Vindicator file photo / July 1985 | Turning out for the Western Reserve Boys Scout Council pro-am golf tournament at Trumbull Country Club 35 years ago on July 22 were, seated, Nancy Williams, WRC executive, and Vince Toro, WRC vice-chairman; standing, from left, Ned Gold, chairman of the tournament, March Posner, executive director of the WRC  and Bob Woodfin, Trumbull Country Club pro. 
 
July 22
 
1995: Hundreds of men gather at Highway Tabernacle Church for the Promise Keepers Youngstown Rally.
 
Bazetta Township Police Chief Robert Jacola says the department will begin daytime bicycle patrols through some neighborhoods, including the Ivy Hill and Timbercreek developments.
 
Michael Andretti wins the Cleveland Grand Prix at Burke Lakefront Airport. 
 
Phar-Mor Inc.'s senior secured creditors are balking at the company's proposed bankruptcy plan. The unsecured creditors accepted the plan, which would allow Phar-Mor to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. 
 
 1980: The Youngstown Board of Education votes 4-3 against establishing a consumer education program in city schools that was advocated by Anthony Julian, a board member and director of the Youngstown office of consumer protection.
 
Stifling humidity and heat fuel a series of severe thunderstorms that swell waterways, down trees and result in the loss of power to 4,000 Ohio Edison customers. 
 
Divers and volunteer firemen are searching for the body of Danny Pinter, 13, of Lowellville, who was pulled into the fast-running water of Pine Hollow Creek and disappeared into a large storm sewer feeding into the Mahoning River. 
 
 1970: A proposed mall-like "superblock" development for Central Square and the Central Business District Urban Renewal area calls for all-weather treatment of a six-block area between Phelps and Walnut streets and Commerce and Boardman streets.
 
Atty. Paul L. Booth, 75, founder of McGuffey Center, dies of a heart attack.  
 
A three-year-old girl whose condition worsened while being treated for suspected polio at St. Elizabeth Hospital, is saved through the efforts of Drs. Robert Gilliland and Kurt Wegner, whose persistence resulted in the discovery of a paralyzing tick  bite hidden by her hair. She began to improve rapidly after the tick was discovered and removed. 
 
 1945: The state Legislature is providing funds to buy 7,800 acres of the Beaver Creek Valley in Columbiana County to establish Ohio's newest state park. 
 
Streamlining Central Square is the number one post-war priority on a 10-point traffic plan put together by the Chamber of Commerce.
 
Youngstowners who wonder what the waste paper they've been collecting for the war effort has been used for can see an example at the Stambaugh-Thompson Co.  An auxiliary gas tank made of wastepaper is on display. The tanks give Mustang and Thunderbolt warplanes extra miles of range before they are emptied and jettisoned.