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F LORENCE F LORENCE RECORDER 75¢ THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS K1 Your Community Recorder newspaper serving Florence and Union Vol. 19 No. 31 © 2014 The Community Recorder ALL RIGHTS RESERVED News ........................ 283-0404 Retail advertising ...... 513-768-8404 Classified advertising ....... 283-7290 Delivery ...................... 781-4421 See page A2 for additional information Contact us 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 PLUS TAX PLUS TAX Available at participating locations. ©2014 LCE, Inc. 43106 CE-0000584027 UNION When Brennan Sweeney wanted to provide his 9-year-old son more summer en- richment opportunities, he couldn’t find the level of infor- mation about available pro- grams he needed to make a deci- sion. “There was really no place where I went to find all the list- ings,” said Sweeney, 36, of Union. So the former business consult- ant and entrepre- neur took mat- ters into his own hands. His new web- site, www.campfinder.co, developed with Mount Lookout resident J.B. Woodruff, features a com- prehensive list of camp pro- grams and user reviews with fo- cused program searches and so- cial media capabilities, a press release says. The site lets parents shop around for the best program for their child’s specific personal- ity, needs and interest. At the same time, it elimi- nates the need to visit camp fairs or scour the Internet for information. “What better way to find a great camp program than hear- ing about it from people you know or who have experienced it?” Woodruff said in the re- lease. “We’re harnessing the power of word of mouth refer- rals and leveraging the power of the web to help parents find the best memory-making expe- riences for their kids.” Sweeney said the pair began working on the site last summer and launched it in early Febru- ary. There are currently more than 400 unique programs listed on the site right now. The goal is to have every camp program in the Cincinnati area available on the site with details “so parents can really make the best decisions on camps for their children.” It’s currently free for camps to list information and for par- ents to search. Sweeney said they will offer some premium features for camps. He antici- pates expanding into other mar- kets. Want to continue the conversation? Tweet at @SSalmonsNKY Website helps parents find best camp programs By Stephanie Salmons [email protected] Sweeney In the next few days, your carrier will be stopping by to collect $3.50 for delivery of this month’s Florence Re- corder. Your carrier retains half this amount along with any tip you give to reward good service. This month we are featur- ing John Hubbart, who is a fourth-grade student at St. Paul School, where he is a member of the academic team. In his free time, he enjoys golf, soccer, play- ing the piano and being out- doors. For infor- mation about our carrier program, call Karen Smith, district man- ager, at 859-442-3463. COLLECTION TIME Hubbart UNION — Lisa Willoughby’s classroom is unlike any other. In this Mann Elementary second-grade classroom stu- dents are surrounded by books to encourage their imagina- tion, develop their minds and prepare them for life. Wil- loughby has spent the last 17 years building her 5,000-book classroom library. “Reading is a passion of mine,” Willoughby said. “I ab- solutely love having developed a classroom library that opens the threshold to endless possi- bilities for my students. They have at their hands the oppor- tunity to learn about whatever they’d like to learn about in nonfiction or the opportunity to take whatever adventure they’d like to take on in fic- tion.” According to Willoughby, instilling this love of reading at this age is essential to students’ success in school and in life. This zeal to educate her stu- dents earned Willoughby, 51, of Union, recognition as a Flor- ence Rotary Teacher of the Year, award chair Gary Wilm- hoff said. The award includes recog- nition at a Rotary Club lun- cheon, as well as $250 from the award’s sponsor, Heritage Bank. The money is to be used for a charity of the teacher’s choice or even the teacher’s school. Their school is given a banner to recognize the win- ner. This year 18 nominations were received for the Rotary’s annual award and only three were chosen. Other winners were Karen Wiebe from Camp Ernst Middle School and Kelly Read from Boone County High School. Wilmhoff said recognition of local teachers is an impor- tant duty of the club. Lisa Willoughby of Mann Elementary has been named a Florence Rotary Teacher of the Year. MELISSA STEWART/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER CLASSROOM LIBRARY INSTILLS LOVE OF LEARNING By Melissa Stewart [email protected] See LEARNING, Page A2 BURLINGTON — Boone Coun- ty residents are seemingly sat- isfied with the level and quality of services provided. At least that’s the conclusion of a 2013 a citizen satisfaction survey, commissioned by the county Fiscal Court last year in partnership with Northern Ken- tucky University. “The purpose of the survey was to measure citizen’s evalua- tion of county performance of delivering basic public ser- vices, and to get citizen input on current policy initiatives under consideration,” an executive summary reads. Frank Bednar presented the results of the survey to court re- cently. According to County Ad- ministrator Jeff Earlywine, this is the second time the county has partnered with NKU and the project was one Bednar completed as a graduate stu- dent. Survey results can be found online at bit.ly/boonesurvey. According to government and community relations direc- tor Adam Howard, the cost of the survey was abut $3,300 and was limited to postage, printing and pre-paid postage for re- turned survey. The expense would have been significantly greater if the county had worked with a na- tional company that provides similar services rather than NKU, he said. The information will be dis- cussed by Boone County depart- ment heads “regarding specific action items that might need to be addressed,” Howard said. “Further, this information may be used by the fiscal court in policy decisions regarding 911 fees, property maintenance code and other issues.” In November 2013, 3,500 sur- veys were sent out to randomly selected residential addresses in the county “proportionate to the urban/rural composition of residents,” according to Bed- nar’s presentation. Of these, 392 usable surveys were returned. About 53 percent of respon- dents were male and 42 percent Survey says Boone residents satisfied By Stephanie Salmons [email protected] See SURVEY, Page A2 FASTING ON FISH B1 Fridays in the Lenten season mean fish frys.

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Page 1: Florence recorder 032714

FLORENCEFLORENCERECORDER 75¢

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 2014 BECAUSE COMMUNITY MATTERS

K1

Your Community Recordernewspaper serving Florenceand Union

Vol. 19 No. 31© 2014 The Community Recorder

ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDNews ........................283-0404Retail advertising ......513-768-8404Classified advertising .......283-7290Delivery ......................781-4421

See page A2 for additional information

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

RITA’S KITCHENCookware gift ideas just intime for the bridal season.B3

PLUSTAX

PLUSTAX

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

UNION — When BrennanSweeney wanted to provide his9-year-oldsonmoresummeren-richment opportunities, hecouldn’t find the level of infor-mation about available pro-gramsheneededtomakeadeci-sion.

“There was really no placewhere I went to find all the list-ings,” said Sweeney, 36, ofUnion.

So the formerbusiness consult-ant and entrepre-neur took mat-ters into his ownhands.

His new web-site,

www.campfinder.co, developedwith Mount Lookout residentJ.B. Woodruff, features a com-prehensive list of camp pro-gramsanduserreviewswith fo-

cusedprogramsearchesandso-cial media capabilities, a pressrelease says.

The site lets parents shoparound for thebest programfortheir child’s specific personal-ity, needs and interest.

At the same time, it elimi-nates the need to visit campfairs or scour the Internet forinformation.

“What better way to find agreat camp program than hear-ing about it from people youknow or who have experienced

it?” Woodruff said in the re-lease. “We’re harnessing thepower of word of mouth refer-rals and leveraging the powerof the web to help parents findthe best memory-making expe-riences for their kids.”

Sweeney said the pair beganworkingon the site last summerand launched it in early Febru-ary.

There are currently morethan400uniqueprogramslistedon the site right now.

The goal is to have every

campprogram in theCincinnatiarea available on the site withdetails “so parents can reallymake the best decisions oncamps for their children.”

It’s currently free for campsto list information and for par-ents to search. Sweeney saidthey will offer some premiumfeatures for camps. He antici-pates expanding into othermar-kets.

Want to continue theconversation? Tweet at

@SSalmonsNKY

Website helps parents find best camp programsBy Stephanie [email protected]

Sweeney

In the next few days, yourcarrier will be stopping by tocollect $3.50 for delivery ofthis month’s Florence Re-corder. Your carrier retainshalf this amount along withany tip you give to rewardgood service.

This month we are featur-ing John Hubbart, who is afourth-grade student at St.Paul School, where he is amember of the academic

team. In hisfree time, heenjoys golf,soccer, play-ing the pianoand being out-doors.

For infor-mation aboutour carrierprogram, call

Karen Smith, district man-ager, at 859-442-3463.

COLLECTION TIME

Hubbart

UNION — Lisa Willoughby’sclassroom is unlike any other.

In this Mann Elementarysecond-grade classroom stu-dents are surrounded by booksto encourage their imagina-tion, develop their minds andprepare them for life. Wil-loughby has spent the last 17years building her 5,000-bookclassroom library.

“Reading is a passion ofmine,” Willoughby said. “I ab-solutely lovehavingdevelopeda classroom library that opensthe threshold to endless possi-bilities for my students. They

have at their hands the oppor-tunity to learn about whateverthey’d like to learn about innonfiction or the opportunityto take whatever adventurethey’d like to take on in fic-tion.”

According to Willoughby,instilling this loveof readingatthisage isessential tostudents’success in school and in life.

This zeal to educate her stu-dents earnedWilloughby, 51, ofUnion, recognition as a Flor-ence Rotary Teacher of theYear, award chair Gary Wilm-hoff said.

The award includes recog-nition at a Rotary Club lun-cheon, aswell as $250 from the

award’s sponsor, HeritageBank. The money is to be usedfor a charity of the teacher’schoice or even the teacher’sschool. Their school is given abanner to recognize the win-ner.

This year 18 nominationswere received for the Rotary’sannual award and only threewere chosen. Other winnerswere KarenWiebe from CampErnst Middle School and KellyRead fromBooneCountyHighSchool.

Wilmhoff said recognitionof local teachers is an impor-tant duty of the club.

Lisa Willoughby of Mann Elementary has been named a Florence Rotary Teacher of the Year. MELISSA

STEWART/THE COMMUNITY RECORDER

CLASSROOM LIBRARY INSTILLSLOVE OF LEARNINGByMelissa [email protected]

See LEARNING, Page A2

BURLINGTON —Boone Coun-ty residents are seemingly sat-isfied with the level and qualityof services provided.

At least that’s the conclusionof a 2013 a citizen satisfactionsurvey, commissioned by thecounty Fiscal Court last year inpartnershipwithNorthernKen-tucky University.

“The purpose of the surveywas tomeasurecitizen’s evalua-tion of county performance ofdelivering basic public ser-vices, and to get citizen input oncurrent policy initiatives underconsideration,” an executivesummary reads.

Frank Bednar presented theresults of thesurvey tocourt re-cently.According toCountyAd-ministrator JeffEarlywine, thisis the second time the countyhas partnered with NKU andthe project was one Bednarcompleted as a graduate stu-dent.

Survey results can be foundonline at bit.ly/boonesurvey.

According to governmentand community relations direc-

tor Adam Howard, the cost ofthe survey was abut $3,300 andwas limited to postage, printingand pre-paid postage for re-turned survey.

The expense would havebeen significantly greater if thecounty had worked with a na-tional company that providessimilar services rather thanNKU, he said.

The information will be dis-cussedbyBooneCountydepart-ment heads “regarding specificaction items that might need tobe addressed,” Howard said.“Further, this information maybe used by the fiscal court inpolicy decisions regarding 911fees, property maintenancecode and other issues.”

InNovember 2013, 3,500 sur-veys were sent out to randomlyselected residential addressesin the county “proportionate tothe urban/rural composition ofresidents,” according to Bed-nar’s presentation.

Of these, 392 usable surveyswere returned.

About 53 percent of respon-dents weremale and 42 percent

Survey says Booneresidents satisfiedBy Stephanie [email protected]

See SURVEY, Page A2

FASTING ON FISH B1Fridays in the Lenten seasonmean fish frys.

Page 2: Florence recorder 032714

A2 • FLORENCE RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 NEWS

FLORENCERECORDER

NewsMarc Emral Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1053, [email protected] Salmons Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1057, [email protected] Stewart Reporter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .578-1058, [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 SchachleiterCirculation Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .442-3464,

[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 WebFlorence • nky.com/florenceFlorence • cincinnati.com/florence

cincinnati.com/news/northern-kentucky

Calendar .................B2Classifieds ................CFood ......................B3Life ........................B1Police .................... B8Schools ..................A3Sports ....................A4Viewpoints .............A7

Index

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were female while 31 per-cent were over the age of65and32percentwerebe-tween the ages of 51 and64.

More than half of therespondents have lived inBoone County betweentwo and 20 years.

“The overall results ofthe survey indicated thatBoone County residents(respondents) are in-creasingly satisfied withthe level and quality ofservices provided,” theexecutive summaryreads. “Citizens rated thecounty image/appearancewith a higher positiveranking in all categories

as compared to 2007, aswell as significant reduc-tion of negative ratings.”

According to Bednar’spresentation:

» 71.4 percent of resi-dents were satisfied withthe county’s snow remov-

al, 10.5 per-cent weredissatis-fied, while11.5 per-cent wereneither sat-isfied nordissatis-fied and 1.5percent of

respondents never usedthe service

» 69.4 percent of re-spondents are satisfiedwith the physical condi-tions of county roads,while 9percentaredissat-isfied, 16.3 percent areneither satisfied nor dis-satisfied and less than 1percent responded theynever used county roads.

Other services sur-veyed include the sher-iff’s department, recre-ational facilities, drain-age along roads and high-ways, recreationalactivities and program,animal control, planningand zoning services,building inspection, golfcourses andcode enforce-ments.

Departmental “help-fulness” remained closeto 2007 survey resultswhile “unhelpful” ratingsdecreased in all but onearea.

The 2013 survey alsoranked critical issues. Ac-cording to Bednar, the re-sponse was similar to thatin 2007 “in that transpor-tation and traffic ratednumber one.”

Inthenewsurvey,how-ever, public safety rankedsecond; it had rankedthird in 2007.

SurveyContinued from Page A1

Howard

“Our education systemis the backbone of ourcommunity,” Wilmhoffsaid. “Rotary recognizesthatwithout agoodeduca-tion system, the countywon’t progress as itshould. Teachers are a vi-tal part of the communityand we want to recognizethem for their contribu-tions.”

Willoughby started herteaching career aftergraduating from EasternKentucky University in1997. She taught in theClark County school sys-tem in Winchester for ayear before moving toBoone County. She taughtat Erpenbeck Elementaryfor eight years and trans-ferred to Mann when theschool opened in 2006.

Willoughby said sheloves working with chil-dren.

“I enjoywhat I do,” shesaid. “I have the best jobin the world – it’s fun andchallenging. My goal as ateacher is to … it soundssimple, but to help eachchild learn the most theycan and become the mostwell-rounded person theycan be. To do this, youhave toget to knowachildandwhy theyare thechildthey are. Then, if theyknow you care, theycare.”

According to MannPrincipal Connie Crigger,Willoughby is an “amaz-ing” teacher because shetakes the time to do justthat.

“Lisa has never, ever,ever complained about achild in her class,” shesaid. “Each child is veryvaluable to her. Shemakes kids believe inthemselves.”

LearningContinued from Page A1

BURLINGTON — RyanClark grew up a fan ofKentucky basketball.

“It all started with mygranddad,” the Burling-ton resident says. “I grewup in Louisville, but hesayshegot tomefirst,be-fore any U of L fanscould. So I grew up a UKfan and loved their bas-ketball squad ever sincethen.”

Clark, 34, has just pub-lished his second book onUK with friend Joe Cox,“Fightin’ Words: Ken-tucky vs. Louisville.”

“I’vewrittenafewoth-ers but writing about UKbasketball is themost funI’ve ever had,” he said.

He and Cox had justfinished their last book,“100 Things WildcatsFans Should Know andDo Before They Die,”when they began to won-der what was next.

Cox, 33, said the ideawasonehehadmore thana decade ago.

While Cox, who livesnear and works in Bowl-ing Green, is a Kentuckyfan – he and Clark metwatching a Kentuckyfootball game while at-tending Western Ken-tucky University – he at-tended the University ofLouisville law school andsays he’s the “softer edgeof the two.”

Having lived in thecity for three years, “Ikind of have Louisvillesympathies”andwill root

for the team – but not atthe expense of UK.

“Joe and I had boththought for a long timesomeone should write abook about the UK and Uof L basketball rivalry,”Clark said. “Not a biasedfan book, but a true histo-ry book about the rivalrythat just chronicled eachgame. We both thoughtwe would love to readthat.”

Clark says a book likethis had never been writ-ten before.

“I personally knowfriends in the sportswrit-ingbusiness –peoplewho

are real journalism ce-lebrities – who wanted towrite this book but neverdid,” Clark said. “So Joeand I pitched the idea,and especially whenLouisvillewonthenation-al title last year, publish-ers got interested. This isthe biggest rivalry in col-lege basketball. The emo-tion and the charactersinvolved are second tonone. And it had to bewritten about.”

“We write well togeth-er, work well together,we’re good friends andI’m glad we’ve been ableto do it twice,” Cox said.

“I look forward to what-ever the future holds andhopefully we can do itagain.”

The competition be-tween the two teams,which meet Friday in theNCAA Sweet Sixteen, isfierce.

“The fans hate eachother, the coaches hateeach other andwhen theymeet each year, the statealmost boils over,” Clarksaid. “It’s the biggestthing in the state sports-wise this side of the Ken-tucky Derby.”

According to Clark,they get into the stories

behind the games.“We talk to players

who have overcome ad-diction of all kinds, horri-ble family lives and otheradversity,” he said. “Fanswill love these kids, nomatter who they rootfor.”

Clark and Cox willread from, discuss andsign “Fightin’ Words” 3p.m. April 5 at Joseph-Beth Booksellers, 2785Dixie Highway, Crest-view Hills.

Want to continue theconversation? Tweet at

@SSalmonsNKY

Cats, Cards rivalry one for the agesBy Stephanie [email protected]

Ryan Clark, left, of Burlington, and Joe Cox, co-authored a book highlighting the history of the rivalry between theUniversity of Kentucky and University of Louisville basketball teams.THANKS TO RYAN CLARK

Page 3: Florence recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • A3

SCHOOLSSCHOOLSACHIEVEMENTS | NEWS | ACTIVITIES | HONORS CommunityPress.com

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

Two seniors at CovingtonCatholic High School, WilliamMcMurtry and Nathan Wich-mann, recently were recog-nized by the National MeritScholarship Corporation as fi-nalists.

McMurtry is a member ofthe swim team,NationalHonorSociety and National EnglishHonor Society. He swims withthe NKY Clippers, and is thesonofToddandCariMcMurtryof Fort Wright.

Wichmann is a member ofthe basketball and tennisteams, Spirit Club, NationalHonor Society and NationalEnglishHonor Society. He par-ticipated in the Governor’sScholars Program, and is thesonofQuinandLisaWichmannof Villa Hills.

Inaddition toMcMurtryandWichmann, Covington Catholichad four National Merit Com-mended Scholars as well: Jere-myGreer, SeanNemann,KeithRadcliff and Thomas Ryan.

CovCath pair recognized as merit finalists

Covingto Catholic’s National Merit Finalists WilliamMcMurtry and Nathan Wichmann (third and fourthfrom left), along with Commended Scholars, from left, Thomas Ryan, Jeremy Greer, Sean Nemann andKeith Radcliff.THANKS TOMAUREEN REGAN

St. Paul School’s January pep rally fea-tured a cup-stacking competition. Onestudentoneachteamwasblindfoldedand

given directions, or nurturing, by teammatesin order to stack cups into a “nurturing pyra-mid.”

Stacking success

Members of the blue team, third-grade student Holly Honerlaw, sixth-grade student Joe Stewart and second-grade student Rick Erwin, celebrateafter completing the “nurturing pyramid” at the St. Paul cup-stacking competition.THANKS TO KELLY EIBEL

Members of the green team, fifth-grade studentTrey Rice, kindergarten student BradyAubuchon, sixth-grade student Jake Maher andkindergarten student Evie Hickey, prepare forthe cup-stacking competition.THANKS TO KELLY EIBEL

St. Paul School eighth-grade student EthanBering and first-grade student Lucy Boltonnurture and direct fourth-grade teammateRenee Kopser at the January pep rally.THANKS TOKELLY EIBEL

Members of the orange team,eighth-grade student EthanBering, first-grade student LucyBolton and fourth-grade studentRenee Kopser, get ready to stackcups at the pep rally.THANKS TOKELLY EIBEL

Four Gateway Communityand Technical College studentswon a combined eight ADDYAwards incompetitionconduct-ed by the Cincinnati chapter ofthe American Advertising Fed-eration.

Katrina Payne, a studentfrom Independence who willgraduate in May, won threeGold ADDYs for product pack-aging, personal stationery andapersonal logo. Samantha Ed-monson, a second-year studentfrom Covington, won Gold AD-DY for a book cover design, anda Silver ADDY, for a book illus-tration.

NicoleDay ofWalton andNi-cole Papin of Union both wonSilver ADDYs. Day, who willgraduate in May, won twoawards for the logo and statio-nery she designed for theNorthern Kentucky incubatorkitchen. Papin, a recent gradu-ate, won a Silver award for herpersonal stationery design.

All fourareVisualCommuni-cation majors. That programwill move this fall into Gate-way’s new Technology and De-sign Center at 615-622 MadisonAve. Toni Bloom, assistant pro-fessor and division chair, andTheresaThomas, associate pro-fessor, teach visual communi-cation courses.

Gatewayfour winADDYawards

Katrina Payne won three GoldAddys in a competition conductedby the Cincinnati chapter of theAmerican AdvertisingFederation.PROVIDED

The A. M. Yealey Elemen-tary School fifth-grade class re-cently hosted its first Coffee-house Night.

The cafeteria was trans-formed into a Greenwich Vil-lage, bohemian-themed coffee-house including jazz playing inthe background, white table-clothswithredandwhitecheck-eredplacemats, andbattery-op-erated tea lights for the center-pieces.

Students shared works dur-ing open mic and roundtablepresentations. Mattie Melson,Marianna Rozell, Luke Ziegler,Molly Switzer and Omar Assdsharedpieces.All students readtheir writings in the smallroundtable setting. The stu-dent-selected writings consist-ed of personal narratives, shortstories, novels and poems.

The Coffeehouse Night wasmade possible by the BooneCounty Educational FoundationInnovation Grant in the amountof $206. Fifth-grade languagearts teachers Julia Deevers-Rich and Delena McGuirewrote and acquired the grant.

CoffeehouseshowcasescreativityCommunity Recorder

Page 4: Florence recorder 032714

A4 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014

Coaching openings» Beechwood High School has an

opening for the girls varsity basketballcoach.Any interestedcandidateneeds tocontact Athletic Director Suzy Wera atsuzy.wera@ beechwood.kyschools.us orsend resume to 54 Beechwood Road, Ft.Mitchell, KY 41017.

Kid Glove vouchers» The Kid Glove Game still has 4,000

ticket vouchers for the games in 2014.The Cincinnati Reds allow the organiza-tion toprint40,000 ticketvoucherseveryyearwith 8,000 each for five games. Twogames are sold out but vouchers remainfor three games:May13 and14 (SanDie-go) and July 8 (Cubs).

Any amateur youth baseball or soft-ball team or league is eligible to partici-pate in theprogram.Ticketvouchersare

$10 each and teams receive 85 percentback to purchase equipment for theirteams for the 2015 season. Basically, youare paying $1.50 to go watch the Redsplay a regular season game. Sell 100ticket vouchers and team receives $850back to buy equipment. Vouchers aredistributed on a consignment basis.

Lastyear, theKidGloveprogrampur-chasedmore than $300,000 in equipmentfor kids throughout the Tristate. This isthe 66th year of the program.

Book signings» Cincinnati baseball icon and World

Series champion Ken Griffey Sr. willconduct a book signing at the NewportPavilion Kroger April 4. He will be sign-ing copies of his new book, Big Red:Baseball, Fatherhood, andMyLife in theBigRedMachine.Thesigning is from10-11:30 a.m. The book catalogues his mem-ories of the 1975 and1976 world champi-on teams, his time with the Yankees andplaying in the same outfield with his su-

perstar son, Ken Griffey Jr.

Bass fishing» Notre Dame’s varsity team fin-

ished third in the recent MuhlenbergCounty tournament and had the awardfor biggest fish, a 3.57-pound bass byKim Birrer.

NKU Notes» TwoNorthernKentuckyUniversity

women’s basketball players have beenhonored by the Atlantic Sun Conferencefor theirperformanceduring the2013-14season. Melody Doss earned first-teamAll-Atlantic Sun Conference honors,while Kayla Thacker was named to theleague’s second team.

Doss and Thacker were the top twoscorers for the Norse, who finished theregular season 17-12 overall and 13-5 inthe Atlantic Sun. Doss, a junior forwardfrom Greenwood, Ind., emerged as thetop Norse player in several categoriesthis season. She averaged15.3 points per

game, which ranked fifth in the AtlanticSun, while shooting 48.3 percent fromthe floor to rank sixth in the conference.She also led the team in defensive re-bounds with 144 and blocked shots with43.

Thacker, a senior guard from Mt.Washington,Ky., startedeverygamesheplayed in this season and finished theyear averaging 12.6 points and a team-high 6.8 rebounds per game. She scoredindoublefigures20times, including11ofthe last 12 games.

Baseball» Walton-Verona beat Villa Madon-

na 7-1March 18.

Softball» Conner beat St. Henry 10-0 March

18 and Beechwood 15-2 March 20.» Heritage beat Ludlow 6-5March18.» Dixie Heights beat Cooper 11-1

March 18.

PRESS PREPS HIGHLIGHTS

By James [email protected]

BOONE COUNTY — No sur-prise, baseball is one of severalsports where Boone County ri-vals are strong and competitivewitheachother.Here isa lookatlocal baseball squads with theseason just under way:

Boone CountyThe defending 33rd District

champions were 16-16 last sea-son and fell in the Ninth Regionquarterfinals. Boone is rankedninth in the coaches poll.

The Rebels, district champsthree of the last four years, re-turn five starters for headcoach Wayne Huff. Top playersstart with senior first baseman/pitcher Trey Ganns, senior out-fielder Austin Johnson, seniorshortstop/pitcher Darien Huff,senior third baseman/catcherTrey Martin and junior infield-er Brenden Stanley.

Ganns, the team’s ace pitch-er, has signed with newly Divi-sion I Northern Kentucky Uni-versity.Hestruckout77battersin 55 innings in 2013 and also hit.349 at the plate. Huff is the No.2 hurler andwill play for Thom-as More. Johnson hit .410 lastseason to lead the Rebels.

Boone plays in the HarrisonCounty tournament March 28-29, starting off with the hostteam, thedefending10thRegionchampions. Boone hosts RyleApril 2.

Conner

Brad Arlinghaus returns forhis eighth year as head coach.Conner was 19-14 last year andlost in the 33rd District semifi-nals. Arlinghaus is six winsfrom the school record.

The top returner is senioroutfielder/pitcher CameronRoss, who planned to sign withtheUniversityofCincinnati lastweek as a preferred walk-on. Athree-year starter, he hit .367last yearwith 22 runs scored, 26RBIand11stolenbases.Theaceon the mound for the Cougars,he had a 3.40 ERAand 44 strike-outs in 39 innings.

Senior Jared Williams is athree-year starter at shortstop.He hit .333 with 12 extra-basehits and 20 runs scored, andwillprovide strong defense andleadership. He has 22 careerdoubles and could reach theschool record of 34.

Senior Blake Hart is a three-year starter at catcher. He hit.318 with two homers and 19runs scored. He is 15 walksaway from the school record.

Junior third-baseman Jef-fery Schneider had some expe-rience lastyearandwillbeakeyaddition to the regular lineup.JuniorBlaiseOstertag is anout-fielder and pitcher who hit .341with 17 RBI and 20 runs scored.

The Cougars have little var-sity experience besides thosefour. Ross andOstertag lead thepitchingstaffwith juniorsRyanGosney and Ryan Ward otherplayers to watch. Senior DaltonHarshburger looks to start at

second base.Conner hosts Campbell

County Thursday, March 27then plays at 1 p.m. Saturday,March 29, at La Salle. Connerhosts Dixie Heights April 2.

CooperThe Jaguars were 14-19 last

year and welcome back 12 sen-iors who will try to make somenoise amongst their stout coun-ty rivals in the 33rd District.The head coach is Jeremy Col-lins.

Top players to watch startwith senior outfielder/pitcherLuis Burgos, senior pitcherHunter Dunn, senior catcherCory Fussinger, senior outfield-er/pitcher Colin Hathorn andsenior outfielder/pitcher JacobLawhorn. Dunn has signed withEastern Kentucky.

Cooper hosts Beechwood atnoon Saturday, March 29, andCampbell County at 5 p.m.Mon-day,March 31. Cooper is rankedeighth in the coaches poll.

RyleThe Raiders return three

starters and two standout pitch-ers as they look to goback to thestate tournament for the secondstraight year. Ryle was 32-8 ayear ago for head coach PatRoesel, winning the Ninth Re-gion.TheRaidersbouncedbackafter being 33rd District run-ner-up.

Five seniors make up thecore of the team this season,startingwith outfieldersMasonForbes and Eric Clarkson, andfirst baseman Tom Deters.

Pitchers Josh Bellew and EthanBrennan lead the rotation.

Bellew was 7-2 last seasonwith a 2.10 ERA. Brennan was4-1with a 0.41 ERA and threw ashutout against Dixie Heightsin the Ninth Region final.Forbes, the regional tourna-ment most valuable player, hit.415 last season and drove in 24while scoring 41 runs.

Roesel’s chief concern is re-placing the starting infield.RylehostsDixieHeights inare-gional final rematch 5 p.m. Fri-day, March 28 and plays atHamilton Badin 2 p.m. Satur-day, March 29 and at La Salle 5p.m. Monday, March 31. Ryleplays at Boone Wednesday,April 2. Ryle is ranked third inthe coaches poll.

St. HenryThe Crusaders were 17-19

last season and 34th Districtrunner-ups, eventually fallingin the Ninth Region semifinals.

Drew Schmidt takes over ashead coach this year. He inheri-ts two returning starters. Play-ers towatch include senior firstbaseman/pitcher Tony LaCorte,senior outfielder/pitcher JoshKleisinger and junior infielder/pitcher Rex Rogers.

St. Henry plays a double-header at Shelby County Satur-day,March29,startingat11a.m.They play at Newport Monday,March31,andatGlenEsteTues-day, April 1. St. Henry’s nexthomegame isWednesday, April2, against nearby rival Lloyd.

Walton-Verona

The Bearcats return sixstarters for head coach KevinMcIntyre, who has 265 careerwins at the school.

Players towatch include sen-ior Christian Lohr, senior An-drewMcWhorter, seniorDanielTilley, sophomore Garrett Lek-hamp and sophomore DanielWest. Lohr, a pitcher who al-ready has three career no-hit-ters, has signed with TreveccaNazarene.

McIntyre said his team ishard-working and should bevery solid defensively and beable to score runs.

W-V hosts Simon KentonThursday, March 27, in a 32ndDistrict seeding game, thenplays at Brossart the next day.

Follow James Weber on Twitter,@RecorderWeber

FIRST LOOK AT 2014 HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL

St. Henry’s Rex Rogers tries to make a tough catch in 2012.FILE PHOTO

Boone rivals battle it out in baseballBy James [email protected]

Boone County’s Trey Ganns isheaded to play for NorthernKentucky University nextseason.FILE PHOTO

SPORTSSPORTSHIGH SCHOOL | YOUTH | RECREATIONAL CommunityPress.com

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

Page 5: Florence recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • A5SPORTS & RECREATION

LEXINGTON — Ben Hepplerstood at center court on theRuppArena floor andkept look-ing around at all the chaos andcelebration around him.

Chaos, celebration andcheer, same first letters as Co-vington Catholic Colonels, whowere celebrating their firststate basketball championshipMarch 23.

“I’m trying to soak it all in,”Heppler said. “I’ll rememberthis for the rest of my life.”

Cov Cath outlasted ScottCounty in overtime, 59-51 Sun-day afternoon, March 23, at theUniversity of Kentucky’s his-toric basketball arena. It wasthe third title in Northern Ken-tucky history, and the second inthe past six tournaments by aNinth Region team (Holmes,2009). Itwasalso the first inCovCath history in its ninth trip tothe Sweet 16.

“It’s incredible,” said seniorforward Mark Schult. “Youdream of it, as a little kid, goingout andwinning your last game,and it’s hard to believe we actu-ally did it.”

The Colonels finished with a33-2 record. After losing toHolmes in the 35th District fi-nal, the Colonels won sevenstraight games. They trailed inthe second half in three of thefour state tourney games.

With a veteran team andmost of the student body in at-tendanceas theColonelCrazies,it was a great day for CovingtonCatholic.

“It’s so special,” said headcoachScottRuthsatz. “Youhaveto look at the administration ondown, what they’re doing at Co-vington Catholic. You have togive so much credit to the Cra-zies. Our Colonel nation reallysupported us, and not just thisgame, all season long. Being the

firstwinner of it, it feels fantas-tic.”

Said Heppler: “It’s reallyspecial to be the first ones andhang that first banner up there.We’ve always had that emptyspot and since CoachRuthsatz’sfirst day we said we would bethe ones to put it up there. The 6a.m. workouts in the summer,playing in the gym all thosetimes, it paid off.”

CovCath’s fitness and tough-ness in adversity paid offagainst the experienced Cardi-nals, who were seeking theirthird state title (35-4). After anearly 9-3 lead, Cov Cath was onthe wrong end of a 22-4 run andtrailed 27-18 at halftime. Scotthad three 3-pointers in a 70-sec-ond span by juniorHines Jones,who averaged four points agame for the year. Forward To-nyMartini had Scott’s first fivepoints and posted 17 points and16 rebounds for the game. CovCath shot just 6-of-22 in the firsthalf, several of those missescoming from around the rim.

“We’ve been in this situationbefore and we knew we couldpull through,” Nick Ruthsatzsaid. “We knew eventually wewouldstarthittingsomeand thefourth quarter we just buckleddown. All the conditioningthrough the summer pulled usthrough.”

Cov Cath trailed by fourpoints, 47-43, with 1:33 to go.Ruthsatz tied the game with apair of foul shots with 51 sec-onds to play.

Ruthsatz gave Cov Cath itsfirst lead since 9-8 early in OT,then tied the game at 51 with2:16 toplay.A tip-inby juniorBoSchuh gave the Colonels thelead for good with 1:46 to play.

After three missed shots bythe Cardinals on their next pos-session, Ruthsatz grabbed therebound and made two foulshots with 57 seconds to play tomake it 55-51. Following anoth-

er missed shot, CCH seniorParker Keller made two freethrows, then Heppler scoredthe final points of the season ona fast-break layup.

“We just played better de-fense, tried to lock themdown,”Heppler said. “That’s the expe-rience of this team with threesenior starters and Parker hit-

ting those huge free throws atthe end. It’s a team game. Ev-erybody can score. Most teamsaround the state don’t have fiveguys who can guard everybodyso thatworks toouradvantage.”

Ruthsatz had 25 points andfive assists. Schult had12pointsand six rebounds. Hepplerscoredeightwithapairof treys.Freshman guard Cole VonHan-dorf had nine points, and Schuhposted 12 rebounds.

One of VonHandorf’s chieftasks was guarding Scott Coun-ty star guardTrentGilbert,whocame in averaging 26 points pergame. TheMr. Basketball final-ist, who is getting interest fromseveral Division I schools, onlyscored 10 points on 4-of-25shooting. Cov Cath rotated sev-eral defenders on himand oftendouble-teamed him in the back-court.

“We just tried to pressurehim as much as possible, be-cause we knew he’s a greatshooter,” Scott Ruthsatz said.“You can never leave him open.Wehadahint of thewayhe likesto go and shoot, and we tried tokeep fresh guys on him.”

The fatigue may have had ahand in two crucial foul-shotmisses by Gilbert. A 91 percentshooter for the year, Gilbertmade28 inarow in theSweet16.However, he missed the frontends of two one-and-one situa-tions late in regulation.

“I love stepping up andbeingable to shut him down,” Von-Handorf said. “They toldme if Ishut him down, we win. I triedmy best. He’s a great player, I’llgive him so many props. I can’twait to see where he goes nextyear. (Assistant coach) Joe Fre-drick told me all of his moves, Ihad them all down, I felt I couldplay him fairly well.”

Follow James Weber on Twitter,@RecorderWeber

Covington Catholic rejoices in historic basketball titleBy James [email protected]

Cov Cath head coach Scott Ruthsatz talks to players as they lookforward to collecting the state championship banner. CovingtonCatholic beat Scott County 59-51 in overtime in the KHSAA Sweet 16state championship game March 23 at Rupp Arena. JAMES WEBER/THE

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A6 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 SPORTS & RECREATION

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 including ninegames at Prasco Park inMason, games at CrosleyField inBlueAshandMid-land Field in Batavia, aswellas13gamesat thecol-legiate ballparks on thecampuses of the Univer-sity of Cincinnati, North-ern Kentucky University

andMiami University.Four games will be

played at the new P&GMLB Cincinnati UrbanYouthAcademy at theRo-selawn Sports Complex,the home fields for Wal-nutHills andPurcellMar-ian high schools.

“TheReds are proud tosupport high school base-ball and foster the devel-opment of the next majorleague stars,” said PhilCastellini, Reds chief op-erating officer. “Cincin-nati has a rich heritage ofhometown players goingon to great major leaguecareers with the Reds in-cluding Ken Griffey Jr.,Rob Oester and DaveParker from this year’sReds Hall of Fame induc-tion class.”

Griffey Jr. ( MoellerHigh School, class of1987), Oester (WithrowHigh School, 1974) andParker (Courter Techni-calHigh School,1970)willbe inducted into the RedsHall of Fame along withthe late JakeBeckley dur-ing Hall of Fame Induc-tion Weekend, Aug. 8-10.

“This event is now anintegral part of the highschool baseball landscapein Cincinnati,” said TomGamble, In-Game Sportspresident and CEO. “It’san honor to celebrate thehistory of local highschool baseball by havinggreat players from thepast take part in our cere-monial first pitches dur-ing many of the games. ”

Title sponsor Skyline

Chili andpresentingspon-sor Safeco Insurance willcreate interactive con-tests and promotions ateach of the 36 games.

At select games, cere-monial first pitches willbe thrown out by some ofthe area’s greatest highschool players to com-memorate the rich tradi-tion and heritage of highschool baseball played inGreater Cincinnati.

Tickets for the RedsFutures High SchoolShowcase games are $5and good for all games onthat day. Each ticket in-cludes a voucher good fora freeViewLevel ticket toselect 2014 Reds regularseason games at GreatAmerican Ball Park andalso includes a coupon for

one free Skyline Chilicheese coney. Advancetickets can be purchasedat each of the participat-ing schools beginning inMarch. Tickets also willbe available ongamedaysat each of the ballparks.

The culminating eventof the Showcasewill be onSunday,May4,whenplay-ers and coaches from the72 high schools will par-ticipate in a “March at theMajors” parade aroundthe field prior to the Redsvs. Milwaukee Brewersgame at 4:10 p.m. AnMVPfromeachof the 36gameswill be recognizedon fieldduring pregame cere-monies. Here is a sched-ule of local matchups andlocations:

Tuesday, April 1Andersonvs.Campbell

County, 2 p.m. (NorthernKentucky University)

Cooper vs. NewportCentral Catholic, 5 p.m.(Northern Kentucky Uni-versity)

Monday, April 7Boone County vs.

Scott, 2 p.m. (NorthernKentucky University)

Covington Catholic vs.Dixie Heights, 5 p.m.(Northern Kentucky Uni-versity)

Wednesday, April 9Beechwoodvs. Conner,

11 a.m. (Northern Ken-tucky University)

Ryle vs. SimonKenton,2 p.m. (Northern Ken-tucky University)

Highlands vs. HolyCross, 5 p.m. (NKU)

Reds high school showcase expands to 72 teamsCommunity Press report

DYNASTY IN THEMAKING

The seventh-grade Conner Middle School girls basketball team won back-to-backregional championships, with only one loss during the last two seasons. Pictured fromleft: Top, BreAnna Beach, Miranda Meier, Maddie Gerak, Nicole Byrns, MaddieBurcham and Abbie Hoppius; bottom, Courtney Hurst, Savannah Jordan, CorinCrawford, Ashlee Lindsey, Joy Strange and Natalie Cain. The coaches are KimWarfield and Rick Hicks.THANKS TO JANET JORDAN

Soccer campsOSYSA Soccer Unlim-

ited Soccer Camps run byJack Hermans and OhioSouth are returning thissummer to several loca-tions throughout the area.

Visit www.osysa.com/camps/soccerunlimit-ed.htm to view the list ofcamps.

Call Jack Hermans at513-232-7916, or [email protected].

Softball playerssought

Northern KentuckyShooting Stars 16U girlsfastpitch traveling soft-ball team seeks playersfor its 2014 roster, prefer-ably dedicated girls whohave played for either

their high school team oranother traveling team.All positions are open.Email [email protected].

Baseball openingThe Southwest Ohio

12U baseball team, TeamIgnite,hasopenings.Theywill play in the Blue levelof the Southwest OhioLeague this spring andparticipate in a guaran-teed five-game tourna-ment in Cooperstown,N.Y., June 13.

Contact coach ChrisVan Meter [email protected] or 859-393-8863.

Get golf-readyWorld of Golf, 7400

Woodspoint Drive, Flor-ence, is offering a seriesof “Get Golf-Ready”classes this spring.

There will be sessionson short game, full swingand on-course manage-ment.

Golfers looking to feelmore comfortable play-ing on the course and be-ginning-to-intermediategolfers looking to lowertheir scores are encour-aged to participate.

Classes are 5:30-7 p.m.Cost is $75 per partici-pant. Dates include: April17, 22, 24, and May 22, 27,29.

For more information,visit www.landrumgolf-.com, or call 859-371-8255.

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Page 7: Florence recorder 032714

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

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

FLORENCERECORDER

Florence Recorder 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 • FLORENCE RECORDER • A7

PAINTINGWITH PLANTS

Love Alive Montessori Preschool student Luke Zumbiel, ofUnion, paints flowers with vegetables from the schoolgarden.THANKS TOMARCY THOMPSON

Union rezoning notwanted

I want to express my strongopposition to the request forrezoning land within the citylimits of Union, namely in andaround Route 42.

With the newMarketplaceopening onMall Road thereshould be plenty of availableshopping at that location forthis area. My personal opinionis that allowing another Krogerstore is all about tax money andpolitics, and not necessarily inthat order. Someone here inBoone County is trying to makea name for themselves at theexpense of the Harmony neigh-borhood and the community ofUnion.

Carespring was smartenough to withdraw their re-quest due to the majority ofcommunity support nixing therezoning. In order for the Har-mony community, as well as thecity of Union, to continue togrow, it would be my recom-mendation that more time andeffort be spent on finalizing theMt. Zion Road relocation andTown Center Plan. The city ofUnion has the charisma of asmall Kentucky town and I feelmost of the citizens would sup-port business efforts that coin-cide with the Town Center Plan.Our local senate representativeliving in Arbor Springs may beable to assist in future endeav-ors.

Richard ChoreyUnion

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.The governor’s highway plan

calls for tolls to pay $1.78 billionfor the proposed Brent Spenceproject. Despite baseless as-sertions to the contrary, $1 atrip is not going to cover that.Tolls in Louisville are beingintroduced at $1 but the fineprint calls for increases asneeded, and they will be need-ed. And, with $12 a trip trucktolls being proposed in Louis-ville, the cost to the common-wealth is unimaginable.

Over 175,000 vehicles crossthe bridge daily, with 65 percentof those vehicles being North-ern Kentucky drivers. If those113,750 drivers pay a toll of$2.50 a trip, it will cost North-ern Kentucky almost $104 mil-lion a year. Those lost dollarsthen fail to circulate and affectour community. This will forev-er cripple Northern Kentucky.

There is a much better wayfor Northern Kentucky to ad-dress this issue. In 1987 theKentucky Transportation Cab-inet recommended that we re-route I-71 through I-75 andacross southern Boone, Kentonand Campbell Counties crossingthe Ohio River and linking theinterstate to I-275 on the Ohio

side. This alternate route wasenvisioned to reduce traffic onthe Brent Spence Bridge bywell over thousands of cars aday.

At the same time, it wouldadd a new Ohio/Kentucky cross-ing and open up vast areas fordevelopment and create tre-mendous growth in both Ohioand Kentucky. This would alsoimmediately take a largeamount of traffic away from theI-75 bridge in Covington. Thepromise of new commercial,industrial and residential devel-opments will mean jobs, jobsand jobs – a large capital in-fusion into our economy. This afar better way for the NorthernKentucky region and the stateof Kentucky to spend our hard-earned money.

We, the following NorthernKentucky based businesses, areagainst tolls and for alternativesolutions. Please vote againsttolls and HB 407.

Ed BesslerPast president, Economy Meats

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

go toCincinnati.Com/northernkentucky.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

ABOUT LETTERSAND COLUMNSWewelcome your comments on editorials, columns, stories or other

topics important to you in the Recorder. Include your name, address andphone number(s) so we may verify your letter. Letters of 200 or fewerwords and columns of 500 or fewer words have the best chance of beingpublished. All submissions may be edited for length, accuracy and clarity.Deadline: Noon FridayE-mail: [email protected]: 859-283-7285U.S. mail: See box belowLetters, columns and articles submitted to the Recorder may be pub-

lished or distributed in print, electronic or other forms.

For more than a year, Iwas a member of the Ken-tucky Veterans Hall ofFame Foundation, board ofdirectors. During my timethere, I observed howthings were being run and Iwas disgusted by it. Duringdiscussions, much moreemphasis was put on whocould help the foundationrather than who actuallydeserved to be inducted.Seeing the hand writing on

the walland unableto do any-thing aboutit, I re-signed myposition onJune 2,2013.

I find itshockingbut notsurprisingthat two

leading figures in theKVHOFF have been in-ducted in the first class. Ibelieve the induction of theExecutive Director andCEOH.B. Deatherageshows a complete disregardfor ethics and the integrityof the board. Another in-ductee is Brandon Baileywho serves as chairman ofthe Selection Committee.His selection was also giv-en help by the fact that hismother sat on the SelectionCommittee. I cannot be-lieve the arrogance of thesepeople to induct themselvesinto this hall and ignore somany more qualified anddeserving veterans.

While I was a member ofthe hall of fame board ofdirectors, I campaignedhard to induct all 59 Ken-tuckyMedal of Honor re-cipients in the first year.The Selection Committeedecided to induct only thefour living Medal of Honorrecipients. Thus rejecting55 of our state’s greatestheroes and voting for them-selves with minor qual-ifications. I guess that liv-

ing Medal of Honor recipi-ents put more people in theseats at the dinner. There-fore the heroes that are nolonger with us become lessimportant.

This in no way is meantto diminish the lives andaccomplishments of anyMedal of Honor recipient.They all deserve to be inthe Kentucky Veterans Hallof Fame before anyoneelse.

A look at the numbers isvery revealing. There is noquestion that the four Med-al of Honor recipients de-serve to be there. Of the 23others, 10 are from Boone,Campbell and Kenton coun-ties. That means that 43percent were selected fromthree of Kentucky’s 120counties. That is not fairbut also not surprising.That is because the Hall ofFame Foundation, all oftheir friends and associatesare located in NorthernKentucky.

The hall of fame is agreat idea and I was proudto be a part of the founda-tion until I saw the self-serving decisions and ac-tions of its leaders. By theiractions, the leadership hasdisgraced the KentuckyVeterans Hall of Fame andcheapened the honor ofbeing selected for induc-tion. The selection ofDeatherage and Bailey hasgiven the hall of fame a bigblack eye fromwhich it willnever recover. Instead ofhall of fame, it has becomethe hall of Shame. To givethe hall any chance of sur-vival, these two individualsmust be removed. Theymust be removed from theKentucky Veterans Hall ofFame and from the Ken-tucky Veterans Hall ofFame Foundation.

TomDierig is a Vietnam veteranfrom1968-1971. He lives in Inde-pendence.

Wrongveteransselected forhall of fame

Tom DierigCOMMUNITYRECORDER GUESTCOLUMNIST

Howwould 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 dollarsinto education, and more specif-ically, early childhood educa-tion, while playing the myNKYcommunity priority game.

Have you heard about myN-KY? It’s a six-month commu-nity visioningcampaign thatlaunched inJanuary toengage resi-dents, educa-tors, politiciansand businessesin determiningthe prioritiesfor NorthernKentucky’snext five-year

strategic plan.I chose to invest in education

because I see it as a great equal-izer of opportunity, helpingensure the future success of allchildren, and in turn their com-munities, regardless of theirsocioeconomic status. In fact,programs supporting childrencan’t start early enough—re-search shows the importance ofearly child development and itspositive effect on later academ-ic and social progress.

Closer to home, the recent

release of kindergarten readi-ness data shows that in North-ern Kentucky only 53 percent ofchildren are ready for kinder-garten. This sobering factshould drive Northern Kentuck-ians to act by promoting, en-couraging and investing in qual-ity early education programsfor children, making educationinitiatives a key priority for ourregion. Programs like homevisitation for first-time moms,initiatives to grow the numberof high-quality child care spotsavailable, social and emotionaldevelopment for young stu-dents and programs that createmore stable families so childrencan be successful. This is wherewe need to invest our money.

There are few opportunitiesand initiatives designed to cata-pult Northern Kentucky fartherand faster than those in theearly childhood realm. It’s afact – investing in childrenmeans investing in our future.

One way you can do that isfollowing my lead and visitingmyNKY.org, the hub for col-lecting community input indeveloping the next five-yearstrategic plan. The site featuresan interactive prioritizationgame and a variety of polls andchallenge questions on the topicof education, as well as otherssuch as transportation, health &wellness, and jobs.

Visiting myNKY.org and

lending your opinion and yourvoice will affect the direction ofthe next strategic plan, whichguides lawmakers and commu-nity movers and shakers whenit comes time to invest publicfunds.

Ask yourself, “What onething can be done to improvethe quality of life in NorthernKentucky?” While you mayanswer differently than I did,your input during the myNKYcampaign could make the dif-ference in making NorthernKentucky 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’s make our voicesheard.

Jordan Huizenga is the director ofdevelopment for Children Inc.

What’s your vision forNorthern Kentucky?

FORMORE INFO:Find out more about myNKY

by visiting the official website atwww.mynky.org as well as thecampaign’s Twitter, www.twit-ter.com/my_nky, Facebook,www.facebook.com/itsmynky,Instagram, www.instagram.com/my_nky and Youtube channel,www.youtube.com/user/itsmyn-ky.

JordanHuizengaCOMMUNITYRECORDER GUESTCOLUMNIST

Page 8: Florence recorder 032714

A8 • FLORENCE-UNION 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: Florence recorder 032714

LIFELIFE PEOPLE | IDEAS | RECIPES

COMMUNITYRECORDER

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 2014

After taking an order from a drive-thru customer at the ImmaculateHeart of Mary fish fry, Lou Masure calls off his order to John Renaker,left, who rings it up on an outside register. Both gentlemen havechildren at IHM. Business at the drive-thru was brisk.KARENMEIMAN/FOR

THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Patrick Braun takes submerged fish out of the hot fryer inside the fry tent at IHM.KARENMEIMAN/FOR THE

COMMUNITY PRESS

Allison Dasch, a second-grader atIHM eats with her family at thefish fry. KARENMEIMAN/FOR THE

COMMUNITY PRESS

Zachary Bockweg, a seventhgrader at IHM, is a runner at thedrive-thru at IHM Fish Fry.Runners carry orders to thedrive-thru serving line and thenruns the filled orders to thevolunteers who take orders andmoney from each car at thedrive-thru.KARENMEIMAN/FOR THE

COMMUNITY PRESS

Kennedy Hill, a seventh-grader at the school, is in charge of the pizzaon the inside serving line. KARENMEIMAN/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Fastingon fish

Fridays in Lent meanfish fries.

And that means volun-teers at Immaculate HeartofMary inBurlington staffthe grills and clear the ta-bles to sell sandwiches andother non-meat menuitems.

Emory Kocsis, a50-year-veteran of theKnights of Columbus, doeshis part to help out at thefish fry. He was part of theassembly line serving fish frycustomers inside the school'sgymnasium. KARENMEIMAN/FOR

THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Joe Mardis, who has had sixchildren attend IHM, tapes up asign to direct customers throughthe drive-thru. KARENMEIMAN/FOR

THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Annie Neiheisel, from left, Hailey Webster, Grace Michels and AudreyReed bag cookies to be sold at the fish fry. The girls are in the eighthgrade. Money they raise from their service work this year will gotoward the purchase of a gift each eighth-grade class makes annuallyat their graduation.KARENMEIMAN/FOR THE COMMUNITY PRESS

Page 10: Florence recorder 032714

B2 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014

FRIDAY, MARCH 28Art & Craft ClassesLittle Learners, 10 a.m.-mid-night, The Lively Learning Lab,7500 Oakbrook Drive, Suite 10,Learn basic skills including finemotor skills, social skills, reading,dancing, music, science andarts/crafts. Ages 3-6. $25 perweek, $10 per day. 859-371-5227; www.thelivelylearninglab-.com. Florence.

Dining EventsFish Fry, 5-8 p.m. ImmaculateHeart of Mary, 5876 VeteransWay, Burlington; dinners $7.50and up; (859) 689-5070.Fish Fry, 4-8 p.m., Mary Queenof Heaven School, 1130 Don-aldson Highway, Dine-in service,carry-out and drive-thru. Bene-fits Mary, Queen of HeavenSchool. Prices vary. Presented byMary, Queen of Heaven Parish.859-525-6909; www.mqhparish-.com. Erlanger.Saint Paul Fish Fry, 5-8 p.m., St.Paul School, 7303 Dixie High-way, Carlin Center. Weeklyspecials, dine in, carry out or callahead. Fried haddock, fried cod,shrimp, crab cakes and moreincluding pizza and mac andcheese. Benefits Saint PaulSchool athletic programs. Pricevaries. Presented by Saint PaulBoosters. 859-647-4072;www.saintpaulboosters.net.Florence.St. Barbara Fish Fry, 4:30-8p.m., St. Barbara Church, 4042Turkeyfoot Road, Dine in orcarry out. Fried fish, bakedtilapia, shrimp and cheese pizza.Adult dinners include threesides. $8 and up. 859-371-3100.Erlanger.Fish Fry, 4-8 p.m., BurlingtonLodge No. 264, 7072 PleasantValley Road, Includes fish sand-wich on rye or white bread,choice of fries or mac andcheese, hushpuppies and coleslaw. $9; $5 for children. Pre-sented by Burlington MasonicLodge #264 F&AM. 859-746-3225 or 859-689-4328. Florence.

EducationAARP Tax-Aide, 9 a.m.-noon,Boone County Main Library,1786 Burlington Pike, Middleand low-income taxpayers areeligible for this free tax prep-aration service. Those withcomplex tax returns will beadvised to seek professional taxassistance. Free. Registrationrequired. Presented by BooneCounty Public Library. 859-342-2665; www.bcpl.org. Burlington.

Health / WellnessFriday Food Fun Group, 10a.m.-noon Topic: DiabetesPrevention., Boone CountyCooperative Extension Service,6028 Camp Ernst Road, Adultsinterested in food, nutrition andcooking gather to learn aboutdifferent topic each month.Ages 21 and up. Free. Presentedby Boone County CooperativeExtenson Service. 859-586-6101.Burlington.

Literary - LibrariesMahjong, 1 p.m., SchebenBranch Library, 8899 U.S. 42, Allskill levels welcome. 859-342-2665. Union.Concert @ the Library: NKYBrotherhood Singers, 7 p.m.,Boone County Main Library,1786 Burlington Pike, Old-schoola cappella, singing gospel music,patriotic tunes and feel-goodR&B. Free. Presented by BooneCounty Public Library. 859-342-2665. Burlington.

On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 8 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, 10087 Old Union Road,Classic story of “deaf, dumb and

blind kid”who becomes mediasensation. Features iconic scoreby The Who, which features Top40 hits such as “Pinball Wizard,”“See Me, Feel Me” and “I’mFree.”. $12-$15. Presented byUnion Community Theatre.Through April 5. 859-384-0295;www.unionct.net. Union.

SportsWinter/SpringMeet, 6:15 p.m.,Turfway Park, 7500 TurfwayRoad, Free, except March 26.Through March 29. 859-371-0200; www.turfway.com. Flor-ence.

SATURDAY, MARCH 29Literary - LibrariesDiscover Tai Chi, 2 p.m., BooneCounty Main Library, 1786Burlington Pike, Learn how thisancient Chinese exercise canreduce your stress level andimprove your flexibility andbalance. Free. Presented byBoone County Public Library.859-342-2665. Burlington.Fandom Fest (middle & highschool), 6-8:30 p.m., BooneCounty Main Library, 1786Burlington Pike, Arrive in cos-tume for dancing, games, prizesand Pocky. Free. Presented byBoone County Public Library.859-342-2665. Burlington.

On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 8 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, $12-$15. 859-384-0295;www.unionct.net. Union.

RecreationRyle Band Bingo, 5-10 p.m.,Erlanger Lions Club Hall, 5996Belair Drive, Doors open 5 p.m.Early games begin 6:30 p.m.Regular games begin 7:15 p.m.Ages 18 and up. Benefits RyleMarching Band Boosters. Pre-sented by Ryle Band Boosters.Through May 31. 859-282-1652.Erlanger.

Runs / WalksHoofn’ it for the Homeless, 11a.m.-1 p.m., Florence Elks Lodge314, 7704 Dixie Highway, Walkto support the Mary Rose Mis-sion: first soup kitchen to openin Boone County. $10. Regis-tration required. 859-912-2634.Florence.

SportsWinter/SpringMeet, 1:10 p.m.,Turfway Park, Free, exceptMarch 26. 859-371-0200;www.turfway.com. Florence.

SUNDAY, MARCH 30On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 2 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, $12-$15. 859-384-0295;www.unionct.net. Union.

MONDAY, MARCH 31CivicTea Party Meeting, 6-8 p.m.,Sub Station II, 7905 Dream St.,Meet and discuss limited gov-ernment, free markets and fiscalresponsibility. Free. Presented byGrassroots Tea Party of BooneCounty. Through Dec. 29. 859-586-9207; www.teapartyboone-county.org. Florence.

Dance ClassesCardio Dance Party DanceFitness Class, 6-7 p.m., The RitzBallroom Dance Studio, 8150Mall Road, Variety of dancestyles, including jazz, hip-hop,Latin, jive and more danced topopular music. Ages 18 and up.$7-$12. Presented by CardioDance Party. 513-617-9498;www.cardiodanceparty.com.Florence.

Education

Russian Language Class, 1-2p.m., The Lively Learning Lab,7500 Oakbrook Drive, Suite 10,Introduces Russian languageand culture, facilitated by thestudy of vocabulary, grammar,short readings and guidedconversation. For ages 10 andup. $22. Registration required.859-371-5227. Florence.Jones STEM Expo, 8 a.m.-2:30p.m., R.A. Jones Middle School,8000 Spruce Drive, Professionalswhose work includes science,technology, engineering andmath share resources, storiesand ideas. Students visit boothsduring math and science classesand participate in engaging,hands-on experiences whileconnecting with STEM experts.For seventh grade students.Free. Presented by Local STEMOrganizations and Businesses.859-282-4610, ext. 106; jonesste-mexpo.weebly.com. Florence.

Literary - LibrariesHomework Help (grades K-12),5-7 p.m., Boone County MainLibrary, 1786 Burlington Pike,Drop in and volunteers showyou how to use library resourcesand guide you toward thecorrect answer. Presented byBoone County Public Library.859-342-2665. Burlington.Zumba, 6 p.m., Chapin MemorialLibrary, 6517 Market St., Latin-inspired, calorie-burning work-out. $5. 859-505-8263. Peters-burg.Gentle Yoga, 6 p.m., BooneCounty Main Library, 1786Burlington Pike, Learn basicpostures and flows. $25. Pre-sented by Boone County PublicLibrary. 859-342-2665. Burling-ton.Yoga, 7:10-8 p.m., Boone CountyMain Library, 1786 BurlingtonPike, Hatha Yoga postures. $25.Presented by Boone CountyPublic Library. 859-342-2665.Burlington.In the Loop, 10 a.m., FlorenceBranch Library, 7425 U.S. 42,Knit or crochet in relaxed,friendly company. Learn for firsttime or pick up new tricks.859-342-2665. Florence.Zumba, 6 p.m., Scheben BranchLibrary, 8899 U.S. 42, Latin-inspired dance-fitness program.$25 per month. 859-334-2117.

Union.Teen Gaming (middle & highschool), 3:15 p.m., Lents BranchLibrary, 3215 Cougar Path,Gaming and snacks. Free. Pre-sented by Boone County PublicLibrary. 859-342-2665. Hebron.

TUESDAY, APRIL 1EducationSign Language, 4:30-5:30 p.m.,The Lively Learning Lab, 7500Oakbrook Drive, Suite 10, Learnconversational sign language.$10. 859-371-5227. Florence.

Health / WellnessMyAging Parents Can’t Stayat Home, What Now?, 1:30-3:30 p.m. and 6:30-8:30 p.m.,Boone County CooperativeExtension Service, 6028 CampErnst Road, Explore spectrum ofliving arrangements for olderadults from independent gar-den homes to nursing levels ofcare, and admission and pay-ment sources. Speakers fromSanders Brown Center on Aging.Ages 21 and up. Free. Presentedby Boone County CooperativeExtenson Service. 859-586-6101;boone.ca.uky.edu. Burlington.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2EducationLego Club, 3-4 p.m., The LivelyLearning Lab, 7500 OakbrookDrive, Suite 10, Learn sciencewith Legos. Free. Through April9. 859-371-5227. Florence.

Health / WellnessPractical Solutions: Methodsfor Dementia/Alzheimer’sCaregiving, 4-8:30 p.m., BooneCounty Main Library, 1786Burlington Pike, Elise SebastianAlzheimer’s Association discusseslocal resources and coping withdementia. Benefits Alzheimer’sAssociation. Free. Registrationrequired. . 859-283-5500. Bur-lington.

Mom’s Clubs

MOMS Next, 9:30-11:30 a.m.,Florence United MethodistChurch, 8585 Old Toll Road, Hotbreakfast provided along withspeaker topics relevant tomothers of children in grades1-12. Free childcare provided.Free. 859-371-7961; www.flo-renceumc.com. Florence.

On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 8 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, $12-$15. 859-384-0295;www.unionct.net. Union.

THURSDAY, APRIL 3Art & Craft ClassesArts and Crafts by Defy Grav-ity Designs, 5:30-6:30 p.m., TheLively Learning Lab, 7500 Oak-brook Drive, Suite 10, Makedifferent art/craft piece everyweek. $5. Registration required.Through June 26. 859-371-5227.Florence.

EducationAdmissions InformationSession, 3-4 p.m., GatewayCommunity and TechnicalCollege Covington Campus, 1025Amsterdam Road, Room C 204.Find out about financial aid,academic programs, advisingand more. Free. Presented byGateway Community and Tech-nical College. Through May 1.859-441-4500; gate-way.kctcs.edu/admissions.Covington.Financial AidWorkshop, 4-5p.m., Gateway Community andTechnical College Covington

Campus, 1025 Amsterdam Road,Room C204. Attend workshopand get help with filing the FreeApplication for Federal StudentAid. Free. Presented by GatewayCommunity and TechnicalCollege. 859-441-4500. Coving-ton.

On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 8 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, $12-$15. 859-384-0295;www.unionct.net. Union.

FRIDAY, APRIL 4Dining EventsFish Fry, 4-8 p.m., Mary Queenof Heaven School, Prices vary.859-525-6909; www.mqhparish-.com. Erlanger.St. Paul Fish Fry, 5-8 p.m., St.Paul School, Price varies. 859-647-4072; www.saintpaulboos-ters.net. Florence.Fish Fry, 4-8 p.m., BurlingtonLodge No. 264, $9; $5 for chil-dren. 859-746-3225 or 859-689-4328. Florence.

On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 8 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, $12-$15. 859-384-0295;www.unionct.net. Union.

SATURDAY, APRIL 5On Stage - TheaterTheWho’s: Tommy theMu-sical, 8 p.m., Union CommunityBuilding, $12-$15. 859-384-0295.Union.

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 Singers perform 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 1:10 p.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.

Page 11: Florence recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • B3LIFE

No recipes today! I’mveering off course andgetting on my soapboxabout cookware. We’regoing into the busy bridal

season andI get morequestionsaboutcookwareand cut-lery thanyou’d be-lieve.Here’s aprimer ofsorts oncookware –

in a future column we’llchat about cutlery. Cutthis column 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 thesides (creating layers) orbottom clad which have adisk of aluminum or

copper on the bottomonly. Both perform well,but the fully clad is mychoice and the highestquality. All Clad pans,made in Pennsylvania,are tops in my book. Youcan use metal utensils.

Aluminum. Look foranodized aluminum,which means the pan hasbeen put through a proc-ess that changes thealuminum structure to benon-reactive to foods,just like stainless, andyou can use metal uten-sils. You get great brown-ing with this cookware.

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 with

it. 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 researchindicates 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 iron

Sets vs. individualpieces

The most used pan inthe 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.Call 513-248-7130, ext. 356.

Rita discussescookware justin time forbridal season

RitaHeikenfeldRITA’S KITCHEN

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

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Page 12: Florence recorder 032714

B4 • FLORENCE-UNION 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.

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Lenten season meansfish-fry season, and plen-ty of local organizationsare serving up Fridayfeasts:

» Beechwood HighSchool, 54 BeechwoodRoad, Fort Mitchell; 5-7:30 p.m. Drive-thru fishfry. Benefits BeechwoodBand Boosters. $7 meals.859-620-6317.

» Bellevue vets fishfry, 24 Fairfield Ave.,Bellevue 5-8 p.m. Non-smoking seating area inmain hall. Dinners $7.50-$4.50. Carry out available.859-431-0045.

» Burlington LodgeNo. 264, 7072 PleasantValleyRoad, Florence; 4-8p.m. $9; $5 for children.859-746-3225 or 859-689-4328.

» Dixie Heights HighSchool, 3010 Dixie High-way, Edgewood; 4-7:30p.m. Drive-thru fish fry;benefits Dixie HeightsHigh School’s music pro-grams. 859-802-8575;www.eyeswithpride.net.

» Edgewood Fire/EMSFish Fry, Edgewood Sen-ior Center, 550 FreedomPark Drive, Edgewood;5-8 p.m. $6.50-$7.25. 859-331-5910; www.edgewood-ky.gov.

» Fort ThomasMason-

ic Lodge No. 808, 37 N.Fort Thomas Ave., FortThomas; 4-8 p.m. $7 din-ner, $1 sandwich. 859-441-1280.

» Fort Wright CivicClub, 115 Kennedy Road,FortWright; 5-8 p.m.; 859-331-1150.

» Holy Cross HighSchool, 3617 Church St.,Alumni Hall, Covington;5-8 p.m. 859-431-1335;www.hchscov.com.

» ImmaculateHeartofMary, 5876 Veterans Way,Burlington; 5-8 p.m.; din-ners $7.50 and up; (859)689-5070.

» Mary Queen ofHeaven School, 1130 Don-aldson Highway, Erlang-er; 4-8 p.m. 859-525-6909;www.mqhparish.com.

» Prince of PeaceSchool, 625W.PikeSt.,Co-vington; 4-7 p.m. 859-431-5153; www.popcov.com.

» St. Barbara Church,4042TurkeyfootRoad,Er-langer; 4:30-8 p.m. $8 andup. 859-371-3100.

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

» St. Catherine of Si-ena Church, 1803 N. FortThomas Ave., Fort Thom-as; 5-7 p.m. $7 dinner, $2andupfora lacarte items.859-653-7573;www.stcatherineofsi-

ena.org.» St. Joseph Church -

Camp Springs, 6833 FourMileRoad, CampSprings;4-7:30 p.m. $8.50 and upfor set-ups, $6.50 sand-wiches. 859-635-5652.

» St. Patrick Church -Taylor Mill, 3285 MillsRoad, Taylor Mill; 4:30-7:30 p.m. $8.50-$9.50. 859-356-5151.

» St. Paul School, 7303Dixie Highway, CarlinCenter, 5-8 p.m. BenefitsSt. Paul athletic pro-grams. 859-647-4072;www.saintpaulboosters-.net.

» St. Thomas School,428 S. Fort Thomas Ave.,Fort Thomas; 4-8 p.m.$4.50-$6.50. 859-572-4641,ext. 242.

» Silver Grove Volun-teer Fire Department,5011 Four Mile, SilverGrove; 4-7:30 p.m. $7meals. 859-441-6251.

» Trinity UnitedMeth-odistChurch,101E.South-ernAve., Latonia; 5-7 p.m.$8, $7 seniors, $4children.859-261-4010.

» Wilder Fire Dept.Fish Fry, Wilder CityBuilding, 520 LickingPike, Wilder; 4-8 p.m. $7.859-431-1440.

If your fish fry is not listed,send the information to [email protected].

Take in a fish fryCommunity Recorder

Tawnya Kordenbrock, a mentalhealth therapist, is hosting a free work-shop for parents, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.April 12 at the William E. Durr BranchLibrary in Independence.

The workshop, “Healthy Boundaries

withYourAdult Child,”will help parentsbetter handle relationships with adultchildren.

AnAugust 2013 PewResearchCenterreport showed that 36 percent of adultsaged18-31werestill livingwith theirpar-ents.

Call 859-468-7534.

Workshop offers help, hope to parentsCommunity Recorder

Page 13: Florence recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • B5LIFE

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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

98AA19KI8: 8: !>A1)

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!

*

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.

OutdoorOutdoorOutdoorOutdoor 6IFI:"6IFI:">K

CE-0000586567

Page 14: Florence recorder 032714

B6 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 LIFE

JoAnn ArensJoAnn Arens, 81, of Florence,

died March 15, at Gallatin Coun-ty Health Care.

She was a homemaker.Her husband, Robert Arens,

died previously.Survivors include her children,

Peggy Butler of Walton, BarbaraMoore of Union, Vickie Ramlerof Burlington, Lisa Arens ofFlorence, Beth Arens of Florida,Robert L. Arens of MorningView, William Arens of Florence,and Mike Arens of Hebron; 24grandchildren; and 24 great-grandchildren.

Interment was at Mother ofGod Cemetery.

Memorials: St. Rita School forthe Deaf, 1720 Glendale MilfordRoad, Cincinnati, OH 45215.

John BallekJohn Andrew Ballek, 63, of

Bronston, Ky., formerly ofFlorence, died March 13, at LakeCumberland Regional Hospital.

He was a truck driver for Tri-BTrucking Co., member of St.Mildred Catholic Church ofSomerset, and enjoyed fishingand working on his cabin.

His parents, Andrew Ballekand Beatrice Meeks Ballek; andbrother, Andy Ballek.

Survivors include his signifi-cant other, Juanita Tucker; sons,Casey Ballek and John Ballek Jr.,both of Cincinnati; stepson,James Tucker of Louisville;sisters, Frances Harris of Akron,Ohio, and Mary Ellen Curran ofSeville, Ohio; three grand-children; and one great-grand-child.

Memorials: the family of JohnBallek, care of Chambers andGrubbs Funeral Home, 8461Dixie Highway, Florence, KY41042.

Doris BauerDoris Ann Bauer, 67, of Flor-

ence, died March 15, at St.Elizabeth Florence.

Survivors include her husband,David Robert Bauer; sons, Timo-thy Bauer and David Bauer;daughter, Michelle Bauer;brothers, Robert Stafford andPaul Stafford; sisters, DebbieMcGovern and Becky Wheeler;and one granddaughter.

Memorials: Alzheimer’s Asso-ciation, Greater CincinnatiChapter, 644 Linn St., Suite 1026,Cincinnati, OH 45203-1742.

Elizabeth LeeElizabeth Caroline "Carol

Lyons" Lee, 72, of Falmouth,

died March 13, at St. ElizabethHospice.

Survivors include her husband,Henry Don Lee; children, ChuckLee of Florence, John Lee ofBright, Ind., Tom Lee of DeMoss-ville, and Lisa Blewett of Cres-cent Springs; sister, Vicki Swart;brothers, Fred and Jack Lyons; 16grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.

Interment was at Floral HillsMemorial Gardens.

Memorials: Susan G. KomenFoundation.

TammyWolfTammyWolf, 50, of Union,

died March 16.She was born in Fort Thomas,

was an active member of St.Anthony Parish in Taylor Millwhere she taught PSR classes,was an active member of theKentucky Education Association,a special-education teacher atYealey Elementary in Florence,and was active with the SpecialOlympics for years.

Her father, David Crawford;maternal grandparents, Robertand Jeanette Campbell; andfraternal grandparents, AlbertandWilma Crawford, diedpreviously.

Survivors include her husband,Mark; children, Noah, Hannahand GretchenWolf; mother,Barbara Crawford; sisters, San-dra Brown and Beth Halderman;and brother, Scott Crawford.

Burial was at St. StephenCemetery.

Memorials: Wolf ChildrenEducation Fund, care of any PNCBank.

DEATHS

ABOUT OBITUARIESFor the most up-to-date Northern Kentucky obituaries,

click on the “Obituaries” link atcincinnati.com/news/northern-kentucky.Funeral homes may submit basic obituary information to

[email protected]. To publish a largermemorial tribute, call 513-242-4000 for pricing details.

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.

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.”

D.M. Walton, KY

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

EQUAL HOUSINGLENDER

Is it time to switch banks?Get the convenience you need and the personalattention you deserve at Park National Bank.

Do you like a checking account that’s truly freeor choices that include rewards?Would you prefer a loan that comes with localservice and quick responses?It’s easy to switch – call or visit me today!I look forward to helping you bank withconfidence and ease.

PS: We have offices in Anderson, Eastgate, Florence, Milford,New Richmond, Owensville, West Chester, and two offices inAmelia, as well as fee-free access to 23,000 ATMs!

Here today, Here tomorrow,Here for you!

Tim KemperVice President"&%$!(#! ')#!

859.282.3556BankWithPark.com

Disclosures are available by calling the telephone number listed in this ad fordetails about credit costs and terms. Member FDIC

CE-0000582587

&D17 >A- #-/B2 >1 >A- (-4C:9B2

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

B.1D>B :5D1BB >A- D-C?142 3-ED-

8D?4C?4C 01; 71D- B.1D>B

516-D:C- -6-D0 /:0, *4/ 3?>A

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"-)1 *-2!*+

"-)1 /!&,-/!*+

"-)1 -0 $.!&

(!&&1)' &- #-%+

Good Shepherd Lutheran Church(LCMS)

9066 Gunpowder Rd. Florence, KY(Between US 42 & Mt Zion Rd., Florence)

746-9066Pastor Rich Tursic

Sunday Worship 8:30 & 11:00Sunday School - All ages 9:45 AM

www.goodshepherdlutheranky.org

LUTHERAN

HEBRON BAPTIST CHURCH3435 Limaburg Road, Hebron, KY 41048(corner of Cougar Path & North Bend Rd.)

9:30 AM Morning Worship & Adult Sunday School11:00 AM Morning Worship & Sunday School6:00 PM Evening Worship6:45 PM Wednesday Prayer Meeting & Bible Study

Youth & Children’s Activities

859-689-7282http://www.hebronbaptist.org

BAPTIST

Page 15: Florence recorder 032714

MARCH 27, 2014 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • B7LIFE

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Page 16: Florence recorder 032714

B8 • FLORENCE-UNION RECORDER • MARCH 27, 2014 LIFE

CE-000

0587

069

PAYING HUGE COMMISSIONS

THIS IS THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE...SAME SERVICE AT A DISCOUNT

Receive A Cash Rebate When You Use Discount Realty As Your Buyers Agent.

SELL YOUR HOMEFOR AS LOW AS $995!

FULL MLS LISTINGG859-743-5453

FOR MORE INFO, VISITWWW.KENTUCKYDISCOUNTREALTY.COM

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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.

ABOUT POLICEREPORTS

The Community Re-corder publishes thenames of all adultscharged with offenses.The information is amatter of public recordand does not imply guiltor innocence.

To contact your localpolice department:

Boone County SheriffMike Helmig at 334-2175;

Florence Police ChiefTom Szurlinski at 647-5420.

Carrie M. Vinson, 38, shoplifting,Jan. 8.Dylan F. Mebs, 22, no regis-tration plates, operating onsuspended or revoked opera-tors license, possession of drugparaphernalia, Jan. 8.Angelica D. Adams, 19, pos-session of drug paraphernalia,tampering with physical evi-dence, Jan. 8.Zachery R. Boitman, 23, tamper-ing with physical evidence,possession of drug parapherna-

BOONE COUNTYArrests/CitationsDonald F. Brock, 25, execution ofwarrant for flagrant non-support, Jan. 8.James Eckler, 34, shoplifting, Jan.7.Jacob A. Schaub, 25, executionof bench warrant for possessionof a controlled substance, Jan.8.Jacqueline R. Groves, 22, shop-lifting, Jan. 8.

lia, Jan. 8.Angelica D. Adams, 19, pos-session of controlled substance,Jan. 8.Zachery R. Boitman, 19, pos-session of controlled substance,Jan. 8.Zachery R. Boitman, 23, execu-tion of warrants for alcoholintoxication in a public placeand contempt of court , Jan. 8.Zachery R. Boitman, 23, execu-tion of warrant for possessionof controlled substance, Jan. 9.

Ginnie Dephillips, 35, givingofficer false name or address,theft of identity of anotherwithout consent, Jan. 9.Ginnie Dephillips, 35, executionof warrant for theft of identityof another without consent,Jan. 9.Randall L. Griffith, 37, executionof bench warrants for alcoholintoxication in a public place,Jan. 9.Cody W. Rainier, 30, alcoholintoxication in a public place,Jan. 9.Mark J. Sholler, 34, shoplifting,Jan. 10.Mitchell L. Williams, 34, execu-tion of warrants for theft andburglary, Jan. 10.Mitchell L. Williams, 34, execu-tion of warrants for non-support and probation vio-lation, Jan. 10.Molly M. Schupp, 28, shoplifting,Jan. 10.

Mary J. Erickson, 53, shoplifting,Jan. 10.Joshua A. Harvey, 24, no regis-tration plates, failure to main-tain required insurance, pos-session of marijuana, Jan. 10.Lesa K. Landrum, 48, executionof warrant for theft by decep-tion, Jan. 10.James M. Rucker, 34, shoplifting,Jan. 10.Ashley N. Turner, 24, executionof bench warrant for theft, Jan.11.Ashley N. Turner, 24, theft ofservices, Jan. 11.Wendy R. Tallant, 38, improperregistration plate, no regis-tration plates, operating onsuspended or revoked opera-tors license, Jan. 11.Tanya B. Howell, 36, executionof bench warrants for nooperators-moped license andspeeding 15 mph over limit,Jan. 11.

Shellie Xaiz, 44, execution ofwarrant for theft by deception,Jan. 11.

Incidents/InvestigationsAssaultReported at 4700 block ofHouston Rd., Jan. 9.BurglaryReported at 40 block of PatriciaSt., Jan. 8.Reported at 20 block of RogerLn., Jan. 10.Criminal mischiefReported at 8500 block ofImperial Ct., Jan. 8.Reported at 7500 block ofHillcrest Dr., Jan. 10.Reported at 10 block of Welling-ton Dr., Jan. 9.Fraudulent use of credit cardReported at 8100 block of EwingBlvd., Jan. 9.Identity theftReported at 800 block of Sun-nybrook Dr., Jan. 8.Identity theft, giving officerfalse name or addressReported at U.S. 42, Jan. 9.ShopliftingReported at 7600 block ofDoering Dr., Jan. 9.Reported at 6900 block ofBurlington Pk., Jan. 8.Reported at 60 block of SpiralDr., Jan. 10.Reported at 4900 block ofHouston Rd., Jan. 10.Reported at 3000 block of MallRd., Jan. 11.

POLICE REPORTS