Show 2A Saturday October FROM PAGE ONE 1994 1 Standard-Examin- Simpson questions: From football to race Developments how jurors will handle the vast amount of scientific evidence expected in the case with quev lions on their views of DNA analysis and blood 12 The answers will help Superior Court Judge Lance I to and lawyers choose 12 jurors and eight alternates and will help Ito decide whether to order the jury sequestered for the entire trial which could last six months Some of the questions explore people's views on the former football star who appeared in commercials and movies and worked as a sportscaster Several other questions asked about race NiSimpson 47 is black the victims cole Brown Simpson 35 and her friend Ronald Goldman 25 were white “How do you feel about interracial marriage?" asked one question “Have you ever dated a person of a different race?" asked another tests and their grasp of “mathematical concepts" And some questions flatly try to weed out people whose minds arc already made up: “Do you think OJ Simpson’s celebrity status may 80-pa- make it very difficult for you to find him guilty or not guilty regardless of what the evidence shows?" The questionnaires were filled out this week of jury ex-wi- fe by 304 people who passed the first phase selection which began Monday Lawyers are reviewing the completed forms to prepare for the first round of questioning of prospective jurors set to begin Oct 800-numb- er I e -r I House wary of voting first on GATT accord Madam t From 1A bow tie The picture turned up in Utah WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate will return after Thanksgiving to vote on a global trade accord Senate Majority Leader Historical Society files It is a copy of a 1908 newspaper photo and is the only known picture of her The lack of photo coverage belies her stature in the community back then when prostitution was illegal George Mitchell said Friday leaving uneasy House members to vote first and the Ginton administration to sweat through two months of uncertainty After consulting with Republi- but officially sanctioned Those who ran it were anything but de- mure London had the one of Ogden's biggest horse-draw- n carriages She had a house on the city's north end that by some accounts doubled as a rhcdical clinic for prostitutes She also had the Marion Hotel at 25th Street and Grant Avenue The hotel had rows of “cribs" out back which were brick rooms each of which had its own door to the alley where prostitutes worked It was on a childhood visit to London's house that Swancr 94 saw her He said it was just before Christmas in about 1907 He and his fa- with presents that London had en him the Senate would recess in October for the election return on the Nov 30 and vote Dec pact reached under the General 1 Agreement on Tariffs and Trade That denies President Ginton a victory on what his spokeswoman Dee Dee Myers had identified as his top legislative priority as the congressional session nears an end It also puts House Democrats in the position of choosing between helping Ginton win a vote the administration says is critical to the president’s world prestige or anger pre-electi- giv- Photo courtesy of Chx Swaner Prostitution was part of 25th Street’s business activities around the turn of the century The about three oifour boxes of stuff she had for u5 candy and fruit and stuff and that’s when I saw Belle London Sie was standing in the door and washing my dad a Merry Christmas and I never forgot that particular night" Swancr said London also ran the London Ice Cream Parlor on 25th Street Becky Reis now runs The Daily Grind coffee shop in the same building She is glad she finally can get a photograph of the historic building’s former owner “1 don’t know about the London Ice Cream Parlor business because I don't know that they ever sold ice cream" said Reis 7 Apparently upstairs They had ihp cribs and downstairs they had' a variety of businesses" from hardware to restaurants “But the upstairs was a hotbed of activity” she said “In fact that door upstairs that goes down to the figured that was a quick esalley or perhaps a back door for cape" prominent citizens who didn’t want to" be” seen using the front door Mitchell cans ther were making grocery deliveries When his father came back outside he was loaded down My dad packed out Developments Friday in the 0 J Simpson case: Jury selection: The judge releases a copy of the blank questionnaire given form asked 294 questions that touched on to prospective jurors The to football on violence mews domestic from everything Public prosecutor Deputy District Attorney Marcia Clark told reporters the case had affected her private kfe 1 can t go to the store I can t take my kids out in public I don t have a We’ She added: 1 suppose it s to be expected because- of the nature of the case I wish it hadn't been like this I wish people didn know me or recognize me anywhere Closed meeting: Attorneys from both sides met with the judge in private to set the ground rules for oral questioning of prospective jurors to begin Oct 12 2 Fuhrman--wrotAttorney probe: Robert Tourtelot an attorney for Detective Mark Bar investiState for a Ito him to Lance Court push asking Superior Judge gation of defense attorneys Robert Shapiro and Johnnie Cochran Jr Tourtelot said in the Thursday letter that the two attorneys repeatedly and erroneously implied that Fuhrman is both a racist and rogue police officer Lkno sale: The limousine that took Simpson to the Los Angeles International murder is going on the auction block The mini- Airport the night of his mum bid for the stretch 1988 Lincoln Town Car with 160000 miles is $20000 80-pa- LOS ANGELES (AP) — )o you own any special knives? Did you ever want to beat up a loved one? Can you handle math? The answers are being used to help decide who makes it — and who doesn’t — on the jury in the OJ Simpson case The questions are among 294 asked of proform released Frispective jurors in an day by the court Would-b- e jurors were grilled on a wide range of issues from their views on race domestic violence and Simpson’s media image to their exposure to pretrial publicity in the case the nature of any cutlery they might own and whether they ever called Simpson’s hot line The questionnaire also seeks to determine and a neat conservative er photo shows the corner of Washington Boule vard and 25th Street in 1896 the upstairs was a hotbed of activity In fact that door upstairs that goes down to the alley I figured that was a quick escape’ ‘But — Becky Reis of The Daily Grind Not that they need have worried much except for appearances Lonconnections in don had rock-soli- d the community Her patrons might get in trouble with thijir wives but jicver the police" Irene Woodhouse who has been studying Ogden’s history for decades said London once was arrested in Salt Lake City for soliciting and hiring a girl The Ogden police chief was called to testify in her trial Woodhouse said the Weber Citizen newspaper ran transcripts of 1 the trial and “the argument of the people of Ogden was thabBelle had always been good to thenj thaVshe had always cooperated with the po1 She was found guilty and Sentenced to 14 years anyway Wood-hous- e said But “two weeks later she was back in Ogden voting in the election" John S McCormick a Utah State Historical Society historian dug out London’s photograph while researching a 1982 article on the building of the Stockade which was a whole Salt Lake City block set aside for prostitution In an Utah Historical Quarterly Review article he said prostitution was definitely tolerated in Salt Lake City McCormick said prostitution was centered around the business district until 1908 when city officials decided to build a stockade in the area between First and Second South and Fifth and Sixth West London was invited by the city council to set it all up McCormick said she agreed forming: a corporation called the i Citizens Investment Company The Stockade Literally a walled-i- n area had rows of brick and frame buildings that prostitutes rented from London for $1 to $4 a ing union supporters already upset about last year’s approval of the North American Free Trade Agreement the AFL-CIOn Thursday wrote to House members warning that GATT would “cause enormous disruption and job loss in the US textile and apparel industry" “We do not believe Congress needs to legislate this issue in haste" the letter said Meanwhile proponents and of the world trade agreement found something new to argue about Friday: A decision by it hearing panel convened by GATT' on whether US laws goveming'au-t- o fuel economy and auto luxury taxes violated current world trade rules US Trade Representative Mickey Kantor said the panel upheld the key portions of three US laws — the gas guzzler tax the auto mileage standards and a tax on cars costing more than $30000 a year O Haiti From 1A fighting crowd cheered The with relief which almost immediately turned to stunned disappointment when the convoy disappeared down a side street de US' troops did detain and disarm five attaches in front of a taunting crowd of Aristide supporters Another attache was bludgeoned to death with a cinder block and a rusty shock absorber and left lying in Paul VI street covered by a gray blanket Bystanders said the man was a FRAPH member who had been shooting until he ran out of bullets and was then seized by an IWinning-frumber- day It also had parlor houses run by landladies that London rented for $175 a month McCormick said London had a separate brick office building that was designed by a city councilman blood-drench- pro-Aristi- de gl CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS The Standard-Examiner'- s policy ! IT error is to promptly correct any or mistake a something' find you you think is unfair please call' 0 from 7 am to 4 pm t weekdays jackpot $32500 Fri angry crowd And in horrifying footage shot by man was CNN a beaten by enraged Haitians American commanders had been told to expect trouble Friday be-- ‘ cause tens of thousands of people were expected to join the march which commemorated the third anniversary of the military coup that overthrew Aristide Only 5000 took part in the march perhaps because violence has increased in the capital during the past two days Seven people were killed and 36 wounded Thors-- ! day when a grenade exploded in aj demonstra-- ! crowd of ’ tors near the downtown harbor 625-421- J WEATHER fcoDA&sIoUxffcq Northern Utah I forecast for noon Saturday Oct The Urns taparafo high fonperatur O Conditions and high temperatures Logan 67 Ogden 70 zoom for Aboutthe paper 1 thtdty Standard-Examinis pubfehed daily Monday through Friday evening and Saturday and Sunday morning by Ogden Publishing Corporation Our business hours are 8:00 am to 5:00 pm Monday through Friday at 455 23rd Street Ogden UT 84401 Our mailing addreas Is P0 Box 951 Ogden UT 84402 The ££-- Sunny Ptly cloudy Salt Lake City 71 Provo 72 Showers Richfield 70 Moab 78 Cedar City 70 55 ' St George 86 4 4 4 6 Salt Lake City Boise Denver Phoenix Low 04 Mod High 0 in To subscribe please call Weber and North Davis Other areas 625-440- COLO WARM STATIONARY e 1994 call Inc toll-fr- One month carrier delivery rate are $985 for delivery Mail are daily and Sunday subscriptions $1500 per month and Sunday only $1000 per month Mail orders not accepted from areas served by carrier 0 6 Ogden Salt Lake and Provo: Today cloudy with a good chance of showers mainly in the morning Clouds and showers decreasing during the afternoon Highs in s the Saturday night fair and chilly Lows near s 40 Sunday partly cloudy Highs in the mid-60- delivery mid-70- BffiierSEiy t Dixie: Today parity cloudy and 'scattered showers Highs in the 70s Saturday night fair and cool Sunday partly cloudy T Chance of mountain showers Sunrise 7:22 am Sunset 7:14 pm New 1st qt Full Lastqt 104 1011 1019 1027 records: Utah temperatures High 89 Normal 73 Low 31 Normal 45’ Precipitation Water year to date: 1265' Normal to Sept: 1618' Precip figures from SIC Airport M missing T other areas before 7:30 pm weekdays or before 11:30 aim weekends All carriers and dealers are independent contractors free from Standard-Examincontrol The Standard-Examincannot be responsible for advance payments to them or their representatives trace Call 625-440- for Information about our 0 Pay By Mail (PBM) program Classified Toll-fre- 625-430- 99 Fax 625-450- 8 News City Boise Idaho Falls If you have a news tip call the Metro 0 or call Standard Line Desk at 24 hours a day at 625-422- Malad Moscow 625-42- Business news Religion newt Local and Utah news Pocatello Twin Falls Evanston I Sources: National Weather Service Intermountain 0 e 625-433- Monticello Allergy & Asthma Clinic Associated Press i 6254270 ! 6254281 ! 6254299 773-728- 3 532-210- 4 7:00 am to 5:00 to 10:00 pm Saturday 3:00 pm to 1 0:00 pm Monday-Thursda- pm y Friday 7:00 : i ' am Opinion pages Editorials letters Fax 6254205 6254508 Management Publisher Scott Trundle Editorial Page Editor Flora Ogan Managing Editor Ronald Thornburg Advertising Director James Barclay Circulation Director Terry E Gandy Operations Director Alan Waldron Accounting Manager Rachael Crary Promotion Manager Patti Woolman Data Processing Manager David Wood 6254541 Policy Weekdays 8:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturdays 8:00 am to 11:30 am 3 DlsplayRetail 625-43Paid Obituaries Weekdays 8:00 am to 5:00 pm Saturdays 11:30 am to 2:00 pm Logan Moab Stale avg call Advertising Blanding Brigham City Cedar City Delta Green River Hanksville Sept precip to date: 012 Normal: 128' in Weber and North Davis or er City 098 a delivery error please 625-44- er ' Daily To report in oDoa 6254260 er Circulation ruVDNPEXM (80ir62S°2rOOatl°n‘ 625-424- 4 625-423- 8 5254220 Copyright Ogden Publishing Corporation 1994 All rights reserved Reproduction reuse or transmittal of all matter herein Is prohibited without prior written permission of the company Ogden Publishing Corporation's liability on account of errors in or ' omissions of advertising shall In no event exceed the amount of charges -for the advertising omitted or the space occupied by the error Postmaster Send address corrections to Standard-ExaminPO Box (USPS 951 Ogden UT 84402-095Second class postage paid at Ogden Utah 403-64- 1 POOR COPY er ! |