Kenton Recorder 11/19/20

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KENTON RECORDER

Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Kenton County

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YO U ’ L L B E Delighted

‘We will have our voice heard’ Founded in Cincinnati, Disabled American Veterans honors its 100th anniversary Jeff Suess Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Covington Police and Covington Fire work an accident and fi re scene on the Brent Spence Bridge on Nov. 11, in Covington, Ky. The Brent Spence Bridge is closed and will be shut down both ways indefi nitely. According to the EMA, a box truck with potassium chloride caught fi re this morning. Flames shot up to the upper deck. ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER

THE REGION’S MISSING BRIDGE:

The project no one can get done

Started in Cincinnati by WWI vets

Julia Fair | Cincinnati Enquirer | USA TODAY NETWORK

Editor’s note: Information included refl ects this article’s original publication date – Nov. 13 (updated Nov. 15). Visit Cincinnati.com for possible updates.

Founded in Cincinnati in 1920, the nonprofi t charity honors its 100th anniversary this year. On Christmas Day 1919, Judge Robert S. Marx hosted a party at the Sinton Hotel in Cincinnati for more than 100 disabled World War I veterans who were receiving special job training from the Ohio Mechanics Institute.

W

here’s our new bridge? h The fi ery accident that recently closed the Brent Spence Bridge resurfaced the decades-long discussion about how to build and pay for a new bridge next to the 56-year-old bridge. In the 1990s, the Federal Highway Administration declared the bridge functionally obsolete because its narrow lanes carried more cars than it was designed for – with no emergency lane. It’s unclear if that contributed to the recent jackknifed truck accident. But, the shutdown highlighted just how long its taken regional and national lawmakers to agree on a way to pay for the $2.5 billion new bridge. Everyone agrees a new bridge is needed to connect Northern Kentucky to Cincinnati, Ohio across the Ohio River. But it’s the political promise no one has been able to keep.

ile Whplies Sup ast L

CE-GCI0330411-01

See VETERANS, Page 2A

A view of the closed Brent Spence Bridge on Thursday, Nov. 12. ALBERT CESARE,PHIL DIDION/ THE ENQUIRER

First, two presidents haven’t been successful. In 2011, former President Barack Obama stood at the base of the bridge and touted legislation that would pry open funding for the bridge. That bill died in the Senate. In 2016, President Donald Trump promised to help the bridge while he spoke at a campaign rally in Wilmington, Ohio. That didn’t happen. See BRIDGE, Page 4A

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Robert S. Marx, a wounded veteran himself, was the fi rst national commander of the Disabled American Veterans in 1920. FILE

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For some soldiers, the war doesn’t end when they come home. Wounded or injured, missing a limb or traumatized by their experience, they face further challenges long after the shooting stops: rehabilitation and recovery, continued health problems, a need for jobs. For the last 100 years, the Disabled American Veterans has been their voice, lobbying in Washington for compensation and benefi ts, helping fi nd new jobs and career advancements and working to improve the lives of those who sacrifi ced for their country. “Veterans are here every day, day in and day out, not just when they come back from war. It’s a lifelong journey to try to return to some sort of normalcy after they serve in the military and become disabled,” said Marc Burgess, CEO and National Adjutant of DAV at the national headquarters in Cold Spring, Kentucky. “That’s our goal to make sure that the program and services that we off er go straight to the quality of life and security of the American dream that these vets fought for all of us to have.”

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

Veterans Continued from Page 1A

Marx, a newly elected judge on the Superior Court in Cincinnati, was a wounded veteran himself and all too aware of the challenges they faced every day. The conversation that night turned to the meager support available and the need for a national organization of disabled veterans. The U.S. government, even the nation itself, had been unprepared to welcome the 204,000 scarred, disabled soldiers returning from the war in Europe. They came home without arms or legs, blind or deaf, mentally ill, or their lungs ravaged by poison gas. The nation’s coff ers were depleted by the war eff ort and government assistance was lacking and ineffi cient. As the world suff ered from the Spanish fl u pandemic, hospital beds were scarce and wounded soldiers slept in cots or on the fl oor, or were turned away. Folks were left to fend for themselves. Disabled veterans on street corners selling pencils from a tin cup became a familiar sight. Marx and other disabled veterans aimed to put an end to that. Within a few months, DAV was born as Disabled American Veterans of the World War. Though formed months earlier, DAV counts Sept. 25, 1920, as its birthdate, when a national caucus was held at Memorial Hall in Over-the-Rhine, attended by 250 disabled veterans from across the U.S.

National commander, war hero Marx served as DAV’s fi rst national commander and biggest promoter. Born in Cincinnati in 1889, Marx graduated from Walnut Hills High School and the University of Cincinnati law school. He was a noted attorney, judge and law professor. UC’s law library bears his name. During World War I, Marx served as captain and operations offi cer in the 357th Infantry, 90th Division, and received the Distinguished Service Cross for his heroism as well as the Purple Heart. On Nov. 10, 1918, after his battalion suffered heavy losses, Marx took command of the attack on Baâlon in the Meuse-Ar-

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KENTON RECORDER

gonne Off ensive in France, which became the furthest point taken by U.S. troops. In a 1919 questionnaire about his military service, Marx wrote: “When I reached Battery headquarters, found the men digging in and gave directions and orders for an immediate advance. After a brief Period the advance commenced and was met with machine gun fi re from both fl anks and artillery fi re from four sides. While leading my Battery forward, a high explosive shell landed close by, killing my intelligence offi cer and wounding me in some 14 places.” He was taken to a mobile hospital where surgeons operated on his head. Two days later, he awoke and found that the armistice had been signed. As a war hero and fellow Democrat, Marx was enlisted by presidential hopeful James M. Cox and his running mate, Franklin D. Roosevelt, for the 1920 election. He joined their whistle-stop campaign, visiting 32 states by train. Although Cox lost the election, the tour helped Marx get the word out to other disabled veterans across the nation and plant DAV chapters. DAV held its fi rst national convention in Detroit in 1921. Rabbi Michael Aaronsohn of Cincinnati, who had been blinded by an artillery shell, gave the invocation. More than 1,000 disabled veterans reunited for the fi rst time since the muddy war-torn trenches, and stood in silence for fallen comrades. Then it was all business. Delegates elected Marx as the fi rst national commander, agreed on a program to assist disabled veterans and chose Cincinnati for the national headquarters. “In war, all are eligible to be wounded, so all the sick and wounded would be eligible to join the DAVWW,” Marx said. Then they marched proudly through

COMMUNITY PRESS & RECORDER NEWSPAPERS

Members of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War (now the Disabled American Veterans, DAV), headed to the fi rst national convention held in Detroit in 1921. FILE

the streets of Detroit, some on crutches, others guiding the blind, triumphant veterans rather than victims.

‘Building better lives’ DAV’s mission is “building better lives for all of our nation’s disabled veterans and their families,” from World War I to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Congress issued a federal charter to the organization in 1932. One memorable fundraiser was the Idento-Tag, a miniature replica license plate keychain mailed to motorists along with an explanation of what DAV was doing for disabled veterans and a request for a small donation. DAV had a plant in Reading where the tags were produced. Most of the workers were disabled veterans. Any keys found with an Idento-Tag could be dropped in a mailbox, and the postal service would forward them to DAV and the keys would be returned to their owner – who often sent back a

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grateful donation. In 1966, DAV moved its headquarters to the site of the old St. Joseph’s Orphanage in Cold Spring. Today there are nearly 1,300 DAV chapters and 1 million members across the U.S. DAV has adapted to the COVID-19 pandemic this year, creating an unemployment relief fund to assist veterans who have lost their jobs during the quarantine and off ering virtual job fairs. There is also a staff in Washington, D.C., that works with Congress and the White House to make sure the laws on the books for veterans benefi ts stay on the books and don’t get chopped by budget cuts. “Without the advocacy and infl uence of organizations like DAV, budgets would be balanced on the backs of our veterans, and we make sure that doesn’t happen,” Burgess said. “We are the voice of ill and injured veterans and we will have our voice heard.” Sources: “Wars & Scars” at dav.org, Enquirer archives

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

Bridge Continued from Page 1A

The reason is simple: Money. To pay for a new bridge will almost certainly require tolls. Ohio lawmakers have no problem with tolls, which could serve as a local match to any money the federal government may set aside for the project. But, Northern Kentucky lawmakers do. Those are the elements that make fi nding a funding solution so complicated, said former Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson, who supports fi nancing the bridge with a toll. “It’s really expensive, and the way our laws work, and the way our transportation funding works, enough northern Kentuckians are concerned about bearing that burden,” Grayson said.

Who promised what? Brent Cooper, President and CEO of the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce, watched governors, congressmen and presidents make promises about the bridge. Not too long ago, former Speaker of the House Republican John Boehner, of Southwest Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Republican Mitch McConnell, of Kentucky, controlled Congress. The pair didn’t make progress on the Brent Spence Bridge funding dilemma. McConnell still runs the U.S. Senate and his wife, Elaine Chao, even serves as President Trump’s Secretary of Transportation. Still no bridge. At times, “we thought for sure we were going to get this done,” Cooper told The Enquirer. He recalled Obama’s visit as one of those moments. In 2011, Obama’s plan centered around the American Jobs Act. It would have pumped $50 billion toward infrastructure projects in the U.S. That bill died in the Senate, according to NPR. In 2014, Former U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx told The Enquirer that the toll disagreement between Kentucky and Ohio made it diffi cult to fund the project. Foxx said the Department of Transportation has fi nancing tools available that could provide money for the bridge. He cited a program created by the 1998 Transportation Infrastructure Finance

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KENTON RECORDER

and Innovation Act (TIFIA) that off ers low-cost federal loans to local entities for projects of “regional and national signifi cance.” Without the states cooperating to fi nance a local match, he said it would be hard for them to solve the problem, according to a previous Enquirer article. In 2016, Trump promised a fi x during a campaign stop. He said he would take money from the United Nations “and we will use that money to invest in America.” Shortly after he was elected, The Brent Spence Bridge was No. 2 on a Trump administration list of 50 transportation priorities. Nothing came of that. The Trump campaign said the priority list was not an offi cial policy document. In 2019, Sen. Rand Paul introduced the Penny Plan to Enhance Infrastructure Act. It planned to cut 1% of the federal government’s noninfrastructure spending and direct that money to infrastructure projects in Kentucky and across the nation. Paul said the $12 billion in spending could help with projects such as the Brent Spence Bridge. The bill hasn’t been reviewed by the House or Senate yet.

What’s the holdup in Kentucky? Local leaders say the biggest funding block is the toll disagreement between Ohio and Kentucky. Northern Kentucky lawmakers don’t want their constituents to pay a toll to cross the bridge to go to work in Cincinnati, said Boone County Republican Rep. Sal Santoro, chairman of a transportation subcommittee. There’s also a law that prohibits tolls on any new bridge that connects Northern Kentucky to Cincinnati. A year after his election, In 2016, former Gov. Matt Bevin signed a bill, backed by the Northern Kentucky delegation, that prohibited tolls on any new bridge that connected Northern Kentucky to Cincinnati across the Ohio River. Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich grew frustrated with Kentucky’s anti-toll stance. “What do they think? Some sugar daddy is coming?” Kasich told a group of reporters in 2018. “Someone is going to come on a great white horse to build a bridge? I don’t think so.”

How did Louisville do it? In 2012, Indiana hatched a plan to build two new toll bridges to connect southern Indiana to Louisville, Kentucky. Santoro told The Enquirer that the two scenarios are diff erent. “(Indiana residents are) the ones paying for the bridges because they’re coming to Louisville every day,” Santoro said. Kentucky paid $1.4 billion for one of the new bridges, according to the United States Transportation Department website. A big chunk of the state’s share, $493.2 million, came from a Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act loan and the toll revenue bonds. Those are backed by Kentucky’s 50% share of the toll revenue generated from the combined Ohio River Bridges Project. The Louisville bridges and the Brent Spence Bridge funding situations are diff erent, said Mark Policinksi, CEO of the Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council of Governments. In Lousiville, there wasn’t a push back on tolls because more traffi c fl owed from Indiana to Kentucky than Kentucky to Indiana. “Kentucky was a much easier sell on tolls because they knew they were going to be getting the majority of the dollars,” Policinksi said. The law Bevin signed specifi cally hindered the Cincinnati area bridge project because it prohibited tolls on bridges only between Ohio and Kentucky. Construction on the Louisville bridges began in 2013 before Bevin took offi ce. Bevin’s 2016 bill blocked tolls as a funding source for the new bridge next to the Brent Spence – a move pushed by Northern Kentucky’s delegation. During his re-election bid in 2019, Bevin backtracked and said tolling had to be part of the solution for the bridge. Northern Kentucky lawmakers haven’t discussed repealing the law, Santoro said.

What do NKY lawmakers want? Santoro said he won’t support a toll if he doesn’t know how much the toll is going to be or how long it would take to pay off the loans. He also said he wanted people to consider the eastern bypass

route. The Eastern Bypass would run east to west across southern Northern Kentucky into Ohio. Traffi c experts have called it dubious. And that route would require a new bridge anyway, so it’s unclear how that would solve the tolling question. The Eastern Bypass is a proposed four-lane highway that would go roughly 70 miles, connecting at Interstate 75 in Springboro and eventually reconnecting to I-75 at Crittenden in Grant County. In January, the Ohio Department of Transportation study concluded the bypass wasn’t a solution to the Brent Spence Bridge problems. Its estimated cost was between $5.4 billion and $7.3 billion. Kentucky fi nished a $2 million study into several Brent Spence Bridge alternatives in 2017. It concluded that the Eastern Bypass was “worthy of further exploration.” Kentucky estimated a price tag of $5.3 billion to complete the project.

What’s next? Ky Gov. Andy Beshear would not speculate about whether the proposed expansion of the bridge would have prevented the crash, but said it was time to get the project moving. “I hope this creates an additional impetus for the community. The communities on both sides of the bridge have to come together for us to have a path forward,” Beshear said. “The disruption...ought to make us all take look and take a look and say ‘what more is everyone one willing to sacrifi ce or change or reconsider to get the project up and moving forward.” Cooper said the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce supports a “reasonable” toll. That means it would support a $1 toll, but not a $4 toll, he said. Cooper added that a rise in the state and federal gas tax could provide funding not only for the Brent Spence Bridge, but other regional infrastructure projects as well. “I’m hopeful that our federal delegation and our state legislatures and local offi cials will all fi nd a way to fi nally get a second bridge built,” said Cooper. Julia is the Northern Kentucky government reporter through the Report For America program.

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

An Anderson Ferry worker directs cars onto the ferry before departing to run cars between Ohio and Kentucky on Thursday, Nov. 12 in Cincinnati. Both the Roebling Suspension Bridge and the Brent Spence Bridge are currently closed. PHOTOS BY ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER

Anderson Ferry transporting as many as 1,000 cars a day after Brent Spence Bridge closure Jeanne Houck Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

The Anderson Ferry is transporting as many as 1,000 cars a day across the Ohio River after the fi ery collision of two semi tractor-trailers closed the Brent Spence Bridge Nov. 11. “We’ve been very busy,” owner Paul Anderson said of the 200-year-old ferry service between Delhi Township and Constance, Kentucky. “We usually do 400 to 500 cars (a day), depending on the weather and the day of the week. I guess now we’re probably doing twice that or more.” Anderson Ferry’s three ferries con-

tinue to make a total of about 130 trips a day, Anderson said, but the ferries are carrying more cars on every trip. The hours remain the same: 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays, 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturdays and 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sundays. And the $5 price per car (prices for other vehicles vary) is not going up. “We’ve had the same price for four to fi ve years and I was thinking of raising it in January,” Anderson said. “But I’m not going to do it while we have problems in the region. We don’t try to take advantage of people like a lot of businesses do.” Anderson knows it is uncertain when the Brent Spence Bridge will reopen.

An Anderson Ferry worker steps out of the Deborah A to direct traffic onto the ferry before departing.

‘We’ll just do what we can’ “We’ll just do what we can. That’s all we can do,” Anderson said, noting that some motorists have been driving away when they see the lines for the ferries. “We just appreciate everybody’s patience and cooperation,” Anderson said.

“Eventually everything will be back to normal when the bridge and the pandemic work out, and everybody will have a smile on their face.” Editor’s note: Information included refl ects this article’s original publication date – Nov. 13.

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Let one of these local restaurants prepare your Thanksgiving feast this year. REGINA H. BOONE/DETROIT FREE PRESS

Give thanks to local restaurants by letting them prepare this year’s feast for you Keith Pandolfi Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

This year, while giving thanks for our friends, family, and our improbable survival as a species, let’s also be sure to thank our local restaurants, who have been suff ering like you wouldn’t believe during the past eight months of COVID-19. One great way to do that is to let them do the cooking for you. Many local restaurants are off ering meal kits, and fully cooked Thanksgiving specials you can pick up a day or two before Thanksgiving, or, in some cases, piping hot on Thanksgiving day. Here are just a few of them. If you don’t see your favorite restaurant listed, give them a call or visit their web sites to see if they’re off ering specials of their own. Boomtown Biscuits & Whiskey: Take home drop biscuits and homemade pies. Choose between biscuits by the dozen with jams and butters, maple bourbon pecan pie, and the honey vinegar pie that took the cake on The Ultimate Thanksgiving Challenge last year. 1201 Broadway, Pendleton. 513-3812666; info@boomtownbiscuitbar.com. Bouquet Restaurant: Dinner to take home. Pick up Tuesday, Nov. 24 or Wednesday, Nov. 25 after 12 p.m. Dinner includes a fi ve-pound Joyce Farms roasted duck; stuffi ng; brussel sprouts; and gravy. The restaurant is also off ering suggested wine pairings available for purchase by the bottle. $100 (wine additional), serves 4-6. Order by Nov. 20. 519 Main St., Covington. 859-4917777; bouquetrestaurant.com. Butler’s Pantry: Dinner to take home: Pick up 8-11 a.m. or 2-6 p.m., Nov. 25. Smoked turkey from Schad’s Meats (brown sugar or Cajun rub); mashed potatoes; turkey neck gravy; green bean casserole; sage dressing; and dinner rolls. $30 for a dinner for two (each additional meal is $15); Order by Friday, Nov. 20. 50 E. Rivercenter Blvd, Covington. 859-292-1699; butlerspantrymarket.com. Commonwealth Bistro: Dinner to take home. Pick up 3-8 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 25. Dinner includes smoked and roasted turkey with gravy; local

mushroom stuffi ng with sage and brown butter; cranberry sauce with port and orange; roasted garlic mashed potatoes; blistered green bean salad with shaved fennel, pecan and pickled shallot; and biscuits with seasonal jam. Dinner serves 5 for $150; 10 for $275; 15 for $425; and 20 for $575. Add a honey pie or apple buckle for $40. Order by Wednesday, Nov. 18. 621 Main St, Covington. 859-916-6719; commonwealthbistro.com. Crown Republic Gastropub: Dinner to take home. Pick up Wednesday, Nov. 25. Off ering three meal kits options. Option 1 includes a maple ham-style pork loin with sides ($70, serves 4-6); Option 2 includes a smoked turkey roulade and sides ($75, serves 4-6); Option 3 includes Lasagna Bolognese ($75, serves 6-8). All meals come with fresh cookie dough that can be baked at home. Order by Friday, Nov. 20. 720 Sycamore St., Downtown. crownrepublicgastropub.com. Fausto at the CAC Restaurant: Dinner to take home. Pick up 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Thanksgiving day. Delivery is available for an additional $15 in areas within a 10mile radius. Dinner for two includes confi t turkey; giblet gravy; and up to four sides, or roasted leg of lamb with lamb jus and four sides. $75, serves 2. Order by Friday, Nov. 20. 44 E. 6th St., Downtown. 513-345-2979, faustoatthecac.com. Forno: Dinner to take home. Pick up at either the Hyde Park or Montgomery locations from 2-6 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 25. “Everything but the turkey” meal includes shrimp cocktail; creamy potato puree; butternut squash soup; honey-glazed baby carrots; caulifl owerParmigiano gratin; truffl ed cream corn; oven-baked penne alla vodka with pane fritto; Allez bakery baguette and Vermont butter; panettone bread pudding with bourbon-soaked golden raisins. $179, serves 6-8 people. Order by Tuesday, Nov. 24. 3514 Erie Ave., Hyde Park. 513-818-8720; fornoosteriabar.com. 9415 Montgomery Road, Montgomery. 513-231-5555; fornomontgomery.com.

It’s a well-known fact that for many older Americans, the home is their single biggest asset, often accounting for more than 45% of their total net worth. And with interest rates near all-time lows while home values are still high, this combination creates the perfect dynamic for getting the most out of your built-up equity. But,manyaren’ttakingadvantageof this unprecedented period. According to new statistics from the mortgage industry, senior homeowners in the U.S. are now sitting on more than 7.19 trillion dollars* of unused home equity. Not only are people living longer than ever before, but there is also greater uncertainty in the economy. With home prices back up again, ignoring this “hidden wealth” may prove to be short sighted when looking for the best long-term outcome. All things considered, it’s not

mistakenly believe the home must be paid off in full in order to qualify for a HECM loan, which is not the case. In fact, one key advantage of a HECM is that the proceeds will first be used to pay off any existing liens on the property, which frees up cash flow, a huge blessing for seniors living on a fixed income. Unfortunately, many senior homeowners who might be better off with a HECM loan don’t even bother to get more information because of rumors they’ve heard. In fact, a recent survey by American Advisors Group (AAG), the nation’s number one HECM lender, found that over 98% of their clients are satisfied with their loans. While these special loans are not for everyone, they can be a real lifesaver for senior homeowners - especially in times like these. The cash from a HECM loan can be used for almost any purpose. Other

Request a FREE Info Kit & DVD Today! Call 800-660-9971 now. surprising that more than a million homeowners have already used a government-insured Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) loan to turn their home equity into extra cash for retirement. It’s a fact: no monthly mortgage payments are required with a government-insured HECM loan; however the borrowers are still responsible for paying for the maintenance of their home, property taxes, homeowner’s insurance and, if required, their HOA fees. Today, HECM loans are simply an effective way for homeowners 62 and older to get the extra cash they need to enjoy retirement. Although today’s HECM loans have been improved to provide even greater financial protection for homeowners, there are still many misconceptions. For example, a lot of people

common uses include making home improvements, paying off medical bills or helping other family members. Some people simply need the extra cash for everyday expenses while others are now using it as a safety net for financial emergencies. If you’re a homeowner age 62 or older, you owe it to yourself to learn more so that you can make the best decision - for your financial future.

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*Source: https://reversemortgagedaily.com/2019/12/17/senior-housing-wealth-reaches-record-high-of-7-19-trillion Reverse mortgage loan terms include occupying the home as your primary residence, maintaining the home, paying property taxes and homeowners insurance. Although these costs may be substantial, AAG does not establish an escrow account for these payments. However, a set-aside account can be set up for taxes and insurance, and in some cases may be required. Not all interest on a reverse mortgage is taxdeductible and to the extent that it is, such deduction is not available until the loan is partially or fully repaid. AAG charges an origination fee, mortgage insurance premium (where required by HUD), closing costs and servicing fees, rolled into the balance of the loan. AAG charges interest on the balance, which grows over time. When the last borrower or eligible non-borrowing spouse dies, sells the home, permanently moves out, or fails to comply with the loan terms, the loan becomes due and payable (and the property may become subject to foreclosure). When this happens, some or all of the equity in the property no longer belongs to the borrowers, who may need to sell the home or otherwise repay the loan balance. V2020.10.07 NMLS# 9392 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). American Advisors Group (AAG) is headquartered at 3800 W. Chapman Ave., 3rd & 7th Floors, Orange CA, 92868. Licensed in 49 states. Please go to www.aag.com/legal-information for full state license information. These materials are not from HUD or FHA and were not approved by HUD or a government agency.


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Thanksgiving Continued from Page 7A

Goose & Elder: Dinner to take home. Choice of sous vide turkey breast or mushroom and spinach lasagna. Sides include buttermilk biscuits; garlic mashed potatoes; cranberry sauce; chicken gravy; stuffi ng; country-style beans; and salad. Choice of chocolate cake with caramel, or creme brulee with fresh fruits for dessert. $125, serves 6. 1800 Race St., Over-the-Rhine. 513-5798400; gooseandelder.com. Golden Lamb: Dine-in or take home. Take home available for pick-up 1-7 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 24, or Wednesday, Nov. 25. Roasted turkey breast, sauerkraut balls; wedge salad; turkey gravy, herb-cheese mashed potatoes; sagesausage and apple stuffi ng; fall vegetable succotash; cranberry-orange chutney; yeast rolls with apple butter; and a whole pumpkin pie. $139, serves 4-6. 27 S. Broadway St., Lebanon, 513-9325065; goldenlamb.com. Hart & Cru: Thanksgiving wine pairings to take home. Includes handpicked four packs of wine, including the Cru Pack for $120, and the Collectors Pack for $210.1401 Elm Street, Over-theRhine. 419-348-9592; hartandcru.com. Jeff Ruby’s Steakhouse: Dinner to take home. Curbside pick-up may be scheduled for Nov. 23, 24 or 25. Dinner includes a 14-16 lb. heritage breed turkey, vacuum sealed in seasoned brine; turkey comes with herbs, mirepoix, and roasting instructions. Sides include fully cooked smoked turkey gravy; bourbon and brown sugar glazed sweet potatoes; green bean casserole; cranberryginger chutney; salted rye dressing; 80 Acres salad; sweet potato butter pie with pumpkin seed crumble and cranberry-orange sauce; box of bread rolls from Sixteen Bricks with truffl e butter. $300, serves 6-8. 700 Walnut St., Downtown. 513-784-1200 Jeff Ruby.com Keystone Bar & Grill: Dinner to take home. Pick up Wednesday, Nov. 25. Dinner includes roasted turkey and gravy; mac and cheese; garlic mashed potatoes; roasted creamed corn with crispy onion topping; fresh cranberry sauce; and cookies from Buskin Bakery. $120, serves 6. Order by 6 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 24. 249 Calhoun St., Clifton, 513-2215397. 3384 Erie Ave., Hyde Park, 513321-2150; and 313 Greenup St., Coving-

The Golden Lamb in Lebanon will have dine-in or take home options. Take home is available for pick-up 1-7 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 24, or Wednesday, Nov. 25. PATRICK REDDY/THE ENQUIRER

ton. 859-261-6777; keystonebar.com. Maize OTR: Meal kits to take home with heating and cooking instructions. Kits include 12-14 lb. turkey with house gravy; choice of starter, four sides and one sweet. Sides include Eckerlin chorizo blend stuffi ng, roasted garlic mashed potatoes, grilled asparagus, rosemary sweet potato mash, yuca fries, sweet plantains, house salad, onion rice and Cuban black bean rice. $250, serves 6-8. Order by Sunday, Nov. 15. 513-403-0909; info@maizeotr.com. Mom ‘n’ ‘Em Coff ee and Wine: Starters and drinks to take home. Pick up 8 a.m.-noon, Thanksgiving day. The “Giving Package” comes with a choice of one bottle of sparkling wine or a bottle of red wine; a quarter pound of blue d’auvergne cheese; one tin or marinated olives; one tin of Espinaler bonito; and one loaf of bread. Order by Friday, Nov, 20. 3128 Colerain Ave., Camp Washington. 513-886-0591; momnemcoff ee.com. Orchids at Palm Court: Dine-in buffet 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Includes shrimp cocktail; fall salad; Caesar salad; turkey and gravy; prime rib and au jus; mashed potatoes; stuffi ng; green beans, and cranberry sauce. Desserts are pumpkin cheesecake; a chocolate tart; and apple bar. $36-$84. All meals are served fam-

ily style. Tickets for the limited-seating brunch can be purchased at eventbrite.com. 35 W. 5th St., Downtown; orchidsatpalmcourt.com. Salazar: Dinner to take home. Roasted turkey and gravy; dinner rolls; farm green salad. Choice of three sides, in-

cluding green beans with mushroom gravy; bread stuffi ng; sweet corn pudding; roasted brussel sprouts with bacon and pimentón; potato puree; honeybutter roasted carrots; or roasted sweet potatoes with brown sugar butter. Dessert choices include pumpkin cheesecake with candied walnuts, or chocolate pots de creme with peanuts and vanilla whip. $30 per person. 1401 Republic St., Over-the-Rhine. 513-621-7000; salazarcincinnati.com. S.W. Clyborne Provisions & Spirits: Dinner to take-home. Pick up Wednesday, Nov. 25. Marinated turkey breast with stuffi ng; mashed potatoes; green beans, turkey gravy, cranberry relish; salad, dinner rolls; and pumpkin pie. The turkey breast comes marinated and prepared for roasting; the herb stuffi ng is oven-ready. Sides come fully cooked and must be reheated. Cooking and reheating instructions included. $129.99, serves 4-6. Order by Thursday, Nov. 19. 5948 Snider Road, Mason, 513-2047922; clybornes.com. Washington Platform: Dinner to take home. Pick up 1-5 p.m. Thanksgiving day. Dinner includes hand-carved roasted turkey and gravy; mashed potatoes; brussel sprouts almondine; cranberry-Grand Marnier compote; yeast rolls with honey butter; and pumpkin cheesecake. $40 per party of two. Order by Monday, Nov. 23. 1000 Elm St., Downtown. 513-421-0110; washingtonplatform.com.

Orchids at Palm Court will have a dine-in buffet 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. All meals are served family style. DAVID SORCHER/CIN WEEKLY

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CE-GCI0526572-04


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Attorney Steve Megerle leads a press conference with survivors and family members he is representing at the former site of the Beverly Hills Supper Club in Southgate, KY on August 12. PHIL DIDION/THE ENQUIRER

Beverly Hills Supper Club development lawsuit resolved, no construction on disputed area Julia Fair Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Attorneys reached an agreement in the dispute regarding the 80-acre $65 million real estate project set to transform the former site of the Beverly Hills Supper Club in Southgate, according to a joint statement from attorneys. The project is expected to have an assisted living center, apartments, homes – and a permanent memorial honoring the victims of the 1977 Memorial Day weekend fi re that killed 165 and injured more than 200. For months, fi re victim descendants advocated for part of the parcel – where most people died – to be exempt from construction and used for a public memorial fountain. Attorneys for fi re victim descendants and the developers gathered at the Campbell County Circuit Court Nov. 10 for a hearing to determine if work could continue on the entire parcel after a judge partially blocked the project in October. Instead of the hearing, attorneys negotiated for hours in court hallways, an Enquirer reporter witnessed. According to the statement, The developers, Edgewood, Kentucky-based construction fi rm Ashley Build-

ers, agreed to: h Perform a survey to confi rm the location of the former Cabaret Room, where most people died in the 1977 fi re. h Include a deed restriction to restrict construction on the Cabaret Room site. h Allow the Beverly Hills Respect the Dead group to raise funds and construct a memorial fountain at the Cabaret Room site. h Allow access to the memorial in the future.

Some descendants claimed they didn't receive family members' body parts back after the fi re, according to court documents. The developers insisted rescue crews recovered all bodies. The descendants also wanted the memorial honoring the fi re victims to be placed where the cabaret room was. The developers, at one point, planned to place it along U.S. 27.

The months-long burial ground and memorial placement dispute

The agreement reached Nov. 10 must be approved by Southgate City Council and the Campbell County Planning and Zoning commission, according to the statement. That's estimated to happen in a few weeks. Julia is the Northern Kentucky government reporter through the Report For America program. The Enquirer needs local donors to help fund her grant-funded position. 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.

When Campbell County and the city of Southgate approved the project earlier this year, fi re victim descendants advocated for an area to be exempt from construction because they believe human body parts remain there. The area they focused on is the former site of the cabaret room, where most people died in the fi re. The descendants wanted it to be declared a burial ground, which would bar it from construction under Kentucky law.

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KENTON RECORDER

Do-ahead turkey gravy Ingredients Anywhere from 4-6 turkey wings 2 large yellow onions, quartered or chopped coarsely (not sweet onions) 1 cup water 2 quarts chicken broth, divided 1 smallish carrot, unpeeled and chopped ⁄ 2 teaspoon dried thyme or about a tablespoon of fresh leaves, minced

1

Much to be thankful for and plenty of do-ahead gravy for turkey and potatoes. PHOTOS BY RITA HEIKENFELD/FOR THE ENQUIRER

1 bay leaf Few sprigs parsley (opt)

‘You’ll love the results’ of do-ahead turkey gravy

⁄ 4 cup flour

3

Salt and pepper to taste 2 tablespoons butter Instructions Preheat oven to 375. Arrange wings in a single layer in a large sprayed roasting pan. (You may have to divide them between 2 pans). Scatter onions over top. Roast about 1 hour and 20 minutes or until wings are dark brown. Put wings and onions in large pot.

Rita’s Kitchen

Add water to roasting pan and stir to scrape up any brown bits on bottom. Add brown bits to pot.

Rita Heikenfeld Guest columnist

I think you’ll get a kick out of this scenario. Today, I was elbow deep in kraut. Homemade sauerkraut that is. I just fi nished tamping it down into jars when it dawned on me that I need to get to the grocery to buy turkey wings for my do-ahead turkey gravy for Thanksgiving. I’m sharing the recipe here, tweaked a bit. When I mentioned the gravy a couple weeks ago, I thought I’d get requests. And I did. This gravy is yummy on its own, but pour the defatted drippings from your roasted turkey into it, and oh my, you’ll love the results. Plus making the gravy ahead gives you extra for leftovers, and no worries about making it from scratch on Thanksgiving. And I know I tell you this every year, but this year wishing you and yours a holiday fi lled with good food and good people is more important than ever. Most likely your gathering, like mine, will be smaller due to the pandemic. So take a few minutes and pack up some

Add 6 cups broth, carrot, thyme, bay and parsley. If you need to add a little more liquid to cover, add water. Bring to boil. Reduce heat and simmer uncovered for 1 hour or so. Remove wings and save meat for another use. Strain broth into saucepan, pressing vegetables to extract as much liquid as possible. Discard vegetables. Refrigerate overnight if you have time so you can skim fat off top easily. If not, do your best to skim it after straining. Bring broth in pot to a gentle boil. Whisk flour into remaining 2 cups chicken broth. Whisk in broth/flour mixture into broth and boil a few minutes to thicken gravy. Stir butter in. Season to taste.

Turkey wings and onions after roasting.

Refrigerate up to 4 days or freeze for 2 months. Tip

to-go dinners. Share them with folks who may not be able to leave their homes, or might be alone. And don’t forget to break the wishbone – whoever gets the biggest half can make a wish.

When you reheat gravy, add turkey drippings to it. If this makes the gravy too thin, whisk a little flour and cool water together – equal parts of each, then add some to the gravy. Do this in increments a little at a time, until you reach thickness desired.

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

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SPORTS Two NKY players earn state player of year awards James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

“Every coach and every player over the past 26 years has been a part of this championship,” said NDA head coach Molly McDermott. “They continued coming in and working hard and not letting the level of play drop off , even when we weren’t experiencing the championships. They came in and maintained the high level of volleyball for those 26 years.” McDermott, a 1990 NDA graduate, was a standout on the Pandas’ 1989 state championship team coached by Kim Gunning. She’s the fi rst person to win a state title as both a head coach and a player. Notre Dame fi nished 26-3 for the season, winning the Ninth Region championship for the second straight year. The Pandas had lost in fi ve games at Mercy Oct. 3 (25-20, 18-25, 19-25, 2520, 15-12) and did not play Assumption during the season. Mercy edged Assumption in fi ve games in the quarterfi nals, and both teams rolled through their semifi nal match.

Notre Dame senior Lauren Carothers has been named Miss Kentucky Soccer, and Ryle senior Noah Moeller was named one of two boys soccer players of the year in Kentucky in honors voted on by state coaches associations. Carothers led Notre Dame with 15 goals and had seven assists as she led the Pandas to a 15-3 record and the Ninth Region semifi nals. Carothers was last year’s Ninth Region off ensive player of the year. She was one of six Northern Kentucky players named fi rst-team allstate by the coaches association, which splits the state into halves: West (Regions 1-8) and East (Regions 9-16). Carothers was fi rst team for the East, along with Dixie Heights senior Carson Smith, Highlands junior Faith Broering, Campbell County sophomore Ruby Dunlevy and Scott senior Lydia Bowling. Simon Kenton junior Ellie Dreas was named fi rst team for the West. Smith scored 28 goals and had 17 assists for the Colonels, who fi nished 15-3-1 and was Ninth Region runnerup to Highlands after winning the 34th District. She was named Ninth Region off ensive player of the year. Broering had 15 goals and six assists, leading the Bluebirds to their third consecutive Ninth Region title. Highlands advanced to the state round of 16 before losing to Lexington Catholic in penalty kicks and fi nishing 15-2-2. Dreas had 26 goals and seven assists for Simon Kenton, who won the Eighth Region. SK fi nished 13-7 after losing to Sacred Heart in penalty kicks in the state quarterfi nals. Dunlevy had 12 goals and eight assists, and Bowling earned all-state honors for the second straight year after posting 16 goals. Earning second-team honors were Simon Kenton senior Sammy Prather, St. Henry senior Mackenzie Kent,

See NOTRE DAME, Page 2B

See PLAYERS, Page 2B

Notre Dame teammates Anna Long, 4, and Sydney Nolan, 11, block a Ryle shot as Notre Dame defeated Ryle 3-1 in the KHSAA Ninth Region championship match Oct. 29, 2020 at Holmes High School. PHOTOS BY JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER

How Notre Dame volleyball won the elusive state title James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Notre Dame Academy has been one of the premier programs in Kentucky high school volleyball since the state began sponsoring the sport. Notre Dame won eight of the fi rst 16 state champions sanctioned in the sport by the Kentucky High School Athletic Association. However, since 1994, the Pandas have had a major mental and physical hurdle located to the southwest of their campus. A big mountain to climb in the form of Louisville all-girls powers Assumption, Mercy and Sacred Heart, who have combined to win all 25 state championships since Notre Dame last won one in 1994. Assumption, which in some years contends for the role as best overall team in the nation, has won 20 of the 25. When Molly McDermott came to coach her alma mater, she went to work giving her program new equipment they would need to climb that hill. That work paid off Nov. 7, when Notre Dame edged Mercy in a fi ve-set thriller (21-25, 25-19, 25-22, 22-25, 15-13) to win that elusive

Notre Dame fi nally broke Louisville's stranglehold on the state volleyball title with the fi ve-set victory over Mercy in the state championship match earlier this month.

state championship. It was NDA’s ninth all-time, second to Assumption’s 22 and now two ahead of Mercy’s seven. It was a program win for 26 years of heartbreak.

Kid Glove leader Paul Kramer dies at 83 James Weber Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

Paul Kramer, a legendary baseball fi gure in the Cincinnati area, died Nov. 8 at age 83. Kramer was the longtime executive secretary of the Kid Glove program, which raised money for baseball and softball equipment for youth games in addition to other charity ventures that connected kids with those sports. Multiple Reds games each year have been designated “Kid Glove Games,” with participants given ticket vouchers and special recognition during the contest. “The Cincinnati Reds and the Reds Community Fund extend their condolences to the family of long-time Kid Glove program director, Paul Kramer,” Reds President and Chief Operating Of-

fi cer Phil Castellini said in a statement. “Paul was the heart and soul of the program that raised millions of dollars over the years to provide high-quality equipment for hundreds of youth baseball and softball teams. Paul and Kid Glove have been an essential part of the fabric of Reds baseball for decades and this marks a tremendous loss for our entire community.” Kramer lost his battle with cancer Nov. 8 and leaves an indelible legacy in Greater Cincinnati, having served for 35 years as the leader of the iconic Power Crosley Jr. Amateur Baseball fund (otherwise known as Kid Glove). He was involved with the Kid Glove games at Crosley Field and Riverfront Stadium before transitioning to a model that See KRAMER, Page 2B

At the 2011 Kid Glove annual luncheon: From left, Kid Glove Games Honorary Chairman Nick Lachey, Kid Glove Games executive secretary Paul Kramer, and Reds president and chief executive officer Bob Castellini. FILE PHOTO

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KENTON RECORDER

Notre Dame

ters. McDermott said it took three full years for the Pandas to be at their peak with the schemes. “We’re playing a diff erent defense than they do at club,” McDermott said. “We were asking them to play a diff erent tempo at the pass. To compete with the Louisville teams, we have to be fast. We

don’t’ always have the size that they do but we have the speed to compete.” The mental and strategic preparations bolstered a talented veteran Panda squad that had fi ve seniors sign with Division I programs Nov. 11. Senior Anna Long signed with Florida State to play beach volleyball. Syd-

ney Schroder signed with Florida Atlantic for beach volleyball. Signing to play the traditional indoor sport were Emma Grace with Xavier, Emily Wichmann with Oakland and Abby Powers with Robert Morris. Other seniors are Annashea Carlisle and Cate Scheper. “We have a great senior class,” McDermott said. “They bought in to what we were asking them to do. These girls have worked hard in the gym to reach that summit and get that monkey of their back. I couldn’t be more proud of them, especially dealing with COVID, and us coaching them with masks, having to clean and sanitize the balls all the time.” McDermott had two fellow NDA standouts as assistant coaches in Leslie (nee Schellhaas) Litmer and Jenna (nee Schreiver) Leistner, who played Division I in college. Long led the team with 376 total kills, which ranked fi fth in the entire state. She also had 41 total blocks and was third on the team with 210 digs. Grace was second on the team with 273 kills. She also had 34 blocks and was second on the team in digs with 259. She also had a team-high 49 aces. Powers was fourth on the team in kills with 173 and Scheper fi fth with 126. Scheper was second on the team in blocks with 45 and Powers had 43. Wichmann had 370 digs. Bentley led the entire state in assists with 969 and her 10.89 per set average was third in the state by a hair. Sophomore Sydney Nolan was third on the team kills with 212 and led in blocks with 81. In the three state tournament matches, Nolan hit .474, with 41 kills to only four errors. Long had 48 total kills. Carlisle came off the bench this year to get 45 digs and 21 aces. Schroder posted 59 kills and 34 blocks. Sophomore Kamden Schrand was fourth on the team in digs with 184. Leah Fortner and Tess Noll also played varsity time. McDermott credited the junior varsity players, who had to step in when the varsity was unable to play in the 35th District Tournament because of quarantine, and ending up winning the district championship. The players who took the fl oor there were Elizabeth Chun, Megan Chun, Lucy Dickman, Adele France, Delaney Gillum, Kayla Hostetler, Brianna Klaene, Jada Kramer, Peyton Mast, Abigayle Porter and Madison Steff en.

10th Region championship and lost in the state round of 16. Honorable mention picks were Simon Kenton senior Aubrey Nipper, Highlands freshman Laney Smith, Boone County senior Raygen Black, Highlands senior Kenzie Nehus, Cooper junior Madi Redlinger, Notre Dame junior Emma Spivey and Dixie Heights teammates Nina Sturm and Grace Gerding. Moeller, a Ryle senior, led a Raiders defense that allowed only fi ve goals all season, none in the regular season. Ryle fi nished 17-1-1, winning the Ninth Region championship and losing in the

state semifi nals to South Warren in penalty kicks. The coaches association did not name an overall Mr. Soccer honoree. Moeller was fi rst-team all-state in the East along with senior teammate Lance Paul, who led the Ryle off ense with 16 goals and 12 assists. Also on the fi rst team were Holy Cross senior Holden Lipscomb, Highlands senior Max Farris, Highlands senior Hank Cook, Covington Catholic senior William Bosley and Conner senior Dekkar Haaser. Lipscomb led Northern Kentucky in goals with 31 with seven assists. Farris and Bosley were off ensive leaders and

playmakers, and Bosley helped CovCath fi nish 13-4-1 and Ninth Region runner-up to Ryle. Haaser and Cook were honored for defense. Ryle teammates Luke Jenkins and Colson Neace were named to the second team along with Beechwood senior Ruben Rechtin, Covington Catholic senior Grant Montelisciani and CovCath junior Carter Eilers. Jenkins and Nease were named on defense for the Raiders. Rechtin scored 15 goals this season. The CovCath pair were honored for defense, with Eilers named as one of two second-team goalkeepers.

baseball and softball programs.” The Kid Glove program has raised more than $400,000 in 2019 and over $10,000,000 since its inception in 1971. Among the items purchased last year were more than 350,000 baseballs and softball and 7,000 additional pieces of equipment. In addition to buying equipment, the organization sponsors the Kid Glove Dugout Club which raises money to send special kids to the Reds’ game. In many instances, this the fi rst opportunity for these kids to see a Reds’ game. The organization also co-sponsors the Miracle League (a league for “special kids”) to play baseball, and works with the Reds’ Community Fund to co-sponsor an Inner City Baseball program. Kramer was former executive secretary of Knothole baseball. The baseball fi eld at St. Henry District High School is named after him, and the softball fi eld after his wife, Wink Kramer.

Kid Glove Game event, Feb. 1973: Paul Kramer, game chairman; Pete Rose, honorary game chairman; and Hank Mersch, game chairman. ENQUIRER FILE

Continued from Page 1B

Then it came to crunch time. McDermott spent a lot of energy during the season reminding her team that they could compete with the Louisville powers. “They came in this year talking about a state championship,” McDermott said. “They competed with those schools at the freshman and JV levels, so they felt when they were seniors , they said we could do this. It’s that mental battle.” That mental perseverance helped as the tense moments and the swings of momentum in the state fi nal were refl ected in the stats, which were close in every major category. Notre Dame had to come through at several key moments. The Pandas had to bounce back after giving away leads of 10-2 and 15-10 in the fourth set, while leading 2-1. The Jaguars rallied to win the fourth set 25-22 to force the decisive fi fth set. NDA trailed 4-2 and 10-9 in the fi nal set. The fi fth set had nine ties and three lead changes until it got to 13-13, when the next team to lead by two points would win the match. Notre Dame led 14-13 on a kill by senior Cate Scheper from an assist by senior Emily Bentley. The Pandas then won the fi nal point on a decisive block by Scheper and senior Abby Powers at the net, following a serve by senior Anna Long. “These kids believed and they bought into working hard in the gym day in and day out,” McDermott said. “They struggled to be motivated some days, and we told them ‘Are you working as hard as Mercy and Assumption right now?’” Another factor McDermott worked on was the physical advantage the Louisville powers usually have. A typical Assumption roster usually has multiple players on the fl oor over six feet tall, and last year’s state champions had one over 6-foot-3. When McDermott returned to NDA for the 2018 season, she worked on changing the Pandas’ scheme to counteract the size advantage the Louisville “big three” usually have. McDermott installed a system where the Pandas play quicker on off ense and defense, emphasizing shorter passes from the serve and shorter sets to hit-

Players Continued from Page 1B

Notre Dame junior Macie Feldman, Dixie Heights junior Morgan Gerak and Bishop Brossart's Riley Griffi n. Prather, a Morehead State commit, had eight goals and 10 assists while controlling the midfi eld for the regional champion Pioneers. Kent had 24 goals, Feldman posted 12 goals and 9 assists, and Gerak posted 18 goals and 18 assists. Griffi n allowed a goal per game in the net for the Mustangs, who won the

Kramer Continued from Page 1B

made donated Reds tickets available to youth teams who would sell them in their neighborhoods and use the proceeds for equipment. This process was meticulously coordinated by Paul, his family and board for decades. “Paul made it possible for tens of thousands of kids to play ball,” said Reds Community Fund executive director and Kid Glove board member, Charley Frank. “Kid Glove is synonymous with youth baseball and Paul was one of our region’s most ardent baseball fans and advocates. The work that the Reds Community Fund does wouldn’t have been possible without Paul’s tireless efforts. It will be impossible to replace him but we’re committed to keeping his legacy burning brightly through our youth

“Every coach and every player over the past 26 years has been a part of this championship,” NDA head coach Molly McDermott said of the elusive state championship. “They continued coming in and working hard and not letting the level of play drop off, even when we weren’t experiencing the championships." JAMES WEBER/THE ENQUIRER

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KENTON RECORDER

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS 518 Grandview Ave.: Bethany and Austin Morgan to Bethany and Matthew Hanson; $300,000 601 Center St.: Shane Iles to Cassandra and Andrew Ritter; $330,000

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Burlington 2036 Birdie Court, unit 146-A: Beverly Goethe to Hedwig Obara; $210,000 2155 Bluegrama Drive: Angie and Scott Stanley to Deanna Ross and Beau Pence; $245,000 2458 Ferdinand Drive: Blake Slack to Wesley Gurren; $225,000 2550 Sunday Silence Court: Amanda and Timothy Knopp to John Kelly; $235,000 2736 Sunchase Boulevard: R.S. Development, LLC to Robyn and Edwin Crawford; $78,000 2741 Sunchase Boulevard: Pamela and Todd Hunt to Alicia Novachich and Kimberly Boyd; $560,000 2961 Timber Ridge Drive: Stephanie and Patrick Callahan to Bryan Wood; $226,500 3044 Featherstone Drive: Kimberly Beemon to Jeffrery Neace; $183,500 4148 Country Mill Ridge, unit 19-102: Chloe North and John Putty to Taylor and Samuel Benner; $144,500 5327 Limaburg Road: Lauren and Philip Mayleben to Goldman USA, Inc.; $358,000 5930 Garrard St.: Gary Anderson to Kristie and Daniel Lovins; $132,500 6448 Pepperwood Drive: Janet Duncan and John Duncan to Bridget and Scott Herbstreit; $193,500 6561 Cannondale Drive: Brookstone Home, Inc. to Hang My Nguyen and Chuyen Duc Bui; $440,000 7387 Spindle Creek Court: Stacie and Chance Anderson to Meghan Cranfield and Mitchell Anderson; $183,000 7435 Owl Creek Circle: Penelope and Kevin Weartz to Karen and Mark Christian; $252,000 7700 Falls Creek Way: Taylor Belew to Samantha Freeman and Elijah Williams; $234,000

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Edgewood 3264 Madonna Drive: Nancy and Gregory Armstrong to Gregory Meyerratken; $249,000 3458 Meadowlark Drive: Abby and Eric Merz to Dawn and Cory Conner; $190,000

Elsmere 1838 Garvey Ave.: JAC Property, LLC to Megan Maschinot; $75,000 202-204 Floral St.: Barbara Thomas to Penny Barton; $135,000 3804 Autumn Road: Aaron Ayotte to Megan Jacobs; $167,000 432 Elken Place: Ronald Unkraut to Terry Thomas; $171,000

Erlanger 145 Barren River Drive, unit 11: Dan Farrell to Vicki Dansberry; $113,000 198 McAlpin Ave.: Hardy Property Holding, LLC to Lisa and Adam Berger; $105,000 203 Forest Ave.: Hilary Gasdorf to Amand Carothers; $162,000 313 James Ave.: Michelle Smith to Riley and Christopher Sumner; $195,000 3388 Cedar Tree Lane: Penny Beach to Jeffrey Bockowski; $125,000 3410 Cherry Tree Lane: David Brosky to Jessica and Brandon Holloway; $168,000 3840 Zora Lane: Matthew Breitung to Alicia and Alexander Wagner; $354,000 3964 Woodchase Drive: Ellen and Matthew Gregory to Kevin Byrne; $179,000 446 Forest Ave.: Shelley and Jason Enda to Laura and Cortez Wrigth; $165,500 908 Valleylake Court, unit 106D: Jennifer and Carl Gosney to Dianne Steveson; $137,000

Florence 10 Lucas St.: Jonathan Landrum to Lee Byrd and Dante Morris; $123,000 102 Hillside Drive: Kylie and Adam Riley to Cassandra and Christopher Kentrup; $160,000 1048 Apple Blossom Drive: Allison and Stephen Neace to Megan

Matracia and Brian Poe; $265,000 1144 Periwinkle Drive: Laura and David Roberson to Colin Wagner; $130,000 1155 Fairman Way, unit 206: Jean Chalk to Xiaopei Fang; $118,000 117 Hitching Post Place: Melissa and Kenneth Humphrey to Michael Finke; $225,000 1333 Ashford Drive: Debbie and Wiliam Hunter to Lacie Heard; $235,000 1590 Hickory Hill Court: Allison and Eric Woodlee to Tonya and Staurt McGriff; $189,000 1596 Shady Cove: Linda and John Nagy to Joseph Turner; $217,500 18 Goodridge Drive: Gabrielle and Jesse McKeehan to Christina Allen and Marc Cordell; $159,500 1802 Quarry Oaks Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Rajendra Shah; $215,500 1806 Quarry Oaks Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Janice and Mark Stambaugh; $215,000 1951 Sunning Dale Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Cassie Parker; $254,000 1955 Sunning Dale Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Lisa Marshall and Jerry Turner; $272,500 1965 Sunning Dale Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Kelli and Douglas Beimesch; $274,500 2086 Blankenbecker Drive: Deborah and Casey McEoy to Wendy Day; $365,000 226 Saint Jude Circle: Tina and Dennis Jeffers to Jessica Barlow; $153,500 580 Buckshire Glen Drive: Theodore Jeffers to Frances and Jeffrey Morris; $225,000 600 Friars Lane, unit 6: Joy and Christopher Glen to Betty Burkart; $110,000 6004 Belaire Drive: The Estate of Plege L. Sharp to Leo Earls; $78,000 6104 Walnut Court: Rebecca Weschler to Erika Niemer; $154,000 660 Friars Lane, unit 8: Barbara Holliday to Kathie Alloway; $112,000 677 Stable Gate Lane: Jennifer Wood to Travis Connley; $125,000 7008 Glenburn Drive: Kathleen and Wilbert Ellis to Michelle and Ian Monroe; $255,000 7130 Thornwood Lane: Seante and Jeff Carter to Brooke and Travis Montgomery; $285,000 787 Ridgeview Drive: Cheryl and Timothy Weber to Jesse and Richard Veron; $225,000 826 Elizabeth Drive: Paulette Lyon to Melissa and Kenneth Humphreys; $330,000

Fort Mitchell 108 Saint Johns Road: Kelly and Thomas Bison to Cindy and Kevin Sheehan; $800,000 140 Deauville Court: Jane Frick, Constance Frick and Lynn Herman to Marnelle and Lazaro Castellanos; $160,000 1987 Warren Ave.: Kristie and Delbert Price to Cassie and Shawn Draper; $78,000 2 Princeton Ave.: Michelle and Ryan Yauger to Catherine and Joshua Miller; $568,000

Fort Wright 1611 Park Road: Mary Jo and Edwin Flick to Kathleen and Mitchell Enzweiler; $200,000 1657 Castle Hill Lane: Kenneth Day to Alenka Maric; $272,500 520 Beaumont Court: Jamie and Ryan Grubish to Nicole and Mukhammadasalom Masharipov; $283,000

Independence 10035 Meadow Glen Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Victoria and Jason Seaver; $370,000 10193 Falcon Ridge Drive: Patrick Ottaway to Lindsey Allen and Dylan Ashba; $220,000 10197 Chestnut Oak Drive: Jessica and Matthew Bodner to Alexis and Stephen Gordon; $212,500 12005 Crabapple Court: Arlinghaus Builders, LLC to Jennifer and Paul Taulbee II; $281,500 1862 Autumn Maple Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Michelle Caouette and Jessica Detrick; $285,500 1870 Autumn Maple Drive: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Amanda Igo; $241,500 2136 Hartland Boulevard: Kathy Hand and William Charmosta to Maria and Dennis Lobes; $231,000 3534 Mills Road: Margaret and Brian Von Lienen to Lauran Mayleben; $346,000 3934 Sherbourne Drive: The Drees Company to Aaron Dries; $366,500 5167 Madison Pike: Danielle and Jason Hudson to Ryan Lockhart; $170,000 59 Nicole Drive: Susan Clauss to Carmen and James Dobos; $220,000 615 Badger Court: Kelly and Joshua Rodamer to Matthew Burkhardt; $166,000 9948 Cobblestone Boulevard: Stephanie and John Simon to Austin Kramer; $220,000

Lakeside Park 61 Buttermilk Pike: Blake and Stephen Benson to Yursa Abonami and Dylan Cottingham; $203,000

Ludlow 272 Deverill St.: Stacey and Adam Moorhead to Caitlyn Kroger and Timothy Helmer; $190,000 625 Church St.: Courtney and Evan Chapman to Aaliyah Bricking; $140,000

Park Hills 824 Aberdeen Road: Alexandra and Benjamin Bessler to Seana Dalenburg; $233,000 843 Alhambra Court: Elizabeth and Paul Ruh to Michelle Smith; $260,000

Taylor Mill 609 Valley View Drive: David Ritchie to Michael Moore; $179,000 663 Ridgeway Drive: Marlayna Kaelin and Jason Cooney to Mary Northup and Shea Wilson; $193,000 678 Ridgeway Drive: Ashley and Richard Arens to Allison Craig; $229,500

Villa Hills 820 Wesley Drive: Katherine and James Spaulding to Lindsay Jordan and Sandra Jordan; $225,000 948 Appleblossom Drive: Beverly and Dennis Koeninger to Eileen and Scott Woods; $668,500

Walton 11307 Sheffield Drive: Wanda Giles to Amber Schultz; $275,000 11521 Wynfair Court: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Joshua Rabb; $327,000 12055 Rachel Ann Drive: Kayla and Blake Early to Stephen Boemker; $170,000 171 Zinfandel Lane: Fischer Single Family Homes IV, LLC to Chloe North and John Putty; $267,000 341 University Drive: Ashlee and Stacey Garrett to Ravindra Vaidawattie Dejeet; $315,000 521 Termar Court: Rebecca and Joshua Kemp to Beth Anderson; $41,000


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SCHOOL NEWS

Staff members at Mary, Queen of Heaven School. PROVIDED

2020 has been a Zoo Staff members at Mary, Queen of Heaven School dressed up for Halloween in the theme of “2020 Has Been a Zoo!” Garri Hunt, Mary, Queen of Heaven

Kindergarten students learn about our democracy Kindergarten students at Mary, Queen of Heaven School recently learned about the election process and our democracy, along with some of our early presidents. Garri Hunt, Mary, Queen of Heaven School

Due to the holiday, our office hours and obituary placement times may vary. Please contact us at 855-288-3511 or obits@enquirer.com for further details.

Kindergarten students at Mary, Queen of Heaven School. PROVIDED

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE

ANSWERS ON PAGE 4B

No. 1115 WAIT, WHAT?

1

BY EVAN KALISH AND CAITLIN REID / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

51 First two words of ‘‘Green Eggs and 1 Aid for a small Ham’’ business 52 ____ fixe 10 Dev of ‘‘Slumdog 53 Malbec and syrah, Millionaire’’ e.g. 15 Part of a prairie 54 Role model skyline 55 Wet-Nap, for one 19 Strict commitment 57 Friend with a 20 Sidestep rhyming description 21 ‘‘Way ahead of you’’ 59 Sighting aptly found 22 Compliment to a in ‘‘Are you for runway model? real?’’ 24 Low card in Texas 61 ‘‘Anything you’d like hold’em to ____?’’ 25 Some donations 63 Relics proving how 26 Stable supply Noah steered his boat? 27 Starting piece on a1 or h8, say 68 Something to do for recovery? 28 ____ Slam (tennis 69 Pacific island ring feat) 70 Neil with the hit 30 Drain ‘‘Breaking Up Is 31 Easily offended by Hard to Do’’ foul language? 71 Carries out 34 Kind of high ground 73 Actor Elwes of ‘‘The 37 Trial Princess Bride’’ 38 Breaks down 75 Trade blows 39 Spanish ‘‘sun’’ 77 Mild 40 Axel ____, protagonist 79 Driver’s org., no of ‘‘Beverly Hills matter how you Cop’’ slice it? 41 X 80 Relent 42 Japanese roadster 83 Prepared for a field since 1989 trip? 44 Residence that might 86 Interjections akin to be named for a ‘‘Yeah, su-u-ure!’’ donor 87 Bygone forensic 45 Question to a tantrum spinoff thrower? 89 Android alternative 49 Costly cuts 90 Quits at the last minute Online subscriptions: Today’s 91 Org. that awards the puzzle and more Safer Choice label than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords 92 World capital ($39.95 a year). established in 1535

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Evan Kalish, 33, of Bayside, N.Y., is a writer and crossword constructor. His hobby is visiting and photographing Post Offices around the country — more than 10,000 to date. Many photos and accounts of his travels appear on his blog, Postlandia. Caitlin Reid is a homemaker, crossword constructor and church pianist in Santa Ana, Calif. The two connected online and collaborated by email and video chat. This is Caitlin’s second Sunday Times crossword and Evan’s first. — W.S.

AC R O S S

2

RELEASE DATE: 11/22/2020

10 MXN, on a currency chart 11 Adele and Cher, e.g. 12 ____ and Caicos 13 Part of a dean’s address 14 ‘‘I’d rather pass’’ 15 Shooting sport 16 All together now 17 Farm-to-table consumer 18 Word that sounds like its first letter 21 Elba who played Macavity in 2019’s ‘‘Cats’’ 23 One end of the PolitiFact meter 29 Willing subject 30 ‘‘Don’t be rude . . . greet our guests!’’ 31 Loonie or toonie 32 Some are named for kings and queens 33 Stately street liners 34 Coat from a goat DOWN 35 High point of Greek 1 ____ Rudolph, civilization? portrayer of Kamala 36 Emeritus: Abbr. Harris on ‘‘S.N.L.’’ 2 Role model 37 ‘‘It’s me . . . duh!’’ 3 Amigo 40 ‘‘Just sayin’,’’ in shorthand 4 Rules’ partner, for short 41 Needless to say 5 El Dorado treasure 42 Mississippi ____ pie 6 Like apple seeds, 43 Released if eaten in huge 44 Thingamabob quantities 46 Brink 7 Fresh from a keg 47 World No. 1 tennis 8 Sore player between 9 Org. that sponsored the Navratilova and design competition Seles for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial 48 Lived in a blue state?

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67 Pelvic exercises 72 Give attitude 74 Instruction for a course? 76 Earnings 78 Drew back 80 ‘‘Sorry to intrude …’’ 81 Certain monkey … or monk 82 ‘‘Jackpot!’’ 83 One needing new, unburned pants? 84 De-lights? 85 Oil-rich state, for short

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88 Appliance with apps 92 Yearns (for) 93 Fashionable pair 94 Cover for ‘‘little piggies’’ 96 ‘‘Josephine the Singer, or the Mouse Folk’’ is the last short story he wrote 97 ‘‘Take that!’’ 98 Kind of chemical bond in salts 99 Vivacious quality 100 What a meta clue might do to itself

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50 One might be hard to sit for 54 Pipes at some bars 56 Brings out 58 Downfall in many an Agatha Christie novel 60 Buzzed hairstyle 62 Stops harping on something 64 Like a sparsely attended party 65 See 66-Down 66 With 65-Down, ‘‘Ditto’’

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93 Jackanapes 94 Rap producers’ favorite vegetables? 95 Masters of slapstick? 100 Retinal receptor 101 Drink after drink? 102 ‘‘To live without ____ is to cease to live’’: Dostoyevsky 103 Sign of summer 104 Stow cargo 108 Get into gear 109 Title for an oral surgeon’s handbook? 113 Certain sexual preferences 114 Italian automotive hub 115 Subject of many an off-season rumor 116 ‘‘Young Frankenstein’’ character played by Teri Garr 117 Tee type 118 4th order?

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103 Chicago mayor Lightfoot 104 Brick made of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene 105 New ____ 106 Showy basket 107 Lifesavers, for short 108 Piece of equipment for gold medalist Lindsey Vonn 110 Marauder of old 111 Lifelong bud, slangily 112 Partner of hem


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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

COMMUNITY NEWS Natural Green Christmas tree lot celebrates 50 years, changes location Paul Stuempel’s Natural Green Christmas tree lot has moved to 90 Alexandria Pike, Fort Thomas, KY 41075 – next to Jeff Wyler Chrysler. Paul’s tree lot has become a family tradition. Little ones run around the roped in, tree lined lot, as mom, dad, grandma and grandpa hunt for their perfect tree while listening to Christmas music to set the mood. Once found, the tree goes through a routine list. It’s put on the Natural Green shaker, then the bailer is next. Then it’s given a fresh cut, and fi nally, it is secured safely in their car. Meanwhile, the family, along with their favorite pet wait to get their yearly picture taken in front of a colorful background. A great time is had by all – only at Natural Green. It was 1970 when Paul opened Natural Green for the fi rst time on a vacant lot on Donnermeyer Drive in Bellevue, Kentucky. He bought 75 trees with the $150 he had to his name. At that time, he only had his wife’s favorite tree, balsam fi rs, like the skimpy Charlie Brown trees, and a fuller tree, Scotch pines. In recent years he has had as many as 10 diff erent varieties of trees. The last couple of years there has been a shortage of trees. This year is no exception. Most of the trees come from Michigan, but he had to go to Canada this year to secure the number of trees needed to open the lot. Most of us are not aware of the hard work the tree farmer undergoes, especially to get the premium quality trees he has. Also, the trees are subject to a government grading system, similar to beef. Paul has had to call for such an inspection before to make sure his customers have the best selection of trees to choose from. He loves the outdoors and is very appreciative of his customers. He is very passionate about the business and all the Christmas excitement. He loves running the tree lot and seeing his customers looking through the display of trees. Paul also enjoys decorating and showing the handmade wreaths in the wreath trailer. He also sells other accessories. Paul loves this type of work so much he started something similar to

Paul Stuempel’s Natural Green Christmas tree lot is celebrating 50 years of business. PROVIDED

the tree lot for the other 11 months of the year. In the early 1970s, he had an open air market known as Frederick’s Fill Produce, located on the 6th Street Fill, but Paul had to close when 471 was built. Paul couldn’t be happier with his Christmas tree business. He is fortunate to have a job for 50 years – a job he dearly loves. It’s fun, but it’s mixed in with hard work and long cold hours. Though only open for a little over one month, there is so much involved that doesn’t meet the eye. Getting the trees here is a feat in itself. Ordering the right number of trees can be tricky, and has defeated Paul in the past. Having enough help on the lot is crucial. Preparation for the following year can begin as early as May, however, all the hard work is worth it when you see the big smiles on faces as they leave the lot with their beautiful tree. Fifty years and loving every minute of it – come visit us at our new location and help us celebrate. Submitted by Paul Stuempel

President and owner of NKY’s ATech Training says Girl Scouts helped prepare her as a female in STEM Walton, KY – How has Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road (GSKWR) Alum Laura Lyons changed the world? Easy, she was unafraid of being the only girl in the room. As president and owner of ATech Training, a Northern Kentucky manufacturing company in the automotive/diesel technology training market and an Army Veteran, Laura has often found herself as one of few females in her male-dominated fi eld, and she’s okay with that. Laura has always had the confi dence to pursue her unique interests, a skill that she attributes to her time in Girl Scouts. Growing up as a Girl Scout in Ft. Thomas and Erlanger, she was interested in problem solving and understanding the technical side of how things worked.

Laura Lyons, president and owner of ATech Training in Northern Kentucky.

See COMMUNITY NEWS, Page 10B

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER

COMMUNITY NEWS

Scouts placed flags on graves to honor troops for Veteran’s Day. PROVIDED Continued from Page 8B

After high school Laura pursued an Associate’s degree in Electrical Engineering Technical and a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science. As a way to help fund her education, Laura joined the Army, where she had the opportunity to move to Hawaii and work in Military Intelligence. Laura credits Girl Scouts for allowing her to gain confi dence in her ability to try new things and take pride in accomplishing her goals. She never really saw herself as being interested in business, but after she was able to sell the second highest amount of Girl Scout cookies in her area one year, she realized that she could try new things and succeed. Laura joked about the Girl Scout

Cookie sales strategy that she roped her little sister into – realizing that people would buy more cookies when her adorable little sister tagged along! Jokes aside, Laura would go on to use the business skills that she learned through Girl Scouts in her future. After years spent on the technical side of her industry at R.A. Jones (a packaging machinery manufacturer) and ATech, Laura was asked to accept the role of President at ATech, shifting from a technical position to a leadership role. Laura’s vast life and professional experience prepared her for this new position. She went on to earn her Master of Business Administration degree and become not only the President, but also the owner of ATech. Laura is passionate about reminding

girls and young women to pursue their unique interests. She recently worked on a project with a group of young Rosie’s Girls where ATech taught them how to build circuit boards and she noted how diligent and eager to learn the girls were. “You can pursue whatever your interests are. Men and women can work together in these fi elds,” said Laura. “Being the only female in the room means that you will stand out. This can be an advantage as you will be noticed when you speak or have an idea to off er.” she continued. We can thank trailblazers like Laura for showing us that girls and women don’t only have a place in STEM fi elds, but they off er critical leadership as STEM innovators, front-runners, and catalysts for advancement.

Amy Greene, Girl Scouts of Kentucky’s Wilderness Road

Scouts honor military heroes on Veteran’s Day Scouts from Troop 1, Troop 1001 and Cub Scouts from Pack 138 chartered by Florence Christian Church placed American fl ags at the gravesites of all military veterans buried in the Florence Cemetery on Center Street. The scouts placed the fl ags on the graves to honor our troops for Veteran’s Day. Troop 1/1001 and Pack 138 meet every Tuesday at Florence Christian Church. Please visit www.troop1ky.org. Timothy Iott, Scouts BSA Troop 1, Troop 1001, Pack 138

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7 botanical gardens for nature-soaking in Cincy Charles Infosino Special to Cincinnati Enquirer USA TODAY NETWORK

What’s in a name? With so many different types of gardens, a name tells us what we will see, and it will smell just as sweet. A botanical garden is a large public garden where plants are grown for display and scientifi c study. An arboretum is a botanical garden that specializes in trees and woody plants. Both are educational, family fun and available in the Cincinnati area. Families can relax and learn more about nature at Cincinnati’s botanical gardens. They might even inspire today’s children to be tomorrow’s botanists. Here’s a list of some of the area’s best natural beauties.

Boone County Arboretum This arboretum has more than 3,600 trees and shrubs in their collections. It is laid out as a landscape arboretum and is the only Level IV Accredited Arboretum in the Greater Cincinnati area. The Boone County Arboretum features over 2.2 miles of paved walking trails. It has 28 collection areas, including three themed gardens: Children’s Garden, Butterfl y Garden and Rain Garden. 9190 Camp Ernst Road, Union; bcarboretum.org.

Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden This 75-acre zoo also has over 3,000 plant varieties. Plants and fl owers are present throughout the zoo. The Cincinnati Zoo has several garden exhibits including: Butterfl y Garden, Community Gardens, Conifer Garden, Green Garden, Green Roof, Pollinator Garden, Rain Gardens, Tulip Display and Edible Gardens & Aquaponics. The Endangered Species/CREW Garden employs CREW scientists, who work to propagate and preserve threatened American plant species. 3400 Vine St., Avondale; cincinnatizoo.org.

Hauck Botanical Garden Hauck is co-managed by the Civic Garden Center of Greater Cincinnati. The 8-acre garden features 900 types of

The Bloom and Grow garden designed by Kat Smith, Krohn Conservatory florist, at the Krohn Conservatory on Friday, Jan. 17. ALBERT CESARE/THE ENQUIRER

trees, shrubs and evergreens. It also has many fl owers, such as hydrangeas, daffodils, daylilies and lilacs. Hauck Botanical Garden’s collection includes 500 varieties of woody shrubs, over 400 varieties of trees and more than 10,000 varieties of bulbs. The botanical garden is home to multiple attraction gardens including Peggy MacNeale Daff odil Collection, Pat Kipp Memorial Shade Garden, Serenity Garden, Butterfl y and Vegetable Garden, Herb Garden and Wildfl ower Garden. There are also the Hauck Legacy Trail and the Green Learning Station. 2625 Reading Road, Avondale; cincinnatiparks.com/central /hauck-botanical-gardens.

Krohn Conservatory Krohn houses over 1,000 diff erent varieties of plants in six permanent collections. The Fern House is like a mini rainforest. The Palm House is also similar to a mini rainforest and features palm trees, vines and a 20-foot waterfall. Citrus trees and temporary exhibits are displayed at the Floral Display House. A collection of bonsai trees is displayed at the Bonsai House. The Orchid House fea-

tures a variety of orchid species in bloom. Cacti are displayed at the Desert House. Krohn Conservatory hosts fi ve fl ower shows and a Butterfl y show every year. 1501 Eden Park Drive, Eden Park; cincinnatiparks.com/krohn.

Mount Airy Arboretum Located in the middle of the Mount Airy Forest, this is a 30-acre garden that features approximately 2,000 specimens from over 50 plant families and more than 125 diff erent genera. The arboretum’s fi ve most signifi cant collections are Meyer Conifer Collection (280 specimens), Rhododendron Collection (235 specimens), Viburnum Collection (166 specimens), Lilac Collection (115 specimens) and Magnolia Collection (87 specimens). 5083 Colerain Ave., Mount Airy; cincinnatiparks.com/west /mt-airy-arboretum.

Rowe Arboretum Rowe is a horticultural museum displaying many examples of hardy plant

specimens in Southwestern Ohio. It houses close to 5,000 diff erent trees, shrubs and perennials. The arboretum also features other specimens that are benefi cial to wildlife and to the ornamental display. There is a predominant evergreen theme throughout the arboretum. 4600 Muchmore Road, Indian Hill; ihill.org/recreation/rowe-arboretum.

Spring Grove Cemetery & Arboretum A cemetery might not sound like the most family fun place. “Hey kids, want to go to the cemetery to see some trees?” However, it is a 733-acre, beautiful arboretum, which just happens to have a 450-acre cemetery. There are approximately 1,300 herbaceous and woody plants. Its oldest tree is a 400-year old white oak and there are two oak trees around 300 years old, and 27 state champion trees – the largest of their species in the state of Ohio. The arboretum also features monuments and sculptures – including a sphinx and a pyramid. 4521 Spring Grove Ave., Spring Grove Village; springgrove.org.

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12B

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2020

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KENTON RECORDER To advertise, visit:

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

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

OFFICIAL PUBLICATION

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NOTICE

MOVE-IN SPECIAL • $500 gift card with a 12-month lease • $1,000 gift card with an 18-month lease • $1,500 gift card with a 24-month lease

Must sign a new lease by November 1, 2020 NEWLY RENOVATED APARTMENT HOMES • Brand new contemporary design • Brushed nickel fixtures and accents throughout • Designer “Wolf Classic” cabinetry • Gourmet kitchen with marbled countertops and tile backsplash • Plank Flooring in living room, kitchen, hallway and bathrooms • Plush, luxurious carpeting • Stainless Steel Appliances • Reservoir style sink basin • Private patios or balconies • High-Speed Internet

Please take notice that Duke Energy Kentucky, Inc. has applied to the Kentucky Public Service Commission for approval to revise its Demand Side Management (DSM) rate for gas service and electric service for residential and commercial customers. Duke Energy Kentucky’s current monthly DSM rate for residential gas customers is $0.030735 per hundred cubic feet and for non-residential gas customers is $0.000000 per hundred cubic feet. Duke Energy Kentucky’s current monthly DSM rate for residential electric customers is ($0.003143) per kilowatt-hour and for non-residential customers is $0.001768 per kilowatt-hour for distribution service and $0.000537 per kilowatt-hour for transmission service. Duke Energy Kentucky seeks approval to revise these rates as follows: Duke Energy Kentucky’s monthly DSM rate for residential gas customers would increase to $0.045817 per hundred cubic feet and for non-residential gas customers would remain at $0.000000 per hundred cubic feet. Duke Energy Kentucky’s monthly DSM rate for residential electric customers would increase to $0.002175 per kilowatt-hour and for non-residential customers would decrease to ($0.000868) per kilowatt-hour for distribution service and would decrease to $0.000218 per kilowatt-hour for transmission service. The rate contained in this notice is the rate proposed by Duke Energy Kentucky. However, the Public Service Commission may order a rate to be charged that differs from this proposed rate. Such action may result in a rate for consumers other than the rate in this notice. The foregoing rates reflect a proposed increase in electric revenues of approximately $1.93 million or 0.57% over current total electric revenues and an increase in gas revenues of approximately $0.94 million or 0.98% over current total gas revenues. A typical residential gas customer using 70 ccf in a month will see an increase of $1.05 or 1.5%. A typical residential electric customer using 1000 kWh in a month will see an increase of $5.65 or 6.1%. A typical non-residential electric customer using 40 kilowatts and 14,000 kWh will see a decrease of $40.35 or (3.2%). A non-residential customer served at transmission voltage using 10,000 kilowatts and 4,000,000 kWh will see a decrease of $887 or (0.4%). Non-residential gas customers will see no change in their bills from this application. Any corporation, association, body politic or person may by motion within thirty (30) days after publication or mailing of notice of the proposed rate changes, submit a written request to intervene to the Public Service Commission, 211 Sower Boulevard, P.O. Box 615, Frankfort, Kentucky 40602, and shall set forth the grounds for the request including the status and interest of the party. The intervention may be granted beyond the thirty (30) day period for good cause shown. Written comments regarding the proposed rate may be submitted to the Public Service Commission by mail or through the Public Service Commission’s website. A copy of this application filed with the Public Service Commission is available for public inspection at Duke Energy Kentucky’s office at 1262 Cox Road, Erlanger, Kentucky 41018 and on its website at http://www.duke-energy.com. This filing and any other related documents can be found on the Public Service Commission’s website at http://psc.ky.gov. CE-GCI0529765-02

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Right Hand Mann, LLC

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Specializing in new and old replacement of driveways, patios, sidewalks, steps, retaining walls, decorative concrete work, basement and foundation leaks & driveway additions. We also offer Bobcat, Backhoe, Loader, and Dumptruck Work, regarding yards & lot cleaning. • Free Estimates • Fully Insured • Over 20 Years Experience Currently Offering A+ Rating with Better 10% DISCOUNT Business Bureau

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