r001754266-0617sections.duluthnewstribune.com/pdf/grill.pdf · page b4 duluth news tr ibune|...
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Duluth News Tribune | Sunday, June 24, 2012Page B4 duluthnewstribune.com
Foot of the High BridgeSuperior, WI • 715-392-3269
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Missouri town remembers ’62 Continental jet crashALAN SCHER ZAGIERAssociated Press
UNIONVILLE, Mo. —Maureen Riordan’s familybarely spoke about the planecrash that killed her fatherwhen she was just 11. Samefor Ronnie Cook, a Missourisoybean farmer who as ahigh school junior wasamong the first on the scenewhen Continental Airlinesflight 11 went down 50 yearsago just south of the Iowaborder.
Aviation buffs knowflight 11 as the country’sfirst bombing of a commer-cial jet airliner, an act ofsabotage by a passenger thatkilled all 45 people on board.Yet the crash of the plane,which departed Chicago enroute to Los Angeles with aKansas City stop, largely
was forgotten as timepassed, families moved onand more horrific airlineincidents came to dominatehistory.
Now, as the result ofefforts by a local historianand an aviation blogger, fam-ilies who carried memoriesof the crash and residentswho remembered that awfulnight are talking about itagain. They include the chil-dren of auto executives andengineers who were onboard and who are now intouch with others affectedby the disaster. A few weeksago, more than 100 peoplegathered for a 50th anniver-sary observance inUnionville, Mo., where anupdated memorial that de-scribes the crash was un-veiled on the downtown
courthouse square. Themonument first was put uptwo years ago, although onlywith the names of flight 11’seight crew members and 37passengers.
Until recently, “folks hereput it aside, more or less,”Cook said. “It was some-thing that happened. Lifewent on. We just didn’t talkabout it.” But the new atten-tion, he said, “was some-thing that should have beendone a long time ago.”
Initial reports blamed asevere thunderstorm for thecrash on May 22, 1962. Butinvestigators soon deter-mined that passengerThomas Doty, a suburbanKansas City salesman facingarmed robbery charges, wasresponsible for the explo-sion. He detonated six sticks
of dynamite in the plane’srear bathroom as part of abotched plan for his wife,5-year-old daughter and un-born son to collect on a lifeinsurance policy he pur-chased before takeoff.
The FBI investigationwas led by Kansas City spe-cial agent in charge W. MarkFelt, who later would earnacclaim as the Watergatewhistleblower known asDeep Throat.
Some believed the bomb-ing helped lead to tightenedairport security measures adecade later and partly in-spired author Arthur Hai-ley’s 1968 book “Airport.”
Previous incidents hadtargeted propeller planes.An October 1933 bombing ofa Boeing 247 plane flyingcross country from Newark,
N.J., to northern Californiakilled all seven people onboard. And in November1955, Jack Gilbert Graham ofDenver planted a bomb inhis mother’s luggage on aUnited Airlines flight to theWest Coast, killing all 39 pas-sengers and five crew mem-bers. He, too, was motivatedto cash in recently pur-chased life insurancepolicies.
Local historian DuaneCrawford began resurrect-ing interest in flight 11 abouta decade ago. His effortscaught the attention of avia-tion blogger Andrew Rus-sell, a 26-year-old NewZealander whose website at-tracted the children of flight11’s passengers and crew.
Those who came to thisobservance included Rior-
dan, who said her familynever considered going tothe scene of the accidentearlier because “it wasn’tsomething you did in thosedays.”
Bob Gray, a 66-year-oldDenver-area resident, cameto honor his uncle, FredGray, the plane’s pilot.
Capt. Fred Gray’s deathhit his nephew especiallyhard. The 50-year-old pilothad taken Bob Gray on hisfirst flight as a student pilotand for his first flattop hair-cut. Bob Gray, who laterearned his pilot’s licenseand worked as an aviationengineer, named his own sonafter his uncle.
“A lot of people felt a kin-ship that they just didn’teven fathom could exist, 50years later,” said Gray.
Duluth News Tribune | Sunday, June 24, 2012 Page B5duluthnewstribune.com
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Owner Scott Boedigheimer is proudthat he can offer something you won'tfind at the big box stores ~
Come in and register for yourchance at a FREE GRILL at either
of our convenient locations!
Experience the difference service makes!
Deposit registrationforms in the grillat participatingmechants.Blanks areavailableat eachbusinessadvertised.
RULESEmployees of theDuluth News Tribune andimmediate families are not eligibleand employees and immediatefamilies of the participatingbusinesses are not eligible intheir place of employment.
Must be 18 years of age orolder to register.
Winners will be notified bymerchant to pick up grill atthe b usiness wherename was drawn.
Drawing will be heldWednesday, July 11.
Winnerswill be announcedin the Sunday,July15th.Duluth News Tribune.
GiveawayHOW TO ENTER
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Bullying of teachers more damaging in online eraCHRISTINE ARMARIOAssociated Press
MIAMI — The bullying that busmonitor Karen Klein endured on aride home from an upstate NewYork school was painful and egre-gious, but also shows how studentharassment of teachers and ad-ministrators has become morespiteful and damaging in the on-line era.
Much attention has been paid tostudents who bully students inclass, after school and on the Inter-net. Less has been given to equallydisturbing behavior by studentswho harass instructors, principalsand other adults.
It’s something that’s long ex-isted; think ganging up on the sub-stitute teacher. But it has becomeincreasingly cruel and even dan-gerous as students get access to ad-vanced technology at earlier ages.
In Maryland, students posed astheir vice principal’s twin9-year-old daughters on pedophilewebsites, saying they had beenhaving sex with their father andwere looking for a new partner.Elsewhere, students have loggedon to neo-Nazi and white suprema-cist sites claiming to be a Jewishor minority teacher and incitingthe groups’ anger. Others havestolen photographs from teachers’cell phones and posted themonline.
“The ways they provoke teach-ers are limited only by their imagi-nations,” said lawyer Parry Aftab,who described the above cases asjust a few of the hundreds she’shandled.
Compared with those, whathappened to Klein in Greece, N.Y.,a suburb of Rochester, was mild,Aftab said.
Students poked the bus monitorwith a textbook, called her a bar-rage of obscenities and threatenedto urinate on her front door,among other callous insults. Onestudent taunted: “You don’t have afamily because they all killedthemselves because they don’twant to be near you.”
Klein’s oldest son killed himself10 years ago.
Eventually, she appears tobreak down in tears. A cell phonevideo of the incident posted onYouTube went viral.
There is no data collected onhow often students bully and ha-rass school authorities.
The most recent school safetyreport from the National Centerfor Education Statistics, the databranch of the U.S. Department ofEducation, found that 5 percent ofpublic schools reported students
verbally abused teachers on adaily or weekly basis. Also, 8 per-cent of secondary school teachersreported being threatened with in-jury by a student, as did 7 percentof elementary teachers.
“Is what we saw in this videooccurring with many childrenevery day with adults? No,” saidKen Trump, president of the Na-tional School Safety and SecurityServices, a Cleveland-based con-sulting firm. “One incident is onetoo many, but we certainly have aproblem where the authority ofeducators and school support per-sonnel has been undermined.”
One of the new ways that stu-dents are harassing teachers hasbecome known as “cyberbaiting.”Students irritate a teacher to thepoint that the teacher breaksdown; that reaction then is cap-tured to post online.
Then there are cases of stu-dents who have created websitesand blogs against teachers and ad-ministrators.
In South Florida, one studentcreated a Facebook group pagecalled, “Ms. Sarah Phelps is theworst teacher I’ve ever met!” Thestudent encouraged others to “ex-press your feelings of hatred.”
The student, Katherine Evans,took the page down but was sus-pended for three days and removedfrom her Advanced Placementclasses. She later was representedby the American Civil LibertiesUnion in a lawsuit against theprincipal of the Pembroke PinesCharter High School, arguing thather right to freedom of speech hadbeen violated. She settled for$15,000 to cover her legal fees andher suspension was wiped fromher record.
Winners will be notified bymerchant to pick up grill atthe business wherename was drawn.