Kenton Recorder 01/30/20

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KENTON RECORDER

Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Kenton County

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Company suing Covington for tearing down 12 buildings it planned to renovate Kentucky Tax Bill Servicing had liens on sites Julia Fair Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Empty lots don’t usually get a lot of attention. But, in Covington, a few grassy lots are actually ground zero of a lawsuit between a Cold Spring-based tax compa-

ny and the city. The confl ict stems from the city's anti-blight initiative when it tore down dilapidated buildings a few years ago. The company, Kentucky Tax Bill Servicing launched a lawsuit against the city because it insisted it should have been notifi ed of the demolitions because of its fi nancial stakes in the buildings. The city's actions prevented the company from completing its plan to own

and renovate the buildings, according to the lawsuit. There were 12 buildings that the company planned to purchase, rehab and then sell for "substantial profi t," according to the lawsuit. It bought liens against the property, which was one of the fi rst steps in its business plan to acquire ownership of the buildings. After a lien is purchased a company can fi le a foreclosure action. That would have allowed the company to buy and

then renovate the properties. The buildings were torn down, so the company couldn't take the next step in its business plan. The lawsuit claimed the city should have notifi ed the company about the demolitions because that's what state law required cities to do with lien holders at the time. That law was repealed in 2016 and went into eff ect in 2017. See BUILDINGS, Page 2A

Grammy-winning ‘Racks in the Middle’ has a local tie Florence’s Dustin James Corbett was among those who helped with the song Madeline Mitchell Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Nipsey Hussle’s ‘Racks in the Middle’ took home the Grammy Award for ‘Best Rap Performance’ on Sunday night. The award was the fi rst for Roddy Ricch and Hit-Boy and second for Hussle, who earned it posthumously, according to the Grammys. If the song had won in a diff erent category – “Best Rap Song” – a Northern Kentucky man would have come home with his own Grammy for his work on the track. It was about four years ago in a Florence, Kentucky, basement studio where Dustin James “DJ” Corbett and Nicholas “Sunny” Race fi rst started dreaming of their music-making business. They didn’t make music together for the fi rst year they knew each other. They just talked. Corbett, 33, of Florence, stressed his commitment to family and faith. Race, 39, of Covington, talked about the artists he’d worked with in Los Angeles. The duo discussed politics, religion and what they envisioned for their careers in the music industry. “I think we were shooting for, like, right now,” says Corbett. Corbett was among a group nominated for Best Rap Song with “Racks In The Middle.” Race says he used to think they were going too far with their fantasies of what a career in music might be. “Now it’s like, dang, we’re just getting started,” Race says. “We weren’t dreaming big enough. So now it’s like, what do we dream about next?” The front end of Corbett’s home studio has a center table with a xylophone. A soft green light shines onto the back wall. On the outskirts of the room are three guitars and a brass instrument of some sort. “I don’t even know what kind of horn that is,” Corbett says, gesturing towards it. Corbett is not a classically trained musician. Race is not a classically trained engineer. But the pair are pulling rank in L.A. studios where Hit-Boy – a seven-time Grammy nominated pro-

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Nicholas “Sunny” Race. left, and DJ Corbett collaborate inside Corbett’s home music studio in Florence. The two are rising up through the music industry. AMANDA ROSSMANN/THE ENQUIRER

ducer and 2012 Grammy Award winner for Best Rap Song with “N****s in Paris,” performed by Jay-Z and Kanye West – hosts major artists of all genres. Race and Corbett say Race the L.A. stars refer to them as “The Cincinnati boys.” Hit-boy’s studios are full of surprises– you never know who you will run into. Corbett: “You’re just sitting there, like, eating Chik-fi l-A or something, and then the door opens and it’s–” Race: “Ty Dolla $ign–” Corbett: “ ‘Oh, Okay.’ I literally was walking, I turned the corner and – the studio that we work in is Chalice – I turn the corner, I’m walking too fast, and I like, I slam my shoulder into Future’s chest–” Race: “Ohhhh!” Corbett: “Like so hard. Like, and then, I didn’t know who it was at fi rst, when I looked up and he’s tall, like he was, I was like... I don’t even know if I said sorry or not. Like, I just, like, my mind went

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blank and I was like, ‘Uhhh...’ “ Race: “Your face said enough.” The Cincinnati boys have earned spots in those studios because of multiple years Race spent building relationships with those producers, and because of what Hit-Boy, Race and others in the community now call “The Corbett Eff ect.” “The Corbett Eff ect” is where those instruments in Corbett’s studio come into play, but mostly, the eff ect is comprised of Corbett’s own voice. When he thinks of a sound he wants to use in a song, he’ll just mimic with his voice what he wants to hear. “Well, the mic’s right here,” Corbett says. “Let me just do that. And then put all these eff ects on it, all these diff erent things to give it a vibe.” Race says that kind of approach is extremely rare. “The Corbett Eff ect,” and the eff ort that comes with it, is why he brought Corbett out to L.A. in the fi rst place. The same approach works in Race’s engineering. He says he can’t teach his techniques to anyone else because, most of the time, he is just listening for

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what he thinks sounds right. “They think, ‘Oh, he’s trying to keep it a secret,’ “ Race says. “No, I just don’t know what I’m doing. I’m just doing what works.” In the studio, Corbett pulls up the fi le that ended up as the genesis for “Racks in the Middle.” The six-second loop is comprised of two sounds: Corbett’s voice and a bell. He created it in October of 2018. Corbett says the music industry is going towards a more assembly-line structure, which is why he has started making fi ve loops a day to send to producers. He says most of the songs we hear on the radio start this way. “Lizzo’s ‘Truth Hurts’ song, I just was working with the guy who made that loop,” Corbett said. “It’s almost beginning to be this, like, subculture within the industry of like, ‘Oh, really big producer? I wonder who does his samples.’ Or, ‘I wonder who’s doing his loops.’ And usually you’ll fi nd the guy who’s, like, sittin’ three seats away, in the back, it’s probably that guy. Just kinda hanging See GRAMMY, Page 4A

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2A ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

Buildings

The blight initiative

Continued from Page 1A

The lawsuit alleged up to 100 buildings could have been torn down without proper notifi cation, but it didn't identify them. The company called for the suit to be classifi ed as a class action, which would open it up to other parties who feel the city’s procedure also impacted them. The city denied the allegations and asked the court to dismiss the suit.

The demolitions The city hired two companies to demolish the buildings between 2013 and 2016. The city brought in Cincinnatibased Evans Landscaping and Gallatin County-based JP Excavating to do the jobs. Each demolition cost the city between $4,000 and $15,000, according to public records obtained through a Kentucky Open Records Act request. The demolition companies were sued as well. The company had a fi nancial stake in the following addresses: 1 132 West 14th Street 2 211 West 16th Street 3 212 Bush Street 4 225 East 11th Street 5 317 West 12th Street 6 422 West 13th Street 7 1322 Holman Street 8 1567 Maryland Avenue 9 1604 Scott Street 10 1610 Jeff erson Avenue 11 1629 May Street 12 1828 Garrard Street

Timing issues The lawsuit, fi led in December in the Eastern Kentucky District Court, came years after the buildings had already come down.

Grass grows where a structure stood at 212 Bush Street before the City of Covington hired a contractor to tear the dilapidated building down.

Covington City Solicitor Michael Bartlett defended the city in a statement. The goal, he said, was to eliminate vacant and deteriorated buildings that “posed signifi cant health and safety risks,” to the neighborhoods. Bartlett said building owners “move on,” pass away and sometimes don’t have money to maintain the buildings. He explained that the city removes structures to help with the city’s longterm goal of “returning the property to productive use.” The company doesn’t see it that way. It also alleged that the city unlawfully entered the properties to inspect them to substantiate claims that would allow the code enforcement board to get demolition orders. “It was clearly off ensive to the community standards to blatantly disregard state law requirements and engaging in a pattern of arbitrary and capricious actions to demolish homes, structures, and improvements of property owners without a legitimate purpose and without notice as required by law,” the company’s complaint read.

What happens next?

The City of Covington was sued by a tax company for tearing down the dilapidated building at 1322 Holman Street.PHOTOS BY MEG VOGEL/ THE ENQUIRER

When The Enquirer reached out to the company's attorney, the company declined comment on the lawsuit. It didn't disclose when it learned the buildings had been demolished and why it waited to fi le the lawsuit. The timing of the lawsuit could pose a few problems for the company, according to the city's response.

The city argued the complaint should be dismissed since it was fi led more than a year after the building's demolitions, past the statute of limitations. It also called the liens "worthless" because the company's deadline to fi le a foreclosure action to purchase the properties was Jan. 1 2019 and the suit was fi led in December.

The company asked the court to call a jury to hear the evidence related to the case. There won't be much movement on the case until Feb. 13, which is the company's deadline to respond the city's motion to dismiss the case. Julia Fair is the Northern Kentucky government reporter through the Report For America program. Anonymous donors pledged to cover the local donor portion of her grant-funded position with The Enquirer.Do you know something she should know? Send her a note at jfair@enquirer.com and follow her on twitter at @JFair_Reports.

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4A ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

Moon Hooch set for Jan. 30 Covington show If you go

Chris Varias Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

compare to your fi rst three albums? A: The fourth record was actually written and rehearsed during soundchecks mostly. Then we let them evolve for years. We’ve been playing those songs live, some of them for six years. We just never released them or recorded them. We just considered them to be part of our live show. With this record, we are capturing that live vibe, and these songs are the essence of our live show. Q: It’s your fi rst album in four years. Why the four-year wait? A: We thought four is a good number. You can divide it, and you get two and divide two and get one. So we thought four was the right number of years to wait. Q: The band has the Cooking in the Cave blog that shares vegan recipes, but it has been kind of quiet lately. Don’t tell

me you guys have fallen off the wagon and have gone on a Big Mac bender. A: No, no. We’re still all vegan. We haven’t been posting everything. There’s a lot to keep track of in the band and sometimes one aspect of things we do online lacks. Our Twitter account is also kind of like our cooking blog, kind of neglected. Q: Aside from dietary choices and their eff ects on the environment, what other social or environmental issues does the band collectively share a similar concern about? A: I think the loss of presence in society has been very destructive. Most people are obsessed with their minds and the thoughts of the future and the past and what they can get and should get and didn’t get. We spend so much energy in that mindset of trying to get more and more and more and more and feeding our needs, and with that, I think we are destroying nature, because you can turn trees into furniture, and you can grow soybeans and make money and become rich, and I think a lot of decisions we are making we are making out of the illusion that the future will fulfi ll us, and the band is very active in addressing this by recognizing it and

was asking him to record. Corbett is not an engineer, but that day he stepped up and recorded Roddy Ricch’s part. Nipsey Hussle recorded his part a week later, after Corbett left L.A. In just a couple weeks Hit-Boy sent him the fi nal track, and two weeks later the song was released; a quick turnaround in the music business. “This night, I don’t know what, there really was something special from the beginning to the end of this thing,” Corbett says. Six weeks later, Nipsey Hussle was shot and killed. When Corbett saw “Racks in he Mid-

dle” was nominated for a Grammy Award, and saw his own name in the release, he says he was reminded of Nipsey Hussle and the importance of the song – a song with lyrics, Corbett admits, weren’t meant directly for Corbett or the experiences he’s had. “It was a moment that I will never forget, for sure. For sure,” Corbett said. “And I’m just extremely grateful to be a part of something that’s way bigger than me.” The Cincinnati boys are trying to brand themselves as “The Recipe,” since they have skills – or, techniques due to lack of skills – unique to the business.

What: Moon Hooch with SolEcho

Wenzl McGowan seems to know the question is coming: What kind of music is this? McGowan is one of the two saxophonists in the dance-inducing groove band Moon Hooch, a trio completed with a drummer. The unusual instrumentation leads people to the category of jazz, but McGowan has his own diff erent, pithy take on the band’s sound. Moon Hooch released the album “Live on Other Planets” earlier this month and are coming to Northern Kentucky on a tour in support of it. Question: You just wrapped up a West Coast tour. What was the reaction to the material you played off “Life on Other Planets?” Answer: It was great. We played 10 shows. It was beautiful to see some of the older songs have a good reaction. People were singing along. Our set has been evolving for the last six years, and we add new songs and take old songs out, but sometimes it’s not so directly correlated with an album cycle, how we compose our live show. Q: How does “Life on Other Planets”

Grammy Continued from Page 1A

out.” Corbett did more than just “hang out” after making the original loop for “Racks in the Middle.” He happened to be in L.A., in the studio, when Hit-Boy pulled out Corbett’s loop track to make a beat. Drums were added, Corbett added some more melodies and arranged the progression and before he knew it Roddy Ricch was in the room and Hit-Boy

When: 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 30 Where: Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington; 859-491-2444 Tickets: $15 advance; $18 door

Moon Hooch plays Madison Live Thursday. PROVIDED

trying to be present and playing present. Q: The name Cooking in the Cave is derived from cave music, which is what you call your band’s style. What’s cave music? A: Cave music is like house music, and it’s more natural to live in. Q: When you see Moon Hooch called as a jazz trio, is that a lazy description coming from the fact that there’s horns and instrumentals, or do you think the wide boundaries of the defi nition of jazz can include you, and indeed there are elements of jazz in your music? A: I think there are elements of jazz in our music, and we’ve all gone to jazz school, but I defi nitely don’t think our music is jazz. It’s equally dubstep, it’s equally electro and house and techno. It’s a mixture of a lot of diff erent things.

“I think people, a lot of times, like, we’re a breath of fresh air out there. Cuz we’re breaking every rule,” Corbett said. “We don’t know what’s wrong and right to do all the time. So we’re just getting these results from this real weird way of doing stuff .” Corbett and Race both say they want to stay in Cincinnati. They want to make Cincinnati a go-to place for major artists to record. The plan is to open a studio in the city within the next couple of years. “Cuz it’s gonna happen here,” Race said. “And I just want to make sure we’re there.”

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KENTON RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ 7A

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8A ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

Appetizers will score at your Super Bowl party Rita’s Kitchen Rita Heikenfeld

For Super Bowl at our house, the food is tantamount to the game. Two appetizers that are faves on both sides of the river are Jalapeno poppers and Buff alo wings. Now these aren’t fancy recipes, but riff s on tried and true crowd pleasers.

Crispy Buffalo chicken wings with 2 sauces Matt Swaim, my colleague at Sacred Heart Radio, loves to experiment with food. When he makes wings, Matt adds baking powder to the seasoning for extra crispy wings. Clever, huh?

Your Super Bowl guests will enjoy Jalapeno poppers with two fi llings. PROVIDED

Wings

Jalapeno poppers with 2 fi llings How many peppers to buy? It depends on size, but count on fi lling at least 12 peppers/24 halves.

1 cup shredded Jack or Pepper Jack cheese

Prep by cutting in half longways and scraping out seeds. Use gloves. Both recipes can be cut in half.

8-10 bacon strips, cooked crisp and crumbled

Top with bacon and let sit a minute before serving since fi lling is hot. Sausage and cheese fi lling

Several shakes garlic powder

Ingredients

Salt and hot pepper sauce to taste (opt)

1 pound bulk sausage, cooked and drained

Cheddar and bacon fi lling

Instructions

8 oz. cream cheese, softened

Ingredients

Preheat oven to 325. Spray baking pan.

1 heaping cup shredded Romano or Parmesan cheese

Blend everything together.

Several shakes garlic powder

Fill each pepper half. Place on pan and bake 20 to 30 minutes, until hot and a bit bubbly.

Instructions

8 oz. cream cheese, softened or whipped cream cheese with chives 1 cup shredded sharp cheddar

You’ll probably have extra sauce after dipping wings, so you can serve that alongside.

Same as above except you won’t have bacon on top.

Ingredients 2 pounds chicken wings, cut into drumettes and flat side (save tips for soup) 1 ⁄ 2 teaspoons baking powder 1

1 teaspoon garlic powder 1 teaspoon salt Several grindings black pepper Instructions Preheat oven to 425-450. Spray baking sheet.

Dry wings and place in bowl. Mix seasonings together and sprinkle over wings, coating evenly. Arrange in single layer on baking sheet, leaving space between wings. Bake 30 minutes, then flip and bake until crispy and golden and done, about 20 minutes or so. Place in bowl and pour Buffalo sauce over to coat well. Remove from sauce and place on platter. Buffalo sauce Ingredients ⁄ 2 cup butter, melted

1

1 cup Frank’s hot sauce Garlic powder to taste A bit of honey or sugar to taste (opt) Instructions Mix everything together. When wings come out of the oven, toss with sauce

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10A ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

Company gifts St. Elizabeth $5 million; criticism follows Anne Saker Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

In accepting a $5 million gift from a Utah company that sells essential oils, St. Elizabeth Healthcare announced that it aims to explore untraditional therapies at its new cancer center. But social media commenters accuse the Edgewood system of selling out to a multilevel marketing fi rm. This month, dozens of Reddit, Twitter and YouTube participants raised an online clamor over the $5 million gift, the biggest ever to St. Elizabeth’s foundation, from doTerra, a Pleasant Grove, Utah, fi rm that calls itself the world’s largest producer and vendor of essential oils. In revealing the gift in October, St. Elizabeth offi cials also announced that the fi rst fl oor of its fi ve-story cancer center, set to open in August, will be named the doTerra Center for Integrative Oncology. The center’s director, oncologist Douglas Flora, said he is perplexed at the blow-back to adding aromatherapy to other options at the center, including yoga, massage therapy and acupuncture. Essential oils are compounds extracted from plants. People can eat the oils, mix them into drinks, apply them to the skin or add them to infusers to release the aroma. DoTerra advertises that adding essential oils to daily regimens promotes overall wellness. Patients, Flora said, already are seeking other methods of dealing with the pain, insomnia and other side eff ects of cancer treatment, including essential oils. In the new cancer center, patients can try those methods under doctor supervision. “There are things that merit further investigation that may yield promise,” Flora said. “We want to accommodate those into our patient-care activities once the data is suffi cient. It doesn’t

mean that we would be substituting any of these measures that we use now. … We’re not going to let anything that harms our patients into our Flora building.” Dr. Russell Osguthorpe, doTerra’s chief medical offi cer, said the company has expanded research into its products. He said no less an institution than the National Cancer Institute is looking at essential oils, among other therapies. “DoTerra is putting our resources in support of these sorts of initiatives,” he said. “We want to support a place where patients can use an evidence-based approach under the guidance of world-renowned cancer physicians at St. Elizabeth. "We’re not selling anything in that space at all, quite the opposite. We agreed early on, we would not sell in that space. It’s a place of healing, not a place of business.” Social media commenters say advertised benefi ts of essential oils are exaggerated. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved essential oils to treat any medical condition. In September 2014, the FDA sent doTerra a warning that some salespeople, who doTerra calls “wellness advocates,” were telling customers that essential oils could treat or cure conditions including the Ebola virus. Osguthorpe and other doTerra offi cials say the company has worked with the FDA since then to correct sales language and train wellness advocates to steer clear of explicit promises. The FDA has taken no further action since the 2014 letter. The social-media objections to the arrangement also say St. Elizabeth is giving doTerra access to patients for potential sales recruitment. The company is a multilevel market-

er, which encourages distributors to bring on new salespeople, who then pay distributors a percentage of sales. Flora said doTerra will not be recruiting salespeople at the center or selling its product there. Jeff Holiday of Eugene, Oregon, produces YouTube videos full-time about pseudoscience and alternative medicine. On Jan. 9, he made a 23-minute video to lash St. Elizabeth for collaborating with doTerra. "When you have somebody who is in a vulnerable situation, like going in for cancer treatment, not only vulnerable to secondary responses or stress responses but also vulnerable to desperation, you have a lure for anybody who is a snake-oil salesman," he said. "The very concept of something that is anti-medicine contributing $5 million should be raising extreme amounts of concern." DoTerra has funded research at Roseman University of Health Sciences in Nevada to study essential oils. In 2018, doTerra donated $5 million to the Huntsman Cancer Foundation in Salt Lake City for the expansion of the cancer hospital at the University of Utah, including its Wellness and Integrative Health Center. Flora said he has seen the consequences of misusing non-mainstream treatments. He was caring for a young breast-cancer patient with the powerful drug tamoxifen to prevent a recurrence. But without telling Flora, the patient also took St. John’s wort, an herb that some people believe eases depression. But the two drugs do not work well together and, Flora said, “We lost her.” Last summer, Flora said, a former patient approached him about essential oils. Nicole Chase, a doTerra wellness advocate, told him about her experience, and Flora expressed interest in learning more. Osguthorpe and other doTerra offi cials then fl ew to Northern Kentucky to meet Flora and see the cancer center

under construction. Flora said he was impressed with their desire to put the rigors of science behind its products. “No company in that fi eld has really devoted resources like a typical pharmaceutical company to research,” he said. Cancer care in the Cincinnati region is growing because the incidence of lung, breast, colon and other cancers is among the highest in the nation – “ground zero,” as Flora calls it. Kentucky is No. 1 in the nation for lung-cancer deaths. UC Health, the University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center collaborate on the UC Cancer Center. This month, the TriHealth system cut the ribbon on its new dedicated building in Montgomery. St. Elizabeth’s center will be 250,000 square feet and will off er the mainstream treatments of chemotherapy and radiation. The 8,400 square feet of the fi rst fl oor that will become the doTerra Center for Integrative Oncology. Flora said that perhaps one half of one day a week, patients can try aromatherapy with doTerra essential oils. All additional therapies will be supervised and monitored by a medical doctor specializing in integrative care, who Flora is in the process of hiring. Integrative medicine is growing in popularity. The National Institutes of Health has a wing called the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. The University of Cincinnati College of Medicine hosts the Center for Integrative Health and Wellness. Himself a cancer patient, Flora said he has found that using lavender oil has improved his sleep. “My personal belief, as a cancer provider, is that we’re poorly educated about these things. My feeling is that if we built something like this, and bring a trained medical doctor to supervise this, our level of expertise will go up.”

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Kenton Recorder

❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020

❚ 1B

Sports St. Henry boys win second All ‘A’ Classic state championship

It really helps us because we’re not tired. I feel great. Best game I’ve ever played. We’re going to celebrate now and use it as a motivator to get better and hopefully win region.” Jude Bessler had 12 points and fi ve rebounds, with 10 of the points coming by halftime. Senior Connor Shea added nine points. The Crusaders had nine See BASKETBALL, Page 2B

See SHORT HOPS, Page 2B

James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

St. Henry senior Connor Shea

St. Henry junior Wyatt Vieth.

Walton-Verona senior Emma Gutman accepts the runner-up trophy in the the All "A" Classic girls basketball tournament Jan. 26. PHOTOS BY JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER

said St. Henry head coach David Faust. “He made some big plays down the stretch and he wants the ball in his hands. You got to have somebody like that but we have a few more guys like that as well.” St. Henry shot 52 percent from the fl oor. Junior Ryan Butler had 15 points, shooting 7 of 9 from the fl oor. “A lot of teams play six, seven players,” he said. “We have 10 who can play.

Boys basketball ❚ Boone County lost to Highlands 88-59 Jan. 21 and Cooper 52-42 Jan. 24. ❚ Conner beat Cooper 62-37 Jan. 22 before Riley Osterbur’s 27 points led Conner to 72-62 win at Lawrenceburg Jan. 24 for its seventh-straight victory. ❚ Cooper was beaten 62-37 by Conner Jan. 22, but won at Boone County 52-42 Jan. 24. ❚ Anthony Caggiano’s 25 points and Dominick Amorello’s 13 rebounds helped Ryle beat Lloyd 67-60 Jan. 24. The Raiders then went on to beat Calvary Christian 60-56 Jan. 27. ❚ St. Henry won four games at Eastern Kentucky University’s McBrayer Arena to clinch the All “A” State Tournament title. The Crusaders beat Campbellsville 78-49 Jan. 23, Somerset 51-50 Jan. 24, Hazard 55-41 Jan. 25 and then Frankfort 77-70 in the fi nals Jan. 26. ❚ Walton-Verona beat Henry County 86-72 Jan. 23 before falling to Campbell County 77-34 Jan. 25 and Spencer County 69-52 Jan. 27. ❚ Jacob Meyer scored 28 points and Jeremiah Hicks had a double-double for Holy Cross when it topped Campbell County 85-83 in overtime Jan. 21. ❚ Beechwood topped Newport 66-58 Jan. 21 and Dohn Community 89-47 Jan. 23. ❚ Covington Catholic beat Holmes on the road 74-39 Jan. 24 before beating Johnson Central 80-52 Jan. 25 to extend its 17-game winning streak. ❚ Covington Latin lost to Portland Christian 71-24 Jan. 24 and Immaculate Conception Academy 61-30 Jan. 25. ❚ Dixie Heights lost to Lakota West 78-65 Jan. 22 and North Bullitt 78-73 Jan. 25. ❚ Holmes fell to Covington Catholic 74-39 Jan. 24 before beating Mason County 50-49 Jan. 25 and Campbell County 79-58 Jan. 27 to improve to 9-12 on the year. ❚ Lloyd lost to Ryle 67-60 Jan. 24. ❚ Ludlow edged Carroll County 60-59 Jan. 22, ❚ Scott was topped by Calvary Christian 55-51 Jan. 21, George Rogers Clark 69-56 Jan. 24 and Lewis County 70-53 Jan. 25.

Walton-Verona girls team nets runner-up title

RICHMOND – On the day the All “A” Classic remembered its founder, Stan Steidel, St. Henry honored him the best way by bringing a title back home to Northern Kentucky. The St. Henry boys basketball team defeated Frankfort 77-70 to win the All “A” state championship Sunday afternoon at Eastern Kentucky University’s McBrayer Arena. St. Henry (16-3) won its second All “A” title, becoming the second Northern Kentucky school to do so behind Newport Central Catholic’s four. Frankfort falls to 11-13. “It’s amazing,” said St. Henry senior starter Luke Maher. “I’ve never felt this way before in my life. It’s breathtaking. I love it.” The tournament commemorated the career of Steidel, who created the tournament in 1980 and was a coach and administrator in various roles in Northern Kentucky for more than 50 years, most recently as Holmes athletic director. At halftime of both championship games, the tournament staff showed a video presentation of his life and career on the large video board at McBrayer Arena, and presented his family with special gifts. The tournament staff wore the same type of red sweater vest that Steidel would always wear to the tournament. After the games, it was the red and blue of the Crusaders who won the day. Led by junior Wyatt Vieth, who had 30 points in the fi nal on 10 of 17 shooting, the Crusaders built a big lead in the second quarter and held the Panthers at bay. Vieth, whose uncle Todd was a key player for St. Henry’s fi rst All “A” title team (2003) was named tournament most valuable player. “Wyatt, he loves this atmosphere,”

SHORT HOPS

Freedom no more: Introducing the Florence Y’alls Briana Rice Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The Florence Freedom professional baseball team is now a thing of the past. You can now call them the Y'alls. “It’s a very exciting time in our organization’s history,” Y’alls Vice President and GM Josh Anderson said. “We have a name that is uniquely Florence, and on a larger scale uniquely Kentucky." The new team name was announced during a recent meeting at the Florence City Government building. The Florence City Council approved the name during the meeting. "We think this is an incredible part of our culture and we want to tell that story," said Jay Becker, owner of BLDG, the design fi rm that helped rebrand the team. The new announcement came with new team colors of red, white and skyblue along with a new team tagline, "Y'all or nothing." The team is part of the Frontier League, an independent minor league not affi liated with Major League baseball. Players are mostly just out of col-

BLDG design fi rm in Covington helped create the new logo for the Florence Y’alls.BRIANA RICE/THE ENQUIRER

lege or spent some time in the lower levels of minor-league baseball. The Freedom had several players signed by MLB organizations during the 2019 season because of their performance with the team. The team announced in October that the Freedom name would go away. Sub-

missions were taken until Oct. 16. On Nov. 27, the team announced fi ve top contenders: ❚ The Go-Goettas ❚ The Fossil Jockeys ❚ The Y'alls ❚ The Pop Flies ❚ The No Sox

The website for the team now redirects to fl orenceyalls.com. It includes the new colors and branding for the team. The fi rst game of the regular season for the Y'alls is on May 14 against the New Jersey Jackals.


2B ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

Basketball Continued from Page 1B

players play eight or more minutes, a staple of this year’s team. “When we built our lead, we ran our off ense and did a good job keeping them out of the lane,” Faust said. “Give credit to Frankfort, they came back and their pressure hurt us. The biggest thing is our depth. That has been our key. St. Henry went on an 8-0 run, six by Butler to take a 22-17 lead in the second quarter, and never trailed again. The run continued into an overall 21-4 spurt to put St. Henry up 35-21. Vieth had seven points in the run, and Shea fi nished it with a 3-pointer with two minutes left in the half. The Panthers climbed within eight in the third quarter, but a basket by Maher pushed the lead back to double fi gures. The Panthers rallied within fi ve at 66-61 with 1:30 to go, but brothers Connor and Cory Shea went 5-for-6 from the foul line. Connor and Vieth were both 4-for-4 at the line to end the game and Cory 3-for-4. It was the 410th career win for Faust. “These guys keep me young,” Faust said. “I’ve been blessed all my years with great kids. If it wasn’t for them, I wouldn’t be here, and for my wife to let me do this. She enjoys watching us play.” WALTON LOSES GIRLS FINAL: Walton-Verona fell 51-47 to Bethlehem in the girls championship game and fi nished as runner-up for the second year in a row. Walton scored 22 points in the third quarter to take a 38-31 lead, sparked by a personal nine-point run by Neeley

SHORT HOPS Continued from Page 1B

❚ Simon Kenton beat Williamstown 78-36 Jan. 21, but lost at Grant County 74-70 Jan. 24. The Pioneers then beat Collins 76-72 Jan. 25 thanks to 39 points by Kelly Niece and 21 points from Jeremy Davis. ❚ Villa Madonna fell to Calvary Christian 70-50 Jan. 23 and Trimble County 74-62 Jan. 25. ❚ Bellevue lost to Newport 84-43 Jan. 22 and Highlands 96-35 Jan. 24. ❚ In the All “A” State Tournament, Bishop Brossart was knocked out by Frankfort 57-52 Jan. 23. ❚ Campbell County fell to Holy Cross in overtime 85-83 Jan. 21 before beating Harrison County 62-37 Jan. 24 and Walton-Verona 77-34 Jan. 25. The Camels were later defeated by Holmes 79-58 Jan. 27. ❚ Dayton lost at Bracken County 7974 Jan. 21, but topped Heritage Academy 77-47 Jan. 23 and St. Patrick 7765 Jan. 27. ❚ Improving to a region-best 18-1, Highlands handled Boone County for an 88-59 win Jan. 21 and beat Bellevue 96-35 Jan. 24. ❚ Newport lost to Beechwood 66-58 Jan. 21 before winning at Bellevue 8443 Jan. 22.

Girls basketball ❚ Boone County beat Williamstown 56-24 Jan. 22 before falling to Ryle 8550 Jan. 24. The Lady Rebels responded with a 61-44 victory at Grant County Jan. 27. ❚ Conner lost to Dixie Heights 7462 Jan. 22 and Notre Dame 56-40 Jan. 27. ❚ Cooper fell to Ryle 89-62 Jan. 22 before being edged in overtime at Lloyd 77-76 Jan. 23. ❚ Ryle beat Cooper 89-62 Jan. 22 and Boone County 85-50 Jan. 24 before losing to Arlington 60-41 Jan. 25 as part of the Raatz Fence/O’Shea’s Classic. ❚ After winning 10 of its last 11 games, St. Henry lost to McNicholas 45-44 Jan. 22 and Dixie Heights 75-43 Jan. 24. ❚ In the All “A” State Tournament, Walton-Verona advanced to the fi nals Jan. 26 where it fell to Bethlehem 51-47

within a minute and a half. She hit two 3-pointers then scored on an and-one play to lift WV from a 29-28 lead to a 38-31 advantage. Maggie Buerger had seven points in the run. The Banshees scored the next seven points and tied it early in the fourth quarter at 38. Bethlehem took the lead after that, but the Bearcats stayed in range with a clutch 3-pointer by Maggie Buerger and two free throws by Emma Strunk. Neeley hit a shot with a minute to play to put WV down 49-47. Baeli Young hit two free throws for Bethlehem with 43 seconds to go. The Bearcats missed four shots after that and could not get to within a one-score game. “We put ourselves in position to win and didn’t fi nish it,” said Bearcats head coach Mark Clinkenbeard. “It was like last year all over again. It’s tough to watch them give what they give and come up short. The best part is there is more basketball to play, but it’s tough right now. “They made plays. They made plays and we didn’t, that’s the bottom line. The kids made plays all week and we came up a little bit short.” Strunk had 11 points, Neeley 13 and Buerger 10. They were the Bearcats’ alltournament picks. Neeley had eight rebounds and Strunk seven. Bethlehem, considered a top contender for the overall Fifth Region crown in March, had eight blocks, four by Mikiah Livers-Bryant who was a disruptive presence for the WV off ense all game. “There were long inside and we had to shoot over the top of them,” Clinkenbeard said. “Bethlehem is here for a reason. We had a good game plan. The kids executed it.”

to fi nish as state runner-ups. ❚ Holy Cross lost to Highlands 51-37 Jan. 25. ❚ Notre Dame improved to 16-4, the best in Region 9, after topping Beechwood 68-24 Jan. 25 and Conner 56-40 Jan. 27. ❚ Beechwood fell to 7-13 on the year after falling to Seven Hills 52-39 Jan. 22, Williamstown 46-37 Jan. 24, Notre Dame 68-24 Jan. 25 and Newport Central Catholic 64-43 Jan. 27. ❚ Covington Latin lost at Portland Christian 57-29 Jan. 24 and at Immaculate Conception Academy 44-32 Jan. 25. ❚ Improving to 14-7, Dixie Heights won at Conner 74-62 Jan. 22 and at St. Henry 75-43 Jan. 24. ❚ Holmes lost to St. Patrick 53-47 Jan. 25. ❚ Lloyd edged Grant County 51-49 Jan. 21 and Cooper in overtime 77-76 Jan. 23, but lost at Newport Central Catholic 56-43 Jan. 25. Jayla LaBordeaux scored 24 points in the loss. ❚ After losing just its fourth game of the season, Ludlow beat Villa Madonna 57-35 Jan. 21, Carroll County 55-46 Jan. 23 and Dayton 55-37 Jan. 24. ❚ Scott dropped its ninth-straight game, a 69-59 defeat at Campbell County Jan. 23. ❚ Jumping to 21-3, Simon Kenton beat Great Crossing 74-54 Jan. 22 and Lincoln County 68-46 Jan. 24 before losing at Scott County 50-48 Jan. 25. The loss broke a 13-game winning streak before the Lady Pioneers won again, topping Williamstown 69-14 Jan. 27. ❚ Villa Madonna lost to Ludlow 5735 Jan. 21 and at Trimble County 58-39 Jan. 25. ❚ Bellevue topped Carroll County 50-41 Jan. 21, but was edged by Pendleton County 46-44 Jan. 25. ❚

Thomas More swimmer Miller named conference Swimmer of the Week ❚ Shelby Miller (McNicholas) was named the Mid-South Women’s Swimmer of the Week on Jan. 27. Miller, who is nationally ranked in six events, helped Thomas More to a dual win over Urbana Jan. 25 with wins in the 200-yard and 100-yard freestyle.

COMMUNITY NEWS From Rituals to Runways: The Art of the Bead exhibit opens Feb. 4 at Behringer-Crawford Museum COVINGTON – If you don’t have tickets for Cher’s Cincinnati concert on April 7 (or even if you do!) you can still get an up-close look at some of the music icon’s glittering and glamorous costumes at Behringer-Crawford Museum. Four of Cher’s dazzling beaded outfi ts will be on display as part of the museum’s newest exhibit, “From Rituals to Runways: The Art of the Bead.” The costumes, mostly created through the Tambour beading process, were designed by celebrity Hollywood designer Bob Mackie and worn by the star for the Sonny & Cher TV show and concerts during the 1960s and 1970s The exhibit, opening on Tuesday, Feb. 4, will celebrate the art and integral roles that beads have played in society over the centuries, from prayer and devotion, to art, fashion and décor. They’ve been made from wood and stone, bone and tooth, glass, plastic and gemstones – all of which are represented in the exhibit, which runs through May 10. A number of special activities will take place during the exhibit. For more information or to purchase tickets for any of the events, go to http://bcmuseum.org/plan-your-visit/now-bcm or call the museum at (859) 491-4003. Special Beading Exhibit Events: “Bead Bash@BCM,” a celebration of the art of the bead, will take place from 6-8 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 21 at the museum, and will include displays and demonstrations, light appetizers and a cash bar. Admission is free for BCM members and $5 for future members. Karaoke and Costume Contest: For those who can’t get enough of the Cher experience, a Sonny & Cher karaoke and look-alike contest will take place at 7 p.m. on Friday, April 3 at BCM. “Cher” your talents and win prizes – “The Winner Takes It All” for best singer and costume. Enjoy snacks and a cash bar. Cost: $8 for BCM members and $10 for future members. Must be 21 or older. Tambour Beading Workshops: This high-fashion, hand-beading technique will be taught by beading master Robert Haven, owner of Bead Embroidery and Design Studio in Lexington, KY. Haven has taught master classes in beading around the world and his work has been featured on ABC’s “Good Morning, America.” He will conduct three four-day workshops, each on two consecutive weekends starting February 22, March 7 and April 18. Sessions run from 9:30 a.m.to 4 p.m. on Saturdays and 1-5 p.m. on Sundays. Cost is $380 for BCM members and $400 for non-members, which includes all tools and supplies. Classes are limited to 10 participants. Beaded Jewelry Workshops: Learn how to create your own necklaces, earrings and bracelets in “Bodacious B’s Beadathons,” classes taught by Becky Hancock, owner of St. Theresa Textile Trove. Two four-day advanced classes will be held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 3-6 and March 31-April 3. Cost is $180 for BCM members and $200 for non-members and includes all tools and supplies with additional materials available for purchase. Three one-day beginner’s classes will also be off ered from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 24, April 14 and April 29. Cost is $40 for BCM members and $50 for nonmembers, including supplies and tools. Participants should bring a lunch. Class limit: 12. Beaded Flower Workshops: Using beads and wire, learn how to create delicate and beautiful beaded blossoms in sessions led by Caren Cohen. Children aged 8-15 can make a Victorian beaded fl ower that can fastened onto a bobby pin or “planted” in a small pot. The class will take place from 1-3 pm. Saturday, March 21. Cost: $20 for BCM members; $25 for non-members. Adults aged 16 and over can craft a French beaded rose that can be used in jewelry, bridal bouquets or arrangements. Noon to 4 p.m., Saturday, April 4. Cost: $40 for BCM members and $45 for nonmembers. Class limit: 10. Chippie’s Sensational Science Lab:

An outfi t designed by Bob Mackie and worn by music icon Cher during concerts and the Sonny & Cher show. PROVIDED

STEAM with Beads: Children age 3 to 5 will explore science using patterns with barrel-shaped, plastic pony beads, making an abacus and conducting child-friendly experiments. The lab takes place from 1 to 2 p.m., Wednesday, February 5. Cost: museum admission plus $3 lab fee per child. Children must be accompanied by an adult. Preregistration required. Brown Bags with Beads: BCM’s February and April Brown Bag Luncheons will feature two of the beading experts who will be leading workshops during the exhibit. Thursday, Feb. 20 will feature “The Art of Tambour Beading” with Robert Haven. On Thursday, April 16, the topic will be “History of Beaded Flowers: The History of French Beaded Flowers, Including the Victorian Era, 1960s and 21st Century” by Caren Cohen. The times for both events are noon to 1:30 p.m. Bring your own brown bag lunch. Drinks and desserts will be provided. Cost: $3 for BCM members; $10 for future BCM members. Reservations recommended. Behringer-Crawford Museum is located at 1600 Montague Road-Devou Park, Covington, KY 41011. The exhibits are free for museum members. For nonmembers, they are included with paid admission: $9 for adults, $8 for seniors 60+ and $5 for children. Wednesdays are Grandparent’s Days: one grandchild admitted free with each paying grandparent. Parking is free. For more information, call 859-4914003 or go to www.bcmuseum.org. Behringer-Crawford Museum is supported in part by our members; the City of Covington, Kenton County Fiscal Court, ArtsWave, Kentucky Arts Council, Northern Kentucky Sports Hall of Fame and The Carol Ann and Ralph V. Haile, Jr. US Bank Foundation. Sharen Kardon, Behringer-Crawford Museum

Cincy/LA-based production team presents Valentine’s Day musical comedy event A new musical is coming to town with roots spanning all the way from Los Angeles to the Queen City. Jennifer Howd and Ross Mihalko, writers of the new show, began work on it over 8 years ago while working in Hollywood. When Jennifer moved to Cincinnati a year and a half ago, she continued working on the script, and eventually teamed up with The Carnegie’s Theatre Director, Maggie Perrino, to give the story life on the stage. “I’m beyond excited to be part of such a vibrant, supportive arts community here in the Cincinnati/NKY area — and I can’t wait to continue developing the stage production with Maggie and so many other talented local artists,” she adds. A full staging of the new musical, entitled Texas Annie: The Legend of the Moan Ranger, is planned for 2020, and the team is hosting a LGBTQ+ friendly fundraiser this Valentine’s day to fund production costs. See COMMUNITY NEWS, Page 4B


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COMMUNITY NEWS Continued from Page 2B

The fundraiser will feature 3 songs from the new musical, burlesque acts from Smoke & Queers Burlesque, Comedian Kelly Collette, prize giveaways, silent auction and more, all hosted by Drag Sensation, Stixen Stones. Texas Annie tells the tale of a renegade sex toy dealer in Texas when sex toys are declared illegal. The show is inspired by a real-life Texas law created in 1973, called the “obscene devices” law, declaring possession of six or more sex toys to be a felony. Although the law was overturned in 2008, it technically still remains on the books to this day. The Texas Annie Fundraiser is Feb. 14, 2020 from 8-10 p.m. at The Lincoln Grant Auditorium, 824 Greenup Street, Covington, KY 41011. Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Tickets can be purchased through The Carnegie Box Offi ce, open Tuesday-Friday 12 p.m. – 5 p.m., in person or by phone at (859) 957-1940, or online at www.thecarnegie.com. Free gift from Pure Romance to fi rst 20 folks in the door. FB: @TexasAnnieMusical Insta: @TexasAnnieMusical Can’t make the show but want to make a donation? Visit www.TexasAnnieMusical.com today. Content Advisory: Production includes adult themes, sexual content, and strong language. Recommended for people 18+ and older. Sponsors: Pure Romance Roar Boudoir Partners: Cindependent Film Festival Smoke and Queers ChicOut Putting Women in their Place CinciFatty Jennifer Howd

Cammy Dierking to guest on Redwood’s WRED-TV

Frederic Chiu bringing ‘Classical Smackdown’ to NKU SOTA

FORT MITCHELL KY – Cammy Dierking, who just completed a 31-year career at WKRC TV, Channel 12 – and was Cincinnati’s fi rst female Dierking sportscaster – will guest on Redwood’s WRED-TV cable show, What’s Good from the Wood, Friday, Jan. 31. Carol Serrone, Executive Director and John McCoy, Executive Producer of the broadcast jointly made the announcement. The broadcast – What’s Good from the Wood – will air on Cincinnati Bell Channel 821 and Spectrum 185, Tuesday Feb. 4 at 3:30 p.m. and Wednesday, Feb. 5 at 7 p.m. in conjunction with the Telecommunications Board of Northern Kentucky. The daughter of University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Royals player Connie Dierking, she was hired in 1988 as Cincinnati’s fi rst female sportscaster. She transitioned to co-anchoring Good Morning Cincinnati newscasts for 13 years while raising three daughters; and co-anchored the main evening newscasts with Rob Braun since 2010. The Sycamore High School (1978) and Miami University (1982) graduate is now a personal trainer at Five Seasons Family Sports Club. “My passion has always been fi tness,” she told John Kiesewetter on his media blog. “After getting three joint replacements (both knees and a hip), I really feel I want to help people stay fi t and active. So much illness and disease can be prevented withy lifestyle changes.” Redwood is a nonprofi t, special needs facility located here and services some 800 clients – from six-weeks of age to 85 years-old. Andy Furman, Redwood

Get ready to rumble as world-renowned pianist Frederic Chiu brings an epic classical piano showdown of Prokofi ev versus Debussy to Northern Kentucky University’s School of the Arts. The concert will take place on Friday, Feb. 7, 2020 at 7 p.m. at NKU’s Greaves Concert Hall. Admission is free and open to the public. Funding for this program has been made possible by the Ohio Music Teachers Association - Southwest District, the Northern Kentucky Music Teachers Association, and NKU SOTA’s Visiting Artist Fund as part of the Annual Winter Piano Pedagogy Conference. Inspired by reality talent shows like “American Idol,” “Classical Smackdown” is a “tongue-in-cheek wrestling match” between contrasting composers with the audience voting for their favorite composer during the concert. The format is built so that any novice or professional can come and have an opinion. The program for Prokofi ev-Debussy is arranged in four “rounds” of pieces specifi cally to provide an opportunity to compare and contrast. Additionally, Frederic will present a session on “New Pedal Techniques” at 10:30 a.m. and facilitate a Masterclass at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020 for students and teachers in Greaves Hall on the second day of the Conference. All events are free and open to the public. Advanced registration at nku.edu/piano is encouraged. Frederic Chiu has recorded the most extensive complete piano works of Prokofi ev, and his personal relationship with the Prokofi ev family has made him a world-recognized advocate of the composer. Across 28 albums, he has recorded works of Chopin, Liszt, Ravel, Mendelssohn, Brahms, Rossini, and Grieg, and most recently, the Beethoven/Liszt Symphonies V and VII. “Hymns and Dervishes,” music of Gurdjieff /de Hartmann, Distant Voices: Mu-

sic of Claude Debussy & Gao Ping and Schubert’s Fantasy for Violin and Piano demonstrate his vast legacy in recording. His innovative proChiu gramming includes “Classical Smackdown,” where composers face off in head-tohead comparisons, with listeners voting for their favorite composer: Debussy vs. Prokofi ev, Bach vs. Glass, etc. Results tracked at ClassicalSmackdown.com. With his wife, Jeanine Esposito, he cocreated the arts non-profi t, Beechwood Arts & Innovation, to explore collaboration across art genres and the use of the arts and technology to create community. His innovative vision of Romeo & Juliet – The Choice, an immersive, interactive production of the famous Prokofi ev ballet, debuted in 2018. Frederic teaches at both Carnegie Mellon University and The Hartt School. The Northern Kentucky Winter Pedagogy Conference has drawn local music teachers to the NKU campus to discuss important topics pertinent to music education for the past eleven years. The conference is co-sponsored by the Northern Kentucky University School of the Arts Music Program, Northern Kentucky Music Teachers Association, and the Ohio Music Teachers Association – Southwest District. Funds for the conference are provided by OhioMTA-SW, NKyMTA, and NKU-SOTA. SOTA is the Creative Engine of NKU. The School of the Arts combines Dance, Music, Theatre, and Visual Arts to bring unparalleled artistic opportunities to current and future students. In a changing world, SOTA prepares students to be creative trailblazers in the Arts and their careers. For more information about NKU’s School of the Arts, please visit nku.edu/ sota or follow on social media @NKUSOTA. Rick Endres, Northern Kentucky University School of the Arts

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6B ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

THURSDAY, JAN. 30 Concerts & Tour Dates Moon Hooch 8 p.m., Madison Live, 734 Madison Ave., Covington. ticketmaster.com. Nicholas Jamerson and Brother Smith 8 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Health & Wellness Fitness Sampler: Zumba 10 a.m., Boone County Public Library: Hebron Branch, 1863 North Bend Road, Hebron. Registration required.

Literary & Books Working Dogs 6:30 p.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington.

Performing Arts Blues For An Alabama Sky 8-10 p.m., Falcon Theatre, 636 Monmouth St., Newport. $10 -$25. Runs Jan. 24-Feb. 8. falcontheater.net.

Sports Women’s Basketball: Northern Kentucky University vs. Milwaukee Wisconsin 7 p.m., BB&T Arena, 500 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. ticketmaster.com.

Public Library: Florence Branch, 7425 US 42, Florence. Joe’s Truck Stop, Abbey Hamilton, Kody Skye 6:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Food & Wine Chocolate Truffle Making Class 3-4:30 p.m., Brianza Gardens and Winery, 14611 Salem Creek Road, Crittenden. $20. RSVP 859-445-9369; info@brianzagardensandwinery.com.

Health & Wellness Matter of Balance 1 p.m., Scheben Branch Library, 8899 U.S. 42, Union. Registration required. bcpl.org.

Literary & Books Crafter’s Guild: Upcycled Papercrafts, Paper Flowers 6:30 p.m., Boone County Public Library: Florence Branch, 7425 US 42, Florence. Registration required. Raising Butterflies 6:30 p.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington.

TUESDAY, FEB. 4 Concerts & Tour Dates Greensky Bluegrass 8 p.m., Madison Theater, 730 Madison Ave., Covington. ticketmaster.com.

Concerts & Tour Dates

Literary & Books

Brantley Gilbert 7:30 p.m., BB&T Arena, 500 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. ticketmaster.com. Michal Menert 9 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. Third St., Newport. Smoke Healer, The Nailers, Boozelords 9:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Unrivaled, Life In Idle, Darkroom Ignite, Children of Mana 7:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Wayne Hancock, The Tammy Whynots 8 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Intergenerational Traveling 6 p.m., Scheben Branch Library, 8899 U.S. 42, Union.

Concerts & Tour Dates Black Flag 7 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. Third St., Newport. Strange Creature 9:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. Aussie Aid featuring Veronica Grim, Carian, Bloody Royal Family, Chalk Eye, Megahussy, The Racket Club, True Falcon, Viceroy Kings 7 p.m., The Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Health & Wellness Geek Your Health: Shape Up Like Spiderman 10:3011:30 a.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington. Registration required. boone.libnet.info. Women Empowering Themselves Through Self-Defense 10:30 a.m., Boone County Public Library: Florence Branch, 7425 US 42, Florence. Registration required.

Literary & Books Saturdays at Scheben 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Scheben Branch Library, 8899 U.S. 42, Union. Drop in for cabin fever relievers and play as a family using our activities. Feb. 1: Move & Groove. Feb. 8: Little Builders. Feb. 15: Sensory Play. Feb. 22: Pretend Play. Feb. 29: Surprise Saturday.

Nightlife & Singles Kentucky Myle 8 p.m., Pendleton Hills Country Club, 317 Country Club Drive, Butler. RubyGreen Sami Riggs 8 p.m., Grandview Tavern & Grille, 2220 Grandview Drive, Fort Mitchell. Winter Jazz 7-10 p.m., Band of Helping Hands Band House, 3831 Decoursey Ave., Latonia. $25-$35.

Performing Arts Remembering James: The Life and Music of James Brown 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, The Carnegie, 1028 Scott Blvd., Covington. $14.50-$20.50. eventbrite.com.

Sports Women’s Basketball: Northern Kentucky University vs. Wisconsin Green Bay 2 p.m., BB&T Arena, 500 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. ticketmaster.com.

SUNDAY, FEB. 2 Concerts & Tour Dates Chelsea Ford and the Trouble 2 p.m., Boone County

To submit calendar items, go to Cincinnati.com/share, log in and click on “submit an event.” Send digital photos to kynews@communitypress.com along with event information. Items are printed on a space-available basis with local events taking precedence. Deadline is two weeks before publication date. To fi nd more calendar events, go to Cincinnati.com/calendar.

MONDAY, FEB. 3

FRIDAY, JAN. 31

SATURDAY, FEB. 1

About Calendar

THURSDAY, FEB. 6 Concerts & Tour Dates Tauk 8 p.m., Madison Theater, 730 Madison Ave., Covington. ticketmaster.com.

Fundraising & Charity

Literary & Books Boone County Chess Challenge 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Boone County Public Library: Hebron Branch, 1863 North Bend Road, Hebron. $10 entry fee. All ages. Registration required. Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park Presents: Stuart Little 2 p.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington.

Nightlife & Singles Kentucky Myle 10 a.m., Velocity Bike & Bean, 7560 Burlington Pike, Florence. RubyGreen Sami Riggs 8 p.m., Pendleton Hills Country Club, 317 Country Club Drive, Butler.

Sports Men’s Basketball: Northern Kentucky University vs. Detroit 7 p.m., BB&T Arena, 500 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. ticketmaster.com.

SUNDAY, FEB. 9 Concerts & Tour Dates Alvin Youngblood Hart 7 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Fundraising & Charity

Handbags for Hope 2020 5-9 p.m., Newport Syndicate, E. Fifth St., Newport. Benefits Literacy Network. lngc.org/events.

Conquering the Runway: Heart Hero Fashion Show 2-5 p.m., River’s Edge at Newport Landing, 101 Riverboat Row, Newport. $30, $10 kids, free ages 4-under. Benefits Congenital Heart Association of Ohio (PCHAOH). tickettailor.com.

Literary & Books

Literary & Books

Valentine’s Truffles 6:30 p.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington. Registration required.

Critters in the Library 2 p.m., Scheben Branch Library, 8899 U.S. 42, Union.

Sports

TUESDAY, FEB. 11

Men’s Basketball: Northern Kentucky University vs. Oakland 4 p.m., BB&T Arena, 500 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. ticketmaster.com.

Health & Wellness

FRIDAY, FEB. 7 Concerts & Tour Dates Earle Diamond, Soul Group, Chalk Eye 9:30 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com. Frederic Chiu: Classical Smackdown 7 p.m., Northern Kentucky University Fine Arts Center, Greaves Concert Hall, 1 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights. Free. nku.edu. The Eskimo Brothers, Jerry King & The Rivertown Ramblers 9 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

ALS Support Group NKY 6:30-7:30 p.m., St. Elizabeth Hospital Florence, 4900 Houston Road, Florence. Free. 502-495-3689.

Literary & Books An Evening with SOTENI 6:30 p.m., Scheben Branch Library, 8899 U.S. 42, Union. Pokemon Game Night 6:30 p.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington. For grades K-5. Serve and Socialize Fair 10 a.m., Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, Burlington.

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12

Literary & Books

Organizations & Meetups

Ben Levin Trio 7 p.m., Boone County Public Library: Hebron Branch, 1863 North Bend Road, Hebron.

The Anti-Human Trafficking Network meeting 6-9 p.m., Newport Branch Library, 901 E. 6th St., Newport. Free. cc-pl.org.

Nightlife & Singles Jim Pelz 7:30 p.m., Second Sight Spirits, 301 Elm St., Ludlow.

SATURDAY, FEB. 8 Concerts & Tour Dates Stonefish 7 p.m., Thompson House, 24 E. Third St., Newport. The Tillers 2nd Annual Old Time Stringbreaker’s Ball 6 p.m., Southgate House Revival, 111 E. Sixth St., Newport. southgatehouse.com.

Food & Wine Wine Series: How To Taste Wine 4-5 p.m., Brianza Gardens and Winery, 14611 Salem Creek Road, Crittenden. $12. RSVP 859-445-9369; info@brianzagardensandwinery.com.

Health & Wellness Whole Person Care 101 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Cancer Support Community, 1717 Dixie Hwy, Suite 160, Fort Wright. 513-791-4060; cancersupportcommunity.org.

PUZZLE ANSWERS R E H A B S

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8B ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

SCHOOL NEWS Simon Kenton High School senior named 2020 candidate for the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program Simon Kenton Senior, Loghan Currin , Walton (Kenton County), daughter of Patrick and Melissa Currin, has been named a candidate for the 2020 U.S. Presidential Scholars Program. Approximately 5,300 seniors out of 3.6 million nationwide have been invited to apply for this naCurrin tional honor. Candidacy is based on either outstanding performance on the ACT/SAT or nomination by the Kentucky Commissioner of Education. This program was established in 1964 by Executive Order of the President to recognize some of our nation’s most distinguished graduating seniors for their accomplishments in many areas: academic success, leadership, and service to school and community. Loghan is a member of the Kentucky Governor’s Scholar Class of 2020, Chamber of Commerce Regional Youth Leadership Class of 2019 and currently serves as the President of Student Council and Secretary of the National Honor Society at Simon Kenton High School. She is an active member of St. Barbara Church’s Youth Group and has spent countless hours in service to the community with fellow members. Loghan is the founding member of the SKHS Dance Team and has been a member of the Drama Club performing in plays over her past 4 years. In April, the Commission on Presidential Scholars will review the applications of all semifi nalists, based on the same criteria used by the review committee, and select up to 161 U.S. Presidential Scholar fi nalists. All scholars will be honored for their accomplishments during the National Recognition Program, held in June in Washington, D.C. For more information,

NDA Class of 2024 Scholarship recipients. PROVIDED

visit the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program. Melissa Currin

NDA offers $78,750 in scholarships to future Pandas Notre Dame Academy off ered academic scholarships totaling $78,750 to 28 incoming freshmen at NDA’s High School Placement Test (HSPT) results meeting on Monday, Jan. 6. Representing eight local grade schools, these talented students earned the scholarships based on their outstanding performance on the High School Placement Test in December 2019. Due to the generosity of the Sisters of Notre Dame and other benefactors, Notre Dame Academy awards several academic scholarships to the top performers on the HSPT each year. The scholarships range from $500 to $2,000. This year, Notre Dame Academy offered 15 renewable Academic Excellence Scholarships to students who scored in the 97, 98 and 99 percentile, and 28 benefactor scholarships based on academic performance. Notre Dame Academy is committed to its mission of educating women to make a diff erence in the world and off ers a comprehensive tuition assistance program that is available to prospective and current NDA families.

The total amount of fi nancial assistance given by Notre Dame Academy in the 2018-19 school year was $914,862.00. Notre Dame Academy congratulates the following future Pandas from the Class of 2024 who were off ered academic scholarships for the 2020-20 school year: ❚ Grayson Rohmiller ❚ Lucy Bailey ❚ Mia Kent ❚ Clara Heberling ❚ Gabrielle White ❚ Georgia Kleman ❚ Mary Catherine Kelly ❚ Jasmine Barczak ❚ Allison Knop ❚ Hannah Renaker ❚ Kelsey Weil ❚ Nicolette Cottingham ❚ Isabelle Fettig ❚ Paige Summe ❚ Sophia Ernst ❚ Nora Kampinga ❚ Lacey Mack ❚ Lydia Dusing ❚ Klaire Eckhardt ❚ Allison Laws ❚ Megan McKeown ❚ Kimberly Woeste ❚ Maria Haacke ❚ Sophia Santos ❚ Madison Jacobs ❚ Ryan Baker ❚ Layla Ficke ❚ Allison Magary

For more information about Notre Dame Academy, go to www.ndapandas.org. Jane Kleier, Notre Dame Academy

New book teaches children how to bake Does your library have a favorite book to be checked out? Saint Agnes’ does. It’s called, “What’s New Cupcake?” by Karen Tacke and Alan Richardson. This book is full of fun and creative baking ideas for cakes and cupcakes. Christina, Woolley, Saint Agnes School

This talented third-grader made the “April Fools Day” cupcake creation (fries and ketchup) and gave it to our school librarian. I think we have a future baker on our hands. PROVIDED

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KENTON RECORDER ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ 9B

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10B ❚ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2020 ❚ KENTON RECORDER

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

ANSWERS ON PAGE 6B

No. 0126 BIOTECHNOLOGY

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BY VICTOR BAROCAS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Victor Barocas is a professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Minnesota with more than 100 published works in the field. Given his profession, the genesis of this puzzle (spelled out at 71-Across) is probably obvious. Besides the theme, Victor included colorful fill like 8- and 29-Across and 8-, 43-, 56-, 82- and 100-Down — all of which help make for enjoyable solving. This is Victor’s 14th crossword for The Times and his fifth Sunday in the past year. — W.S.

51 Angered by 53 Ancient monuments 54 Gaston ____, “The Phantom of the Opera” novelist 55 Latte choice, informally 58 The “she” in the lyric “She would merengue and do the cha-cha” 59 W.W. I French biplane 60 Capital of Albania 61 Like much of Iowa 63 1980 Olympic hockey champs 66 Up 68 Shark fighters 70 “Believe ____ not!” 71 Biological manipulation suggested four times by this puzzle 74 First AfricanAmerican Davis Cup player 75 Beethoven’s birthplace 76 Comprehension 77 Tender spot? 78 Like the sun god Inti 79 Some liturgical vestments 81 ____ de Triomphe 83 It’s down in the dumps 86 First National Leaguer to hit 500 home runs 87 Fall color providers 88 Some instant coffees 90 Cheyenne Mountain org. 92 Stays out of 93 Closes in a thin membrane

AC R O S S

RELEASE DATE: 2/2/2020

1 Homeowner’s action, for short 5 Things blockers block 8 1979 film inspired by Janis Joplin’s life 15 Indistinct shape 19 Receptionist on “The Office” 20 Be bothered by 22 Island nation west of Fiji 23 Possible consequence of default, in brief 24 Wildflower with spiky, purplish blooms 25 Secure 26 Ruling family of Edward I 27 Finished 28 Adam’s ____ (water) 29 Hole in one’s head 31 Humpty Dumpty, e.g. 32 “Dallas” family name 33 The Anne of “Anne of the Thousand Days” 35 Feverish 36 Put back on 38 Insinuating 39 — 40 James who won an Emmy two years in a row for the same role on different shows 42— 45 Ignorant person, in slang 47 Security-system array 49 Total Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).

95 Disappointing response to an application 98 Remarkable ability of a starfish 99 Use a rototiller on, say 101 Lack of variation 103 “ER” actress Laura 105 Turn out 106 Service with more than 1.5 billion users 107 Home of the Latino Walk of Fame, informally 108 Composer of the “London” symphonies 111 Big e-cigarette brand 113 Anti-athlete’s foot brand 115 Good for leaving handprints in 116 State without reservations 117 — 119 Provider of child support? 120 — 121 Polynesian carving 122 Dreamer 123 Half in advance? 124 Unique individual 125 Starting point 126 Broadway’s “____ Todd” 127 “Hamilton” Tony nominee Phillipa ____ 128 Loch ____, site of Urquhart Castle DOWN

1 Goes through physical therapy 2 Anon

3 Beethoven’s only opera 4 As a rule 5 City that ancient Greeks called Philadelphia 6 Christian with a big house 7 Winter vehicle 8 Mike and Carol Brady, e.g. 9 Berry receiving much attention in the 2000s 10 Bambi’s aunt 11 Bit of ancient script 12 Ingredient in some health-food supplements 13 Not occurring naturally 14 Romanian-born writer once in the French Academy 15 Cook on the outside 16 Tribe of Moses and Aaron 17 Available to the public 18 Wimbledon champ, 1976-80 21 First takes 29 Gag item floating in Halloween punch 30 Brother on “Frasier” 32 Breadwinner 34 Ancient Dead Sea land 37 Woozy 39 — 40 Rooms with views 41 Forecast 42 — 43 Phrase of agreement 44 Subject for Kinsey 46 Olden Tokyo 48 Flower part

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107 Refrain from nursery singing 108 “In time we ____ that which we often fear”: Shak. 109 Devoted 110 Make into a couple 112 Magazine with the motto “Cure ignorance” 114 Staff note 117 — 118 First name in spy literature 120 —

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JANUARY 30, 2020 μ KC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 1C To advertise, visit:

classifieds.cincinnati.com n Classifieds Phone: 855.288.3511 n Classifieds Email: classifieds@enquirer.com n Public Notices/Legals Email: legalads@enquirer.com

Classifieds

All classified ads are subject to the applicable rate card, copies of which are available from our Advertising Dept. All ads are subject to approval before publication. The Enquirer reserves the right to edit, refuse, reject, classify or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported in the first day of publication. The Enquirer shall not be liable for any loss or expense that results from an error in or omission of an advertisement. No refunds for early cancellation of order.

Homes for Sale-Ohio

Homes

Homes for Sale-Ohio

to advertise, email: Classifieds@enquirer.com or call: 855.288.3511

$5000

towards your new home today! Call The Deutsch Team for details today! Tom Deutsch, Jr.

513-460-5302

CE-0000710674

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

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513-460-5302

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Real Estate

Hart Farm 3.9 acre, $36,900, Falmouth. Some trees roll-off, pasture, level, country setting, big yard, 3 min from Hwy 27. City water electric, 2k down $350 monthly. Regina 1.9 acres, $29,900, Hogg Ridge Rd. Country setting, pasture, road frontage, city water, electric, single wides welcome. Available on land contract with 3K down $277 monthly. Asa 21 acres, $94,900 Northern Grant County. Mostly woods, deer trails, hunting ground, Ideal for cabin getaway, single wides welcome. Available on land contract with 3K down $925 monthly. Millers Cook Farm 1 acre, $38,900 Gallatin County. Set up with water, electric, septic, gravel driveway. Available on land contract $2500 down $375 monthly, doublewide homes welcome. Jackie 11.3AC, $86,900, Hwy 16 Gallatin. Open pasture, gently rolling, pond, homesite off the road. City water & electric, available on land contract with $3000 down $864 per month. TRI STATE LAND COMPANY (859) 485-1330 tristatelandcompany.com

Rentals PUBLISHER’S NOTICE

All real estate adver tised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Cincinnati Low Income, Section 8 Apartments. Affordable Housing, Rent Based on Income. 2-3BR. Call 513-929-2402. Ebcon Inc. Mgt. Equal Opportunity Housing

Cincinnati Senior Low Income Apts. Section 8. 1-3BR. 513-929-2402 Equal Opportunity Housing

Macarthur Park is accepting applications for 2 & 3 BR apts. Ask about our move in special! 665 Park Ave, Unit K1, Loveland, OH, 45140, 513-683-5081

NOW HIRING! Part-Time Receptionist The City of Florence, Kentucky is accepting applications for the position of PT Receptionist within its Public Services Department. The positions primary responsibilities include greeting visitors, answering phone, sorting mail, record keeping, generating reports as well as other clerical skills. High School diploma or equivalent experience required. Must have basic computer skills including word-processing, spreadsheet and data-base management. Compensation to be $14.00 per hour. Workdays are M-F 10:00am to 2:00pm. Applications are available at the City of Florence Finance Department located in the Florence Government Center, 8100 Ewing Blvd., Florence, KY 41042 between 8:30 AM and 5:00 PM, M-F, or on-line at our website, www.florence-ky.gov,. Completed applications must be returned to this same location by 4:00 PM on Friday, February 7th, 2020. (EOE)

Office Space for lease in Park Hills, KY. 500-1800 sq ft, can combine spaces. $700-1600 monthly, electric included. Great visbility, easy access to I-75, close to downtown Cincy. Call Dave Meenach with First Commercial Realty at: 859-803-8100

Celebrate it. VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com

NEED TO RENT? Post your listing.

VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com

Find a home that fits your family in a neighborhood that fits your life.

Your dream home should come with a dream neighborhood.

That’s why Cincinnati | Homes provides exclusive details on neighborhoods, lifestyles and area amenities with every listing.

cincinnati.com/Homes


2C μ KC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ JANUARY 30, 2020

Find a home that fits your family in a neighborhood that fits your life.

Your dream home should come with a dream neighborhood. That’s why Cincinnati | Homes provides exclusive details on neighborhoods, lifestyles and area amenities with every listing.

cincinnati.com/Homes


General Auctions

General Auctions

Rides

AUCTION

ROBERT E. HAY, JR. ESTATE AUCTION

Friday, February 14, 2020 @ 1:00 p.m. Location: 4077 Ky. Hwy. 10, Maysville, KY 41056 Fantasic Prime Mason Auction signs will be posted

Land Buying Opportunity!

County farmland!

This is a nice, well maintained property 70.289 +/- acre farm in Mason Co. KY to be offered in 4 tracts and combinations utilizing the multiparcel method of auction: NOTE: You can purchase any tract, combination of tracts, or the entire farm Tract No. 1: Approximately 25.8 acres and two-story, 5bd/2ba brick home with metal roof; large kitchen; separate laundry room; central heat/ac; cellar; large rooms with plenty of closets; city water; sewer; natural gas; well; spring-fed pond; well fenced; shade trees; nice lawn; two entrances to property from Ky. Hwy. 435 and Ky. Hwy. 10 Tract No. 2: Approximately 13.1 acres with frontage on Ky. Hwy. AA Tract No. 3: Approximately 15.3 acres with frontage on Ky. Hwy. AA Tract No. 4: Approximately 16.1 acres with frontage on Ky. Hwy. 10, nice pasture & hay land

SATURDAY FEBRUARY 1, 2020 9:30 AM

Located at 200 Mill Street Williamstown, KY 41097. From Walton, KY take I-75 South to Williamstown Exit 156 and turn left and go to stop sign and go straight to US 25 and turn right as you get into Williamstown Mill Street is on the left auction location on the right. Will be auctioning the personal property of EMMA CARR, and items from the NORTHERN KENTUCKY DRUG TASK FORCE ITEMS .THIS IS A PARTIAL LIST LOTS MORE ITEMS Old Cast Iron Griswold Rabbit Cake Mold # 883, Old Banjo, Large Collection Of Dolls, Barbie Dolls Old Doll Cases, Old Blow Torch, Cast Iron Furniture Movers, Griswold Damper, Tobacco Spears, Green & Yellow Depression Glass, Old Juicer, Porcelain Rollers, Glass Rolling Pin, Costume Jewelry, Griswold Meat Grinders, Penn Dairies Milk Box, Sad Irons, Glass Mason Lids, Old Silver Mountain Train , Cream Can, Brass Apple Bucket, Old Kerosene Oil Heater, Cast Iron Skillet, Small Brass Bucket, Porcelain Coffee Pot, Crock Jug, 2 Corn Jobbers, Old Sled With Back, Old Porcelain Sign, Old Kitchen Pump, Star 5 Crock Jug, Chicken Waterer, Cast Iron Pan, Large Tractor Seat, Wicker Foot Stool, Old Tobacco Knifes, Old Doorknobs, Wood Chisels, Old Toys, Old Insect Dusters, Old Wooden Handle Pipe Wrench, Old Hay Needle, Hand Saws, Zippo Lighters, Griswold Heart Mold # 2, Old Gone With The Wind Style Lamp, Child’s Bike, Daisy Butter Churn. Bulova watch in orginal box Spectra laser set HV 301 in case Alpine car stereo Boss auti power capacitor Crunch amp Senco nailer Levelite set in case Dewalt nailer 4 small nailers in husky tote bag Bostitch nailer Duofast nailer Ryobi drill set Chicago plasma cutter new in box Makita drill in case Dewaltdrill combo set in case Maxidas vehicle code scanner new in case Dewalt air compressor Badland winch 3 Bosch hammer drills new Terms are cash or check with proper ID. No buyer’s premium 6 % Sale tax charged if dealer bring copy of sales tax number

KANNADY & MOORE AUCTION SERVICE Morningview & Williamstown, KY AUCTIONEERS Randy Moore 859-393-5332

Steve Kannady 859-991-8494 Also check out pictures on auctionzip.com ID # 1411

- - - Restrooms available - - For more pictures, please visit: www.chuckmarshall.com or www.auctionzip.com (#1198) Be sure to dress for the weather - this is an onsite auction Note: This property is being sold at auction to settle the Estate of Robert E. Hay, Jr. John Estill - Attorney Inspection: For inspection prior to auction, contact our office @ 606-845-5010 Terms: 10% of purchase price (non-refundable) is due day of auction. Balance due at closing on or before Mon. March 30, 2020 Although all information in all advertisements is obtained from sources deemed reliable, the auctioneer/broker and owners make no warranty or guarantee actual or implied as to the accuracy of the information. Lead paint could be present in any home built prior to 1978. Make your inspection prior to sale date. Buyer will be required to sign a disclosure statement of lead base hazards along with a waiver of a 10-day post sale inspection. It is for this reason that the prospective buyers should avail themselves the opportunity to make inspection prior to auction. All announcements day of sale take precedence over all advertisements. Our company is not responsible for accidents. Property to sell in “as is condition”.

CE-0000710603

SALE CONDUCTED BY CHUCK MARSHALL AUCTION & REAL ESTATE COMPANY 4565 Maysville Rd, Flemingsburg, KY 41041 www.chuckmarshall.com Like Us On FACEBOOK Chuck Marshall, Auctioneer 606-782-0374 or 606-845-5010 Flemingsburg, KY

Careers

Jobs

new beginnings...

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Full-time Banking Customer Service Representatives at our Florence, KY and Ft. Wright KY locations to provide excellent customer service in daily transactions, customer inquiries, and problem resolution in accordance with Bank policies. No evenings or weekends required. Preferred requirements for the Banking Customer Service Rep include: - High School Education or equivalent experience - Computer proficiency - Prior cash handling and customer service experience Direct inquiries to: denise.sigmon@cdbt.com EOE/AAP

Medical Records,

Assorted

Stuff MODEL TRAIN SHOW St. Andrew, Milford, OH Sat. Feb. 8th, 9:30am - 2:30pm, over 70 Dealer Tables, Food, Interactive Display. $5 Admission, 12yr & under FREE. Info. 513-732-2793

HOUSE CLEANING. Hate to clean your own home? Give me a call. 25 years experience. Villa Hills Resident. Please call: 859-835-4995.

Garage Sales Lexus 2015 ES300H, 50K mi, luxury options, excellent condition, $22,600 859-331-8908

BUYING CHINA, Crystal, Silverware, Downsizing Moving Estate 513-793-3339

2864 Sherwood Court (Off of Edgeclif, Hanover Park), Burlington. Fri & Sat, Jan. 31-Feb. 1, 7a-1p.

Garage Sale - 1383 Afton Dr . Florance, Sat, Feb. 1st, 8a-1p Lots of Misc. Items! AKC English Cream Golden Retriever Pups. Shots, wormed, family raised. Starting at $950. Lexington IN 812-801-1945

1 BUYER of OLD CARS CLASSIC, ANTIQUE ’30-40-50-60-70s, Running or not. 513-403-7386

Goldendoodle Puppies Shots & wormer up to date, ready to go. $400 each. 502-514-2388

NOW THAT’S REFRESHING.

2 PIANO LESSONS 50 YRS. EXP; 859-727-4264

Higher Standard Poodle, 12 weeks old, AKC Reg., vet checked, wormed, 2nd shots. Home raised. $500 859-757-9387

$ CASH PAID for Old Harleys and Motorcycles - Pre-1980 Any condition! CALL 845-389-3239 or cyclesndmore10@gmail.com

Ford 2005 F150 XLT 4x4 4 dr crew cab, leather, etc. 130K mi.

MUST SELL! 859-525-6363

BUYING-RECORD ALBUMS & CDs, METAL, JAZZ, BLUES, ROCK, RAP, INDIE, R&B & REGGAE. 513-683-6985

THE NEWS IS ALWAYS CHANGING. SO ARE WE. VISIT US ONLINE TODAY

I BUY STEREO SPEAKERS, PRE AMPS, AMPS, REEL TO REEL TURNTABLE, RECORDS, INSTRUMENTS, ETC. ~ 513-473-5518

Business & Service Directory to advertise, email: ServiceDirectory@enquirer.com or call: 855.288.3511

INSTANT CASH PAID For Baseball Cards Coins, Gold, Silver, Antiques, Old Toys, Watches, Comics, Case Knives Military, Trains, Autographs, Many Others! We Pick-up. 513-295-5634

Old Advertising/Gas Station Related Items, Pre-1970 l Signs, Gas Pumps, Air Meters, Soda Coolers, Dealership Advertising, Etc. Call 937-321-7154

COHORN

CONCRETE LLC

Pets

POSTAGE STAMP SHOW Free admission, Four Points Sheraton 7500 Tylers Place, off exit 22 & I-75, West Chester, OH., Feb. 15th & 16th Sat: 10-5 & Sun: 10-3. Buying, selling & appraising at it’s best! Beginners welcome. www.msdastamp.com

• 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**

859-393-1138 859-359-0554

859-814-1778

Office

Fax

cohornconcrete@aol.com www.cohornconcrete.com

NKyHomeRepair.com Kitchen, Bath & Basement Remodeling, Decks, Tile, Custom Showers, Walk-in Tubs

VISIT CLASSIFIEDS online at cincinnati.com

25 years exp. Insured. Cincy Best Seasoned Firewood, 1/2 Cord $80 pickup. Delivery and stacking available. 513-795-6290

ALL DONE

FREE ESTIMATES & INSURED

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

Adopt Me find a new friend...

Celebrate it.

Buick 2015 Regal , like new, 13,800 mi, fully loaded. È 859-512-1986

Musical Instruction

$$$ 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

Announce

Special Notices-Clas

CASH for junk cars, trucks & vans. Free pick up. Call Jim or Roy any time 859-866-2909 or 859-991-5176

Cincinnati OH Estate Sale 1006 Fisk Ave Cincinnati OH 45205 2/1 & 2/2 Sat- 1pm - 5pm #’s @ 12:45 Sun - 1pm-5pm û SHORT NOTICE SALE û Contents of two-story home & garage. Couch, rocker, recliner, coffee table, end tables, misc chairs & tables, Q bed, wood futon, desk, file cabinets, folding bookcases, sm secretary, sm chest of drawers, glass front cabinet, chimney cabinet, kitchen cabinet, VTG porcelain top table, loveseat, Bakers rack, Baldwin spinet console piano, rugs, lamps, pictures, mirrors, air purifier, window airconditioner, heaters, steam fast press, metal lockers from lockers.com, flatscreen TV, folding room Dividers, small freezer, stack LG washer & dryer, fridge, grill, patio furniture, new light fixtures, yard wagon, weedeater, mower, two ringer washers, kerosene heater, lots of misc new & used in the garage. Too much to list – all priced to sell! Info & pics hsestatesales.com or 859-992-0212. Dir - Elberon - W. 8th St - Sunset - Westhaven – Fisk Ave

all kinds of things...

Community announcements, novena...

Buying All Vehicles Not Just Junk up to $3000 Fair cash price, quick pickup. 513-662-4955

Special Notices-Clas NOTICE OF DESTRUCTION OF RECORDS BEGINNING FEBRUARY 28, 2020. TriHealth Physician Partners; The Family Medical Group will destroy medical records whose retention periods have expired. These include ONLY patients born in 1988. A patient or a patient’s legal representative may be able to obtain records prior to destruction by submitting a Trihealth authorization form specifying the patient’s full name at the time of services, date of birth, social security number, current address and phone number. Submit requests in writing no later than February 20, 2020. Direct your request to: The Family Medical Group Attn: Barb Paff 3260 Westbourne Drive, Cincinnati OH 45248. Records must be picked up by the requester. Identification or proof of power of attorney will be required. 513-389-1400.

neighborly deals...

$$$$$$ A&A $$$$$ We buy junk cars and trucks ~ CASH on the spot ~ û†û 513-720-7982 û†û

Jeep 2011 Wrangler, 60000 mi., Manual, Excellent cond., Hardtop, Garage kept. Retired and no longer need two vehicles. Please text only., $15,000. Tom (513)460-7945

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the members of the HOME SAVINGS BANK, fsb, of Ludlow, KY for the election of directors and for the transaction of any other business of the Savings Bank, shall be held at its home office. 202 Elm St., Ludlow, KY 41016 at 5:30pm, Monday February 10, 2020 KEN,Jan23,30,Feb6,’20 #3965670

best deal for you...

Garage Sales

UPDATED ALL DAY.

General Auctions

JANUARY 30, 2020 μ KC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ 3C Great Buys Automotive General Auctions

859-331-0527

AKC Bernies Mountain dogs, 6 females, $120 0 513-617-2398

Call Today for your Quote

ALLIED PAINTING AND MAINTENANCE

NORTHERN KENTUCKY ROOFING

All Types of Roofing, Shingles and Metal, Roof Repairs, Roof Leaks Licensed and Insured

859-445-3921 Hendel’s Affordable Tree Service Best Service in Cincy/NKY! Call today for Winter Discount Pricing! 513-795-6290

INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR PAINTING

Right Hand Mann, LLC

DECK RESTORATION

Tree Service • Stump Grinding Property Maintenance Delivery of Goods and Aggregate Mobile Welding Service Fu lly Bush Hog Mowing Insured

HANDYMAN SERVICES

8594729195

Wyatt Mann (Owner/Operator) 859.444.7368 righthandmann78@gmail.com

Requests for a Legal Notice for the Enquirer or Community Press/Recorder should be emailed to: legalads@enquirer.com


4C μ KC-KENTUCKY - COMMUNITY μ JANUARY 30, 2020

Your generous monetary donation provides shoes, coats, glasses and basic necessities to neediest kids right here in the Tri-state. With so many children living in poverty, it’s a great way for you to help the children who need it most. So, step up for Neediest Kids of All and send your donation today!

GIVE TO NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL Yes, I would like to contribute to NKOA. Enclosed is $___________________. Name______________________________________________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________________________ Apt. No. ___________ City_______________________________________________________ State_________________ Zip___________ Please send this coupon and your check or money order, payable to: NEEDIEST KIDS OF ALL, P.O. Box 636666, Cincinnati, OH 45263-6666

Make a credit card contribution online at Neediestkidsofall.com.

Neediest Kids of All is a non-profit corporation now in its 64th year. Its principal place of business is Cincinnati, and it is registered with the Ohio Attorney General as a charitable trust. Contributions are deductible in accordance with applicable tax laws.


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