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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • A19

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
A19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE ENQUIRER 2017 19A For the latest winning lottery numbers, go to Cincinnati.com/lottery OHIO (Drawings: Jan. 6) Pick 3 (early): 3 1 6 Pick 4 (early): 1 9 4 0 Pick 5 (early): 4 7 1 3 4 Pick 3 (late): 8 6 1 Pick 4 (late): 7 0 0 3 Pick 5 (late): 2 3 9 8 8 Rolling Cash 5: 2 10 11 16 27 Classic Lotto: jackpot is an estimated $7.3 million. KENTUCKY (Drawings: Jan. 6) Pick 3 (early): 3 6 1 Pick 4 (early): 3 2 1 0 (Drawings: Jan. 5) Pick 3 (late): 7 9 9 Pick 4 (late): 0 5 3 8 Cash Ball: 6 12 21 30, 31 Kicker: 8 6 9 6 1 INDIANA (Drawings: Jan.

6) Daily 3(early): 6 1 3 Daily 4 (early): 2 5 4 1 (Drawings: Jan. 5) Daily 3 (late): 0 1 7 Daily 4 (late): 7 9 0 5 Cash 5 (late): 8 22 23 34 37 Hoosier Lotto: jackpot is an estimated $4.8 million. MEGA MILLIONS jackpot was an estimated $117 million. Information: 800-589-6446 POWERBALL jackpot is an estimated $94 million. Information: 800-589-6446.

LOTTERIES 1610: Astronomer Galileo Galilei began observing three of moons (he spotted a fourth moon almost a week later). 1789: America held its first presidential election as voters chose electors who, a month later, selected George Washington to be the first chief executive. 1942: Japanese forces began besieging American and Filipino troops in Bataan during World War II. (The fall of Bataan three months later was followed by the notorious Death March.) 1959: The United States recognized the new government of Cuba, six days after Fidel Castro led the overthrow of Fulgencio Batista. 1979: Vietnamese forces captured the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, overthrowing the Khmer Rouge government.

1989: Emperor Hirohito of Japan died in Tokyo at age 87; he was succeeded by his son, Crown Prince Akihito. 1999: For the second time in history, an impeached American president went on trial before the Senate. President Bill Clinton faced charges of perjury and obstruction of justice; he was acquitted. 2015: Masked gunmen stormed the Paris offices of Charlie Hebdo, a French newspaper that had caricatured the Prophet Mohammad, methodically killing 12 people before escaping. (Two suspects were killed two days later.) TODAY IN HISTORY From an online discussion.

Hi, Carolyn: My husband and I are expecting, and we would really like to keep our baby off social media. We obviously post pictures, and our parents agree with our preference. not sure how we deal with other relatives and friends who might post pictures. If only one or two here and there, I want to make a big deal about it, but I also want to set a precedent of being OK with it. Is there a way you suggest telling people our wishes without sounding controlling? the first baby in the family so everyone is also excited.

Expecting The best way not to sound controlling is to figure out what you most want and need to control, and to let everything else go because if announcing expectations on Facebook exposure, sugary foods, preferred colors, acceptable toys, screen time, music volume and shoes in the house (and you have special health circumstances to justify it all), then, well, you get what you get. Pregnancy is a good time to form general priorities, because you have time to think while you await your birth, but expect the reality of your child and of the number of fronts on which your relatives and friends push back against your preferences to force adjustments on the fly. Some parents end up adopt- ing strategies that even resemble their original intent; the goal is to be flexible in setting priorities and focused in living by them. So. Facebook.

Mention to anyone taking the picture that you want the photos online until is old enough to consent to it. For those who hear this and post an image, ask kindly for them to take it down or change their privacy settings (assuming OK with you, that a just-family, closed group has access). And, like I said, stay loose on the less meaningful stuff. Re: Baby: What we said was, are not posting pictures of the baby on Facebook, but we can invite you to see pictures on (fill in the This can be a dropbox, a blog, a password-protected site we found aservice that is designed for that. This will let people know you want pictures posted while also allowing them to see your little one, which is what they really care about.

Of course, my mother-in-law posted pictures on Facebook anyway after we specifically told her not to, and we had to ask her to take them down. Some people will truly not care what you feel about it, and you just have to roll with it. Anonymous The alternate means of sharing is an elegant solution, thanks. Email Carolyn at post.com. CAROLYN HAX Parents want photos on social media Melissa Etheridge with the Pops is 7 p.m.

Sunday at Taft Theatre. The time was wrong Friday in a listing on Page 6D. Lakota Local School Public Hearing on the Tax budget will be held on January 9, 2017 at 3:30 p.m. at the Board of Education, 5572 Princeton Road. The date was wrong in legal advertisements.

CORRECTIONS Second arrest made in Hamilton death Asecond arrest was made Friday in connection with the death of Hamilton firefighter, who died fighting a blaze in December 2015, Hamilton police said. William Tucker, 49, of Richmond, Kentucky, was caught with the help of Kentucky State Police and has been charged with one count of murder and two counts of aggravated arson, Hamilton Police Chief Craig Bucheit said. Tucker is in custody in Kentucky and will face an extradition to Butler County next week, officials said. This arrest comes nearly a month after Lester Parker, 66, of Hamilton was arrested. He faces one count of murder and one count of aggravated arson.

Parker owned the two-story home on Pater Avenue in which Firefighter Patrick Wolterman died. Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser said under Ohio law a murder conviction results in a sentence of 15 years to life and a $15,000 fine and an aggravated arson conviction carries a maximum prison term of 11 years and a $20,000. Wolterman had been working with the Hamilton Fire Department eight months. He was 28 and recently married. The incident was ruled an arson within a week of the blaze.

At the same time, Bucheit announced that death would be investigated as a homicide. On Monday, Bucheit said little about what the yearlong investigation revealed. He said a motive would be revealed during the trial, and declined to say how investigators believe the fire started. In days following the fire, Melissa Lainhart, 43, daughter of Lester Parker and his wife, Bertha Parker, told investigators on the day of the fire that no one was home at the time of the blaze. Her parents, she said, had traveled to Las Vegas to celebrate their 45th wedding anniversary.

On Friday, Bucheit did not indicate if he thought more arrests would be made. want to thank our investigators who delivered today, and throughout the past year, on a pledge that I made after the death of Bucheit said. pledge was to pursue every lead, to work every angle and exhaustively pursue those responsible for his Update expected in 2013 Brittany Stykes slaying The Brown County Office is expected to give an update Tuesday to a more than 3-year-old homicide cold case. Brittany Stykes, 22 at the time, was four months pregnant when she was shot and killed in her Jeep on U.S. 68 north of Ripley on Aug.

28, 2013. daughter, Aubree, 14 months old at the time, was found next to her mother by a motorist, shot in the head. She survived and had to undergo four surgeries, according to previous reporting by The Enquirer. An autopsy report confirmed that Stykes was shot three times in the neck, chest and arm. Mary Dodson, mother, on behalf of the family said in a statement to The Enquirer: our daughter Brittany has left an emptiness in the hearts of our family that will never be mended, our grief is something that when you lose a child you agonize with till you yourself take your last breath and losing Brittany the way that we did just makes it all the more unbearable.

We are hoping that the new and fresh eyes that will be coming onto Brittany case will help to solve my murder and get Brittany, the baby she carried, Aubree and our family the justice we deserve so maybe we can eventually find some kind of peace our hope and prayers are with everyone working case. Thank you from the Dodson The Brown County Office, Brown County Drug Major Crimes Task Force and Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation will join the press conference slated to begin at 10 a.m. Florence man killed in ATV crash identified AFlorence man who died when he crashed his all-terrain vehicle and was ejected from it in Union this week has been identified as Terry Lanigan. Emergency crews responded to a farm in the 11000 block of U.S. 42 just after 4:30 p.m.

Thursday. They found the 37-year-old and took him to St. Elizabeth Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, the Boone County Office says. Deputies reported that Lanigan was not wearing a helmet at the time. Man shot in possible abduction that may have begun in Avondale Aman suffered life-threatening injuries in a shooting Friday night that may have involved an abduction, police said.

The victim was dropped at University of Cincinnati Medical Center at approximately 6 p.m. with a gunshot wound to the upper body, Cincinnati police Lt. Steve Saunders said. Investigators are working to determine the location of the shooting, but officials said preliminary information suggests the incident may have started at the Avondale White Castle at Reading and William Howard Taft roads. Investigators said they believe said the victim interacted with two individuals in a white four-door sedan at that location, and that someone may have abducted or attempted to abduct the victim.

He was later dropped off at the hospital in a different vehicle than the one described at White Castle, Saunders said. The man underwent surgery for injuries sustained in the shooting. His identity has not been released. Cameron Knight and Brett Milam IN BRIEF.

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Pages Available:
4,582,266
Years Available:
1841-2024