On Nov. 18, a man wearing a sweatshirt with the hood pulled tightly over his head and a mask covering all but his eyes pounded on the front door of Security Federal Savings Bank in Durham, N.C., scaring employees inside. After several loud attempts to push open the door, which is a "pull" door, he fled. Durham police say precisely the same thing happened at another bank on Oct. 22.
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A state appeals court in Santa Ana upheld a lower court by granting Sheryle Ulyate an increase in child support payments from her ex-husband for their 15-year-old daughter, from $2,000 a month to $6,000 a month. Ulyate said the girl's monthly expenses included $2,000 for clothing, $300 for jewelry, and $1,600 for entertainment, and she asked for $15,000 a month. The
ex-husband made a fortune selling mini-blinds.
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In July, a Jackson Center, Pa., woman reported that someone used a ladder to climb into the second story of her home and that all that was missing was $10 worth of diapers, despite the presence of jewelry and antiques in the same room.
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Police in Key West, Fla., were called to a house in September to quell a loud argument in which a 28-year-old woman was accusing her female friend, 29, of attempting to steal her "strap-on deluxe model" vibrator, which she said was valued at $90.
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Antonio Castro Jr., 45, and his wife pleaded guilty to defrauding the supermarket tabloids the Globe, the Star and the National Enquirer by selling them 547 phony tips on celebrity gossip over a four-year period.
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Ronald Melvin Gower, 31, was arrested in Princeton, Ky., after he tried to rob a bank with a toy gun. One teller refused to hand over money, and as the robber tried to persuade her, another employee, carrying a Polaroid camera to take a picture of a car later in the day, snapped the robber's
picture. Gower allegedly backed away, said he was just kidding, and asked for change of a $100. (Gower was wearing a rolled-up stocking under his cap, but had forgotten to pull it over his face as a mask.)
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The robbery of an Office Depot store in Lennox, just after closing, was aborted when the robber, after locking workers inside, walked out the back door to tell accomplices it was OK to come inside. The door locked behind him.
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A man wearing a wig and glue-on mustache and sideburns tried to rob a Seattle check-cashing store in November, presenting a clerk with a hand-written note. The note, said the clerk, "was just a bunch of gibberish. I didn't even try to read it; it was just ridiculous." The man declined a request for clearer instructions and left, swearing.
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David D. Cousins, 22, was arrested for bank robbery in Quincy, IL, in November, after being tricked by the bank's executive vice president, Louis McClelland, into surrendering after a six-hour standoff. McClelland had faked a heart attack and told Cousins that if he died, the robbery would be
too gruesome to be acceptable for movie rights, but that if he got medical treatment, he could help Cousins sell the story so they could both achieve fame and fortune. Shortly afterward, Cousins surrendered.
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A 42-year-old man was found not guilty by reason of insanity in Gainesville, Fla., in January on charges that he set fire to 22 churches in Florida, Colorado and Tennessee in a 10-month period. The man said he set the fires as punishment because he thought church computers were sending him signals
to become gay.
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Recent prices for the Kremlovka hospital in Moscow (formerly the main facility for members of the Politburo and the Supreme Soviet): the equivalent of $2 a day for a room, $100 for a gall bladder operation, 15 cents per tooth for dental fillings.
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The Tass news agency reported in December that Olga Frankevich, who fled Soviet security police in 1947 during the Stalinist purge, surfaced from a house in western Ukraine, where she had been hiding under a bed for 45 years. Her slightly bolder sister roamed the house but never left it.
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A 40-year-old man in Taylor, Mich., dropped dead of a heart attack minutes after bowling his first-ever perfect "300" game (12 strikes in a row).
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Researchers at Auburn State University and Wayne State University surveyed 49 metropolitan areas and found that the more country and western radio music, the higher the suicide rate.
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Terrible diet and room with no ventilation are being blamed on the death of a men who was killed by his own gas. There was no mark on his body but autopsy showed large amounts of methane gas in his system. His diet had consisted of beans (they said what kind; I forgot) cabbage (and a couple other things). It was just the right combination of foods. It appears that the man died in his sleep from breathing from the poisonous cloud that was hanging over his bed. The ME said, had he been outside or had his windows opened it wouldn't have been fatal but the man was shut up in his near airtight room. He was "...a big man with a huge capacity for creating [this deadly gas]." Three of the rescue workers got sick and one was hospitalized.
[This message has been edited by Brian R. (edited 30 August 2000).]
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A state appeals court in Santa Ana upheld a lower court by granting Sheryle Ulyate an increase in child support payments from her ex-husband for their 15-year-old daughter, from $2,000 a month to $6,000 a month. Ulyate said the girl's monthly expenses included $2,000 for clothing, $300 for jewelry, and $1,600 for entertainment, and she asked for $15,000 a month. The
ex-husband made a fortune selling mini-blinds.
--
In July, a Jackson Center, Pa., woman reported that someone used a ladder to climb into the second story of her home and that all that was missing was $10 worth of diapers, despite the presence of jewelry and antiques in the same room.
--
Police in Key West, Fla., were called to a house in September to quell a loud argument in which a 28-year-old woman was accusing her female friend, 29, of attempting to steal her "strap-on deluxe model" vibrator, which she said was valued at $90.
--
Antonio Castro Jr., 45, and his wife pleaded guilty to defrauding the supermarket tabloids the Globe, the Star and the National Enquirer by selling them 547 phony tips on celebrity gossip over a four-year period.
--
Ronald Melvin Gower, 31, was arrested in Princeton, Ky., after he tried to rob a bank with a toy gun. One teller refused to hand over money, and as the robber tried to persuade her, another employee, carrying a Polaroid camera to take a picture of a car later in the day, snapped the robber's
picture. Gower allegedly backed away, said he was just kidding, and asked for change of a $100. (Gower was wearing a rolled-up stocking under his cap, but had forgotten to pull it over his face as a mask.)
--
The robbery of an Office Depot store in Lennox, just after closing, was aborted when the robber, after locking workers inside, walked out the back door to tell accomplices it was OK to come inside. The door locked behind him.
--
A man wearing a wig and glue-on mustache and sideburns tried to rob a Seattle check-cashing store in November, presenting a clerk with a hand-written note. The note, said the clerk, "was just a bunch of gibberish. I didn't even try to read it; it was just ridiculous." The man declined a request for clearer instructions and left, swearing.
--
David D. Cousins, 22, was arrested for bank robbery in Quincy, IL, in November, after being tricked by the bank's executive vice president, Louis McClelland, into surrendering after a six-hour standoff. McClelland had faked a heart attack and told Cousins that if he died, the robbery would be
too gruesome to be acceptable for movie rights, but that if he got medical treatment, he could help Cousins sell the story so they could both achieve fame and fortune. Shortly afterward, Cousins surrendered.
--
A 42-year-old man was found not guilty by reason of insanity in Gainesville, Fla., in January on charges that he set fire to 22 churches in Florida, Colorado and Tennessee in a 10-month period. The man said he set the fires as punishment because he thought church computers were sending him signals
to become gay.
--
Recent prices for the Kremlovka hospital in Moscow (formerly the main facility for members of the Politburo and the Supreme Soviet): the equivalent of $2 a day for a room, $100 for a gall bladder operation, 15 cents per tooth for dental fillings.
--
The Tass news agency reported in December that Olga Frankevich, who fled Soviet security police in 1947 during the Stalinist purge, surfaced from a house in western Ukraine, where she had been hiding under a bed for 45 years. Her slightly bolder sister roamed the house but never left it.
--
A 40-year-old man in Taylor, Mich., dropped dead of a heart attack minutes after bowling his first-ever perfect "300" game (12 strikes in a row).
--
Researchers at Auburn State University and Wayne State University surveyed 49 metropolitan areas and found that the more country and western radio music, the higher the suicide rate.
--
Terrible diet and room with no ventilation are being blamed on the death of a men who was killed by his own gas. There was no mark on his body but autopsy showed large amounts of methane gas in his system. His diet had consisted of beans (they said what kind; I forgot) cabbage (and a couple other things). It was just the right combination of foods. It appears that the man died in his sleep from breathing from the poisonous cloud that was hanging over his bed. The ME said, had he been outside or had his windows opened it wouldn't have been fatal but the man was shut up in his near airtight room. He was "...a big man with a huge capacity for creating [this deadly gas]." Three of the rescue workers got sick and one was hospitalized.
[This message has been edited by Brian R. (edited 30 August 2000).]
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