CAMPBELL RECORDER
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THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2020 | BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS | PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK ###
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Ongoing epidemic collides with the pandemic Terry DeMio Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Shoppers take to stores in the NewPort Shopping Center as the commonwealth reopens for retail in Newport on Wednesday. SAM GREENE/THE ENQUIRIER
WELCOME BACK, SHOPPERS Hand sanitizer is provided at the entrance of the New Port Art Gallery in Newport.
Matt Stonecash, 41, of Prospect Hill, leaves with his purchase of tennis balls from Dick's Sporting Goods in Newport.. Stonecash says he purchased the tennis balls for physical therapy use.
As retail stores reopened in the commonwealth on May 20, masks were part of the wardrobe for shoppers at the NewPort Shopping Center.
Shoppers entered the stores in the NewPort Shopping Center.
Owner Brent Keltch talks about his plans for a grand re-opening in the New Port Art Gallery. Opening plans were postponed in the gallery, which officially opened in January, during the commonwealth's retail closure.
Isolation is the enemy. Jennifer Anderson watched helplessly as her boyfriend spent two days early in April isolating himself in their bedroom in Covington watching endless TV news about how COVID-19 was threatening the globe. “People who are drug addicts, you’re seeing it on the screen, it’s gonna get to you,“ she said. Her boyfriend took off to the streets after that, besieged by that familiar compulsion to use drugs to cope, and although he eventually sought treatment, she lost track of him for days. Which made her own recovery more precarious. Anderson tried to hang on by off ering help to others. On April 7 she posted to Facebook: “Today is a beautiful day. I’m so grateful I woke up. Sober and not dope sick. I have healthy relationships in my life. Sober people that love me just the way I am. We all deserve that. We are NEVER alone. I’m here if you need to talk or just need someone to listen. Call me. ... Anytime.” She included her phone number. It didn’t dawn on her then that she needed as much help as her peers did. Five days after that post, she was struggling to hold onto her sobriety. “I’m tired,” she said by phone. What was once hard about staying free from addiction is now harder. An epidemic that was diffi cult for most people to appreciate is now an epidemic that’s in hiding. It’s the epidemic of overdose deaths that killed almost 1,296 people a week in 2018. Seventy percent of those deaths involved an opioid. It’s an epidemic that continues to kill people every day. The novel coronavirus has taken the stage. But those still in need of help for addiction now must jump new hurdles. These are hurdles that make getting counseling harder, make getting human contact harder and make getting food, clothing and shelter harder. For the diligent, telehealth counseling has replaced face-to-face therapy sessions. Discreet sober meetings and intimate faith services have been swapped out for Zoom and Facebook Live encounters. For those in active addiction who depend on libraries for internet access and an ability to join digital counseling sessions, the closure of public libraries has shut the door on even that lifeline. lll Anderson is 40. She has wrestled with addiction for years with a fi erce determination to stay well, but this COVID-19 threat and all that it has brought with it has hurled a new level of anxiety her way. “It’s been hard,” she said. “I was used to three groups a week, three hours a day, so that fi lled up my time,” Anderson said. “Then it was gone.” The structure of those in-person meetings with peers, maybe getting a peer sponsor and eventually, helping others, often helps those in recovery maintain their sobriety. See ADDICTION, Page 2A
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2A ❚ THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2020 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Addiction Continued from Page 1A
“You become a link in the peer chain of recovery,” said Dr. Mina “Mike” Kalfas, an addiction specialist with St. Elizabeth Physicians Journey Recovery Center in Northern Kentucky. Addiction is a chronic, often relapsing health condition that, when treated with medication, counseling and other support can be eff ectively managed. Experts felt like they were making progress now that medication-assisted treatment has become more commonplace. Now, as the pandemic continues, treatment providers are trying to prevent setbacks – to, in eff ect, bend the links among those in recovery into a new shape, so that people with addiction can get help without risking their lives to COVID-19. And without succumbing to a recurrence of addiction. To their credit, experts were not taken by surprise. “We saw this coming,” said Dr. Roberto Soria, chief medical offi cer at Crossroads Clinic in Corryville, and addiction specialists planned for it. As stay-at-home orders bubbled up across the United States, the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration announced guidelines in March that allowed states to take the lead in how methadone providers would give medication to patients. Instead of coming to a clinic every day, people deemed stable can take home up to 28 days of medication, depending on state rules. Ohio’s rule restricts take-homes to 14 days. Still, some are left out: “The only people that we cannot give it to are the people who are actively using fentanyl,” Soria said. His clinic has put in place safeguards to protect clients. Temperatures are taken outside. Inside, fl oors are marked at 6-foot intervals for those waiting in line for methadone. The number of clients allowed in at one time is limited to 12. The clinic has extended hours so that fewer people will be there at any given time, Soria said. Pew Research Center also put out strategies for care of those with opioid use disorder during the pandemic. Among recommendations: Have a lead point of contact who ensures patients are following a comprehensive care program. Elsewhere, doctors who prescribe buprenorphine products such as Suboxone, which diminishes opioid cravings, are reevaluating patients to learn who can have prescriptions for a longer duration. Anderson said her prescription, originally a week’s worth of Suboxone, was extended to two weeks through the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine’s Addiction Sciences clinic, also in Corryville. That helped, she said, because she didn’t have to fi nd a way across the river every week. Her counseling was restricted to phone conversations. That proved harder. Locating peer support she felt she
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Safe, Secure & Happy
Jennifer Anderson, 40, has battled addiction for 20 years, going in and out of sobriety and treatment. “With the corona thing, it's been hard. It's been scary,” she says. For her, limited access to meetings has been particularly hard. Here she sits in a park in Covington on April 22 before heading to a treatment center. “I’m not trusting this area,'”she said. “I need to relearn behaviors.” LIZ DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER
could trust was not easy, but she managed to do it for a while. “There’s a lot of underground AA meetings that people are doing in their yards and at farms, and you have to reach out,” she said on April 6. “They’ll help you.” lll In the Cincinnati area, treatment providers want people to know there is help. The Center for Addiction Treatment in the West End is trying to get word out that services are available. First Step Home in Walnut Hills, which provides housing and treatment for pregnant women, is reaching out for clients. The Northern Kentucky Offi ce of Drug Control Policy continues to link those with addiction to treatment. “We have had an increase of inquiries around reentry or recovery resources, where folks are asking for sober living or food services as well as online recovery resources,” said Director Amanda Peters. Outreach looks diff erent: Less face-to-face contact, more door hangers outlining treatment options. Dr. Shawn Ryan, founding partner of BrightView Health, which has nearly 5,000 medication-assisted treatment patients in Ohio, said patients have adjusted rapidly to the call-in appointments. lll Not everything is going smoothly. In Greater Cincinnati, Quick Response Teams, which go to the homes of overdose survivors to link them with treatment, have suspended operations. “The biggest part of QRT is that rapport ... when you knock on the door. We’ve lost that relationship,” said Tom Fallon, investigative commander of the Hamilton County Heroin Task Force. Hamilton County Public Health temporarily changed its syringe exchange operation, an eff ort to prevent the spread of HIV and other blood-borne infections, to appointment-only. The plan tentative plan is to reopen the week of May 18 with outdoor services. The exchange has drawn some cli-
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ents. In a three-week span, from March 30-April 20, 231 appointments were made, and 139, or 60%, were kept, records show. Participants received Narcan and a month’s worth of syringes to help keep public contact down. But for some, the restrictions were too much to manage in their already chaotic lives. So far in Hamilton County, overdose counts have remained stable when compared to 2019. But on April 23, the county’s addiction response team issued an alert, saying 13 people died from suspected overdose in just fi ve days, and 911 calls about overdose were up. Compounding the issue, doctors who treat addiction are beginning to see the erosion of previous progress in some patients. “We’re seeing pretty good attendance to our physicians’ video visits,” said Kalfas, “but some of the patients seem to be skirting the therapist.” Peer support specialists and case managers are calling patients more in response, and doctors are increasing drug screens for some patients to counter setbacks, he said. The results of the screens aren’t al-
ways good. “I’m starting to see substances creeping in,” Kalfas said. “I’m starting to see meth and even some of the older stuff : A little more heroin. A little more cocaine.” Newtown Police Chief Tom Synan, a coordinator with the Hamilton County Addiction Response Coalition, suspects the fentanyl supply, largely from China, has decreased with the coronavirus pandemic. He believes other drugs – heroin, cocaine – are being used in its place, exacerbating the addiction crisis. “It’ll be tough to tell exactly what impact the crisis has had on patients with opioid use disorder until we see at least a few months of trends,” Ryan said. lll Inside those trends will be the individuals who make them, including Anderson. For her, the day-in-day-out pressures that piled on with COVID-19 were too much to manage. “You can’t see your psychiatrist. You cant see your counselor,” she said. In mid-April, she felt so alone and anxious that she broke her no-drug-use rule and started taking Xanax, a benzodiazepine sedative sometimes prescribed for anxiety, but known to cause dependence. It triggered her active addiction, again. It was a medication she’d long ago been prescribed, along with the opioid painkiller Percocet, after a fall in her mother’s home. That’s what started her addiction disorder 20 years ago. Some uncertain number of days after she relapsed, Anderson went to Sun Behavioral Health in Northern Kentucky to detox. She doesn’t remember much of the stay. By April 20, she decided she’d have to get farther from the Cincinnati area to recover. The drug scene is too ingrained here, she said. She arranged for a Karen’s Place treatment advocate to pick her up in a Covington park on April 22 and drive her to the center, in Louisa, Kentucky. It has been a hard road, with the pandemic capsizing so much of what she’d learned about staying sober. But Anderson has remained unwavering in her persistence. “I’m OK,” she said early on. “I’m gonna be OK. No matter what, this is just part of my story.”
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4A ❚ THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2020 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Crestview Hills Joseph-Beth permanently closing Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The Crestview Hills Joseph-Beth location is permanently closing, eff ective immediately, offi cials said. The small independent bookstore chain will only close the one store, saying there have been declining year-overyear sales at the Crestview Hills location. That, “compounded through recent store closures due to coronavirus,” led to the closure. “In response to business changes over the last several weeks due to COVID-19, Joseph-Beth is undertaking some large scale changes. Unfortunately, this includes permanently closing our Crestview Hills location,” president
Joseph-Beth is closing its Crestview Hills store, leaving one in Rookwood Pavilion and one in Lexington Green. FILE PHOTO
and CEO Adam Miller said in a statement. Joseph-Beth announced its lease of
the 20,000-square-foot space at Crestview Hills in fall 2011, taking over a former Borders location. “We are sad to leave Crestview Hills. It was a diffi cult, but necessary, decision and we will miss being part of that community,” Miller said. “We are thankful for the outpouring of community support we have received, and continue to receive, during this diffi cult time and look forward to the day we are able to open our doors to our customers again.” Miller said the closing will allow Joseph-Beth to operate its two store locations at Rookwood Pavilion in Cincinnati and at Lexington Green in Lexington and “be a successful local, independent bookstore for years to come.”
Fort Thomas schools elementary teacher arrested on child porn charges By Michael Baldwin Fox19
Covington police arrested a Northern Kentucky man Wednesday, May 20 on child porn charges, according to police documents. Justin Fussinger, 35, is charged with possessing and viewing matter portraying sexual performance by a minor. Fort Thomas Independent Schools
confi rms Fussinger is a special education teacher at Samuel Woodfi ll Elementary. “Every defendant accessing child pornograFussinger phy is cause for concern,” Kenton County Commonwealth’s Attorney Rob Sanders said. “But one with direct access to children is extremely alarming.”
Fussinger was arrested at 6 p.m. May 20. He bonded out of Kenton County Jail at 9:30 p.m. on a $2,500 bond. Anyone who suspects their child could be a victim should call Covington police at 859-356-3191 or the NKY Children’s Advocacy Center at 859442-3200. Enquirer media partner Fox19 provided this report
Coronavirus took bite out of April home sales Randy Tucker Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Local home sales declined about 21% in April compared to the same month last year as home buyers hit the brakes hard amid the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the latest Re/Max National Housing Report, which covers 53 metro areas.
But a corresponding decline in inventory helped buoy prices as buyers in a tight real estate market were forced to compete for even fewer listings. “Homes are still selling for over list price, especially those priced at $300,000 and under,’’ said Donna Deaton, a realtor at Re/Max Victory in Liberty Township. “There are still a lot of buyers out there, we’re just limited on
inventory like we have been for the past year or so.” Meanwhile, Northern Kentucky saw sales drop about 19%, according to NKAR. The median price in Northern Kentucky last month was up about 12% to $195,000 in year-to-year comparison, according to NKAR.
Whitney Craig, 34, passed away Sunday night in Hebron, Ky. COURTESY OF THERESA TAYLOR
Firefi ghter Whitney Craig dies unexpectedly She was an engineerparamedic with Central Campbell Fire District Segann March Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The Central Campbell Fire District announced May 18 that one of their fi refi ghters passed away unexpectedly. Whitney Craig, 34, passed away May 17 in Hebron. “Words cannot express how sad it makes us to have to announce this terrible news,” the district said in a release. “Whitney was a wonderful young lady. and we miss her already.” Craig started her career in 2011 with the Ludlow Fire Department. She was hired as a fi refi ghter-paramedic with Central Campbell in 2015 and promoted to engineer-paramedic in 2018. “Whitney was a loving mother of two boys and was a great fi refi ghterengineer-paramedic,” the release said. A GoFundMe has been created for her funeral expenses. As of May 19, the account had raised more than $13,000. “Due to the unexpected loss, there were no funds in place for funeral arrangements for Whitney and her family,” the GoFundMe says. “We are graciously accepting donations to help alleviate this fi nancial burden. Any leftover funds will be placed in trust funds for her two sons.” No further details regarding Craig’s death were released when this article was originally published.
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Panic buyers of hydroxychloroquine included a goldfi sh with arthritis Anne Saker Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The pace has almost returned to the everyday at HealthWarehouse in Northern Kentucky, so Jenny Trenkamp and Ross Goetz can refl ect now on their roles in the coronavirus pandemic, facing the panic that fueled demand for the drug hydroxychloroquine. About 100 people work at HealthWarehouse, in business since 2007 and the only online pharmacy licensed in every state. The Florence company has just weathered an unprecedented deluge of new orders for that one drug that lasted a month. In March, the company got orders for more than 500,000 doses. Pharmacists Trenkamp and Goetz haven't counted all the orders, but Goetz says they number in the thousands. They found the majority of orders were fi rst-time purchases by doctors, dentists and other health professionals. One veterinarian wanted the drug for a goldfi sh with rheumatoid arthritis. When Trenkamp and Goetz followed up, they often met hostility. “My favorite email,” said Goetz, “was a doctor who said, ‘Since when has pharmacy been allowed to interfere with the legal practice of medicine? You just count the pills.’ ” Trenkamp listened to hundreds of voicemails and heard one emotion dominating. “Panic People were panicstricken.” When she declined an order from an angry anesthesiologist, “He said he sure hopes my mom doesn’t need anesthesia because he won’t be giving it.” The U.S. Food and Drug Administration allows hydroxychloroquine to be prescribed for malaria and autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. Usually, HealthWarehouse.com dispenses up to 20,000 pills a month to treat patients with those disorders. Doctors cannot prescribe hydroxychloroquine expressly for COVID-19 because it has not been tested for safety and effi cacy against the new illness. But
Jennifer Trenkamp is a pharmacist at HealthWarehouse in Florence, the only online stop allowed to dispense drugs with website orders and prescriptions. For more than two weeks, she processed thousands of demands from doctors for a malaria drug as a possible treatment for COVID-19. PROVIDED
Ross Goetz and Jennifer Trenkamp are pharmacists at HealthWarehouse in Florence, the only online stop allowed to dispense drugs with website orders and prescriptions. When some news reports in March mentioned a malaria drug as a possible treatment for COVID-19, thousands of orders came in from doctors seeking the drug for themselves and their family, Goetz said. PROVIDED
the FDA did allow an emergency exception for the drug amid the pandemic. Goetz said that in mid-March, orders took a small but eyebrow-raising increase. The Fox News cable channel reported March 16 on a French study of hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19, the disease resulting from infection from the new coronavirus. Then on March 20, President Trump mentioned the drug for the fi rst time. For weeks after, amplifi ed with frequent reporting from Fox News, the president advocated for the drug’s use for COVID-19 with the pitch, “What have you got to lose?” People turned to the internet, “and we’re at the top of the Google Shopping results,” Goetz said. "Every time I got 10 done," said Trenkamp of the orders, "100 more came in.” Goetz and Trenkamp said the orders asked for amounts of the drug far beyond what would be needed to treat any illness, including one individual order
for 10,000 pills. To control the run on the drug, HealthWarehouse limited sales to longtime customers or to fi rst-timers with a history of using the drug. When asked for more documentation, one doctor asked Goetz, “What do you need to have on the prescription so that you’ll process this?” Occasionally, unsatisfi ed customers “would stomp their feet and act in a childish manner, and they would use their power to fi nd a yes without any understanding about why they were being told no,” Goetz said. The saddest calls Trenkamp handled came from hospital doctors in New York and other hot spots looking for any measure of protection. “If you’re in New York in the ER front line, with family at home, I can understand why you would want this.” Doctors placing orders came from a variety of disciplines, including several hundred podiatrists. Dentists can pre-
scribe the drug for jaw pain, “but they were ordering it in amounts far larger than you would need to treat, very, very, very large quantities,” Goetz said. “When asked for any sort of proof, I got silence or an argument.” Veterinarians, who do use human drugs for animals, ordered the drug for dogs and horses, “which seemed strange, all these pets suddenly coming down with autoimmune diseases,” Goetz said. “We had one vet call in with a goldfi sh with rheumatoid arthritis. I don’t know how that works.” On March 22, because of runs on pharmacies, the Ohio Pharmacy Board was one of the fi rst regulatory boards in the country to restrict hydroxychloroquine to people who test positively for the coronavirus. HealthWarehouse has warned doctors that it will report improper prescriptions to other regulators. In April, the FDA recommended against prescribing hydroxychloroquine because of side eff ects including heart failure and loss of vision. That action, Goetz said, stopped the tide of new orders to HealthWarehouse. But every few days, Goetz gets a few more new orders from people who just heard about the drug. "They think it’s the hot new information,” and he tells them it's not.
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Is this strawberry pie recipe as good as Frisch’s? Fresh strawberry pie Sub in raspberries if you like. Ingredients 9” pie shell, baked 5 nice cups strawberries, halved or quartered, divided into 2 and 3 cups (about 2 pounds) ⁄ 4 cup and 1 tablespoon sugar, or to taste 3
⁄ 2 cup cold water
1
⁄ 4 cup corn starch
1
⁄ 4 cup lemon juice
1
Whipped cream for garnish Instructions In a pan over medium heat, mash together 2 cups of berries with sugar. Whisk together water, corn starch and lemon juice. Add that to berries. Cook and stir until mixtures comes bubbles and boils. Cook a couple minutes more, and keep stirring. Mixture will be good and thick. Remove and pour into bowl. Stir in remaining berries.
Fresh strawberry pie is a perfect way to use fresh berries. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD/FOR THE ENQUIRER
Cool a little before pouring into baked pie shell. Refrigerate a couple hours or more to chill, then serve with dollop of whipped cream.
Rita’s Kitchen
Sweetened whipped cream
Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist
As I was going through my notes from you, it dawned on me again that this column is a journal of sorts. Of your lives and mine. And it’s not just about food. In the process of cooking more and eating at home more during this pandemic, we’re realizing that eating together without having to rush out somewhere has its advantages. We’re continuing to be more frugal. Not wasting – thinking twice about tossing out over ripe bananas (refrigerate or freeze and make banana bread later). Or bell peppers whose skin is wrinkly from languishing in the vegetable drawer (cut in half, remove seeds, smoosh halves down, drizzle with oil. Grill, roast or broil, skin side up. Skin, then freeze). Even fi nding joy instead of frustration during a long wait at the store. Translates to yes, we’re starting to get back to normal, carefully. Local strawberries will be ripening soon, if not already. I’m thinking that may be the reason for strawberry pie requests. “Like Frisch’s, if you can,” one reader asked. Here’s what I call a “new and improved” version of my
No real recipe, but for every cup of cream, stir in 1-2 tablespoons sugar and a tiny bit of vanilla if you like. Whip. Tip: Perfect baked pie crust Poke bottom and sides with fork. This is called docking and keeps crust flat.
Properly docked pie crust before baking.
Roll dough 2-3” wider than pan. You won’t have to stretch dough to fi t pan, which causes shrinking during baking. Freezing strawberries
strawberry pie recipe. I’ve upped the lemon juice and cornstarch to assure a good gel since some strawberries are juicier than others, and that can make for a loosely set pie. My berries were more tart than usual, so I increased the sugar amount, too. That’s why you see a range in the recipe – you decide how much you need. Is this recipe as good as the pie Frisch’s is famous for? At my house, it’s a resounding yes. I hope it is for you, too.
Leave caps on, rinse and air dry. Hull: cut stem out in circular motion to remove. Place in single layer on baking sheet, freeze until fi rm, then place in containers.
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Sports A look at NKY players in Major League Baseball James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Baseball fans are missing the game they love right now, as Major League Baseball is supposed to be well on its way. While we can’t watch live games right now, we can look back at some history. Northern Kentucky is sometimes overlooked when it comes to Greater Cincinnati’s impact on the game, but there have been several pros from the Kentucky side of the river over the years. Here is a look at the known major leaguers from Northern Kentucky who spent all or most of their pre-MLB life in the area:
Todd Benzinger during batting practice at Riverfront Stadium before game one of the World Series in 1990. THE ENQUIRER/JOANNE RIM
Bob Barton The Holmes High School graduate played from 1965-75, including fi ve seasons in San Francisco, four in San Diego and one with the Reds. He had 237 career hits and nine home runs. His best season was 1971 in San Diego, when he hit .250 with fi ve homers and 23 RBI. He played three games with the Reds in 1973.
Todd Benzinger The former Red was born in Dayton, Kentucky, and graduated from New Richmond High School. He was drafted in the fourth round by Boston in 1981. He played in the majors from 1988-95, including with the Reds from 1989-91. He had 733 career hits and 66 home runs. In 1989, he had career highs of 17 home runs and 76 RBI. Perhaps the moment he is most remembered for in Cincinnati is catching the fi nal out of the 1990 World Series in Oakland.
Jim Bunning Jim Bunning was born in Southgate and later went to St. Xavier High School and Xavier University. He died in 2017 at the age of 85. He pitched from 1955-71, with Detroit, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Los Angeles, and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996. He had a 224-184 record and a 3.27 ERA and two no hitters, including a perfect game in 1964 when he tossed what was then the ninth perfect game alltime. Bunning had 40 shutouts and 2,855 strikeouts, which was second place all-time when he retired. He won 20 games in 1957 with a 2.69 ERA, and from 1964-66 in Philadelphia he won 19 games each season with an ERA under 2.65 and 17 total shutouts. Bunning was also the second pitcher, behind Hall of Famer Cy Young, to win 100 games and collect 1,000 strikeouts in both leagues.
Brandon Berger Berger was a baseball and football standout at Beechwood. He spent four seasons with the Royals from 2001-04,
Southgate native Jim Bunning was a star at St. Xavier High School before he was an All-Star pitcher in the Major Leagues. ENQUIRER FILE
hitting eight home runs in 217 at-bats. He hit six home runs in 2002. Berger was a 16th-round draft choice by Kansas City in 1996. As part of some unusual trivia, four of his eight lifetime home runs came off of former White Sox standout Mark Buehrle, and two came off of former St. Louis standout Darryl Kile in a game that occurred two weeks before Kile’s sudden death in 2002 at age 33.
Leo Foster Foster, born in 1951 in Covington, graduated from Holmes High School. He played from 1971-77 with the Braves and Mets after being a second-round draft pick by Atlanta in 1969. In 1974 with the Braves, he had 112 at-bats with 22 hits and one home run. That season, he was a teammate of Hank Aaron’s when Aaron hit his 715th career home run to break Babe Ruth’s alltime record. On April 8, 1974, when Aaron broke the record in Atlanta, Foster entered that game at second base in the eighth inning.
Chris Hook The Lloyd Memorial graduate pitched
for NKU and was the pitching coach for the Florence Freedom for several years. Hook is the pitching coach for the Milwaukee Brewers. In the majors, he pitched for San Francisco from 1995-96. In 1995, he was 5-1 in 45 relief appearances spanning 52 innings. He pitched 13 innings in 1996. He pitched three times against the Reds at Riverfront Stadium.
Josh Lueke (71) of the Seattle Mariners pitches during spring training at Peoria Stadium in 2011 in Peoria, Arizona. HARRY HOW/GETTY IMAGES
Jason Johnson The Conner graduate was signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates as an undrafted free agent in 1992. He had a long career, pitching from 1997 to 2006, winning 56 games with a 4.99 career ERA. He made his major league debut with the Pirates in 1997, appearing in only three games. Following the season, he was among the players selected in the draft by the newly created franchise, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. In his lone season in Tampa Bay, Johnson went 2-5 in 13 starts. From 1999 to 2003, Johnson was with the Baltimore Orioles, with 2001 the best season of his career, going 10-12 with a career low 4.09 ERA. He started 221 career games, 120 See BASEBALL, Page 2B
The Atlanta Braves' David Justice reacts after his sixth inning home run in Game Six of the World Series againdt the Cleveland Indians in 1995. FLORIDA TODAY/AP
CovCath senior center Hupmann commits to NKU basketball James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Covington Catholic senior basketball standout Noah Hupmann has committed to play for Northern Kentucky University, CovCath athletic director Tony Bacigalupo confi rmed May 19. Hupmann, a 7-foot-1 center, transferred to CovCath for his senior season after growing up in Evansville, Indiana, where he played for Day School. Hupmann missed some time with illness this season but played 23 games, averaging six points per game, shooting 61 percent from the fl oor while averaging fi ve rebounds a contest. He helped CovCath fi nish 29-5 and win the Ninth Region championship for
the third straight year. The Colonels’ quest for a third state championship in seven seasons was cut short by the novel coronavirus pandemic. He had one of his biggest performances in CovCath’s most important game of the season, a 59-54 win over Highlands in the Ninth Region championship game. Hupmann scored 12 points on perfect 6-of-6 shooting, while grabbing fi ve rebounds and blocking two shots. As a junior in Evansville, he averaged 16.6 points, 10.6 rebounds and 7.7 blocks per game, notching three triple-doubles. According to MaxPreps, Hupmann led the nation in blocks per game. He also was an IBCA Underclass Small School All-State selection.
“He alters a lot of shots, blocks a lot of shots,” head coach Scott Ruthsatz said in March. “He’s tough inside but he can also shoot. We can put him at the 15-foot range.” Hupmann will join a roster led by head coach Darrin Horn, who will enter his second season in charge of the Norse this fall. Horn’s son Walker was a sophomore backup guard on this year’s CovCath squad. Hupmann’s father, former University of Evansville standout Sascha Hupmann, died in April. Hupmann is the second 2020 CovCath graduate to commit to play in college. Senior point guard and Mr. Basketball fi nalist Grant Disken committed to Division II Saint Leo in April.
CovCath senior Noah Hupmann guards Cooper senior Kevin Centers on Jan. 17. JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER
2B ❚ THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2020 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Baseball
cago White Sox from 1986-87, pitching 43 total games in relief. He had a 4-3 record and 5.17 ERA. In 1986, He was 3-1 with a 2.45 ERA, allowing only 18 hits in 33 innings. His second career win came at Yankee Stadium, when he struck out Ken Griff ey, Sr. and Mike Pagliarulo in the eighth inning after retiring Dave Winfi eld, then the White Sox rallied to win in the ninth. His fi rst win came on May 11, 1986, a game started by Anderson High School graduate Richard Dotson. His third win came in relief of Tom Seaver that season.
Continued from Page 1B
with Baltimore, and had six complete games and one shutout, with Detroit in 2004. On June 8, 2005, Johnson became the fi rst Tigers pitcher to hit a home run in a regular season game since Les Cain in 1971. The homer came against Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Jeff Weaver at Dodger Stadium. Johnson fi nished his career pitching four games with the Reds in 2006.
Jim Minshall The Newport Central Catholic graduate pitched six total games with the Pirates from 1974-75, allowing one hit in 5.1 innings. He was a second-round pick by the Pirates in 1966.
Nate Jones The Pendleton County High School graduate was born in 1986. He pitched at Northern Kentucky University and was a fi fth-round pick by the Chicago White Sox in 2007. Jones was in the White Sox bullpen from 2012-19 and is currently in the Reds organization. He has pitched 284 games with a 3.12 career ERA and nine saves. He was 8-0 in his rookie season, 2012, with a 2.39 ERA in 65 games. In 2016, he had a 5-3 record, 2.29 ERA and 80 strikeouts in 70 innings. He has 318 career strikeouts in 291 innings.
David Justice David Justice, born in Cincinnati in 1966, was 23 years old when he broke into the big leagues in 1989 with the Atlanta Braves. He was a fourth-round pick in 1985. He went to Covington Latin High School and Thomas More College. Justice played from 1989 to 2002. He spent his fi rst eight seasons with Atlanta, four with Cleveland and two with the Yankees. He hit 305 career home runs and had 1,017 RBI. Justice hit .279 for his career with over 1,500 career hits. In 1993, Justice hit 40 home runs and 120 RBI. In 1997 with Cleveland, he had 33 home runs and 101 RBI while hitting 3.29. Justice played in six World Series and eight league championship series. He had 14 career home runs and 63 RBI in 398 career at-bats in the postseason. He had four home runs and 21 RBI in 36 World Series games, playing in the fall classic four times with Atlanta and two with the Yankees. His home run in Game 6 of the 1995 World Series was the only run in a 1-0 win by the Braves that clinched the world championship.
Jeoff Long The Lloyd Memorial graduate, born in 1941, played with the Cardinals and White Sox in 1963-64. He had 16 career hits including one home run and nine RBI, playing fi rst base and outfi eld.
Larry Luebbers The St. Henry graduate was an eighth-round pick by the Cincinnati Reds in 1990. He started 14 games for the Reds on the mound in 1993, going 2-5 with a 4.54 ERA.
Chicago White Sox relief pitcher Nate Jones (65) at Progressive Field. KEN BLAZE-USA TODAY SPORTS
He won his fi rst two starts, at home against Pittsburgh July 3, 1993; and at Wrigley Field against the Cubs on July 8. He returned to the majors in 1999 with St. Louis, going 3-3 in eight starts with a 5.12 ERA. He returned to the Reds in 2000, pitching 14 games including one start. In 1999, he won at Coors Field against Colorado, giving up two runs in fi ve innings. His lone complete game came Aug. 31, 1999 with the Cardinals at home against Florida. He allowed fi ve hits and no walks in an 8-1 win.
Josh Lueke Born in 1984 in Highland Heights, Lueke went to Scott High School and Northern Kentucky University. He was a 16th-round draft pick by the Texas Rangers. He pitched in 72 games from 2011-14 for Seattle and Tampa Bay. He pitched 87 innings and had 75 strikeouts, winning two games overall.
Luke Maile Maile, who turned 29 on Feb. 6, has many Covington Catholic off ensive records and was an eighth-round pick by Tampa in 2012. He has been in the majors since 2015, spending two seasons with Tampa Bay and three in Toronto before moving to Pittsburgh in the off season. He has 120 hits, including 30 doubles, and 10 home runs. His best season has been 2018, when he hit .248 in 202 at-bats with three home runs and 27 RBI. He has been known for his defense, throwing out 33 percent of base stealers in his career.
Joel McKeon McKeon grew up in Erlanger and started in knothole baseball as a teenager before moving to Florida. He attended Tichenor Middle School. He was a fourth-round pick by San Francisco in 1982 and played for the Chi-
Graham Taylor The Dixie Heights graduate, born in 1984, started three games for the Marlins in 2009, losing two of them. He was a 10th-round pick in 2006 out of Miami (Ohio).
Scott Wiggins The Newport Central Catholic graduate was a seventh-round draft pick in 1997 by the Yankees. He pitched three games in relief for Toronto in 2002, giving up one earned run, a home run to Cleveland’s Coco Crisp.
Old-timers Many Northern Kentucky natives played in the early days of baseball. Here is a list according to the Baseball Almanac: Kid Baldwin (Newport, 1884-1890), Harry Berte (Covington, 1903), John Black (Covington, 1911), Neal Brady (1915-25), Howie Camnitz (1904-15), Bob Clark (Covington, 1886-93), John Dolan (Newport, 1890-95), John Farrell (Covington, 1901-05), Hank Gastright (Covington, 1889-96), Joe Heving (Covington, 1930-45), Johnnie Heving (Covington, 1920-32), Eddie Hohnhorst (1910-12), Rudy Helswitt (Newport, 18991910), Eddie Hunter (Bellevue, 1933), Bill Kissinger (Dayton, 1985-97), George Miller (Newport, 1877-84), Dick Niehaus (Covington, 1913-20), Bill Niles (Covington, 1895), Tommy Reis (Newport, 1938), John Smith (Dayton, 1913), Joe Sommer (Covington, 1883-90), Bill Sweeney (Covington, 1907-14), Jesse Tannehill (Dayton, 1894-1911), Lee Tannehill (Dayton, 1903-12), Jack Thoney (Fort Thomas, 1902-11), Dale Williams (Ludlow, 1876), Orville Weaver (Newport, 1910-11). Camnitz had a record of 133-106 from 1904-15, mostly with the Pittsburgh Pirates. He had a 2.75 lifetime ERA. Farrell had 567 career hits with the Washington Senators and St. Louis Cardinals. Gastright had 72 career wins, 30 with the Columbus Colts in 1890. Joe Heving had 76 wins and a 3.90 ERA. Hulswitt had 564 career hits, 99 for extra bases. Sweeney had 1,004 career hits and 172 stolen bases. Jesse Tannehill had 197 career wins and a 2.79 ERA and also 361 career hits and fi ve home runs. Lee Tannehill had 833 career hits.
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Met golf championships to go on as scheduled James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
June was set up to be a month of “Majors” for the Greater Cincinnati Golf Association, and it still is. After months of uncertainty due to the coronavirus, the area’s biggest youth and amateur golf tournaments will go on as scheduled after the Ohio state government allowed competition in golf and other noncontact sports beginning May 26. Many golf courses had gradually reopened in recent weeks with safety restrictions in place. Social-distancing guidelines and safety protocols to eliminate physical touching will be in eff ect for all tournaments. “We’re excited to get back to work and get back on
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Alexandria 1615 Grandview Road: Lee Ann and Greg Kramer to Andrew Grant; $146,000 3 Shadow Wood Court: Mackenzie and Tyson Enzweiler to Kellie and Travis Arnold; $277,500 8364 E. Main St.: Tamara Belanger to Lindsey and Christopher Florea; $75,000 9762 Sweetwater Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Brandon Rogers; $199,000
the courses,” said Todd Johnson, the executive director of the GCGA. “Our main focus the last couple of months is seeing the courses maintain their memberships and agronomy, so tournaments have all of a sudden popped up for us.” The tournaments begin with the 1905 Junior Tour, which starts May 30 at Wildwood Golf Club in Middletown. The tour runs through July 10, which include the Metropolitan junior championships June 8-9 at Shaker Run Golf Club. Major adult tournaments are also right around the corner. The Northern Kentucky Amateur Championship is June 2-4 at Lassing Pointe. Registration deadline is May 26. The Metropolitan Women’s Amateur Championship is June 10-11 at Wetherington Golf and
Country Club, and the 111th Tony Blom Amateur Men’s Championship is June 22-27 at Heritage Club and Shaker Run. The Met senior championship is July 6-7 at Summit Hills Country Club. Keeping six feet apart will be required and congregating in tee boxes is discouraged. Golf traditions such as exchanging scorecards, handshakes, high-fi ves and trophy presentations are not allowed. Golfers should bring their own refreshments and each competitor will be allowed only one spectator, though a course has the right to ban all spectators. As of May 21, the Northern Kentucky Amateur had 64 entries and Johnson hopes to get more than 80. The Met tourneys are just starting to take entries. The women’s deadline is June 3 and men’s June 15.
3837 Glenn Ave.: Falizegray, LLC to Jeston Biggs; $132,500 406 E. 18th St.: Perry & McFall Properties, LLC to William Lynch; $114,000 4365 Siffel Court: Sharon and Michael Langham to Michael Allgeier; $175,000 811 Main St.: Greenlight Developers, LLC to Emily and Alberto Herrera; $430,000 9164 Hawksridge Drive: Rhonda Kelley to Dashia Stantz; $160,000
7 Highland Meadows Drive, unit 3: Joseph Vuhlop to Jo Ann Huck; $105,000 9 Meadow Lane, unit 8: Susan and Andrew Herbst to Sheila McDaniel; $105,000
Crescent Springs
Bellevue 109 Glazier Ave.: Bridgett and Brian Merz to Maria Siow; $227,000 335 10th Ave.: Lee Anna Bay to Jessica and Adam Sebastian; $137,000 624 Truman Lane, unit 404: Georgia Brumfield to Gerald Prophett; $88,000
2266 Devlin Place, unit 202: Bonnie Taylor to Anthony Russo; $154,000 2484 High Crossing Drive: Vicki Dansberry to Julia and Lucas Beattie; $280,000
Elsmere 439 Swan Circle: Anna Phillips to Christopher Haubner; $144,000
Burlington
Erlanger
1915 Stanford Court: Judy and Peter Martin to Donae and Edward Newman; $200,000 197 Owl Overlook: Teresa and Jose Sanchez to Patrick George II; $200,000 2340 Sawmill Court, unit 205: Felicia and Travis Carney to Anthony Bergman; $100,000 2340 Sawmill Court, unit 207: Dustin Hudgens to Jessica Gallagher; $100,000 2616 Burdsall Drive: Tonya and William Hickman to Christian Foster; $205,000 3049 Allens Fork Drive: MacKenzie and Caleb Culberston to Robert Moore Jr.; $195,000 3411 Mary Teal Lane: Erica and Justin Thomas to Shanna and Patrick Parker; $230,000 5776 Bunkers Ave., unit 101-1: Allison and Daniel House to Patrick Taylor; $154,000 5937 Ethan Drive: Claudia and David Schuele to Connie and Duane Broyhill; $249,500 6129 Wayside Springs Court: Mary Lee to Jennifer and Carter McDine; $213,500 6227 Baymiller Lane: Jennifer and Richard Housner to Jennifer and Bradley Couch; $220,000 6267 Matthew Circle: Ashley and Kyle Begley to Darlyne and Jose Bias Jr.; $138,000 643 Makayla Court: Amber Juett to Matthew Miller; $190,000 6464 Westland Drive: Tara and Cameron Frodge and Marsha and Jerry Howe to Laurentine Ngombe and Didier Ndona; $150,000 6469 Rogers Lane: Debra and Howard McDaniel to Randall Floyd; $87,000 6851 Lillian Court: Kristie and Thomas Ferguson Jr. to Elizabeth and Cory Kearns; $255,000 7784 E. Bend Road: Arris Smith to Ashley and Kyle Begley; $134,000
321 Timberlake Ave.: Jacob Shinkle to Mark Groneck; $142,500 3515 Susan Lewis Drive: Debbie Bricking to Rachel and Jeff Seibert; $105,000 443 Division St.: Angela Kuhl to Maria and Robert Barnes; $158,500 720 Southwith Place: The Drees Company to Elizabeth and James Rosplock; $461,000 770 Plum Tree Lane: Brian Schneider and Delaney Mitchell to Jennifer and Mark Schell; $148,500
California 13135 Peach Grove Road: Tina Hickman to Tricia and Shawn Williams; $180,000
9 Ross Ave.: Caitlyn Stroh and Fletcher Page to Katie and Stephen Tolliver; $222,000
345 Fallingwater Court, unit 12-E: Louis Conrad to Kimberly Pratt; $173,000 356 Shadow Ridge Drive, unit 25-D: Ruth Buenger to Tami and Jeffrey Trunick; $215,000
Fort Thomas
Covington 126 Indian Creek Drive: Rebecca and Troy Garrard to Martha Benjamin and Jeanettte Benjamin; $188,000 1806 Garrard St.: Emily and Corey Lubbers to Jeinifer Sexton; $135,000 2214 Busse St., unit 16: Raymond Murphy to Abraham Mynatt; $65,500 3427 Sunbrite Drive: Mildred Martin to Shannon and David Ponder; $404,000 3576 Tamber Ridge Drive: The Drees Company to Danielle and Christopher Murray; $372,000
PUZZLE ANSWERS T H E V A U L T
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A R N O A T C I G S S E W E N E B E T X A T S T R E C I A S O N L O R D A N E R D R G E L E C U R P O M A I L I N Z L E D Z E R A T E S E S
A P A R T
N A R R A T K I O V P E S S B U E S U S R E R X E H H U A R P L
C R E A T I N E D A L I A N C O N G A
H I T T I N G T H E P A N I C B U T T O N
O C T E T H O O T I E N I E L S E N S
V Y I O E S D F B A C O N U S S P S P E S E S T D P N A I G U B O L E S T B T H E E A T R G A G A S O N
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1120 Cayton Road: Marie Hall to Jacqueline and Robert Stephens; $251,000 1158 Periwinkle Drive: Demi and Ryan Waid to Michelle and Daniel Webb; $125,000 1800 Ashley Court, unit 29-201: Delinda Mains to Robin Cox; $152,000 2 Girard St.: Elaine and J. Donald Marksberry to Linda and Charles Sallee; $180,000 37 Rio Grande Circle, unit 3: Keisha and Troy Williams to Ruth and Mark Kearns; $99,000 47 Harness Lane: Daniel Rebilas to James Humphrey III; $248,500 6443 Summerfiled Drive: Kayla and Michael Fuson to Geraldine Nienaber; $128,000 7152 Cascade Drive: Janet Lawson to Carol Moore; $206,000 7433 Cumberland Circle: Brian Gatewood to Brooke and Nicholas Patterson; $225,000 7703 Ravenswood Drive: Stay Properties, LLC to Branden McDaniels; $120,500 8989 Crimson Oak Drive: Tina and Cameron Berens to Regina and Elliott Cross; $260,000 91 Wellington Drive, unit 2A: Hertha and William Smith to Wanda and Robert Hurst; $200,000 9370 Lago Mar Drive: Alyssa and Andrew Schneider to Anna Phillips; $218,000
Fort Mitchell
Cold Spring
A R K A N S A S
Florence
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O R D E R S
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12 Grandview Ave.: JAC Developments, LLC to Cheng and Brady Hunt; $175,000 144 Summit Ave.: Paul Rizzo to Ryan Donovan; $225,000 209 Clover Ridge Ave.: Timothy Webster to Katherine Mattingly; $185,000 252 Sargeant Ave.: Raymond Losey to Leah and Marc Snowball; $166,000 402 S. Fort Thomas Ave.: Karen and Joseph Dean to PAR6, LLC; $185,000 512 Calmet Court, unit 12: Brian Baker to Richard Dube; $108,000 59 Broadview Place: Jung Ja and Soo Don Kim to R and B Homes, LLC; $212,500 607 S. Grand Ave.: Emily and Richard Annusbigian to Bridgett and Brian Merz; $420,000 69 Sweetwater Ave.: Margaret and Daniel A'Hearn to Jaclyn and Keegan Burdsall; $450,000
Independence 10082 Meadow Glen Drive: Meghan and Michael Allgeier to Renae and Matthew Taylor; $296,000 10304 Fredricksburg Road: Andrew Petry to Melissa Perrin and Nicholas Shad; $203,500 10774 Cypresswood Dirve: Deborah Hiserote to Lisa and Nicholas Farfsing; $260,000 1194 Hatcher Court: Richard Jackson to William Britton; $195,000 1309 Galveston Court: Rhonda and Kenneth Beckerich to Falica Ellis; $221,500 2805 Hinsdale Drive: Christine and Joshua Rider to John Burroughs III; $273,000 6315 Stallion Court: Charles Mitchell to Sarah and Douglas Major Jr.; $228,000 77 Sylvan Drive: Deborah Adams to Moses Moore IV; $145,000 843 Stephens Road: Patricia and Daniel Blanton to Larry Stacey; $222,500 9938 Cobblestone Boulevard: Kelly Liggett to Nancy Granfield; $156,000
Lakeside Park 2480 Fountain Place, unit 4B: Patricia Delaney to Shirley Ramsey; $138,000
Ludlow 237 Highway Ave.: SBK Properties, LLC to Emma King; $105,000 373 Southwind Lane, unit 28-304: Hina Jamai and Fahad Waqar to Paula and Brian Hunterman; $225,000 412 Somerset St.: Barbara and Van Songerath to Megan Bowling and Ranaldo Gillespie; $100,000
Newport 1002 Isabella St.: Bellevue Land, LLC to Jared Limbach; $190,000 160 Lamphill Drive, unit 31: Edgar Cleves to Charles Valz and John Valz; $145,000 196 Grandview Ave.: MAD Properties, LLC to Michaeel Ingram; $75,000 940 Patterson St.: Newport Millennium Housing Corporation III to Karis Hawkins; $155,000
Park Hills 1213 Hilltop St.: Kelly and Andrew Sullivan to Erin and Andrew Ducker; $287,500
Southgate 308 Southgate Circle: Virginia Barnard to Cynthia and Greg Hanneken and Connor Hanneken; $73,000 64 View Terrace Drive, unit 5: Pauline and Steven Dickerson to Barbara and Gregory Brown; $71,000
Taylor Mill 839 Crocus Lane: Gayle and Daniel Trame to Linda Jackson, Christa and Douglas Slade; $292,000
Union 10205 Lewis Lane: Saima and Ali Syed to Katharine and Christopher Moore; $316,000 1053 McCarron Lane: The Drees Company to Mary Hall; $532,500 10918 Riley Road: Martha and James Duncan to Anna and Jonathan Hunley; $405,000 11064 Galileo Boulevard: Stacy and Robert Jordan to Ashley and Charles Sandefer; $432,000 1705 Saint Jovite: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Anand Puthuveetil and Princy Anand; $313,500 1709 Saint Jovite: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Lori and William Harless; $415,500 8483 Saint Louis Boulevard: Kimberly and Claudix Dalcour to Maria and Franklin Leaf; $325,000 9566 Soaring Breezes, unit 233D: Charlene and Jeffrey Randolph to Diane and Tom Dulworth; $330,500
Verona 15840 Teal Road: Tracy Davis and Soren Campbell to Kimberly and John Waits; $865,000
Fort Wright
Villa Hills
1644 Highland Pike: Shelly and Stephen Harvey to Maria Novak; $277,000
1010 Doriel St.: Deneen and Ben Zimmerman Jr. to Brian Foltz; $373,000 2452 Orchid Drive: Rebecca and Kenneth Budde to Shelly and Stephen Harvey; $349,000 816 Valley Trails Drive: Lauren and Christopher Korba to Elif and Murat Yildirim; $228,000
Hebron 1356 Witetail Glen Court: Jennifer and Martin Ritson to Maria Rodriguez and Justin Miller; $364,000 1544 Marietta Drive: Michelle and William Rogers to Tiffany and Andrew Simmons; $224,000 2757 Berwood Lane: Jarlyn and Michael Ratliff to Eric Fecher; $179,000 3146 Bentgrass Way: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Karen and Jeff Moore; $322,500 3741 Sugarberry Drive: Jennifer and Steven Barrier to Kloe Sylvester and Trevor Ross; $180,000
Highland Heights 127 Bramble Ave.: Andrew Menkhaus to Alexandra Robert and Paul Ubel; $144,000 255 Sunset Drive: Christopher Zimmerman to Ann and Brady Baker; $137,000
Walton 12049 Crouch Road: Mollie and Dennis Flynn to Angela and Stephen Jones; $215,000 12236 Hutton Drive: Tanya and Roger Babik to Joy and Adam Smith; $325,000 181 Blackgold Court: Karen and Jeffrey Moore to Jona and Cody Jones; $243,000 518 Savannah Drive: Tracy and Steven Trego to Samantha and Andrew Hatfield; $340,000
Wilder 720 Johns Hill Road: Brian McCoy to Pam Puterbaugh; $152,500
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2020 ❚ 5B
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6B ❚ THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2020 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B
No. 0524 WIDE-OPEN SPACES
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AC R O S S
RELEASE DATE: 5/31/2020
1 How some stock shares are sold 6 Caesar-salad ingredient 13 Big name in swimwear 19 African grazer 20 Yalitza ____, bestactress nominee for 2018’s ‘‘Roma’’ 21 Woodworking machine 22 R. J. Reynolds product that once sponsored ‘‘The Dick Van Dyke Show’’ 24 Had legs, so to speak 25 Flying class? 26 Like some leaves and knives 27 Blast 28 ‘‘The Confessions of ____ Turner’’ (1967 Pulitzer-winning novel) 29 Scrapped 30 One who might say, ‘‘Your money’s no good here’’? 31 Overwhelming favorite 33 Roofing material 34 Dyes that can be used as pH indicators 35 Echo voice Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
36 Eponym of Aqaba’s airport 38 Editorial reversal 39 Simmering sites 41 On the schedule 45 Chef’s creation 47 Crosses one’s fingers 49 Sophisticated 50 Subjects of four famous violin concertos by Vivaldi 52 Can’t take 54 Body part that’s also a Hebrew letter 55 Christ, to Christians 56 Flavorful 57 Colts, maybe 59 Sch. on Chesapeake Bay 60 Interstellar clouds 62 Fundamental dispositions 63 With 55-Down, inning enders 65 Pourable art material 66 Creature seen basking on the shores of the Galápagos 67 Superman co-creator Jerry 69 Sports icon with the autobiography ‘‘Faster Than Lightning’’ 71 Entertainer Minnelli 75 Bitcoin and the like 77 47th U.S. vice president
78 Comic actor whose wife left him to marry their neighbor Frank Sinatra 81 Airer of the gospel music reality competition ‘‘Sunday Best’’ 82 Classic Chevrolets 84 Eaglelike 85 One with a small but devoted fan base 87 AAA service 88 Restrained from biting 89 Places of intense scrutiny 90 Entertainment on a diner place mat, maybe 91 Alka-Seltzer tablet, for one 92 Early omnivore 94 Returning after curfew, say 95 Substance used to preserve the Declaration of Independence 96 Apt rhyme for ‘‘bore’’ 97 ____ Pieces 98 Has in mind 99 Mary I or Elizabeth I DOWN
1 Major tributary of the Mississippi 2 Gymnastics event for both men and women 3 The ____ State, nickname for Maine
4 Targets of formicide 5 Mythical flier 6 Isolated 7 Account 8 Popular performanceenhancing supplement for athletes 9 Freaking out 10 Good-size wedding band 11 Competed 12 Rockyesque interjections 13 Spends extravagantly 14 Some biodiesel sources 15 Victorian home? 16 Whole 17 Judged 18 Things taken while waiting 20 Representative 23 ‘‘Capeesh’’ 27 Whiffs 29 Org. for lightweights 30 End-of-level challenges in video games 32 Items in 18” x 18” x 1¾” boxes 34 Like the hands in the Allstate logo 36 Keystone ____ 37 ____ & the Blowfish 39 What sneers express 40 Popular dating app 42 Lake drained by the Truckee River 43 Iniquities 44 Places of iniquity
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46 Spanish ‘‘that’’ 48 State capital on the Mississippi 50 Word with roll or bar 51 Muppet wearing a horizontally striped shirt 52 Chinese port city on Korea Bay 53 Occupy, as a booth 55 See 63-Across 56 English county that’s home to Brighton
58 Weather-map symbol 61 Butter, in Burgundy 62 Doctors Without Borders and others, in brief 64 Having a low neckline, as a dress 66 ‘‘Gotta split’’ 68 Group of 18th-century thinkers that included Voltaire and Rousseau 70 Numbers of concern to showrunners
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72 The ‘‘Last Great Race 82 Some skilled workers in ‘‘Brave New on Earth’’ World’’ 73 Love match? 83 Lead-in to while 74 Respondent 85 Party line? 76 South African money 86 Former North Carolina senator Kay 77 Slo-____ fuse ____ 78 Pan flute musician in 89 Let fly iconic commercials 90 Clickable list of the 1980s 92 W.W. II general ____ 79 Like a jackass Arnold 80 Your current 93 Clock setting on the occupation? Big Island: Abbr.
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8B ❚ THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2020 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
SCHOOL NEWS
Eighth-grade graduate Jackson Schabell arrived at St. Joseph, Cold Spring to the applause of the faculty and staff as he came to pick up his diploma in a drive by parade after the eighth grade virtual graduation. PROVIDED
Jantzen Wittrock received his diploma and awards from Assistant Principal Kim Huser in the drive by parade for the eighth grade students at St. Joseph, Cold Spring. PROVIDED
A graduation to remember
Randel Plowman received his M.F.A. in printmaking from University of Wisconsin-Madison and his B.F.A. from Northern Kentucky University. He has exhibited in solo and juried exhibitions throughout the United States; in addition, his work appears in many public and private collections in North America and abroad, his work has been cited in numerous publications, including The New York Times and USA Today; been featured in The Paris Review, How Design Magazine, Artist Magazine and Somerset Studio. He is the author of two books, Masters: Collage, and The Collage Workbook: How To Get Started And Stay Inspired; voted Best Art Instruction Book of 2012 by Library Journal. Plowman currently teaches printmaking at Northern Kentucky University. For more information and to register, please visit nku.edu/artworkshops. Rick Endres, NKU School of the Arts
It wasn’t what they thought it would be, but it was defi nitely something they will never forget. After a virtual awards ceremony, the eighth grade students at St. Joseph, Cold Spring arrived at school for a drive by presentation of their diplomas. It was a parade with streamers and balloons as the students were greeted by the applause of the faculty and staff waving signs of congratulations and cheering good wishes. Linda Gabis, St. Joseph Cold Spring
NKU School of the Arts offering online art summer workshops for adults Northern Kentucky University’s School of the Arts will be off ering two online art studio workshops for adults age 18+ this summer. Each workshop is taught by Randel Plowman and will offer an optional 10-hour Professional Development certifi cate for teachers. Tuition for each workshop is $70. ‘Zine Workshop (June 13-19) You will create a ‘zine edition of your own! This can include text and pictures, pictures only, text only. Both printing and binding techniques will be taught. If
you are an artist, writer, teacher or anyone with a story to tell, a point to make, or like to draw and make things, this workshop is for you! No previous experience necessary. ‘Zines (pronounced “zeens,” short for magazines) are self-published minibooks or original content about anything the author/illustrator chooses. Examples of topics range from comics, fanfi ction, politics, art, and personal stories. Generally, they are reproduced on a photocopier in small print runs for sale or trade. Zines have been produced since the 1700s and were created by politically involved artists in the Dada and Surrealist movements in the early 20th century and the 1970s Punk subculture. Collage Workshop (June 27-July 3) Collage is the art of recycling. It takes the old and makes it new again through fragmenting, recontextualizing and combining imagery in new and exciting ways. This seven-day online workshop explores the many possibilities that collage can off er. This workshop is open to both beginner and advanced artists. Several techniques will be explored in this hands-on workshop, including; creating visually compelling imagery through the use of layering, using color eff ectively, how to create a strong composition and more.
NewCath juniors selected to Ky Governor’s Scholar Program Two juniors from Newport Central Catholic High School have been selected to represent NCC in the Governor’s Scholar Program this summer.
NewCath juniors Jason Grothaus and Vinny Miglio will attend the KY Governor’s Scholar Program. PROVIDED
They are as follows: ❚ Jason Grothaus - son of Jim & Patty Grothaus of Southgate, KY ❚ Vinny Miglio - son of Tony and Betsy Miglio of Bellevue, KY Additionally, Junior John Paul Ampfer - son of Matt & Catherine Ampfer of Ft. Thomas, KY was chosen as an alternate for the program. This prestigious fi ve-week study program provides academic and personal growth in a non-traditional experience at Centre College, Morehead State University, or Bellarmine University. Students were selected on the basis of test scores from the PSAT, SAT or ACT. Their unweighted GPA and diffi See SCHOOL NEWS, Page 10B
I n d e p e n d e n t , As s i s t e d L i v i n g & M e m o r y C a r e
Thank you for coming together by being apart. We know it isn’t easy. In times like these you want to be close to the people you care about most. It’s that caring spirit that has all of us coming together by being apart. It’s the kind of sacrifice that’s making a real difference, especially for older adults like the ones that call our independent living, assisted living and memory care communities home. Thank you for doing your part to not only keep yourself and your family safe, but the rest of us as well.
Now Offering Virtual Tours Call Today! 513-586-4797
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COMMUNITY NEWS Transform your garden into a science lab All the mechanisms of life are represented in a garden: respiration, nutrition, circulation, reproduction and maturation. As such, it’s a perfect science laboratory where students can hone their math and observational skills and creativity. In a garden, young people can learn math through keeping a journal of plant growth, chemistry through composting, botany and biology from observing plants, worms, insects and wildlife in the garden, and reproduction by dissecting a fl ower and observing the male and female parts under a magnifying glass. Lilies and irises are best for this project, though any fl ower will do. They can also learn engineering from studying plant structures and perhaps building their own support structure for vining plants. You and your child can plant bean or sunfl ower seeds, which sprout quickly in a clear plastic cup. Fill the cup threequarters of the way with potting soil. Have your child press the seeds into the soil around the sides of the cup, leaving enough space between each one to give them room to grow. You should be able to see the seeds through the plastic. Water the cup and
SCHOOL NEWS Continued from Page 8B
culty of course load was also taken into consideration. Students submitted a writing entry and demonstrated what they have done in the areas of extracurricular activities and service. Ron Dawn, principal, stated, “Being chosen for the Governor’s Scholar Program, one of Kentucky’s top student awards, is quite an accomplishment long hours of school work, community service, and applying for the program. Thousands of highly qualifi ed juniors from across the state of Kentucky apply each year, and the competition is fi erce. We are proud to recognize Jason, Vinny and John Paul and congratulate them on their acceptance to this distinguished program; they truly deserve and have
place it in a sunny window. With regular watering and proper sunlight, it won’t be long before the seeds sprout. Eventually Stolz your child will be able to see roots forming as well, and as the plants fi nally outgrow their nursery, you and your child can transplant them into the garden to observe, as they mature and produce the next generation of seeds. All you need to observe a plant’s circulatory system is a kitchen counter, water and food coloring. Plants draw water and nutrients from the soil through their xylem, which is a series of straw-like tubes that serve as capillaries and also support the plant. Fleshy food plants like carrots and celery are great plants to illustrate this action. Put a few drops of blue food coloring into a glass of water. Cut off both ends of a carrot – perhaps one you and your child have grown in the garden – and place it vertically in the blue water. In a few hours, take a look at the top of the carrot. The circle of blue dots will show you how the carrot pulled the water up through the xylem. Sarah Stolz is the Campbell County Horticulture Agent. Sarah Stolz, Campbell County Cooperative Extension
Zoom educational programs on kitchen equipment
Goodwill’s Northern Kentucky outlet stores re-open
Your Kenton and Boone County Cooperative Extension offi ces are working on some new ways to conduct our educational programs. A series of “zoom” programs have been set up to help you with some of your kitchen tools. Join us. Each program begins at 10 a.m, and last approximately one hour. Mason A link will be sent to those who register to join the interactive, online sessions. Register through Kenton County Cooperative Extension (kenton.ca.uky.edu or 859-356-3155). Byrnes Kathy Byrnes and Diane Mason are presenting these sessions. ❚ May 29 – Getting the Most from a Food Processor ❚ June 5 – Cast Iron: Choosing, Using, and Caring ❚ June 12 – Slow Cooking in a Fast Paced World ❚ June 19 – Induction Cooktops: What’s the Attraction? Kathy Byrnes, Kenton County Cooperative Extension Service
After 12 weeks of mandated closure, Ohio Valley Goodwill was thrilled to reopen its Northern Kentucky retail stores, including Bellevue, Florence and Independence as well as its Outlet store in Woodlawn. With the re-opening of these locations, 15 stores are open and welcoming shoppers. Stores are open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily and feature an array of spring and summer fashions. The three remaining boutique stores will re-open at a future date. Like other businesses, the organization was closed from late March until May 20. The Goodwill team took advantage of the time to thoroughly deep clean its 18 retail stores and collect and organize new spring and summer fashions for display. Goodwill team members will be adhering to all health and safety recommendations from the Department of Health including the wearing of face masks, use of gloves, ongoing wipe down of carts and all high touch surfaces, social distancing and everything needed to ensure the safety of our guests and our team members. For a list of all 18 store locations, visit www.goodwillbargains.com Sharon Hannon, Ohio Valley Goodwill Industries
earned this opportunity.” Tessy B. Krebs, Newport Central Catholic High School
initiative. These are the Foundation’s 2020 Straight “A” recipients: Female recipients ❚ Aissatou Barry, Taft High School ❚ Mollie Berger, Stebbins High School ❚ Alexis Davis, Blanchester High School ❚ Morgan Hughes, Northwest High School ❚ Emma Jasper, McNicholas High School ❚ Amber Miller, Boone County High School ❚ Madeline Miller, Indian Hill High School ❚ Kristen Robbins, Holy Cross District ❚ Chelsey Zugaro, Kings High School Male recipients ❚ Tyler Brown, Highlands High School ❚ Jesse Byrge, Roger Bacon High
School ❚ Matthew Carroll, Turpin High School ❚ Timothy Dick, South Dearborn High School ❚ Joshua Gehner, Colerain High School ❚ Joseph Kiely, Covington Catholic High School ❚ Harrison Mabjish, St. Henry District ❚ Malik Mitchell, Aiken High School ❚ Tyler Smith, Valley View High School Anthony Muñoz, along with Foundation partners and the fi nalist chosen Most Infl uential Teacher will honor and recognize these fi nalists at the Hall of Fame Dinner on July 26 at the Manor House in Mason. Caleigh Willis, The Anthony Munoz Foundation
Anthony Muñoz Foundation announces Straight A recipients The Anthony Muñoz Foundation has announced the fi nalists of its 2020 Straight “A” Scholarship. The Foundation received over 330 nominations from 128 schools. These fi nalists were nominated by counselors, coaches and other school administrators for their pursuit of Academic excellence, Athletic achievement, Actively serving in the community while possessing a strong Ambition, having a winning Attitude and the ability to overcome Adversity. This year’s presenting partner, Mike’s Car Wash will donate over $40,000 in scholarships to support the
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