29.60 71.30 89.50 132.40 178.80 237.80
Percent Change 5.7% 6.1% 6.1% 5.9% 6.1% 5.9% 6.0% 6.0% 6.0% 6.0%
Current Per Quarter $36.65 38.45 44.15 52.20 73.20 227.85 285.50 421.90 576.55 752.80
Phase 2 Per Quarter $40.50 42.50 48.80 57.70 80.90 251.80 315.50 466.20 637.10 831.90
Percent Change 10.5% 10.5% 10.5% 10.5% 10.5% 10.5% 10.5% 10.5% 10.5% 10.5%
Consumption Charges Monthly First 1,500 cubic feet Next 163,500 cubic feet Over 165,000 cubic feet
Current
Phase 2
$4.65 Per 100 cubic feet 4.19 Per 100 cubic feet 3.07 Per 100 cubic feet
$4.77 Per 100 cubic feet 4.44 Per 100 cubic feet 3.25 Per 100 cubic feet
Percent Change 2.6% 6.0% 5.9%
Quarterly First 4,500 cubic feet Next 490,500 cubic feet Over 495,000 cubic feet
$4.65 Per 100 cubic feet 4.19 Per 100 cubic feet 3.07 Per 100 cubic feet
$4.77 Per 100 cubic feet 4.44 Per 100 cubic feet 3.25 Per 100 cubic feet
2.6% 6.0% 5.9%
Wholesale Water Rates
$3.78 Per 1,000 Gallons 2.83 Per 100 cubic feet
$3.98 Per 1,000 Gallons 2.98 Per 100 cubic feet
5.3% 5.3%
Bulk Sales
$6.22 Per 1,000 Gallons
$6.38 Per 1,000 Gallons
2.6%
Lindsey Rechtin VP of Finance and Support Services Northern Kentucky Water District BCR,Feb27,Mar5,12,’20#4065519
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The City of Florence, Kentucky (“City”) invites proposals from qualified, competent, knowledgeable, and experienced providers that provide the services outlined in this Request for Proposal (“RFP”), in compliance with all applicable laws and regulations. Companies submitting responses must be prepared to enter into an agreement (“Agreement”) for the provision of requested services and goods as set forth in this RFP. Issue Date: February 2020
27,
RFP Title: Engineering Design Services for US 42/Mall Road/Ewing Blvd Signals Issuing Department: City of Florence Public Services Department 8100 Ewing Blvd Florence, Kentucky 41042 Contact: Eric Hall Public Services Director (859) 647-5416 Eric.Hall@florence-ky.gov Proposals must be submitted in a sealed envelope plainly marked on the outside "SEALED PROPOSAL FOR Engineering Design ServicesUS 42/Mall Road/Ewing Blvd Signals." SEALED BIDS MUST BE MAILED OR PHYSICALLY DELIVERED TO: City of Florence Public Services Department 8100 Ewing Blvd Florence, Kentucky 41042 RESPONSES MUST BE SUBMITTED BY: 10:30 a.m. on March 12th, 2020. A submission received after this date and time will be considered non-responsive.
GIVEN UNDER MY HAND THIS 18TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 2020 DAVID MARTIN, CIRCUIT CLERK
LEGAL NOTICE The Walton Board of Adjustment will hold a Public Hearing on Monday, March 16, 2020 at 6:30 P.M. in the Walton Senior Center, 44 North Main Street, Walton, Kentucky. ****************************** Request of The Deters Comp a n y for a Conditional Use Permit and two Variances. The Conditional Use Permit would allow a car wash to be located on a future lot. The Variances would reduce the 500 foot road frontage requirement so the future car wash lot and Wendy’s restaurant lot could each have two curb cuts on Chestnut Drive. The future 0.662 and 0.6927 acre lots are currently part of Lot 9 of Walton Towne Center, Walton, KY. The lot is located to the south and east of Chestnut Drive and is immediately to the west of 715 Chestnut Drive (Tire Discounters) Walton, Kentucky and is currently zoned Commercial Two (C-2). ****************************** Information about this request is available at the Boone County Planning Commission office located at 2950 Washington Street, Room 317, Burlington, Kentucky or you may call at 859-334-2196. Other information is available at www.boonecountyky.org/pc. (2/27/20)
Engineering Design
JAMES EDWIN SCOTT 6322 PIKE STREET BURLINGTON, KY 41005 AGNES SCOTT 6324 PIKE STREET BURLINGTON, KY 41005
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
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REVIEW: Pursuant to KRS 45A.730-750, the evaluation of proposals and making any awards shall be conducted using competitive negotiation. Any final award shall be based upon the criteria set forth below. The City of Florence finds that selection based upon competitive negotiation is necessary based upon the finding that specifications cannot be made sufficiently to permit an award on the basis of the lowest bid price or lowest evaluated bid price. The City of Florence reserves the right to reject any and all proposals. BCR,FEB27’2020#4071278
Requests for a
Legal Notice for the Enquirer or Community Press/Recorder should be emailed to: legalads@enquirer.com
14B ❚ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2020 ❚ BOONE RECORDER
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
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Smith’s Towing 1495 Dolwick Dr. Erlanger, KY 41018 859-586-8999
Benito Pantaleon
*Smith’s Towing reserves the right to place bids on the following vehicles. TITLES NOT GUARANTEED!* Listed below are vehicles in which will be sold for towing and storage charges generated by impound. Auction date as follows: March 6, 2020 at 10:00 AM by Smith’s Towing at 1495 Dolwick Drive, Erlanger, KY 41018: WBAGN63484DS47960 2004 BMW 745 LI Black Osman Ismail Vallaz W04GP5EC5B1065511 2011 Buick Regal Beige Nicole Haynes DTL Finance 2G4WS52J541314711 2004 Buick Century Custom Richard Wilson 1GYEE437490119300 2009 Cadillac SRX Derrick Parker Guardian Finance 1GNCS18X34K148854 2004 Chevrolet Blazer Yellow Nicholas Gabhart Onemain Financial 1G1PC5SB3F7167642 2015 Chevrolet Cruze Black Courtney Faehr
1HGEJ8247WL136068 1998 Honda Civic EX Gray Herindo G Mendez 2HGFG12818H513961 2008 Honda Civic EX Guadalupe Restaurant Cleaning JHMBA4139MC027688 1991 Honda Prelude White Bradley Stevens 1HGCM81625A004217 2005 Honda Accord EX Black Dennis Walz KMHCG45G6YU028584 2000 Hyundai Accent GL Angela Hacker KMHDN46D44U709965 2004 Hyundai Elantra GLS Cheyenne Muse
1J4FX58S2TC295222 1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee Rebecca Adams Hall
2CNDL73F856023781 2005 Chevrolet Equinox Blue Jeffrey Miller Professional Finance Service
1J4GL48K02W211924 2002 Jeep Liberty Sport Austins Auto KNDJC733945182168 2004 Kia Sorento Black State of Indiana Child Support State of Indiana Dept Revenue Clarksville Finance INC Charles W Hipscher JM2UC1214E0815194 1984 B2000 Standard Bed Michael Traylor
3GNDA23P76S616046 2006 Chevrolet HHR LT Shanna Miller Pauls Auto Sales
4A3AK24FX7E069183 2007 Mitsubishi Eclipse Silver Orlando Used Auto Parts
1GNET16S446101239 2004 Chevrolet Trailblazer Jelen Portalatin Garcia Auto Sales
5N1ED28Y74C620960 2004 Nissan Xterra XE Alford Finance Inc Quinton E Jordan
1G1ZB5EB1AF219405 2010 Chevrolet Malibu LS Elizabeth Marie Johnson Bens Automotive Inc
JN1CA31D5YT713874 2000 Nissan Maxima GLE Integrity Funding Ohio, LLC Rebecca D Wiedenbein
2G1WL52M0W9164161 1998 Chevrolet Lumina Braden Michael Plasterer
1N4AL3AP1EN384573 2014 Nissan Altima Gray Santander Dusty Combs Tracy Turner
2G1WG5E39C1249033 2012 Chevrolet Impala LT Marsha Harris Red Rock Financial Services 1GCWGFFF6F1106492 2015 Chevrolet Express G2500 Enterprise FM Trust 1GCCS1445TK216834 1996 Chevrolet S10 Gold Darrell Piercefield 1GAZGPFF7H1261941 2017 Chevrolet Express G3500 Enterprise FM Trust 1G1BN53EXMW260240 1991 Chevrolet Caprice William S Edwards Titlemax of Tennessee
1G3WH12M7VF322969 1997 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme White Ethan Mcfarland JTKDE167680232930 2008 Scion TC Black Joseph Eduardo Cuervo JTLK324254010146 2005 Scion XB Black Constantine Cassis Titlemax of Ohio INC 1NXBR32E73Z023048 2003 Toyota Corolla Blue Jane Richie 2T1KU4EE9AC214520 2010 Toyota Corolla Matrix Mark Edward Russell Sarah Ann Layton
1GCWGFFF0F1115950 2015 Chevrolet Express G2500 Enterprise FM Trust
3VWDP7AJ6DM405437 2013 Volkswagon Jetta SE Farah Hashi Lincoln Financial Services
1GNDV23L66D103209 2006 Chevrolet Uplander Samantha Hilton
3VWSC29M81M000325 2001 Volkswagon Jetta Matthew Lay
1G1ZT54815F241011 2005 Chevrolet Malibu Patricia Bea Meja
WMEEJ3BA5BK478210 2011 Smart Fortwo Pure/Passion Guillermo Ramirez
2G1WF52EX19146078 2001 Chevrolet Impala Kenneth Collier 2A8HR54P78R793157 2008 Chrysler Town & Country Beatriz Adriana Morales Ruiz 1C3EL46X44N408586 2004 Chrysler Sebring Tonya Howser Springleaf Financial Services 1B4HR38N82F158660 2002 Dodge Durango Sport Joseph R Zanotti Ohio Neighborhood Solutions
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1HGCM56314A066901 2004 Honda Accord Black Amanda Trusty
1GNDT13S632214986 2003 Chevrolet Blazer White Precious T J Hence
2G1WL52M4X9107902 1999 Chevrolet Lumina Nolan Fisher
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1HGCM56715A119195 2005 Honda Accord EX Guy Thronberry Titlemax of Ohio
JNRAR07Y2YW079394 2000 Infiniti Q4 Mary Lou Kroger
3GNDA23D06S612071 2006 Chevrolet HHR LT Maroon Austin Funk
GOT EXTRA STUFF?
1HGCG5659XA061684 1999 Honda Accord Blue Erik Gonzales
1GCHG39R1X1135137 1999 Chevrolet Express G3500 Micah Wiegold Integrity Funding
2GCEC19KXS1302703 1995 Chevrolet C1500 Green Ernest D Hurley Titlemax of Tennessee
NOTICE OF HEARING NOTICE is hereby given that the Kentucky Public Service Commission has scheduled a public hearing in a case styled “In the Matter of the Electronic Investigation of Home Energy Assistance Programs Offered by Investor-Owned Utilities Pursuant to KRS 278.285(4),” Case No. 2019-00366, on Tuesday, March 17, 2020 and Wednesday, March 18, 2020, at 9:00 a.m., Eastern Standard Time, at the offices of the Public Service Commission at 211 Sower Boulevard, Frankfort, Kentucky. The local address for Duke Energy Kentucky, Inc. is 1262 Cox Road, Erlanger, Kentucky 41018. The purpose of the hearing will be to take evidence on investor-owned utilities’ Home Energy Assistance Programs. This hearing will be streamed live and may be viewed on the PSC website, www.psc.ky.g ov. BCR,Feb27’2020#0004068179
1FTCR10A1NPA66623 1992 Ford Ranger White Chassity N Happeny
2B7JB21Y31K550985 2001 Dodge Cargo van Joshua Garrison 2D4GP44L27R188366 2007 Dodge Caravan Red Corrine Schaefer 1FDWE37SXWHB59523 1998 Ford E350 Kwadwo Boateing 1FMZU73K03UA23823 2003 Ford Explorer XLT Blue Arthur N Diggs III 1FTPW14565FB33262 2005 Ford F150 Supercrew Red Timothy Cherry Credit Acceptance Corp 1FTNE24L44HB27493 2004 Ford Econoline Timothy Mcgaha Onemain Financial group
4X4TRPU17JL020464 RPod Camper Connor Gillespie US Bank 1GBHP32K3R3302011 1994 Chevrolet P30 Travis Chappell 2G1WH55K429366538 2002 Chevrolet Impala Carla Akin Time Auto Sales 1B3LC46K18N595624 2008 Dodge Avenger SE Albert Gilbert 1GNDT13W5Y2156590 2000 Chevrolet Blzaer Black Anita Foudray JF1GD61637H520770 2007 Subaru Impreza Black Dalton Joynt 1J4GL48K35W711516 2005 Jeep Liberty Sport Pippen Auto Sales LLC WDBGA51E5PA126201 1993 White Mercedes-Benz 500SEL White Eileen Robinson Blues Auto Sales INC 1GCFC24MXWZ177153 1998 Chevrolet C2500 Madison Wolfla 1G8ZK5279TZ379518 1996 Saturn SL2 Green Sabryna Franklin CIN,Feb20,27,’20#4051480
1FMZU72E12UB62370 2002 Ford Explorer Jerry Glasgow Reliable Camp and Auto 1FTRX17252NA28771 2002 Ford F150 James P Kayden Onemain Financial Group 2FAHP71W36X140294 2006 Ford Crown Victoria Hamad Ahmed Haumaid Aksuwaidi 1FTRX14W18FC14754 2008 White Ford F150
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