By The Bradenton Herald, Fla. Nov. 5--Ever put up a tent in the woods, then watch the first big gust of wind knock it down? Then you have a pretty good idea how Tony Dungy feels every time the Indianapolis Colts defense takes the field.
All of her life, Cecilia Meyer loved to play cards. Bridge, euchre, poker - there wasn't any card game she couldn't play well, said her grandson, Michael Pumphrey of North College Hill. He thinks her penchant for playing cards kept her mind active well into her 90s. "Really, she stayed pretty sharp until this year," he said. Mrs. Meyer, who died Tuesday, just 35 days short of her 100th birthday,
Aside from her family, the greatest love of Virginia C. Armbrister Gubser's life was nursing. She worked in the profession until she was 72. "That was her life, really," said her husband, Leo Gubser of Dayton. "She was very adamant about it, and she was good at it." Mrs. Gubser, who died Wednesday at 91, grew up in a small town in the mountains of Virginia called Max Meadows. She studied at Berea
F. Edward "Eddie" Ostendorf will forever hold a special place in the local history of bank robberies. It's impossible to know for sure how many he helped foil. Ostendorf, a law enforcement coordinator with the U.S. Attorney's Office in Lexington and a Park Hills police chief, originated the silent-alarm program for police and financial institutions in Northern Kentucky. He then spent 10 years
No. 1 Ohio State at Michigan State, 2:30 p.m. The dysfunctinonal Spartans will try and repeat their 1998 upset when they shocked the top-ranked Buckeyes. No. 2 Florida at No. 11 Auburn, 6:45 p.m.