Capitol's famous clock falls victim to shutdown


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WASHINGTON (AP) - The drip, drip, drips of government shutdown talks are no longer being measured by the tick-tock-tick of the Capitol's most famous clock. Even it has fallen victim to partisan gridlock.

The Ohio Clock has stood watch over the Senate for 196 years. It stopped running shortly after noon Wednesday.

Employees in the Office of the Senate Curator ordinarily wind the clock weekly. But they are among the thousands of federal employees furloughed under the partial shutdown.

The Secretary of the Senate's Office says that only curator employees can work on the clock, given its fragility.

No one knows why the handsome clock is named for Ohio. Starting in 1817 it stood in the old Senate chamber. Since 1859 it has held its current post outside the modern-day chamber's south door.

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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CHARLES BABINGTON

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