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Show OP COAOETHESREBRE! FHKE RODS GheSaltLakeTribune A tomado tore through TRAX trains,left,finally downtown Salt Lake City, from the Delta Thomas K. Welch, below, and Sait Lake's tolled through the Sait LakeValley,after a drumbeat of complaints of traffic snarls and crippled businesses. Salt Lake Police in riot gear silenced the “drum cir- Olympic bid committee tore atthe state’s reputation — as a scandal involving corruption, bribery and greed rattled the Olympic movement. fow,after a drug bust tumed into full-blown clearing of the park that raised questionsof potice brutality. Center through Capitol Hill, at left, and to the Avenues. Meanwhile, the alleged actions of cle” in Liberty Park, be- Paul Fraughton / The Salt Lake Tribune Looking backata fateful 1999, through a 500-year-old crystal ball Steven C. Wilson / The Associated Prees BY SEAN P. MEANS E ‘THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Could anyonehave predicted that 1999 would have broughta tornado through downtown Salt LakeSe an pee which was not invented until the mid18th century, and was used in Mormon enclaves of the Old West. Butevenafter discovering that histor- ical paradox, the scholars labored to find the key word that would unlock the scroll’s code, They eventually stumbled on that word: “fetch.” ‘The text that poured forth from the scroll revealed manystartling predictions by the scribe, known by the nom de Earth and canoes to fly in the air.” The skies above downtown Salt Lake City turned dark on Aug.11, as a tornado ripped through downtown. Damage was worstat the OutdoorRetailers Summer Market. The twister tore up the massive tents north ofthe Salt Palace where sellers were to display their outdoor gear. Allan Crandy,a 38-year-old exhibitors’ contractor from Las Vegas, was killed when thetent he was in collapsed. The cut a.path from the west ‘Ryan Galbraith / The Salt Lake Tribune those storefronts were boarded upbefore the tornado.) , “The House ofthe Five Circles shall be Furtherprobes discover — surprise, sur- fe that similar efforts to tasersapd have pe vara apart in Atlanta, Nagano and side of downtown through the Avenues. sented here are the wonders that the scroll unrolled. It demolished the Sun nightclub, blew windowsoutofthe Delta Center and the Wyndham Hotel, plucked up hundreds of “A mighty wind shali strike a City by a Lake ofSalt, causing trees to ripfrom the trees in Memory Grove, wrecked houses in the Avenues,and left boarded-up storefronts down Main Street. (Oops, rescue, though hisfate is still clouded.” It seemed like such a small thing: a letter leaked to KTVX reporter Chris Vanocur in November1998, a letter from the Salt Lake Olympic Committee's files that suggested the Salt Lake bid committee paid tuition for the daughter of an IOC memberfrom Cameroon. More revelations followed. An IOC member from the Congo received free health care from IOC.Other IOC officials, including President-for-Life Juan Antonio Samaranch, received $10,000 guns.A senior I Denny La / The Belt Lake Tribune Mayor Corradini announced would not run for a third term. The IOC oe erRQprT eT T Ter See eed Eee The Politics of Punchboards, Andthe Publisher’s Perogative wheat: the Justice gress, seaman tr EG. the Michael J. Miller / TheGaltLake Tribune IOC and the U.S. Olympic Committee. SIONS_ OF 4 ATV aL The Scene oe ited the playingprice to no more than 10 ooesteethird or Rurth teks oat The tate Laurance W. Cracroft penned the manuscript for @ bookon his fie in Utah, a humorous took atits idiosyncrasies, its joys and its tribulations. We are presenting weekly serialized excerpts from it. “Hell, ‘Cracraft,” polnted out the tndig- itoseaeNd beuniiemead @ f won the Games, will continue into the new mil “An iron horse shall racefrom the |