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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page B004

Location:
Akron, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
B004
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Continued next column Continued next column From previous column From previous column Memorials AKRON North Hill Marble Granite 330-253-2179 KENT Portage Marble Granite 330-673-5870 Memorials brought to you by www.NorthHillMarbleAndGranite.com TO SIGN THE GUEST BOOK FOR THE OBITS BELOW, PLEASE GO TO WWW.OHIO.COM/OBITUARIES. SEARCH BY LAST NAME. 100 Off any in stock memorial 2 89 77 5 4 Robert A. Andrews CUYAHOGAFALLS--Rob- ertA.Andrews,94,passed away October 17, 2013. RobertwasborninMount tothelate Alfredand EdnaHart- manAn- drewsand livedinthe hogaFalls areamost ofhislife.

Heenjoyed hismorning coffeeat ingtotheOhioRiver.Healso servedintheUSArmyAir CorpsinPanamaduringWorld War II. ertisprecededindeathbyhis Andrews.Heissurvivedby HelenAndrewsofNewCum- (Joseph)Granataandtheir sharedtheexperiencesof otherlovingniecesandneph- ews.Wewishasincerethank (Emaline)BoldenandtoJessi- caWaltersfortheirloveand support. VisitationhourswillbeMon- to8p.m.atHennessy-Bagnoli- thefuneralhome.Robert’sfi- nalrestingplacewillbeChest- nutHillMemorialPark.Inlieu madetotheAmericanHeart AssociationorHospiceof condolencesandsharememo- ries. Joan Margaret App JoanMargaretAppdiedon October16ofnaturalcauses, sixdaysafterher94thbirth- day. Shewas bornonOc- tober10, 1919in DuBois, Pennsylva- nia.Agrad- uateof DuBoisHigh attended Clearfield HospitalSchoolofNursing, graduatedasaregistered nursein1940.Shehasbeen anAkronresidentsince1941, workingasanurseatAkron VicePresidentofAdministra- tionatSaintThomasHospital, from which she retired in 1989.

Joanwasanactivemember ofSaintSebastianCatholic Churchformanyyearsand thenofSaintHilaryCatholic Church.Shewasamemberof theSt.ThomasHospitalWom- avidbridgeplayerandanac- complished floral artist. K.App,Jr(Bud),who,after53 herindeathin1995.Sheis alsoprecededindeathbyher year.Sheissurvivedbyher Bedoya)AppofBaltimore, (Joseph)SmerickofAkron; nifer(MattSinger)Appof CuyahogaFallsandJessica SmerickofSt.Petersburg, chard)SweitzerofAhmerst, Massachusetts. Thefamilywouldliketo exceptionalcaregiversforallof their lovin care. AMassofChristianBurial wherefriendsmaycallfrom11 followatRoseHillBurialPark. maybemadetoSt.Hilary CatholicChurch.Pleasevisit www.hummelcares.comto leaveremembrancesorcon- dolences.

330-253-6126 Daniel M. Babarick October 18, 2013. Friendsmaycall5to8p.m., theDunn-QuigleyFuneral servicewillbeat1p.m.Tues- day.BurialinStowCemetery. Visitwww.dunn-quigley.com formoredetailsandtoshare memoriesandcondolenceson Book of Memories. Stow, 330-688-3866 Catherine Bookwalter 16, 2013.

Shewas borninStow onMarch thelate Frederick andAnna Ullrich.Cath- erineloved musicand wasadevot- edmember oftheOhioCountryWestern Music Association. Shewasprecededindeath bedeeplymissedbyher five great-grandchildren. VisitationwillbeMonday, October21from11-1followed bya1p.m.funeralservicewith PastorLarryKnightofficiating atNEWCOMERFUNERAL Akron.IntermentatGreen- woodCemetery.Inlieuofflow- maybemadetotheAmerican CancerSociety.Toleavea specialmessageforthefamily ron.com.NEWCOMERFU- NERAL HOME (330) 784-3334 AND Carolyn Jean (Richards) Dix Ourlovingmotherandwife, Mrs.CarolynJean(Richards) Dixat72yearsyoungofAkron lovingarmsonOctober13, 2013. Visitationwillbeheldat11 a.m.untiltimeofservice.Fu- neralservicewillbeheldat12 2013atArlingtonChurchof God539S.ArlingtonStreet, AkronOhio.Rev.RonaldFowl- erwillbeofficiating.Burialwill followthefuneralatMt.Peace Cemetery.Funeralarrange- mentsarebeinghandledby RhodenMemorialFuneral Home.Condolencesmaybe sentto1064OakTreeDrive AkronOhio44320or476 MoreleyAvenueAkronOhio 44320 Clara M. Foerg ClaraM.Foerg,82,ofAkron passedawayOctober16, 2013.

Funeralservicewillbeheld at1p.m.onMonday,October JoshuaSchoonofficiating. Familyandfriendsmaycallon Mondayfrom12p.m.untilthe timeoftheserviceatthe church.Memorialcontribu- nametoNAMI(NationalAlli- SummitCount 0462.Toleaveaspecial messageonlineforthefamily, visitourwebsiteatwww.scher messerfh.com. SCHERMESSER GREEN (330) 899-9107 www.schermesserfh.com Timothy Lee Foster thyL.Fos- fromacou- rageous fightwith welcomedin theloving armsofhis mother. Memorial servicewillbeheldTODAY, 12noonatRhodenMemorial withPastorRichardBrownoffi- ciating.Friendsmaycallatthe chapelTODAYfrom11a.m. untiltimeofservice.Interment atOhioWesternReserveNa- tionalCemeteryat10a.m.

Processionwillformat424 NoahAve.Condolencesmay besentto19943LaurelTrail, Cypress, TX 77433. Paul B. Goehler PaulB.Goehler,81,passed 2013. Bornin Springfield Township, OhioonFeb- ruary18, 1932to MearleE. andVada (neeKeck) Goehler; Paulwasa graduateof NortonHighSchool, heretiredfromthe U.S.AirForce, whereheserveddur- VietNamEraandlastwiththe 410thMilitaryPoliceSquad- NCOICWeaponSystemSe- curity.

PaulretiredfromFirestone TireandRubberCompanyaf- wasemployedatSeaWorldof AceHardwareandWalgreens. HewasamemberofMoga- doreMooseandenjoyedlis- teningtoBlueGrassMusic andspendingtimewithfamily, great-grandsonandwalking the dog, Precededindeathbyhispa- issurvivedbyhiswifeof58 (DeeDee)andJohnGoehler; relatives and friends. Funeralservicewillbeheld Monday1p.m.atthe Campfield-Hickman-CollierFu- Barberton44203withPastor KimLawrenceofficiating.Buri- alatGreenlawnMemorialPark withmilitaryhonorsconducted byFirestoneVFW3383.The familywillreceivefriendson also1hourpriortotheservice onMonday.Inlieuofflowers donationsmaybemadetothe 201, Hudson, Ohio 44236. 330-745-3161 Deanna Gombaski passedawayOctober11, 2013.Arrangementstobe madeatalaterdate.CoxFu- neral Home, 330-836-3100 Robert Lee Hively RobertL.Hively,87,passed away on October 17, 2013. FriendsmaycallatBacher terRd.onSunday,October aMasonicservicebyVictory 5p.m.Afuneralservicewillbe heldatNortonBaptistChurch, 4239S.ClevelandMassillon Stricklandofficiating.Friends mayalsocallatthechurchone hourpriortotheservice.Inter- mentatGreenlawnMemorial Park.Funeralhomemap, theHivelyFamilycondolence bookareavailableatwww.bac herfuneralhome.com.

(Bacher, 330-644-0024) B4 Akron Beacon Journal Ohio.com INFORMING. ENGAGING. ESSENTIAL. Saturday, October 19, 2013 B4 Saturday, October 19, 2013 From noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, the inaugural a safe driving awareness event will take place in memory at Buckeye Woods Park, 6335 Wedgewood Road, Medina (on state Route 162 in Lafayette Township, a half mile east of state Route 42).

Participants are encouraged to walk or ride in memory or in celebration of a loved one lost or seriously injured in a motor vehicle accident. Registration by donation gets underway at 11 a.m. All proceeds will be donated to recent Medina County crash survivors Samantha Lynn Pankuch and Cody Scruggs (their car was hit by a semi on state Route 224) and Andy Gerspacher (a motorcyclist hit by a car on state Route 162 and Ryan Road). For more information, please call 330-662-4374. Free quality haircuts Big, beautiful bouquets to Eric Garrett Sr.

owner and founder of Beyond Expectations Barber College (BEBC) for yet another community outreach event. Garrett is sponsoring a from 9 to 11 a.m. Sunday at First Grace United Church of Christ, 350 S. Portage Path, Akron. Student barbers will provide free haircuts and serve breakfast.

BEBC which is at 2202 Romig Road (hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday) offers professional haircuts by students for $5. OFSC golf tournament Hats off to members of the Ohio Fire Safety Coalition (OFSC), which recently sponsored a hugely successful invitational golf tournament (now in its ninth year) at Glenmoor Country Club (followed by silent and live auctions), raising $22,000 for Akron Paul and Carol David Foundation Burn Institute. Since its 2005 inception, the group has raised more than $220,000 for the hospital.

This is a very important gift to burn patients, current and future. According to the Federal Management Agency, more than 3,500 Americans succumb each year from fire- related injuries, and another 18,300 are injured. Fore more information, please contact Matthaew Kuwatch at 216447-6331 or Julie Schade at 216-447-5677. It for the Drum roll, please, for the outstanding results of Green High recent It for the fundraiser put on by the boys and girls varsity and junior varsity soccer teams that garnered four victories over North Canton Hoover and Boardman High schools. This event raised $19,160, a record, which is being split between Camp Quality Ohio and the Susan G.

Komen Northeast Ohio chapter. than 1,000 event T-shirts were sold and 60- plus donated baskets, including everything from lottery tickets to Pandora bracelets to Ohio State themed items, were raffled off throughout the said event volunteer Karen Harlock. were busy, as was the popular dunk Dennis Guilmette, fundraising chairman, presented the checks. Jewell Cardwell can be reached at 330-9963567 or curtailed by a fall in a snowboarding accident. was a catastrophic injury.

I shattered my elbow and said Smith as she pointed to the pins holding her arm together visible just under her skin. Smith said she was thrilled to be called on to portray a zombie in the first episode of The Walking season three, filmed in Hollywood in August 2012. Not only did she need the work, but she also loved being part of a show that has captured imagination with its deliciously frightening story line. Zombies stories are just one of the popular directions people turn for a good scare. For decades, film and television buffs have been scared silly by chain saw-wielding villains, buff vampires and other frightening things go bump in the Some people relish the idea that hordes of lumbering zombies will blanket the Earth and end mankind as we know it.

is the pop culture term for the end of the civilized world and the breakdown of society as a result of a spreading zombie outbreak. As any fan of The Walking Dead can attest, even the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, where the series takes place, was not a safe refuge for the straggling group of survivors to find permanent refuge. On screen, the CDC was blown up in season one in a fiery explosion designed to incinerate pathogens, viruses and bacteria kept at the and take out any live humans inside the building, as well. CDC message Never let it be said the fed- eral government have a sense of humor. With tongue planted firmly in cheek, the CDC discovered it could use the fictional end-of-the-world scenario to effectively engage new audiences with its emergency preparedness messages.

Recognizing the popularity of the series, the agency designed a national initiative based on the zombie apocalypse premise, reasoning that if people can survive an attack of the undead, they are pretty much ready for any kind of disaster. you are generally well- equipped to deal with a zombie apocalypse, you will be prepared for a hurricane, pandemic, earthquake or terrorist CDC Director Dr. Ali Khan says on the website. In a program titled Preparedness 101: Zombie Pandemic, the CDC offers suggestions for people in the event of an emergency and what to include in an emergency kit to withstand an attack. The agency provides posters, buttons, badges and widgets for blogs and websites to draw attention to the importance for emergency preparedness.

A cartoon-like, zombie novella demonstrates the challenges a fictional couple and their dog, Max, face as they deal with a zombie attack taking over their town. Teachers can access the site where information is available to help them share emergency preparedness guidelines with their students. The CDC initiative has not escaped the notice of the local agency responsible for keeping people safe in an attack by hunger-crazed hordes of zombies, floods, tornadoes or any other type of emergency where people are in danger. so key right now in the entertainment industry they are into zombies. This is a great path to get people to prepare for emergencies in all events.

start reading about the zombie apocalypse and then all about hazard said Valerie De Rose, Summit Emergency Management Agency coordinator. Tinseltown zombies Smith, who works in sales by day and at a winery in the evenings, said she moved to California six years ago to pursue her dreams of acting and modeling. The fact she had never seen an episode of the show stop her from trying out for the part of a zombie when she got the call from her agent. stayed up all night and watched every episode trying to find out what it was all she said. The extras in the show were judged on their ability to do a zombie-like walk.

Fortunately, Smith said, she is a quick learner. Zombies cast members sat for makeup longer than they were filming, Smith said. When the makeup technicians were finished, she looked in a mirror and scared herself. was nothing left of Smith said. After her television debut, the snowboard fall effectively ended her days in Hollywood.

She returned home, where her parents and three siblings helped her heal. Smith said she learned a number of lessons from her experiences in Hollywood, not the least of which is that a brain must be destroyed in order to kill it. learned I would probably not do very well in a zombie apocalypse. far too trusting. It would be hard for me to shoot somebody in the head or beat their brains out with a golf Smith said.

To learn more about the Zombie Pandemic preparedness, visit www.cdc. Kathy Antoniotti can be reached at 330-9963565 or cations, there are campuses in Aurora and Highland Square neighborhood. The Stow campus was launched in March 2009 with about 80 people from the Hudson site who lived in the Stow community. The group began meeting at Christ Community student ministry facility (called the Block) at 5374 Darrow Road in the southern portion of Hudson, with plans to move into Stow once a location could be secured. After several years of searching, the congregation purchased 12 acres of land at 3900 Kent Road, near the Kent State University Airport, and broke ground last year.

McKee said he wanted the building to fit the personality of the congregation, which is made up primarily of young families. are a church that loves being together. very social, so we have a large atrium space where people can come McKee said. are a place where people love to come and hate to leave. That could be a problem, if we get people out of here in time to free up parking spaces for people who are coming to the second service.

But a good problem to The Stow church offers Sunday worship services at 9:30 and 11 a.m. Those services, which attract about 200 worshippers each, now will take place in the new worship area. The versatile worship space has a seating capacity of 400, which allows the church to double the current number of worshippers before needing to add another service. The church also serves about 150 children and has dedicated 8,900 square feet of the new building to ministry. The nursery area has one- way glass, so that parents can see their children but the children cannot see them.

It is divided into two areas for crawlers and for walkers. There is also an isolated nursing area for mothers. Each of the four preschool rooms has two entrances: doors, which adults are expected to use, and bright yellow tube slides, which children are expected to use. The slide concept is to help ease the separation anxiety some children might experience. The area called the Grid, which has bright orange squares in the carpeting, is for elementary school-age children.

The multimedia area includes breakout rooms and can be divided to accommodate up to a dozen small groups. The area called the Tank will be used for ministry activities for middle school-age children. The multipurpose room also will be used for classes and staff meetings. The building includes a kitchen and office space. It is Christ Community first newly constructed building, since adopting the multi- campus concept in 2008.

The Hudson-based church changed its name in 2011 from Hudson Community Chapel to Christ Community Chapel to reflect its expansion. The Rev. Joe Coffey, Christ Community lead pastor, said the new building is a tool that will be used to help people connect with each other and ultimately to God. overall philosophy is to combine the strength of a large church with the intimacy and relationships that you can find in a small church. Our plan is to keep a campus to a maximum of 1,000 people before branching out to another Coffey said.

goal is to impact and serve the communities where people are living. The building is a tool for our people in serving and reaching the community for An open house at 4 p.m. Sunday will give community members an opportunity to see the new building and learn more about the church. have a new building, but keeping the same message of grace, redemption and mercy at the forefront because lives are being changed because of McKee said. are a casual church.

We want people to be culturally comfortable and spiritually challenged. We are not perfect people. We are messy people with baggage who are in the process of More information about Christ Community Chapel can be found at www.ccchapel. com. Colette Jenkins can be reached at 330-996-3731 or She can be followed at www.twitter.com/ColetteMJenkins.

Cardwell Continued from Page B1 OTHER Carlson, Lani 50, of Loudonville. Died Sunday. Carlson, Brunswick. Faecking, Richard 67, of Grafton. Died Tuesday.

Bauer, Valley City. AREA DEATHS Stow Continued from Page B1 Zombies Continued from Page B1.

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Pages Available:
3,080,789
Years Available:
1872-2024