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Your Community Recorder newspaper serving all of Campbell County C AMPBELL C AMPBELL COUNTY RECORDER 75¢ THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS Vol. 17 No. 14 © 2014 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED The Campbell County Recorder 654 Highland Suite 27 Fort Thomas, KY 41075 For the Postmaster Published weekly every Thursday. Periodicals postage paid at Newport, KY 41071 USPS 450130 Postmaster: Send address change to The Campbell County Recorder 654 Highland Suite 27, Fort Thomas, KY 41075 Annual subscription: Weekly Recorder In-County $18.02; All other in-state $23.32; Out-of-state $27.56; Kentucky sales tax included News ................... 283-0404 Retail advertising .. 513-768-8404 Classified advertising .. 283-7290 Delivery ................. 781-4421 See page A2 for additional information Contact us PLUS TAX PLUS TAX Available at participating locations. ©2014 LCE, Inc. 43106 CE-0000584027 HIGHLAND HEIGHTS — The University of Kentucky’s Campbell County Cooperative Extension Service is getting children ages 6-10 to dig read- ing and gardening at the same time. The Literature in the Gar- den program is part of the ex- tension service’s youth garden- ing programs, which also in- clude a monthly Flower Buds program for ages 3-5 and a reg- ular youth master gardener class for ages 8-12. Doris Meece, a horticulture technician at the office, led first meeting of Literature in the Garden class March 11 by reading the book “Miss Rum- phius” by Barbara Cooney. Af- terward, six children planted lettuce seeds in a plastic plant- er. How Miss Rumphius plant- ed seeds everywhere she went and cleaned up was a fun story to hear, said Claire Curtsing, 9, of California. Curtsing said she liked planting seeds in the dirt as part of the class. “You get messy,” she said. Emma Bezold, 10, of Califor- nia, said she planting food is part of sustaining life and has to be done each year. “It makes you feel like you’re the one making the world recycle,” Bezold said. Meece said children will read a different book about the environment or gardening, and get to take the book home. The lettuce seeds the children planted will be moved into the Lakeside Commons Education- al Gardens outside the back- door of the extension service office during the next class, she said. Meece said she considered story books for the junior mas- ter gardener classes, but decid- ed they were more appropriate for children ages 6-10. YOUTH GARDENING CLASSES Registrations and a waiting list for spots in youth garden- ing classes at the University of Kentucky’s Campbell County Cooperative Extension office at 3500 Alexandria Pike, Highland Heights, are accepted through the website http://campbell.ca.uky.edu/ or by calling Doris Meece, horti- culture technician, at 859-572- 2600. » There are still spots are available for children for to join Literature in the Garden in time for the 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 8, meeting at the extension ser- vice office, 3500 Alexandria Pike, Highland Heights. The class meets at 5 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month through August. » The next junior master gardener meets on the fourth Tuesday April through August; the first meeting is April 29. Classes will meet from 5-7 p.m. April 29 and May 27, and from 10 a.m.-noon June 24 and July 29. A new master youth gar- dener class will start again in August. There are only three spots available in the class starting in April, and a waiting list is kept for any unexpected class openings, Meece said. » Flower Buds gardening classes for children ages 3-5 meet from 10-11:15 a.m. on the first Thursday of the month year-round. The class is limited to 12 participants, and there is a waiting list, Meece said. Preston Lauer spreads lettuce seeds into a pan of dirt as Cora Hopkins gathers more seeds to spread from a bowl during the first Literature in the Garden class.CHRIS MAYHEW/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER Planting the seeds of literacy By Chris Mayhew [email protected] Kylie Sansom, left, presses lettuce seeds into a pan of dirt as Claire Curtsinger raises a dirt-covered hand during the first Literature in the Garden class at the University of Kentucky’s Campbell County Cooperative Extension Service in Highland Heights.CHRIS MAYHEW/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER BELLEVUE — Three new busi- nesses have or are about to open on Fairfield Avenue. Bellevue Dental on the Ave- nue, located at 340 Fairfield Ave., opened Dec. 16. Gents, a men’s consignment shop, opened Jan. 2. The Paper Tiger, a gift boutique, is expected to open later this month. A friendly place Dental on the Avenue, a gen- eral dentistry practice, is oper- ated by Dr. Kevin Wall of Co- vington, who has been practic- ing for 26 years. Wall’s practice replaces Dr. David Hagedorn, who retired last fall. Office manager Meredith Reilman said Wall and his staff had been looking for “a neat lit- tle neighborhood,” to set up their “forever home.” Bellevue fit the bill. “We love it here,” she said. “It’s a tight-knit community and so friendly. We are very pleased to be a part of it.” The office is accepting new Avenue sees growth By Melissa Stewart [email protected] See AVENUE, Page A2 ALEXANDRIA — Justin Rolf felt pressure not to drop the ball when it came to collection start- ed by his sister. There was a chance the Crosstown Foodout, started by Rolf’s sister Mallory to raise do- nations for the CARE (Caring And Reaching with Encourage- ment) Mission, was going to canceled this year if someone didn’t take over. Mallory Rolf founded the collection as a fundraiser chal- lenge between Campbell Coun- ty and Bishop Brossart high schools. She graduated from Bishop Brossart in 2013 and is a freshman at the University of Brother takes over By Chris Mayhew [email protected] See BROTHER, Page A2 UNITED AGAINST TOLLS In a letter to the Recorder a group of business leaders urges alternative bridge solutions. A7 RITA’S KITCHEN Cookware gift ideas just in time for the bridal season. B3 FASTING ON FISH B1 Fridays in the Lenten season mean fish frys.

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Page 1: Campbell county recorder 032714

Your Community Recordernewspaper serving all ofCampbell County

CAMPBELLCAMPBELLCOUNTY RECORDER 75¢

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

Vol. 17 No. 14© 2014 The Community

RecorderALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The CampbellCounty Recorder654 HighlandSuite 27

Fort Thomas, KY 41075

For the PostmasterPublished weekly every Thursday.

Periodicals postage paid at Newport, KY 41071USPS 450130

Postmaster: Send address change toThe Campbell County Recorder

654 Highland Suite 27, Fort Thomas, KY 41075Annual subscription: Weekly Recorder In-County $18.02; All otherin-state $23.32; Out-of-state $27.56; Kentucky sales tax included

News ...................283-0404Retail advertising ..513-768-8404Classified advertising ..283-7290Delivery .................781-4421See page A2 for additional information

Contact us

PLUSTAX

PLUSTAX

Available at participating locations. ©2014 LCE, Inc. 43106CE-0000584027

HIGHLAND HEIGHTS — TheUniversity of Kentucky’sCampbell County CooperativeExtension Service is gettingchildren ages 6-10 to dig read-ing and gardening at the sametime.

The Literature in the Gar-den program is part of the ex-tensionservice’syouthgarden-ing programs, which also in-clude a monthly Flower Budsprogramfor ages 3-5 and a reg-ular youth master gardenerclass for ages 8-12.

Doris Meece, a horticulturetechnician at the office, ledfirst meeting of Literature inthe Garden class March 11 byreading the book “Miss Rum-phius” by Barbara Cooney. Af-terward, six children plantedlettuce seeds in a plastic plant-er.

How Miss Rumphius plant-ed seeds everywhere she wentand cleaned up was a fun storyto hear, said Claire Curtsing, 9,of California.

Curtsing said she likedplanting seeds in the dirt aspart of the class.

“You get messy,” she said.

EmmaBezold,10, ofCalifor-nia, said she planting food ispart of sustaining life and hasto be done each year.

“It makes you feel likeyou’re the one making theworld recycle,” Bezold said.

Meece said children willread a different book about theenvironment orgardening, andget to take the book home. Thelettuce seeds the children

planted will be moved into theLakesideCommonsEducation-al Gardens outside the back-door of the extension serviceoffice during the next class,she said.

Meece said she consideredstory books for the juniormas-tergardenerclasses,butdecid-ed theyweremore appropriatefor children ages 6-10.

YOUTH GARDENINGCLASSESRegistrations and a waiting

list for spots in youth garden-ing classes at the University ofKentucky’s Campbell CountyCooperative Extension office at3500 Alexandria Pike, HighlandHeights, are accepted throughthe websitehttp://campbell.ca.uky.edu/ orby calling Doris Meece, horti-culture technician, at 859-572-2600.» There are still spots are

available for children for to joinLiterature in the Garden in timefor the 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 8,meeting at the extension ser-vice office, 3500 AlexandriaPike, Highland Heights. Theclass meets at 5 p.m. on thesecond Tuesday of each monththrough August.» The next junior master

gardener meets on the fourthTuesday April through August;the first meeting is April 29.Classes will meet from 5-7 p.m.April 29 and May 27, and from10 a.m.-noon June 24 and July29. A new master youth gar-dener class will start again inAugust. There are only threespots available in the classstarting in April, and a waitinglist is kept for any unexpectedclass openings, Meece said.» Flower Buds gardening

classes for children ages 3-5meet from 10-11:15 a.m. on thefirst Thursday of the monthyear-round. The class is limitedto 12 participants, and there is awaiting list, Meece said.

Preston Lauer spreads lettuce seeds into a pan of dirt as Cora Hopkins gathers more seeds to spread from a bowl during the first Literature inthe Garden class.CHRIS MAYHEW/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER

Planting theseeds of literacy

By Chris [email protected]

Kylie Sansom, left, presses lettuce seeds into a pan of dirt as ClaireCurtsinger raises a dirt-covered hand during the first Literature in theGarden class at the University of Kentucky’s Campbell CountyCooperative Extension Service in Highland Heights.CHRIS MAYHEW/THE

COMMUNITY RECORDER

BELLEVUE—Threenewbusi-nesseshaveorareabout to openon Fairfield Avenue.

Bellevue Dental on the Ave-nue, located at 340 FairfieldAve., opened Dec. 16. Gents, amen’s consignment shop,opened Jan. 2. The Paper Tiger,a gift boutique, is expected toopen later this month.

A friendly placeDental on the Avenue, a gen-

eral dentistry practice, is oper-ated by Dr. Kevin Wall of Co-vington, who has been practic-ing for 26 years. Wall’s practicereplaces Dr. David Hagedorn,who retired last fall.

Office manager MeredithReilman said Wall and his staffhad been looking for “a neat lit-tle neighborhood,” to set uptheir “forever home.”

Bellevue fit the bill.“We love it here,” she said.

“It’s a tight-knit community andso friendly.Weareverypleasedto be a part of it.”

The office is accepting new

AvenueseesgrowthByMelissa [email protected]

See AVENUE, Page A2

ALEXANDRIA — Justin Rolffelt pressurenot todrop theballwhen it came to collection start-ed by his sister.

There was a chance theCrosstown Foodout, started byRolf’s sisterMallory to raisedo-nations for the CARE (CaringAnd Reaching with Encourage-ment) Mission, was going tocanceled this year if someonedidn’t take over.

Mallory Rolf founded thecollection as a fundraiser chal-lenge between Campbell Coun-ty and Bishop Brossart highschools. She graduated fromBishop Brossart in 2013 and is afreshman at the University of

BrothertakesoverBy Chris [email protected]

See BROTHER, Page A2

UNITED AGAINSTTOLLSIn a letter to the Recorder agroup of business leadersurges alternative bridgesolutions. A7

RITA’S KITCHENCookware gift ideasjust in time for thebridal season. B3

FASTINGON FISHB1Fridays in theLenten seasonmean fish frys.

Page 2: Campbell county recorder 032714

NEWSA2 • CAMPBELL COUNTY RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014

CAMPBELLCOUNTY RECORDER

NewsMarc Emral Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1053, [email protected] Mayhew Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1051,[email protected] Scalf Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1055, [email protected] Laughman Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . .513-248-7573,

[email protected] Weber Sports Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1054, [email protected]

AdvertisingTo place an ad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .513-768-8404,

[email protected]

DeliveryFor customer service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .781-4421Sharon Schachleiter Circulation Manager . .442-3464,

[email protected] Hollenkamp Circulation Clerk . . . . . . . . . .441-5537,

[email protected]

ClassifiedTo place a Classified ad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .283-7290, www.communityclassified.com

To place an ad in Community Classified, call 283-7290.

Find news and information from your community on the Webcincinnati.com/news/northern-kentucky

Calendar .................B2Classifieds ................CFood ......................B3Life ........................B1Obituaries .............. B6Schools ..................A3Sports ....................A4Viewpoints .............A7

Index

Kentucky.“Mallory really started

it and did the hard workfor me, and basically myjob was keeping it going,”he said.

Rolf, a point guardwhocomes off the bench forBrossart’s basketballteam, netted the most do-nations ever from thisyear’s Crosstown Foodoutwith 4,537 pounds of food.Donations were broughtby students, faculty andparents fromboth schoolsto Campbell County Mid-dle School for the annualCrosstown Shootout bas-ketballgamesJan.3and4.

For the first time in thechallenge’s three yearsCampbell County HighSchool won by collecting3,305 pounds of food, hesaid. Credit goes to socialstudies teacher Geoff Be-secker, and a few of hisstudents for collectingdo-nations early in prepara-tion for the Foodout, Rolf

said. Besecker is also aboard member of theCAREMission.

Bishop Brossart col-lected and donated 1,232pounds. Rolf saidMallorywas able to come back toattend one of the games.

Mallory said shehelped raise about 2,000pounds of food each of ofthe first two years.

“He raised so muchmore food than I did,” shesaid. “I was so proud ofhim.”

Mallory started theCrosstown Foodout as anidea of how she could do aproject to help her com-munity for an applicationto get into Kentucky’sGovernor Scholar pro-gram.

“I didn’t see anythingthat said you shouldn’tjust do it, so I did,” shesaid.

Justin taking over theevent was unexpected,butexciting,Mallorysaid.

“I reallywanted it to besomething that lastedlonger than just twoyears,” she said. “I wasreally excited when hesaid he was willing to putforth all that effort.”

BrotherContinued from Page A1

Siblings Mallory and JustinRolf of Alexandria haveorganized the CrosstownFoodout for three years,gathering donations for theCARE Mission food pantry.THANKS TOMALLORY ROLF

homes. She will offer tosell on consignment theman’s clothes. And, withreferrals from funeralhomes, donate an outfitfor burial to the family.

She also plans to offerdonations to local agen-ciessuchasBrightonCen-terandMountainMission.

A good fitLater this month, The

Paper Tiger will make itsreturn to Bellevue. Thegift boutique will set upshop at 605 Fairfield Ave.

According to ownerTom Ort, who lives inSouthgate, the store firstopened on Fairfield Ave-nue in 1986. After 17years, it moved to theNewport Shopping Cen-ter.

“I look forward to re-turning to Bellevue,” Ortsaid. “It’s a friendlyatmosphere, a real neigh-

borhood atmosphere. Youget a community feelhere.”

Ort said Bellevue com-pliments the “down-homefeeling” of The Paper Ti-ger well.

The store offers li-censed sports merchan-dise, seasonal flags anddecor, invitations andplush animals.

Bellevue Main Streetprogram manager JodyRobinsonsaid she is excit-ed to welcome these newbusinesses to FairfieldAvenue.

“Growing the historicFairfield Avenue busi-ness district is significantto Bellevue,” she said.“Certainly it’s good forour local economy, but it’sjust as much about placemaking.”

Fairfield Avenue pro-vides a destination for amix of shops, restaurantsand services. But it ismore than that, accordingto Robinson.

“It’s an experience, aplace to gather,” she said.“When I talk to new resi-dents it tops their list ofwhat attracted them toour community. TheNorthern Kentucky Eco-nomic and Housing Sum-mit identified FairfieldAvenue as the key ele-ment in the stabilityBellevue experiencedwhilemostof therivercit-ies struggled during themost recent downturn inthe economy.”

Want to continue theconversation? Tweet@MStewartReports

patients and Reilman saidthe staff is ready to makethem feel welcome.

“We’re a small staff offour,” she said. “Wedoourbest to make people feelwelcome and comfort-able. Everyone walks outsmiling.”

Amissingmarket

Gents,ownedandoper-ated by Sandi Slusser, isshaking things up in theworld of consignment.

“There are a lot ofwomen’s consignmentshops,” Slusser said.“There may be a smallsection of men’s clothingin them, but there’s noth-ing really just for men.”

So she came up withthe idea for an upscalemen’s consignment store.

“It’s for guys who liketo shop economically,”she said.

The store, at 321 Fair-field Ave., offers an arrayof gently used name-brand clothing. Gents isalso accepting consign-ors.

Slusser,who lives inAl-exandria, said she isworking to build relation-ships with area funeral

AvenueContinued from Page A1

Sandi Slusser dresses a mannequin for the window of hernewmen’s consignment shop, Gents, on Fairfield Avenuein Bellevue. MELISSA STEWART/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER

‘PIPPI LONGSTOCKING’

The indomitable Pippi Longstocking, played byRebecca Williams, outdoes Strongman DeeganGearding in the St. Joseph School's eighth-gradeproduction,“Pippi Longstocking.” Performances willtake place at 7 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, March 28and 29, and 2 p.m. Sunday, March 30, in the school'sMemorial Hall, 4011 Alexandria Pike, Cold Spring.Tickets cost $5 each at the door. For more information,call 859-441-2025. PROVIDED

ALEXANDRIA — TonyaBolton is really focusedon her new career.

The Pendleton Countyresident opened her pho-tography portrait studioin January at 200 Com-mercial Circle Drive inAlexandria, in the lowerlevel of Susan’s Salon andSpa.

Although she’s been ahobby photographer formore than a decade, shedecided togoprofessionaltwoyears ago, and recent-ly graduated from Anto-nelli College in Cincin-nati.

For now, her hours areby appointment only. Be-sides calling her at 859-512-9136, the best way tocontact Bolton or to findout about her availability

is to check her Facebookpage,facebook.com/funphotog.

That’s where she hostsgiveaways, provides anemail newsletter and listssales.

While she has plenty ofprops and backgroundsforphotos,Boltonsaidshe

loves togooutsideforpor-traits in special locations.

Bolton took senior por-traitsofBaileyStaffordatAult Park in January.

“The images wereamazing,” said AmberTate, Stafford’s mother.“She took the time to lis-ten to what we wanted,

andshedidn’t rushus. Shetook her time, and thatreally makes a big differ-ence.”

Tate said Boltonstopped them to takemore photos on the wayback to the studio.

“Shejustpulledoff intoa field with tall grass, andshe called me to say shethought it would be agreat spot for anotherpic-ture,” Tate said. “It’s myfavorite. I don’t know thatsomeone else would dothat. Tonya is just so per-sonable and creative. Ican’t imagine going any-where else for portraits.”

In addition to studioand location shoots forchildren, families, new-bornsandhighschool sen-iors, Bolton offers somecreative compositions aswell.

Photog aims for inspirationBy Amy [email protected]

Photographer Tonya Bolton recently opened her studio at200 Commercial Circle Drive, in the lower level of Susan'sSalon and Spa, in Alexandria. PHOTO PROVIDED BY KEVIN LINNERE

CE-0000576106

APRIL 2 10am – 2pmBank of Kentucky, Warsaw BranchWarsaw, KY

APRIL 3 10am – 2pmKroger Newport, Newport KY

APRIL 8 10am – 2pmCity of Wyoming, Wyoming, OH

APRIL 10 8am – 1pmSt. Elizabeth EdgewoodEdgewood, KY

APRIL 11 12pm – 4pmKroger Union, Union KY

APRIL 12 9am – 12pmRemkes Market TurfwayFlorence, KY

APRIL 14 9am – 1pmSt. Pius X Church, Edgewood, KY

APRIL 15 12pm – 6pmSt. Elizabeth Florence, Florence KY

APRIL 16 10am – 2pmThomas More CollegeEdgewood, KY

APRIL 17 10am – 2pmKroger Ft. Mitchell, Ft. Mitchell KY

APRIL 25 12pm – 4pmSt. Elizabeth Covington

APRIL 26 8am – 12pmSt Mary’s Parish, Alexandria KY

APRIL 28 2pm – 6pmGrant Co. Public LibraryWilliamstown, KY

APRIL 29 2pm – 6pmKroger CrossroadsCold Springs, KY

St. Elizabeth is working to better

identify cardiovascular disease,

as well as to prevent stroke

and cardiac emergencies. The

CardioVascular Mobile Health

Unit extends the experience and

excellence of the St. Elizabeth

Heart and Vascular Institute

by providing screenings, risk

appraisals and education in our

community, where you can easily

access our services.

Delivering top – notch carewith advanced technology

SCREENINGSARE $25 EACH.Call 859 – 301 – WELL (9355)to schedule an appointment.

Page 3: Campbell county recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • CCF RECORDER • A3

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

COMMUNITYRECORDEREditor: Marc Emral, [email protected], 578-1053

More than 75 Camp-bellCounty studentsfrom Campbell

Ridge Elementary, Cross-roads Elementary, Reiley El-ementary, Campbell CountyMiddle School and CampbellCounty High School, recent-ly competed at the CampbellCountyRCXrobotics region-al tournament.

The school district will bewell represented at theSTLPstate championship, sched-uled for April 22.

Campbell County MiddleSchoolwill send two teams inthe middle-school division:the middle-school championFunky Squirrelz 3, CaseyKyle, Jason Sand and JamenSchweickart; andthemiddle-school runner-up CCMS 4,Cole Arthur, Max Kelling-haus and Logan Roether.

Campbell County HighSchool will send one team inthe high-school division: thehigh-school runner-up TheStuff, Katie Emmett, TonyPainter andMaddie Emmett.

TheCampbell elementaryschools placed teams in thetop 10, but none will be goingto state.

CAMPBELLSTUDENTS SHOW OFFROBOTICS SKILLS

The CCMS 4, featuring Cole Arthur, Max Kellinghaus and Logan Roether,finished as the middle-school regional robotics runner-up.THANKS TO DOUG

GEIMAN

The Funky Squirrelz 3, featuring Casey Kyle, Jason Sand and Jamen Schweickart, won the middle-schoolregional championship.THANKS TO DOUG GEIMAN

GOING GREEN

St. Mary Elementary fourth-grade student Lydia Haubner wasamong those students who dressed in green for St. Patrick’sDay.THANKS TO NICOLE WEBB

DANCE DOMINANCE

The Highlands High School dance team recently placed first in both the pom-pom and variety dance categories at the KDCO State Championship in Frankfort. Pictured, third rowfrom left, Madalyn Wiefering, Beth Ann Griffith, Bella Keller, Kirsten Peterson, Megan Reynolds, Peyton Bankemper, Abby Weyer, Olivia White, Ellie Farley and Olivia Diehl; secondrow, Lydia Erickson, Hilary Gadd, Mariah Nurre, Maria Massa, Addie Sparks, Carly Hill, Haly Hennigan and Jillian Malloy; first row, Chelsea Swango, Maddie Keefer, Bethany West,Alyssa Farley, Macy Fennell, coach Erin Janson and Nicole Nurre.THANKS TO KACIE BRYANT

U.S Rep. Thomas Massie(R–4th District) invites all highschool students from Kentuck-y’s 4thCongressionalDistrict toparticipate in the 2014 Congres-sional Art Competition.

Since 1982, members of theU.S. House of Representativeshave sponsored the annual Ar-tistic Discovery Contest, a na-tionwide high school arts com-petition, to recognize and en-courage the artistic talent in thenation.

The winning piece of artfrom each congressional dis-trict is displayed in a yearlong

exhibitwithinaU.S.Capitolcor-ridor. Winners will also receivetwo round-trip tickets to Wash-ington,D.C., for theunveilingoftheir work.

Interested artists can submittheir artwork to Massie’s Cres-cent Springs district officesthrough April 14.

The artwork will be dis-played at the Boone CountyPublic Library (main branch)and judged by members of thelocal art community.

Further information aboutthe program call Carrie Porterat (859) 426-0080.

Massie accepting worksfor art competition

Page 4: Campbell county recorder 032714

A4 • CCF RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

COMMUNITYRECORDEREditor: Melanie Laughman, [email protected], 513-248-7573

LEXINGTON — Matt Wilsonmade a name for himself at theSweet 16 March 19.

The Campbell County HighSchool sophomore and his Cam-el teammates didn’t get their“hump day” on a Wednesdaynight at Rupp Arena, and whilethe Camels lamented somemissed opportunities, they canlook back at a successful run tothe state tournament.

Campbell fell 58-56 to John-son Central in the first round oftheKHSAASweet16, ending itsfirst appearance in the tourna-ment since 2001, secondoverall.

Wilson, a 6-foot-5 sophomorecenter, led theway for the Cam-els with 16 points and 21 re-bounds, plus two blocked shotsHe was 6-of-11 from the fieldandposted17ofhis reboundsonthe defensive end.

“The kids played really hardtonight,” Campbell head coachAric Russell said. “They guttedit out. I thought their pressurebothered us, and caused manyturnovers that killed us in thegame. I don’t think we didn’tplay hard, I just think we didn’thandle theirpressureverywell.I thinktheir lengthgot tousa lit-tle bit as far as their traps andwe made poor decisions attimes. We also made nice playsat times to score off them, too,so you take the good with thebad.”

Campbell had 14 turnoversfor the game, the last the mostcostly, as the Camels turned itover off a Johnson Central trap.Junior guard Dalton Adkins’layupoffastealandassistby ju-nior guard Braxton Blair with4.6 seconds left was the ulti-mate winning basket. The Cam-els weren’t able to get off a shoton their final possession.

With the game tied 56-56 inthe final minute, Campbell heldthe ball for a final shot anddidn’t call time out, as Russell

trusted seniorguardCoreyHol-brook and junior guard De-’Ondre Jackson to run the show.

“De’Ondre and Corey havebeen in this position all year andI thought they could make aplay,” Russell said. “I felt if Icall time out there - I only hadone anyway - then I thought if Icall it, it gives them a chance toset their defense up. I felt likeone of those two would getsomething to the basket or getfouled. Their kid just made anice defensive play.”

Holbrook had 18 points andsix rebounds. Jackson posted16points. The two guards com-bined to shoot 12-of-24 from thefieldandeachmadetwo3-point-ers.

Wilson guarded Shane Hall,JC’s 6-foot-9 senior, who wasone of seven Mr. Basketball fi-nalists in the state.

Hall, who has signed withMarshall and entered the statetourney averaging 17.5 pointsand 10.3 rebounds, was held tojust nine points and five re-bounds. He did have fiveblocked shots, all in the firsthalf.Hall entered the state tour-neysecondinstatehistory inca-reer blocks (465).

“We wanted to play realphysical with him,” Russellsaid. “Matt did a great job. Weknew where he liked to get theball,wewere trying topushhimoff that spot. Coreywould come

De’Ondre Jackson scores a basket March 19 in the Sweet 16 first round. JAMES WEBER/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER

WILSON’S BIG GAMEPACES CAMELSIN TOUGH LOSS

By James [email protected]

See HOOPS, Page A5

Camel sophomore Matt Wilsongoes to the hoop. CampbellCounty fell 58-56 to JohnsonCentral in the first round of theKHSAA Sweet 16 March 19. JAMES

WEBER/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER

CAMPBELLCOUNTY—Base-ball is under way in CampbellCounty. Here is a look at coun-ty schools:

BellevueBellevuewas11-19 last year

for head coach Rob Sanders,who has 95 careerwins.He di-rected the Tigers to their sec-ond consecutive conferencetitle in NCAA Division III andhas a veteran group back for arunata threepeatandpostsea-son success.

Bellevue returns sevenstarters on defense, its topfive starting pitchers and fourof its top five hitters from2013. Three multi-sport stand-out seniors enter their fifthyear on varsity and will leadthe way.

Senior shortstop DylanHuff hit .342 last year and is atwo-timeconferenceplayer ofthe year. Senior right fielderTyler Ackerson hit .362 andwas second on the team inRBI. Senior catcher ZachPoinsett was the leadoff hitterand hit .314.

Additionally, senior BrianDill led team in RBI and is astrong fielder at first base aswell as theNo. 2hurler. Sopho-more Briley Seiter is likely tolead the rotation and hadstrong outings in 2013 againstpowerhouse foes CovingtonCatholic and Newport CentralCatholic.

Bishop BrossartThe Mustangs had an un-

characteristically tough 2013season, going10-20 andendingits season in the 37th DistrictTournament. Head coach RonVerst returns eight startersplus the entire pitching stafffrom a year ago, though theMustangs have to account forthe graduation of standoutcatcher Tanner Norton.

Top returning players aresenior infielder/pitcher NateVerst, junior third baseman/pitcher Spencer Hackworth,

junior outfielder/pitcher ClayKramer and senior shortstop/pitcher Conner Verst.

Nate Verst, a KentuckyWesleyan recruit in DivisionII, hit .385 last year to lead theteam and has 15 wins in twoseasonson themound tobe theteam’sace.Kramer is theNo.2pitcher. Teddy McDonald, theteam’s second-leading hitterlast year, missed part of lastseason to injury.

Brossart plays at GrantCounty March 27 and hostsWalton-VeronaMarch29, thenplays at 1:30 p.m. Saturday,March 31, at Colerain. Bros-sart hosts Campbell County at12:30 p.m. April 5.

Brossart was 10th in theNKY coaches poll.

Campbell CountyThe Camels peaked at the

end of last season, going 19-17overall but putting together awinning streak that broughtthemthe37thDistrictchampi-onship. Campbell made a runto the10th Region final, losingto Harrison County.

Scott Schweitzer returnsfor his sixth season as headcoach. He returns five start-ers in RobertMetz, JoeKrem-er, JohnnyEblin, CameronEd-wards and AveryWood.

Schweitzer’s main concernis mound experience, as theCamels graduated 75 percentof their innings thrown from2013.Campbelldoesreturnsixpitchers with varsity experi-ence, though.

“The experience we returnat the varsity is invaluable,”Schweitzer said. “At any timelast year wewould start six orseven sophomores and theygrew as a team.”

The Camels were seventhin the preseason NorthernKentucky Baseball CoachesAssociation poll.

DaytonDaytonwas 4-13 last season

and is directed this year byhead coach Justin Fussinger,

NCC’s Zack Pangallo bunts the ball last year.FILE PHOTO

Campbell Co.boasts strongbaseball teamsBy James [email protected]

Campbell County’s Robert Metz slides in safely under the tag ofBrossart’s Conner Verst in 2012. FILE PHOTO

See BASEBALL, Page A5

Page 5: Campbell county recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • CCF RECORDER • A5SPORTS & RECREATION

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over to help and try to getthe ball out of his hands.That part of it, trying tohold him down, we didpretty good.”

A big key highlightedby Russell was JC’s sec-ond post player, 6-foot-6Kyle Gullett. Gullettscored 22 points and hadfour blocked shots, as heand Hall rejected nineshots in the first half, andthe Golden Eaglesblocked 11 overall in thefirst stanza. Campbell of-ten played four guardsaroundWilson.

“Gullett got away fromus a lot,” Russell said.“The biggest thing therewas itwasamismatch.Wedidn’t play with a truefour man all year long,and they exposed it. They

didagoodjobtryingtogethim the ball and they ex-posed us a few times, andthat’swhatwe’vebeen liv-ing with all year, and thatkind of got us tonight.”

All the blocked shotskept the Golden Eagles inthe game. Campbell shot11-of-30 in the first half,but 9-of-13 on two-pointshots that weren’t reject-ed.Campbell limitedJCto11-of-30 shooting, and ledby as many as 12 points inthe first half on a 3-point-er by Jackson that cappeda12-0 run. TheCamels ledbyeightpoints in the thirdquarter but the GoldenEagles pulled within two(44-42) entering the finalperiod.Wilson scored on alayup with 1:40 to go togive Campbell a 56-54lead, its final points. Gul-lett tied it with 1:15 to go.Campbell seniors areHol-brook, Luke Franzen andGarrett Geiman.

HoopsContinued from Page A4

es with a 322-268 record.He directed the Thor-oughbreds to a 20-14 rec-ord last year. NCC was36th District runner-upand fell in the Ninth Re-gion quarterfinals. NCCwas All “A” Classic statechampions as well andwill look to defend that ti-tle. Schulkens’ chief chal-lenge is replacing almosthis entire lineup, as juniorZack Pangallo is the onlyreturning starter, and hehad a late start due to hisbasketball duties inMarch. Other players towatch begin with JakePangallo, Mitch Pangallo,Jake Yeager, GrantMoeves and Tommy Don-nelly.

“They lack experiencebut are a very hard groupof youngmen that want tocarry on the NewCath

who takes over the pro-gram.

Senior third baseman/pitcher Austin Brockmanis the team’s topreturningplayer. He is the only sen-ior listed on the Greende-vils’16-playerroster.Day-ton has two juniors andtwo sophomores.

Dayton participates inthe inaugural “Little 5”tourney at LloydMemori-al High School beginningMarch 28 and hosts Race-land April 1.

HighlandsJeremy Baioni return

for his seventh year ashead coach. He directedthe Bluebirds to a 19-18

record, highlighted by asecond straight 36th Dis-trict championship.

Staters returning areseniorsMitchGesenhues,Evan Allen (second base)and juniorsJakeWhitford(shortstop), Todd Ramey(first base/third base) andJoseph Martin. PitchersJoeyCochran (senior) andMitchell Jones (junior)lead the mound staff.Baioni said Jones and Ra-meyareDivision I collegeprospects.

“We have a lot of varsi-ty and big game experi-ence,” Baioni said. “Whilewe return five everydaystarters, our roster willconsist of kids that have alot of varsity experience.Wehavequite a fewpitch-ers to look at and competi-tion for playing time willbe intense.”

Highlands is rankedfifth in Northern Ken-tucky by local coaches.

NewportTheWildcats went 4-17

last season and are headcoached by Dennis Ollier.TheWildcats were oustedin the 36th District semi-finals. Newport hosts St.Henry Monday, March 31then plays Bellevue April1 before playing at rivalNewport Central CatholicApril 2.

Top returningWildcatsare seniorCharlieMullinsand senior second base-man/outfielder MichaelTurner.

Newport CentralCatholic

Jeff Schulkens returnsas one of Northern Ken-tucky’s winningest coach-

baseball tradition,” Schul-kens said. NCC is rankedsixth by the NorthernKentucky BaseballCoaches Association inthe preseason.

Silver GroveThe Big Trains were 6-

12 lastseasonandtheheadcoach is Mark Bamfort.SG hosts Villa MadonnaApril1andNicholasCoun-ty April 4 before hostingScott in district playApril9. Players to watch startwith senior first baseman/pitcher Zac Louden, ju-nior outfielder BlakeDoyle, junior secondbaseman/outfielder BillyMiller and junior catcher/outfielder/pitcher Chris-tian Pollitt.

Follow James Weber on Twit-ter, @RecorderWeber

BaseballContinued from Page A4

Nate Verst is Brossart’s toppitcher with 15 wins in twoseasons.FILE PHOTO

Kid Glove vouchers» The Kid Glove

Game still has 4,000ticket vouchers for thegames in 2014. The Cin-cinnati Reds allow theorganization to print40,000 ticket vouchersevery year with 8,000eachfor fivegames.Twogames are sold out butvouchers remain forthree games:May13 and14 (SanDiego) andJuly 8(Cubs).

Any amateur youthbaseball or softball teamor league is eligible toparticipate in the pro-gram. Ticket vouchersare $10 each and teamsreceive 85 percent backto purchase equipment

for their teams for the2015 season. Basically,you are paying $1.50 togowatch theReds play aregular season game.Sell 100 ticket vouchersand team receives $850back to buy equipment.Vouchers are distrib-uted on a consignmentbasis.

Book signings» Cincinnati baseball

icon and World Serieschampion Ken GriffeySr. will conduct a booksigning at the NewportPavilion Kroger April 4.Hewill besigningcopiesofhisnewbook,BigRed:Baseball, Fatherhood,and My Life in the BigRed Machine. The sign-ing is from 10-11:30 a.m.

PRESS PREPS HIGHLIGHTS

By James [email protected]

See HIGHLIGHTS, Page A6

Page 6: Campbell county recorder 032714

A6 • CCF RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 SPORTS & RECREATION

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The book catalogues hismemories of the1975 and1976 world championteams, his time with theYankees and playing inthesameoutfieldwithhissuperstar son, Ken Grif-fey Jr.

Wrestling» Campbell County

senior Sean Fausz is theLaRosa’s MVP of theWeek for March 18. Na-tionally-ranked seniorSean Fausz is a two-timeKentucky statewrestlingchampionfor theCamels.He recentlywon the statetitle in the 138-poundweight class, followingup his state title last sea-son in the 132-weightclass. Sean went 53-2 thisyear and in his junioryear was an undefeated62-0 with 37 pins and wasnamed NKY Co-Wrestlerof the Year. He has 287wins inhishighschool ca-reer.

Sean holds four schoolwrestling records and atone point had won a re-markable 82 straightmatches. This season, heled the Camels to a sev-enth straight NKACchampionship and a sec-ond straight Kentuckystate runner-up finish.Sean also wrestles on theinternational stage. Hewrestled in Mongoliawith Athletes In Actionand was a member of the2013U.S. Cadet FreestyleWorld Team, finishingninth in the 58-kilogramclass at the World Cham-pionships in Serbia. Seanalso rancrosscountry fortwo years and has com-mitted to wrestle atNorth Carolina State.

Track» At Conner High

School in the first out-doormeet of the year, theCampbell County Cam-els looked to start theyear off right with astrong performance inthe Conner Cougar Invi-tational. The boys teamfinished seventh overalland the girls fourth, andmembers of both teamsput up some very goodtimes and heightsthroughout the day.

The top performancesfor the boys teams were:Senior Devon Strangefinished second in the100meter dashwith a time of11.70; Sophomore DustinTurner came in thirdplace in the 100 meterdash with a time of 11.80;The 4x100 relay of Gun-ner Froehlicher, DustinTurner, Dylan Rich, andDevon Strange finishedin second place with atimeof 46.10;MarkChap-lin finished in the 3,200meter run with a time of10:34.70; The 4x400 teamof Christian Vargas,Amar Bayyari, ParkerYounse, and MarthenKummer took home afourth place finish with atime of 4:02.30; MattMayer earned a sixthplace finish in the highjump with a height of 5-04.00; Andrew Hydenfinishedthird inthetriplejump with a distance of37-02.00

The top performancesfor the girls team were;Sophomores Kaitlyn Do-noghue and Emily Orthfinished fifth and sixth inthe 100 meter dash withtimes of 14.00 and 14.30;The 4x200 relay of Kait-lyn Donoghue, Mer-

edith Donoghue, EmilySteele, andBrookeBuck-ler finished secondwith atime of 2:01.10; JennahFlairty won the 1,600 byalmost 20 seconds with atime of 5:47.60; The 4x100consisting of Emily Orth,Meredith Donoghue,Rachel Steffen and Kait-lyn Donoghue finishedfourth with a time of57.40; JennahFlairtywonher second race of theday in the 800with a timeof 2:39.00; Brooke Buck-ler won the 200 with atime of 27.90 and EmilyOrth finished seventhwitha timeof30.10; In thefinal event of the day, the4x400 team of BrookeBuckler, Emily Steele,Natalie Fausz, and Jen-nah Flairty won with atime of 4:45.40.

NKU Notes» Two Northern Ken-

tucky University wom-en’s basketball playershavebeenhonoredby theAtlantic Sun Conferencefor their performanceduring the 2013-14 sea-son.MelodyDossearnedfirst-team All-AtlanticSun Conference honors,while Kayla Thackerwasnamed to the league’ssecond team.

Doss and Thackerwere the top two scorersfor the Norse, who fin-ished the regular season17-12 overall and 13-5 inthe Atlantic Sun. Doss, ajunior forward fromGreenwood, Ind.,emerged as the topNorseplayer in several catego-ries this season.Sheaver-aged 15.3 points pergame, which ranked fifthin the Atlantic Sun, whileshooting 48.3 percentfrom the floor to rank

sixth in the conference.She also led the team indefensive rebounds with144 and blocked shotswith 43.

Thacker, a seniorguard fromMt. Washing-ton, Ky., started everygame she played in thisseason and finished theyear averaging 12.6points and a team-high6.8 rebounds per game.She scored in double fig-ures 20 times, including11 of the last 12 games.

Girls basketball» Newport Central

Catholic center NikkiKiernan, Simon Kentonsenior guard Abby Ow-ings and Calvary Chris-tian senior guard SarahRoaden were honored asPlayers of the Year intheir respective divi-sions.

Kiernan was selectedin Division II after lead-ing Newport CentralCatholic to the Ninth Re-gion title by averaging 17points and 10 reboundspergame this season. Shefinished her career with1,869 points, third inschool history, 1,139 re-bounds, second in schoolhistory, and was first inschool history with over350 blocked shots. Shehas not decided whereshe will play college bas-ketball.

Owings was selectedinDivision I after leadingSimon Kenton to a run-ner-up finish in theEighth Region tourna-ment. She finished hercareer with 1,642 pointsand has committed toplayatThomasMoreCol-lege.

Roaden was selectedinDivision III after aver-

aging 18 points, 2.7 as-sists and 2.6 steals pergame this season. She be-came only the fifth play-er in Calvary Christianhistory to reach the1,000-point club and ended hercareer with 1,078 points.She has not decidedwhere she will play col-lege basketball.

Boys basketball» DixieHeightsguard

Brandon Hatton was se-lectedKentuckyAssocia-tion of Basketball Coach-esNinthRegion player ofthe year and NewportCentral Catholic’s RonDawnwasselectedNinthRegion coach of the yearonMonday.

» Campbell County’sCorey Holbrook and De-’Ondre Jackson, andBrossart’s Alex Trent-man and Drew Burnswere named All-10th Re-gion. Campbell’s MattWilson and SilverGrove’s Chris Lambertwere honorable mention.Campbell’s Aric Russelland Brossart’s MikeCode (Class A) woncoach of the year honors.

Baseball» Scott beat Bellevue

7-1 March 18 and New-port 11-0 March 19.

» Brossart beat SilverGrove 10-2 March 20.

» Silver Grove took apair from Covington Lat-in March 18, 11-1 and 5-2.

Softball» Campbell County

beat Harrison County 7-5March 18 and Scott 16-1March 20.

» Newport beat Day-ton 8-3 March 18.

» NCC beat BrackenCounty 3-1March 18.

PRESS PREPS HIGHLIGHTS

Continued from Page A5

The third annual Sky-line Chili Reds FuturesHigh School Showcase isincreasing participatingschools from64 to72,with13 teams playing in theseason-opening event forthe first time.

TheShowcase features36 games from March 29to April 27 at the premierbaseball parks in GreaterCincinnati and NorthernKentucky.

Tickets for the RedsFutures High SchoolShowcase games are $5and good for all games onthat day.

On Sunday, May 4, the72 high schools will par-ticipate in a “March at theMajors” parade prior tothe Reds vs. MilwaukeeBrewers game. An MVPfromeachof the 36gameswill be recognizedon fieldduring pregame cere-monies. Here is a sched-ule of local matchups:

Tuesday, April 1Andersonvs.Campbell

County, 2 p.m. (NorthernKentucky University)

Cooper vs. NewportCentral Catholic, 5 p.m.(NKU)

Monday, April 7Boone County vs.

Scott, 2 p.m. (NKU)Covington Catholic vs.

Dixie Heights, 5 p.m.(NKU)

Wednesday, April 9Beechwoodvs. Conner,

11 a.m. (NKU)Ryle vs. SimonKenton,

2 p.m. (NKU)Highlands vs. Holy

Cross, 5 p.m. (NKU)

RedsshowcaseexpandsCommunity Press report

Page 7: Campbell county recorder 032714

VIEWPOINTSVIEWPOINTSEDITORIALS | LETTERS | COLUMNS | CH@TROOM CommunityPress.com

COMMUNITYRECORDEREditor: Marc Emral, [email protected], 578-1053

CAMPBELLCOUNTY RECORDER

Campbell County EditorMarc [email protected], 578-1053Office hours: 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-FridaySee page A2 for additional contact information.

228 Grandview Drive, Fort Mitchell, KY 41017654 Highland Ave., Fort Thomas, KY 41075phone: 283-0404email: [email protected] site:www.nky.com

A publication of

MARCH 27, 2014 • CAMBELL COUNTY RECORDER • A7

Formore than a year, I was amember of theKentuckyVeter-ans Hall of Fame Foundation,board of directors. During mytime there, I observed howthingswere being run and Iwasdisgusted by it. During discus-sions,muchmoreemphasiswasput on who could help the foun-dation rather than who actuallydeserved to be inducted. Seeingthe handwriting on thewall andunable to do anything about it, Iresignedmy position on June 2,2013.

I find it shocking but not sur-prising that two leading figuresin the KVHOFF have been in-ducted in the first class. I be-lieve the induction of the Exec-utive Director and CEO H.B.Deatherage shows a complete

disregard forethics and theintegrity of theboard. Anotherinductee isBrandon Bai-ley who servesas chairman ofthe SelectionCommittee.His selectionwas also givenhelp by the factthat his mother

sat on the Selection Committee.I cannot believe the arroganceof these people to induct them-selves into this hall and ignoreso many more qualified and de-serving veterans.

While I was a member of thehallof fameboardofdirectors, I

campaigned hard to induct all59KentuckyMedalofHonorre-cipients in thefirstyear.TheSe-lection Committee decided toinduct only the four livingMed-al of Honor recipients. Thus re-jecting 55 of our state’s greatestheroes and voting for them-selves with minor qualifica-tions.

I guess that living Medal ofHonor recipients put more peo-ple in the seats at the dinner.Therefore the heroes that areno longer with us become lessimportant.

This in noway ismeant to di-minish the lives and accom-plishments of any Medal ofHonor recipient. They all de-serve to be in theKentuckyVet-erans Hall of Fame before any-

one else.A look at thenumbers is very

revealing. There is no questionthat the fourMedal ofHonor re-cipients deserve to be there. Ofthe 23 others, 10 are fromBoone, Campbell and Kentoncounties.

That means that 43 percentwere selected from three ofKentucky’s120 counties. That isnot fair but also not surprising.That is because the Hall ofFame Foundation, all of theirfriendsandassociatesare locat-ed in Northern Kentucky.

The hall of fame is a greatidea and Iwasproud tobe apartof the foundation until I saw theself-serving decisions and ac-tions of its leaders.

By their actions, the leader-

ship has disgraced the Ken-tucky Veterans Hall of Fameand cheapened the honor of be-ing selected for induction. Theselection of Deatherage andBailey has given the hall offame a big black eye fromwhich it will never recover. In-stead of hall of fame, it has be-come the hall of Shame.

Togive thehall anychanceofsurvival, these two individualsmust be removed.Theymust beremoved from the KentuckyVeteransHall ofFameandfromthe Kentucky Veterans Hall ofFame Foundation.

TomDierig is a Vietnam veteranfrom1968-1971. He lives in Independ-ence.

Wrong veterans selected for hall of fame

TomDierigCOMMUNITYRECORDER GUESTCOLUMNIST

GOOD FRIENDS

Retirees, mostly graduates from Newport Catholic High School, gather at Sis’s Restaurant in Newport for their monthly breakfast get-together.Pictured, left side of table from foreground on back, Bill Sheridan, Jim Bricking, Jimmy Dale, Jim Vieth and Steve Kohls; right side fromforeground on back, Dave Bruce, Bill Theis, Jerry Kohls, Skip Hicks and Bill Detzel.THANKS TO BILL THEIS

Businesses against BrentSpence tolls

The following business lead-ers of Northern Kentucky areunited against tolls because weknow the true cost to this com-munity will be devastating.

Thegovernor’shighwayplancalls for tolls to pay $1.78 billionfor the proposed Brent Spenceproject. Despite baseless asser-tions to the contrary, $1 a trip isnot going to cover that. Tolls inLouisville are being introducedat $1 but the fine print calls forincreases as needed, and theywill be needed. And, with $12 atrip truck tolls being proposedin Louisville, the cost to thecommonwealth is unimagina-ble.

Over 175,000 vehicles crossthebridgedaily,with65percentof those vehicles being North-ern Kentucky drivers. If those113,750 drivers pay a toll of$2.50a trip, itwill costNorthernKentucky almost $104 million ayear. Those lost dollars then failto circulate and affect our com-munity. This will forever crip-ple Northern Kentucky.

There is a much better wayfor Northern Kentucky to ad-dress this issue. In1987 theKen-tucky Transportation Cabinetrecommended that we re-routeI-71 through I-75 and acrosssouthern Boone, Kenton andCampbell Counties crossing theOhioRiverandlinkingthe inter-state to I-275 on the Ohio side.This alternate route was envi-sioned to reduce traffic on theBrent Spence Bridge by wellover thousands of cars a day. Atthe same time, it would add anew Ohio/Kentucky crossingand open up vast areas for de-velopment and create tremen-dous growth in both Ohio andKentucky. This would also im-mediately take a large amountof traffic away from the I-75bridge in Covington. The prom-ise of new commercial, indus-trial and residential develop-ments will mean jobs, jobs andjobs – a large capital infusionintooureconomy.This a farbet-ter way for the region and stateto spend our money.

We, the following NorthernKentucky based businesses areagainst tolls and for alternativesolutions. Please Vote AgainstTolls andHB407.ThankYouforyour consideration.

Ed BesslerPast president, Economy Meats

This letter was signed by 23 otherbusiness leaders. For a complete list,

go toCincinnati.Com/northernkentucky.

LETTER TOTHE EDITOR

How would you invest$100,000 in our community, ifyou had the chance?

I answered that question onmyNKY.org, where I chose toinvest $100,000 in virtual dol-lars into education, and morespecifically, early childhoodeducation, while playing themyNKY community prioritygame.

Have you heard about myN-KY?It’sasix-monthcommunityvisioning campaign thatlaunched in January to engageresidents, educators, politi-cians and businesses in deter-mining the priorities for North-ern Kentucky’s next five-yearstrategic plan.

I chose to invest in educationbecause I see it as a great equal-izer of opportunity, helping en-sure the future success of allchildren, and in turn their com-munities, regardless of their so-cioeconomic status. In fact, pro-

grams support-ing childrencan’t startearly enough-—researchshows the im-portance ofearly child de-velopment andits positive ef-fect on later ac-ademic and so-cial progress.

Closer tohome, the recent release of kin-dergarten readiness data showsthat in Northern Kentucky only53percentofchildrenarereadyfor kindergarten. This soberingfactshoulddriveNorthernKen-tuckians to act by promoting,encouraging and investing inquality early education pro-grams for children, makingeducation initiatives a key pri-ority for our region. Programslike home visitation for first-

time moms, initiatives to growthe number of high-qualitychildcarespotsavailable, socialand emotional development foryoung students and programsthat createmore stable familiesso children can be successful.

There are few opportunitiesand initiatives designed to cata-pultNorthernKentuckyfartherand faster than those in theearlychildhoodrealm.It’safact– investing in children meansinvesting in our future.

One way you can do that isfollowing my lead and visitingmyNKY.org, thehubforcollect-ing community input in devel-oping the next five-year strate-gic plan. The site features an in-teractive prioritization gameand a variety of polls and chal-lenge questions on the topic ofeducation, as well as transpor-tation, health and wellness, andjobs.

Visiting myNKY.org and

lending your opinion will affectthe direction of the next strate-gic plan, which guides lawmak-ers and communitymovers andshakers when it comes time toinvest public funds.

Ask yourself, “What onething can be done to improvethe quality of life in NorthernKentucky?” While you may an-swerdifferently thanIdid,yourinput during the myNKY cam-paign could make the differ-ence in making Northern Ken-tucky a better community.

Whether you do it online orin-person, myNKY is yourchance to tell Vision 2015 whatareas you believe will move theregion forward. Let’s talk aboutour future. Let’s talk about ourpriorities.Let’smakeourvoicesheard.

Jordan Huizenga is the director ofdevelopment for Children Inc.

What’s your vision for Northern Kentucky?

JordanHuizengaCOMMUNITYRECORDER GUESTCOLUMNIST

Page 8: Campbell county recorder 032714

A8 • CCF RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 NEWS

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‘07 FORD TAURUS ....................................... $6,8794 Dr, A/C, Auto, Pwr Windows, Looks clean #6944A

‘07 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS ......... $8,828V8, Auto, A/C,, Loaded, 59000 miles #14297A

‘07 HYUNDAI SONATA ................................. $8,8394 Dr, Auto, A/C, Loaded, One Owner, Clean #28588A

‘05 HYUNDAI ELANTRA ............................... $8,878Auto, A/C, Pwr Windows & Locks, 2800 Miles #P7245

‘05 CHEVY COBALT LS.............................. $10,3874 Dr, Auto, A/C, 34000 Low Miles #P7222

‘10 TOYOTA YARIS ..................................... $10,4374 Dr, Auto, A/C, Pwr Windows & Locks, One Owner #70122A

‘03 HYUNDAI TIBURON GT ....................... $10,462Auto, A/C, Leather, Pwr Sunroof, Loaded #P7137

‘09 PONTIAC G5 CPE................................. $10,473Auto, A/C, Loaded, One Owner, Low Miles #P7141

‘10 HYUNDAI ELANTRA ............................. $10,6264 Dr, Blue, 5 Sp, A/C, Power Windows & Locks #28587A

‘08 SMART PASSION CONVERTIBLE ....... $10,896Auto, A/C, 31,000 Low Miles, Looks New #P7016

‘13 FORD FOCUS SE ................................. $13,8364 Dr, Auto, A/C, 7500 Miles, One Owner #28750A

‘09 PONTIAC G6......................................... $13,8794 Dr, V6, Auto, A/C, Full Pwr, Low Miles #P7163

‘07 CHRYSLER 300C.................................. $14,379Auto, A/C, Leather, Loaded, Low Miles #28070A

‘11 CHEVY CRUZ LT RS............................. $14,7634 Dr, Auto, A/C, Leather, Pwr Sunroof #P7184

‘11 KIA SOUL SPORT ................................. $15,7294 Dr, Auto, A/C, Pwr Windows, Sunroof & Locks #P7205

‘10 MAZDA 3S ............................................ $16,856Auto, 4 Dr, A/C, Pwr Sunroof, 15k Low Miles, Loaded #P7087

‘10 HYUNDAI GENESIS CPE ..................... $18,796A/C, Power Windows & Locks, Loaded #P7199A

‘10 CHEVY CAMARO.................................. $19,662A/C, 6 Sp, Wheels, Full Pwr, One Owner #14293A

‘10 DODGE CHALLENGER ........................ $20,892A/C, Auto, Loaded, Pwr Window & Locks #P7225

‘14 FORD MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE ....... $23,789V6, Auto, A/C, Power Windows & Locks #P7233

‘11 CADILLAC CTS 3.6 ............................... $28,465Nav, Wheels, Leather Sunroof, Low Miles #P7248

‘06 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXT.......... $10,792V6, Auto, A/C, Full Pwr, Low Miles #P7164

‘04 FORD 5150 SUPER CREW 4X4........... $12,846Leather Int, Pwr Sunroof, Loaded #40115A

‘05 CHEVY SILVERADO C1500 EXT CAB. $14,759V8, 5.3, A/C, Auto, Low Miles, Clean #P7236

‘06 DODGE DAKOTA QUAD CAB SLT....... $14,7984x4, Auto, A/C, Full power, Low Miles #28517A

‘06 CHEVY SILVERADO LONG BED ......... $14,871V.8, Auto, A/C, Super Clean #P7247

‘08 CHEVY HHR SS.................................... $15,842Auto, A/C, Wheels, Pwr Sunroof, One Owner #P7244

‘11 MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER SPORT...... $16,873AWD, Pwr Sunroof, Full Power #19553A

‘07 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4x4 SLT....... $18,679V8, Hemi, Auto, A/C, Loaded, One Owner #40094A

‘09 TOYOTA VENZA NAVIGATION ............. $19,623V6, Pwr Sunroof, Leather #P7010A

‘05 CHEVY SILVERADO K1500 Z71 .......... $19,872Crew Cab, V8, 51000 Miles, Loaded #P7229

‘11 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB XLT....... $20,8734x4, V6 4.0, Auto, A/C, Full Pwr #P7161

‘09 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB FX4....... $21,6994x4, Lift Kit, Call for Details #P7103

‘09 CHEVY SILVERADO C1500 ................. $21,782Ext Cab, V8, A/C, Auto, Loaded #P7226

‘04 CHEVY K2500 HD SILVERADO ........... $22,337Long Bed, Crew Cab, V8 6.0, 61,000 Miles, 4X4

‘10 GMC ACADIA SLT................................. $22,832Nav, DVD, Pwr Sunroof, Loaded, One Owner #40124B

‘08 CHEVY SILVERADO K1500.................. $22,833Crew Cab, LT V8, 5.3, Full Power, Clean #P7121A

‘05 CHEVY K2500 HD SILVERADO ........... $22,859Crew Cab, 4x4, V8 6.0, Long Bed, 54k Miles #P7146

‘11 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING.. $23,892A/C, Auto, DVD, Full Power, Loaded #P7238

‘08 JEEP WRANGLER UNLIMITED............ $24,8714x4, Hard & Soft Truck, 6 Sp #7213

‘05 CHEVY K2500 HD EXT CAB 4X4 ......... $25,337Diesel, Full Pwr, Loaded #P7139

‘12 JEEP WRANGLER RUBICON 4X4 ....... $26,733Navigation, 65P, Loaded, Clean #P7210

‘07 FORD F150 SUPER CREW 4X4........... $27,841Lariat, Leather Int, Pwr Sunroof, One Owner #14115A

‘10 CHEVY SILVERADO K1500.................. $30,762LT, Crew Cab, V8, Auto, Loaded, Lift Kit #P7162

‘13 CHEVY SPARK .....................................$11,7694 Dr, Auto, A/C, Pwr Windows & Locks, Looks New #P7160

‘12 CHEVY CRUZE LT................................ $14,7964 Dr, Auto, A/C, Ful Pwr, Low Miles, One Owner #19486B

‘13 CHEVY SONIC LTZ............................... $15,8964 Dr, Auto, A/C, Leather, and Heated Seats #P7173

‘12 CHEVY SONIC TURBO LTZ ................. $16,2936 Sp, Pwr Sunroof, 6000 Low Miles #P7215

‘13 CHEVY CRUZE LTZ.......................... ....$16,879Leather Int, Power Seat, Full Pwr #P7076

‘12 CHEVY MALIBU LTZ............................. $17,8154 Dr, Pwr Sunroof, Leather, Low Miles #P7050

‘13 CHEVY CRUZE 2LT.............................. $17,823Auto, A/C, Loaded, Clean #P7228

‘14 CHEVY CRUZE LT ............................... $17,8694 Dr, A/C, Auto, Loaded, 15000 Low Miles #P7243

‘14 CHEVY IMPALA LIMITED ..................... $19,7424 Dr, A/C, Auto, Full Power, 13000 Low Miles #P7214

‘11 CHEVY C1500 EXT CAB....................... $20,433V8, Auto, A/C, Loaded, 26000 Low Miles, One Owner #P40055A

‘11 CHEVY TRAVERSE LT AWD..................$23,411V6, Auto, A/C, Full Pwr, One, Owner #4265A

‘13 CHEVY EQUINOX LT............................ $23,659Auto, A/C, Loaded, Pwr Windows/Locks, Loaded #P7189

‘12 CHEVY SILVERADO K1500 EXT CAB .$24,693V8, A/C, Auto, Loaded, One Owner #P7153A

‘13 CHEVY CAMARO LT RS....................... $24,743Auto, A/C , 15000 Low Miles, One Owner #70119A

‘12 BUICK REGAL GS ................................ $24,8294 Dr, Leather, Pwr Sunroof, Wheels, Loaded #P7028

‘11 CHEVY SILVERADO K1500 Z71........... $28,672Ext Cab, V8, Auto, Full Power, Loaded #P7246

‘12 SILVERADO K1500 EXT CAB Z71 ........$30,811Auto, A/C, Full Power, V8, 4x4, #P7227

‘12 SILVERADO K1500 EXT CAB Z71 ....... $31,7294X4, Auto, A/C, Loaded #P7223

‘11 CHEVY SILVERADO K2500 Z71........... $33,879Crew Cab, 6.0, 4X4, LT, V8, Auto, A/C, Loaded #P7237

‘13 BUICK ENCLAVE .............................. ....$38,692Leather, AWD, Pwr Sunroof, Loaded #P7207

‘13 CHEVY SILVERADO K1500 LT............. $38,791“White Diamond”, 8k, Loaded, Crew Cab #40107A

‘10 HYUNDAI ELANTRA TOURING............ $14,779Pwr Sunroof, Auto, A/C, One Owner, Clean #28777A

‘11 HYUNDAI ELANTRA ............................. $15,4334 Dr, GLS, 6Sp, Pwr Windows & Locks #P7216

‘11 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS........................ $15,7134 Dr, A/C, Auto, Full Power, One Owner #P7179A

‘12 HYUNDAI ELANTRA TOURING............ $15,749Auto, A/C, Pwr Sunroof, Loaded #28674A

‘12 HYUNDAI ELANTRA ............................. $15,7864 Dr, Auto, A/C, Full Power, One Owner! #17174A

‘13 HYUNDAI ACCENT............................... $16,4734 Dr, A/C, Auto, Full Power, Low Miles #7221

‘11 HYUNDAI SONATA SE.......................... $17,739A/C, Auto, Sunroof, Navigation, One Owner #P7191

‘13 HYUNDAI ELANTRA ............................ $17,7494 Dr, Auto, A/C, Pwr Windows/Locks, Loaded, One Owner #P7234

‘12 HYUNDAI SANTA FE AWD ................... $18,732Auto, A/C, Pwr Windows/Locks, One Owner #28659A

‘11 HYUNDAI SONATA................................ $18,8624 Dr, Pwr Sunroof, Auto, A/C, Full Power #P7196

‘12 HYUNDAI VELOSTER CPE.................. $18,988Pwr Sunroof, Full Pwr, One Owner #P6993

‘13 HYUNDAI ELANTRA LIMITED...............$19,811Leather, Power Sunroof, Loaded, Navigation #28817A

‘13 HYUNDAI SONATA SE.......................... $19,862Auto, Pwr Sunroof, One Owner #P7150

‘11 HYUNDAI SONATA SE.......................... $21,8232.0 T, Leather, Pwr Sunroof, Nav, Loaded #P7151

’12 HYUNDAI VERACRUZ LTD AWD ......... $22,696Leather, Sunroof, Loaded #P7165

‘13 HYUNDAI TUCSON AWD ..................... $22,8794 Dr, Auto, A/C, Full Pwr, Low Miles #P7130

‘13 HYUNDAI TUCSON AWD .................... $23,871Auto, A/C, Full Power, Loaded, One Owner #P7235

‘13 HYUNDAI SANTA FE 2.0 SPORT......... $24,861Leather, Pwr Sunroof, Low Miles, One Owner #28737A

‘12 HYUNDAI AZERA.................................. $26,8314 Dr, Auto, A/C, Navigation, Loaded #P7214

‘10 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4X4 ............. $30,846V8, Auto, A/C, Lift Kit, Loaded #P7100

‘09 TAHOE LTZ 4X4 .................................... $34,629Leather, Full Pwr, Loaded, Nav, DVD #13819

Page 9: Campbell county recorder 032714

LIFELIFE PEOPLE | IDEAS | RECIPES

COMMUNITYRECORDER

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 2014

Fridays in Lent mean fish fries.And thatmeans volunteers at St. ThomasChurch in Fort Thomas staff

thegrillsandclear thetables tosell sandwichesandothernon-meatmenuitems.

Will Meyer, 3, of Bellevue enjoying his Jello at the Fish Fry at St. Thomas School in Fort Thomas. KAMELLIA SMITH/FOR THE COMMUNITY RECORDER.

FASTING TIMES

Judie Wieland of Cold Spring loads up on shrimp sauce during the FishFry at St. Thomas School in Fort Thomas. KAMELLIA SMITH/FOR THE

COMMUNITY RECORDER.

Greg Schneider of Fort Thomas, left, and ChrisMeyer of Bellevue help in the kitchen of St. ThomasSchool in Fort Thomas for their Fish Fryevent.KAMELLIA SMITH/FOR THE COMMUNITY RECORDER.

Mary Price of Fort Thomas, 11, left, and her sister,Kathleen, 9, at the Fish Fry at St. Thomas School inFort Thomas.KAMELLIA SMITH/FOR THE COMMUNITY RECORDER.

Jeannie Lyons of Fort Thomas, left, serves food to Ryan Miller of Highland Heights during the Fish Fry at St.Thomas School in Fort Thomas. Helping Lyons, at left, is Jim Dietz of Fort Thomas. KAMELLIA SMITH/FOR THE

COMMUNITY RECORDER.

Page 10: Campbell county recorder 032714

B2 • CCF RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014

FRIDAY, MARCH 28Dining EventsSt. Joseph Church Fish Fry,4-7:30 p.m., St. Joseph Church -Camp Springs, 6833 Four MileRoad, Features Mr. Herb’s bakedor fried fish, fried catfish,salmon, deep-fried shrimp, crabcakes and sampler platter.Carryout available. $8.50 and upfor set-ups; $6.50 sandwiches.Through April 11. 859-635-5652.Camp Springs.St. Catherine of Siena LentenFish Frys Around theWorld,4-7 p.m. Theme: Chinese. Sweet-n-sour shrimp, fried rice/steamed rice, egg rolls andfortune cookie., St. Catherine ofSiena Church, 1803 N. FortThomas Ave., Undercroft. Fea-ture themed meatless dinnersfrom around the globe. Tradi-tional fish dinners also available.$7 dinner, $2 and up for a lacarte items. 859-653-7573;www.stcatherineofsiena.org.Fort Thomas.St. Bernard Church Fish Fry,5-7 p.m., St. Bernard Church, 401Berry St., Fish set-ups, salmonpatty set-ups, fried shrimp,grilled cheese, cheese sticks,french fries, mac and cheese,homemade coleslaw and more.Family friendly. 859-640-0026;www.saint-bernard.org. Dayton.Fish Fry, 4-7:30 p.m., SilverGrove Volunteer Fire Depart-ment, 5011 Four Mile, $7 meals.859-441-6251. Silver Grove.St. Thomas Fish Fry, 4-8 p.m.,St. Thomas School, 428 S. FortThomas Ave., Cafeteria. Hand-dipped fish. Shrimp and pizzaavailable. $4.50-$6.50. 859-572-4641, ext. 242. Fort Thomas.Fish Fry, 4-8 p.m., Fort ThomasMasonic Lodge No. 808, 37 N.Fort Thomas Ave, Fish, macaroniand cheese, fries, coleslaw andtartar sauce. Sponsored byNorthern Kentucky York RiteAssociation. $7 dinner, $1 sand-wich. Presented by Fort ThomasMasonic Lodge No 808. 859-441-1280. Fort Thomas.Wilder Fire Department FishFry, 4-8 p.m., Wilder City Build-ing, 520 Licking Pike, Chickenand shrimp dishes available withhomemade sides and home-made desserts. Benefits WilderFire Department. $7. Presentedby Wilder Fire Department.859-431-1440.Wilder.

On Stage - TheaterOne Flew Over the Cuckoo’sNest, 8-10 p.m., MonmouthTheatre, 636 Monmouth St.,Classic of American theatre formore than 40 years. Stageversion of film that made JackNicholson a household name.Ages 18 and up. $18, $15 stu-dents and seniors. Presented byFalcon Theater. 513-479-6783;falcontheater.net. Newport.

SATURDAY, MARCH 29Art & Craft ClassesWine and Canvas, 6:30-9:30p.m., Naked Tchopstix, Newporton the Levee, Painting class withcocktails. No experience neces-sary. $35. Reservations required.Presented by Wine and Canvas.513-317-1305; www.wineand-canvas.com. Newport.

Karaoke and OpenMicKaraoke, 8-11:30 p.m., South-gate VFW, 6 Electric Ave., WithDJ Ted McCracken. Free. Pre-

sented by VFW Post 3186. 859-441-9857. Southgate.

SUNDAY, MARCH 30Dining EventsChampagne Brunch, 11:30a.m.-2 p.m., The Barrington ofFort Thomas, 940 Highland Ave.,$15. Reservations required.Presented by Carespring HealthCare. 859-572-0667; www.cares-pring.com. Fort Thomas.

Karaoke and OpenMicDJ-led Karaoke, 9:30 p.m.-1:30a.m., Miller’s Fill Inn, 52 Donner-meyer Drive, Free. 859-431-3455;www.facebook.com/millers.fil-lin. Bellevue.

On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 2 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, $12-$15. 859-384-0295;www.unionct.net. Union.

RecreationBingo, 5-9 p.m., Southgate VFW,6 Electric Ave., Early games startat 6 p.m., regular games at 7p.m. Free. Presented by VFWPost 3186. Through July 20.859-441-9857. Southgate.

MONDAY, MARCH 31CivicSpring Clean-up, 8 a.m.Through April 6., City of Belle-vue, , Dumpster located onColfax Avenue across fromPublic Services Garage. Noliquids such as paint or oilaccepted. Free. 859-431-8888;www.bellevueky.org. Bellevue.

TUESDAY, APRIL 1Benefits

Don’t Be Foolish Card Partyand Luncheon, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.,Highland Country Club, 931Alexandria Pike, Card playing isoptional. Lunch included alongwith raffle and pot of gold.Ages 18 and up. Benefits St.Elizabeth Fort Thomas patientservices. $20. Reservationsrequired. Presented by St.Elizabeth Ft. Thomas Auxiliary.859-212-5375. Fort Thomas.

Clubs & OrganizationsTriangle Toastmasters Meet-ing, 7-8:30 p.m., CampbellCounty Fiscal Court, 1098 Mon-mouth St., Become a confident,more effective speaker. Free.Presented by Triangle Toastmas-ters. 859-757-1234; triangle-.toastmastersclubs.org. New-port.

Music - BluesOpen Jam, 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.,Miller’s Fill Inn, 52 DonnermeyerDrive, Free. 859-431-3455;www.facebook.com/Millers-fillinn. Bellevue.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2Karaoke and OpenMicDJ-led Karaoke, 9:30 p.m.-1:30a.m., Miller’s Fill Inn, Free.859-431-3455; www.face-book.com/millers.fillin. Bellevue.Karaoke with Bree, 8 p.m.-midnight, Pike St. Lounge, 266W. Pike St., Free. Presented byHotwheels Entertainment.513-402-2733. Covington.

THURSDAY, APRIL 3Music - CabaretDon Fangman Sings Sinatraand Other Artists, 6:30-9 p.m.,Knotty Pine On The Bayou, 6302

Licking Pike, Songs of FrankSinatra, Dean Martin, TonyBennett, Neil Diamond, MichaelBuble and Andrea Bocelli. Free.859-781-2200. Cold Spring.

RecreationAerial Fitness, 6-7 p.m., Loco-motion on the Levee, 1 LeveeWay, Work on core bodystrength and endurance and useaerial equipment for workout.Rigorous course suitable for allfitness levels. Ages 18 and up.$15. Presented by CincinnatiCircus Company. Through July31. 513-921-5454; www.cincin-naticircus.com. Newport.

FRIDAY, APRIL 4Dining EventsSt. Joseph Church Fish Fry,4-7:30 p.m., St. Joseph Church -Camp Springs, $8.50 and up forset-ups; $6.50 sandwiches.859-635-5652. Camp Springs.St. Catherine of Siena LentenFish Frys Around theWorld,4-7 p.m. Theme: Mexican. Fishtacos, fiesta rice and chips/salsa.,St. Catherine of Siena Church, $7dinner, $2 and up for a la carteitems. 859-653-7573;www.stcatherineofsiena.org.Fort Thomas.St. Bernard Church Fish Fry,5-7 p.m., St. Bernard Church,859-640-0026; www.saint-bernard.org. Dayton.Fish Fry, 4-7:30 p.m., SilverGrove Volunteer Fire Depart-ment, $7 meals. 859-441-6251.Silver Grove.St. Thomas Fish Fry, 4-8 p.m.,St. Thomas School, $4.50-$6.50.

859-572-4641, ext. 242. FortThomas.Fish Fry, 4-8 p.m., Fort ThomasMasonic Lodge No. 808, $7dinner, $1 sandwich. 859-441-1280. Fort Thomas.Wilder Fire Department FishFry, 4-8 p.m., Wilder City Build-ing, $7. 859-431-1440.Wilder.

Music - BluesChuck Brisbin & the TunaProject, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., MansionHill Tavern, 502 WashingtonAve., $4. 859-581-0100. Newport.

On Stage - TheaterOne Flew Over the Cuckoo’sNest, 8-10 p.m., MonmouthTheatre, $18, $15 students andseniors. 513-479-6783; falcon-theater.net. Newport.

SATURDAY, APRIL 5Art Exhibits

CivicShred it Day, 9 a.m.-noon, Cityof Bellevue, 616 Poplar St.,Cintas Document Managementlocated in front of city buildingfor shredding of sensitive in-formation. Free. 859-431-8888.

Bellevue.

Karaoke and OpenMicKaraoke, 8-11:30 p.m., South-gate VFW, Free. 859-441-9857.Southgate.

ShoppingYard Sale, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., FortThomas Masonic Lodge No. 808,37 N. Fort Thomas Ave, Present-ed by Fort Thomas MasonicLodge No 808. 859-781-2536.Fort Thomas.

SUNDAY, APRIL 6Karaoke and OpenMicDJ-led Karaoke, 9:30 p.m.-1:30a.m., Miller’s Fill Inn, Free.859-431-3455; www.face-book.com/millers.fillin. Bellevue.

Music - ReligiousForgiven Trio, 6-7 p.m., High-land Avenue Baptist Tabernacle,1080 Highland Ave., Gospelsinging group consisting ofCloid, Debbie and Brian. Free.859-781-4510; www.habt.org.Fort Thomas.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

The NKY Brotherhood Singers perform 7 p.m. Friday, March 28, at the Boone County Main Library, 1786 Burlington Pike, in Burlington. The Singersperform old-school a capella, gospel music, patriotic tunes and feel-good R&B. Free. 859-342-2665.FILE PHOTO

Turfway Park presents Winter/Spring Meet racing, 6:15 p.m. Friday March 28, and 1:10p.m. Saturday, March 29.FILE PHOTO

The Speak Easy Cincy: Saturday Workshop is noon to 2 p.m., Saturday, March 29, atMonkey Brew Coffee reading room, 402 Bakewell St. in Covington. Members take turnsleading writing workshops, and each lead chooses their own prompt. Everyone haschance to create and share original work. Free. Presented by Speak Easy Cincy.859-640-5275; facebook.com/speakeasycincy.FILE PHOTO

ABOUT CALENDARTo submit calendar items, go to www.cincinnati.com and click

on “Share!” Send digital photos to [email protected] with event information. Items are printed on a space-available basis with local events taking precedence.Deadline is two weeks before publication date. To find more

calendar events, go to www.cincinnati.com and choose from amenu of items in the Entertainment section on the main page.

THINGS TO DO IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD

Page 11: Campbell county recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • CCF RECORDER • B3LIFE

If fear is keeping you from normal, routine dental visits sedationdentistry may be what you need. Dr. Tara Dallmann, DDS is asedation expert with the training and skill to put even the mostanxious patient at ease. Come back to the dentist - your smile

will love you for it!

“The entire staff is very friendly and accommodating. Theirsmiles and assurances made me feel at ease with all

the dental treatment required.”

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For our most fearful patients,Gentle Dental Care is offering

$100 OFFIV Sedation to ensure a healthy 2014.

Valid for 30 days.

1984Walton-Nicholson Pike, Independence, KY859-363-1616 • www.SedationSpaDentist.com

CE-0000580287

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25GSK4<H@:7 D4 )A@94S7$ T/ >R.6>W?6 >W?;*%II P23??O

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The Cincinnati VAMC’sMobile Health Unit is

designed to help eligibleVeterans access the VAHealthcare programs/services they deserve!Staff will be on hand todetermine eligibility andprovide information.

•HOW TO ACCESSVA HEALTH CARE

•F.A.Q.’S•PENSION

•COMPENSATION•BURIAL BENEFITS•BRING A COPYOF YOUR DD214

CINCINNATI VA MEDICAL STAFF WILL BE ON HANDTO ANSWER ANY OF YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT BENEFITS

FOR YOU AND YOUR DEPENDENTS

VA MOBILE HEALTH UNITwill be here

Sunday, March 30th, 2014Sunday, March 30th, 201410am to 4pm10am to 4pm

SAM’s Club #8133SAM’s Club #81334949 Houston Rd, Florence, KY 410424949 Houston Rd, Florence, KY 41042

“You Served Us - Let Us Serve You”

CE-0000588806

We are hereto serve those

who have served.

There is no chargefor this service.

Youmay be able to participate in an investigationalmedication research study.

Do You Suffer from Frequent Aches and Pains?Do You Have Fibromyalgia?

WhatThis is a research study to find out more aboutthe safety and tolerability of an investigationalmedication. Researchers want to see whether it canhelp people with fibromyalgia.

An“investigational”medication is a medicationthat is being tested and is not approved for usein the United States by the U.S. Food and DrugAdministration (FDA).

WhoMen and women, age 18 to 65 years old, who havefibromyalgia may be eligible for participation.

PayParticipants will be compensated for time andtravel.

DetailsFor more information, contact Alicia Heller, RN at513-558-6612 or [email protected].

CE-0000589131

No recipes today!I’m veering offcourse and getting

on my soapboxabout cookware.We’re going intothe busy bridalseason and I getmore questionsabout cookwareand cutlery thanyou’d believe.Here’s a primer ofsorts on cookware– in a future col-umn we’ll chatabout cutlery. Cut thiscolumn out and armyourself with it when youshop for cookware.

Buying cookware canbe confusing to say theleast. Should you go byprice? By looks? By pop-ularity? Buy individualpieces or sets? Do somesoul searching, thinkabout the way you cook,your lifestyle, and pickcookware that will serveyou best. Cook’s Illustrat-ed has some timely in-formation on their siteabout cookware choices.For the most part, youget what you pay for,especially when it comesto stainless steel and castiron. The cookware thatwill last a lifetime isn’tgoing to be inexpensive,but you know what? Inthe long run, you’ll savetime, money, the environ-ment and, maybe mostimportant, your sanity!

Material: It can bestainless steel, alumi-num, anodized alumi-num, copper with atinned or stainless insidesurface, cast iron, castiron with enameled in-side, ceramic, temperedglass and nonstick, toname just a few.

Clad stainless steel.On its own, stainless is apoor conductor of heat.Buy a stainless pan withcopper or aluminum in it.The best cookware is“clad” which means ithas aluminum or coppercore that is sandwiched,or clad, between stain-less steel. It’s also calledtriple or five-ply. Thereare two kinds of clad:Fully clad like what I justdescribed where thesandwiched core extendsfrom the bottom of thepan all the way up the

sides (creating layers) orbottom clad which have adisk of aluminum or

copper on thebottom only. Bothperform well, butthe fully clad ismy choice and thehighest quality.All Clad pans,made in Penn-sylvania, are topsin my book. Youcan use metalutensils.

Aluminum.Look for anodized alumi-num, which means thepan has been put througha process that changesthe aluminum structureto be non-reactive tofoods, just like stainless,and you can use metalutensils. You get greatbrowning with this cook-ware.

Copper. Best conduc-tor of heat but often themost expensive andneeds maintaining to lookgood. Awesome brown-ing. You can use metalutensils.

Cast iron. I call thisthe original nonstick.Heats up slowly andretains heat. When weleft home, Mom gave usone of her heirloom castiron skillets. I won’t frymy kibbi patties in any-thing else. Made in theUSA, these are treasures.If you find one at a ga-rage sale that’s made inthe USA, snatch it up!Lodge, Wagner and Gris-wold are familiar names.The downside is cast ironis heavy and needs to beseasoned, and dried rightaway after cleaning. Theperk is you get a boost ofiron when you cook withit. There are now castiron pieces that are pre-seasoned. Metal utensilsare OK.

Enameled cast iron.My time-honored LeCreuset, which doublesas a Dutch oven, has anenameled cooking sur-face, which gives thebenefit of cast iron with-out the angst. Greatbrowning qualities. Bestto use silicone or woodenutensils.

Nonstick. There is alot of debate about thisbeing a safe cookingsurface. My research

indicates that Teflon-coated pans are consid-ered safe as long asthey’re not overheated orpeeling/flaking. “Greenpans,” nonstick pans witha ceramic-type safe coat-ing, are popular now.Nonsticks do not brownas well, for the most part,as regular pans, butthey’re wonderful foreggs, waffles, cheesesandwiches, low-fat cook-ing, etc. You need no oilexcept for flavor/brown-ing and clean up is abreeze. Unless otherwisestated, use silicone orwooden utensils.

More tips andvideos onmy siteAbouteating.com

Cooking spray: Yes orno?

All about cast ironSets vs. individual

piecesThe most used pan in

the kitchen (you may besurprised)

Pans for inductionranges

Rita Nader Heikenfeld is anherbalist, educator, JungleJim’s Eastgate culinary pro-fessional and author. Emailher at [email protected] with “Rita’skitchen” in the subject line.

Rita discusses cookware just in time for bridal season

RitaHeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

This heirloom cast iron pan is the only thing Rita will fry her kibbi patties.THANKS TO RITA HEIKENFELD

Page 12: Campbell county recorder 032714

B4 • CCF RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 LIFE

It’s a problem that’splagued the Tristate foryears – sewers backing upinto area homes. Severalyears ago a federal courtordered the CincinnatiMetropolitan Sewer Dis-trict to pay to clean upsewer back-up damage,but that hasn’t solved theproblem everywhere.

Sewer back-ups canoccur just about every-where and they can notonly damage your base-ment, but your belongingsas well. Unless you pro-tect yourself, you could bestuck with huge clean-upbills. That’s what hap-pened to Karla Kramerafter a sewer back-up ather Alexandria home latelast year.

“We came home to aweird smell and wentdownstairs and noticedsome puddles,” Kramersaid. That’s when Kramerand her husband, Daniel,founded their basementwas flooded with severalinches of sewer water.

“The water was actu-ally gushing up through

the sewer,”she said. Aplumberwas soonable todeterminetheir sewerline to thestreet wasclear; itwas thesanitation

district’s main line thatwas clogged up. “Therewere deep tree roots thathad grown through thelines,” Kramer said.

In addition to replacingthe tile on the basementfloor, as well as the car-pet, the Kramers had toreplace drywall becauseeverything was damagedby that sewer water.Northern Kentucky San-itation District No. 1,known as SD-1, came outand fixed the sewer linebut won’t pay for the Kra-mers’ damage.

“They came out andsaid, ‘Yes, it was definite-ly their fault,’ but sincethey didn’t actually know(the blockage) was there

they were not at fault,”Kramer said. Fortunately,the Kramers have sewerback-up insurance as partof their homeowner’scoverage. But they onlyhad $5,000 coverage andthe damage to their homeand belongings exceeded$12,000.

SD-1Director DaveRager said that while suchback-up s are unfortunate,they do happen. “It is notuncommon that it happensin our system. We try tokeep up with the systembut they do happen. That’spart of the reason why somany utilities are ownedby the government, thechallenge of maintainingsystems like this,” Ragersaid.

Rager said the sewerdistrict will be checkingthe lines in Kramers’neighborhood every sixmonths to make sure theyremain clear. Unlike theCincinnati MetropolitanSewer District, SD-1’sfederal court decreedoesn’t require it to payfor undetected sewer line

problems. “We have 700miles of lines. That’s al-most enough to go fromcoast to coast,” Ragersaid.

The Kramers have nowincreased their sewerback-up insurance andthis is something allhomeowners should con-sider – especially thosewith a finished basement.In addition, those whorent homes should checktheir renter’s insurancepolicy.

A Forest Park man saidalthough he has renter’sinsurance, his policydidn’t cover the recentsewer back-up damage tohis belongings. So, be-cause many renters’ pol-icies don’t automaticallyinclude sewer back-upcoverage, you need to askfor this protection.

Howard Ain’s column appearsbi-weekly in the CommunityPress newspapers. He ap-pears regularly as the Trou-bleshooter on WKRC-TVLocal 12 News. Email him [email protected].

Make sure insurance has sewer coverage

HowardAinHEY HOWARD!

Lenten season meansfish-fry season, and plentyof local organizations areserving up Friday feasts:

» Bellevuevets fish fry,24 Fairfield Ave., Bellevue5-8 p.m.Non-smoking seat-ing area in main hall. Din-ners $7.50-$4.50. Carry outavailable. 859-431-0045.

» FortThomasMasonicLodge No. 808, 37 N. FortThomas Ave., Fort Thom-

as; 4-8 p.m. $7 dinner, $1sandwich. 859-441-1280.

» St. Bernard Church,401 Berry St., Dayton; 5-7p.m. 859-640-0026;www.saint-bernard.org.

» St. Catherine of SienaChurch, 1803 N. FortThomas Ave., Fort Thom-as; 5-7 p.m. $7 dinner, $2and up for a la carte items.859-653-7573; www.stcath-erineofsiena.org.

Take in a local fish fry

CE-0000579106

(859) 904-4640www.bryanthvac.com

Tune-Up SPECIAL$64.95

26 POINT INSPECTION &SAFETY CHECK OF YOURHEATING or A/C SYSTEM

*Offer expires 04/30/14. Some restrictions mayapply. Call for details. Not valid with any otheroffers or promotion with existing customers.

(859) 904-4640

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140 West Pike St. Covington, KY 41011

(859) 431-2266(800) 431-1554

[email protected]

We can just about

DOUBLEyour hearing aidbattery life

regular price $10“free with new purchase”

Since 1917

Y’ALL COMEY’ALL COME

National Award Winning Super-Premium Hand Crafted Ice Creammade in The Friendly Market.Served by Scoops, Shakes, Malts,

Floats and Banana Splits. Pints to takehome, Custom Ice Cream Cakes for Parties,

Catering and Corporate Events.

This week’s feature flavors:Cherry, Pomegranate, Habanero.

859-488-1351

Take Exit 178 go east Off I-75, Left on Sam Neace,Right on Berberich Dr. Left to Friendly Market

CE-0000583889

www.beechmontford.comBeechmont Ave. & I-275

513-752-661124MONTH REDCARPET LEASES, 0% FINANCINGAND FACTORY REBATES AREDEPENDENTON FORDMOTORCREDIT COMPANY FINANCING. TRADE-IN ASSISTANCE REQUIRES TRADING

INA ‘95ORNEWER VEHICLE. NOT EVERYONEWILLQUALIFY. GOODWHILE SUPPLIES LAST. SEE DEALER FORCOMPLETEDETAILS. OFFER ENDS 03/31/2014.

New2014 FordEscape S

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ALSO 2013 FORD F-150S

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0% for 72mos. PLUS$1250 Factory Rebate!

2013 FORD EXPEDITION

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2013 FORD EDGE

0% for 72mos. PLUS$2000 Factory Rebate!

Page 13: Campbell county recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • CCF RECORDER • B5LIFE

Queen Set

$499†Compare $1889

$400SAVE OVER Off our regular

Sale Price onthis Queen Set

Special Purchase!YOUR CHOICE! Sealy Super Plush OR Luxury Plush EuroPillowtop with Foam Encased Edge Support and Memory Foam.

Special Purchase!YOUR CHOICE! Sealy Super Plush OR Luxury Plush EuroPillowtop with Foam Encased Edge Support and Memory Foam.

75

7118118

18

842

842

Burlington Pk.

Hou

ston

Rd.

Mal

l Rd.

FlorenceMall

World ofSportsGolf Club

FlorenceY’all

WaterTower

Monday-Saturday 10–9Sunday 12–6

Online: morrisathome.com

8040 Burlington Pk.859-282-5500

atBetterBetterBetterSleep

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USA

exclu

sive 50$50505050

Gift Card¥¥

¥¥Valid on furniture, mattress or accessory purchasesof $998 or more. Valid through Apr. 17, 2014.

Exclusions apply. See back for details.

50%' ALL (?G0@B?G+' ALL 23BBG+EE+E' ALL 3..+EE-G@+E

OFF50 †ComparePrice

WEEKEND! THIS

MONTHSFINANCING AVAILABLE*On purchases of $1,999 or more onfurniture, mattresses and accessorieswith your More for You credit card madebetween March 26 – April 17, 2014.

PLUS

PLUS

$798†98=&>$1 >K $179999

,/# %>;$I9 !8%> I: F>:IAA> CIKL >991:K &IAA8C!)2>:< 98A8$! >F>IA>;A1 >K KLI! &$I91)

&IAA8C!) >991:K CIKL F>:IAA> I: !8%> %>;$I9 ,/#

Express!CustomAvailable

USA90” fabric sofa in flax with accent pillows.Entire collection on sale.

Ashley HomeStore Exclusive $498498498†compare at $119999

Special Purchase

$798†98=&>$1 >K $159997

*H11: &>:1A ;15 CIKL!K8$>"1 I: 8>D J:I!L) +:KI$1

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CIKL ;15 &>:1A *H11: CIKL ;15 &>:1A *H11:MORRIS EXCLUSIVE

STORAGE

$998†98=&>$1 >K $219999

4&9) 5I:I:" !1K I: =>:"8 J:I!LI:9AH51! K>;A1 >:5 7 9L>I$!)

+:KI$1 98AA19KI8: 8: !>A1)

:I!L J =>:"8 I: !1K 5I:I:" 4&9)MORRIS EXCLUSIVE

Queen storage bed inburnished black finish.

Entire collection on sale.

$698698698†compare at $159996

$Storage Drawers

5pc. dining set in brownfinish includes table and 4upholstered chairs. Entire

collection on sale.

$598598598†compare at $139995

*50 Months Special Financing: Additional finance offers available in store. *Offer applies only to single-receipt qualifying purchases.Prior purchases, Morris Back Room and “Hot Buys” excluded. A 20% deposit is required at time of purchase. Special orders require a25% deposit. No interest will be charged on promo purchase amount divided equally by the number of months in promo period. The equalmonthly payment will be rounded to the next highest whole dollar and may be higher than the minimum payment that would be requiredif the purchase was non-promotional purchase. Regular account terms apply to non-promotional purchases. For new accounts: PurchaseAPR is 29.99%; Minimum Interest Charge is $2. Existing cardholders should see their credit card agreement for their applicable terms.Subject to credit approval. ¥¥ $50 Gift Card: Valid on furniture, mattress or accessory purchases of $998 or more. Valid through Apr.17, 2014. Not valid on “Hot Buys,” “The Works,” “Phenomenal Priced Items,” premium mattresses, The Morris Back Room, prior purchasesor with any other discounts or coupon offers. Limit one gift card per household. †Compare price: Sale prices and percentage savingsoffered in this advertisement on furniture and mattresses are discounts from the compare price. The compare price is the regular priceor original price for the item or comparable item at another retailer. Actual sales may or may not have been made at the compare pricesand intermediate markdowns may have been taken. ††Leather match upholstery features top-grain leather in the seating areas withskillfully matched vinyl everywhere else. Ashley Furniture HomeStores are independently owned and operated. NOT RESPONSIBLE FORTYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. ©2014 Morris Furniture Co., Inc. 032714 NKY Recorder

11pc. Stainless Steel Grill Set

Bring this certificate to Morris Home FurnishingsOutdoor Living Center in Florence to experience our

expanded collection of outdoor and sunroom furnitureand get a FREE 11 pc. Stainless Steel Grill Set!

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Set Grill Steel Stainless 11pc. Set Grill Steel Stainless 11pc. Set Grill Steel Stainless 11pc. Set Grill Steel Stainless 11pc. Set Grill Steel Stainless 11pc. Set Grill Steel Stainless 11pc.Just for telling us which Outdoor group you like best!

Limit One Per Household. Valid through April 14, 2014.

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CE-0000586567

Page 14: Campbell county recorder 032714

B6 • CCF RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 LIFE

UCHealth offered the first program inCincinnati that was fully accredited as abreast imaging Center of Excellence andremains the region’s only ACR-accreditedCenter Of Excellence for breastMRI.Early detection by our dedicated breastspecialists using state-of-the-arttechnology canmake all the difference.

Breast cancer may be curable if detected early.

Choose the experts.

(513) 585-TEST

UCHealth.com/services/imaging

Available at:University of CincinnatiMedical Center234 Goodman StreetCincinnati, Ohio 45219

West Chester Hospital7700 University DriveWest Chester, Ohio 45069

U N I V E R S I T Y O F C I N C I N N AT I C A N C E R I N S T I T U T E

CE-0000581809

Family and Cosmetic DentistryThomas More Parkway

859-757-1002 • www.BeitingDental.com

No Dental Insurance?Ask about our wonderful discount plan!

Used by families, retirees, self-employed…Anyone without dental insurance!

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>1 5199-C- :4/ A?CA B5A119

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CE-0000589756

Sunday School: 9:30 amSunday Morning Worship: 10:30 amSun. & Wed. Eve Service: 6:00 pm

720 York St., Newport KY 41071859-581-4244 Pastor: Gordon Milburn

LOVE & FAITHFELLOWSHIP CHURCH

Family WorshipCenter

97 Three Mile Rd.Wilder, Ky. 41076859-441-5433

SERVICE TIMESunday, 10:45 a.m.

NON-DENOMINATIONAL

Virginia BellVirginia Bell, 92, of Alexandria,

died March 15.She loved to share her talent

for playing the organ for manyyears at the Church of Christ ofAlexandria where she was acharter member, and she also wasa member of the Order of theEastern Stars Alexandria.

Her husband, Melvin Bell, diedpreviously.

Survivors include her daughter,Sandy Bertram, and grandson,Tim Bertram.

Alvin HartAlvin Lewis Hart, 80, of High-

land Heights, died March 11 at St.Elizabeth Edgewood.

He was a member of theChurch of Christ in Covington formany years, good at working withleather and jewelry, loved puz-zles, cards, the Cincinnati Redsand University of Kentucky bas-

ketball, and collected old silverspoons and knives.

Survivors include his brother,Merrill Hart; sisters, DeloresMcLaurine, Bonnie Robinson,Joyce Reynolds, Tish Dorsey andSherry Murray; nephews andnieces.

Interment was at EvergreenCemetery in Southgate.

Memorials: the charity ofdonor’s choice.

Richard HeckRichard “Dick” Heck, 89, of

Melbourne, died March 19, at hishome.

He was a Navy veteran ofWorld War II, past post command-er of Campbell County VFW PostNo. 3205, member of AmericanLegion Post No. 219, a KentuckyColonel, member of St. JosephChurch in Camp Springs, and wasa retired union carpenter with theCarpenter’s Union Local No. 698.

Survivors include his wife,Glorianna Heck; sons, James Heck,Roy Heck and Ronald Heck;daughter, Patricia Schwegmann;10 grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren.

Interment was at St. JosephCemetery in Camp Springs.

Memorials: St. Joseph School,6829 Four Mile Road, Melbourne,KY 41059; or Campbell CountyVFW Post No. 3205, 8261Alexan-dria Pike, Alexandria, KY 41001.

Richard HudsonRichard Lee Hudson, 79, of

Walton, died March 17 at St.Elizabeth Edgewood.

He was the chief of police forWalton for 13 years, was a Lt. Col.(Ret.) U.S. Army Corps of Engi-neers, a Vietnam veteran, and amember of Covington MasonicLodge 109 and the Shriners. Hegraduated from Holmes HighSchool in 1952 and went on to UK

to earn a bachelor’s degree inelectrical engineering and then toArizona State University to earnhis master’s in facilities engineer-ing. He enjoyed crossword puz-zles, restoring his 1938 Ford, andspending time with his grand-children, two favorite dogs andhis wife.

Survivors include his wife, CarolAnn Hudson; sons, Richard LeeHudson II of Lawrenceburg, Ind.,and Timothy Kirk Hudson ofBellevue; daughters, Karen LynnEmerson of Waldron, Ind., andSusan Ann Scherrer of Alexandria;seven grandchildren; and 14great-grandchildren.

Burial with military honors wasat Highland Cemetery in FortMitchell.

Memorials: American HeartAssociation; or Shriners BurnsInstitute; or the charity of donor’schoice.

Joseph KoblitzJoseph F. Koblitz, 86, of Alexan-

dria, died March 19 at his home.He was a retired stationery

engineer for the Meade PaperCo., was a Navy veteran of theKoreanWar, and member of theAlexandria VFW.

His wife, Carolyn Koblitz, andson, William Koblitz, died previ-ously.

Survivors include his sons, Tonyand Joe Koblitz; daughters, JudyHogan and Julianne Baker; eightgrandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Burial was at St. StephenCemetery in Fort Thomas.

Memorials: Leukemia andLymphoma Society, 1311Mamaro-neck Ave., Suite 310, White Plains,NY 10605.

James OgdenJames F. “Jim” Ogden, 82, of

Fort Thomas, died Feb. 4.Memorials: First Baptist Church,

801 York St., Newport, KY 41071.

Harry RobinsonHarry L. Robinson, 76, of Cold

Spring, formerly of Fort Thomas,died March 14 at his residence.

He was a carpenter for morethan 40 years with Local 126Carpenters Union, for which healso served as a union trustee. Heloved coaching Little League

Softball, was involved in JuniorLeague Football and was a mem-ber of Christ Church UnitedChurch of Christ in Fort Thomaswhere he served on the churchcouncil.

Survivors include his wife, JudyBishop Robinson of Cold Spring;daughters, Belinda Ryder, KimEifert, Vickie Blaker, Angel Lorenzand Teri Mettens; sons, MikeRobinson andWesley Robinson;sister, Brenda Penny; 23 grand-children; and 10 great-grand-children.

Burial was at Forest LawnMemorial Park in Erlanger.

Memorials: Christ Church, 15 S.Fort Thomas Ave., Fort Thomas,KY 41075; or St. Elizabeth Hospice,483 S. Loop Drive, Edgewood, KY41017.

Lance Schmidt IILance Henry Schmidt II, 48, died

March 1.He graduated from Boone

DEATHS

See OBITUARIES, Page B8

ABOUT OBITUARIESBasic obituary information and a color photograph of

your loved one is published without charge by TheCommunity Press. Please call us at 283-0404 for moreinformation. To publish a larger memorial tribute, call513-242-4000 for pricing details.For the most up-to-date Northern Kentucky obituaries,

click on the “Obituaries” link atcincinnati.com/news/northern-kentucky.

Page 15: Campbell county recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • CCF RECORDER • B7LIFE

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Page 16: Campbell county recorder 032714

B8 • CCF RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 LIFE

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Grove High School near Val-paraiso, Ind., and received hisbachelor’s degree in businessmarketing from Purdue UniversityNorth Central. He worked forEagle Aircraft in Valparaiso as anair taxi pilot, and later becameEagle Aircraft’s chief flight in-structor and managed the flighttraining school. He also flew as acorporate pilot for Signco Trans-portation and as a commercialpilot with Comair Airlines inNorthern Kentucky, retired inOctober 2012 after more than 23years of service with Comair, wasproud of his German heritage,loved music, was a talented guitarplayer, was a gun enthusiast, andenjoyed kayaking, motorcycleriding and cooking.

Survivors include his parents,Erika and Lance H. Schmidt;brother, Kurt; wife, Anne.

A memorial service is plannedfor 11 a.m. Saturday, March 29, atFloral Hills Memorial Gardens,5336 Old Taylor Mill Road, Co-vington.

Memorials: Melanoma Re-search Foundation, www.melano-ma.org; or Suncoast Hospice,Clearwater, Fla., www.thehospice-.org.

Rita SchrandRita D. Schrand, 91, of Coving-

ton, died March 15 at WoodcrestCare Center.

Her husband, TheodoreSchrand, died previously.

Survivors include her son,Steven Schrand of Lakeside Park;daughters, Sue Kramer of FortThomas, Patti Uhling of CrescentSprings, and Cindy Beckman ofErlanger; sisters, Virginia Hale ofGhent, and Jane Herzog of Co-vington; eight grandchildren: and16 great-grandchildren.

Burial was at St. John’s Mauso-leum in Fort Mitchell.

Verna SchwarbergVerna Jane Schwarberg, 94, of

Newport, died March 14, atBaptist Convalescent Center inNewport.

She was a homemaker, 70-yearmember of the St. John’s choir,active at Camp Sunshine as a

cook, helped with Optimist Clubfunctions and enjoyed cooking.

Her husband, David BrooksSchwarberg, died previously.

Survivors include her daugh-ters, Bonnie Hoffmann, JeriMcMath and Debbie Hecky; andsister, Betty Myers.

Memorials: St. John’s UnitedChurch of Christ, 415 Park Ave.,Newport, KY 41071.

Tony SimonTony “Frank” Simon, 85, of

Cold Spring, died March 13 at St.Elizabeth Fort Thomas.

He was a salesman all his life,selling Fuller Brush products for62 years and Electrolux sweepersfor 40 years. He was a member ofSt. Joseph Church, Cold Spring,member of the Seniors Club,volunteered at the CampbellCounty Senior Center where heran the Monday morning pinoch-le game, and was an avid cardplayer and belonged to many cardclubs with his family and friends.

His brothers, Harold, Albert,Rudolph and Cliff; and sisters,Alvina, Marcella, Evelyn, AnnaMae and Jean, died previously.

Survivors include his wife, JaneSimon of Cold Spring; sons, RickSimon of Alexandria, and BobSimon of Alexandria; daughters,Sharon Geiger of Cold Spring,Judy Leick of Fort Thomas, LisaFleissner of Alexandria, BrendaNiehaus of Taylor Mill, and DianaLichtenfeld of Fort Thomas;brother, Louis Simon of FortWright; sister, Ruth Kramer ofSouthgate; 21 grandchildren and15 great-grandchildren.

Interment was at St. StephenCemetery in Fort Thomas.

Memorials: St. Joseph ChurchCapital Campaign Fund, 4011Alexandria Pike, Cold Spring, KY41076.

Arthur SmithArthur Jewell Smith, 87, of

Alexandria, died March 12.He operated Art Smith Gulf

Station in Highland Heights for 13years, was a bowler at SouthernLanes, member of First BaptistChurch in Cold Spring, served inthe Army, and retired from theFord Motor Co. after 30 years.

His sons, Arthur “Artie” and

Alan “Shaggy,” died previously.Survivors include his wife, Grace

Smith; daughter, Robin Jewell;sister, Naomi McBride; and fivegrandchildren.

Memorials: First Baptist Church,4410 Alexandria Pike, Cold Spring,KY 41076.

Ruth SpencerRuth Evelyn Spencer, 64, of

Bellevue, died March 15 at St.Elizabeth Edgewood.

She was a registered nurse withCincinnati Children’s Hospital, andwas a professional member andjudge for USA gymnastics.

Her father, Daniel Poe, diedpreviously.

Survivors include her mother,Maude Evelyn Goodman ofFlorence; son, Troy Spencer ofBellevue; daughter, Tonya Spencerof Bellevue; brother, Daniel Poe ofIndependence; and two grand-children.

Memorials: American KidneyFoundation, 6110 Executive Blvd.,Suite 1010, Rockville, MD 20852-3903; or St. Elizabeth Hospice, 483S. Loop Drive, Edgewood, KY41017.

VernonWynnVernonWynn, 80, of Dayton,

Ky., died March 14, at St. ElizabethFort Thomas.

He worked for Keebler inMariemont, Ohio, was an Armyveteran of the KoreanWar, andloved feeding animals and hiscats.

His wife, Carol Joy Wynn;sisters, Mildred Brandenburg,Pernie Lanham and ShirleyRoarke; and brothers, WilbertWynn, Alfred Wynn and GranvilleWynn Jr.

Survivors include his son, BrianVernonWynn of Atlanta; daugh-ter, Joann Newberry of Waddy,Ky.; siblings, Wanda Mulkey,Norah Beech, Ollie Bates andDavid Wynn; and two grand-daughters.

Burial was at Bagdad Cemeteryin Bagdad, Ky.

Memorials: American CancerSociety, 297 Buttermilk Pike, FortMitchell, KY 41017; or CampbellCounty Animal Shelter, P.O. Box97, Melbourne, KY 41059.

DEATHS

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