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YO U ’ L L B E Delighted
Region’s 2nd new cancer hospital opens St. Elizabeth opens Edgewood facility as clinical trials, treatment undergo pandemic stress Anne Saker Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
When breaking ground in August 2018 on a $130 million cancer hospital in Edgewood, offi cials of St. Elizabeth Healthcare said the facility would bring in more treatments for patients in Kentucky, which has the nation’s highest death rates from cancer. But as Northern Kentucky’s largest health care provider sharpens the scissors for a socially distanced ribbon cutting Sept. 29, the coronavirus pandemic also has put a mortal squeeze on cancer research and treatment. Dr. Doug Flora, the new hospital’s director and a cancer survivor, said clinical trials at St. Elizabeth for new cancer drugs that shut down in the spring are struggling to reopen. “We’re gravely concerned about it,” Flora said. Patients, doctors and advocates worry that the acute eff ort to put down the viral infection will stall the decadeslong eff ort against the No. 2 killer in the United States as lawmakers shift priorities with the billions of tax dollars now spent on cancer research.
How the pandemic affects cancer care The new coronavirus, which jumped from animals into humans in late 2019, has killed more than 200,000 Americans. COVID-19, the disease that can result from coronavirus infection, now is the third-leading cause of death in the United States. Cancer, which has plagued humans for at least 1.7 million years, will as usual kill about 600,000 Americans in 2020. In 2016, the Obama administration established a $1.8 billion cancer “moonshot” program for seven years of research. But funding has dropped from $400 million in 2019 to $195 million this year. “This research funding we’re asking for is more critical than it’s ever been before,” said Julie Turner, a cancer survivor who lives in the Dayton suburb of Vandalia and who is lead Ohio ambassador for the Cancer Action Network of the
View of the main lobby, Tuesday, Sept. 22, at the new cancer center at St. Elizabeth Edgewood Hospital in Edgewood, Ky. PHOTOS BY KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE ENQUIRER
American Cancer Society. She has been lobbying members of Congress to release more money to the National Cancer Institute for research. “We all know some breakthrough trials are in beakers in laboratories, but we can’t get them released because we haven’t been able to get them through clinical trials,” she said. This spring for six weeks, Ohio and Kentucky ordered pandemic halts to nonessential hospital surgeries and procedures. Cancer treatment was considered essential, but hospitals saw a falloff in patients enrolling for trials or making appointments for screenings. A May survey from the American Cancer Society of more than 1,200 patients and survivors found nearly 80% See ST. ELIZABETH, Page 2A
View of the healing courtyard looking north to the cancer center.
‘We’ve been through a lot worse’:
Whalen-Mockbee family out of home after fi re Courtney King Fox19
The family of a local murder victim is now in search of a place to live after a fi re destroyed the inside of their Fort Mitchell home. The fi re happened Sept. 20 after, according to the Whalen-Mockbee family, someone left a lit candle unattended. Now the inside of the home has to be gutted, they say, turning it uninhabitable for at least the next four months, maybe longer. Currently, the family was staying in a hotel when this article was originally published, according to a GoFundMe page set up for them: https:// bit.ly/3mTs1sR “Somebody said last night that God only throws at you what you can handle, and God must really think a lot of this family,” Duggin George, a relative, said. “There’s been so much much thrown their way.”
How to submit news
The Whalen-Mockbee family is without a home after a blaze burned through their house on Sunday. PROVIDED/FAMILY PHOTO
“We’ve been through a lot worse and we’re all okay,” Carli Mockbee said. “That’s what’s important.” Carli lived in the house with her sister, father and grandfather. She is the daughter of Michelle Mockbee, who au-
To submit news and photos to the Community Press/Recorder, visit the Cincinnati Enquirer’s Share website: http://bit.ly/2FjtKoF
Contact The Press
thorities say was murdered by a coworker in 2012 at the plant where she worked. Family members say they were able to save photos of Michelle from the blaze. “I mean, that’s huge,” George said.
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“Those are rarities that you just can’t lose.” The family says they also found Michelle’s ring when they went back in to look for it Sept. 21. “The women on my mom’s side of the family have a pink sapphire ring, and I inherited my mom’s when she passed away,” Carli explained. She says it’s a miracle they found it. The ring was on her headboard, she says, and wasn’t destroyed by the water damage or debris. The only marks left by the fi re were some smoke stains and ashes, and Carli says they were able to clean them off . “It was defi nitely a sign from her when we found it,” Carli said. She adds the family is hoping to move back into the same house Michelle grew up in. George thinks they’ll be able to. “It’s inspiring to see how they stand up and march right through it,” he said. Enquirer media partner Fox19 provided this report
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How to share news from your community The following information can be used for submitting news, photos, columns and letters; and also placing ads for obituaries: Stories: To submit a story and/or photo(s), visit https://bit.ly/2JrBepF Columns/letters: To submit letters (200 words or less) or guest columns (500 words or less) for consideration in The Community Press & Recorder, email viewpoints@communitypress.com Please include your first and last name on letters to the editor, along with 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. Obits: To place an ad for an obituary in the Community Press weekly papers, call 877-513-7355 or email obits@enquirer.com
General view of the new cancer center, Tuesday, Sept. 22, at St. Elizabeth Edgewood Hospital in Edgewood, Ky. PHOTOS BY KAREEM ELGAZZAR/THE ENQUIRER
St. Elizabeth Continued from Page 1A
reported delays to their health care. A Seattle study found enrollments in new clinical trials dropped by nearly 50% from January to April. Flora said he also has met with members of Congress recently in his role on the Kentucky board of the American Society of Clinical Oncologists. The 45,000-member organization wants $15.5 billion in federal money to ease the disruption to clinical trials, cancer treatment, screenings and supportive care.
What’s in the new building Drivers needed to deliver Community Recorders Part-time adult motor drivers are needed to deliver the Press and Recorder newspapers. Drivers must be available on Wednesdays (Ohio) or Thursdays (Kentucky) and have a reliable vehicle. For more information, call 513-853-6277 or 859-781-4421.
The new St. Elizabeth facility is the second new cancer hospital this year in a region that is cancer-stricken: Kentucky ranks fi rst in the nation, and Ohio eighth, for deaths from cancer. In January, the TriHealth system opened the Thomas Comprehensive Care Center next to its Bethesda North Hospital in Montgomery. That venue consolidates TriHealth’s cancer medicine and eventually will house the Tri-
Real-time locating system sensors have been installed throughout the new cancer center, which will manage the flow of patients and associates throughout the facility, according to the hospital. This technology will also be a key element of ongoing safety measures to counteract the spread of coronavirus at St. Elizabeth Edgewood Hospital.
Health Heart Institute. The Edgewood building is 250,000 square feet on fi ve stories and designed with a cancer patient’s compromised immune system in mind. “When we started this process two years ago, we were focusing on the cancer patient who is dealing with an im-
munosuppressed body,” Flora said. “A lot of the systems we planned for look really prescient now.” Patients will carry sensors to track their way through the huge hospital, making sure they don’t get lost or wait too long. “But it also has a program for immediate contact tracing, so anyone who comes with 6 feet of these lanyards can be contact traced,” Flora said. The revolving door entry with two extra side doors are motion activated, so no touch needed. The terrazzo fl ooring, made from a composite of materials, is easier to sanitize. Public restrooms have barrier-free openings. A hospitalwide system of ultraviolet lights can clean rooms and wheelchairs. The hospital brings in integrative care such as yoga, massage, meditation and essential oils. DoTerra, a Utah multilevel distributor of essential oils, gave $5 million to the St. Elizabeth Foundation in October, and the new hospital’s fi rst fl oor is named the doTerra Center for Integrative Oncology. Editor’s note: Information included refl ects this article’s original publication date – Sept. 24. Visit Cincinnati.com for possible updates.
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NKY voting, CARES Act money and a horse racing bar tion Building at 1098 Monmouth Street in Newport. h The Campbell County Clerk offi ce at 8330 West Main Street in Alexandria.
Julia Fair Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
This is an installment of reporter Julia Fair’s series “By the way, NKY.” Here, you’ll fi nd what’s going on in Northern Kentucky. We know the news can be depressing. But we also know there are a ton of exciting things happening in Northern Kentucky. So, we are re-launching this series – By the way, NKY – to focus on some of the good news happening in the region and to fi ll you in on what’s going on in your neighborhoods. If there’s something you think should be included, email reporter Julia Fair at jfair@enquirer.com By the way, here’s what’s going on in Northern Kentucky:
Which local governments got federal aid for the COVID-19 pandemic?
How to vote in Northern Kentucky Just like everything else this year, voting will be diff erent in Kentucky. There are three options: early by absentee ballot, early in-person and inperson on Election Day. Any Kentucky voter can request an absentee ballot online. People can mail in the ballot or drop it off at a secure dropbox location. The state’s election plan announced in August provides Kentucky voters an opportunity to skip in-person voting. Voters can cite COVID-19 fears as their reason for wanting an absentee ballot with no questions asked, according to the Courier-Journal. Due to COVID-19, there are fewer voting locations in each county. Here are some important dates to know: h Oct. 5 (at 4 p.m.) – The deadline to register to vote h Oct. 9 (at 11:59 p.m.) – The deadline to request an absentee ballot h Oct. 13 – Early in-person voting commences and runs Monday-Saturday up to Election Day. h Nov. 3 – Election Day. All absentee ballots must be postmarked by this day. h Nov. 6 – The day by which all absentee ballots must be received by the county clerk in order for them to count. And here’s what you need to know about each county:
People vote in the Kentucky Primary election at the Northern Kentucky Convention Center on Tuesday, June 23 in Covington. MEG VOGEL/ THE ENQUIRER
Boone County h Vote early at the Boone County Extension Enrichment Center at 1824 Patrick Drive in Burlington. h Visit theBoone County Clerk website to see where you can vote in-person on Election Day. In Boone County, any registered voter can vote at any of the 10 locations. Drop off your mail-in absentee ballot at four locations: h The Boone County Board of Elections offi ce at 2950 Washington Square in Burlington. h The Florence library at 7425 US 42 in Florence. h The Hebron library at 1863 North Bend Road in Hebron. h The Union library at 8899 US 42 in Union. Kenton County h Vote early at the Kenton County Government Center at 1840 Simon Kenton Way in Covington and the Inde-
pendence Senior Center at 2001 Jackwoods Parkway in Independence. h Visit the Kenton County Clerk website to see where you can vote inperson on Election Day. Drop off your mail-in ballot at three locations: h The Kenton County Administrative building at 1840 Simon Kenton Way in Covington. h The Kenton County Clerk offi ce at 5272 Madison Pike in Independence. h The Independence Senior Center at 2001 Jackwoods Pkwy in Independence. Campbell County h Vote early at the Campbell County Administration Building at 1098 Monmouth Street in Newport. h Visit the CamClerk website to see where you can vote in-person on Election Day. Drop off your mail-in ballot at two locations: h The Campbell County Administra-
Northern Kentucky local governments received federal money for expenses related to COVID-19, according to a news release from Gov. Andy Beshear. Most of the money has gone toward payroll expenses and personal protective equipment, or PPE. See if your city got funding: h Crestview Hills got $235,853 for sanitizing supplies, PPE, telework equipment and police department payroll. h Dry Ridge got $160,136 for payroll expenses. h Elsmere got $453,601 for family and medical leave and medical supplies. h Fort Wright got $412,527 for police and fi re department payroll. h Newport got $1.1 million for small business relief and police and fi re department payroll. h Southgate got $196,192 for police payroll and telework equipment. h Boone County got $4.5 million for payroll expenses. h Bellevue got $415,044 for payroll for police offi cers and fi refi ghters. h Crescent Springs got $132,971 for payroll for police offi cers. h Edgewood got $627,959 for PPE, sanitizer, telework supplies and payroll for fi rst responders. h Florence got $2.3 million for payroll for police offi cers, fi refi ghters and EMS workers. h Highland Heights got $344,022 for PPE, sanitizer, telework supplies, paid leave for a quarantined employee and payroll for police offi cers. h Fort Mitchell got $592,653 for police payroll and sanitizing expenses. h Villa Hills got $239,962 for payroll expenses for police offi cers, fi refi ghters and EMS workers. h Wilder got $220,753 for PPE and payroll expenses for police offi cers. See VOTING, Page 5A
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Covington to continue outdoor street dining into January 2021 Chris Mayhew Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Covington will allow the use of heaters to extend outdoor dining and drinking as the weather grows cold in an effort to help businesses stay afl oat during COVID-19 rules. Outdoor seating increases the number of customers a business can serve under Kentucky’s 50 percent maximum indoor capacity rule, according to a city release. Federal offi cials have also advised people to wear masks indoors to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus, according to an Aug. 16 USA Today article. Up Over Bar at 624 Main St., Covington, is able to seat 20 more people than if they were only open indoors, said owner Amy Kummler in the release. “People are much more comfortable sitting outside and not being enclosed,” Kummler said in the release. “It’s a real-
Voting Continued from Page 4A
Newport Racing & Gaming opens soon There will soon be a new spot to drink and bet on historic horse races in Northern Kentucky. On Oct. 2, Newport Racing & Gaming will open in Newport in the Newport Shopping Center. The facility is an extension of Turfway Park in Florence, which is owned by Churchill Downs. It will have 500 historic racing machines for people to bet money
People dine and drink on a parking lot area converted into outdoor dining on Seventh Street near Braxton Brewing's taproom, McK's Chicks, and Rich's Proper Food and Drink restaurants. COVINGTON/PROVIDED
ly big deal that the city lets us do this.” Kummler said her bar was shut down for 14 weeks in the spring, and cannot aff ord to be shut down again. Mayor Joe Meyer signed an executive
on old horse races displayed on small TV screens. The $38.4 million development project began construction in May. It is expected to create 70 fulltime-equivalent jobs, according to a press release.
Resources for NKY residents Need a COVID-19 test? Do you still need to fi ll out the census? Here are some helpful links to resources in Northern Kentucky. h Find a COVID-19 test on the state’s COVID-19 website. h Fill out the census at www.2020census.gov.
As of Sept. 18, about 78% of Boone County residents had fi lled out the census. About 72% of Kenton and Campbell counties completed it. That’s it for this installment of By the way, NKY. Let us know if there’s something you think we should include in the next. In the meantime, here are some other ways to keep up with your community: h Keep an eye on your local government with us and subscribe to the free daily newsletter that gets sent directly to your inbox every morning. h Download the NKY news app and sign up for alerts to be the fi rst to
order Sept. 21 to ensure outdoor seating can remain through Jan. 2 instead of ending Oct. 31. Sidewalks, alleys, and parking spots are among spaces in public rights of way
know about news in your neighborhood. Julia 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. If you want to support Julia’s work, email her editor Carl Weiser at cweiser@cincinna.gannett.com to fi nd out how you can help fund her work. Do you know something she should know? Send her a note at jfair@enquirer.com and follow her on twitter at @JFair_Reports.
END GUTTER CLEANING FOREVER!
are places where businesses will be allowed to use heaters to stay open at least two additional two months into winter under the #RecoverCovington social media hashtagged program, according to the release. Businesses will have to reapply to keep their temporary spaces open with heaters The city hired Josh Rhodes, a former restaurant manager, to serve as a liaison with businesses and the city during the pandemic, according to the release. Restaurants and bars have capitalized on the additional outdoor spaces, he said. “Their struggle to survive doesn’t end with the end of summer,” Rhodes said. The #RecoverCovington program has enabled about 40 restaurants and bars to expand outdoor seating into public right of way, said Elizathabeth Glass, who coordinates special event permits and outdoor seating licenses in the city manager’s offi ce.
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4 local schools named 2020 National Blue Ribbon Schools Sarah Brookbank Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
Four Greater Cincinnati schools were named National Blue Ribbon Schools for 2020. Each year, the U.S. Department of Education recognizes schools based on academic excellence or their progress in closing achievement gaps, offi cials said. In 2020, there were 317 public schools and 50 private schools named National Blue Ribbon Schools. In 38 years, the program has given 10,000 awards to more than 9,000 schools. Schools can be nominated fi ve years after a win and can be public or private schools. The winners include elementary, middle and high schools. “The National Blue Ribbon School award acknowledges and validates the hard work of students, educators, families, and communities in striving for— and attaining—exemplary achievement. For many educators, receiving the award is the realization of a long-held dream,” offi cials said. Local 2020 National Blue Ribbon Schools: h C.O. Harrison Elementary School in Delhi Township h Evanston Academy Elementary School in Evanston h Crosby Elementary School in Harrison h Villa Madonna Academy High School in Villa Hills
Villa Madonna Academy High School PROVIDED
A rendering of the mural planned for Newport depicts General James Taylor and his wife. PROVIDED/CITY OF NEWPORT
Newport mural to depict James Taylor, founder of city and slaveowner Cameron Knight Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
A new plan for a mural revealed Sept. 24 for Newport’s fl oodwall depicts the man responsible for the founding of the city in 1795, General James Taylor, and his wife. In an era when the statues of Confederate generals are being removed from city streets, it bears remembering that Taylor owned dozens of slaves. But how can a man who was for much of his life a slave owner also be lauded in his own time for his work supporting emancipation? The city of Newport released a statement Sept. 28 about the plan for the mural: “While it is a historical fact that General Taylor was a slave owner, the city is not commemorating his slave ownership,” the statement says. “General Taylor and his wife are being memorialized for their contributions to the founding of Newport.” The artist’s concept shows Taylor and his wife amid abstract lines depicting land and rivers. It reads: “The Rich History of Newport, Est. 1795.” Commissioning the mural was part of Newport’s 225th anniversary. City offi cials want the entire fl oodwall covered in murals and are continuing to raise money to do so. “Context is necessary in discussions about historical fi gures who were slave owners,” the statement said. “We should not ignore it, but must also judge each person on an individual and unique basis.”
Here’s some of that context: Taylor, who earned his general title during the War of 1812, has a complicated history with slavery. He did own slaves, even at the time of his death, but earned praise for setting his slaves frees in his will. The marker outside his home, which still stands, states it was an underground railroad station. But that home on East Third and Overton streets was only built after a slave uprising burned his previous home to the ground, according to “A History of Covington” by John E. Burns. Rev. Horace H. Hawkins famously escaped Taylor’s ownership, stealing Taylor’s own ferry to cross the Ohio River and then years later attempting to purchase his freedom from Taylor’s heirs, according to the University of Kentucky’s project on notable Kentucky African Americans. Taylor died in 1848, before the Civil War. According to census data, he and his brother owned 54 slaves in 1840. NKYviews.com compiles newspaper reports from the early days of the settlement of Northern Kentucky. The site shows that while it is true that Taylor laid out a path to freedom for the slaves he owned, it was not straight forward. According to his will, male slaves were to be set free at age 30, females at 28. Several of the slaves were willed land and other things to start their lives as farmers. However, in the 1880s, some 40 years after Taylor’s death, many of the slaves had not received any land and took his survivors to court. In 1891, the Kentucky State Journal
announced the slaves had won their court cases and an appeal by the heirs. The paper called the protest of the heirs a “sham” and “unconscionable” besmirching “the kind and benevolent desires of General Taylor.” The NKYviews article also notes that one particular slave was singled out in Taylor’s will: a man named Thomas Fields or Thomas Curry. The will states he can be free at age 40 and must never return to Kentucky. The website says speculation at the time was that Taylor believed he was responsible for the fi re that burned down his house. As for the murals, Newport offi cials pointed out that the fi rst panel to be completed for the fl oodwall murals honored the Southgate Street School opened for Black students in 1866 just after the Civil War. Newport purchased the school after federal funding ran out and kept it operating until desegregation allowed the students to transfer to other schools, according to the Kentucky Historical Society. Mayor Jerry Peluso along with several other city offi cials spoke at the unveiling of that mural last week. No mention was made of Taylor owning slaves though his legacy was discussed. Peluso told The Enquirer Sept. 28 that he wasn’t aware Taylor had owned slaves and it wasn’t discussed in any conversation he had about the mural. Northern Kentucky NAACP President Jerome Bowles was in attendance, according to video of the event and Peluso. Bowles had not replied for requests for comments at the time of this report.
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Ft. Wright resident honored with Voices of Giving Award Donna Bloemer, a resident of Ft. Wright, Kentucky, was recently honored by the Greater Cincinnati Planned Giving Council (GCPGC) as a Voices of Giving Award recipient, for her selfl ess generosity and foresight in contributing a lasting gift to her favorite charitable organization. Bloemer was nominated by Redwood, where she began volunteering in 1986 as part of the Notre Dame Academy Service Program. Since then, she has been involved in many ways by serving on the Redwood Board for several years, co-chairing the Planned Giving Committee and chairing the Staffi ng Committee. She is also a member of the Redwood Foundation Board. She included Redwood in her estate plan by making a specifi c bequest gift in her will. “Planned gifts are so important for nonprofi ts because they ensure that needs of clients they serve will be met in perpetuity. My children’s lives are much richer for having attended Redwood.” In its 22nd year, the Voices of Giving Awards Event (this year held virtually) pays tribute to Greater Cincinnati philanthropists who represent the true spirit of giving. The Event also acknowledged professional advisors who play a pivotal role in cultivating planned gifts. The Greater Cincinnati Planned Giving Council is a professional association for people whose work includes developing, marketing, and administering charitable planned gifts. Members include persons who raise funds for nonprofi t institutions, consultants, and professional advisors who work in a variety of legal and fi nancial settings – people whose life work is helping others LEAVE A LEGACY through a planned gift to the charities they love. Lisa Desatnik
Unstoppable Women Series’ to highlight inspiring local women Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road (GSKWR) announces the launch of a brand-new virtual series designed to highlight extraordinary local women who have impacted the local community and shaped business and civic sectors throughout the State of
A newly improved version of America’s best-selling male performance enhancer gives 70-year-old men the ability and stamina they enjoyed in their 30’s. America’s best-selling sexual performance enhancer just got a lot better. It’s the latest breakthrough for nitric oxide – the molecule that makes E.D. woes fade and restores virility when it counts the most.
Donna Bloemer accepts her award. She was nominated by Redwood. PROVIDED
Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati. Backed by over a hundred years of excellence, Girl Scouts has a proven track record of fueling the female leadership pipeline by providing rigorous leadership development opportunities. The “Unstoppable Women Series” will act as a tribute to the eff ective and inspiring programming that Girl Scouting off ers, with many of the “Unstoppable Women” pointing to skills learned through their involvement in Girls Scouts as instrumental to their personal aspirations and career achievement. Nearly 80% of women who have had Girl Scout experiences attribute their personal and professional success to Girl Scouting. Kicking off Unstoppable Women will be Rachel Roberts, Kentucky State Representative (D), business owner and philanthropist; Rachel also serves on the GSKWR Board of Trustees. Girl Scouts will participate in the virtual series by leading the Q&A sessions with the ‘Unstoppable Women’ guests. Inspirational women from Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati will be featured in the 2020-21 series, including: • Nancy Grayson, President, Horizon Funds – Tuesday, Oct. 13 at 4:30 p.m. • Michelle Krummen, Head of Talent, 84.51 – Tuesday, Oct. 27 at 4:30 p.m. • Lacy Starling, President, Legion Logistics – Tuesday, Nov. 10 at 4:30
p.m. • Carolyn Noe, CEO, Superheroines – Tuesday, Dec. 8 at 4:30 p.m. • Rosemary Schlachter, Philanthropist & President, 25th Hour – Tuesday, Jan. 5 at 4:30 p.m. • Wendy Vonderhaar, CEO, Intrinzic, Inc. – Tuesday, Jan. 19 at 4:30 p.m. • JoAnne Kennard & Molly Edmondson, Principals, Mojo Advantage – Tuesday, Feb. 2 at 4:30 p.m. • Lisa Daugherty, Director of Tax, Luxottica – Tuesday, Feb. 16 at 4:30 p.m. • Gina Goings, Sr. Vice President, Communications & Development, Urban League of Greater SW Ohio– Tuesday, March 2 at 4:30 p.m. Adults and students of all ages and genders are invited to virtually attend the ‘Unstoppable Women Series’. Being a Girl Scout is not a requirement to participate; anyone interested in hearing the rich stories, experiences and guidance of local female leaders are welcome to attend. To access a virtual session of the ‘Unstoppable Women Series’ simply complete a gratis registration through Eventbrite: uwseries.eventbrite.com To learn more about how Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road is creating experiential and leadership opportunities for growth, please visit www.gskentucky.org. Amy Greene, Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road
Nitric oxide won the Nobel Prize in 1998. It’s why “the little blue pill” works. More than A new discovery that increases nitric oxide availability was 200,000 studies confirm recently proven in a clinical trial to boost blood flow 275% it’s the key to superior sexual performance. In a Journal of Applied sexual performance. And this new discovery Primal Max Red contains Physiology study, one increases nitric oxide a bigger, 9,000 mg per resulted in a 30 times availability resulting in serving dose. It’s become MORE nitric oxide. And even quicker, stronger so popular, he’s having these increased levels and longer-lasting trouble keeping it in lasted up to 12 hours. performance. stock. “I measured my nitric One double-blind, placebo-controlled study (the “gold-standard” of research) involved a group of 70-year-old-men.
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Two ways to make Mississippi pot roast Mississippi slow cooker pot roast from scratch Rita’s Kitchen
Adapted slightly from Sam Sifton’s New York Times recipe.
Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist
Ingredients
It was a crazy busy day today on our little patch of heaven. We started out working with the wood pile, stacking it into manageable rows. Then it was on to gathering seeds from the cutting fl ower rows. And harvesting more hot peppers, including banana. The cool weather, the banana peppers and a thawed chuck roast were motivation for supper: Mississippi pot roast in my crockpot. Now, this iconic, yummy recipe can be made two ways: one using packaged ingredients and one from scratch. But the one on Pinterest’s most pinned list, well over 1 million times, is guess what? The roast with packaged ingredients! It’s also the easier of the two, so that won me over. Check out my site for the fun story of how this recipe became “the best roast in the world.” Truth be told, the seasonings are weird. Ranch dressing and gravy mix. Oh, and a stick of butter. But a recipe
3 pounds or so boneless chuck roast Salt and pepper ⁄ 4 cup flour
1
Vegetable oil 4 tablespoons butter 4 or so pepperoncini or to taste 2 tablespoons each: mayonnaise and cider vinegar ⁄ 2 teaspoon dried dill leaves or tablespoon fresh
1
⁄ 4 teaspoon each: garlic powder and sweet paprika
1
Instructions Mississippi pot roast is an Internet favorite. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD/FOR ENQUIRER
doesn’t get that popular unless it’s be- I’m sharing my adaptation of a New York yond delish. Yes, it deserves the raves. Times from scratch recipe. It’s darn For those of you who are more purist, good too.
Rub roast with salt and pepper. Sprinkle flour all over and massage into meat. Film bottom of skillet with oil. Heat until hot, then put roast in and brown well on all sides to create crust. This is necessary for flavor and to thicken gravy. Place roast in slow cooker and add any brown bits.
Mississippi crockpot/slow cooker pot roast
Add butter and pepperoncini. Put lid on and turn to low.
The recipe I shared a while back used a tri-tip roast. I like chuck roast better, and it’s less costly.
top.
Ingredients
Place butter on top. Don’t stir or add water.
3 pounds or so boneless chuck roast 1 package brown gravy or Au jus gravy mix (I used brown gravy mix) 1 package ranch salad dressing 1 stick butter – yes, a whole stick 3 whole fresh banana peppers or about 6 or so pepperoncini Instructions Place roast in sprayed crockpot. Sprinkle gravy and dressing packets on
Make ranch dressing by whisking mayonnaise, vinegar, dill, garlic and paprika together. Add to meat.
Add peppers.
Cover and continue cooking, undisturbed, 6 to 8 hours, or until you can shred meat easily using 2 forks.
Cook on low, undisturbed, 6-8 hours or high 3-4 or so. It’s done when meat easily shreds with 2 forks. Gravy will look a bit thin, but no worries.
Mix meat with gravy. Serve with noodles or roast or mashed potatoes, or pile onto sandwiches.
Take roast out (it will have fallen into large pieces), shred and put back in cooker. It will absorb gravy, making meat juicy. Serve with mashed potatoes, noodles or rice.
Mississippi roast in Instapot:
A hot pepper assortment with banana peppers are on top.
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SPORTS Local prep swimmers named All-Americans Alex Harrison Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
The National Interscholastic Swimming Coaches Association revealed its All-Americans for the 2019-20 season. All-Americans were picked as the swimmers that had the top 100 times in each event.
Boys
Cameron Hergott (2) rushes in for Beechwoods fi rst touchdown. Beechwood leads 17-9 at the half. JEFFREY DEAN FOR THE ENQUIRER
Hergott’s big night leads Beechwood over Ryle James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
FORT MITCHELL – The Beechwood football team does not shy away from big competition. After a win over 4A power Corbin, and a narrow loss to 5A state champion Covington Catholic, the Tigers went up in size Friday night, taking on 6A rival Ryle at home. The teams hadn’t met since 1998, and this year’s game was scheduled late in the summer due to the coronavirus pandemic. Beechwood used its potent playmakers and a staunch defensive eff ort to pull away for a 35-14 win, dropping the Raiders to 1-2. “We have a bunch of good athletes at receiver and we’re confi dent,” said Beechwood senior quarterback Cameron Hergott. “We’re going into next week
thinking we can win any game. After these past three weeks, we’re playing really well. It’s good for the postseason.” Hergott threw for 318 yards and two touchdowns. He had 14 completions of 10 yards or more. Junior Parker Mason had seven catches for 125 yards. Junior Brady Moore had four catches for 94 yards. Sophomore Mitchell Berger rushed for two touchdowns and had a 43-yard TD catch. “We got playmakers who can improvise and make things happen,” said Beechwood head coach Noel Rash. “(Hergott) makes things happen and I’m really pleased with our eff ort. That kid’s special.” Beechwood struck fi rst after the Raiders fumbled at their own 20 on their fi rst play from scrimmage. Hergott had a 15-yard completion, and Berger took it in from a yard out with 4:32 to go in the
fi rst quarter. Beechwood scored on its next drive after converting a fake punt from its own 42. Two completions by Hergott set up a 3-yard run by Berger with 10:23 to go in the fi rst half. Ryle thwarted one scoring drive in the fi rst half when Lukas Colemire stepped in front of a Hergott pass and intercepted it near the goal line. Later, Beechwood got the ball back and Hergott downed a punt at the Ryle 3 yard line. Beechwood then returned the interception favor with a minute to go in the half after sophomore Austin Waddell picked off a pass by Ryle’s Bradyn Lyons and returned it 21 yards for a score, and it was 21-0 at halftime. Beechwood outgained Ryle 179-14 in the half. See BEECHWOOD, Page 2B
200 Medlay Relay: The St. Xavier 200 Medley Relay team of Nate Buse, Scott Sobolewski, Jean-Pierre Khouzam and Owen Taylor had the secondbest time in the nation with a 1:27.97 time, just edged by Indiana's Carmel High School who had a 1:27.94 fi nish. Mason's relay squad of Adam Chaney, Nick Diangelo, Carl Bloebaum and Kevin Wu were the No. 11 team in the All-American rankings. Kings (Kevin Glennon, Jake Young, Aiden Leamer, Kavin Lynch) and Sycamore (Avery Clapp, Ansel Froass, Declan Skinner, Bishop Carl) also had times on the list. 200 Free: Jacob McDonald from Lakota East snagged the fi nal spot in the event's top 20 times after putting up his 1:37.62 time. Mason's Adam Chaney (1:38.93) and St. Xavier's Taylor (1:39.42) also appeared. See SWIMMERS, Page 2B
Jude Dierker of Covington Catholic was the only area diver to get an All-American nod. PROVIDED
NewCath survives at Newport, keeps winning streak alive Eli Feazell @ENQSports
NEWPORT — Things almost went so badly for the Newport Central Catholic Thoroughbreds many times, but they never let the Newport Wildcats get an edge over them. Newport was driving down the fi eld with less than four minutes remaining in the game while down three points, hoping to give itself a chance to defeat NewCath for the fi rst time in 21 years. After getting four fi rst downs on what was looking like an impressive drive, it looked like Newport might pull it off . The Thoroughbreds didn’t allow it, forcing and recovering a fumble with just a minute remaining to secure their victory. NewCath kneeled and won 17-14 on a warm Friday night at Newport High School Stadium. It was not a pretty game, especially in the second half, but the Thoroughbreds managed to continue their undefeated start regardless. NewCath’s head coach, Stephen Lickert, knew what his team needed to do to remained poised when Newport was looking strong. “Trust your techniques and your fundamentals and good things will happen,” Lickert said. “They had a great drive coming out of the half, (they) really gave it to us, had a good game plan there coming out of the half. They scored, and our guys didn’t quit.” The Thoroughbreds dominated for most of the fi rst half, which ended up being one of the most crucial factors to them winning. After Newport’s Ethan Jeff erson scored on a six-yard run on a short drive to start the game, there was no stopping NewCath’s defense for the rest of the
Fans are spaced apart as they watch the Newport and Holmes matchup at Newport High School in Newport on Friday, Sept. 18. HANNAH RUHOFF
fi rst half. Neither passes nor rushes went through the Thoroughbreds as Jefferson found himself running away from the pass rush almost every play he dropped back.
For the rest of the fi rst half, NewCath took over and scored 17 unanswered points. The fi rst came a bit easy when a high snap went over Newport’s punter’s head and rolled right into the endzone
for Justin Schneider to recover, tying the game up. The Thoroughbreds’ off ense was at See NEWCATH, Page 2B
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Swimmers Continued from Page 1B
200 Individual Medley: Froass represented Sycamore again in the 200 IM. Froass had the 10th-best time in the nation, swimming the medley in 1:47.55. Ian Van Gorp from St. Xavier had a 1:48.82 and his teammate Sobolewski had a 1:49.22 to appear in the event's top 50 times. Kings' Young had a 1:50.44 and Aaron Sequeira of Walnut Hills swam a 1:51.07 to also earn All-American nods. 50 Free: Mason's Chaney swam the third-best time in the nation with his 19.62 fi nish. Sequeira also had a top-10 time, fi nishing sixth in the nation with a 19.92. St. Xavier's Khouzam and Taylor, Mac Russell of Highlands and Mason's Braden Osborn also made the list of honorees. 100 Fly: Khouzam earned another All-American title with his 47.01 fi nish in the 100 Fly, good for fourth in the nation. Bloebaum from Mason was narrowly kept out of the top 20, having the 21st best time if a 48.49. Buse and Taylor of St.Xavier, Glennon of Kings and Osborn from Mason had times to make the All-American list. 100 Free: Khouzam again leads Cincinnati swimmers, fi nishing 14th in the nation with a 44.10 fi nish in the 100 Free. His teammate Taylor was the other local swimmer on the list, swimming a 44.94 for the 47th spot in the nation. 500 Free: Jacob McDonald swam to the All-American list's No. 3 spot after his 4:21.05 time. Kellen Roddy from St. Xavier also had a top 20 time of a 4:26.66. Walnut Hills swimmer Alex Craft also appeared, swimming a 4:40.77 time. 200 Freestyle Relay: Cincinnati had the 1-2 punch in the 200 Free Relay. St. Xavier (Khouzam, Buse, Van Gorp, Taylor) swam the nation's fastest relay in 1:20.86 while Mason's relay (Osborn, Bloebaum, Wu, Chaney) ran second in 1:21.11. 100 Back: Sequeira appears again for Walnut Hills, appearing at No. 2 in the nation with his 46.71 backstroke time. Mason's Bloebaum (49.63) and St. Xavier's Buse (49.66) both rack up another All-American nod with appearances on the list. 100 Breast: Sobolewski from St. Xavier cracked the nation's top fi ve with his 53.63 time in the 100 Breast. Cincinnati had two other representatives with Froass from Sycamore (55.66) and Cameron Jones from St. Xavier (56.31). 400 Freestyle Relay: St. Xavier took the national runner-up spot as the stellar relay team of Khouzam, Sobolewski, Van Gorp and Taylor swam the event in 2:59.30. Sycamore (Erik Menchhofer, Clapp, Carl, Froass) and Mason (Osborn, Bloebaum, Wu, Eli Devyak) also cracked the top 100 times in the relay. Diving: Jude Dierker of Covington Catholic was the only area diver to get an All-American nod.
Girls 200 Medley Relay: Mason's relay team comprised of Emma Dalton, Reese Lugbill, Kiara Anchrum and Tiana Anchrum just missed the top 10, but was 11th in the nation with their 1:42.21 time. Springboro's relay team (Maggie Clough, Molly Arneson, Hannah Hill, Abby Susec) appeared with a 1:44.99 time and Ursuline Academy (Madeline Wolfe, Helene Beerman, Claudia Butterfi eld, Isabella Matesa) showed with a 1:45.20. 200 Free: Grace Hastings from Anderson had a top 10 fi nish after swimming the freestyle in 1:46.99. Leah Luckett from Kings also appeared with her 1:50.37 time. 200 Individual Medley: Notre Dame
Beechwood Continued from Page 1B
Beechwood struck again when Hergott lofted a long pass to Berger, who leaped to beat a defender and had the ball pop out of his hands. Berger corralled the ball on the rebound and sprinted the rest of the way for a 43-yard touchdown. “Our receivers played awesome, made a bunch of plays for me and made me look good tonight,” Hergott said. Beechwood held Ryle to 41 total yards until the Tigers started putting backups out on defense late in the third quarter. Bradyn Lyons led three sustained drives for Ryle after that, completing several passes to Jameson Smith and Will Watkins for big gains. “We had to make sure to make them drive the ball and not give up big plays,”
Ursuline Academy's Mallory Hanna took home third place in the girls diving competition at the 2020 Southwest Ohio Swimming and Diving Classic, Jan. 19. GEOFF BLANKENSHIP/FOR THE ENQUIRER
Lakota East's Jacob McDonald reacts after wining the boys 500-yard freestyle at the swimming and diving championships in Canton Ohio, Saturday, Feb. 22. TONY TRIBBLE/FOR THE ENQUIRER
Academy freshman Lainy Kruger swam the medley in 2:00.50, good for 27th in the nation. Paige Striley from Lakota West (2:02.98) and Reese Lugbill from Mason (2:04.04) followed on the list. 50 Free: Hill represented Springboro as a solo swimmer, fi nishing the freestyle in 23.04. Matesa (23.07) also represented Ursuline Academy in the nation's top 35 times. 100 Fly: Mason's Kiara Anchrum swam a 54.48 and Madeline Hart of Turpin swam a 55.28 to be the area's AllAmerican representatives in the event. 100 Free: Matesa appears for Ursuline Academy for the third time, putting together the 28th-best times with her 50.03. Springboro's Hill also gets her third nod with a 50.15 fi nish. Phoebe Wright from Walnut Hills just cracked the All-American list, fi nishing her 100 Free in 51.01. 500 Free: Hastings took Anderson to the nation's top 15 times with her 4:48.84. Hannah Cech from Lakota East also earned a nod, swimming the 400 yards in 4:54.03. 200 Freestyle Relay: Mason continued grabbing honors, adding the area's best and only time in the relay. The Mason team of Kiara Anchrum, Dalton, Tiana Anchrum and Maggie Hojnacki swam the relay in 1:35.53. 100 Back: Only Springboro's Clough reached the All-American list from the area after she swam the even in 55.15, the 69th-best national time. 100 Breast: Kruger picks up a second
Rash said. Ryle put pressure on Hergott at times in the fi rst half. Senior Wilson Pendleton had two sacks on Hergott and a tackle for a loss on a designed draw play by the Beechwood QB. Pendleton added a third sack in the second half. “Coming in, we knew they were a bigger school,” Hergott said. “They got bigger guys up front. Their rush game was really good so I had to get the ball out of my hands quickly. They hurt us a little bit but we ended up doing well and making plays.” Beechwood hosts Dixie Heights next while Ryle plays at Scott County. Ryle 0 0 0 14-14 Beechwood 7 14 7 7-35 B – Berger 1 run (Graman kick) B – Berger 3 run (Graman kick) B – Waddell 21 interception return (Graman kick) B – Berger 43 pass from Hergott (Graman kick) R – Smith 15 pass from Lyons (Rogers kick) B – Mason 50 pass from Hergott (Graman kick) R – Watkins 50 pass from Lyons (Rogers kick) Records: R 1-2, B 2-1.
Aaron Sequeira celebrates for Walnut Hills after posting a new record for the boys 50-yard freestyle at the 2020 Southwest Ohio Swimming and Diving Classic, Jan. 18. GEOFF BLANKENSHIP/FOR THE ENQUIRER
Anderson's Grace Hastings reacts during the state swimming and diving championships in Canton, Ohio, Saturday, Feb. 22. TONY TRIBBLE/FOR THE ENQUIRER
All-American nod from her freshman season for Notre Dame Academy, appearing as No. 29 in the nation with her 1:02.20 fi nish time. Claudia Butterfi eld (1:02.86) again appeared for Ursuline Academy and Reese Lugbill (1:03.57) reached for Mason. 400 Freestyle Relay: Area teams earned three more mentions on the AllAmerican list. Springboro (Susec, Clough, Arneson, Hill) led the way with
NewCath Continued from Page 1B
its best in the second quarter, scoring 10 points off a Malaki Herndon touchdown run and a fi eld goal. While he didn’t score, many of NewCath’s yards came from the game’s MVP, Joey Runyon. If it weren’t for these fi rst-half points, the game may have ended differently. The defensive pressure wasn’t as present on Jeff erson in the second half as it was in the fi rst. Even though Newport once again only scored once in the half, its off ense played much better in the late game. Their second-half scoring drive took over seven minutes off the clock before James Martin ran the ball into the endzone to make it a one-score game. Newport kept its opponent off the fi eld, and multiple
a 3:28.46, No. 55 in the nation. Ursuline Academy (Elizabeth Naylor, Butterfi eld, Grill, Matesa) and Mason (Reese Lugbill, Ashley Lugbill, Tiana Anchrum, Kiara Anchrum) also made appearances. Dive: Mallory Hanna from Ursuline Academy and Sarah Krusinski from Mount Notre Dame had diving scores high enough to be named All-Americans.
times the Wildcats came so close to either tying the game up or taking the lead after Martin’s score. NewCath wasn’t ready to allow a miracle, though. No matter how close the Wildcats got, they were never quite close enough. The Thoroughbreds had two fourth-down stops in the second half to stop Newport from taking their lead away, and the fumble recovery at the end sealed the deal. “We’re just thankful that we won the football game,” Lickert said. In hopes of continuing its winning streak, NewCath will host Holmes next. Newport will see itself visiting Bellevue in its next game. Newport Central Catholic 7 10 0 0 - 17 Newport 7 0 7 0 - 14 N - Ethan Jefferson 6-yard run (Maxwell kick good) NCC - Justin Schneider recovers fumble in the endzone (Lavin kick good) NCC - Malaki Herndon 2-yard run (Lavin kick good) NCC - Sam Lavin 36-yard fi eld goal N - James Martin 3-yard run (Maxwell kick good) Records: Newport Central Catholic (3-0) Newport (1-2)
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2020
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SCHOOL NEWS Student artist is a two-time winner: Iris Sullivan takes fi rst in O’Donnell Invitational again Iris Sullivan, a Holy Cross High School junior from Latonia, KY, has won the Connie O’Donnell Student Art Invitational for the second year in a row. Iris’s winning entry, a charcoal drawing showing a young girl gazing at the Eiff el Tower, was submitted by her art teacher, Craig Lipscomb. It earned her a $50 prize plus $500
for her school’s art program. The competition is hosted by Behringer-Crawford Museum in honor of the late artist Connie O’Donnell of Villa Hills to off er talented local high school students the opportunity to showcase their work during the museum’s annual freshART event, taking place on Oct. 4. First runner-up in this year’s competition was Aaron Mufl e, a senior at Covington Catholic High School, submitted by art teacher Tim Haders. Second runner-up was Jenna Shriver, a senior
at Notre Dame Academy, entered by teacher Matt Eckerle. Iris said she has been interested in art from about age 10. She said she had always admired a still life of roses that hung on her living room wall. The piece, which was painted by her aunt, was so intriguing for her that it led her to paint her own still lifes. An appreciation for art runs in her entire family, who hold their own competitions to take photos from which Iris is to make paintings. And a photo is
where Iris received her inspiration for her winning piece, Ashlyn on the Del Trocadero. Her charcoal drawing was originally a gift for a family friend to commemorate a visit to France, she said, adding that she personally knows the young girl she depicted in her drawing. Winning the O’Donnell invitational two years in a row has been a confi dence boost for Iris, she said. A self-proSee SCHOOL NEWS, Page 5B
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Alexandria 10509 Michael Drive, unit 12: Georgette and Michael Lyons to Linda and Gary Belden; $89,000 11016 Hayfield Drive: Heather and Jason Wooton to Sara Sunderman and Jonathan Carmichael; $310,000 1168 Parkside Drive: Robin Mulloy to Holley Adkins; $251,000 1253 Summerlake Drive: Christina and Henry Nagel to Erin Walton-Spencer; $245,000 1433 Popular Ridge Road: Gary Landell to Donna Hill; $120,000 16 Southwood Drive: Amy and John Woodredge to Chad Scott; $289,000 28 Trapp Court: Bennie Whitmer to Tyler Moul; $178,000 7813 Alexandria Pike: Westmark Properties, LLC to Janet and Roger Bezold; $177,500 788 Yorkshire Drive, unit 17-204: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Janis Reynolds; $236,500 790 Yorkshire Drive, unit 17-104: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to John Ruthman; $207,000 794 Yorkshire Drive, unit 17-305: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Michael Sanzo; $160,000 802 Harmony Valley Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Megan Tucker and Charles Griffin; $284,000 8420 Persimmon Grove Pike: Billy Bruin to Wendy Yeung and Christopher Clark; $147,000 9622 Sweetwater Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Casandra and Patrick Egan; $239,000
Bellevue 132 Ward Ave.: Shirley Randolph to Clare Healy; $156,000 176 O'Fallon Ave.: Robyn and Anthony Sheehy to Megan Thomas; $135,000 239 Berry Ave.: ACI Properties, LLC to Jeffery Cliff; $110,000 266 Van Voast Ave.: Douglas Arlinghaus to Wayne Enterprises, LLC; $115,000 303 Eden Ave., unit 5A: Victoria Griffin to Raymond Bell; $1,350,000 310 Bellepointe Commons, unit 61: Lindsay Dunn to Lisa Herman; $98,000 432 Berry Ave.: Ollberding Investments, LLC to Billie and Elmer Nickell; $172,000
Bromley 101 Shelby St.: Deborah Gabbard to Rachael and Alex Martinez; $130,000 223 Boone St.: Kelley Mills to Caitlyn Todd; $85,000
Burlington 1740 Val Court: Roberto Torreggiana to Dorothy Lucas; $106,000 2268 Medlock Lane, unit 311: Sicom Investments, LLC to Anthony Funk; $102,500 2308 Sawmill Court, unit 206: Charise Solomon to Katherine Cole; $102,000 2818 Rolling Green Court: Diane and Ricky Laudermilk to Cynthia Doerflein; $305,000
2838 Coachlight Lane: Pat Ohara to Alitta Barnett; $250,000 2851 Rolling Green Court: Alta and Benjamin Cabrera to Colena and Gregory Weldon; $300,000 3134 Burlington Pike: Tonya and Timothy Kazior to Alysssa Kazior; $120,000 3940 Country Mill Ridge, unit 22-303: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Anthony Reece; $191,000 4021 Twilight Ridge: Heidi and Billy Lozano to Alisha and Philip Sanders; $255,000 5512 Carolina Way: Emily Owen to Robert Ridder Jr.; $168,000 5925 Perlate St.: Rachel and Sean Flynn to James Mefford; $208,000 7440 Big Horn Court: Penny Barton to Haleigh and Alexander Wellman; $210,000 7696 Falls Creek Way: Donna and Timothy Scott to Sarah and Jason Esperaza; $247,000
Cold Spring 5526 Dodsworth Lane: Danielle Perez to Melissa McGroarty and Douglas Simonson; $142,000 702 Queensway Court: Connie and James Mills to Allyson Burton; $134,000
Covington 109 Winding Way, unit F: Elmer Kerth Jr. to Marilyn Compton; $84,000 1110 Panorama Drive: Gabrielle Stutler and Mark Stutler to Julea and William Remke; $925,000 1150 Hands Pike: Lois and Stephen Klaine to Michael Burch; $370,000 1209 Garrard St.: Meredith and James Podmajersky to Resolve Properties, LLC; $55,000 202 E. 26th St.: Brandon Remley to Stallion Investments, LLC; $65,000 2106 Siena Ave., unit 4-102: Fischer Attached Homes III, LLC to Elaine and Adam Impellizzieri; $167,500 220 W. 5th St.: Debra and Joseph Mardis to AS Capital, LLC; $125,000 2218 Custer Lane: Margaret and Richard Riehle Jr. to Rachel and Patrick Hyde; $185,000 2223 Scott Boulevard: Daria and Aaron Johnson to Ashley and Andrew Minges; $210,000 2240 Amici Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Marylou and Michael Westling; $359,000 2455 Rolling Hills Drive, unit 7-305: Zach Gasdorf to Meredith Brungs; $143,000 2510 Camellia Court: Justin Blanchet to Ashley Valerius; $172,500 31 Valeside Drive: Kellie Havlin to Kyle Clark; $167,000 315 E. 47th St.: Holly Adkins to Aaron Warren; $145,000 4455 Urlage Court: Diane and Thomas Seiter to Mark Clos; $208,000 513 Pershing Ave.: Eugenie and Anthony Kreutzjans to Tripura, LLC; $70,000 573 Taylor Mill Road: Casey and Jacob Cheesman to Steven Tucker; $130,000 8461 Decoursey Pike: State of the Art Property
Solutions, LLC to Sabrina and Richard Lawson II; $163,000 9116 Tamarack Court: Marjorie and David Workman to Tyler Schmidt; $180,000 9189 Hawksridge Drive: Natalie and Neil Patterson to Catherine Cruze and Dustin Ramler; $165,000
Crescent Springs 2480 High Crossing Drive: Katrina and Eric Marcotte to Ashlee and Joel Clore; $295,000
Edgewood 558 Kinsella Drive: Mary Ginney to Dixie and Shawn Meyer; $238,000
Elsmere 811 Main St.: Robert Iles to Schott Schumaker; $123,500
Erlanger 203 James Ave.: Cynthia and Neil Ahern to Donald Bailey; $185,000 22 Sunset Ave.: Alexander Kenwright to Kyle Lehmkuhl; $175,000 305 McAlpin Ave.: Shelley Dastillung to Tamara and Steven Crupper; $93,000 3334 Cedar Tree Lane: Kimberly and Adam Rhein to Sean Dunigan; $178,000 3405-3407 Misty Creek Drive: Julia and John Conaboy to Criag Winterman; $180,000 3929 Spire Circle, unit 120-D: Angela Miller to Jean and Eugene Kocik; $157,000 699 Maple Tree Lane: Torie and Joseph Neiheisel to Ronnie Pitcock III; $165,000
Florence 10 Tee St.: Donald Martin and Donald Reilly to Bradley Sturdivant; $137,000 152 Saddlebrook Lane, unit 481: Anthony Delisio to Martese Henderson; $112,500 156 Saddlebrook Lane, unit 371: Shehroz Tusunov and Rano Ashurova to Britany Bent; $109,000 1659 Trace Drive: Jill and Steven Popham to Alex French; $260,000 1911 Cliffview Lane: Melanie and Barry Milson to Susanna and Michael Schwendermann; $206,000 2744 Pebble Creek Way: Maurene and Matthew Werner to Samantha and Matthew Dews; $240,000 32 Rio Grande Circle, unit 1: Kelly Edwards and Jonathan Edwards to Mallory Edwards; $80,000 37 Red Clover Court: P. Anne Upton to Carrie and Dustin Hopp; $260,000 7 Smith St.: Cheryl and Ryan Jump to Olivia and Erin Kirry-Fuqua; $138,000 7065 Running Fox Court: William Ellis to Christine and Troy Scott; $349,000 7146 Thornwood Lane: Melissa and Arthur Santomo to Timothy Okermmiri and Aaron Okemmiri; $395,000 7740 Ravenswood Drive: Kari and William Watkins to Otilia and Weston Chimbwanda; $177,000 8164 Woodcreek Drive: Sarah and Adrian Landis to Donna and Roger Weddle; $372,000
9270 Tranquilty Drive: Keisha Walton to Michael Neale; $376,000 9793 Windsor Way: Gretchen and Chrisopher Hughes to Jennifer Lauer and Sean Parr; $380,000
Fort Mitchell 2493 Jerrys Lane: TakKwong and Ngan-Sai Yip to Lin Chen; $295,000 3916 Old Madison Pike: Anthony Asalon to Douglas Dorsel; $135,000 96 Pleasant Ridge Ave.: Dorothy and Donald Hatfield to Diane Bihl; $134,000
Fort Thomas 18 Warren Court: Whitley and Luke Stein to Christina and Randy Kash; $187,000 215 S. Grand Ave.: Heather and Saleel Muzumdar to Phillip Dinn; $542,000 300 Hill St., unit 301: Laura and Michael Randall to Martha and Donald Seibert; $185,000 45 Indiana Ave.: Laura and Michael Thomason to Jennifer Toms; $255,000 450 Chesapeake Ave.: Samiam Properties, LLC to Scott Bonner; $172,500 62 Mel Lawn Drive: Lisa Hemmingway, Darlene and William Hemmingway to Kimberly Tramuta and Nicholas Shipley; $445,000
Fort Wright 549 Fincastle Lane: Susan West to Danny Ferrell; $215,000
Hebron 1090 Breckenridge Lane: Michelle Peters to Anne Atwood; $285,500 1632 Woodfield Court: Carla and Bradford Carr to Mattew Rowe; $245,000 1761 Elijah Creek Road: Kelli and James Rudd to Kareli Pinto-Lazaro and Luis Rivera; $175,000 2970 Emma Lane: Joseph Frey to Corbin Fox-Ash and Hunter Pracht; $193,500 3831 Sugarberry Drive: Ashlle and Adam Thomas to 3831 Sugarberry, LLC; $195,000
Highland Heights 28 Highland Meadows Circle, unit 12: Jennifer and Chuck Curd to Ryan Buezek; $115,500
Independence 10786 Glenhurst Drive: Kelsey and Thomas Murrell to Robert Luke; $182,000 1084 Amblewood Court: Shelli and Timothy Seiter to Renee Steimle; $225,000 1849 Autumn Maple Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Hannah and Jordan Mabe; $226,500 1871 Forest Run Drive: Kim Graboskey to Selena Moses; $277,000 2198 Hartland Boulevard: Valerie and Donnie Poore to Blake Daniels; $222,500 44 Apple Drive: U.S. Bank National Association to Catherine Harms; $71,500 4859 Open Meadow: Barbara and David Reiss to Melinda and Randall Staviski; $314,000 559 Tupelo Drive: Caitlyn
Todd to Kristen and Nicholas Kaliin; $209,500 6387 Alexandra Court: Jessica and Michael Spille to Joanne Rademacher and Keith Neace; $213,000 729 Ridgepoint Drive: Johnna and William Bradley to Amy Scales and Joseph Buchanan; $215,000 736 Stablewatch Drive: Jo Ann Brinkman to Alyssa Schomaker; $250,000
Ludlow 413 Elm St.: Cheryl Spann-Schnaitter to Austin Corsmeier; $199,000 423-429 Oak St.: Rebecca Moix to Jennifer Joplin; $152,500
Newport 110 15th St.: Kelly and Evan Flairity to Emily and Justin Carabello; $201,500 329 Riddle Place: Alicia and Daniel Plavsic III to Megan Major and Natalie Ford; $155,000 6 20th St.: Danielle and Maxwell Redder to David Hart; $141,000 718 E. 9th St.: Emily and Justin Carabello to Stuart Gladney; $287,000 939 Columbia St.: Thomas and Christy Hiance to Deborah Smith; $118,500
Park Hills 526 Scenic Park Drive: Steven Skidmore to Ashley and Matthew Titus; $75,000
Southgate 102 W. Walnut St.: Sandra and Edward Vicars to Earlen and Joseph Ritter; $59,000 222 Beech Road: Alison and Garrett Desch to Chad Workman; $168,000
Taylor Mill 5142 Taylor Mill Road: Sally and Philip Wright to Gloria and Samuel Ryle; $175,000 5424 Stone Hill Drive: Lindsey and Eric Field to Keisha King; $232,000
Union 10559 Mountain Laurel Way: Lori and David Osborne to Wendy and Michael Ferris; $419,000 1076 Dustwhirl Drive: Debra and Jeffrey Scheele to Danielle and Andrew Albertson; $517,000 10809 Doral Court: Amanda Stanken to Charles
Schindler; $218,500 12056 Jockey Club Drive: Emily and Patrick Keal to Keith Puckett; $485,000 1213 Citation Drive: Sandra and Phillip Damstrom to Gretchen and Ryan Hartzler; $494,000 14995 Prat Court: The Drees Company to Lauren and Michael McNaughton; $494,000 2360 Slaney Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Megan Willman and Tyler McKenzie; $303,500 3664 Evensong Drive: Lisa and John Marshall Jr. to Kirsten and Thomas Kloenich; $328,000 7020 O'Connell Place: Rebecca and Dennis Schmeising to Britan and Clay Brandon; $325,000 851 Man O War Boulevard: Maronda Homes of Cincinnati, LLC to Niki and Mark Stinde; $515,000 9524 Symphony Court: Debbie and Jay Arlinghaus to Donna and Karl Langhorst; $378,500 954 Traemore Place: The Drees Company to Heather and Levi Cushing; $518,000 9759 Spruce Lane: Richard Lohr Jr. to Jacqueline and Mike Zwick; $390,000 9915 Burleigh Lane: Gail Cecconi and Donald Cecconi to Vickie and Donald Brutke; $440,000
Verona 1920 Stephenson Mill Road: Deborah and Joseph Cresci Jr. and Hearts Meadow Farm, LLC to Shannon and Mike Blandford; $1,040,000
Villa Hills 1045 Brookville Court: Alice and Robert Westbrook to Erin Silvestri and Victor Niemer Jr.; $320,000 14 Stevens Court: Ashley and Matthew Rowe to Christian Howard; $250,000 2541 Thirs Landing: Loren Flanigan, Brian Hass and Bradley Haas to Linda Linde; $405,000 2558 Buttermilk Pike: Jennifer Ingala to Valerie and David Poore; $353,000 832 Wesley Drive: Mary and Michael Behymer to Chan Kung and Van Thluai; $190,000 See REAL ESTATE, Page 5B
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SCHOOL NEWS Continued from Page 4B
claimed perfectionist, Iris said she can pass hours drawing her own interpretations of the images she fi nds. “I set weekends off to the side where I can just spend the whole day doing art. And I go to my aunt’s house, because she’s kind of like a drill sergeant. I’ll stay on one area of the art for a while and not move on.” Iris is broadening her skills by taking a variety of art classes at her school and other local institutions. Though her favorite medium is charcoal, she is experimenting in other forms of art, especially pointillism. When asked if she plans to enter the O’Donnell competition again in her senior year, Iris responded, “Defi nitely.” Iris’s drawing and submissions by other student artists are on display at BCM now through the freshART livestream auction on Sunday, Oct. 4. To buy tickets and view and bid on pieces by more than 50 local artists, go to freshART2020.givesmart.com. Proceeds from freshART benefi t the museum’s youth education programs. For more information, call (859) 4914003, email info@bcmuseum.org or visit www.bcmuseum.org. Sara Braden, Behringer-Crawford Museum
GO Pantry selects Junior ambassador council GO Pantry has chosen four Junior Board members for the 2020-21 school year. In addition, 15 students from various Northern Kentucky high schools were selected for the Junior Ambassador council. Both programs are designed to foster leadership skills amongst the youth in
Iris Sullivan with her drawing, “Ashlyn on the Del Trocadero.” PROVIDED
our community, all the while instilling knowledge of non-profi t work, and exposing students to food insecurity issues within our community. Dr. Holly Danneman, GO Pantry board member and adult lead for the junior council, along with Matt McIntire (Asst preceptor for council) led the selection process, with the assistance of current junior members.
After interviewing many qualifi ed candidates, and taking into consideration each applicant’s leadership potential, benefi cence, dependability, innovation, understanding of food insecurity, and communication skills, the following students were selected: h Vincent Croyle (SHDHS senior)Junior Board h Griffi n Gould (SHDHS senior)-Ju-
nior Board h Corinne Mozea (Ignite SK junior)Junior Board h Jenna Danneman (Notre Dame senior)-Junior Board secretary Ambassadors: h Rachel Raziano (Villa junior) h Ben Dropic (Villa junior) h Noah Francis (SHDHS junior) h Brooke Murphy (Notre Dame senior) h Sarah Woodrum (Notre Dame junior) h Annie Heuker (Notre Dame junior) h Darielle Kontcho (Ignite Dixie senior) h Tra Setter (Ignite SK senior) h Carson Woolums (Cooper senior) h Emily Wolf (Cooper freshman) h Ella Leicht (Cooper Junior) h Ashley Downing (Ryle Sophomore) h Joey Sander (Ryle junior) h Emma Gatlin (Ryle sophomore) h Matt Setters (SHDHS senior) GO Pantry’s mission is to feed food insecure children in NKY by working closely with school resource offi cers to identify children in need. The creation and development of our Junior Board and Ambassador program is an important part of our “kids feed kids” initiative. As junior board members and ambassadors, these students will serve as a voice for GO Pantry in both our schools and in our community. Most importantly, this council will be a resounding voice for the children who need and depend on GO Pantry for a reliable food source. Both Junior board members and Ambassadors will also be an integral part of GO Pantry’s leadership team for volunteer events and community outreach activities. Holly Danneman, GO Pantry
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Continued from Page 4B
Walton 11029 Pelphry Lane: Erica and Steve Wagner to Ellen and Matthew Gregory; $270,000 1154 Camin Lane: Alyssa Lewis
to Bryn and Clay Cuzick; $380,000 12070 Arbor Run Drive: Carol Hosseiniour to Louisa and Daniel Pint; $250,000 12368 Gaines Way: Celia and Neil Silvia to Jennifer and Matthew Hammond; $450,000
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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B
No. 0927 WORD LADDDERS
1
BY SAM TRABUCCO / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
49 ‘‘Agreed’’ 1 Something blurred to 53 Philosopher who avoid trademark tutored Nero infringement 55 Message made with 5 ‘‘Well, that’s cutout letters, stereotypically ridiculous!’’ 9 One method of coffee- 57 Chowder ingredient making 60 Game in which each player starts with a 13 Fully intends to score of 501 18 Reason for people to 61 West Bank grp. hide 62 Social-media avatar, 20 Bit of ancient text for short 21 Home of Roma 65 Thing given as a 22 Expert on nutrition concession 23 Bantering remark 66 Castle defense 24 Feature of Captain 67 Nobel winner Ahab Morrison 25 Many M.I.T. grads: 68 One who has a lot to Abbr. offer? 26 End of many a name 71 Yellow variety of on the periodic table quartz 28 Doctor’s hand 73 Norse troublemaker covering 76 Spotted 30 Tokyo, before it was 77 Fenway team, Tokyo familiarly 31 Not wanted 78 ‘‘However hard I try 34 Pop star Grande, to . . . ’’ fans 81 Child-care expert 35 French movie LeShan theaters 82 Parts of ziggurats 37 ‘‘Ki-i-i-i-nda’’ 85 Twin of Jacob in the 38 ‘‘You’re on!’’ Bible 41 Black-market, say 86 Lifetime-achievement ceremonies, e.g. 43 Occasion for male bonding, in modern 91 Bequeaths lingo 93 Difference between 46 Pressing need when dark and light, in on the go? a way 48 Part of a media-sales 95 Bacterium in some raw meat team, informally 96 Center of a cobbler Online subscriptions: Today’s 99 Clorox cleanser puzzle and more 101 Leaves alone than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords 102 Uses a modern ($39.95 a year). engine
106 Kenan’s partner on an old sitcom 107 The ‘‘L’’ of B.L.M. 108 ‘‘Geaux Tigers!’’ sch. 110 Love of money, per I Timothy 6:10 113 Brand of nail polish 114 Appeasing 117 School closing? 118 One of the former Big Three information services, along with CompuServe and Prodigy 119 Words from a present giver 121 Sweetheart, in Rome 123 ‘‘That one’s mine!’’ 128 Word often confused with ‘‘least’’ 129 Frenzied 130 Sweet Mexican dessert 131 Backsides, to Brits 132 Certain sneak 133 Caesar’s accusation 134 Like a fox
RELEASE DATE: 10/4/2020
DOWN
1 Counterculture drug, for short 2 Geneva accord? 3 Newbie 4 Chose 5 Bit of butter 6 Govt. org. with the motto ‘‘Fidelity, Bravery, Integrity’’ 7 Dramatic touches 8 Comedian Judy 9 Nickname for basketball star Julius Erving 10 Is sorry about
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Sam Trabucco is an American cryptocurrency trader based in Hong Kong. When he’s not working, he enjoys playing board and card games, especially Magic: The Gathering and poker. Sam says one of his top priorities as a crossword constructor is to make his puzzle relatable to younger solvers. ‘‘I want this hobby to remain relevant forever!’’ This is his 25th puzzle for The Times. — W.S.
AC R O S S
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11 Photo-sharing app, familiarly 12 14th-century king of Aragon 13 Written using an outline 14 Witch 15 Basketball star nicknamed ‘‘The Answer’’ 16 Kind of test with unproven accuracy 17 Largest city of Nigeria 19 Word ladder, Part 1 21 Big milestone for a start-up 27 Slangy ‘‘I messed up’’ 29 Word ladder, Part 2 31 Old food-label std. 32 Where an auto racer retires? 33 Enjoyed home cooking, say 36 ‘‘I Love It’’ duo ____ Pop 37 Letter-shaped beam 39 When repeated, king of Siam’s refrain in ‘‘The King and I’’ 40 Result of peace talks 42 Some smartphones 44 Oppressive ruler 45 Lacking + or –, electrically 47 ‘‘____ and Janis’’ (comic) 50 Whirlybirds 51 Ă“scar’s ‘‘other’’ 52 Gas that’s lighter than air 54 Nile danger 56 Fire in ‘‘Jane Eyre,’’ e.g. 58 Like most lions 59 Mrs., abroad
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63 Word ladder, Part 3 64 Subsided 66 áƒŚ áƒŚáƒŚáƒŚ and áƒŚáƒŚáƒŚáƒŚáƒŚ, say 69 Where to find some cliffhangers? 70 Unpopular legislation of 1773 71 N.F.L. referee, at the start of overtime 72 ____ Valley (San Francisco area) 74 Gem that’s also a name 75 New Zealander
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112 Prospectors’ finds 115 Mel of baseball 116 Understand, informally 120 Clarifying word on a school-reunion name tag 122 Tinder bio info 124 Amazon worker 125 ‘‘Kill Bill’’ co-star Lucy 126 Jazz composer Beiderbecke 127 Like a fox
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McConnell serenaded with car horns, bullhorns from upset voters Scott Wartmanm Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK
FORT WRIGHT – People unhappy with U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell drove to his work Sept. 21 to let him know their feelings Car horns and bullhorns serenaded the Senate majority leader’s offi ce in Fort Wright. The protesters’ cars bore fl ags and signs labeling McConnell as a “hypocrite” and portraying him as the Grim Reaper. Similar “caravans” also circled McConnell’s offi ces throughout Kentucky and Washington, D.C. It was organized by the Poor People’s Campaign, an anti-poverty movement led by Protestant minister the Rev. William Barber and theologian Liz Theoharis. Protesters in Fort Wright included a mix of Democrats, labor leaders and people who work in religious social service organizations. What message did they want to send McConnell? “Well, I’d say get the hell out of the way, but I don’t know if you can print that,” said Betti Glynn, 77, of Anderson Township. Glynn and the dozens of protesters in Northern Kentucky wanted McConnell to pass a COVID-19 relief bill and police reform. The death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has heightened their anxiety. They called for McConnell to wait on appointing a new justice. They called him a hypocrite for blocking President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, in 2016. McConnell has said the Senate will vote on President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee. Glynn has two grandchildren with Type 1 diabetes. She’s worried a stronger conservative majority on the Supreme Court will gut the Aff ordable Care Act’s protections on pre-existing conditions. That also concerns Louise Lawarre. The 71-year-old Anderson Township resident has a 6-year-old grandson also
A protestor holds a flag out of her car window during the Poor People’s Campaign “National Call for Moral Revival” protest of Mitch McConnell’s refusal to pass COVID-19 related bills at Sen. Mitch McConnell’s office in Fort Wright on Monday, Sept. 21, 2020. HANNAH RUHOFF
with Type 1 diabetes. She waved a fl ag depicting the Senate Majority Leader majority leader as the Grim Reaper and calling for McConnell to pass a full COVID-19 stimulus package. “There’s a ban on using pre-existing conditions to deny health care access, and without that we know what insurance companies did before,” Lawarre said. “We know many people were denied health care coverage because they have pre-existing conditions. I’ve got a string of them myself. But at the moment it’s my grandson whose life would be in immediate jeopardy.” Lawarre, Glynn and dozens of other residents from all over the Greater Cincinnati region met in a parking lot in Fort Wright. They drove a half-mile to the nondescript, gray concrete offi ce building on Dixie Highway that holds McConnell’s Northern Kentucky offi ces.
The din from the car horns and bullhorns attracted the attention of the Fort Wright police. The police asked the protesters to stop honking in deference to the non-Senatorial offi ces in the building. The protesters complied and continued to drive in circles around the offi ce building for an hour. The Poor People’s Campaign streamed the protest online with the other protests around Kentucky and Washington, D.C. “I think our message was heard,” said Serena Owen, an Elsmere resident with the Kentucky Poor People’s Campaign. “I know we still have a lot to do. We hope that our senator, Mitch McConnell, we’re going to try to reach out to him and will try to get him to show up for Kentucky.” When asked for a response, McConnell’s offi ce referred to his remarks on
the Senate fl oor on Sept. 21. McConnell didn’t seem swayed by his critics. McConnell and other Republicans have argued there’s nothing unprecedented if the Senate quickly votes on Trump’s nominee. In 2016, the federal government was divided, with the Democrats in the White House and the Republicans controlling the Senate. Now the Republicans control both the Senate and the White House. McConnell sees voting on Trump’s Supreme Court pick as the will of the people. “Perhaps more than any other single issue, the American people strengthened this Senate majority to keep confi rming this president’s impressive judicial nominees who respect our Constitution and understand the proper role of a judge,” McConnell said.
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Explore these 7 wacky wonders of Kentucky Everything from aliens to a fork in the road
Before arriving in Louisville in 2011, it spent the night naked and alone, fl at on its back on a truck bed in New York City, something the original can’t claim. Along with a vintage beaded stretch limo, the hotel has left an endearing, wonderfully wacky gift to Louisville street life with its replica of the David.
Pat McDonogh Louisville Courier Journal USA TODAY NETWORK
There’s plenty of wackiness and kitsch to be found along Kentucky’s interstates, much of it spiraling gleefully outward from Mammoth Cave. The thought being, if you’re willing to overpay to walk through a cave, you’ll overpay to see a wild west gunfi ght. With this list of unique Kentucky attractions, I was looking for something more than trashy commerce. I went looking for the passion that comes from the heart where the people responsible for these venues went all in and a fast buck was not the motivation. One is an ode to one man’s infatuation with ventriloquism. There are gravesites and re-creations of two of the world’s greatest antiquities on the list as well. There’s also a large metal pun in Simpson County and a shootout with little green men. Let's take a weird trip. Here are seven strange wonders of Kentucky.
FORK IN THE ROAD
Kentucky Stonehenge was built by former mayor Chester Fryer on the side yard of his home in Mundfordville, Kentucky. PHOTOS BY PAT MCDONOGH/COURIER JOURNAL
50-FOOT GOLDEN STATUE OF DAVID Golden David replica, Seventh and Main streets, downtownLouisville He looks west with a blank expression from his perch at Seventh and Main streets in downtown Louisville. There is a saying in the arts — if you can’t make it good, make it big. The thinking behind this is; if it’s this big, it has to be good. And gold. Turkish conceptual artist Serkan Özkaya had never seen Michelangelo’s masterpiece sculpture of David when he began creating his homage for the 21c Museum Hotel. At nearly 50 feet tall, including the base, it’s huge, double the size of the original in Florence. But it’s gaudy in its shiny gold paint, out of place — a crass tribute to the original. Özkaya pays respect to the original masterpiece by super-sizing it, a fi ttingly American way to pay homage. On Özkaya’s fi rst attempt to erect his version of the masterpiece, the statue
At the fork where Bunch Road meets Uhls Road in Simpson County On a lovely ride out through the unknown stretches of gentleman farmer land, there is an eternal question that we all must face. Left, or right? As America’s great mangler of euphemisms, Yogi Berra, once advised, "when you come to a fork in the road, take it." This roadside attraction all began when a group of students in a FranklinSimpson High School welding class decided to construct a 21-foot steel fork, at the fork where Bunch Road meets Uhls Road in Simpson County. It’s the most popular entrenching tool in the county. In two short years, it’s become a regular tourist attraction, up there with Kenny Perry’s Golf Course and the fi berglass bull at the Lucky Lotto Vape Store. The monument has also been accepted into the patriotic bosom of the county and is often decorated for national holidays with red, white and blue decorations. The fork is a 700-pound steel punchline in a living Far Side cartoon where a farmer and his wife sit frozen in their pickup staring, unable to decide.
KENTUCKY STONEHENGE
The supersized, gold painted recreation of the Michelangelo's 'David' stand on Main Street in Louisville, Kentucky in front of the 21c Hotel.
The Fork in the Road at the intersection of Bunch and Uhls Roads in Simpson County, Kentucky. The fork was constructed by students in a welding class at Franklin-Simpson High School.
collapsed and was rebuilt before making its way to the Derby City. Constructed of fi berglass and steel, the replica is
made from a 3D rendering of the original David. A twin to Louisville’s golden David stabds in a park in Turkey.
Take exit 65 off Interstate 65 in Munfordville. Follow US 31 and take a right on Lynn Avenue. You can't miss it. Just a mile or so off Interstate 65 in Munfordville is Kentucky Stonehenge. Former Mayor Chester Fryer says this ginormous circle of rocks is the same diameter, same number and has the same space between them as Stonehenge. They are all aligned with the points of the compass just like the original, but See WONDERS, Page 11B
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Wonders Continued from Page 10B
much more accessible to the average Kentucky druid. “My wife thinks I’m crazy,” admits 86-year-old Fryer. “One day I was on the computer and saw Stonehenge and I said, ‘I can build that.’ I sat there and studied it and fi gured out how many feet across it is and where each rock sits. It’s built just like the fi rst one. I did it all myself. I never could work with nobody because they get to telling you how to do it and mess you up," he said. “In 2000, I went over a thousand acres of ground getting the rocks. I bought ‘em all for $10 a piece. I cut the ends off and poured cement around them and stood ‘em up. That’s the reason I can’t breathe good now, from cutting all those stones. I’ve probably only got $4,000 to $5,000 in it.” And just like the original, Fryer says that on the Summer Solstice, “the 21st day of June, the sun shines right through the center and it’s got a magnetic pull too.” “People from all over the world have been here to see Stonehenge. People are here taking pictures all the time, 20-25 people come by each day to see it," he said. While the original Stonehenge has existed for thousands of years, Fryer can only speculate on the Munfordville version. “Everything has its day,” he said.
LITTLE GREEN MEN OF CHRISTIAN COUNTY Pennyrile Area Museum, 217 E. 9th St. Hopkinsville 270-887-4270. Tours by appointment. Look for The Little Green Men Festival in Kelly, to return next August 2021. It was a hot night on Glennie Lankford’s farm in Kelly, Kentucky on Aug. 21, 1955. She enjoyed having the whole family home, including her son Elmer “Lucky” Sutton, friend Billy Ray Taylor and their wives. All home for the weekend from their carnival jobs, joining Glennie, son Jake and her three small children. The family played cards and around 7 p.m. Billy Ray went outside to get water from the well. He noticed a bright object
The Fred Hale Shopping Center in Scottsville, Kentucky, where former owner, Miss Dynamite, a dog, is buried at the base of the strip mall's sign.
Glenda Sutton Morris' father, Lucky, was involved in the 1955 shootout with space aliens in the Kelly area of Christian County Ky. Each year she dresses up as an alien for the Little Green Men Days Festival. PHOTOS BY PAT MCDONOGH/COURIER JOURNAL
in the sky, which passed over the farmhouse then fell to the earth. Excitedly, he ran into the house to tell everyone, but they thought he was just trying to scare the women. “But, he wouldn’t shut up about it,” says Sutton’s daughter Geraldine Sutton Stith. “Dad and Billy Ray head outside and they see these little silver beings, 2 to 3 feet tall, with big ears, big glowing yellow eyes and long arms. They seemed to fl oat atop the ground,” says Stith. Alien. Glennie Lankford later described the aliens as, "fi ve-gallon gas cans with a head and shimmering like on my refrigerator," to author Isabel Davis in "Close Encounter at Kelly and Others in 1955." “Someone grabbed a shotgun and another grabbed a rifl e and started watching the back door. A shot rang out in the front of the house and its Uncle Jake
Miss Dynamite's tomb at the base of the Fred Hale Shopping Center sign. Miss Dynamite, a dog, was the legal owner of the strip mall and would sign checks with a paw print.
shooting one through the window. Billy Ray runs out the front door and this clawed hand reaches down and grabs him by the hair. My dad runs out, shoots at it, hits it, and it fl oats to the ground and rolls away,” says Stith. “They just keep coming up to the doors and windows and peering in at them. ,” she says. The gunfi re went on for nearly four hours. “It gets quiet around 11 p.m. and my dad gets everyone in the truck and drives to the sheriff ’s offi ce in Hopkinsville. The sheriff and a team from the nearby Ft. Campbell Army base search the premises but can’t fi nd anything. There
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MISS DYNAMITE The Fred Hale Shopping Center, 1820 Highway, 3500 Old Gallatin Road, Scottsville If you’re near Scottsville in southern Kentucky, stop by and pay your respects to Miss Dynamite. Fred Hale was a wealthy, eccentric bachelor, an entrepreneur who made his fortune bottling RC Cola. Around 1958 Hale got a dog, a chihuahua, terrier mix and named her Miss Dynamite. It was customary to see Hale around town in his white suit and red tie with Miss Dynamite on his arm. He later built a shopping center and named it after himself but made the dog the legal owner of the center. “She had a checking account and would pay the bills with a paw print as a signature,” said Brenda Williams, owner See WONDERS, Page 12B
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are shotgun and rifl e shells all over the yard and the woodwork is shot up in the house. Something happened but nothing to show for it.” Finding no evidence of space aliens, the offi cials leave. “Everyone is exhausted and around 3:30 a.m., my grandmother is in bed and my dad is in a rocking chair beside her with a shotgun. She opens her eyes, and she sees one at the window.” The gunfi re starts anew and continues through the night. When the sun came out, the creatures disappear. The next day Lucky Sutton told his family "Don’t talk about last night, just keep it to yourself, no good can come of this. Let’s just go on with our lives." But the word was already spreading quickly throughout Christian County and the world. Newspapers and wire services had a fi eld day reporting the story and for the fi rst time coined the term 'Little Green Men' in reference to space aliens. People began showing up at the house waiting for the aliens and taking souvenirs. "My grandmother couldn’t take it and sold the farm within two weeks. She was afraid the aliens would come back,” Stith says. “It was very rare to get my father to speak of it, you could tell it really bothered him,” adds Stith, who has written two books on the shootout and regularly produces podcasts due to the intense interest in the story.
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Wonders
WILSON PICKETT’S GRAVE
Love,” with Pickett at the helm. His powerful vocal skills would lead to a contract with Atlantic Records and in the 1960s the hits fl owed like water — “In the Midnight Hour,” “634-5789,” “Land of a 1000 Dances,” “Don’t Knock My Love Pt. 1” and “Funky Broadway,” to name a few. He recorded fi ve No. 1 hits and put 12 singles in the Top 10 on Billboard’s Rhythm and Blues charts. Not a crooner like Sam Cooke or a swooner like Otis Redding, but a great soul shouter, “Wicked” Wilson Pickett was a man with a commanding presence. As the money rolled in, he moved his mother and other family members to Louisville. His rise to the top was bookmarked by a tumultuous time in our nation’s history, with the war in Vietnam and the Civil Rights Movement. Interestingly, soul music was a uniting factor in the country, heartfelt and danceable and loved by all races. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991, the same year that multiple legal issues began to bedevil him, including an arrest for threatening the Mayor of Englewood, New Jersey while driving through his yard. Rev. Charles Elliott of King Solomon Missionary Baptist Church remembers Pickett fondly from playing music shows with their gospel groups. “We used to sing together and Pickett was one of our main attractions." Later in life, “he would come and talk with me a lot when he was in Louisville," he said. Both men moved their families out of the segregated south looking for a better life. And now Pickett rests in peace in Louisville. Reach photographer Pat McDonogh at pmcdonogh@courier-journal.com.
Evergreen Cemetery, 4623 Preston Highway, Louisville. Visitations upon request. Guitarist Tim Krekel recounted the moment in his song “Wilson Pickett” as he watched from his backyard fence in January 2007 as the music legend was laid to rest in Evergreen Cemetery. It caught everyone by surprise when the soul man from Prattville, Alabama chose Louisville, Kentucky as his place to drop anchor. Pickett, who grew up singing in church, joined the Falcons in 1959 and recorded the secular hit “I Found a
Soul singer Wilson Pickett's mausoleum at Evergreen Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky.
Continued from Page 11B
of Refl ections Hair Salon, one of the shops at the center. Longtime friend Dwight Stovall remembers seeing the dog on the TV news “signing” a six-fi gure check with her paw. Miss Dynamite passed away in 1973 at the age of 15 and Hale had her buried in a crypt at the base of the Fred Hale Shopping Center sign. She remains there today, where an image of her in white and green molded plastic holds the highest spot on the sign. On the tomb is a small photo of her standing on her back legs with a corncob pipe and hat with an inscription about her life. Miss Dynamite’s obituary claims she received fan mail from celebrities including former President Lyndon Johnson, astronaut/Senator John Glenn and bandleader Lawrence Welk. When Hale passed away in 1982, he left most of the 10 storefronts in his shopping center to diff erent area churches. “He was a real nice guy, just an everyday dude,” Stovall said.
VENT HAVEN MUSEUM Vent Haven Museum, 33 West Maple Ave., Fort Mitchell. 859-341-0461. Tours are by appointment only from May to September. Long gone is the laughter of the children and the bright television lights. As you enter the room at the Vent Haven Museum, there are only frozen smiles and unblinking stares from hundreds of small human forms. W. S. Berger was an amateur ventriloquist who began collecting dummies around 1910 and never stopped until his death in 1972. Over the years, his home became fi lled with ventriloquial fi gures and memorabilia. Upon his retirement in 1947, he moved the collection to his garage and the Vent Haven Museum was born. “It was a hobby that took on a second life," said Lisa Sweasy, curator of the museum in Fort Mitchell, where the world’s largest collection of ventriloquist dummies resides. The collection has grown to fi ll two adjacent buildings and now houses nearly 1,000 historic fi gures. The mu-
A room fi lled from floor to ceiling with ventriloquist dummies at the Vent Haven Museum in Ft. Mitchell, Kentucky. PHOTOS BY PAT MCDONOGH/COURIER JOURNAL
seum also holds the complete history of each item, including playbills, scripts, performance tapes, photographs and correspondence with Berger. Highlights of the tour include Shari Lewis’ sock puppet, “Lambchop” and Edgar Bergen’s “Charlie McCarthy” dummy and memorabilia. “Bergen was on the cover of Time Magazine in 1942 when nothing else was happening in the world," Sweasy said. "It just goes to show what a big name he was, just a huge star.” A personal highlight is “Farfel.” Farfel was the fl oppy-eared dog on ventriloquist Jimmy Nelson’s Saturday morning children’s TV show in the 1960s. He is best remembered for slowly saying the word Chocolate at the end of Nestle Quik commercials. Each year the museum receives between 20-25 new dummies, and as the three tiny buildings have reached capacity, plans to build a larger building to house the collection are in the works. An annual ventriloquist convention supports the museum and an adopt a dummy program has helped bring in nearly $40,000 toward the new construction. Sometimes it takes years for the museum to receive a ventriloquist dummy.
Sweasy tells of an off er Berger made for a set of dummies in 1955 that never came to pass. “In 2015 I get a call from a nursing home in California where a client had passed away. He had kept these two dummies in his room the whole time he’d been at the home. They found a note from the original ventriloquist, his father, that said; send these to the Vent Haven Museum.” “Sixty years later these two dummies come rolling in here. How cool is that?” asked Sweasy.
I n d e p e n d e n t & As s i s t e d L i v i n g
Don’t bother looking any further, just come here to live! We asked Aleta what she would tell people who are looking at senior living. As you can tell, she’s a huge Ashford fan. She raves about the excellent services, wonderful food and outstanding people. Plus, she finds the price an exceptional value. See for yourself why Aleta loves The Ashford so much! Aleta McFarland, Ashford Resident
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POLICE OFFICER CITY OF MILFORD, OHIO The Milford Police Department is accepting applications to establish an eligibility list for police officers. Applicants must take the entrance examination at a National Testing Network location before December 14, 2021. Visit https://www.nationaltestingnetwork.com/ publicsafetyjobs/ for more information. Applicants must be 21 years of age and certified as a peace officer by the Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy. Applicants must also be a legal U.S. citizen with a valid driver’s license and will be required to pass a complete background investigation, physical fitness, medical and psychological examination, including a drug and alcohol screen.
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