Word: rudolph
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PLED GUILTY. ERIC RUDOLPH, 38, to the 1996 bombing at the Atlanta Olympics and attacks on abortion clinics and a gay club in Atlanta and Birmingham, Alabama, which in total killed two people and injured 150; as part of a deal to serve four life sentences instead of face execution; in Atlanta and Birmingham. Rudolph, who was caught in May 2003 after having spent five years hiding in the North Carolinian woods, also disclosed the location of more than 110 kilos of dynamite he had hidden there. His primary motivation, he wrote in a rambling and unrepentant manifesto released after...
...like nothing more than to squash the little carriers," he says, "but the consumers have shown that they prefer competition. They want discount airlines to live." And as the name People Express implies, giving the people what they want is what the airline aims to keep doing. --By Barbara Rudolph. Reported by Joseph J. Kane/Atlanta and Thomas McCarroll/New York
Pleaded guilty. Eric Rudolph, 38, to the 1996 bombing at the Atlanta Olympics and attacks on abortion clinics in Atlanta and Birmingham, Ala., and an Atlanta gay club, leaving a total of two dead and more than 150 injured; as part of a deal to serve four life sentences instead of facing execution; in Atlanta and Birmingham. Rudolph, who was caught in May 2003 after spending five years hiding in the North Carolina woods, disclosed the location of 250 lbs. of dynamite he had hidden there. His primary motivation, he said in a rambling, unrepentant statement released after his pleas...
...investment firm Wertheim & Co.: "Hutton's sales force is nearly demoralized, and its customers are starting to hold back. Even after it's over, Hutton will still wear the stigma. And in this business, which is regulated by trust, a company's reputation means a lot. " --By Barbara Rudolph. Reported by Anne Constable/Washington and Thomas McCarroll/New York City
...liquidation if our backs are forced against the wall," said Wheeling Spokesman Ken Maxcy. Elmer Paulina, a veteran steelworker, was equally unyielding: "There comes a time when you must draw the line and say, 'I'm not going to take it anymore.' Now is that time." --By Barbara Rudolph. Reported by Thomas McCarroll/Monessen