—GOOD MORNING
Tuesday, July 14, 2020 | gainesvilletimes.com
LOTTERY I Drawings for Monday, July 13, 2020
CASH 3
Midday: 8-6-2
Evening: 6-4-6
CASH 4
Midday: 9-7-5-9
Evening: 6-4-8-0
GEORGIA FIVE
Midday: 3-8-6-9-4
Evening: 8-9-0-5-9
Previous days’ drawings
FANTASY FIVE (7/12)
7-8-23-33-42
POWERBALL (7/11)
14-19-61 -62-64 Power Ball: 4
Current jackpot: $87M
MEGA MILLIONS (7/10)
10-15-20-49-53 Mega Ball: 22
Current jackpot: $91M
Lottery numbers are unofficial. The Georgia Lottery Corp.: 404-215-5000.
DowntownGainesville.com
lib
social distance social
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Main
Join us in Historic Downtown Gainesville on Saturday, July 18,
11 a.m. -10 p.m. Two sides of the square will be closed for
s l
rcGt ...
jainesville
pedestrian friendly shopping and sidewalk sales, and expanded
outdoor seating for dining and park picnics.
CELEBRIS REPORT
Body found in search of
lake for ‘Glee’ star Rivera
A body was found Monday at a Southern
California lake during the search for “Glee”
star Naya Rivera, authorities said.
The body was discovered five days after
the 33-year-old Rivera dis
appeared on Lake Piru,
where her son was found
July 8 alone a few hours
later on a boat the two had
rented, the Ventura County
Sheriffs Office said.
Authorities would not
immediately say if the per
son found was Rivera, but Rivera
said the day after she dis
appeared that they believed she drowned in
the lake northwest of Los Angeles. A 2 p.m.
press conference was scheduled.
Search crews found the body floating in
the northeast area of the lake, authorities
said. The body would be flown 40 miles to
the coroner’s office in Ventura, Sheriffs
Capt. Eric Buschow said. Rivera’s family has
been notified of the discovery.
The lake an hour’s drive from Los Angeles
was searched by dozens of divers working in
waters with little visibility, with help from
sonar and robotic devices combing the bottom
and helicopters and drones searching above.
“I can’t imagine what it’s like for her par
ents, her family,” Buschow said. “It takes an
emotional toll on the search teams too.”
Rivera played singing cheerleader San
tana Lopez for six seasons on the Fox musi
cal-comedy “Glee.”
If she is declared dead, she will become
the third major cast member from the show
to die in their 30s.
Cory Monteith, one of the show’s leads,
died at 31 in 2013 from a toxic mix of alcohol
and heroin.
And co-star Mark Sailing, who Rivera
dated at one point, killed himself in 2018 at
age 35 after pleading guilty to child pornog
raphy charges.
Rivera had experience boating on the lake
in Los Padres National Forest, authorities said.
Surveillance video shows Rivera and her
son, Josey Hollis Dorsey, leaving on the
rented boat.
When the boat failed to return, its vendor
found the vessel drifting in the northern end
of the lake late Wednesday afternoon with
the boy asleep on board. He told investigators
that he and his mother had been swimming
and he got back into the boat but she didn’t,
according to a sheriff’s office statement.
The boy was wearing a life vest, and
another life jacket was found in the boat
along with Rivera’s purse and identification.
Rivera is believed to have drowned “in
what appears to be a tragic accident,” the
statement said.
The boy, Rivera’s son from her marriage
to actor Ryan Dorsey, was safe and healthy
and with family members, authorities said.
The couple finalized their divorce in June
2018 after nearly four years of marriage.
The most recent tweet on Rivera’s
account, from July 7, read “just the two of
us” along with a photo of her and her son.
Preston, actor and wife of actor
Travolta, dies at 57
Kelly Preston, who played dramatic
and comic foil to actors ranging from Tom
Cruise in “Jerry Maguire” to Arnold Schwar
zenegger in “Twins,” died Sunday, husband
John Travolta said. She was 57.
Travolta said in an Instagram post that his
wife of 28 years died after a two-year battle
with breast cancer.
“It is with a very heavy heart that I inform
you that my beautiful wife Kelly has lost her
two-year battle with breast cancer,” Tra
volta said. “She fought a courageous fight
with the love and support of so many. ”
The couple had three children together.
Associated Press
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©2020, Vol. 73, No. 95
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
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Coming to terms with the
abrupt end of sons marriage
Dear Carolyn:
My son got married in October to his long
time girlfriend. The wedding was fabulous,
but more important, my son and his wife
appeared to be blissfully in love.
He called yesterday to say it was over —
she had been unhappy since the
wedding and finally moved back
home to her parents. He said that
she felt she had lost her identity,
that her career was secondary
to his and that they only were
friends with his friends.
What’s odd about this is that
he lives 2,000 miles from where
he grew up — but they live in the
only city she has ever lived in.
Her family, friends, high school,
college and career are all still right there.
It makes me think that there is something
more serious going on.
I was so blindsided by the news, and I’m
so terribly sad. Before anyone says this isn’t
about me, I totally get that, but I’m grieving
nevertheless. I’d sure love advice on how
I can move on from this, while supporting
my son.
— Sad Former Mother-in-Law
Of course you’re grieving. It’s a sad time
for all of you, and you don’t need to justify
caring or apologize for it.
I don’t think this needs to be about “some
thing more serious going on,” though. No
doubt you’re right that her explanation and
the facts don’t line up perfectly well. How
ever, it also seems possible that she just held
all this stuff in and told herself different
things to make it OK and it all never really
felt right — which was to be expected, if she
wasn’t being honest with herself — and now
it’s all just tumbling out in a pile of messy
feelings and logical inconsistencies.
Here’s a common version of what I’m
trying to describe: She kept telling herself
that she and your son were right
for each other because they were
together so long... and kept tuning
out the little voice telling her oth
erwise, because hitting the brakes
was so painful to think about. And
once the wedding plans were
underway, ugh, so painful and
now public to stop the runaway
train. But finally it was too hard to
deny that she wasn’t happy.
That feeling is no less than a
sense of not being oneself anymore. Even
if some of the specifics are provably false,
I bet that general part of her explanation is
dead-on accurate.
Anyway. I’m throwing this all out there
in case it helps you make sense of it, but the
basics are the same regardless: She had
second thoughts, she acted on them, your
son is first among you in facing a drastic and
painful change. Just be kind to everyone,
yourself included, as you all adapt to that
change.
If her heart genuinely is no longer in
this marriage, then your son will be better
for her decision to get out. In time he will
recover, and so will you, and a life that fits
him better will be there for him when he’s
ready.
Chat with Carolyn online at noon each
Friday at www.washingtonpost.com.
CAROLYN HAX
tellme@washpost.com
TODAY IN HISTORY
On this date:
In 1789, in an event symbolizing the start of the French Revolu
tion, citizens of Paris stormed the Bastille prison and released
the seven prisoners inside.
In 1798, Congress passed the Sedition Act, making it a federal
crime to publish false, scandalous or malicious writing about
the United States government.
In 1865, the Matterhorn, straddling Italy and Switzerland, was
summited as a seven-member rope party led by British climber
Edward Whymper reached the peak. (Four members of the
party fell to their deaths during their descent; Whymper and
two guides survived.)
In 1914, scientist Robert H. Goddard received a U.S. patent for
a liquid-fueled rocket apparatus.
In 1921, Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco (SAH’-koh) and
Bartolomeo Vanzetti were convicted in Dedham, Massachu
setts, of murdering a shoe company paymaster and his guard.
(Sacco and Vanzetti were executed six years later.)
In 1933, all German political parties, except the Nazi Party, were
outlawed.
In 1960, British researcher Jane Goodall arrived at the Gombe
Stream Reserve in the Tanganyika Territory (in present-day Tan
zania) to begin her famous study of chimpanzees in the wild.
In 2004, the Senate scuttled a constitutional amendment banning
gay marriage. (Forty-eight senators voted to advance the mea
sure — 12 short of the 60 needed — and 50 voted to block it).
In 2009, disgraced financier Bernard Madoff arrived at the But-
ner Federal Correctional Complex in North Carolina to begin
serving a 150-year sentence for his massive Ponzi scheme.
In 2013, thousands of demonstrators across the country pro
tested a Florida jury’s decision the day before to clear George
Zimmerman in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.
In 2014, the Church of England voted overwhelmingly in favor
of allowing women to become bishops.
BIRTHDAYS
Actress Nancy Olson is 92.
Former football player
and actor Rosey Grier is
88. Actor Vincent Pastore
is 74. Music company
executive Tommy Mot-
tola is 72. Rock musician
Chris Cross (Ultravox) is
68. Actor Jerry Houser
is 68. Actor-director Eric
Laneuville is 68. Actor
Stan Shaw is 68. Movie
producer Scott Rudin is 62.
Singer-guitarist Kyle Gass
is 60. Country musician
Ray Herndon (McBride and
the Ride) is 60. Actress
Jane Lynch is 60. Actor
Jackie Earle Haley is 59.
Actor Matthew Fox is 54.
Rock musician Ellen Reid
(Crash Test Dummies) is
54. Rock singer-musician
Tanya Donelly is 54. For
mer child actress Missy
Gold is 50. Olympic gold
medal snowboarder Ross
Rebagliati is 49. Rhythm-
and-blues singerTameka
Cottle (Xscape) is 45.
Country singer Jamey
Johnson is 45. Hip-hop
musician “taboo” (Black
Eyed Peas) is 45. Actor
Scott Porter is 41. Actress
Phoebe Waller-Bridge is
35. Rock singer Dan Smith
(Bastille) is 34. Actress
Sara Canning is 33. Rock
singer Dan Reynolds
(Imagine Dragons) is 33.
TODAY IN HISTORY PHOTO
CARLOS OSORIO I Associated Press
Guitarist Eddie Van Halen, left, makes a guest appearance during Michael Jackson’s
Victory Tour concert in Irving, Texas, on Friday night, July 14,1984. Van Halen, who is in
town for his own concert Saturday night, joins in during Jackson’s hit “Beat It.”
| The calendar of events will return at a later date,
HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY
ARIES (March 21-April 19).
Cue the orchestra. Here come
the sentimental chords and
a story to match. Your buy-in
will depend on how much else
is going on in your realm.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You’re not trying to be mys
terious, and yet, if someone
wants to reach you, that
person is going to have to try
a little harder now because
you’re working something out
in the world of your mind.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21).
What baffles those around
you is cake to you. You can
unravel it, no problem. You’ll
use what you know and at
tend to the issue, stopping a
problem from growing worse.
CANCER (June 22-July 22).
There are rogue elements
at play. You’re not afraid of
them, and you’re not en
thused by them either. They
are a sure indicator of an
unpredictable and unforget
tabletime.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Your
mind loves a habit, the com
fort of a pattern. Good or
bad hardly matters; it’s more
about the rhythm. In this new
situation that’s unfolding, the
rhythm is still being estab
lished.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
How much control do you
really need? This is the ques
tion. You would like more than
you have, and yet, maybe you
also need less than you have.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23).
The theme today is wealth
sharing, though the wealth in
question isn’t money. What
ever you think the most valu
able thing you could share is,
you’ll be passing that around.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
It is possible to catch the
deluge in a cup so long as the
cup is made of good material
and the deluge is contained
and can be controlled. Many
a mountain were carved with
a slow drip.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Friends and loved ones
may be all around, but if their
offers fall short, it’s only be
cause you know how excel
lent your own company can
be. Sometimes it’s about you
spending time with you in a
way that makes you happy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). A stamp of approval can
count in times when you’re
not so sure about the next
good move. You’re worthy
without the validation, but
something about it still helps.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
Are you feeling uncharacter
istically shy? It might help to
know. No one is expecting
you to have answers. You’re
so lovable, and just being
available is enough.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20).
Amusement is one of those
human needs that would
seem easy enough to meet,
and yet, with every exposure
to a thing, it becomes less
amusing. This is the secret to
your appeal. You keep chang
ing it up.