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The Winona Daily News from Winona, Minnesota • 4
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The Winona Daily News from Winona, Minnesota • 4

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Winona, Minnesota
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4
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Tuesday, April 4, 2000 DAILY RECORD Winona Daily News Arrangements Grace "Evelyn" Neville Visitation Wednesday at 1 p.m., followed by a memorial service at 2 p.m. at FawcettJunker Funeral Home. Frances A. Rettkowski Visitation today from 6 to 8 p.m., with a 7:30 p.m. Christian Wake Service at Watkowski-Pronschinske Funeral Home.

Services at 11 a.m. Wednesday at St. Stanislaus Kostka Church, with preliminary services at 10:30 a.m. at the funeral home. Burial in St.

Mary's Cemetery. HARMONY, Minn. Carol Jertson Visitation today one hour before 3 p.m. services at Greenfield Lutheran Church, with burial in Greenfield Cemetery in Harmony. (Lindstrom Funeral Home) ARCADIA, Wis.

Clarabelle M. "Rea" Gamoke Visitation today from 4:30 to 9 p.m., with a 7 p.m. rosary and on Wednesday from 8 to 11:30 a.m. at Wozney Funeral Home. Service at noon Wednesday at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church.

Burial in Calvary Cemetery. BUFFALO CITY, Wis. "Minnie" Marian D. Brownlee Burial at noon Thursday at St. Stanislaus Catholic Church Cemetery, Arcadia.

Memorial service at 12:30 p.m. Thursday at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church, Arcadia. (Killian Funeral Home) ARCADIA, Wis. Cordelia M. Schlesser Visitation today from 8 to.

11:30 a.m. at Wozney Funeral Home. Services at noon today at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church. Burial will be in St. Joseph's Cemetery, Wis.

Runkel Services will be 11 a.m. today at St. Bartholomew's Catholic Church in Trempealeau. Burial in Holy Cross Cemetery. (Zwickey Funeral Homes Galesville Chapel) WHITEHALL, Wis.

Barbara N. Franklin Visitation from 4 to 8 p.m. today at Jack Funeral Home, with Christian Prayer Service at 7 p.m. and a rosary immediately following. Friends also.

may call one hour prior to the services at the church. Funeral services will be 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at Saint John's Catholic Church in Whitehall. Burial will be in Lincoln Cemetery, Whitehall. Sunday 10:19 a.m.

374 E. Wabasha St. Rescue units responded to an 84-year-old woman with flu-like symptoms. Fire personnel administered oxygen and took patient's vital signs. She was prepared for transport to Community Memorial Hospital by ambulance.

10:50 a.m. 2:30 p.m. 177 Carimona St. Fire units responded to a report of smoke in a building. The smoke was coming from a paper fire in the front door of the apartment.

The fire was. extinguished before fire units arrived. 2:55 p.m. 4:23 p.m. Sugar Loaf hill Rescue units responded to a report of hikers in distress on Sugar Loaf hill.

The people who were climbing were not in need of emergency assistance. It was a false alarm. 5:25 p.m. 8:06 p.m. 157 W.

3rd St. Rescue units responded to a 76-year-old woman with an unknown medical problem. Fire personnel administered oxygen, took the patient's vital signs and prepared her for transport to Community Memorial Hospital by ambulance. 8:31 p.m. Births Kay and Brent Bailey of Minnesota City, a daughter, Kaelen Rose, born March 26, 2000, at Community Memorial Hospital.

Maternal grandparents are Shirley and Gene Sobeck of Minnesota City. Paternal grandparents are Shirley and Dave Bailey of Rochester, Minn. Correction Ted Hazelton is a former member of the Winona Railroad Club. A story in Sunday's Winona Daily News reported he was active in the club. Death notices Obituaries Lily M.

Danner MABEL, Minn. Lily M. Danner, 98, of Spring Grove and formerly of Mabel, died Sunday, April 2, 2000, at Health Care Center in Spring Grove. Services will be: held. at 2 p.m.

Wednesday at Mabel United Methodist Church, Mabel. Visitation will be from 6 to 8 p.m. today at Mengis Funeral Home, Mabel, and one hour prior to services at the church. Burial in Mabel Public Cemetery. Morgan Van Winkle BUFFALO CITY, Wis.

Morgan Van Winkle, infant. daughter of James and Denise (Friedenberger) Van Winkle, died Thursday, March 30, 2000, at Franciscan-Skemp Medical Center, La Crosse, Wis. Private graveside services will be held today at Nelson Cemetery, Nelson. StohrFuneral Home of Alma is in charge of arrangements. Lawrence FLAGSTAFF, Ariz.

Lawrence DiMatteo, 70, of Flagstaff and formerly of Winona, died Tuesday, 28, 2000, at his home. He was born Sept. 14, 1929, in Calumet. Survivors include his wife, Patricia, and five children. Services were held at 11 a.m.

March 31 at Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Chapel. Burial in Flagstaff Calvary Cemetery. Hyacent 'Jake' Kabus BLAIR, Wis. Hyacent "Jake" Kabus, 83, of Whitehall died Sunday, April 2, 2000, at -County Memorial Nursing Home in Whitehall. Funeral services will be 10:30 a.m.

Thursday at Saint Ansgar's Catholic Church, Blair. Burial will he in Rest Haven Cemetery, Blair. Visitation is from 6 to 8 Wednesday at. Jack Funeral Home in Blair, where there will be a Christian prayer service at 7 p.m. immediately followed by a parish rosary.

Friends also may call at the church on Thursday. one hour prior to the services Allen J. Pehler ARCADIA, Wis. Allen J. Pehler.

37, of Arcadia died Monday, April 3, 2000, at his home in Arcadia. Wozney Funeral Home will be assisting the family with arrangements. Mary Lou Kaiser PLYMOUTH, Minn. Mary Lou Kaiser, 43, of Plymouth and formerly of Lanesboro, died Sunday, April 2, 2000, at her home. She was born July 20, 1956 in Winona.

She has two children, Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Thursday, at St. Patrick's Catholic Church in Lanesboro. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Visitation will be from 6 to 8 p.m.

Wednesday at Johnsonboro Riley and Funeral one hour Home in before Lanesvices Thursday at the church. Johnson-Riley Funeral Home is assisting the family with arrangements. Lottery Numbers selected Monday Minnesota Daily 3: 0-4-2 Cash 4 Life 46-58-72-73 Illinois Pick Three Midday: 4-7-4 Pick Three Evening: 8-3-1 Pick Four Midday: 9-8-8-7 Pick Four Evening: 3-5-5-2 Little Lotto: 8-13-20-26-28 Lotto jackpot: $11 million lowa $100,000 Cash Game: 8-11-22-30-32 SuperCash: 9-19-24-26-31-33 Pick 3: 9-4-8 Pick 4: 8-2-3-8 The Winona Daily News uses recyeled newsprint. Every issue, every day! Ruling Marian D. 'Minnie' Brownlee June 7, 1921-April 2, 2000 BUFFALO Wis.

Marian D. "Minnie" Brownlee, 78, of Buffalo City and formerly Arcadia, died Sunday, April 2, 2000, at Franciscan Skemp Healthcare Arcadia Nursing Home in Arcadia. Marian was born on June 7. 1921, in Arcadia to Valentine and Stella (Reck) Stelmach. She married Eugene Brownlee at St.

Stanislaus Catholic Church on July 3, 1945. She had been a cashier and bookkeeper at the Farmer. Store and worked at the Brownlee Jewelry Store. She had been. a member of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church and St.

Anne's Rosary Society. She is survived by her husband, Eugene of Buffalo City; one son, Robert (Janet) Brownlee of Danville, one daughter, Joy (John) of Luck, one sister, Loretta Kulas of Winona; and five grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents. A memorial Mass will be held 12:30 p.m. Thursday at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church in Arcadia, with the Rev.

Bill Kulas officiating. Burial will be at noon Thursday at: St. Stanislaus Cemetery. Killian Funeral Home, Arcadia, is assisting the family with arrangements. Convictions The following people convicted in Winona District Court.

March 8, 2000 were County Edward Maurice Price, 33, La Crescent, failure to stop at a stop sign, driving while intoxicated BAC .16 over and .10 second time within five years, stayed 30 days of 120 days for two years, supervised probation for two years, $730. Nicholas Robert Speltz, 39, Route Box 189, violated limited license, jail stayed 45 days for one year, unsupervised probation for one year, $238. Bryan Mathew Crigler, 21, 252 W. Broadway, driving while intoxicated with .16 to .10 or more within two hours, jail stayed 120 days for: two years, unsupervised probation for two years, $603. Stephanie Jane 32, address not given, driving while intoxicated with .32 BAC and DWI within five years, jail 30.

days stayed of 120 days for two unsupervised probation for two years, $1,053. Ali Al-Abdullal, 22, 11 Huron Lane, driving after revocation second and third offense, jail 15 days stayed of 60 days for one year, unsupervised probation for one year, $330. Crystal Dawn Wells, 20, Minnesota City, driving intoxicated with .13 BAC and over 10 BAC two hours after driving, jail stayed 30 days for one year, unsupervised probation for one year, $330. March 10, 2000 Nicholas Kenneth Levan, 20, Jennie M. Gilbertson Feb.

21, 1911-April 2, 2000 ARCADIA, Wis. Jennie M. Gilbertson, 89, of Arcadia died Sunday, April 2, 2000, at Franciscan Skemp Healthcare in La Crosse, Wis. Jennie was born on Feb. 21, 1911, in the Township of Arcadia to Gilbert and Agnette (Herberg) Erickson.

She married Albert Gilbertson on Oct. 30, 1930, in Winona. She was a farmer and homemaker, a member of Fagernes Lutheran Church, W-ELCA and quilting group. Jennie is survived by one son, Larry A. (Janice) Gilbertson of Arcadia; one daughter, Irene Gilbertson of Whitehall, one brother, Alvin Erickson of Arcadia; four grandchildren, Theresa (Bob) Gilbertson-Tullius, Daniel (Margo) Gilbertson, Lisa (Jim) Lisowski and David (Lisa Heath) Gilbertson; and seven great-grandchildren, Eric, Taylor, Tyler, Nikki, Jesse, Samantha and Dylan.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Albert, on Jan. 14, 1992, and a sister, Julia Pederson. Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Fagernes Lutheran Church, rural Blair, with the Rev. Kevin Jones and the Rev.

Gary Hanson officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at Killian Funeral Home. They also may call from 1 p.m.

until time of services Thursday at the church. Killian Funeral Home is assisting the family with arrangements. Rochester, no proof of insurance operator, seat belt violation, $153. Zavair J. Swannigan, 22, Milwaukee, speeding $68.

Gregory Ervin Bonow, 21, Lewiston, open: bottle driver first offense, $178. Todd Bruce Boynton, 23, Lewiston, open bottle in moving vehicle passenger, $128. Lee James Kennedy, 21, Altura, open bottle in moving vehicle passenger, $128. March 13, 2000 Lloyd Douglas Johnson, 31, 576 E. King driving after revocation, seat belt violation, jail 30 days stayed of 90 days for one year, $263.

Lloyd Douglas Johnson, 31, 576 E. King no proof of insurance operator, $478. Earl Steven. Kruger, Plainview, 46, driving while intoxicated with .15 BAC second DWI within 5 years, jail 30 days stayed out of 120 days for unsupervised probation for two years, $755. Kurt Jerome Knuesel, 27, 916 E.

Sanborn driving while intoxicated with .29 to .20 or more within five years, jail 45 days stayed of 365 days for two years, supervised probation for two years, $630. March 20, 2000 Steven Duane Horner, 20, 545 47th angle with one extra line, $68. John Albert Beise, 38, Rochester, speeding $68. Goren Bridge With Omar Sharif and Tannah Hirsch BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY Both vulnerable. South deals.

NORTH 1094 9 853 0 62 K632. WEST EAST 0765 Void 9 K042 9 J10976 0 0974 0 10853 0 J974 SOUTH A AKOJ The bidding: SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST 24 Pass 20 Pass Pass 34 Pass 4NT Pass 54 Pass SNT Pass 60 Pass Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: King of 9 A key difference between rubber bridge and duplicate is that the former. offers the opportunity for safety plays even when the odds in favor of success are overwhelming. In duplicate you often cannot afford to sacrifice a possible overtrick just to secure the contract. South's opening bid was an artificial game force.

North's two dia- From Page 1A make PCs accessible and more affordable to millions of Americans." Microsoft didn't lose all of the case: Jackson ruled that the government failed to prove that Microsoft's exclusive marketing arrangements with other companies "constituted unlawful, exclusive dealing" under federal antitrust law. Jackson's verdict opens the door for the federal government to seek drastic penalties against Microsoft. The options range from breaking up the company that made Gates a billionaire to forcing it to share its proprietary software, code with competitors. Jackson also paved the way for states to seek penalties under their own anticompetition laws. "Microsoft maintained its monopoly power by anticompetitive means and attempted to monopolize the Web browser Jackson said in a ruling that caused a record-plunge in the Nasdaq market even before its release.

Microsoft stock dropped by more than $15 a share to close at costing Gates about $12.1 billion in paper losses. The' Justice Department vowed to press the case until consumers are rewarded. "Microsoft has been held accountable for its illegal conduct by a court of law," Attorney General Janet Reno said. "Thanks to this ruling, consumers. who have been harmed can now look forward to benefits." Attorneys general for the states that joined the case called for strict sanctions.

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal urged Jackson to "adopt remedies that are as far-reaching and fundamental as Microsoft's abuses of its monopoly." Reno's antitrust chief, Joel Klein, said he still was open to a settlement but that it would have to redress the violations cited in Monday's ruling. Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer also said the company would be open to more negotiations but it "would need to see an approporaite openness" from the government. Police Maxine Weilandt, 668 E. Sanborn reported ornamental figures taken from her lawn. Missing are a Dutch boy and girl, valued at $100 apiece; three flamingos, $20 apiece; three ducks, $60; two turtles, $20; and a $300 windmill.

A 1989 Mazda 626, owned by Mary Funk, was reported stolen from 119 E. 3rd St. The keys were left in the vehicle. The car was recovered on Monday in Fountain City, Wis. It was valued at $600.

Tom Schott of Goodview reported the theft of a propane cylinder from a gas grill. The cylinder was recovered at 3rd and Zumbro streets. Stereo components valued at $800 were reported taken from 773 W. 5th St. Donald Poillon reported he found locked doors unlocked and the Gerald M.

Simon, Route 2, Altura, reported someone has been stripping parts from three older tractors and selling them to a Rochester junkyard. Parts were reported stripped from an International, 9N Ford, and a Ferguson Model 20. equipment missing. WINONA Monday "We've spent the past 25 years thinking of ourselves as a small aggressive company playing catch up to industry giants even though at some point along the way we became a large company," Ballmer said. Our.

intense focus on moving forward has at times been seen as threatening and our passion for being the best has been misinterpreted. We can do better. But that doesn't mean innovating any less or delivering anv less value to In his ruling, Jackson wrote that "Microsoft's anticompetitive actions trammeled the competitive process through which the computer software industry generally stimulates innovation and conduces to the optimum benefit of He said Microsoft adopted "aggressive measures" with computer manufacturers and Internet providers that "successfully ostracized" Navigator, a browser made by Microsoft rival Netscape Communications, in favor of the company's Internet Explorer. Substantial business was lost to competitors "as a result of Microsoft's decision to bundle Internet Explorer with Windows," Jackson wrote. The bundling "caused Navigator's usage share to drop substantially from 1995 to 1998, and that as a.

direct result Netscape suffered a severe drop in revenues from lost advertisers, Web traffic and purchases of server products." All the parties to the suit, including the states, tried to postpone a ruling by working the past four months through a court-appointed mediator, Judge Richard Posner. The talks collapsed over the weekend, prompting Jackson to release his verdict. Both sides in the case had reasons to settle. For Microsoft, the verdict is expected to spur more consumer lawsuits. Microsoft already faces dozens of classaction lawsuits seeking potentially billions of dollars in damages.

Private lawyers plan to use the ruling to bolster their contentions that Microsoft abused its software monopoly to illegally drive up prices of its Windows operating system. One person was injured i in a hit-and-run accident at 2nd and Carimona streets at 7:58 p.m. Jason Newman, 21, 264 W. Wabasha suffered injuries when a Chevy Blazer. turned in front of his vehicle.

The second vehicle left the scene. The Blazer later was located at 527 E. 3rd St. James Miller, 23, was cited for driving after revocation, failing to stop for an accident and no insurance. Richard Drake, 23, 670 E.

Sanborn was cited for driving while intoxicated. Drake initially was stopped for driving on the shoulder on Riverview Drive. WINONA Troy Pozanc, 33, Route 1, Winona, suffered injuries in a one-vehicle accident on County Road 20 between Silo and Bethany. The accident was reported by cell phone at 1:38 a.m. The caller reported the injured and bloody driver was walking from the scene.

When sheriff's deputies arrived, the driver was gone. Pozanc was located at his home at 4:30 a.m. Two juvenile girls were stopped while riding an ATV on County Road 23 near Stockton. The girls were not wearing helmets. The ATV was impounded.

monds was negative, and the rest of the auction was natural. When North showed only one king, South was satisfied with a small slam since appeared to be a club loser and there was no guarantee that North possessed the queen of trumps. West led the king of hearts, and it was obvious that only a 4-0 trump split put the contract at risk. In a pair event it would be right to cash a high trump after winning the ace of hearts, and that would inevitably lead to the contract's defeat on this lie of the cards. Try it.

If West has all the trumps, a dummy reversal is required to land 12 tricks. At trick two declarer must lead the eight of spades! West can do no better than rise with the queen and return a trump. Now declarer can use the high trumps in hand for ruffing hearts while dummy's 10 9 of trumps will pull the enemy's teeth. The trump return is taken on the table with the nine and a heart- is ruffed high. A trump to the nine permits another heart ruff with declarer's remaining spade honor.

Declarer now crosses to the king of clubs to draw the outstanding trump, discarding a club from hand, and five more tricks in the minors bring declarer's total to 12. Winona Daily News Positively, Part of Your Life! "The Winona Daily News is people who care for customers, care for each other, and who are passionate about quality and success." (USPS 686-860) Published daily and Sunday by the World Wide Web Winona Daily News, a division Lee www.winonadailynews.com Enterprises, from 601 Franklin e-mail: Winona, MN 55987, where periodicals are paid. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Telephone numbers Single copy: 50 cents daily, $1.25 Sunday 507-453-3500 Toll free 800-328-2182 Home Week 13 26 52 Classified advertising delivery $3.10 $40.30 $77.50 $155.00 Mail $3.30 $42.90 $82.50 $165.00 Newsroom Postmaster: Retail Send address changes to: InfoPoint. Advertiser. Winona Daily News P.O.

Box 5147 Winona, MN 55987-0147.

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