Saturday, November 6, 1999
Enter our Dress A Turkey contest
Help! Our turkey needs dressing.
Print out the form, then put pencil, crayons, paint, markers, sequins, feathers you name it to our last turkey of the decade/century/millennium.
The prize? The joy of seeing your artwork in print and online on Thanksgiving, when the best of the flock will be published. (Check out last year's winners)
You can email your entry to nberlier@enquirer.com or mail it to:
Dress A Turkey
Tempo
Cincinnati Enquirer
312 Elm St.
Cincinnati OH 45202
Deadline: Entries must be at the Enquirer on or before Monday Nov. 15.
Entries also may be dropped off 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays at the customer service center in the lobby of our building, 312 Elm St., downtown, or at our Kentucky Bureau, 226 Grandview Drive, Fort Mitchell.
'2% Club' warrants more study, auditors say
Bill asks to post medical lawsuits
Teen donates Christmas tree for square
HMO change may set trend doctors want
Flynt looks to Butler Co.
Voucher order is blocked
Fire ravages Florence eatery
Gracious, polite trick-or-treaters were a delight
Hillsides closely guarded
Enter our Dress A Turkey contest
GET TO IT
'Harmonium' composer leads stirring premiere of choral masterpiece
DANCE REVIEW
ANTIQUES and COLLECTIBLES
Butler Co. to aid in fund hunt for City Centre
Butler County may hook up to Cincinnati water
Court to decide Lebanon land's fate: apartments or park
Democrat announces run against Westwood
Ex-dissidents now elected to run Cleves
Kenton Co. EMTs use breathing tool
Ky. Catholic schools get $25,000 donation
Lebanon to pay fine for illegal meeting
ODOT gives more to transit center
Police signal to warn of cruisers in area
Reading fire chief to take new job
School helpers may face checks
Skaters learn by baby steps
Teen arrested for false 911 cell calls
Tip leads to arrest in Covington drug death
Tongue-twister name didn't stop voters from writing him in
TRISTATE DIGEST
Trotta was tailor to the stars Loved gardening and his family
UofL player hurt in elevator fall
Village honors its boy soldier