There are no pages to turn. It's a scroll. Thus, it is rolled onto either of two sticks at either end of the scroll depending on which way your are scrolling.
A yad
I'm not sure what you mean by "page turner". The torah is in scroll form, and it's opened to the entire portion when its read. So no pages are turned. The reader is called a ba'al kri'ah (בעל קריאה), or ba'alat kri'ah (בעלת קריאה) for women.
The scroll that contains the 5 'books' of Moses is called the Torah.
The first Torah scroll was written by Moses (Deuteronomy 31:24).
The Torah scroll is stored in a special cabinet called the Holy Ark.
A Torah scroll, a Tanakh, a book with the Torah in it...! There are countless possibilities!
When used in prayer services, the Torah is always in scroll form. When it is studied in classrooms or study groups, it is almost NEVER in scroll form, except to show students what a Torah scroll looks like. When the Torah is in book form, it is often called a Humash or Pentateuch.
The Eighth Scroll has 332 pages.
The Star Scroll has 576 pages.
The Jesus Scroll has 194 pages.
The Seventh Scroll has 752 pages.
Yes, the Torah is a parchment scroll containing 5845 verses. Every synagogue has a Torah scroll.