NEWS
By Jacques Kelly and Jacques Kelly,SUN STAFF | March 14, 2004
Angelo Frank Cammarata Sr., whose singing entertained local audiences for more than five decades at wedding receptions and bar mitzvahs, died of cancer Wednesday at his Perry Hall home. He was 67. A founder of the singing group The Romanos, he sang tenor and played the drums at thousands of Baltimore social engagements. Born in Baltimore and raised on Chapel Street, he was introduced to music while playing in the old St. Paul's Parochial School Drum Corps on Caroline Street. While attending Clifton Park Junior High School, he was drawn to the popular vocal groups of the day, including the Four Aces and the Ames Brothers.
NEWS
March 12, 2004
On March 10, 2004, ANGELO F., beloved husband of Theresa A. (nee D'Aurora), devoted father of Angelo F., Jr., Gino A., Glenn R., and Rodney E. Cammarata, also survived by five grandchildren, one great-grandchild, one brother and three sisters. Christian wake service will be held at the E.F. Lassahn Funeral Home (Kingsville) 11750 Belair Rd. on Thursday, 3:30 PM. Mass of the Resurrection will be celebrated at St. Joseph Church, Fullerton, Saturday, 11:00 AM. Interment Gardens of Faith Cemetery.
NEWS
February 4, 2004
On February 1, 2004, ANNA M., (nee Cammarata), beloved mother of Christina R. Scarbath and husband Butch; Charlene A. Woolery and husband Richard; Charles R. Gochnour and wife Nancy; Douglas A. Gochnour; Cindy T. Gochnour and husband Rick and Debbie M. Liberto and husband John, loving grandmother of Dale Adams, Cortnie Lambdin, Jamie Lake, Steven Woolery, Christopher Gochnour, John Douglas Gochnour, Aryn Kratzmeier, Cory Kratzmeier, Ryan Liberto and...
NEWS
By Lyle Denniston and Lyle Denniston,SUN NATIONAL STAFF | March 5, 1999
WASHINGTON -- Paula Corbin Jones will receive $200,000 from the money President Clinton paid to settle her sexual-misconduct lawsuit, under a deal made yesterday by several groups of lawyers who had represented her.Clinton and Jones agreed in November to settle her case out of court, after a judge had dismissed it and she began pursuing an appeal, and Clinton paid an agreed $850,000 to end the lawsuit. There was no apology involved, although earlier Jones had insisted on one.Since then, an increasingly bitter fight had broken out among the lawyers who had handled her case at various stages, with competing fee claims along with charges of malpractice and bad faith traded back and forth.
NEWS
By Robert Hilson Jr. DTC and Robert Hilson Jr. DTC,SUN STAFF | February 4, 1998
Dominic Joseph Cammarata, a longtime Baltimore boxer who fought more than 150 times during his amateur and professional career and is a member of the state's boxing Hall of Fame, died Fridayof cancer at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Fort Howard.Mr. Cammarata, 73, of Morrell Park in Southwest Baltimore began his amateur boxing career in 1938 and fought for 10 years before retiring as a professional in 1948.He boxed as a bantamweight and fought in all of the famous Baltimore boxing landmarks, including the old Baltimore Coliseum in West Baltimore, St. Stanislaus Hall in Fells Point and the Hayloft in Canton.
NEWS
By Lyle Denniston and Lyle Denniston,SUN NATIONAL STAFF | July 30, 1997
WASHINGTON -- Lawyers for Paula Corbin Jones told a federal judge yesterday that they will not try to question President Clinton anytime soon about her claim that he made an unwanted sexual advance to her six years ago.At the same time, however, they urged the judge in a new filing to allow them to go ahead with questioning of others -- including Arkansas state troopers -- about Clinton's private life and possible relations with other women when he was...
NEWS
By Carl M. Cannon and Carl M. Cannon,SUN NATIONAL STAFF | June 12, 1997
WASHINGTON -- The original question was this: What, if anything, happened between Paula Corbin Jones and President Clinton in a Little Rock hotel on May 8, 1991?But now that the lawyers have worked their way to the Supreme Court, there is a second question: Who is paying the legal bills?It is not Paula Jones or Bill Clinton. And in a case in which both sides pay keen attention to their public relations victories and setbacks, the issue of legal fees is being debated as vigorously as the underlying facts of the suit itself.