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The Sentinel from Carlisle, Pennsylvania • 5

Publication:
The Sentineli
Location:
Carlisle, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Friday, June 9, 1995, The Sentinel, Carlisle, Pa. A5 Grisly picutres upset juror, family Tornadoes rip through city in Texas Panhandle Mm iT fe-. --W, WW. PAMPA, Texas (AP) Several tornadoes slammed into this Panhandle city Thursday, collapsing a warehouse, overturning a tractor-trailer and causing several injuries. Authorities said the twisters damaged a 15-block area on the south side of Pampa and knocked out electricity and telephone service in the city of about 20,000 some 65 miles northeast of Amarillo.

A one-story industrial building collapsed on top of six cars parked inside and an 18-wheeler was overturned, said Bill O'Brien, an admin istrator at Coronado Hospital who was in contact with the city's emergency operations center. At least five people were treated for injuries at the hospital, including a 54-year-old woman who was admitted to the intensive care unit for a heart problem after her oxygen machine failed because of the power outage. "There is a dress shop completely wiped out. A laundromat is completely gone. There's trees shredded all over the place," said Christy Scroggins of Pampa.

from Lakshmanan descriptions of two parallel, superficial cuts on Goldman's neck. "These look to be some threatening cuts," he said. "This is something you threaten somebody with. You threaten you're going to do bodily harm to them." He said Goldman was immobilized early, and he demonstrated on Kelberg how a killer could have grabbed the victim from behind and sliced a knife lightly across his throat. Shannon Murrah, left, and Heather Duff look at the remains of Murrah's house in Pampa, Texas, Thursday after a tornado destroyed nn niTrinn i TTMl A A GREA yyt Surprise DAD with a (grilsle Sggg 24WJ770 I light Center Person $20.00 Up to 3 People $40.00 Gift Certificates and Rrglht Instruction Available mil JF I GT-2000 II FATHER'S DAYi 4 MSTS.

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(am SALE PRICE $1 4999 Regular Price 179" LOS ANGELES (AP) Autopsy photos showing the fatal slash across Ronald Goldman's throat rested on an easel in the OJ. Simpson courtroom, just a few feet away 1 from a juror in the front row. A few feet beyond the easel, Goldman's father, sister and stepmother quietly cried in the first row of the audience. They dabbed their eyes with tissues and sipped water from little paper cups. At one point the father's chest heaved.

The gore and emotion were too much for the juror near the photos. Just 10 minutes after a break Thursday, the 37-year-old woman motioned to a bailiff, got up and rushed out of the courtroom. As she left, she braced herself on the backs of chairs and dabbed her nose with a tissue. For five tense minutes, she remained in the jury room while the courtroom was paralyzed. The judge, remaining jurors, attorneys and audience members sat nearly motionless as a national television audience waited.

When the juror returned, tissue to her nose, quivering in her seat, Judge Lance Ito called a halt to the session 90 minutes early. He told everyone it had been a long day and reminded them that court would only be in session for a half-day today. It was one of the most wrenching moments in a trial hardly starved for emotion and drama. Defense attorneys were especially concerned; they didn't want the autopsy photos shown in the first place for fear jurors would become emotional, possibly to the point of unclear ithinking. After court, attorneys and Ito Iwho had ruled that the photos, ithough ghastly, were legally relevant met to decide how to handle the remainder of the testimony by Dr.

Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran, the county coroner. Defense attorney Robert Shapiro said the judge would move the easel holding the photo board back so it is not in jurors' faces. There also was talk of cutting back the court hours, which recently were extended at the request of the sequestered jurors to speed the trial. 7 "It's been a very difficult day for everyone, a very difficult week for everyone," Shapiro said. "The judge is very concerned for the jury and for the victims families who are in Jhe courtroom as well as everyone else in these proceedings." The juror was overcome in the midst of the prosecution's effort to reconstruct the manner in which Goldman was murdered June 12 alongside Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson.

Prosecutor Brian Kelberg suggested that in the confrontation outside Ms. Simpson's condominium, the assailant taunted Goldman with a knife before making the deadly slashes and stabs. Kelberg elicited 100-year-old loves to find mistakes KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Audrey Stubbart's 100th birthday is no reason for her to miss work today. She's having her party and a potluck dinner tonight, after putting in an eight-hour day as a copy editor for The Examiner newspaper in Independence.

Her full-time job, she says, is what keeps her going. "Work makes me feel like I'm contributing. It gives me self-worth and If you don't have self-worth you 0on't have anything," Mrs. Stubbart Said Thursday during a break from checking stories for errors. I "I want to be among people who have something to think about, tltfe Service rJhai lJe Sell! Buy one Dress Shirt at regular price and get the second one of equal or lesser value for half price Buy one Neckwear at regular price and get the second one of equal or lesser value for half price Buy one Sport Shirt at regular price and get the second one of equal or lesser value for half price M7 Mower Services 321 Run Road, off 641, off Old Mill Road, Carlisle, PA 249-7833 cTVlichael's Haberdashery Martha's Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday 8 am-8 pm Wednesday, Friday, Saturday 8 am-4 pm i 120 North Hanover Street Carlisle 249-7661 Li This Father's Day: What He Really Wants Urpp(0 Suits and PL VQ Sportcoatsj 4 AMMUNITION By: Fiocchi.

Federal, Black Hills, Remington, American Eagle, Winchester, Eldorado, Cor-bon CCI All 12 Ca. Fiocchi Target Ammo $45Caseof 10 Boxes Para. Fiocchi 50 Para Sellier Bellot of 25 .45 ACP Fiocchi $13.80 Box of 50 RIFLES (Cash Sale) Browning A-Bolt II Hunter BOSS $560 .22 L.R. Browning BL-22 Lever-Action Rifle $291, .22 Hornet NO-1-B Single Shot Rifle $504. .243 Win.

Ruger K77RP Stainless Composite Rifle $403. SHOTGUNS 12 Ga. Beretta 682 Gold OU Shotgun $2,261. 12 Ga. Beretta 686 Essential OU Shotgun 12 Ga.

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LEUPOLD SCOPES Varl-XIII 4.5x14 AO Matt $417.80 Vari-XIII 3.5 10-50 MM $496.69 Vari-XIII 3.5 10 $373.42 Vari-XII 3x9 $237.04 Vari-XII 3x9 Silver HANDGUNS .22 L.R. Colt Cadet semi-auto pistol $194 $250.03 Vari-XII 4 12 AO Matte $334.46 CLOTHING Browning VSTs .22 L.R. Browning Buck Mark semi auto pistol $205. .22 L.R. Ruger 2245 semi-auto pistol $235.

.22 L.R. Beretta 21 A semi-auto pistol $195. .38 Spec. Lady Smith Wesson Model 60 Revolver $345. .38 Spec.

Smith Wesson Airweight Model 442 $330. Browning Gun Safe 11 Gun Model S6221 Retail $1150 CASH SALE $662 26 Gun Fire Safe Model M632F Retail $2275 CASH SALE $1320 Filson pants Mossy Oak sutfflS iox r'srs something to do, some plans," she Said. "I don't want to be one who has Jo be taken care of, or needs government care." I Mrs. Stubbart joined the newspaper after the publishing company she was working for made her retire at 65. I "That is the worst economical thing ever done to working people in the United States," she said.

"I've bad 35 good, productive years of labor since then." I Mrs. Stubbart, whose husband 5ied nearly 30 years ago, says she has always been in good health, and even delivered her five children at borne. She doesn't have a doctor or Jake any medicines. She plans to keep working as long as her health is good. "My boss said he wished everyone had my work ethic," she said.

"I just love work, and I LOVE to find mistakes." Before coming to Independence in 1944, Mrs. Stubbart was a schoolteacher in Wyoming. She developed a Jove of the written word because reading was the only entertainment (here. She tries to pass that love on to Jounger colleagues at The Examiner. "When they make consistent mistakes, I like to point it out to them.

I think they appreciate it," she said. 'r C'mon now. Not another one. This Father's Day, give your Dad the gift that's always in style, and that he'll love forever. Gve him fine jewelry.

art 2 Beistle Plaza Shippensburg, PA 17257 717-532-2070 Just Off 1-81 Exit to OUTFITTERS TO FINE SPORTSMEN SPORTSWOMEN Hours: Mtin.Tuea.Wcd 9-6 Thur. Fri 9-8 Snr 9-6.

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Pages Available:
947,895
Years Available:
1881-2024