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What happened on June 30, 1996
NEWS
Eight-year Relationship Of Couple Ended In Murder-suicide Case Sarah Banks Fatally Shot James B. Kozloff Before Killing Herself In Voorhees, Police Say.
By Shawna McCoy and John Way Jennings, FOR THE INQUIRER
The Olympics: Then & Now In Ancient Olympia, Where The Games Began, A Statue Of Zeus Was One Of The Seven Wonders. In Modern Atlanta, Where The Games Resume Next Month, There Are Civil-rights Shrines - And A Monument To A Soft Drink.
By Mike Nichols, FOR THE INQUIRER
Skateboard Craze Irks Shop Owners The Parking Lot Of A Strip Mall In U. Darby Has Become A Skating Mecca.
By Raphael Lewis, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Part Of A Borough Goes Back To Nature The Merchantville Mile Was An Old Railroad Bed Until A Garden Club Reclaimed It For Native Wildflowers.
By Lisa Kozleski, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Ridge's Scorecard: Sticking To Agenda, Rewarding Support He Campaigned To Reduce Spending Growth And Expand Prisons. Guess What?
By Robert Zausner, INQUIRER HARRISBURG BUREAU
Religious Right Puts Gays Back In Spotlight
By Dick Polman, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Pow Laid To Rest, Honored
By Dan Hardy, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Mapping Future For Kindergartners In Lower Merion The District Is Planning Ways To Deal With Projected Overcrowding. A Kindergarten Center Is One Option.
By Anne Barnard, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
World Leaders Demand Karadzic Step Down The ``g-8'' Chiefs Said They Might Reimpose Economic Sanctions. They Also Discussed Global Security.
By Robert A. Rankin, INQUIRER WASHINGTON BUREAU
Board Still Seeking A Plan For Tennent A Plan To Revamp The Schedule And Standards Was Rejected. Some Worry About The Consequences.
By Chris Seper, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Ambassador Terry
At Historical Society, Librarian Lets Her Actions Speak Volumes Not All The References Are On The Bookshelves.
By Joseph S. Kennedy, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
School Busing May Face Overhaul No One Seems To Dispute That It's Inefficient. A Solution Could Take Some Dealing By Lawmakers.
By James M. O'Neill, INQUIRER TRENTON BUREAU
Emergency Units Will Communicate Better - For A Price The Question Is, How Will Local Fire, Ambulance And Police Companies Pay For Their Part Of The Radio System? They Hope The County Will Help.
By Russell Gold, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Shot At Fame Gets Blood Flowing
By Pam Louwagie, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
At Strawbridge, A Sale To Truly End All Sales S&c Put On Its Final Warehouse Clearance. The Bargains Eased The Grief.
By Laura J. Bruch, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Wanted: A Mission Who Heads The U.n. Isn't Nearly As Important As Deciding What The World Body Does.
Amid Its Gardens, They Labor, Live And Learn Most Come To View The Flowers And Fountains. But Longwood Is Also A Home.
By Catherine Quillman, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Labor Dept. Reviews Dispute Over Union Vote Some Observers Said Matthews Beat Sutton In District Council 33. The Tally Said Otherwise.
By Peter Nicholas, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
A Rocky Path To Move Verdict
By Craig R. McCoy and Julia C. Martinez, INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS Inquirer staff writers Richard Jones and Daniel Rubin contributed to this article
Council Cuts Library's Funds Over Drug-abuse Office Members Thought It Might Lure Drug Abusers To The Mount Holly Library. They Found Out That Wasn't The Case, But Still Slashed Library Funding.
By Matthew Dolan, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Photo Caption
The Philadelphia Inquirer / CHARLES FOX
Save The Zoo It Needs A New Plan And Suburban Aid.
The First Lady's Chats - From The Other Side A Spirited Conversation.
By Ellen O'Brien, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Remodeling: Look Before You Leap Check Out Your Home's Systems. If You Don't, A Dream Project Can Become An Expensive Nightmare.
By Michael Walsh, FOR THE INQUIRER
Educating The Disabled: Is The Price Fair?
By Art Caplan
Union Heads Vexed By Talks As Contract Deadline Looms A Mood Of Concern Seemed To Mount Throughout The Day. The Current Pact Expires At 12:01 A.m. Tomorrow.
By Howard Goodman and Suzanne Sataline, INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS
A Troubled Corner Of D.c. Gets Some New Residents: 4 Wis. Eaglets Anacostia Seems An Odd Spot To Transplant Wildlife. ``it's Not Alaska,'' A Falconer Said, But It Has Its Pluses.
By Heather Dewar, INQUIRER WASHINGTON BUREAU
Promised Land Within Reach For Area Church West Grove United Methodist Finds A New Site.
By Don Beideman, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
The Scene In The Nation And The World
By Thomas J. Brady, with reports from Inquirer wire services
Young Moms Become Glad Grads They Want A Better Life For Themselves And Their Children.
By Justin Pritchard, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Even A Democratized Romania Can't Hide The Obvious Scars Suffered By Its Children More Free, More Fair. More Street Youths.
By Julie Mertus
Exhibit Features Photos Of Poets
By Victoria Donohoe, INQUIRER ART CRITIC
Booming Good Time Expected At Fireworks Washington Township Vows A Spectacular Holiday Display. Monroe Promises A Better One.
By Matthew Futterman, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Vacation Survey: Cash Used For Half The Costs
By Donald D. Groff, FOR THE INQUIRER
Program To Fight Abuse Wins Praise And Federal Funds West Deptford's Divert Trains Volunteers To Talk To Victims. A Grant Will Set Programs Up Elsewhere.
By Tamara Chuang, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
A Warm `Welcome' Fans And Fanfare Coming To Town
By Tanya Barrientos and Ralph Cipriano, INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS
Two Area Hospitals Announce Changes Chester County Hospital And Southern Chester County Medical Center Will Make Nursing-center Care More Accessible.
By Mary Blakinger, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
A Delco Township Proud Of Its History
By Don Beideman, FOR THE INQUIRER
Where The Flock Goes, Churches Are Following Using Marketing Skills, They Target Sites With The Desired Profile: Families.
By Kristin E. Holmes, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Parents Establish Fund In Memory Of Slain Son
By Mary Anne Janco, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Since Student's Slaying, Drivers Feeling Vulnerable No One Knows Why Aimee Willard Stopped Her Car. The Theories Are Scary. Police Offer Some Safety Tips.
By Lea Sitton, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Getting There Is All The Fun For Orienteers With A Map And A Compass, They Always Figure Out Where They Are.
By Susan Weidener, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
A Southampton Estates Plan Alarms Nearby Residents Building Would Bring Flooding And Violate An Agreement, They Say. A Zoning Hearing Is Tomorrow.
By Chris Seper, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
A Furnished Sample Sells Buyers On The Value At Little Heather Woods
By Sheila Dyan, FOR THE INQUIRER
Odds Appear Risky For Saving Enough
By Andrea Knox, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Nonprofit Groups Gather To Learn About New Fund Milton Apfelbaum Left The Money For The Philadelphia Foundation To Parcel Out.
By Laura Genao, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Neshaminy Teacher's Scientific Method Is A Winner Watermelons And Gravity Go Together In Her Class. Now, She Has Won A National Award.
By Jennifer Inez Ward, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Youths Tuning Up For Summer Play Forty-four Youngsters Came Out To Audition For The Summer Stage Production ``little Mary Sunshine.''
By Kristin Vaughan, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
The Ties That Bind The U.s. And The Saudis
By Alan Sipress, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Has Tide Turned For Historic Canal? Flooding Showed That Waterways Around The Delaware Canal Are Growing, A Resident Says.
By Erin Einhorn, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
A Debate: Imagining The Mall
By Henry Magaziner
Towns Get Together To Get Rid Of Sewage A Gibbsboro-voorhees Deal Lets Each Town Use The Other's Lines. Both Municipalities Expect To Save.
By Lillian Weis, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
West Vincent Group Finds Soup Heiress' Land Plans Hard To Swallow The Hamilton Family Wants Its 307-acre Tract Rezoned For Commercial Use. Some Residents Are Irate.
By Susan Weidener, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
High-school Age, She Is Off To Face A College Challenge A Willingboro 14-year-old Will Skip Secondary School To Join A College Program For Gifted Girls.
By Analisa Nazareno, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Transportation, With A Human Touch He Knows Firsthand Of Poor Treatment On Wheelchair Vans. He Makes Sure His Clients Get Better Service.
By David E. Wilson, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Letters
On South St., Police Keep Crowds Moving - On Wheels Or On Foot
By Suzette Parmley, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Bensalem Conflict Takes On Scriptural Overtones The School Board's Battle With Its Superintendent Drew Biblical Allusions From Lawyers For Both Sides.
By Steve Ritea, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Fbi: Heist Trail Led To White Supremacists Robbers Hit 7 States, But Their Aim May Have Been Bigger. A Confession Led Authorities To Philadelphia.
By Mark Fazlollah, Michael Matza, Maureen Graham and Larry King, INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS This article was also reported by Inquirer staff writers Connie Langland, Jeff Gelles, Howard Goodman, Anthony Gnoffo, Tom Moon and Joseph A. Slobodzian and correspondents Justin Pritchard and Jacqueline L. Urgo
J. Bitman, 81, Pediatrician
By Connie Langland, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Abington Stadium Plans Are In Works A Parents' Group Will Ask For Corporate Donations To Pay For The Construction Of The School District Structure.
By Monique El-Faizy, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
Milk Price Supports Targeted One Pa. House Bill Would Abolish Minimum Prices For Buyers, And Another The Milk Board.
By Karl Stark, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Bullets Overseas, Prejudice At Home Jewish War Veterans To Mark 100 Years.
By Craig LaBan, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
How To Make That Project Go Smoothly
By Susan Caba, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
The Name Changes, But Quality Remains
By Barbara Whitaker, FOR THE INQUIRER
From Marine To Firefighter, Still Showing How It's Done Retired Col. Ernest Brydon Has Found Some New Troops.
By Kristin Vaughan, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
At Crux Of Lawsuits: Finding Why Police Corruption Happens
By Joseph A. Slobodzian, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Expressions Of Grief At Scene Of Crime Friends And Strangers Have Left Flowers And Other Items Near Where Aimee Willard's Car Was Found. Others, Moved By The Outpouring, Stop To Look.
By Suzanne Gordon, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Cowlings Breaks Silence On Bronco Ride; Prince Charles May Take Out Loan For Divorce
From Inquirer wire services
In The Honey Trade, Sweet Times Turning Sticky With Supplies Off, A Buzz Over Price, Purity.
By Rick Nichols, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
To Chinese, Hong Kong Spells Hope Even As Takeover Looms Next Year, Communists Will Rule. Residents Are Exiting. Chinese, Seeking A Better Life, Are Entering - Any Way They Can.
By Jennifer Lin, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
ENTERTAINMENT
2 Texans: Lovett Needs Fire, But Gilmore Glows
By Dan DeLuca, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
She's Really Making The News Now
By Stephen Seplow, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Pinky And Brain, For Brains Of All Ages One's Devious. One's Dim. The Cartoon Mice Are A Cult Fave.
By Christopher Cornell, FOR THE INQUIRER
Prince Charmed Can Philly-native Will Smith Be A Dramatic Actor And A Star At The Same Time? His New Film, ``independence Day,'' Which Opens Wednesday, Likely Holds The Answer.
By Carrie Rickey, INQUIRER MOVIE CRITIC
BUSINESS
Reports, Fed Meeting, Holiday Could Make For A Weird Week There Will Be Abbreviated Trading. A Purchasing Managers Report May Loom Large, Coming A Day Before The Fed Decides Whether To Change Rates.
By Cynthia Mayer, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
How Profit-sharing In 1978 Evolved Into A Retirement Vehicle
By Andrea Knox, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Don't Be Retiring On Retirement You'll Need 65 Percent Of Your Final Salary For Each Golden Year. That Means Working Hard Now: Save A Lot. Invest Aggressively. And Start Yesterday.
By Andrea Knox, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Happy Teachers Here's A Plan Retirees Love
By Andrea Knox, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Firms Are Replacing Traditional Pensions
By Andrea Knox, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
SPORTS
Morandini's Hopes Crippled By Injury If He Had Any Chance To Repeat As An All-star, It Probably Vanished When He Was Hurt Two Weeks Ago.
By Phil Sheridan, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Who's To Blame For Waiting Game? Agonizingly Slow Play Is A Problem All Over. But It's Not Just The Players Who Are At Fault.
By Joe Logan, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Delayed Stadium Task-force Report Won't Be Rosy The Phillies And Eagles Want New Facilities. They Are Not Optimistic That The State Will Play A Big Role.
By Michael Sokolove, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Kwon, Tucker Reach Final Of Clay-court Tournament
By Mayer Brandschain, FOR THE INQUIRER
A 66 In Second Round Gives Benz 3-shot Lead
By Joe Juliano, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
They Stumble And They Fall, But Men's Gym Team Emerges
By Diane Pucin, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Cameraman Says Belle Threw A Drink At Him
THE INQUIRER STAFF
Limekiln Is A Nice Public Course; While Short, It's Also Challenging The Ambler Facility Has 27 Holes. It Is Regarded As Neither Too Easy Nor Too Difficult.
By Joe Logan, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
At Last, Game Commission Approves New Hunting Dates Once The Commission Was Able To Obtain A Quorum, The Dates Were Approved Pretty Much As Proposed.
By Stephen J. Morgan, FOR THE INQUIRER
Expos' Fassero Two-hits Phillies The Lefty's Perfect Game Was Broken Up By Phils Pitcher Curt Schilling, Who Starred In Defeat.
By Phil Sheridan, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
U.s. Women Gymnasts: They're Starting To Grow Up It Used To Be The Smaller, The Better. Now, As Evidenced By The Olympic Trials, Things Are Starting To Change.
By Diane Pucin, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
It's The New Wave, And They're Catching It The X Games Are Making Winners Out Of Lugers (and Skateboarders And Sky-surfers). They Go Fast. They Fly High. But How Long Will They Endure?
By Frank Fitzpatrick, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Don Casey Joins Staff Of The Nets' Calipari
THE INQUIRER STAFF
For This Vietnam Veteran, A Tough Golf Shot Is No Pressure Walter Morgan Says There's No Comparison Between 18 Holes On The Links And A War-torn Jungle.
By Joe Juliano, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
LIVING
Confronting Survivors Proves A Painful Ordeal Interviewing Holocaust Victims Demands Skill.
By Naomi Freedman Serviss, FOR THE INQUIRER
Easy Readin' Here's A Sampling Of Paperbacks To Help Fill The Lazy, Hazy Days.
By Michael Harrington, FOR THE INQUIRER
The Kindness Of Strangers There Was A Time When Adults Were Expected To Help Out If Youngsters Got Into Trouble Or Out Of Line. But Times, And People, Have Changed.
By Murray Dubin, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Women Are Picking Up Cigars More These Days Cigar Smoking Has Increased Among Women And Students.
By Emilie Lounsberry, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
FOOD
A Few Fixes Suit Tastes Of Faithful
By Elaine Tait, INQUIRER RESTAURANT CRITIC
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