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To: porcupine --''''> who wrote (1434)3/8/1999 6:29:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Respond to of 1722
 
Yankee Baseball Great Joe DiMaggio Dies At 84

By Patricia Zengerle

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (Reuters) - New York Yankees
great Joe DiMaggio died Monday at 84,
sending baseball fans and Americans who had
never watched a game into mourning for one
of the century's icons.

''I have no doubt that when future generations look back at the
best of America in the 20th century, they will think of the
'Yankee Clipper' and all that he achieved. Hillary and I extend
our thoughts and prayers to his family,'' President Clinton said
in a statement.

''For several generations of fans, Joe was the personification of
grace, class and dignity on the baseball diamond,'' Major League
Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig said.

''In many respects, as an immigrant's son, he represented the
hopes and ideals of our great country,'' he said, referring to
DiMaggio's Italian-American heritage.

DiMaggio was renowned as a great center fielder who led the
Yankees to 10 World Series during his 13-year career, winning
nine. His 56-game hitting streak in 1941, one of the most revered
records in all of sport, has never been equaled or approached by
another player.

He also was known for his brief marriage to movie star Marilyn
Monroe in 1954. Though the marriage collapsed after just nine
months, friends said DiMaggio considered her the love of his
life. He arranged to have roses placed on her grave three times a
week for 20 years after her death in 1962.

Morris Engelberg, DiMaggio's attorney and close friend, said that
DiMaggio had died at home shortly after midnight amid friends and
family members including his brother Dominick, who also played
professional baseball, and grandchildren.

DiMaggio had been recuperating after lung cancer surgery at
Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood, Florida, last October.
Though the immediate cause of his death was not released, he had
battled several infections during the three months he was
hospitalized following his operation.

DiMaggio last appeared in public in late September at Yankee
Stadium, when the team celebrated ''Joe DiMaggio Day'' by
presenting him with replicas of eight World Series rings that had
been stolen from him in 1960.

New York Yankees principal owner George Steinbrenner said Monday
that he was ''deeply saddened'' by DiMaggio's death.

''Like his many fans across America, and indeed, around the
world, the Yankees are deeply saddened by the passing of Joe
DiMaggio, one of our own and one of the greatest of all time,''
Steinbrenner said in a statement. ''It was the class and dignity
with which he led his life that made him part of all of us.''

DiMaggio also was remembered for his charitable work. Between
1992 and up until his death, he raised some $5 million for the
Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital at Memorial Regional Hospital in
the city where he lived.

And he would thrill the young patients, their parents and
grandparents by visiting their bedsides once a month or more
often. Like much in DiMaggio's life, the ex-slugger chose to keep
that aspect of his life from the press.

''It was tremendous to see him work. He never wanted to have the
press follow him during those visits. He never wanted us to have
pictures or video. He said, 'I just want to come out and I want
to see the kids and I want to see the parents,'' Frank Sacco, the
hospital's chief executive officer and a friend of DiMaggio's,
said.

Sacco said the baseball great was able to walk at his home in the
weeks before his death, and had been in good spirits during a
recent visit.

At Mickey Mantle's, a Manhattan bar and restaurant frequented by
athletes and fans and named after another great Yankee
centerfielder, long-time Yankee fan James Murray, said, ''Joe
represented a lot of what was good and decent about the sport.
You don't see that today. He was a craftsman. It really is too
bad. You don't see those ethics anymore. Without Joe DiMaggio
perhaps they are dead forever.''

Nicknamed ''Joltin' Joe'' and ''the Yankee Clipper,'' the
three-time American League Most Valuable Player was a lifetime
.325 hitter. He was voted into the Major League Baseball Hall of
Fame in 1955.

He played in 10 World Series, posted 2,214 hits, 361 home runs
and 1,537 RBI (runs batted in) in 6,821 at-bats during a
13-season career interrupted by a three-year stint in the army
during the Second World War.

DiMaggio retired from baseball in 1951. His name was celebrated
in literature and song.

In 1952, the Cuban fisherman in Ernest Hemingway's novel, ''The
Old Man and the Sea,'' said: ''I would like to take the great
DiMaggio fishing.''

And Simon and Garfunkel used his name as a symbol of a more
heroic era in their 1960s song ''Mrs. Robinson.''

''Where have you gone Joe DiMaggio/A nation turns its lonely eyes
to you,'' they sang. ''What's that you say, Mrs. Robinson/
Joltin' Joe has left and gone away.''

dailynews.yahoo.com



To: porcupine --''''> who wrote (1434)3/8/1999 7:26:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1722
 
Home Prices Up 3.3 Percent At End Of '98

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The price of U.S. homes rose at an
annualized rate of 3.3 percent in the last three months of 1998,
the slowest rate of the year, but were expected to remain strong
in 1999, Freddie Mac (NYSE:FRE - news) said Monday.

''Fourth quarter changes in home values were smaller than in the
past three quarters, reflecting the seasonal slowing of the
market,'' Freddie Mac economist Amy Crew Cutts said in a
statement.

''Home price appreciation is expected to continue to be higher
than inflation overall, between 3 percent to 4.5 percent for the
year.''

All regions in the country experienced a rise in annualized
average home values, led by the Pacific, which was up 5.7
percent. Home prices in the East South Central states were next,
with a 3.9 percent rise.

New England and the South Atlantic region tied for third with a
3.5 percent rise while home values in the Mid Atlantic states
rose 3.3 percent. The house price index in the West North Central
states rose 3.2 percent, compared with a 3.0 percent gain in the
West South Central region.

The Mountain region had a 2.7 percent growth rate while the East
North Central states brought up the rear with a 1.5 percent
growth rate.

Freddie Mac is a corporation chartered by Congress that buys
mortgages from lenders and packages them into securities for
investors.