22 BEERS ON TAP • MICROBREWS MADE IN THE U.S.A. • IMPORT BEERS 11 POOL TABLES • FIVE DART MACHINES • FOOSBALL WE CAN MAKE YOUR LOOK 12 LE Sizzling Summer Specials... k Tanning & Facials k Nails k Perms k Make-overs k Hair Cits k Hair Coloring m mm mm mm mm mm mm mm ■ mm "./mm fm mm mm mm mm a mm m Let's Get Aquainted with ourTan & Cut Special 2 Tanning Sessions Plus Shampoo, Haircut & Style A$32%fae,alMonly 1 1$2& j House of Holloway 5740 Old Cheney Road “FAMILY HAIR STYLISTS” 423“3 616 Bring in CouponjoRcdeem_ jixpires j«3j*95__ mu> (1 gc K»k i.' ! Witness admits seeing car resemblingO J. Simpson’s By LINDA DEUTSCH AP Special Correspondent LOS ANGELES (AP) - A car similar to 0 J. Simpson’s Bronco sped away from the murder scene, a defense witness acknowledged Wednesday, but he fiercely denied recognizing one oftwoangry voices he heard that night as Simpson’s. - “Didn’t you (say)... ‘I know it was O. J. It had to be him?”’ Deputy District Attorney Christopher Darden asked duringcross-exami nation. “I never said that. Absurd!” ex claimed Robert Heidstra, who lives around the comer from the condo minium where Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were slain and was walking his dogs the night of the murders. Tm so mad at both of you guys that I’m about to hold both of you in contempt. ” ■ Jumi Ito Heidstra’s testimony came dur ing a court session marked by an outburst by Judge Lance Ito, who stormed off the bench and warned two attorneys they faced “severe sanctions” if they continued to per sonally attack each other. Heidstra reluctantly confirmed that he once described a white Jeep like vehicle speeding away from the condo about a half hour after the time Simpson allegedly had driven his white Ford Bronco there to commit murder. Heidstra ac knowledged that the vehicle he saw “could have been a Bronco.” On redirect examination, de fense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. elicited from Heidstra the observa tion that the vehicle turned a comer and headed south, away from Simpson’s home. Heidstra’s testimony is key to the defense, which is challenging (he prosecution ’ s chronology for the night of June 12, 1994, to show that some one other than Simpson could be the murderer. Darden intimated that a woman who often conversed with Heidstra in his native French has told prosecutors he identified one voice he heard that night as Simpson’s. But Heidstra said he couldn’t have recognized Simpson’s voice because he has never spoken to the defendant and can’t remember ever hearing him on TV. He also denied saying that one of the voices he heard was a black man and told jurors he would be unable to identify someone’s race from hearing a voice. Darden’s questions about race set off one of the most vitriolic exchanges of the trial between Darden and Cochran. Ito, who wound up shouting at the lawyers and the witness and sending jurors out of the room, threatened the sanctions against the two black law yers if there are any more personal attacks. “I’m so mad at both of you guys that I’m about to hold both of you in contempt,” Ito warned after Cochran accused Darden of asking racist ques tions and Darden protested. “I’ve always considered the ques tion of race in this case to be a ques tionablc issue, your honor. How ever, this is the witness’s statement and if the statement is racist then he is a racist, not me,” Darden said. Addressing Cochran directly, Darden said some of the defense lawyer’s comments have “created a lot of problems for my family and myself.” Cochran and Darden have had a contentious relationship through out the case, and they clashed when Darden argued against the defense use of a racial epithet in attacking a police detective as a racist. Darden has accused the defense of improp erly injecting race into the case. Cochran has attacked Darden’s le gal skills and suggested he was cho sen for the case only because he is black. The judge’s outburst surprised jurors, who jumped when Ito shouted, “Wait! Wait! ” and abruptly ordered them out of court saying, “Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, please leave!” They were on their feet before he finished his sentence. When the jury returned 20 min utes later, Ito apologized and told Heidstra: “I want you to understand I’m not mad at you, but I have some things on my mind.” Darden accused Heidstra of tai loring hi s testimony to help Simpson after prosecutors decided not to call him as a witness. Again, his accusa tions were based on interviews witfe ** the French-speaking Patricia Baret, an employee for the veterinarian who treats Heidstra’s two dogs. “Didyoutell Miss Baret you thought O. J. Simpson was going to kiss you when he got out of prison?” Darden asked. “I don’t know where she got that. It’s absurd,” Heidstra said. 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