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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer du lieu suivant : Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1

Lieu:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Readers share personal stories via Enquirer Reds defeat Expos, 8-4 I I 1 Piniella launches tirade on trades 7:, 'Business People' i New feature profiles local leaders Tourists spend $3 billion in Frnnnmir stnHv relied tndnv Hills DeveloPers lnc- expanding Economic Study released Businesswomen face challenges Marjorie Bradford profiled Section IJ hnt i no 7 1 7TT ir I IWk III IWl Today, Part 2 of 5-part special report. In Tempo 7 cwan NAT! ENQUIKER FINAL351 i First Navy Jack XL in irtrMi ASiiiBiiMW ii i fifMirii'Tiiili fniB i i ii-- nt 14 'H in 1 'IS pH 'is 1 ITS A 2' -'i 1 I 4 sv Ami WW" iw 1 I Smder Im '-k IIMIilUIIIM I i he dust ites BY MICKEY HIGGINBOTHAM The Cincinnati Enquirer Just a few minutes to catch their breath and allow the dust to clear. 3 A Wf That's all workers needed Sun- 1 Hnv mnrnina hpfnrp thpv mnnntfH lb i bulldozers and began hauling off a mountain of debris that was the University of Cincinnati's Sander Hall. The 293-foot tower, rigged throughout with dynamite, collapsed vy i ti rr-ji inceiuuv as siaccaio uursis nuueu km i --i-i t-j. -i -i 4 -J I 4 i i day.

What took two years to build at a cost of $12.5 million was carefully blasted to bits in about nine seconds. It was the tallest building in the United States demolished by i. c- FA.tiJUM"''iiiifctfiiiiiitsai Almost immediately after the The chased scores of spectators to their cars. One woman likened the experi- the tower off Jefferson Avenue hc up a small jagged piece of glass that ence to a stampede. "It was hist like midnicht." said rocketed his way during the implo- UC Police Officer Jim Pfankuch, sion.

Fluffy yellow insulation not whose hair and uniform were sprin (Please see KA-BOOM, back page, this section) kled with the dust. It was hard to breathe. They were trying to get out of it you could hear them 11 I Onlookers enjoy an The Cincinnati EnquirerGary Landers coughing." Pfankuch, one of the closest to "awesome" show, Page A-12. More than 500 pounds of dynamite turned Sander Hall into 1 ,500 truckloads of rubble Sunday. This was the view of the implosion from a helicopter at 1 ,750 feet.

ll Work could replace welfare Panel urges job incentives to help children, fight poverty Four sections 151st year, No. 76 Copyright, 1991 The Cincinnati Enquirer Business Separate voice D-2 Regional stocks D-4 Investment report D-4 Through July Fourth, The Enquirer is reproducing flags that flew in America. Today's flag. First Navy Jack Several versions of the "Striped Rattlesnake Flag" are identified with NationWorld Tempo Digests A-2 Advice B-2 World A-3 Nation A-3 Healthscience A-3 Television B-5 Comics B-6 Classified B-8-13 Colonial naval forces. The first Navy Jack was flown aboard the antees mothers a minimum level of child support if the father cannot pay.

"We lift the overwhelming majority of people out of poverty," says Rockefeller. "We allow people to keep more of the money they've earned if working." There are many recommendations from the National Commission on Children, but the two major points, and most costly, are universal health insurance for children and the income support for poor families. (Please see WELFARE, Page A-9) commission chairman. To lift families out of poverty and encourage the parents to work, the commission calls for a $1,000 tax credit for every child in lieu of the current child exemption, which is $2,150. (Tax credits are deducted from what is owed to the government; exemptions are deducted from taxable income.) The commission also calls for a continuation of the Earned Income Tax Credit, which reduces taxes for the working poor, and a new child-support program that tracks down absent fathers and guar BY RICHARD WHITMIRE Gannett News Service WASHINGTON Honest pay for honest work.

That's what the National Commission on Children recommends in a report to be released today. Offering work, rather than welfare, is similar to what other anti-poverty reports are saying, and it could shake up the way America deals with poverty. "You support children by supporting families," said Sen. John Rockefeller, Sports Metro Scoreboard C-2 Morning report A-5 Tennis C-3 Lotteries A-5 Classified MM C-6-12 Obituaries A-8 Mred, flagship of the Continental fleet, in 1776. The flags and information were provided by the Dan Beard Boy Scout Council and Flaggs USA of Cincinnati.

The flags are displayed at the Westin Hotel. Mostly clear tonight. Weather: Sunny. High 82. Low 62.

Details, A-2..

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Pages disponibles:
4 582 327
Années disponibles:
1841-2024