Tag: local news

  • [Video] Senior Miya Brines sets Loveland High School high jump record

    [Video] Senior Miya Brines sets Loveland High School high jump record

    by Grace Nunn

    Loveland, Ohio – Senior Miya Brines set a new Loveland High School high jump record on Saturday, March 27 clearing the bar at 5’6 1/2″ in the Loveland dual meet vs Princeton at Tiger Stadium. She placed 1st in the high jump.

    LHS Senior Miya Brines

    “I am very honored to be in the Loveland High School record books with so many other athletes. I believe hard work and dedication have a big impact on the way I perform and compete as an athlete,” Brines said.

    Miya also thanked her coaches for investing their time and effort into herself and the team and cannot wait for her future as an athlete.

    The previous record was 5’6 set in 2016 by Kendall Ewert.

    She also came in 1st in the long jump with a leap of 16′-10.75″, 1st in the 100-meter hurdles running a 14.59, and 1st in the 300 Meter hurdles at 48.67.

    Brines will continue her track and academic career at the University of Iowa.

  • Do you know: The man who used his wife’s fortune to fund the freedom of over 1,400 slaves.

    Do you know: The man who used his wife’s fortune to fund the freedom of over 1,400 slaves.

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know that Thomas Garrett unabashedly gave life to his abolitionist ideals?

    Please read more about Garrett at Black Then…

    And read even more about this leader of abolitionism at Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia…

    Thomas Garrett ambrotype c1850 from Wikipedia

  • Meet Adam Reed the next leader for Loveland High School

    Meet Adam Reed the next leader for Loveland High School

    David Miller is the Editor and Publisher of Loveland Magazine

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – Peggy Johnson announced her retirement at the end of January after 39 years in education and 6 years as Principal of Loveland High School (LHS).

    Thirty-nine-year-old Wyoming High School Principal, Adam Reed, who is entering his 17th year in education was recently announced as Johnson’s successor for the 2021-2022 school year.

    Reed grew up in Fairfield and currently lives in Loveland with his family. “I enjoy spending time with my family, golfing, and traveling,” Reed told Loveland Magazine in an email exchange. Education has been his only career path.

    “My wife Kate and I have three sons. Nolan is 7 and attends the Loveland Primary School, Hunter is 5 and will attend the Loveland Early Childhood Center next year, and Carson just turned 2. 

    Adam Reed will be the next Principal at Loveland High School

    Reed earned both his B.A. and Masters in Education at the University of Cincinnati before earning his Administrative and Superintendent Licensure from Xavier University.

    He is a graduate of Fairfield High School, was a varsity baseball coach, and was an assistant coach on a final four basketball team while at Fairfield. 

    I asked Reed what were his proudest accomplishments with the Wyoming schools and mentioned that the school certainly has bragging rights in regards to academics. “Leading the high school through the pandemic. Supporting students and teachers academically and socially and emotionally while creating the safest learning environment possible,” was his answer. Reed added, “Being an instructional leader with my staff as we integrated technology into their teaching practices and making the high school a Google school.” Reed is also proud that he created a culture where students “felt heard and valued”. 

    Adam Reed will be the next Principal at Loveland High School

    I also asked Reed what does he feel are his best skills that he will bring to LHS. He said, “I am a student-focused administrator and educator. I believe in meeting our students where they are in order to support their learning and goals after high school. I look forward to creating a positive culture and environment to support our teachers and students.”

    “While at Wyoming, I participated in our district-wide One Degree Shift work surrounding diversity,” was Reed’s response to a question about the goals of the Loveland District’s Diversity Advisory Board. He further emphasized, “For the 2021-2022 school year, Wyoming High School has created two new courses, African American Studies, and Women’s Studies. As I transition to Loveland, I will continue to focus on our students and meet them where they are. The work of the Loveland Diversity Advisory Board will be instrumental in creating a safe, equitable, educational environment that celebrates diverse perspectives, identities, cultures, and worldviews for all our students.”

    In speaking about her retirement, Peggy Johnson said in a statement issued by the District, “Working with teenagers is an unbelievable honor and seeing how they pursue their interests, overcome challenges, and succeed is a most rewarding experience.”

    Johnson has spent 39 years in education, beginning her career as a student-teacher in the Fall of 1980 at Loveland High School. She went on to teach students with hearing and language impairments for 17 years and served as a Special Education Supervisor in Hamilton City Schools. She served as principal of Turpin High School for 13 years and spent the last 6 years leading Loveland High School.

    Principal Peggy Johnson at the 2018 Commencement (Loveland Magazine file photo)

    A release by the District announcing her retirement said, “While at LHS, Johnson expanded the Advanced Placement program, business program, increased performance on state assessments, and “was dedicated to her students” according to Loveland Director of Human Resources Charles Ogdan. “There isn’t an event that happens where Ms. Johnson isn’t there mingling with students, taking pictures, and posting on Twitter in support of student success and growth,” Ogdan said. 

    “I wish to thank the LHS school community for the opportunity to work with talented, passionate, and dedicated educators and students and enthusiastic supportive parents and community,” Johnson said in the statement.

  • Do you know: DAVID RUGGLES, AN AGGRESSIVE ABOLITIONIST  WOULD FORCE HIS WAY INTO HOMES

    Do you know: DAVID RUGGLES, AN AGGRESSIVE ABOLITIONIST WOULD FORCE HIS WAY INTO HOMES

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know that David Ruggles was an aggressive abolitionist who would force his way into homes to inform slaves that they were free?

    He also did his part by first opening a bookshop that was burned to the ground.

    Portrait of David Ruggles (center) with Isaac T. Hopper (left) and Barney Corse (right) confronting John P. Darg in 1838 (Artist unknown)

    Read more about Ruggles at Black Then – Discovering our history…

  • I felt the tears welling behind my eyes and willed them not to escape

    I felt the tears welling behind my eyes and willed them not to escape

    There is value in having no child feel rejected and invisible in their own school. If I can help it, none of them will.

    A story by a Loveland resident presented by Loveland Magazine in collaboration with the Loveland Diversity Advisory Board

    A sharp pain startled me. Something had pelted my head. Whatever it was ricocheted to the floor with a hollow plink. I rubbed the back of my skull and looked around trying to determine what had hit me. As I did, I took another sharp blow, this time to the cheek, followed again by a distinct plinking sound. The next shot hit my shoulder. Then my neck. Finally one of the projectiles flew past my face and I was able to identify what was being hurled toward me. 

    It was a penny. 

    I looked in the direction from which the projectiles originated and saw a lunch table of my fifth grade peers laughing, trying to look inconspicuous in the conspicuous way guilty ten year-olds have a tendency to do.

    “Did she pick them up?” one whispered.

    “Shhhhh! She’s looking over here,” the other said, waving his hand in the universal sign to keep it down.

    More giggles.

    x

    I sheepishly rubbed my cheek, which by now was smarting and red. I looked down at the floor where several pennies lay in a telltale scatter at my feet. 

    Another sharp pain.

    “Pick up the pennies, Jew,” someone from the table jeered, just loud enough for me to hear.

    I felt the tears welling behind my eyes and willed them not to escape. No one would see me cry. Despite my best intentions, a tear leaked out, betraying me as it rolled down my injured cheek. Its saltiness stung against the broken skin.  

    x

    The perpetrators weren’t the school’s “bad” kids. They weren’t the “troublemakers.” They weren’t the kids who wadded up the stiff brown paper towels, wet them, and threw them up on the bathroom ceiling where they’d stick and harden like cement. 

    These were the kids who raised their hands to read aloud from the social studies textbook when the teacher asked for volunteers.They attended PSR at the church down the street from my house where a giant tree sprouted pink blossoms each spring before dropping her petals in a sudden heap. These were the kids who, if I’d told a teacher, would elicit the response of ‘Well now that doesn’t sound like them. I’m sure they meant nothing by it. Have you tried ignoring it?’

    x

    The lone tear fell onto the lunch table, a solitary puddle on the faux wood facade. Pennies? What does that even mean? I pondered this question silently, focusing intently on the fallen tear to prevent more from spilling out. I felt ashamed and embarrassed. I never mentioned it again. 

    This was the first time it happened, but it wouldn’t be the last.  

    At ten years old, I didn’t understand the deeply anti-Semitic implications of these kids’ actions. As an adult, I know they picked up on these stereotypes somewhere. I feel confident that the hateful message was learned outside of school, however subtly transmitted. Maybe slips of the tongue by their parents. Maybe from the innuendos presented in the news channel their family watched. Maybe from friends whose families held biases. But what about what they learned–or didn’t learn–while they were in school? What was the message there?

    There was nary a mention of Jewish people in my elementary school. Despite a small population of Jewish students, the curriculum had settled into a comfortable rhythm they saw no need to update. I remember clearly how each year my teachers were startled when they learned that I didn’t have a Christmas tree. 

    “What do you mean?” my second grade teacher asked incredulously. “Everyone has a Christmas tree,”  And so it went. 

    x

    I accepted my lot early. I dutifully completed my “Letter to Santa” assignments each December prior to “Christmas Break” where I’d take home the ornament I had to make for my non-existent tree. In the spring, I mustered up fake gusto to color oil pastel Easter egg cut-outs. I completed the multiplication worksheets asking how much tinsel Jane needs to trim her Christmas tree and conducted the science experiments on decorating Easter eggs with various substances, bright red beet juice staining my hands for days. 

     The message coming from the school was clear: one specific religion was the universal norm. Obviously, I was different. That made me a target. 

    I share this with you to illustrate that representation matters. While some may disagree, they are likely the ones who have never been in a situation where they were the “other.”

    Representation doesn’t mean anyone has to alter their own convictions or feel put on the defensive. It doesn’t mean one side is right and the other is wrong, that there’s a hidden agenda, or that any one lifestyle is being attacked. 

    What it does do is allow students to learn that the world is full of people whose beliefs, values, and opinions differ from their own. It means the students who aren’t part of the status quo feel a sense of belonging. At its best, it fosters mutual understanding and civility. Representation neither promotes one lifestyle, race, or religion, nor detracts from another. All representation does is to allow students to see that there are different ways of being and that there is validity in who we ALL are. 

    x

    While I cannot change my school experience, we owe it to our own kids the opportunity to explore diversity through equal and prominent representation. If you’re a minority, there is value in seeing someone like yourself; if you’re in the majority, there is value in seeing that there’s an actual living, feeling human being behind the label. Most importantly, there is value in having no child feel rejected and invisible in their own school. If I can help it, none of them will.


  • Do you know Josephine Garis Cochrane from Ashtabula invented first commercially successful automatic dishwasher

    Do you know Josephine Garis Cochrane from Ashtabula invented first commercially successful automatic dishwasher

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know that Cochrane exhibited her invention at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago? She won the highest prize for “best mechanical construction, durability, and adaptation to its line of work”.

    https://www.facebook.com/RandomHistoryoftheDay/posts/2594464494187252
  • Loveland school district wants your thoughts

    Loveland school district wants your thoughts

    Loveland, Ohio – This is the “Thought Exchange” survey to build the profile the Board of Education can use for the Loveland City School District superintendent search.

    https://my.thoughtexchange.com/#415463588/hub

    NOTE!  this will be open through tomorrow,  Wednesday afternoon, 3/24.

    You share your own thoughts and rate thoughts from other participants based on how much you agree 1 = strongly disagree or 5 = strongly agree.   


  • You can buy handmade cards made by special needs students at LHS

    You can buy handmade cards made by special needs students at LHS

    by Emily Hicks

    For the past several years, students with special needs at Loveland High School have designed hand-made blank greeting cards to gain valuable work experience. We use the money made from the profit of the sales to  buy supplies for the room, activities, and often celebrations.

    Students design, create, package, and sell these handmade cards to the community and staff members of Loveland. This year we were unable to attend our biggest sales event, The Loveland Craft Fair, due to the pandemic. 

    The profits from this fair help fund our classrooms and give our students the opportunity to practice social and life skills during outings in our community.  

    We are looking for new ways to get our craft and our students’ experiences out there. 

    The community will be able to meet some of our talented students and purchase these amazing cards this Spring at the Loveland Farmers Market.  We will have cards available for cash purchase for $2.00 per pack of 4.  You can choose from a variety of cards including, happy birthday, thank you, thinking of you, get well soon, tiger paw, and many more.

    They are also available for cash purchase through this sign-up Order Form .

    We look forward to seeing you again in our community!

  • Do you know “Black” was in the Royal Family before Meghan Markle?

    Do you know “Black” was in the Royal Family before Meghan Markle?

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know?

    Take a look at this story and read more from Mr. Imhotepr

    Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, originally named Sophie Charlotte was born on May 19, 1744. Queen Charlotte also held the titles of Electress of Hanover and Queen Consort of Hanover. Mecklenburg-Strelitz was a minute north German dukedom in the Holy Roman Empire.

    Queen Charlotte was the youngest daughter of Princess Elizabeth Albertine Saxe-Hildburghausen and Duke Charles Louis Frederick of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, otherwise known as Prince of Mirow.

    Queen Charlotte is a descendant of a black branch of the Portuguese royal family; more specifically, Alfonso III and his concubine, Madragana, a black moor.

    This fact makes Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Charles and Prince William technically mixed race. Many historians have tried to cast doubt on the nature of Queen Charlotte’s heritage. But her personal physician has noted her “true mulatto face” and the public report released before Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation in 1953 acknowledges the monarchy’s African heritage.

    Africans don’t beg for royalty. We know we are the originals and we’ve been there before anyone else. They just hide it but we remember and we will teach it to our children. Don’t forget to get your copies of My African Icons, I Love Africa and The Black Samurai to teach your children that their ancestors are the original royals and that they civilized the whole planet.

  • Do you know what the Harlem Renaissance was?

    Do you know what the Harlem Renaissance was?

    by Barbara Kyles

    Do you know?

    The Harlem Renaissance was an intellectual and cultural revival of African American music, dance, art, fashion, literature, theater and politics centered in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, spanning the 1920s and 1930s.

    Take a look at this story from Historical African American Images and welcome to Black history…

    https://www.facebook.com/adoshistory/posts/119025793465904