CAMPBELL RECORDER
DEALS AT Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Campbell County
THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS ❚ PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK
JARED LORENZEN Feb., 14, 1981 - July 3, 2019
University of Kentucky quarterback Jared Lorenzen throws during the football team's media day activities held at Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington, Kentucky August 8, 2003. ENQUIRER FILE PHOTO
Legend of Kentucky football celebrated at St. Pius X Church Scott Springer
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
EDGEWOOD, Ky – The life celebration of one of Kentucky’s most phenomenal athletes drew a steady stream of traffi c to St. Pius X Church in Edgewood July 10 as friends and family said a fi nal goodbye to No. 22 Jared Lorenzen. The mourners included current University of Kentucky head coach Mark Stoops and several former teammates of Lorenzen’s at diff erent levels including Giants quarterback Eli Manning. Lorenzen’s unconventional size for a quarterback, coupled with his personality gained him national attention, even after his career ended. “You can completely forget all of the athletic things that Jared did, the people that knew Jared remember him as a guy who just made everybody feel better,” former Highlands coach Dale Mueller said. “He always had everybody’s back, he was your friend. he just always was a nice, sweet, gentle-loving person.” On the other hand, most won’t forget the athletic accomplishments. The 1999 Highlands grad led the Bluebirds to a 15-0 season in 1998 throwing for 3,392
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yards and 45 scores while rushing for 904 yards and 15 touchdowns. Lorenzen was listed at 6-foot-4 and 240 pounds out of high school, looking more like a tight end or lineman, but was recruited by Hal Mumme at Kentucky to play quarterback. “When anyone ever mentioned him playing in a different spot, he had no interest in that whatsoever,” Mueller said. His top target at Highlands and later UK, was friend and teammate Derek Smith. Lorenzen and Smith connected 50 times when Jared played his fi rst Wildcat games in 2000 after redshirting. They also were noteworthy frontcourt players for Highlands in basketball, making the 1997 state title game. “United – you say Jared and Derek and Derek and Jared,” Mueller said. “They really had a special thing their whole life.” Stoops never coached Lorenzen but admired his presence and mentioned the Wildcats may honor No. 22, possibly with a jersey worn by quarterback Terry Wilson for their opening game. “He was a great Wildcat,” Stoops said. “What I did See LORENZEN, Page 2A
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New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning, center, and owner John Mara, far right, leave after the visitation on July 10 of former Highlands, University of Kentucky and New York Giants quarterback Jared Lorenzen. It was held at St. Pius X Catholic Church in Edgewood. KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE ENQUIRER Vol. 2 No. 26 © 2019 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED $1.00
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2A ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
‘Things are happening fast’
Work starting on Newport concert venue Randy Tucker
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
After more than a decade of planning, developers have begun the fi rst phase of construction on the new concert venue that will anchor a giant mixed-use project at the Ovation site along the Ohio River in Newport. Construction crews last week began digging the foundation for a two-story parking garage that will serve as a platform for the concert venue announced in May by veteran Columbus concert promoter PromoWest and its partner, Los Angeles-based AEG Presents. In addition to the garage and music venue, construction is also underway on pads for two future buildings that would be located near the concert venue, west of Columbia Street, between Third and Fourth streets in Newport. Plans for a competing concert venue directly across the Ohio River at The Banks in Cincinnati are still in fl ux. MORE: Patch of gravel in Lower Price Hill holds key to The Banks' music venue By contrast, it took just six weeks from the time the Ovation concert venue was announced for Covington-based Corporex Cos. to get the necessary zoning, site plan approval and permits COMMUNITY PRESS & RECORDER NEWSPAPERS ❚ 312 Elm Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202 ❚ 2116 Chamber Center Drive, Fort Mitchell, KY 41017 NEWS TIPS ........................................513-248-8600 HOME DELIVERY..............................859-781-4421 ADVERTISING...................................513-768-8404 CLASSIFIEDS ....................................513-242-4000 SUBSCRIPTIONS...............................513-248-7113
An artist's rendering of the AEG Presents/PromoWest concert venue coming to the Ovation site in Newport. PROVIDED
needed to get started, according to Tom Banta, Coporex's managing director. "The City of Newport has been great to work with, and the entitlement and approval process has been very smooth,'' Banta said. "We are doing a staged design, permit and construction process that will allow us to fast track the project to completion.'' Even before construction fi nishes on phase one, expected sometime in late 2020, construction will begin on up to 5 million square feet of residential and commercial space northwest of the concert venue. The mixed-used portion of the development will be built on top of elevated garages, raising the entire 35-acre Ovation site to the same level as the levee and allowing for unobstructed views of Downtown and the Ohio River. When completed, the project - which is about a quarter of the size of the 120-
acre Banks development - is expected to include a mix of apartments and condos, restaurants, entertainment venues and a hotel. In addition, the development, which could cost up to $1 billion to complete, will include parks, public plazas, recreational amenities, trails and riverfront improvements. That's not just wishful thinking, according to Banta, who said a national retailer - who he declined to name - was scheduled to meet with Corporex offi cials this week to discuss a possible lease arrangement at Ovation. "Things are happening fast. People heard about the announcement, and they started to call because of that,'' Banta said, referring to the concert venue, which is expected to be a major draw. The $40 million, indoor-outdoor facility will have capacity for 2,800 indoors and 7,000 outdoors. It will host up
Lorenzen Continued from Page 1A
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know of him I really appreciated. I loved having him around the program and we’re going to miss him.” Among former UK teammates making their way north was current Wildcats linebackers coach Jon Sumrall, former Rams receiver Keenan Burton, Derek Smith and former Wildcat quarterback Shane Boyd. “He had a great personality,” Sumrall said. “He was welcoming warm and funny and competitive. The most colorful personality you could ever imagine, an unforgettable guy.” Sumrall mentioned he never had to tackle Lorenzen since quarterbacks were not “live” in practice. Burton recalled the strength of his rapid southpaw passes. “During spring ball the fi rst pass he threw to me, I think the Wilson sign was stuck in my chest because he threw the ball so hard,” Burton said. Burton’s favorite memory of Lorenzen was the 2003 seven-overtime game against Arkansas, which the Wildcats eventually lost 71-63 after a little over fi ve hours. When some at then-Com-
to 180 events a year, and is expected to draw 350,000 to 400,000 people annually, according to PromoWest CEO Scott Stienecker. Stienecker.said he's already been in negotiations with regional and national sponsors on a potential naming-rights deal. And he expects to start booking acts for the concert venue by the middle of next year, with a planned opening date in the early part of 2021. Stienecker said many of those bookings are likely to be bands regularly performing at PromoWest's Express Live! venue in Columbus and Stage AE in Pittsburgh. "We'll block-book all three cities at once,'' he said. "The industry is familiar with what PromoWest does because of Express Live! and Stage AE. When people go out on tour, they'll know what to expect with the indoor-outdoor facility in the Cincinnati/ Northern Kentucky market.'' For Stienecker, the launch of his latest music venture is bittersweet. He tried for years to land a spot in Cincinnati for a new concert venue, and he said he had hoped PromoWest would be selected to open a concert venue at The Banks. Instead, the Joint Banks Steering Committee, which makes recommendations for development at The Banks, chose Music and Event Management Inc. - a subsidiary of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Still, Stienecker said he has no regrets: "It’s actually worked out perfect for us. The regional excitement around this project has been outstanding. We intend to bring Cincinnati the No. 1 indoor-outdoor music facility in the country.”
monwealth Stadium began leaving, Lorenzen lit them up. “I went back and watched some clips and was just smiling at him saying, ‘You’re going to miss a hell of a game!’” Burton said. Boyd, who briefl y took Lorenzen’s job under coach Guy Morriss in 2001 said some tried to drive a wedge in their relationship, but it actually brought them closer together. “We were friends fi rst before we were competitors,” Boyd said. “We just genuinely loved each other. We loved being around each other and had a lot of things in common.” During his time in Lexington, Lorenzen threw for 78 touchdowns and ran for 12 more playing for Mumme, Morriss and Rich Brooks. In 2015, he was inducted into the UK Athletic Hall of Fame. Lorenzen was not drafted but hooked on with the New York Giants for four seasons and won a Super Bowl ring in 2008 when the Giants and Manning won Super Bowl XLII spoiling New England’s run at an undefeated season. Jared Lorenzen was 38-years-old. For information on donations or condolences go to linnemannfuneralhomes.com. Louisville Courier Journal writer Jon Hale contributed to this report.
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University of Kentucky head football coach Mark Stoops walks out after paying his respects at the visitation of Jared Lorenzen, KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE ENQUIRER
4A ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
YOUR HEALTH with Dr. Owens
Safe Places Cincy links people to recovery services Connections to care are critical, whether for diabetes, heart disease or any other medical condition. The same is true for addiction. When people with a substance use disorder—be it heroin, alcohol or other drugs—are ready for treatment, systems need to be in place to connect them with evidence-based programs.
Sourdough egg-in-a-hole with bacon and farm greens at The Bakers' Table in Newport, Ky., on Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2019. ALBERT CESARE / THE ENQUIRER
Newport restaurant makes Eater’s Best New Restaurants in America list
O’dell M. Owens, MD, MPH
Polly Campbell
President & CEO
Eater, the national website about all things food, published a list today of the 16 Best New Restaurants in America. A Cincinnati-area restaurant is on it, and it's kind of a surprise. Hillary Dixler Canavan, restaurant editor of Eater, chose Baker's Table in Newport, a coff ee shop and lunch restaurant that's not even open for dinner. "What makes a restaurant a tourist magnet and what makes it a standby? Many travelers long to fi nd a gem tucked away on a small-town main street – the kind of place you want to linger in and
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
then brag about to your Instagram followers. Locals, however, may fi nd that what they actually need is a restaurant with a well-priced menu that outshines a home kitchen and rewards return visits. When a new restaurant like The Baker’s Table hits both marks, it has the makings of an essential." Check out their list on Eater.com. I love that they picked this homey, friendly place. I don't know how they found it. It doesn't have the fl ash of most "best restaurants" but it has the essentials of why we go out to eat. So congratulations to David Willocks and Wendy Braun, who've put so much thought and care into creating this place.
A variety of resources are available for recovery in our community, but often connections are missed. Safe Places Cincy helps to link people and treatment providers. People with addiction can walk in to any of the Cincinnati Health Department’s health centers. Once there, patients are evaluated by specially trained public health staff and transported to the treatment program via Uber Health. Since it launched in March, Safe Places Cincy has helped about 20 people find treatment. The program brings together a variety of partners, including Cincinnati Health Department, Interact for Health, Cincinnati Council Member Amy Murray, Uber Health and three treatment providers (Talbert House, Center for Addiction ti Treatment T t t and d BrightView). B i htVi ) Safe Places Cincy is open to peo ople living in Hamilton County or who are eligible for O Ohio Medicaid. For more information about the program m, including a list of locations, visit www.safeplacescincy.org. For information about treatment options in Northern Kentucky, call the regional help line at 85 59-415-9280 and in Southeastern Indiana, call the C Community Mental Health Center at 812-532-3420. Dr. O’dell Moreno Owens is the president and chief execuHealth and InterAct for Change. tive officer of Interact for H Dr. Owens is a reproducttive endocrinologist. He earned an MD, an OB/GYN resiidency and a master’s of public ale University School of Medihealth degree from Ya ed a fellowship in reproduccine. He also obtaine at Harvard Medical School. In tive endocrinology a wens has served as the Hamilrecent years, Dr. Ow ner, Cincinnati State Technical ton County Coron y College President, and Interim and Community Health Commisssioner and Medical Director of the Cincinnatti Health Department.
www.interactforhealth.org CE-CIN0007934-01
Country music legend Garth Brooks performs to over 75,000 fans, the largest indoor concert crowd ever in Arizona at State Farm Stadium on March 23, 2019 in Glendale, Ariz. ROB SCHUMACHER/THE REPUBLIC
Northern Kentucky bar makes pitch for Garth Brooks to come on tour Kyle Brown
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Country music legend Garth Brooks announced a seven city "Dive Bar Tour" on Sunday, July 7, and one Northern Kentucky bar is making its pitch for him to stop by. Bobby Mackey's in Wilder tweeted:
"Please copy this post and send a message to Garth Brooks saying that you want #americashonkytonk Bobby Mackeys Wilder KY. added to the Garth Brooks Seagrams 7 Crown Dive Bar Tour." So far Brooks has only announced a date July 15 in Chicago. No location has been given. None of the other six cities have been named.
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ 5A
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6A ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Ministry behind Creation Museum to operate school Rachel Berry
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Answers in Genesis, the non-profi t ministry behind the Ark Encounter and Creation Museum, is taking over a Christian school in Northern Kentucky. AIG will now operate Twelve Stones Christian Academy, a nondenominational Christian school that meets at Erlanger Baptist Church. TSCA began in 2017 with kindergarten through seventh grade and plans to continue adding one grade each year until it becomes a K-12 school. The school, which is entering its third year of operation, integrates a biblical worldview into its curriculum. It is unique because of its focus on teaching students to communicate the gospel
Students sit in class at Twelve Stones Christian Academy. PROVIDED/ANSWERS IN GENESIS
and defend their faith, said Ken Ham, AIG's CEO. TSCA also uses only textbooks from Christian publishers.
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"The school complements AIG’s goal of equipping children, teens, and adults with solid apologetics answers from the Bible in a questioning world," said a news release. The school board, which included AIG employees, approached AIG about the change. AIG was previously familiar with the school and had endorsed it since its beginning. Ham said TSCA's staff is in-sync with AIG's goals and that the statements of faith of the organizations are "virtually the same." No major changes are anticipated following the leadership change, and the current administration and teachers will remain at the school. Scientists and educators from AIG will serve as guest lecturers. Students will be given the opportunity to visit the Creation Musuem and Ark
Encounter for school, and classes will utilize facilities such as the Creation Museum's labs, observatory and planetarium. Students of TSCA will also receive free annual passes to the Ark Encounter and Creation Museum, which can be used for immediate family members. The school is not currently accredited but hopes to gain accreditation by the time the fi rst class graduates from 12th grade. Schools must wait a few years after their inception to become accredited, and Ham said TSCA is using outside consultants to assist with the process. TSCA currently has 50 students and is still enrolling for the upcoming school year. Ham said he hopes AIG's profi le in the region will help increase enrollment for the newly-formed school.
3 Cincinnati area Charming Charlie stores to close Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Three local Charming Charlie stores will be closing soon and closing sales have begun. The Charming Charlie locations in Crestview Hills Town Center, Rookwood Commons and Deerfi eld Towne Center will close after the jewelry and accessories retailer fi led for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The chain plans to close all of its 261 stores in 38 states. This is the second time the store has fi led for bankruptcy. Charming Charlie closed about 100 stores during its previous bankruptcy, which ended in April 2018, according to USA TODAY.
The company said it faced "unsustainable operating expenses, including onerous leases" at a time when many brick-and-mortar stores are battling with online retailers. Going-out-of-business sales have already begun at Charming Charlie locations. According to the website, stores are 20 to 50% off . The sale is valid instore only and all sales are fi nal. Gift cards will be accepted until August 21. The company expects to vacate its stores by Aug. 31, according to a court fi ling. Hilco Merchant Resources and SB360 Capital partners are handling the liquidation. USA TODAY contributed to this article.
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8A ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
New step to protect against ODs: Hamilton County off ers fentanyl test strips Valerie Royzman
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Hamilton County Public Health is now off ering opioid users a way to test their drugs for the deadly synthetic opiate fentanyl. The health department’s mobile syringe exchange program, The Exchange Project, will provide fentanyl test strips, which advocates say can prevent some overdoses. “Anything we can do to give people another chance at life and another chance to get into treatment is worth the eff ort,” said Hamilton County
Health Commissioner Tim Ingram. The health department recently secured a $75,000 grant for its syringe-exchange program from the 20-county health nonprofi t Interact for Health to fund the strips, said Interact spokesperson Emily Gresham Wherle. A February 2018 study from John Hopkins University found 70% of respondents –people recruited from Baltimore, Boston and Providence who use drugs – reported they would change their behavior knowing their drugs tested positive for fentanyl. They might inject the drugs more slowly, use only when with someone who has the opioid-overdose antidote naloxone, or
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perhaps, not use at all. Caracole, a nonprofi t that provides HIV services in the region, has been distributing the strips on its mobile testing van since November. The agency has handed out more than 750 strips since it began carrying them in November 2018. Suzanne Bachmeyer, associate director of prevention, said as people have become more familiar with the strips, they’ve asked for more. Caracole has reciprocated, giving them more. Dennis Cauchon, president of Harm Reduction Ohio, said about a month ago he was “surprised” by the length of time it took the Hamilton County health department to get the strips. The county “has been progressive in other ways,” he said, but other Ohio cities, including Columbus, Cleveland and Portsmouth, were already off ering them. “There’s no doubt that the strips would benefi t the Cincinnati area and it would almost certainly save lives, especially since fentanyl has migrated outside of the heroin and opiate supply,” he said. Fake ecstasy and other pressed-fentanyl pills sold as prescription opioids were among adulterated street drugs in the region during an overdose surge in May. People who use drugs other than heroin should be aware that the strips can be used on other drugs, such as meth and cocaine, said Daniel Raymond, deputy director of planning and policy for the Harm Reduction Coalition in New York City. “The powerful thing that we’ve seen with fentanyl test strips is it makes that sense of risk concrete to people,” he said. “It goes from a hypothetical, ‘Oh these are just scare tactics or urban leg-
ends,’ to actual, tangible proof that fentanyl is something to be concerned about.” The Northern Kentucky Health Department does not provide the strips at its Syringe Access Exchange Programs now. But it will take part in a new study with the University of Kentucky to determine whether the strips are eff ective in curbing overdoses. One piece of the study will evaluate how Covington and Newport syringeexchange clients use the strips, as part of an $87 million grant the university received in April, said Laura Brinson, public health impacts administrator for the Northern Kentucky Health Department. The four-year Healing Communities Study has the goal of reducing opioid overdose deaths by 40 percent in 16 Kentucky counties. If the study shows the test strips are eff ective, “funders may be more likely to support their use, which is one of the reasons why this study is so important,” Brinson said.
Places to fi nd fentanyl test strips Caracole: Its mobile testing van travels throughout Hamilton and Butler counties, as well as one location in Northern Kentucky, to provide free HIV testing, fentanyl test strips and other resources. Caracole, in partnership with Hamilton County, opened July 11 as a sitebased syringe exchange and operate on Thursdays from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Hamilton County Public Health: The health department’s syringe-exchange van travels throughout Greater Cincinnati to trade sterile syringes for used ones, hepatitis C testing, fentanyl test strips and other resources.
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10A ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Blink announces plans for NKY in 2019 Noelle Zielinski
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Blink is returning to Cincinnati Oct. 10-13. And it's going to be bigger than before, now expanding into Northern Kentucky. This year, Blink will span 30 blocks across Findlay Market and Covington. The installations will be connected by the Roebling Bridge, which will have a new look immersed in light and sound during the four-day event. At a recent press conference, Blink's plans for the NKY portion of the event were announced. Grouplove, the alternative rock band, will be performing a free concert Oct. 12 in Covington's RiverCenter parking lot. The concert is a collaboration between Kroger Wellness Your Way Festival, Blink and Corporex. Opening acts for the concert will be announced soon. Covington will light up with more than 20 installations stretching from the Roebling Bridge to Seventh and Madison. Also for Blink, new mural will be introduced by local artist group, Xylene. The mural will be animated through projection mapping and will be a permanent addition to the community. The mural will be located across the street from Covington’s RiverCenter, on the tower of the north side of the TANK garage.
The world's largest mobile disco ball spins on Pleasant Street near Findlay Market. It hails from Louisville. MEG VOGEL/ THE ENQUIRER
More in NKY for Blink 2019 • The John A. Roebling bridge will connect Blink’s route as a featured iconic landmark bathed in light and sound. Artists Brave Berlin of Cincinnati and MASARY Studios, a team of Boston artists specializing in urban interactive experiences will make the Singing Bridge “sing,” working with local lighting experts Vincent Lighting of Erlanger, Kentucky. • The Ascent will magically come to life, bathed in animated light on all sides with vibrant colors and patterns. • A mural celebrating Carol Ann and Ralph V. Haile, Jr. will be created, in time for Blink, on the back of the U.S. Bank building at Sixth and Madison. • Blink will highlight two internationally acclaimed street artists through architectural projection mapping. Both sides of the Faile Mural on W. Sixth Street
Grouplove will play a free show at Blink in 2019. PROVIDED
(projection by local media artist, Chris Glenn), as well as the London Police mural on Fourth and Scott streets (projection by Brave Berlin). • Another architectural projection mapping will animate the Hannaford Building. Blink has commissioned Klip Collective – a pioneer and creative powerhouse in projection mapping from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. • Northern Kentucky University is creating a light installation that will actually sit on the Ohio River. • The World’s Largest Mobile Disco Ball, made in Kentucky, will return for Blink – and fi nd its home in
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"Endless Commerce," a sculpture by Joe Girandola and Matt Lynch, glows at 117 W. Liberty St. during the fi rst night of Blink Cincinnati Oct. 12. MEG VOGEL/ THE ENQUIRER
This is a rendering of the what the Roebling Bridge will look like during Blink, an art and light festival in October. PROVIDED
Covington for a pop-up Disco Party.
Don't miss it If you don’t know what Blink is, it’s an art installation like no other that features light sculptures, murals by international artists and projection mapping. Blink’s fi rst event took place in October 2017 and brought in over one million visitors which is considered to be the largest gathering of people in downtown Cincinnati and Over-the-Rhine. Blink is free and open to the public.
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CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ 11A
Spaghetti with simple tomato anchovy sauce Don’t turn your nose up at the thought of anchovies. Truth be told, they’re the “secret” ingredient in more than a few dishes. Used in moderation, anchovies never make a food taste fi shy. They mellow when cooked, adding depth of flavor. If you’re still not convinced, add less and go from there. Ingredients 12 oz. spaghetti or other pasta 28 oz. whole canned tomatoes 1/4 cup olive oil 1/4 to 1/2 cup diced onion 2 teaspoons garlic, minced or to taste (a couple nice cloves) 1-2 teaspoons anchovy paste Palmful chopped basil or 1 teaspoon dried Salt and pepper Parmesan cheese Instructions Put pasta on to cook and while it’s cooking, make sauce. By the time the pasta is cooked, sauce will be just about done, too.
Add basil after sauce cooks. RITA HEIKENFELD/PROVIDED
Try spaghetti with a simple tomato anchovy sauce Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld
Have you ever looked at a recipe and not followed it to the letter? That’s what happened to me today when I made a simple spaghetti sauce that called for a 28 oz. can of whole tomatoes. The only pantry tomatoes I had were quarts of whole tomatoes that I canned last year so I subbed in those. It also called for pureeing tomatoes in the blender, but there was no way I wanted to fool with that. So I just smooshed them with a potato masher right in the pan. How did the spaghetti sauce turn out? Really good, and really
easy. My kind of cooking! Marx Hot Bagels tuna and egg salad John Marx, no longer proprietor of this beloved Blue Ash restaurant, has always been so nice in returning my calls. A while back, readers wanted to know how to make his tuna and egg salad. At the time, John had just sold the restaurant to new owner, Y.Y. Davis and said recipes would stay the same. Per usual, all he would tell were ingredients: “One has boiled egg and the other tuna, and both have real mayonnaise, carrots, celery, Lawry’s seasoned salt and white pepper,” he said. I say it’s the love that makes his food yummy. I made a version of Marx’s tuna salad. Recipe’s on my abouteating.com site.
Heat oil in pan and add onions. Put garlic on top (garlic burns easily so putting it on top insulates it.) Cook until onions start to get soft, add tomatoes and anchovy paste. Smoosh tomatoes well with potato masher. Bring to boil, reduce heat to simmer and cook about 15 minutes. Stir in basil and season to taste. Toss sauce with pasta and give it a shower of cheese. Tip: whole anchovies vs paste These salty, tiny fi sh are packed whole in tins or jars. In paste form, they’re packed in tubes. It takes about 5 whole anchovies to equal 1 tablespoon paste. Paste is more concentrated. Subbing diced/crushed tomatoes If that’s all you have, go for it. I will tell you, though, whole tomatoes, in my opinion, taste and look better than most diced/crushed. How to measure spaghetti before cooking For spaghetti, a 1-1/2” diameter bundle is 8 oz.
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12A ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Viewpoints Northern Kentucky emerging as a tourism juggernaut Name Here Columnist Newspaper Name USA TODAY NETWORK – REGION
The summer vacation season has arrived and tourism in Northern Kentucky has never been hotter. A slew of vibrant attractions, a booming bourbon scene, the construction of new hotels, robust demand for the Northern Kentucky Convention Center and the continued growth of the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport have fi rmly placed tourism as a major driver of employment, investment and visitor spending. Tourism in Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati is a fi nancial powerhouse, generating more than $5 billion of economic impact and supporting more than 77,000 jobs. Last year, direct visitor spending jumped to $450 million. And every dollar spent on tourism marketing generated $23.52 in return. In addition to the local impact, Northern Kentucky has emerged as a statewide tourism juggernaut, representing 20% of the state’s tourism industry. Boosting our region’s tourism is a number of exciting and inviting attractions. Northern Kentucky’s group tour business, led by the faith-based attractions The Creation Museum in Boone County and the Ark Encounter in nearby Grant County, continues to attract visitors to the region in 2018. And those visitors spend their time and dollars elsewhere in the community. Alan Bernstein of BB Riverboats in Newport estimates that as much as 20% of the cruise line’s business comes from people who came to Northern Kentucky to visit the Creation Museum and Ark Encounter. As bourbon tourism continues to boom, the award-winning B-Line – Northern Kentucky’s bourbon tour – has helped entrench the region as the northern edge of Bourbon Country and has been the catalyst for the opening and planning of new bars, restaurants and distilleries. There is even a newly opened bourbon kiosk at the airport. Along the banks of the Ohio River, planned new investments at Newport on the Levee, including the exciting SkyWheel, guarantees that tourists will continue to fl ock to our riverfront for years to come. One of the summer's biggest tourism draws returned to Northern Kentucky July 11-13 with the NASCAR triple-header weekend capped by the Quaker State 400 presented by Walmart at the Kentucky Speedway in Sparta. Those attractions are helping fi ll Northern Kentucky hotels while spurring the development of new hotels from Newport to Florence. In 2018, hotel occupancy in Northern Kentucky hit a record high, with demand growing by 7.5% over 2017. Not only did local occupancy beat the national average of 66.2%, but 2018 marked the second consecutive year that occupancy exceeded 70%. Tour and travel groups alone brought more than 18,000 room nights to region last year. Demand for Northern Kentucky showcases the strength of our destination’s off erings as part of an exciting and inviting region. Higher occupancy translates to higher demand and provides growing room revenues for hotels. That pie continues to grow. Since the Hotel Covington opened in 2016, six additional hotels have opened including the Aloft at Newport on the Levee, Hampton Inn & Suites in Newport and
Visitors walk around the replica ark on July 5 at the Ark Encounter in Williamstown, Ky. THE ENQUIRER/KAREEM ELGAZZAR
Exterior of the Hotel Covington, 7th Street and Madison Avenue, Covington. PATRICK REDDY/ THE ENQUIRER
the Home 2 Suites by Hilton in Florence. And two of our major hotels – The Cincinnati Hilton Airport in Florence and the Cincinnati Marriott Hotel in Boone County – have been rejuvenated through major renovations. The surge in hotel development is continuing from Newport – where a new Hilton property has been announced for the World Peace Bell site – to Florence, where seven hotels are either under construction or in various stages of planning. The consistent investment shows that hotel owners and operators sense the long-term stability of demand and occupancy in Northern Kentucky. Looking to the future, meetNKY is working closely with the 20-year-old Northern Kentucky Convention Center on a feasibility study for expanding the center. meetNKY is also working with the City of Covington, which has launched a study of developing the adjacent Internal Revenue Service center that is scheduled to close. This is an exciting time for our destination and exciting time to be a visitor to Northern Kentucky, and we are committed to keeping the momentum going
An employee of Buffalo Trace rolls a barrel of bourbon to be bottled at Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, on Nov. 28, 2018. ALBERT CESARE/ THE ENQUIRER
SUBMIT YOUR LETTERS, COLUMNS
The River Queen, part of BB Riverboats, makes its way down the Ohio River in 2013. LIZ DUFOUR/THE ENQUIRER
this summer, throughout the rest of 2019 and well into the future. Tim Bray is chairman of the meetNKY l Northern Kentucky Convention and Visitors Bureau and the Kentucky Speedway director of communications
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.
Campbell Recorder
❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019
❚ 1B
Sports KSR tribute show details fond memories of Jared Lorenzen Luke Feliciano
Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Friends, teammates and coaches took time to remember former Highlands High School and University of Kentucky quarterback Jared Lorenzen, who recently passed away. In the process, they created a memoir of colorful stories for a man that touched so many. Kentucky Sports Radio (KSR) hosted a special tribute show to honor the life of the standout athlete. The show truly encapsulated who Lorenzen was as both a player and a person. Lorenzen, a 1999 graduate of Highlands, left an indelible mark on the community. He guided the Bluebirds to two Kentucky Class 3A state titles. Following his time at Kentucky, he spent four seasons in the NFL with the New York Giants where he won a Super Bowl ring. For his outstanding athletic achievements, Lorenzen will enter Highlands’ Athletic Hall of Fame this fall in his fi rst year of eligibility. “That era with Jared and Derek Smith – they were so fun to watch,” KSR co-host Ryan Lemond said. "They were a circus. Nobody could touch them during that era. During that state fi nal, it was a state championship game and it was like a JV scrimmage ... They were unbelievable." His impact can be exemplifi ed by the $16,000 raised by UK fans for the Jared Lorenzen Memorial Fund during the fi rst hour of the two-hour time slot when the show aired. By the time the show wrapped up, donations totaled nearly $24,000. Lorenzen was friends with KSR host Matt Jones along with co-hosts Lemond and Drew Franklin. He was also featured as a guest and co-hosted the show several times. Jones invited Lorenzen onto the show because he wanted someone who understood the X’s and O’s of football. “I believe, defi nitively, (he) is the most popular player in UK football history," Jones said. "When you're talking about the most beloved and the person that is the fan favorite, he's in the conversation, period in terms of UK athletes because of the way people saw him in high school." Guests of the show included some of Lorenzen’s teammates, friends and coaches. They brought forth a medley of their favorite stories and memories about Lorenzen. Audio clips detailing some of Lorenzen’s best moments from his playing days at Kentucky were run during commercial breaks. One guest was Derek Abney, a former Wildcats’ wide receiver and teammate of Lorenzen’s at Kentucky, who provided a comical account. He got a Hummer during the summer just to drive around and test drive for a day or two," Abney recalled.
Marty McCord, wearing a Jared Lorenzen jersey, watches Matt Jones perform a special radio show in honor of Jared Lorenzen in front of a live audience at Highlands Athletics in Fort Thomas, Ky., on Thursday, July 11, 2019. Kentucky Sports Radio host Matt Jones and started a fund to help support Jared Lorenzen's family. ALBERT CESARE / THE ENQUIRER
"Some of the guys, we kind of took it out while he was lifting weights and we took it places we probably shouldn't have gone. You could obviously see some dirt and grass ... Jared found out about it, and some people would freak out and fl ip out but Jared, you know, he was always just the nicest guy. He was mad about it but didn't take it out on anybody. That was just him." Rich Brooks, the head coach of Kentucky football when Lorenzen was a senior, also joined the show. "My very fi rst year, I sit down with Jared and I'm convinced that he could be even better than he is if he was a little thinner," Brooks said. "So, he and I both went on a diet. I went from about 188 to 170 and he went from maybe 302 pounds to 260 maybe." Lorenzen often spoke to the hosts of the show about how he learned the most in his entire playing career from Brooks in just a short 6-8 months with him. Derek Smith, a former Highlands and Kentucky football player reminisced on his athletic career as a teammate of Lorenzen's. Smith and Lorenzen had
played sports together since the sixth grade. Smith revealed a story about Lorenzen from high school when he accomplished an impressive feat while goofi ng off on the football fi eld. There was a time in high school – we were goofi ng off ," Smith said. "He was down on one knee throwing a football at a trash can and I would say it was at least 50 to 70 yards away. Every single one of them, we thought, had a chance to go in, let alone doing it on your feet with that much precision. But he was doing it on his knees ... It's just special." According to the show’s hosts, they always played Linkin Park music when Lorenzen was on the show because he was a fan of the band. During the show, they played his favorite tunes from the band in honor of him. Hal Mumme, Lorenzen’s coach for his fi rst few years at Kentucky captured Jared perfectly in one concise statement. He had probably the greatest arm I've ever coached, a better athlete and besides all that an even better person," he said.
Looking back at Jared Lorenzen’s NFL career Tyler Dragon Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
There’s a consensus that Jared Lorenzen made his mark in high school by becoming Kentucky’s Mr. Football and in college as "The Hefty Lefty" as he engineered University of Kentucky for four successful years and left college football fourth all-time in passing yards in the SEC. But Lorenzen also made an impact in the NFL. His pro career numbers are meager: 4-of-8 passing for 28 yards in four games as a backup for the New York Giants. Most of his playing time came in preseason action. Those stats are forgettable even for an undrafted free-agent signee. Yet, what one does on game day See LORENZEN, Page 2B
Jared Lorenzen Lorenzen left an imprint on those he encountered in the NFL. That was evident by the outpouring sentimental words upon news of his passing. GETTY IMAGES
2B ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
Who are the best Cincinnati running backs ever? Mark Schmetzer Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
From Williamsburg’s Jason Bainum to Ross’s Nick Wilson, Greater Cincinnati has been blessed down through the decades with some brilliant high school football running backs. Norwood’s Marc Edwards, CAPE’s Carlos Snow, Boone County's Shaun Alexander, Wyoming’s Richard
Hall – all are among the local players who ran their way toward the top of their state's rushing records. The Enquirer and Cincinnati.com are trying to determine who, out of the hundreds of highly regarded ballcarriers who’ve piled up yards and touchdowns down through the years, are the top 10 – and we’re hoping for your help. As intrepid as we are, we can’t be everywhere, so you tell us. Who would you nominate as the one or two or three
top high school running backs you’ve seen in your lifetime? Why is he so high on your list – so dominant in your memory? Don’t just give us a name. Give us a reason or reasons. If you have a nominee or nominees, please send the names and credentials to mlaughman@enquirer.com. Oh, and keep your eyes open for future polls on related high school sports subjects. After all, who knows the local scene better than you?
How Lorenzen inspired Highlands players, fans Adam Turer
Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Jared Lorenzen was already a legend in Fort Thomas. Kids who grew up watching him aspired to star at quarterback for Highlands High School, just like J-Lo did. They were mesmerized by his success at the University of Kentucky and felt a sense of pride when their hometown hero won a Super Bowl ring with the New York Giants. Lorenzen’s legacy was secure. The 1998 Kentucky Mr. Football, who died July 3 at age 38, had already inspired the next generation of Bluebirds greats. He didn’t have to come home and give back. But that was just Jared Lorenzen’s nature. He always looked for ways to help the community that helped raise him. Whether it was through dropping a note to a young Bluebirds quarterback, spending hours in the summer heat helping a fellow Bluebird with passing pointers, or joining a younger Bluebird in a pizza-eating contest for a local charity, Lorenzen remained a fi xture in Fort Thomas. “For me when I was growing up, Highlands football was life. And the guys on the team like Jared were larger than life. In my mind during that time, college football or the NFL weren't important. Highlands football was it so we idolized those guys like they were celebrities,” said Will Bardo, a 2010 Highlands graduate. “Those guys were legends and Jared led the way. I always thought of him as the guy that could throw the ball 65 yards from his knee growing up.” Bardo treasured the football on display at his parents’ house, signed by Lorenzen's 1998 Bluebirds state championship team. A decade later, Bardo was part of three straight state championship teams at Highlands en route to a prolifi c career at the University of Dayton. During that time, he received valuable pointers and wisdom from Lorenzen. “He had no reason hanging around me and helping me out in my high school and college days with quarterback play while he was in the NFL and working on keeping his career going. But he did. And I actually think he enjoyed doing that,” said Bardo. “He loved helping people. I don't have any doubt that he was here to serve other people and make their lives better. And he did a damn good job of that.” He coached and mentored Patrick Towles, another Bluebirds star who spent his childhood looking up to Lorenzen and the late-90’s dynasty at Highlands. The Bluebirds won six straight state titles from 2007 to 2012. Towles followed in his coach’s footsteps, realizing a lifelong dream of quarterbacking the Kentucky Wildcats. Their relationship began when Towles was a sophomore thrust into starting duty after Bardo suffered an injury. Following a Highlands game, Lorenzen handed Towles a note off ering his phone number and mentorship. “I was ecstatic. My entire time growing up I wanted to play quarterback at the University of Kentucky,” Towles said. “That was a validation. If Jared Lorenzen thinks I can do this, then I can do this. Our relationship started then and only grew over the next few years. I
Lorenzen Continued from Page 1B
doesn’t always defi ne how successful the individual is. Building lasting relationships and memories with teammates, coaches and those around the NFL world is, too, signifi cant. Lorenzen left an imprint on those he encountered in the NFL. That was evident by the outpouring sentimental words upon news of his passing. “Jared was a great teammate and friend. We competed against each other in college and came to the Giants together. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family. I will always remember his competitive spirit and his good nature. Jared has left us all way too soon,” Giants quarterback Eli Manning said in a team statement. Manning even credited Lorenzen for accomplishing one of the greatest plays in Super Bowl history. Trailing the undefeated Patriots by four points with
July 21, 2010: Highlands High School new quarterbacks coach Jared Lorenzen, left, talks to the Bluebirds starting quarterback Patrick Towles. ERNEST COLEMAN/THE ENQUIRER
became the player I was in large part to him.” Lorenzen offi cially took over as quarterbacks coach at his alma mater for one season in 2010. He spent hours breaking down fi lm and sharing his football and life experiences with players who grew up idolizing him. “He didn’t have to be on the staff to be a coach for us. When he was on our staff , he was phenomenal. It was so valuable,” said former Bluebirds coach Dale Mueller. “Being a guy with such success and then being such a humble, serving person, it was never about how good Jared was. It was always about how good you were, things you were good at.” Bardo and Towles spent their college years texting with Lorenzen and working with him in the summers. Bardo recalled a time when he was having diffi culty putting the proper spin on the ball and sought Lorenzen’s advice. Rather than providing a detailed correction learned from his NFL coaches, Lorenzen off ered practical advice that stuck with Bardo. “He didn't give the technical answer I was looking for. He gave me a ‘You've been doing this since the third grade; you know what you're doing. Keep throwing and you'll throw right through it,’” Bardo said. “He said it with such a confi dence like, ‘Yeah, this is the answer, and you'll fi gure it out. You know what to do.’ I won't forget the confi dence and charisma he had and how that rubbed off to the people he was around.” Even as a player, Lorenzen had a confi dence that served as a calming infl uence on his coaches. In fact, he fundamentally changed the way the Bluebirds, the midst of a state championship-winning dynasty, ran their off ense. After losing a nailbiter to Moeller in his fi rst game as a starter, Lorenzen suggested taking snaps from the shotgun. That would help him fend off the type of seven- and eight-man blitzes that Moeller used to defeat the Bluebirds. “From then on, we were always a shotgun team. He completely changed our off ense. He changed me as a coach from being a guy who said ‘this is what you’re
just over a minute left on third and fi ve, Manning escaped the grasp of New England defensive linemen Richard Seymour and Jarvis Green. He then threw a pass to wide receiver David Tyree, who made a miraculous catch by pinning the football on his helmet, all the while with safety Rodney Harrison draped over him. It was the most momentous play of Super Bowl XLII and helped the Giants pull off the 17-14 upset. Manning and Tyree received most of the notoriety after the timeless NFL highlight. But Manning’s ability to ward off a near sack was in part because of time spent in practice doing strip drills with the 6-foot-4, 285-pound Lorenzen. “We had to move around and other quarterbacks tried to strip the ball out. Lorenzen took it to the next level, and it was like he was the d-tackle trying to get a sack. All the work I had with Jared Lorenzen, I think that was a big help in getting out of that pocket,” Manning recounted on NFL Network. Camaraderie established with teammates, combined with every single practice and meeting during the season, plays a part in the journey to becoming a
supposed to do as a player,’ to a coach who trusted his players to get the ball in the end zone,” said Mueller. “He was such a creative person. He really impacted me in letting guys be creative.” It was undeniable that Lorenzen was an off ensive football savant. The Bluebirds team he quarterbacked to a state championship in 1998 set the record for most points scored by a Kentucky team in a single season. That record stood until 2010, when Lorenzen joined the coaching staff and helped Towles and company break that mark. “One of his fi rst games as a starter, we faced a team that came out in a diff erent defense than we had ever talked about. They were doing something that we hadn’t prepared for at all. I called timeout and went out to talk to Jared about it because I thought it was going to mess us up,” said Mueller. “Jared met me halfway and said ‘I bet you’re coming out because they’re in this. Well, I was going to audible to this.’ He was such a football genius. He was a special, special football player. It looked like he was thinking about things about a minute ahead of everyone else.” Lorenzen became more than a coach. He was a friend and mentor to the players who grew up wanting to emulate him. He always made time to help current and future Bluebirds. Even when his legend was growing as a player, he displayed a rare humility for a high school football star. “It didn’t matter if it was the state championship, if a kid came up to him before the game, he was going to talk to him and motivate him. People always talked so positively about him and he would always try to defl ect that and talk positively about them,” said Mueller. “His biggest impact on me as a coach was that humble, it’s-all-about-the-other-person attitude. That’s the way Jared was. He wanted to make everybody else feel good about themselves.” Lorenzen was a role model for so many younger Bluebirds, for his off -fi eld example just as much as his on-fi eld exploits. “Unfortunately, our world today is a very ‘me’ society. Jared didn’t live his life like that. Jared was always very ‘What can I do for you?’ He was always looking to help people and to use his tools for good,” Towles said. “I’ve watched a lot of football and I have yet to see an arm like Jared’s. I learned so much from not just his abilities but from his experience. His willingness to share that with people was vital for me. In a world full of a lot of boys, he was defi nitely a man.” Even before he joined the coaching staff , Lorenzen was off ering assistance to the Bluebirds. Just as he did with Bardo, Lorenzen reached out to Towles, unsolicited, to off er guidance and advice. He made sure that if you played quarterback for Highlands, you were part of a special fraternity. But he didn’t limit his servant leadership to Highlands quarterbacks. “One of my close friends who never met Jared but went to Highlands and then on to UK told us how Jared reached out to him on LinkedIn after my friend graduated college, off ering to help with the job search and anything else in regards to post-college life. All because they both went to Highlands and UK,” said Bardo. “That gives you an idea of what he was about and that’s how I'll remember him. Jared was a person unlike anyone I knew and I won't forget him.”
Super Bowl champion. Without playing a down in Super Bowl XLII, Lorenzen is a Super Bowl champion and he had a role in the Giants’ victory. “Jared got along well with his teammates, and he contributed a lot in his hometown,” former Giants Super Bowl winning head coach Tom Coughlin said in a portion of his statement through the team. Lorenzen played four years with the Giants and had a short stint with the Indianapolis Colts during the 2008 preseason. His stats didn’t leave a mark, but the time he shared with his professional teammates and coaches was certainly memorable. “Jared was a special person, and a beloved Giant. He was an important member of our 2007 team, one that created its own destiny. Our thoughts are with Jared’s family and friends who loved and appreciated him so much, just as our organization and fans did,” the Giants said in a statement. Lorenzen left a lasting impression and that’s his most important, as well as worthy, NFL stat.
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ 3B
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Representing Children, Inc.: Catie Turner, Rick Charlton, Emmy Lou Charlton, honorees Lori and David Zombek, Elizabeth Fricke and Jordan Huizenga. PAULA NORTON/PROVIDED
Campbell County residents honored Cold Springs residents Lori and David Zombek (nominated by Children, Inc.) and Ft. Thomas residents Elizabeth and Bradley Younger (nominated by YMCA Camp Ernst) were honored by the Greater Cincinnati Planned Giving Council recently with a Voices of Giving Awards. The annual Voices of Giving Awards Event paid tribute to Greater Cincinnatians who have chosen to leave a charitable legacy with a bequest or other type of planned gift to a favorite charitable organization. All honorees were selected by their benefi ting cause. Mrs. Zombek has served on the Children, Inc. board of directors since 2011 and as president of the board since 2018. She has chaired the organization’s major fundraiser, “Raising the Green,” since 2014 and currently is co-chair of the Capital Campaign Special Gifts Committee. Prior to joining the board, she was director of advocacy for Children, Inc. and was recognized as employee of the year. The Zombeks recently added Children, Inc. as a benefi ciary in their wills to help launch a planned giving program that will enable the organization to serve more families. Mrs. Younger fi rst experienced the Camp Ernst summercamp magic as a child, then spent her high school and college summers as a camp counselor and leader, making sure the next generation of campers had an impactful camp experience like she did. Even as a college student, she recognized the importance of philanthropy and helped lead the charge to energize young camp alumni to fi nancially support camper
scholarships. Later, the couple’s fi rst child showed up as an enthusiastic fi rst time camper at the age of 5. Later Mrs. Younger joined the Camp Ernst Board and, as current Board chair, has had a remarkable impact on engaging volunteers towards the goals of fundraising and promotion of a positive, life-changing camp experience. The Youngers’ example of generosity and planning has led to them taking the step to name Camp Ernst as a benefi ciary in their will, ensuring future generations will have those same life changing experiences. The Greater Cincinnati Planned Giving Council is a professional association for people whose work includes developing, marketing, and administering charitable planned gifts for non-profi t institutions and a variety of other legal and fi nancial settings. Lisa Desatnik, Lisa Desatnik Public Relations
NKY International Trade & Affairs to host session on utilizing the Northern Kentucky region’s international students Northern Kentucky International Trade & Aff airs will host its next session on utilizing the region’s international students at Northern Kentucky University (NKU) (Nunn Drive, Highland Heights, KY 41099) from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Thursday, July 25. Sherry Neal, an Immigration Attorney with Hammond Law Group, and Dr. Francois Le Roy, NKU’s Director of the Offi ce of Education Abroad and the ExSee COMMUNITY, Page 5B
*Source:https://www.mpamag.com/market-update/senior-home-equity-has-grown-to-6-9-trillion-112295.aspx A reverse mortgage increases the principal mortgage loan amount and decreases home equity (it is a negative amortization loan). AAG works with other lenders and fnancial institutions that offer reverse mortgages. To process your request for a reverse mortgage, AAG may forward your contact information to such lenders for your consideration of reverse mortgage programs that they offer Reverse mortgage loan terms include occupying the home as your primary residence, maintaining the home, paying property taxes and homeowners insurance. Although these costs may be substantial, AAG does not establish an escrow account for these payments. However, a set-aside account can be set up for taxes and insurance, and in some cases may be required. Not all interest on a reverse mortgage is tax-deductible and to the extent that it is, such deduction is not available until the loan is partially or fully repaid AAG charges an origination fee, mortgage insurance premium (where required by HUD), closing costs and servicing fees, rolled into the balance of the loan. AAG charges interest on the balance, which grows over time. When the last borrower or eligible nonborrowing spouse dies, sells the home, permanently moves out, or fails to comply with the loan terms, the loan becomes due and payable (and the property may become subject to foreclosure). When this happens, some or all of the equity in the property no longer belongs to the borrowers, who may need to sell the home or otherwise repay the loan balance.V2019.04.17 NMLS# 9392 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). American Advisors Group (AAG) is headquartered at 3800 W. Chapman Ave., 3rd & 7th Floors, Orange CA, 92868.
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Representing YMCA Camp Ernst: Elizabeth Cochran, honorees Elizabeth and Bradley Younger and Jacob Brooks. PAULA NORTON/PROVIDED
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ 5B
COMMUNITY NEWS
For Northern Kentucky University: Kelly Keene, Nancy Bratton Perry (honoree) and Ray Rolwing. PAULA NORTON/PROVIDED Continued from Page 4B
ecutive Director of the International Education Center, will present on how businesses can navigate the organization’s desire to increase and diversify the international employee population. “Many of our region’s employers think hiring international talent is a diffi cult or complex process,” said Debby Shipp, Vice President of International Trade & Aff airs for the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce (NKY Chamber). “That’s why we are so excited for this session that will explore the international talent already in the area, and discuss how to navigate the hiring
process to increase diversity.” Registration for the NKY International Trade & Aff airs session is $35 NKY Chamber Members, $55 for future NKY Chamber Members, and $20 for NKYP Passport holders. Registration is available online at www.nkychamber.com/events. Mikayla Williams, Scooter Media
Horizon Community Funds awards DCCH with $10,000 DCCH Center for Children and Families is one of four Northern Kentucky nonprofi ts to receive funding from Horizon Community Funds’ inaugural grant
cycle. The grant will support DCCH Center’s Targeted Case Management Program. “We are continually looking for ways to further serve children and families in need. Targeted Case Management fi ts nicely within our continuum of services and mission. We are grateful to Horizon Community Funds for providing the resources to get this exciting program up and running.” Bob Wilson, Executive Director DCCH’s newest program for children and families in our community, Targeted Case Management provides services to children in need of behavioral health and/or medical interventions and their
families. Northern Kentucky children identifi ed as being at-risk for entering the child welfare system by school therapists, family resource counselors, or other professionals will have access to a DCCH Targeted Case Manager to coordinate all aspects of interventions. This process includes initial assessment of need; developing a treatment plan with guardians; giving referrals to appropriate providers; facilitating relationships with providers; assisting with travel to and from appointments; and following-up to ensure adherence to the treatment plan. Interventions can include behavioral health treatment, medical care, educational programs, social development activities, and other support services. Guardians will also receive services as part of their child’s treatment plan, such as substance use/abuse assistance and in-home parenting skills training. The goal of the program is to provide early intervention and care coordination to keep children with their families and avoid admission to an expensive and disruptive out-of-home placement like a group home or foster care. Horizon Community Funds President, Nancy Grayson added, “Horizon Community Funds strongly believes in the importance of DCCH Center’s work to keep children and families together. We thank our Council of Trustees for their leadership in our grant selection process to bring Targeted Case Management to Northern Kentucky. Our commitment to accelerating change, leveraging partnerships and resources, and using innovative strategies through our Community Impact Fund grants shows prominently in this program. Strong families create a common bond in our community.” In 2018, the number of children in out-of-home placements in Kentucky grew from 8,624 to 9,705; a 13% increase over the previous year. Since 2010, the See COMMUNITY, Page 8B
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6B ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD
THURSDAY, JULY 18 Business & Networking Business Growth Workshop 11:30 a.m., Highland Country Club, 931 Alexandria Pike, Fort Thomas. 2hour live workshop with lunch.For serious business owners and general managers only. Presented by business coach Drew Schwegman. actioncoachbluegrass.com.
Concerts & Tour Dates Peaceful Sorrow 8 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. 3rd St., Newport. Summer Music on the Levee 7-10 p.m., Newport on the Levee, 1 Levee Way, Newport. Free. July 18: Zack Attack, July 25: Ithika. Tennessee Jet 8 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.
Food & Wine Summer Dinner Theatre: Church Girls, The Musical Northern Kentucky University Fine Arts Center, Stauss Hall, 1 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. $40. Ticket must be purchased at least 2 days in advance. Includes play and buffet dinner. Runs July 5-21. nku.edu.
Fundraising & Charity Pappy Raffle for Free Showers Florence Christian Church, 300 Main St., Florence. Proceeds used for renovations to expand the Shower Ministry of Florence Christian Church, a public shower and laundry for our unsheltered, homeless, and under-served neighbors.
Piano Bar, 18 E 5th St., Newport. $25. Runs Saturdays March 2-Oct. 26. Saving Stimpy 9:30 p.m., Peecox Bar & Grill, 635 Donaldson, Erlanger.
SUNDAY, JULY 21 Food & Wine July Brew Like a Pro at Home Beginner Class 2 p.m., Carabello Coffee Company, 107 E. 9th St., Newport. eventbrite.com.
Nightlife & Singles
MONDAY, JULY 22
FRIDAY, JULY 26
Concerts & Tour Dates
Concerts & Tour Dates
Amigo The Devil 8 p.m., Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington. ticketmaster.com.
Psychostick, Toybox Killer, New World Natives, Thompson House 8 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. 3rd St., Newport. Ray Will 8 p.m., Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington.
Health & Wellness Line Dance Class 4-5 p.m., Elsmere Senior Center, 179 Dell St., Erlanger. Senior Strength Class 10-11 a.m., Elsmere Senior Center, 179 Dell St., Erlanger.
TUESDAY, JULY 23
RubyGreen Sami Riggs 6 p.m., Lucky Duck Pub, 5036 Old Taylor Mill Road, Taylor Mill.
UX Writing: Choose Your Voice 5:30 p.m., The BLDG, 30 W. Pike St., Covington. Panel discussion about how user experience is influenced by writing. Scheduled panelists: Autumn Cayabyab, senior content strategist at Paycor, Ericka McIntyre, writer and editor, Casey Schroeder, senior technical writer and content strategist at 84.51, and Sarah Stephens, UX writer at Kroger Digital. eventbrite.com.
Politics & Activism Northern Kentucky Young Republicans Summer Picnic 6 p.m., Pioneer Park, 3952 Madison Pike, Covington. eventbrite.com.
Health & Wellness
Light The Torch 7 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. 3rd St., Newport.
Concerts & Tour Dates
Food & Wine
The Catching 7:30 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. 3rd St., Newport.
Dinner Theater: All Shook Up 6:30 p.m., Olde Star Mall Theatre, 1418 N Main St., Williamstown. $29-$39.
Education
Sports Evansville Otters at Florence Freedom 7:05 p.m. Friday, 6:05 p.m. Saturday, 5:35 p.m. Sunday, UC Health Stadium, 7950 Freedom Way, Florence.
SATURDAY, JULY 20 Comedy Comedy Sports 7-9 p.m., Falcon Theatre, 636 Monmouth St., Newport. $7-$10. falcontheater.net.
Concerts & Tour Dates An Evening To Celebrate the Life of Paul Stewart 7:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Between The Buried And Me 7 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. 3rd St., Newport. Mockery, Maxwell Hedron, Abby Vice 9 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.
Raising Monarch Butterflies 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m., Campbell County Cooperative Extension Service, 3500 Alexandria Pike, Newport. Learn how to raise caterpillars and release the adult butterflies. Register for one class only. Register by calling 859 572 2600 or online at https://campbell.ca.uky.edu.
Festivals City of Union Summer Food Truck Hot Spot Series 5:30-8:30 p.m., Union Park, 10165 Old Union Road, Union. Free. facebook.com/CincyHotSpot.
THURSDAY, JULY 25 Business & Networking Past, Present, Future 4 p.m., Second Sight Spirits, 301 Elm St., Ludlow. Sen. Chris McDaniel joins the Emerging Leaders Committee to share his lessons learned in business and advice to today’s future business leaders. Registration includes 2 drink tickets and small bites. Free to attend but space is limited. Register: Charley at 937-725-5119 or Charley@BuildersNKY.com by July 19th to attend.
Concerts & Tour Dates Eminence Ensemble 8 p.m., Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington. ticketmaster.com. Glier’s Goettafest 2019 July 25-Aug. 4, Newport’s Festival Park, 1 Levee Way, Newport. Free admission. goettafest.com.
Food & Wine
Food & Wine
Covington Farmers Market 9 a.m.-1 p.m., 124 E. 3rd St., Covington.
Dinner Theater: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum 6:30 p.m., Newport Central Catholic High School, 13 Carothers Road, Newport. $30. bit.ly/ NCCForumTix.
Nightlife & Singles Cincinnati Noir 10 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Amy Sailor 8:30 p.m., The Beer Sellar, 301 Riverboat Row, Newport. Newport Gangsters Tour 5 p.m., Gangsters Dueling
Nightlife & Singles Troy Tipton Experience 8 p.m., Radisson Hotel, 668 W. 5th St., Covington. Free. Kentucky Myle 7 p.m., Buffalo Bob’s Family Restaurant, 9910 Berberich Drive, Florence. The Blame Bertsch Band 7 p.m., Sis’s Family Restaurant & Bar, 837 Monmouth St., Newport.
SATURDAY, JULY 27 Beloved Youth 7 p.m., Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington. $10-$12. With Current Events, Season Ten, Circle It, Micah Sipple. madisontheateronline.com/madison-live. Goodnight, Texas, the Bones of J.R. Jones 8 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Rio and the Rockabilly Revival 7 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. Sounds Like Summer 5 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. 3rd St., Newport. $10.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 24
Jeremy Pinnell 7 p.m., Folk School Coffee Parlor, 332 Elm St., Ludlow. eventbrite.com.
Holy Cross Parish Summer Festival 6-11:30 p.m. Friday-Saturday, Holy Cross Catholic Church, 3612 Church St., Latonia. Free.
Emily Wolfe 7 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.
Concerts & Tour Dates
Other & Miscellaneous
Festivals
Concerts & Tour Dates
FRIDAY, JULY 19
Overeaters Anonymous 7:15-8:15 p.m., St. Elizabeth Hospital, 85 N. Grand Ave., Fort Thomas. Free.
Amy Sailor 5 p.m., Festival Park on the Levee, 1 Levee Way, Newport.
Concerts & Tour Dates
Overeaters Anonymous 7-8 p.m., St. Elizabeth Hospital, 85 North Grand Ave. FL A, Fort Thomas. Free.
Health & Wellness
To fi nd more calendar events, go to Cincinnati.com/calendar.
Burlington Antique Show 6 a.m.-3 p.m., Boone County Fairgrounds, 5819 Idlewild Road, Burlington. $6 early bird, $4, free ages 12-under. burlingtonantiqueshow.com.
Business & Networking
AUDITIONS: Blues for an Alabama Sky by Pearl Cleage 6:30-9:30 p.m., Falcon Theatre, 636 Monmouth St., Newport. Free. Questions or more information about auditions: torie80@gmail.com. falcontheater.net/current-season/auditions.
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.
Neighborhood
Nightlife & Singles
Performing Arts
About Calendar
Museums & Attractions Bam Powell 7-9 p.m., Behringer-Crawford Museum, 1600 Montague Road - Devou Park, Covington. $5, free ages 12-under.
Festivals Ludlow Vets Limburger Festival 6 p.m., Ludlow Vets/ Knights of Columbus, 830 Elm St., Ludlow. eventbrite.com.
Food & Wine Sip. Sleigh. Donate. A Fundraiser for SAAP 6 p.m., Newberry Bros. Coffee & Bistro, 530 Washington Ave., Newport. Information: 513-300-1347. eventbrite.com. Wine and Cheese Walking Tour Led by Tony 3 p.m., Brianza Gardens and Winery, 14611 Salem Creek Road, Verona. $28. eventbrite.com.
Fundraising & Charity Movin’ for Inclusion 5K Walk 9 a.m., Devou Park, 1201 Park Drive, Covington. $15. marjoriebook.org. Shoes & ‘Dos 6:30-11 p.m., The Band of Helping Hands Bandhouse, 3831 Decoursey Ave., Latonia. $20-up. bandofhelpinghands.com/gigs-events.
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CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ 7B
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8B ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
COMMUNITY NEWS Continued from Page 5B
number of children in out-of-home placements has grown from 6,914 to 9,705; a 40% increase. Interventions facilitated through Targeted Case Management are specifi cally designed to have an impact on the lives of these children by increasing access to care across the spectrum of providers, improving outcomes, and reducing the overall number of children in out-of-home placements. DCCH Center has evolved over the past 170 years from a traditional orphanage to a multi-service agency serving the community with outpatient therapy, foster and adoption services, and a residential treatment facility for survivors of child abuse ages six to 14. The Targeted Case Management Program is a natural extension of our mission, and we are excited to bring our topranked services to Northern Kentucky children and families. Horizon Community Funds strongly believes in the importance of DCCH Center’s work to keep children and families together. We thank our Council of Trustees for their leadership in our grant selection process to bring Targeted Case Management to Northern Kentucky. Our commitment to accelerating change, leveraging partnerships and resources, and using innovative strategies through our Community Impact Fund grants shows prominently in this program. Strong families create a common bond in our community. “Founded in 1848, DCCH strives to improve the lives of children who have been impacted by childhood trauma and bring families together for a bright, healthy, and happy future.” Horizon Community Funds of Northern Kentucky is a qualifi ed public charitable 501(c)(3) organization established as a community foundation in 2017 by Northern Kentucky leaders. Its mission is to unite resources to raise the quality of life for all people in the Northern Ken-
For Redwood School & Rehabilitation Center: honoree Jennifer Leonard with John Francis. PAULA NORTON/PROVIDED
tucky community. More information can be found at www.horizonfunds.org. Stacy Neurohr, DCCH Center for Children and Families
Local philanthropists honored for giving back Nancy Perry of Ft. Mitchell (nominated by Northern Kentucky University) and Jennifer Leonard of Crescent Springs (nominated by Redwood School and Rehabilitation Center, Inc.) were honored by the Greater Cincinnati
Planned Giving Council recently with a Voices of Giving Awards. The annual Voices of Giving Awards Event paid tribute to Greater Cincinnatians who have chosen to leave a charitable legacy with a bequest or other type of planned gift to a favorite charitable organization. All honorees were selected by their benefi ting cause. Ms. Perry graduated from NKU in 1973 with a degree from the College of Business; and since then, has touched countless lives. After graduation, she began her NKU career as a records offi -
cer in the Registrar’s Offi ce. She then became the assistant dean for Student Affairs in the Chase College of Law. In 1988, she became NKU’s alumni director. In 2002, she became the fi rst director of advancement for the Chase College of Law. Ms. Perry retired from Chase in 2004, but soon thereafter became the director of development for Steely Library. She most recently served as the director of planned giving on the Development and Alumni Relations Team; and offi cially retired from NKU in 2018. NKU Offi cials often talk about the founders of the great University and the vision they had for the impact it would have on this region. Ms. Perry is one of those founders who have made NKU into what it is today. Her boldness, tenacity, and unwavering passion for NKU has made a lasting impact on this institution. In addition to her long-time service to the University, Nancy has made a planned gift via an insurance policy to the NKU Fund for Excellence. Ms. Leonard serves as a Redwood overseer and as a trustee on the Board of the Dorothy Wood Foundation (DWF) which holds an endowment to support Redwood for years in the future; and is co-chair of the Planned Giving Committee for Redwood and DWF. John Francis, Redwood’s executive director and CEO, stated, “Jenny has brought personal experience and professional skill to the Board. She has coled the eff ort in recent years to resurrect our planned giving eff orts. Professionally, as an estate planning attorney, she has also advised clients on the value of philanthropy for Redwood’s benefi t.” The Greater Cincinnati Planned Giving Council is a professional association for people whose work includes developing, marketing, and administering charitable planned gifts for non-profi t institutions and a variety of other legal and fi nancial settings. Lisa Desatnik, Lisa Desatnik Public Relations
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CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ 9B
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10B ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
SCHOOL NEWS Burkart to take over as Newport Central Catholic High School softball coach Newport Central Catholic High School recently promoted long-time assistant, Chris Burkart to take over as head coach for its softball team. He has been an assistant coach for the past 11 years and President of the Northern Kentucky Softball Coaches Association since 2013. Burkart, a 1984 graduate of Newport Central Catholic High School said, “I’m very thankful for the opportunity to be the new Head Coach of the Thoroughbred fast pitch team, and I’m looking forward to the challenge of leading these young ladies not only as their head coach, but preparing them for life after high school. I played baseball at NewCath for 3 exceptional coaches, Bill Vogt, Frank Pangallo, and John Lyons. My coaching style will be a refl ection of the way that these coaches infl uenced me as a player. We will work hard and be proud of the name on the front of the jersey.” “We will focus on the qualities that not only make a great player, but a productive individual. I fi rmly believe that the “life lessons” gained in sports, accountability, responsibility, honesty, respect, teamwork, and striving to improve, will benefi t these young ladies as they progress through life. While wins and tournament titles are great, my hope is that when these young ladies graduate that they are prepared for the challenges of adulthood,” added Burkart. Burkart credits much of his knowledge about fast pitch softball to former head coaches, Denny Barnes and Mike Mazzei, as well as some great assistant coaches, James Hubbard and Dan Hausfeld. He expressed his gratitude to coach Denny Barnes who allowed him the opportunity to get involved with the program in 2009. Burkart said, “Having played baseball and competitive men’s slow pitch, I thought I knew it all when it came to coaching fast pitch, but it was Coach Barnes who quickly let me know that while there are similarities, there is a big diff erence between baseball, slow pitch and fast pitch.” Principal Ron Dawn commented, “I am very proud to announce Chris Burkart as our new softball coach. Chris has been involved with our softball program for many years and has been a great asset to our school. Chris is as hard working and dedicated to our school as anyone I know. I am also very confi dent that he will be an excellent role model for our players.” Burkart has been coaching slow pitch and fast pitch See SCHOOL NEWS, Page 11B
Chris Burkart will take over as Newport Central Catholic High School softball coach. PROVIDED
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up to 2-year parts & labor warranty on repairs *Valid on Carrier 3 ton 16 SEER A/C or heat pump (up to $1,363) when matched with a high-efficiency furnace. Discount can be applied to other select models. Choice of free air filtration system, duct cleaning, or upgrade to 15-year Carefree parts & labor warranty with qualifying purchase. Some restrictions apply. Rebates, credits & financing vary by model. Financing with approved credit. Minimum monthly payments required. Interest accrues at time of purchase unless paid in full during promotional period. For regular term purchases,APR is based on US prime rate and is subject to change. Client responsible for filing utility rebates if applicable. ***Up to 72 months 0% financing option valid on Optimum and Optimum Plus systems and cannot be combined with other discounts. **Must be presented at time of service. Cannot combine with other discounts. Not valid on previous purchases. Existing residential only. See dealer for details on discounts, warranties and guarantees. For REPAIR ONLY second opinions, written competitor quote must be presented. Owner-occupied homes only. Must be in service area. Expires 8/15/19. IN HVAC License: HV00010016 KY HVAC License: HM01276 KY HVAC License: HM00986 OH HVAC License: HV.26591 IN Plumbing License: CO50800249 KY Plumbing License: M5308 OH Plumbing License: PL.47812
schedule your free estimate on new equipment
A+
(513) 327-2572
CAMPBELL RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ 11B
SCHOOL NEWS Continued from Page 10B
softball since 2002. His three daughters played fast pitch at NewCath. He played for some of NKY’s best slow pitch teams in the 80s and 90s, is a 2012 member of the Softball City Hall of Fame, and was an All-Tournament selection as a member of the Schiff er Metal’s team that won the 1992 NSA Men’s Major Indoor Softball World Series. Tessy B. Krebs, Newport Central Catholic High School
Hilltoppers to present ‘A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum’ The Newport Central Catholic Hilltoppers are proud to present “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.” Please join us for the 11th annual Hilltoppers Production in the NCC Blackbox Theatre. The Dinner Show performance is Thursday, July 25. Doors open at 6 p.m., dinner is served at 6:30 p.m. and performance is at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $30 which
includes dinner, drinks and the show. Regular performances are Friday and Saturday, July 26-27 and Friday and Saturday, Aug. 2-3 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $12. Tickets are on sale now! Visit bit.ly/NCCForumTix, select your show then select your seat! Any questions, please contact NCCHilltoppers@gmail.com. All proceeds go to Newport Central Catholic High School. Tessy B. Krebs, Newport Central Catholic
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Alexandria 10233 Pond Creek Road: Blinda Benton to Danielle Stubbs; $150,000 1264 Summerlake Drive: Denise and Wyatt Shanks to Rickey Pemberton Jr.; $224,000 1315 Osprey Court: The Drees Company to Kayla and Joseph Webb; $289,500 18 Meadow Lane: Karen Humphreys to Courtney and Rickey Mays; $165,000 533 Steffen Road: Barbara and Gary Kohls to William Carson; $156,000 638 Indigo Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Christina and Daniel Pollack; $359,500 7925 Caledonia Court: The Drees Company to Danielle and Joseph Novak; $321,000
Bellevue 1214 Wilson Road: Nicholas Zechella to Colin Rosenhagen; $214,000 234 Glaizer Ave.: Pamela Blanton to Andrew Underhill; $125,000 443 Clark St.: Delbert Perry to Theresa Baker; $133,000 910 Taylor Ave.: Jillean and Heath Hughes to Christina Walker; $150,000
Cold Spring 13 Glenridge Drive: Karen and Thomas Molloy to Leslye and Randall Mason; $320,000 1700 Arbor View Lane, unit 102: Vickey and David Honaker to Capri and Thomas Jones Jr.; $113,000 302 Medocino Court, unit 303: Jessica Wiegand and
Brian Neumann to Barbara and Mark Stiers and Maxwell Stiers; $125,000 455 Darlas Drive: Lisa and Douglas Lonneman to Jennifer and Shawn Riggs; $400,000 5 Neltner Drive: Bryan Lewis to Austin Eibel; $173,000 509 Ivy Ridge Drive: Sandra and David Zureick to Elizabeth and Robert Mallery; $125,000 675 Silver Ledge: Anna Kappes to Mary and Richard Keller; $295,000 6954 Tippenhauer Road: Mary and Richard Keller to Joann and Mark Perry; $585,000 823 Slate View, unit 8-304: Jennifer Frees to Charity McCormick; $159,000
Fort Thomas 216 Grant St.: Ronald Hoffman to Kierston and Christopher Gray; $163,500 38 Miller Lane: Mary and D. Cameron Draper to Amy and John Homer; $289,000 40 Burney Lane: Stephanie and Matthew Mansfield to Suzanne and Grady Gibson; $201,500 45 Taylor Ave.: Melisa Buechel to Justin and Leo Amann; $205,000 46 Avenel Place: Valerie and Matthew Grosser to Jamie and James Villegas; $690,000 48 Tower Hill Road: Susan and Daniel Lynch to James Griggs; $85,000 96 Miller Lane: Beverly Harber and Edward Harber to Ashley Sampson and Jody Turner; $210,000
Highland Heights 20 Highland Ave, unit 10: Lloyd Schuler to Heather and Robert Howell II; $89,500
Newport 1012 Central Ave.: Bellevue Land, LLC to Chad Oliver; $226,000 1129 E. 11th St.: Renee and James Scharf to Gunning Family Properties, LLC; $1,035,000 136 Center St.: Joshua Nieporte to Ashlyn and Adrien Doneworth; $120,000 32 Parkview Ave.: Greg Wanstrath to Shasta Gilliard; $120,000 519 Maple Ave.: Beth Voss to Chelsea and Daniel Boyer; $335,000 6559 E. Alexandria Pike: Beverly and Timothy Frommeyer to Jeanne and Brian Hils; $330,000 723 Linden Ave.: Caitlin and Brian Kirst to Joh Toerner; $262,000 920 York St.: Alyssa Roberts to Kaitlin Dejanette; $128,000
Southgate 10 E. Walnut St.: Stephanie Hills to Sarah Hamm and Alexander Humphrey; $156,000 2420 Joyce Ave.: Karla Irzarry to Julie Baker; $170,000 48 Woodland Hills Drive, unit 11: Hallie Acres to Brittany Kelly; $80,000 99 Blossom Lane: Aasta and Neal Wolfe to Cameron Grimme; $510,000
Wilder 35 Wesley Drive: Joyce and Frank Elben to Jordan and Michael Simmons; $289,000
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Renewal by Andersen Midwest is independently owned and operated. Offer expires 7/31/19. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Discount applied by retailer representative at time of contract execution and applies to minimum purchase of four (4) or more windows and/or patio doors between 7/1/19 & 7/31/19 with approved credit. Subject to credit approval. Interest is billed during the promotional period but all interest is waived if the purchase amount is paid before the expiration of the promotional period. APR is subject to change after promotional period expires. Financing for GreenSky® consumer loan programs is provided by federally insured, federal and state chartered financial institutions without regard to age, race, color, religion, national origin, gender or familial status. Financing not valid with other offers or prior purchases. All financing is provided by third-party lenders unaffiliated with Renewal by Andersen retailers, under terms and conditions arranged directly between the customer and such lender, which are subject to credit requirements. Renewal by Andersen retailers do not assist with, counsel or negotiate financing, other than providing customers an introduction to lenders interested in financing. Savings comparison is based on the purchase of a single unit at regular list price. See your local Renewal by Andersen location for details. All license numbers available upon request. “Renewal by Andersen” and all other marks where denoted are trademarks of Andersen Corporation. ©2019 Andersen Corporation. All rights reserved. ©2019 Lead Surge LLC. All rights reserved.
1
12B ❚ THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2019 ❚ CAMPBELL RECORDER
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 6B
No. 0714 HIDDEN TACTICS
1
BY JACK REUTER / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Jack Reuter, 25, is a freelance app developer for Android devices in Montrose, N.Y. He says he likes crosswords that have an extra layer to them — which this unusual puzzle definitely does. It is Jack’s debut for The Times. — W.S. Instructions: The center of this puzzle represents a 70-Down/55-Down, in which you can achieve a 122-Across by moving the 25-Across.
AC R O S S
RELEASE DATE: 7/21/2019
1 Cleaning product in a dangerous 2010s viral internet challenge 8 “Home” in a classic song 16 Jack of children’s rhyme 21 “Agreed” 22 Escapes, as molasses 23 Irregularly notched, as a leaf 24 Protein found in hair and hooves 25 See instructions 27 Watson’s creator 28 Pain for a tiler, maybe 30 Yearbook 31 Side represented by 34 Adams and Elgort 35 Doctor’s order 37 Dorothy’s caretaker in “The Wizard of Oz” 40 Irritate 41 Irritable 42 Verify the addition of 43 Nabisco product with an exclamation point in its name 49 That guy’s 50 Ill repute, to a Brit 52 Santa ____ winds 55 Some ovations 60 Become attentive 61 Succeeds 65 Cowboy flick 66 Eve’s counterpart Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
67 What a plant may exude 69 Freak out 71 Treasure 72 When doubled, a Thor Heyerdahl book 73 Mother ____ 74 [Grumble, grumble] 75 Pith holders 76 Set aside for now 78 Score elements: Abbr. 79 Digital message 80 Old gold coin 81 Map of Hawaii or Alaska, often 82 1974 Gould/ Sutherland C.I.A. spoof 83 Lushes 84 Deteriorate with age 86 Cut into bits 88 Prevents, legally 89 Letters near an X-ray machine 90 People native to Tennessee and the Carolinas 92 “While I have you …,” in a text 95 Classic 1922 film subtitled “A Symphony of Horror” 98 Brown-headed nest appropriator 104 “Fighting” college team 107 Maker of pens and lighters 108 Sheer fabric 109 First commercial film shown in stereophonic sound 111 Key of Bizet’s first symphony
116 Side represented by O 117 87 is a common one 118 Conspicuous 121 Yuletide contraction 122 See instructions 125 Arrests 128 Outpost for an osprey 129 No longer needed for questioning 130 Senator Tammy Duckworth or former Senator Max Cleland 131 Symbol of directness 132 Arrived at, as an answer 133 Swollen area DOWN
1 Hangout often near a pool 2 Glacial hue 3 Like Mount Kilimanjaro 4 Doe in ‘‘Bambi’’ 5 Polling fig. 6 French acceptances 7 Title 1962 film villain 8 Valentine heart, e.g. 9 Urban cacophony 10 Slate, e.g. 11 Touch up, as styled hair 12 Some airborne particulates 13 What dashes may represent in internet searches 14 Kind of reaction 15 Ike’s W.W. II command 16 Veto on movie night
17 Figure in many a fairy tale 18 Mischievous 19 One-named singer with the 2002 No. 1 hit “Foolish” 20 Some cuppas 26 No longer edible 29 Computing acronym 32 Silicon Valley startup V.I.P. 33 Baby fox 35 Unexceptional 36 Prefix with planet 38 St. Louis’s ____ Bridge, the oldest span over the Mississippi 39 Biblical high priest 40 The “u” spelling of 50-Across, e.g.: Abbr. 43 Figures in the Sistine Chapel 44 Part of Africa or an orchestra 45 Your signature might be in this 46 Came down hard 47 Terrific 48 Chatter 51 City that hosted the 1974 World’s Fair 53 Rare beneficiaries of royal succession 54 Together 55 See instructions 56 Dating-app distance metric 57 Stat 58 Lush 59 Son of Clytemnestra and Agamemnon 61 Enter incorrectly 62 Jawbone of ____ (biblical weapon)
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63 How early Beatles songs were recorded 64 Best 66 Suffix on many an infomercial product’s name 68 Self-inflicted ritual death of a samurai 70 See instructions 73 Leash 77 Dulce de ____ (confection) 82 Notice 85 ____ Luis Obispo
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99 Indianapolis-to-St. Louis dir. 100 “Phooey!” 101 Ape 102 Calls it quits 103 Boutique stock 105 Barbie’s younger sister 106 Long (for) 108 Part of an M.A. program application 110 Religious sch. 111 Called out 112 Any of the Apennines 113 In ____ (grumpy)
FREE
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114 War hawk 115 Situation after a leadoff single 118 Ball ____ 119 Big org. in Saturdayafternoon TV 120 “Indiana Jones” setting 123 Half of a 1955 union merger 124 Singer’s syllable 126 They’ll sound sped up at 45 r.p.m. 127 French director Besson
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EQUIPMENT: Equipmentshownmayrequireadditionalfees.Touchscreenpicturedrequiresadditionalchargeof$299.Vanishingsensorscostanadditional$159each.GIFT CARD: $100VisaGiftCardfulfil edbyProtectYourHomethroughthird-partyprovider,Mpell, uponinstallationofasecuritysystemandexecutionofmonitoringcontract.$4.95shippingandhandlingfee,giftcardscantakeupto8weekstoarriveafterfollowingtheMpell redemptionprocess. BASIC SYSTEM: $99 Installation. 36-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($1,007.64). 24-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($671.76) for California. Offer applies to homeowners only. Basic system requires landline phone. Offer valid for new ADT Authorized Premier Provider customers only and not on purchases from ADT LLC. Cannot be combined with any other offer. The $27.99 Offer does not include Quality Service Plan (QSP), ADT’s Extended Limited Warranty. ADT Pulse: ADT Pulse Interactive Solutions Services (“ADT Pulse”), which help you manage your home environment and family lifestyle, require the purchase and/or activation of an ADT alarm system with monitored burglary service and a compatible computer, cell phone or PDA with Internet and email access. These ADT Pulse services do not cover the operation or maintenance of any household equipment/systems that are connected to the ADT Pulse equipment. All ADT Pulse services are not available with the various levels of ADT Pulse. All ADT Pulse services may not be available in all geographic areas. You may be required to pay additional charges to purchase equipment required to utilize the ADT Pulse features you desire. ADT PULSE + VIDEO: ADT Pulse + Video installation is an additional $299. 36-month monitoring contract required from ADT Pulse+ Video: $58.99 per month, ($2,123.64), including Quality Service Plan (QSP). Doorbell camera may not be available in all areas. GENERAL: For all offers, the form of payment must be by credit card or electronic charge to your checking or savings account, satisfactory credit history is required and termination fee applies. Certain packages require approved landline phone. Local permit fees may be required. Certain restrictions may apply. Additional monitoring fees required for some services. For example, Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert monitoring requires purchase and/or activation of an ADT security system with monitored Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert devices and are an additional charge. Additional equipment may be purchased for an additional charge. Additional charges may apply in areas that require guard response service for municipal alarm verification. Prices subject to change. Prices may vary by market. Some insurance companies offer discounts on Homeowner’s Insurance. Please consult your insurance company. Photos are for il ustrative purposes only and may not reflect the exact product/service actually provided. Licenses: AL-19-001104, AR-CMPY.0001725 AZ-ROC217517, CA-ACO6320, CT-ELC.0193944-L5, DC-EMS902653, DC-602516000016, DE-07-212, FL-EC13003427, EC13003401, GA-LVA205395, IA-AS-0206, ID-ELE-SJ-39131, IL-127.001042, IN-City of Indianapolis: LAC-000156, KY-City of Louisvil e: 483, LA-F1914, LA-F1915, LA-F1082, MA-1355C, MD-107-1626, ME-LM50017382, MI-3601205773, MN-TS01807, MO-City of St. Louis: CC#354, St. Louis County: 95091, MS-15007958, MT-PSP-ELS-LIC-247, NC-25310-SP-FA/LV, NC-1622-CSA, NE-14451, NJ Burglar Alarm Lic. # -NJ-34BF00021800, NM-353366, NV-0068518, City of Las Vegas: 3000008296, NY-Licensed by the N.Y.S. Department of State UID#12000317691, NYS #12000286451, OH-53891446, City of Cincinnati: AC86, OK-AC1048, OR-170997, Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Registration Number: PA022999, RI-3582, RI-7508, SC-BAC5630, SD- 1025-7001-ET, TN-1520, TX-B13734, ACR-3492, UT-6422596-6501, VA-115120, VT-ES-2382(7C), WA-602588694/ECPROTEYH934RS, WI-City of Milwaukee: PAS-0002790, WV-WV042433, WY-LV-G-21499 3750 Priority Way South Dr. Indianapolis, IN 46240 ©2019 DEFENDERS, Inc. dba Protect Your Home DF-GT-OH-CI-D2799 CE-GCI0224506-06
Classifieds
JULY 18, 2019 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 1C
cincinnati.com
Homes for Sale-Ohio
JOBS
HOMES
RIDES
To place your ad visit: cincinnati.com/classifieds or search: classifieds
Homes for Sale-Ohio
Business
Adopt Me
Commercial
Pets
opportunites, lease, Invest...
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap or familial status or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newpaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Kentucky Commission on Human Rights 800-292-5566 H.O.M.E. (Housing Opportunities Made Equal) 513-721-4663
Real Estate
Rentals
Covington - SEM Manor Rent Subsidized Senior Apts. 62 & older Studio & One Bedroom apts. Onsite Laundry, Secured Building, Pet friendly, Call 859-291-9047 or TTY 800-750-0750
Newport - Two Rivers Apts. Rent subsidized 30% of monthly income One bedroom. Seniors 62 & older Or mobility impaired. On site laundry, Secured building, Pet friendly, Service Coordinator. Call for application 859-291-9047 or TTY 800-750-0750
–– NOW HIRING –– CNAs - FT/PT -All Shifts KMA/LPN - PT - 2nd Shift Housekeeper - FT - 3rd Shift
Please call for more information
great places to live...
St. Charles Community 600 Farrell Drive • Covington Kentucky 859-331-3224
Clifton-Upscale 6BR with 6 lofts. Newer home, 6 car garage, 0.2 mi from campus. accomodates up to 11 people. $6000/mo. 513-869-1248
1BR 1BA private, closet,all utilities covered. W/D available. $650 Convenient to Crestview Mall, fine eateries and an A+ location. Mature renter wanted. 859468-0496
stcharlescommunity.org
Market Devel. Mgr., Americas Construction. OMYA, Cincinnati OH. Lead Omya’s Construction market devel. activities ; manage cross functional project teams comprised of sales, mktg, & tech.; identify relevant target customers for Omya’s construction market products & devel. strategies on how to approach these targets with winning messages relative to Omya’s products & value propositions; implement strategies to devel. relationships with ppl in the target org. who can influence the use of Omya’s products. Up to 50% travel reqd: up to 25% domestic + up to 25% intertl). Requires: Bachelor’s in Chem. Eng,, Chem, or related + 2 yrs’ exp in paints & coatings industry & 2 yrs’ exp in: identifying new products, app. & customers in the construction market (paints & coatings, adhesives & sealants, cement-based products, & eng’ing wood products); preparing business cases relevant to construction market to propose new markets &/or products; project mgmnt exp & successful execution of complex projects in construction market. Professional working proficiency in Spanish (orally and in writing). Email resume w/ "Market Devel. Mgr." in subj to: jobs.ram@omya.com. See Omya.com "Careers" for desc.
Homes
7 acre Pendelton County. Mostly wooded, level building site, black top road frontage, gently rolling, country setting. Single wides welcome, available on land contract $2000 Down $400 Monthly.
6BR completely remodeled, $6,000/mo 6 car gar., 0.2 mi from campus 513-869-1248
Alexandria,KY - Alexandria Manor Apts 1 BR Avail. now. ELDERLY, OR DISABLED Prices based on income. 6 Breckenridge Lane, Call for info M-F 8-5. 800-728-5802 TDD 7-1-1. Ashcraft Real Estate Services Inc. Equal Housing Oppty
BURLINGTON TERRACE APTS Now Accepting Applications For Waiting List of 1,2 & 3 BR 2895 Douglas Dr. Burlington, KY 41005 859-586-5628
Cincinnati Family & Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing
Cincinnati Low Income, Section 8 Apartments. Affordable Housing, Rent Based on Income. 2-3BR. Call 513-929-2402. Ebcon Inc. Mgt. Equal Opportunity Housing
2.5 acre Glencoe Area. Corner pasture lot, rolls off from the road. Ideal for small home with yard. Private road, water & electric at the road. Available on land contract $2000 Down. $240 Monthly. 5 acre 7 min off the Williamstown exit. Open level pasture, great view & black top road frontage, double wides welcome. Available on land contract $2500 Down $530 Monthly. 13 acre Gallatin County. Large cattle barn, all easy rolling pasture, Ideal for livestock, black top road frontage, stick built homes welcome. Availavble on land contract $4900 Down. $1000 Monthly. 21 acre Northern Grant County. All woods, deer trails for days, hunting ground with a home site. Ideal for cabin getaway, single wides welcome. Available on land contract $3000 Down $550 Monthly. 8.8 Williamstown Area. Small barn, pasture, some trees, rolling to hilly, black top frontage. Ideal for livestock, single wides welcome. Land Contract Available, $2000 Down. $475 Monthly. 4 acre Falmouth. Mostly wooded, open building site near the road, half mile off of Hwy 27, city water. $36,900, $2000 Down. TRI-STATE LAND CO. Walton, KY (859) 485-1330
WALTON 2 acre Residential Lots, (Homes Only), 2 mi. South of Walton. Price Reduced, $52-$58K 859-802-8058
Homes for Sale-Ky Elanger - 2nd Floor 1 BR Apt, Off-Street Parking, .5 Block to Bus, $400/mo + Deposit + Utilities 513-617-3947
ERLANGER, KY-Ashwood Apts & Townhomes 1 & 2 BR, avail. Start $500. Sec 8 ok, 3510-3534 Kimberly Dr, 621-623 Debbie Lane, 859-727-2256 M-F 8-5. TDD 7-1-1 Ashcraft Real Estate Services, Inc. Equal Housing Opportunity
FT. THOMAS. 1 & 2 BDRM APTS & 1 BDRM TOWNHOMES 859-441-3158
MT. LOOKOUT 1 & 2 BDRM Grandin Bridge Apartments 513-871-6419
Union, KY Home For Sale Brick, 3BR/2BA 10512 Killarny Dr.
Careers
Jobs
new beginnings...
Software Eng’r Mrg, Kroger, Cincinnati OH. Partner w/ eng’r & prduct leaders, hire/mnge sftwr eng’rs; asgn, direct & eval. Prsnt pratcal input for strgtic tech decs; synth complx probs & prsnt solutns. Drive strgtc algnmnt of system specfctns. Supt prep of tech roadmap & provide input. Monitor new tech. Drive root- cause analysis critical bus & prdcts issuses. Estblsh perfmnce stands & procedures. BS in Comp Sci, Info Sys or related & 5 yrs exp. See full desc & apply online: https://jobs.kroger.com & search for Job #1415211.
BEAUTY/NAIL SALON ONGOING BUSINESS, Fully Equipped, N.KY Upscale Area. Richwood KY. For Lease. 859-760-0441
Assorted
Stuff all kinds of things...
BURLINGTON ANTIQUE SHOW Boone County Fairgrounds Burlington, KY Sunday, July 21 -----------8am-3pm $4.00/Adult Early Buying 6am-8am $6/Adult Rain or Shine 513-922-6847 burlingtonantiqueshow.com
CE-GCI0228565-02
Real Estate starting fresh...
NOW HIRING! Seasonal Mechanic SALARY: $14 per hour
Sheets & Towels Outlet Store, Open 9-1 on Saturdays at 2250 Progress Dr., Hebron. Hotel quality + irregular sheets, towels, robes, slippers, blankets, pillows, scrubs & more at deep discounts! Credit & debit cards only accepted. All sales final. $0.25 to $20
DESCRIPTION: The City of Florence is
Applications, available from the City of Florence Finance Department, or on-line from the City’s website at www.florence-ky.gov. CE-GCI0233257-02
For Sale by Owner This home is individually listed on the National Historic Register #51 known as the August Sauer House. Great Rehab Opportunity in Newport KY qualifying for Federal & State tax credits. 3 Story-2 units with separate entrances and utilities. You could live in one unit and rent the other. Large fenced yard. Very large could be double lot that may possibly be divided and another home built on. Huge opportunity that needs a lot of work, but will be very profitable for someone. View of downtown Cincinnati from front porch. Very near the new Ovation Project being built which will increase value considerably. 832 Central Avenue Call 859-653-6169 for additional information or an appointment to view. Asking price is $195,000
Community
Announce
announcements, novena... Special Greeting
SIMON KENTON HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 1969 50 YEAR REUNION Join us for food, cash bar, dancing and catching up with high school friends. When: Friday, September 6, 2019 6:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m. Receptions Event Center South 1379 Donaldson Hwy Erlanger KY 41018 Cost: $40 per person Please RSVP By August 1, 2019 For more information: SKClassof69@gmail.com
Special Notices-Clas HARRIS DIATOMACEOUS EARTH FOOD GRADE 100% OMRI Listed-For Organic Use. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com
KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Sprays, Traps, Kits, Mattress Covers. DETECT, KILL, PREVENT. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com
AKC German Shorthair ed Pointer Pups, 12 wks, females, Liver/Wht, ticked, $700. Vet Ck. Pet/Hunter. 513-518-2688 AKC Standard Poodle pups. 4F/8M,apricot/red/silver/black 3 weeks. $1200-$1500 859-816-9999
BORDER COLLIE AKC, 8 wks, family raised, sweet, smart, beautiful! $500. 502-857-1500 or email: kysciguy@yahoo.com
Dachshunds, Pekingese, Beagles, Shihpoos, Yorkies, Morkies, and Poodles. Shots, Dewormed & Vet Checked. Blanchester, OH. 937-725-9641
English & French Bulldog Puppies. AKC reg., males & females. 1 year health guarantee, vet checked. www.trulocksredgables.com or 1-270-678-7943 or 270-427-6364
Musical Instruction
2 PIANO LESSONS 50 YRS. EXP.; 859-727-4264
seeking to fill a seasonal Mechanic position within the Public Services Department. This position is responsible for providing basic mechanic abilities including oil changes, tire replacements, other preventative maintenance repairs as well as other duties as assigned. We are in search of someone with a six month availability.
find a new friend...
5 piece bedroom set, dinette set, end tables and coffee table, love seat, and stereo speakers, 859-360-0021
SHIFT: 1 st - normal hours are 7:00 am - 3:30 pm
Homes for Sale-Ky
PETS & STUFF
Red Kent MonarchTricycle with owners manual, pump, helmet, locking combination chain & oil. Paid $350, Asking $200. Call Walter 615-788-7229
BUYING 35mm Photo Slides primarily railroad & transportation related 1940’s - 1970’s *Comic Books 1940’s - present* 1920’s -1950’s Dectective & Pin-up Pulp Magazines 513-325-4913 BUYING-RECORD ALBUMS & CDs, METAL, JAZZ, BLUES, ROCK, RAP, INDIE, R&B & REGGAE. 513-683-6985 CASH FOR RECORDS Private collector buying 45’s & LP’s Up to $10 per record, small & large collections. Roger 513-575-2718 /513-6806633 I can come to you!
I BUY STEREO SPEAKERS, PRE AMPS, AMPS, REEL TO REEL TURNTABLE, RECORDS, INSTRUMENTS, ETC (513) 473-5518 ISO ROOKWOOD TILES: 2009 Reds Opening Day w/ Mr. Redlegs; 2010 Spirit of Baseball WITH Reds logo; 2012 World Choir Games; 2012 St. Xavier High School. (513)404-2069 $$$ PAID for LPs, CDs, CASSETTES -ROCK, BLUES, INDIE, METAL, JAZZ, ETC + VINTAGE STEREO EQUIP, DVDs & MEMORABILIA. 50 YRS COMBINED BUYING EXPERIENCE! WE CAN COME TO YOU! 513-591-0123
WAR RELICS US, German, Japanese Uniforms, Helmets, Guns, Swords, Medals Etc, Paying Top Dollar Call 513-309-1347
Fill your Summer with unconditional love and a life time of memories with an Ocherese puppy. M/F starting at $675 812-8930281 or 812-582-0682 www.ocherese.com German Shepherds AKC black and fawn born April 1st Avail now 1st shots and has certificates, $600 859-957-9855 Goldendoodle, black M, Vet checked & dewormed, $700 937-510-2863 rosesgoldendoodles.com Golden Retriever pups, 2 F, 8 wks. Vet checked, calm. Ready now! $900 each 859-816-8533 companionbreeders.blogspot.com
Puppies, Bernese Mountain Dog, 1 male 1 female, $1200.00, 9 weeks, Black Brown white, Excellent temp These beautiful babies are ready for their furever home! Up to date with shots & worming, dew claws removed. Born & raised in our home. Socialized w kids, adults, & other pets. Now’s the time to take one home today! (513)320-6262 cbubba long@yahoo.com Standard Poodle for sale, red, female, AKC reg., 15 wks, beautiful, smart, $1,000 859-814-1365
Automotive
Rides best deal for you... Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk up $3000 Fair cash price, quick pickup. 513-662-4955 CASH for junk cars, trucks & vans. Free pick up. Call Jim or Roy anytime 859-866-2909 or 859-991-5176
Toyota 2007 Corolla S Series, 5 spd, graphics, Exc. Cond. 859-525-6363
2C μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ JULY 18, 2019 General Auctions
General Auctions 1 BUYER of OLD CARS CLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s, Running or not. 513-403-7386
SchneidersAuction.com
Tools, Trucks, Tractors and More Auction
Live - Onsite Auction 11390 Banklick Rd. Walton Ky 41094
Schneider’s Auction Service is proud to offer this wonderful collection of tools, vehicles, tractors trailers and more at public auction!
1997 HONDA VALKYRIE Only 14K mi. Great cruiser at an affordable price! $3595. 513-314-1010
Offering a wide variety of hand tools, lathe, power tools, Farm items, Trucks, Tractors, Implements, Mowers, ditch witch, lumber, steel and more! Auction is Court Ordered to settle the estate of John C. Wood. Preview for trucks and tractors will be the morning of the sale July 20th beginning at 8:00am
2016 Harley Davidson Ultra Classic, 6,800 miles, air ride, black, GPS, $15,000. 513-633-6537
Auction Begins at 10:00 am July 2oth 2019 Call TODAY for all the auction details! (859) 360-2314
2016 Harley Davidson Ultra Classic, 6,800 miles, air ride, black, GPS, $15,000. 513-633-6537
More items than we can list! International Harvester 766 - 5,819 +/- Hours, Farmall Super A – last ran in 2004, International 574 – 4,192 +/- Hours, Massey Ferguson 35 – 2,290 +/- Hours - Need Battery, International 464 – 1,227 +/Hours – May need Carburetor, not running, Kubota ZD326s – Runs – Needs Battery, Kubota B2910 -Runs, John Deere 450c – Runs– Needs Battery, Ditch Witch 30, 2001 Lincoln Continental, 1996 Toyota Pickup Ditch Witch 2300, 1972 Ford F100 , 1989 Chevy 2500, Ambusher 5’ Bushhog, Grapple Bucket, Harley Rake, Post Hole Diggers, Skid Steer Forks, Air Compressors, Bush hog 3008, Rotavator 374 6’, Hay wagons,Gravity Beds, Head Gates, Massey Ferguson Square Bailer, Trailers, Lifts, Finish mowers, Plows, Rakes, Tedders and Conditioners, And Hay equipment, Lincoln Welder, Tire Changer,New Holland 451 Cycle Bar, Disc mower, Bush hogs – 6’, Vermeer Round bailer, Log splitters, Chain saw, Hand tools, Pallets of electrical supplies, Residential and Commercial electrical parts and supplies, Lathe, Band saw, sand blaster, saws presses and more tools!, Lumber, steel and building supplies!, Too Many Item to List Them ALL Auction Pickup: Bring your trucks, trailers, tie downs and help to load your items! All items to be removed day of sale! Payment: All payments to be processed day of sale. 3% credit card fee. Cash and Check accepted. Payment MUST be made in full day of sale!
CE-0000709478
CALL: 877-513-7355 TO PLACE YOUR AD
COHORN
CONCRETE LLC
Specializing in new and old replacement of driveways, patios, sidewalks, steps, retaining walls, decorative concrete work, basement and foundation leaks & driveway additions. We also offer Bobcat, Backhoe, Loader, and Dumptruck Work, regarding yards & lot cleaning. • Free Estimates • Fully Insured • Over 20 Years Experience Currently Offering A+ Rating with Better 10% DISCOUNT Business Bureau
Office
Fax
859-393-1138 859-359-0554 cohornconcrete@aol.com www.cohornconcrete.com
NKyHomeRepair.com Kitchen, Bath & Basement Remodeling, Decks, Tile, Custom Showers, Walk-in Tubs
25 years exp. Insured.
859-331-0527
NORTHERN KENTUCKY ROOFING
All Types of Roofing, Shingles and Metal, Roof Repairs, Roof Leaks Licensed and Insured
859-445-3921
ALL DONE
FREE ESTIMATES & INSURED
Ford 2008 Explorer XLT. 4 dr, new tires. Exc. Cond. Must Sell! Call 859-525-6363
Mazda 1999 B2500. 5spd. New fuel & water pump, brakes, runs good! 138k miles. $1500 859-866-2996
FAQ: Auction to be held onsite - 11390 Banklick Rd. Walton Ky 41094. Per seller request, all bidders must be onsite! - Online, Absentee and Phone bidders will NOT be accepted. Sold “As is, Where is” with all faults. 10% Buyers Premium to be added to bid price to create final sale price.
David G. Schneider -Principal Auctioneer Bobby V. Schneider - Principal Auctioneer Jared Williamson - Principal Auctioneer Brian Brockman - Apprentice Auctioneer Info@SchneidersAuction.com
Service Directory
Chrysler 2005 Town & Country Touring Minivan. Exc. cond., Must Sell! Call 859-525-6363
Smith Construction Services -Bathroom Remodeling -Tile -Handyman Services
30+ Years Experience
859-308-7604
CE-0000709295
• Concrete Work & Repair • Truckpointing Brick & Stone • Pressure Washing Exterior & Chimney Repair • Gutters & Complete Gutter Maintenance • Roof & Roof Repairs • Fence & Fence Repairs • Deck & Deck Repairs **Additional Exterior Services Provided**
Call Today for your Quote
859-814-1778
Hendel’s Affordable ó Tree Service ó Call today for Autumn & Discount Pricing! ± 513-795-6290 ± ± 513-266-4052 ±
NKyHomeRepair.com Kitchen, Bath & Basement Remodeling, Decks, Tile, Custom Showers, Walk-in Tubs
Post your rental. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com
25 years exp. Insured.
859-331-0527
Nissan 2006 Quest Minivan 3.5 SEL V6. 61K mi. $3900 obo. Exc Cond., 859-525-6363
Garage & Yard Sale VISIT: cincinnati.com/classifieds TO PLACE YOUR AD
Great Buys
Garage Sales neighborly deals...
Roselawn OH Estate Sale 7325 Brookcrest Dr Cincinnati OH 7/20 & 7/21 Sat-10-4 #’s 9:45 Sun-1-4 Wonderful 2 family estate sale of 70 yrs. Mid century modern Stanley dining table/6 chairs/3 leaves/server/China cabinet. America of Martinsville 3 pc bedroom set – chest/bed/mirrored dresser. Dropleaf side table, 2 twin sleigh beds, Duncan Phyfe dining table/5 chairs/leaf/buffet/China hutch. Rattan style headboard & nightstand, Rway mirrored dresser/bed. Vintage kitchen table, bookshelves, TV armoire, Couches, misc chairs & tables, Victrola record player/radio, Victorian singer sewing machine in cabinet, costume jewelry, flat screen TVs, linens, Snoopy/Peanuts gang collection, pedestal w/statute, rugs, China, records, lamps, mirrors, books, electronics, Amico bike, microwave, ladder, some tools, file cabinets, vtg kitchen items - too much to list - all priced to sell. Info and pics HSESTATESALES.com or 859-468-9468 . Dir - I -75 - exit 9 -Summit Road to R-section Rd R - Brookscrest Dr
HAND OUT THE CIGARS! Celebratewitha announcement. VISITCLASSIFIEDS onlineatcincinnati.com
Garage Sales WANTED ARTISTS & CRAFTERS Sharonville Kiwanis Arts & Craft Show. Sharonville Community Center. Sun Sept 29. 513-563-1738 email: patchancetaylor@gmail.com
GARAGE/YARD SALE FRI JULY 19, 8AM - 4PM Oak barstools, designer purses, toys, clothes, household items, homemade People Pots, lots of misc. 266 KASSADY CT Burlington
Garage Sales
Hebron, Street Sale, 2946 & 2949 Bradford Ave, Fri: 8-2, Sat: 8-2, Furniture, household items, children’s toys, baby furniture, boy/girl/women designer clothing & shoes. Dir: Off of Coral Ave and Ridge Ave in Hebron, KY
10512 Killarny Dr., Union, KY July 19-21 & July 26-27, Moving to Florida 3 rooms of furniture, treasures & tools 4 Family Yard Sale - 1826 Grandview Rd, Sat. 7/20 8a-2p - bikes, toys, antiques, baby items, & much more! Anchor Church Rummage Sale, 3126 Riggs Ave, Erlanger, KY 41018 July 20th, 9am-?, Clothing, misc tools, kitchen items, housewares, household & holiday items. All proceeds go to church mission funds.
Christmas in July Sale! All items 50% off Sat July 20th 830am-12pm. Antiques, furniture, jewelry, clothing, toys, books, holiday items and more! DCCH Flea Market 75 Orphanage Rd Ft Mitchell 859-331-2040 DAYTON, KY- City Wide Garage Sales- Saturday, July 20, 9am-2pm. Visit: www.daytonky.com for a list of participants. Florence Huge Multi Family Sale - Fri. 7/19 & Sat. 7/20 8a-2p, 8658 Valley Cir Dr. Off Pleasant Valley Rd. Rain or shine!
Your search ends here...
Our new robots won’t take jobs. Highland Heights; Knollwood Community Sale! Friday/Saturday July 19 & 20, 8-2pm. FRI ONLY: 221 Ridgehill. FRI/SAT: 6 Woodcrest Ct., 7 Squire Ct., 126, 128 Ridgehill; 11, 17 Brandywine, 416 Knollwood. SAT ONLY: 2 Squire Ct.; 143, 220 Ridgehill; 7 Jillian; 419 Knollwood. Could be more, look for signs! Nice home items, lots of kid stuff, boys clothes, & NEW items. HUGE GARAGE SALE in Triple Crown 10850 Pollard Ct. July 19, 7a-4p / July 20, 7a-2p Tons of clothes for men, women and girls, 2-bdrm sets, furniture, washer/dryer, toys, and much more! Multi Family Sale 106 Valley View Dr ive, Southgate-KY. Sat, July 20, 8a-noon.
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JULY 18, 2019 μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 3C
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that Campbell County Fiscal Court has filed an application with the Commonwealth of Kentucky Energy and Environmental Cabinet Department for Environmental Protection Division of Water to allow the repair and stabilization of portions of Blangey Road in unincorporated Campbell County, Kentucky. Any comments or objections shall be directed to: Kentucky Division of Water, Floodplain Management Section, 300 Sower Blvd 3rd Floor, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601. Phone: (502) 564-3410 Matt Elberfeld /s/ Date: July 8, 2019 County Administrator Published CAM,July11,18,’19# 3670987 Campbell County Recorder
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CITY OF ALEXANDRIA MUNICIPAL ROAD AID All interested persons please take notice that the Council of the City of Alexandria will hold a PUBLIC HEARING pursuant to KRS 174.100, on Thursday, August 1st, 2019 during the City Council Meeting beginning at 7:00 p.m. in Council Chambers at the City Building, 8236 West Main Street, Alexandria, Kentucky 41001. Minutes and a recording of the proceedings shall be taken; and a record will be made. This Public Hearing will be held for the purpose of receiving and reviewing public comment to take the sense of the public regarding the proposed use of Municipal Road Aid Funds. The City projects that there will be a total of $169,975.53 available for the fiscal year 2019/20.
The following vehicles stored at Fenders Wrecker Service Inc.9 27 Park Ave. Newport, Ky. 41071, will be sold at public auction on July 27, 2019 to the highest bidder. Seller has right to bid. Forms of payment are, cash or credit card. No titles are guaranteed. 1997 CHEVROLET 1GNDT13W8VK148821 ROBERT DEATON 1995 JEEP 1J4FJ78S0SL654417 JASON MEEKS OHIO AUTO LOAN SERVICE 2008 CHEVROLET 2G1WB58N389274157 STEVEN QUAILEN 1998 BUICK 1G4HR52K6WH491118 AUSTIN TYLER FAUST 2005 SATURN 5GZDV03L95D242924 CHERYL LEAGUE AEX CREDIT SERVICES 2005 HYUNDAI KMHDN46D15U988180 KIMBERLY JOHNSON INTEGRITY FUNDING 2003 CHEVROLET 1G1NE52J83M741318 ASHLEY CULLUM 2008 HONDA JH2MC130X8K403856 AARON KOSIER 2001 TOYOTA 4T3ZF13C41U354747 FRANCESCA THOMAS 2003 CHEVROLET 1G1JC12F237106537 ROBERT STEWART 2001 PONTIAC 1G2NE52T91M523043 TORIA JOHNSON 3A AUTO 2004 CHEVROLET 1G1ZT548X4F152164 GERALD LANIER 2010 KIA KNAGG4A89A5374534 FLOYD NELSON KBS AUTO SALES 1999 DODGE 2B3HD56J3XH581702 VANESSA JOHNSON 2001 HYUNDAI KMHWF35V81A474218 JAMES STULL INTEGRITY FUNDING OHIO 2002 HYUNDAI KMHFU45EX2A231037 ANDREA GIRTON 2003 MERCEDES BENZ WDBRF40J63F402501 THOMAS E POWELL JR EAGLE FIN SERV 2002 JEEP 1J8GL58K52W179220 CHARLES A KIRTLEY 2004 CHRYSLER 1C3EL45X94N294943 JOSHUA FISHER 2005 CHRYSLER 2C4GP54LX5R370008 CLESTA HUGHES DENNIS SMITH AUTO SA 2008 HYUNDAI KMHDU46D78U517352 CHAD GAMBLE 2004 FORD 1FAFP58U8YA181421 ERYN J MCCULLEY 2007 CHRYSLER 1C3LC46K27N552920 KENNETH ALEXANDER 2005 CHEVROLET 1GNET16S756118389 DAVID LUCAS OR EVELYN LUCAS CAM,Jul11,18,25,’19 #3655588 NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that the Kentucky Public Service Commission has scheduled a public hearing in a case styled “In the Matter of Electric Annual Cost Recovery Filing for Demand Side Management by Duke Energy Kentucky, Inc.,” Case No. 2018- 00370, beginning Wednesday, July 31, 2019, at 9:00 a.m., Eastern Standard Time, at the Commission’s offices, 211 Sower Boulevard, Frankfort, Kentucky. The purpose of the hearing will be to take evidence on Duke Energy Kentucky’s Application. This hearing will be streamed live and may be viewed on the PSC website, psc.ky.gov. CAM,Jul18’19#3677822 The City of Highland Heights has adopted the following Ordinance: Ordinance No. 10-2019 - An ordinance adopting a supplement to the Code of Ordinances of the City of Highland Heights, Kentucky. The full Ordinance is available on the Highland Heights website: http://hhky.com CAM,July18,’19# 3679798
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed bids for the furnishings of all labor, materials, equipment and services for the PAVEMENT REPLACEMENT known as Raintree Subdivision Pavement Replacement will be received by the City of Melbourne, 502 Garfield Avenue, Melbourne, Kentucky, until 10:00 AM EST on August 8, 2019. Bids will be publicly opened and read immediately after the deadline for submittal and will be reviewed at the City Commission meeting at 7:00 PM on August 12, 2019. The project will include, but not limited to, approximately 1541 SY concrete Pavement Removal and Replacement, 235 LF of 4” Underdrain, 10 SY of Concrete Sidewalk, 6900 LF of Joint Sealing, Traffic Control and Best Management Practice. Complete sets of the Bidding Documents may be obtained from the Phipps Reprographics for a Cost of $25.00 at the Phipps Reprographics, 434 Scott Blvd., Covington, KY 41011. Phone (859) 2611851. Check Payable to Phipps Reprographics. Each Bid must be accompanied by Bid security made payable to The City of Melbourne in an amount of five percent (5%) of Bidder’s maximum Bid price and in the form of a certified bank check or a Bid Bond issued by a surety meeting the requirements of the General Conditions. The Bid security of Successful Bidder will be retained until such Bidder has executed the Agreement, furnished the required contract security and met the other conditions of the Notice of Award, whereupon the Bid security will be returned. If the Successful Bidder fails to execute and deliver the Agreement and furnish the required contract security within fifteen days after the Notice of Award, Owner may annul the Notice of Award and the Bid security of that Bidder will be forfeited. The Bid security of other Bidders whom Owner believes to have a reasonable chance of receiving the award may be retained by Owner for a period of sixty days after the Bid opening, whereupon Bid security furnished by such Bidders will be returned. Bid security with Bids, which are not competitive, will be returned within seven days after the Bid opening. No bidders may withdraw his bid for a period of sixty (60) days after the closing time for receipt of bids. The City reserves the right to reject any and all bids or part thereof, to waive formalities and to negotiate with the apparent qualified best bidder to such extent as may be in the City’s best interest. Angela Ross City of Melbourne Clerk CAM,July18,’19# 3678566 The Campbell County Cable Board financial statements may be viewed at 10 Hilltop Drive, Highland Heights, through a scheduled appointment by contacting Jennifer at (859)781-3495. CAM,Jul18,’19#3684490
PUBLIC HEARING A public hearing will be held by the City of Dayton, Kentucky on August 6, at 7:00 p.m., 200 Clay Street, Dayton, KY in conjunction with the regular City Council meeting. The purpose of the public hearing is to discuss road improvements and obtaining written or oral comments regarding the proposed use of Municipal Road Aid Program funds for 2019/2020. CAM,Jul18,’19# 3685944
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION
LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Cold Spring Board of Adjustment will hold a public hearing at the city building located at 5694 East Alexandria Pike, Cold Spring, KY on Monday, August 5, 2019 at 7:00 PM, for the purpose of reviewing and hearing testimony on the following: CASE NUMBER: BA-19-007 APPLICANT: Cicogna Sign Company, Inc. LOCATION: 989 Matinee Blvd. Cold Spring, KY 41076 REQUEST: Variance for additional signage. Persons interested in this case are invited to be present. Information concerning this case is available for public inspection at the Campbell County & Municipal Planning & Zoning Office, 1098 Monmouth Street, Suite 343, Newport, Ky. Monday-Friday during normal business hours. Cynthia Minter /s/ Date: July 15,2019 Cynthia Minter, AICP Published: July 18, 2019 Director of Planning & Zoning Campbell County Recorder CAM,Jul18,’19#3685875
All interested persons are welcome to attend and give verbal comments and/or to provide written comments prior to or at the P u b l i c Hearing. Further information is available at the offices of the City Clerk at the above-referenced City Building, (859) 635-4125. Submitted by: Jan Johannemann City Clerk CAM,Jul18,’19#3680270 CITY OF SOUTHGATE, KENTUCKY CAMPBELL COUNTY LEGAL NOTICE Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the City Clerk, Municipal Building, City of Southgate, 122 Electric Avenue, Southgate, Campbell County, Kentucky, 41071 until 2:00 P.M. local time on AUGUST 1, 2019, for furnishing all labor, materials, and equipment necessary to complete project known as SOUTHGATE 2019 STREET PROGRAM, and, at said time and place, publicly opened and read aloud. Contract documents, bid sheets, plans and specifications can be obtained at CT Consultants, Inc., 2161 Chamber Center Drive, Fort Mitchell, Kentucky 41017 for $50.00 per set, (nonrefundable). Plans requested by mail will be an additional $15.00 per set. Checks shall be made payable to CT Consultants, Inc. Specifications can also be viewed online at ctconsultants.com. Each bidder is required to submit with his proposal a bid bond in the amount of ten percent (10%) of the base bid or certified check equal in amount to ten percent (10%) of the base bid. The bidder to whom the contract is awarded will be required to furnish a surety bond in an amount equal to one-hundred percent (100%) of the contract amount. Bid security furnished in Bond form shall be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in the State of Kentucky to provide said surety. Proposals must contain the full name of the party or parties submitting the same and all persons interested therein. It is the intent and requirements of the owner that this project be completed no later than MAY 31, 2020. The successful bidder will be required to have a current occupational license in the City of Southgate before the Contract will be awarded. The City Council of the City of Southgate, reserve the right to waive irregularities and to reject any or all bids. The City Council of the City of Southgate shall authorize acceptance of the bid made by the responsible bidder who, in Council’s judgment, offers the best and most responsive proposal to the City, considering quality, service, performance record, and price; or Council may direct the rejection of all bids. The City may award based on "functional equivalence" concerning specified work or products. By the order of the City Council of the City of Southgate. Mayor Jim Hamberg, City of Southgate CAM,Jul18,’19# 3680799
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4C μ CC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ JULY 18, 2019
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