[Headline Missing] Outbreak of war explains scowl on stranger's face ZONE FINAL Edition

I heard the initial reports of the bombing of Baghdad on my car radio while pulling onto Hebron's parking lot at 6:45. I walked into the school and, eager to spread the word, immediately told Hebron athletic director Mark Cates, who was seated at the ticket table outside the gym. Cates thought...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Sun (Baltimore, Md. : 1837)
Main Author Erik Nelson AH: War turns thoughts of fans from game
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Baltimore, Md Tribune Publishing Company, LLC 23.01.1991
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Summary:I heard the initial reports of the bombing of Baghdad on my car radio while pulling onto Hebron's parking lot at 6:45. I walked into the school and, eager to spread the word, immediately told Hebron athletic director Mark Cates, who was seated at the ticket table outside the gym. Cates thought at first I was joking, but he quickly realized this was no prank. He then ran into the gym to pass on the news. It's hard for him to choose, but when pressed, [Ed Lilley] said his favorite items in the store are the lacquered wooden eggs from the Soviet Union. They range in price from $14 to $90. He does the bulk of his business from mid-September to the end of the year. Lilley's closing the shop for the month of February to attend a Christmas fair in Frankfurt, Germany, where he'll stock up on merchandise.
ISSN:1930-8965