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The Indianapolis Star du lieu suivant : Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 70

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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i MAY 21, 1986 PAGES 61-70 PAGINATED (-10 -THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR- 71 THE WEATHER THE DAILY CROSSWORD Indianapolis forecast TODAY Mostly cloudy, cool. Morning low, 40. High. 60. Northwest wind 10 mph.

OVERNIGHT Fair, cool. Low, 43. THURSDAY Partly sunny, warmer. High, 64. Indiana SOUTH BEND Cloudy, continued very cool today and overnight.

High, 49. Northwest wind 10 to 15 mph. Cloudy with periods of sunshine Thursday. Morning low, 43. High, 58.

FORT WAYNE Cloudy, very cool today and overnight. High, 48. NorthN west wind 10 15 mph. Cloudy with periods of sunshine Thursday. Morning low, 43.

High, 57. EVANSVILLE Partly sunny, continued cool today. High, 68. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph. Fair, cool overnight.

Mostly sunny, a little Thursday. Morning low, 45. High, 70. EXTENDED FORECAST Fair Friday and Saturday. Increasing clouds Sunday with a of rain in south half.

Continued cool. Lows, mid-40s to mid-50s. Highs, 70 to 75. State summary Clouds continued to shroud Indiana Tuesday afternoon. This, coupled with the cool, northwest flow of air across the state, helped keep temperatures mostly in the mid-40s mid-50s.

Only Evansville, which had a few more breaks in the clouds, made it the lower 60s. The clouds temperatures were natoo caused by a low-pressure system that lingered over New England Tuesday night. The counter-clockwise circulations around this system were drawing cool, moist air into Indiana from the north Atlantic. The clouds over the state will be slow to leave due to the very slow movement of the low, while southwest sections will get some sunshine today. Most of the state will continue under a blanket of clouds.

Not until Thursday will most of Indiana have any real sunshine or warmer temperatures. Indianapolis data May 20, 1986 Precipitation Trace Total amount (since Jan. 1) 17.51 Accum. departure from normal (since Jan. 1) plus 2.83 Mean temperature ..51 Cooling degrees .0 Accum.

cooling degrees (since Jan. 1) .58 Normal accum. ..38 Heating degrees 14 Accum. heating degrees (since July 1) Normal accum. Barometer readings 30.04 7 p.m.

30.03 1.p.m. 30.02 Relative humidity Maximum Minimum Temperatures 1 a.m 48 1 p.m. 51 3 a.m. 48 3 p.m. 53 5 a.m.

46 5 p.m. 53 7 a.m 47 7 p.m. 53 9 a.m. 48 9 p.m, 50 11 a.m. 49 11 p.m.

49 High (at 6:30 p.m.) 56 Normal 75 Year ago 81 Record (in 1921, 1942, 1977) 90 Low (at 7:30 a.m.) 46 Normal 53 Year ago 54 Record (in 1894) 38 Marine forecast LAKE MICHIGAN (Indiana and Illinois shores) North to northeast winds 12 to 22 knots today. Mostly cloudy with a little or drizzle. Waves 2 to more than 4 feet. High waves will make conditions hazardOus on or near piers, beaches and breakwaters, especially along the Indiana shore. The water temperature off Chicago's lakefront Tuesday was 49 degrees.

30.24 30.00 29.77 30.00 30.24 SEATTLE TIC BOSTON HIGH NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO IDENVER ST. X. LOS ANGELES 60 80 80 DALLAS NEW ORLEANS 60 LEGEND 80 RAIN SNOW 80 AIR SHOWERS FLOW HIGHEST UPI TEMPERATURES Travelers' forecast CITY TODAY Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Tstrms Baltimore Billings Tstrms Birmingham Sunny Bismarck Windy Boise Boston Tstrms Buffalo Shwrs Charlotte Cheyenne P1CIdy Chicago P1CIdy Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus, Ohio Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Sunny Fairbanks Cloudy Flagstaff Windy Honolulu Sunny Houston Sunny Jackson, Miss Fair Jacksonville P1CIdy Juneau Cloudy Kansas City Knoxville P1CIdy Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Surrounding states FRIDAY THROUGH SUNDAY ILLINOIS Fair with pleasant days and cool nights. Lows, mid-40s to low 50s north and low to mid-50s south. Highs, upper 60s mid-70s north and mid- to upper 70s south.

KENTUCKY Partly cloudy Friday Saturday. Chance of showers Sunday. Lows, upper 40s to low 50s. Highs, 70s. OHIO Some clouds northeast, partly sunny southwest Friday.

Fair over the weekend. Lows, mid-40s to mid-50s. Highs, 60s Friday and mid60s to mid-70s during the weekend. MICHIGAN (lower peninsula) Chance of showers mainly east Friday and Saturday. Partly cloudy Sunday.

Lows, 40s. Highs, mid-60s to low 70s. Canadian cities Tuesday City 7 p.m. weather Hi Lo Calgary Cloudy 74 Cloudy 84 51 Montreal Rain 53 48 Ottawa Rain 52 49 Toronto Cloudy 53 50 Vancouver. PtCidy 58 50 River levels Wednesday's forecast (Flood stages in parentheses) OHIO RIVER Cincinnati (52) 26.8, down 0.2 Markland (51) 14, down 2 Evansville (42) 15, up 0.4 FOR THE RECORD News of the courts DIVORCE LAWSUITS FILED Theodore Alexander Judy L.

Alexander Angela M. Avery William H. Avery Jr. Rhonda R. Bozarth Robert F.

Bozarth Kathleen M. Bunch Jessie D. Bunch Kathy Burchett Carlos Burchett Jerry Childs Dawayne Childs Kathleen M. Chott Laurence R. Chott Larry R.

Curran Kathryn J. Curran Loretta M. Dishman Carl D. Dishman Carrie M. Earl Nicholas E.

Earl Laura L. Edwards Brian S. Edwards Timothy B. Epley Penny S. Epley Kelly L.

Epperson William R. Epperson Cathy L. Gibbs Edgar L. Gibbs Jr. Jennifer D.

Hale Dwight A. Hale Bradley V. Helms Alice Helms Jane E. Jacoutot Robert L. Jacoutot Valerie J.

Karr Gregory D. Karr Andrew K. Kass Theresa D. Kass Margaret P. Kin Stephen M.

Kin David R. Kyser Ruth J. Kyser Sherry L. LaChance Herve P. LaChance James J.

McCaughna Jerrie L. McCaughna Alice J. Miller Gene C. Miller Sarah A. Mitchell Louis W.

Mitchell Claudia J. Moore David M. Moore Julie A. Neuhausel Herbert L. Neuhausel Johnathan L.

Post Lori A. Post Barbara K. Taylor Thomas R. Taylor Kathleen J. Winks Kenneth W.

Winks Anthony Zupan Mary K. Zupan Vital statistics BIRTHS COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Girls ALLSUP, Jeff and Mary; MILLER, David and Brenda; THOMAS, Reginald and Linda. INDIANA UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Girls BINEGAR, Glenn and Karen; COLE, William and Janelle; LESTER, Ronald and Deborah. METHODIST HOSPITAL Boys BARKER-QUALKINBUSH, James and Brenda; BRUMMETT, Thomas and Jacqueline; RICHARDSON, Michael and Calle. Girls FORD, Kevin and Barbara; OLIVER, Mark and Cathy; SELLS, John and Sandra.

ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL CENTER MITCHANER, Tony and Ann; Boys WILDS, James and Laura. Girls DEANE, Kenneth and Michele; LAMPING, James and Eda. ST. VINCENT HOSPITAL Boys BRINKMAN, Gary and Tamera; CARMAN, Keith and Karen; DOYLE, Craig and LeeAnn; GRIFFIN, Alan and Peggy: NIEMEYER, James and Kay; TEDFORD, Larry and Darlene.

Girls FOX, Donald and Patricia; JACOBS, Joseph and Penny; SCOTT, Larry and Connie; TAKEKAWA, Reinosuke and Kuniko. WISHARD MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Boys GIBSON, Carl and Billie; GRISWOLD, Kelly, MEREDITH, Candice. Girls LAMBERT, John and Dawn; LEWIS, Sandra; STOWERS, Shannon; SANDERS, Mae. ACROSS 1 Masculine 5 Goes higher 10 Catch sight of 14 Rara 15 nous 16 Meadows 17 Smug 19 Eng. composer 20 Lamb's mother 21 Cain's father 22 Short coat 24 Grows old 25 Bored with it all 26 Earnest plea 29 Puts on an act 32 Cowboy at times 33 Wild hogs 34 Bind 35 Reptiles 36 Defeats 37 Prima donna 38 Cravat 39 Neon and methane 40 Discussion group 41 Enthralled 43 Foolish blunders 44 Mechanical man 45 Olive genus 46 Noted Russ.

name 48 Particle 49 Public vehicle 52 Red deer 53 Elan 56 Single time 57 Eats to capacity 58 Out of the wind 59 Equal 60 Gaze fixedly 61 Nothing more than DOWN 1 Nutmeg spice 2 State positively 3 rickey 4 Intuitive letters 3 5 6 8 9 10 12 13 15 16 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 129 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 THURSDAY PtCIdy PtCIdy Sunny Cloudy Shwrs Sunny Fair Shwrs Shwrs PtCidy P1CIdy PtCIdy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Sunny Cloudy P1CIdy Cloudy Sunny Cloudy Sunny Sunny PtCIdy Fair Sunny Cloudy P1CIdy PtCIdy Fair P1CIdy Fair CITY TODAY THURSDAY Miami Tstrms P1CIdy Milwaukee P1CIdy Mpls St Paul Fair Nashville P1CIdy New Orleans Sunny Sunny New York City Cloudy Norfolk Va P1CIdy Oklahoma City Omaha P1CIdy PtCIdy Orlando Tstrms Philadelphia Tstrms PtCIdy Phoenix Sunny Pittsburgh Cloudy Portland, Maine Rain Portland, Ore Fair Providence Tstrms Shwrs Raleigh Tstrms P1Cidy St Louis St Thomas V. I. San Diego Fair San Francisco Sunny Sunny San Juan P.R. PtCIdy St Ste Marie Shwrs Shwrs Seattle P1CIdy Spokane Shwrs P1Cidy Tampa Tstrms Topeka P1Cidy Tucson Sunny Tulsa Sunny P1CIdy Washington Dc Shwrs P1CIdy Wilmington, Del P1CIdy National temperature extremes Tuesday Low 24 at Gunnison, Colo. High 106 at Palm Springs, Calif.

National outlook The National Weather Service's outlook for May 26 through May 30 calls for above-normal temperatures over most of the West, northern half of the Plains and upper then Mississippi Valley. Below-normal temperatures are expected over most of the southern Plains, the southcentral states and from the southern mid-Atlantic states southward. Muchbelow-normal readings are possible over the eastern Gulf Coast region and the Southeast. Elsewhere, nearnormal temperatures will prevail. Littie or no precipitation is expected over the southern half of the West, most of the mid-Mississippi Valley and from the Tennessee Valley north through the lower Great Lakes.

Above-normal precipitation IS expected on the Washington coast, northern Nevada, southern Idaho, eastern Colorado, the eastern Gulf Coast and from the mid-Atlantic Coast south over the Atlantic states. Elsewhere, amounts will be mostly near normal. In Indiana, the weather service expects near-normal temperatures and below-normal amounts of precipitation during the period. Air quality (As of 3 p.m. Tuesday) Indianapolis Standard Dirt and dust 34 260 Sulfur dioxide 27 365 Ozone 57 235 Nitrogen dioxide 28 1,130 Carbon monoxide 1.7 10 Pollutants Standards Index: 24 good Monday 7:47 a.m., United Oil 3005 East 10th Street; soft drinks.

10:44 a.m., 30 North Riley Avenue; television, telephone. 11:30 a.m., 500 Festival garage, 951 South White River Parkway, West Drive; unknown. 11:34 a.m., 3244 North Oiney Street; unknown. 11:53 a.m., 3728 North Adams Street; handguns, rifle, VCR, stereo equipment. 12:10 p.m., 5322 East 40th Street; telephones, cameras.

12:50 p.m., 3962 North New Jersey Street; stereo equipment, television, clothing, liquor, jewelry. 3:15 p.m., 1118 East Norton Street; bicycles. 4:11 p.m., 1636 Broadway; handguns, television, VCR. 4:24 p.m., 3862 Strathmore Drive; stereo, microwave oven, figurines, cassette tapes. 4:30 p.m., 1413 Fletcher Avenue; rifles, ammunition.

4:53 p.m., 3217 West Michigan Street; plants, hangers. 5:20 p.m., 851 North Beville Avenue; firearms, ammunition, pocket watch, pillow cases, coin collection. 5:45 p.m., 820 North Hamilton Avenue; nothing missing. 6:10 p.m., 800 Middle Drive, Woodruff Place; ring, beer. 6:15 p.m., 835 North Tecumseh Street; shotguns.

8:20 p.m., 3030 East 37th Street; gold chain. 9:45 p.m., 3540 North Pennsylvania Street; microwave oven, cassette deck, VCR, television. STOLEN VEHICLES Monday 10:15 a.m., 3320 East 26th Street; 1983 Buick Electra, 1985 plate 49D7741. 10:41 a.m., 1142 North Somerset Avenue, 1978 Buick Park Avenue, 1985 plate 93F3114. 12:20 p.m., 2530 South Tibbs Avenue; 1974 black Ford pickup, 1986 plate 4894W.

7:45 p.m., 2000 North Illinois Street; 1984 black Oldsmobile Cutlass, plate 93E9701. Tuesday 1:30 a.m., 400 North Meridian Street; 1935 Chevrolet van, 1986 plate 49L 233. 5:25 a.m., 2346 North Dearborn Street; 1979 Chevrolet Capri, 1986 plate 4510. 7:16 a.m., 4225 Lesley Avenue; 1984 red Oldsmobile Toranado, 1986 plate 97G 1897. HOOSIERS IN CONGRESS John P.

Miler, R-3rd Banking CommitWhat they did tee, office, floor. Daniel R. Coats, R-4th Office, floor. Elwood H. "Bud" Hillis, R-5th In IndiTHE STAR'S WASHINGTON BUREAU ana.

Washington Activities of Indiana's con- Dan L. Burton, R-4th Foreign Affairs gressional delegation Tuesday, May 20: Committee, Veterans' Affairs Committee, SENATE met at 10 a.m. on supplemental office, floor. appropriations for fiscal 1986. John T.

Myers, R-7th Office, Richard G. Lugar, Foreign Relations Francis X. McCloskey, D-8th Veterans' Committee, Agriculture Committee, office, Affairs Committee, office, floor. floor. Lee H.

Hamilton, D-9th Foreign Affairs Dan Quayle, Armed Services Com- Committee, office, floor. mittee, Labor and Human A Resources Com- Andrew Jacobs D-10th Office, floor. mittee, office, floor. HOUSE met at noon on trade legislation. Letters to members of the Senate and Peter J.

Visciesky, D-1st Interior Com- House should be sent to the Senate Office mittee, office, floor. Building, Washington, D.C. 20510, and the Philip R. Sharp, D-2nd Interior Com- House Office Building, Washington, D.C. mittee, office, floor.

20515, respectively. 1986 Tribune Media Services, Inc All Rights Reserved Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 5 Primer FRAN SAVOR PAS 6 Indians of CURE CRONE AVID 7 Halt Peru the flow LEX OAT TES TOT TO 8 Sea eagle TESTTU BE TURNER 9 Pioneers STY ALS 10 Pass SABRAS GREENERY 11 Sinuous AMOUR GROSS TOE 12 Window glass LUNE GLOSS CODA 13 Fr. river 18 Beer SE SLAVE SANER 23 Horse food NADE PARSON 24 Affirmative LADE PAN votes TROUGH LONGTIME 25 Spoiled kids HOLDI A NOSE ASIA 26 Babble ISLE NOVEL ANT 27 Varnish ingredient SEAS DRESS EWES 28 Physical aspect 37 Actor Andrews 46 Boutique 29 Sat for a 39 Large desert 47 Prong picture 40 Lyricist's 48 boy! 30 Undersea products 49 Cotton unit explorer 42 Crumble 50 Dope addict 31 Closes tightly 43 Woman's 51 Pintail duck 33 Attack garment 54 King Cole 36 Titled lady 45 Different 55 a Foreign cities Weather, Temperatures Tuesday City Weather Time Temp. Amsterdam 1 pm 74 Athens Clear 2 pm 83 Berlin Clear 1 pm 68 Cairo Clear 2 pm 82 Copenhagen Clear 1 pm 62 Dublin PtCidy 1 pm 60 Hong Kong 8 pm 81 Jerusalem Clear 2 pm 71 London 1 pm 63 Madrid PtCIdy 1 pm 78 Manila 8 pm 84 Moscow Cidy 3 pm 64 New Delhi 6 pm 92 Paris Cidy 1 pm 74 Rome 1 pm 73 Seoul 9 pm 64 Stockholm Clear 1 pm 66 Sydney 10 pm 59 Taipei Rain 8 pm 76 Tokyo Cidy 9 pm 61 Vienna Cidy 1 pm 68 Indianapolis skies Wednesday, May 21 Sunset today 7:56 p.m. Sunrise Thursday 5:25 a.m.

Moonset Thursday .............4:20 a.m. Full moon Friday Prominent star High overhead and almost directly above the moon at 10:59 p.m. is the bright star Arcturas, a comparatively nearby star only 25 light-years from Earth. Steven A. Nafziger, 9633 Shoreland Lane; Tamera K.

Longenberger, 3917 Trilbey Drive. Anthony L. Root and Mary C. Robbins, both of 965 North Somerset Avenue. Paul W.

Jarboe and Sandra J. Buzek, both of 4176 North Pasadena Avenue. Robert J. Livingston, Pittsburgh; Linnea R. Gilliatt, 404 South Routiers Avenue.

Earl E. Lanter and Sue M. Marten, both of 2206 Oak Run Place. Kerry B. McGeath and Judith P.

Griner, both of 1316 West Epier Avenue. David A. Hudson, Terre Haute; Sherry A. Jessie, 10027 Lake of the Lanterns North Drive. Orval E.

Williamson, 2423 East Kessler Boulevard; Mary E. Wheat, 4723 Kingsley Drive. Police runs Time listed is time reported PERSONAL- ACCIDENTS Sunday 3:30 p.m., Concord and 10th streets; William King, 1129 West 29th Street, unspecified injuries. Monday 12:41 p.m., Morris Street and Belmont Avenue; Tanya Combs, 1829 West View Drive, head injury. 1:57 p.m., Tacoma Avenue and 55th Street; Scott Klemme, 20, 4220 Kessler Lane East Drive, arm injury; David A.

Long, 34, Brownsburg, face injury. 4:57 p.m., College Avenue and 42nd Street; Lakeshia Harris, 4144 North College Avenue, head injury. 8:36 p.m., Keystone Avenue and Kelly Street; Stephen E. Schmidt, 29, 50 North Alabama Street, neck pain; Steven D. Murphy, 39, same address, neck pain; Tuesday 12:14 a.m., Madison Avenue and Hoefgen Street; Cathy Hayes, 3526 North Rybolt Avenue, facial injury.

CITY ROBBERIES Monday 10 a.m., 900 North Pennsylvania Street; billfold. CITY BURGLARIES Sunday 8:23 a.m., 9:51 a.m., equipment. 4:57 p.m., televisions. CRYPTOQUIP IV N. WOSEN AM RT FT IVO MW AH HT KOS DE Yesterday's Cryptoquip: KEEN, AMBITIOUS TRAI NEE AT OUR BAKERY SAYS.

"I NEED A ROLL MODEL." Today's Cryptoquip clue: A equals The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that equals it will equal throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error. C) 1986 King Features Syndicate, Inc JUMBLE THAT by Henri SCRAMBLED Arnold and WORD Bob GAME Lee Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

ICCOL SOITH 21 WHAT PIERCES YOUR EAR WITHOUT LEAVING A HOLE? BLOORE Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as sug: gested by the above cartoon. Print answer here: (Answers tomorrow) DEMON PANIC ARTFUL USEFUL Jumbles: to do at the Yesterday's Answer: What the tow truck was trying auto race -PULL A FAST ONE available for $2.25 plus 55 cents postage and handling from Jumble Book No. 27 is P.O. Box 4366, Orlando, FL 32802-4366. Include your Jumble, this newspaper, name, address, zip code and make check payable to Newspaperbooks.

SEEK FIND BEASTS OF BURDEN CS MT I MA MC RI BAKH OR OT TE RE ON I NE DRUB A NO DL HV DL A HAU AM PT PT YES TAO ON 0 0 SR ME UM KM WI A AR ILN SYNE NT BAL WOBUL A DAL NE YO A EH A ERZAI PRO UP A BR IA NO A HR MO OH I HA I TE LS MT I CSI 1986 HIDDEN WORDS LISTED BELOW APPEAR FORWARD BACKWARD. UP. DOWN OR DIAGONALLY IN THE PUZZLE, FIND EACH WORD AND BOX IT IN. Camel Dromedary Husky Dog Elephant Yak Horse Reindeer Llama Mule Brahman Donkey Oxen Carabao Sumpter LOTTERY NUMBERS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Here are the winning daily lottery numbers drawn Tuesday in nearby states: ILLINOIS Daily Game: 539; Pick Four Game: 6089. MICHIGAN Daily: 062; Daily-4: 7898.

OHIO The Number: 400; Pick 4: 0449. Here are the winning daily lottery numbers drawn Monday in nearby states: ILLINOIS Daily Game: 486; Pick, Four Game: 2690. MICHIGAN Daily: 097; Daily-4: 7244. OHIO The Number: 576; Pick 4: 1780. JOYCE JILLSON'S HOROSCOPE This column is for entertainment only Venus enters Cancer.

Traditional values are stressed in relationships. A patriotic time. Families become tighter and more supportive. Venus here will be favorable for construction, real estate and business in general. More marriages will take place.

The birth rate goes up. ARIES (March 21-April 19). Business gains are more important than popularity. Be forthright in a way that won't offend others. Stay out of nowin situations.

TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20). Deal fairly with others. New ways are found to conquer a frustrating habit. To have love you must be willing to take emotional risks.

Give more than you recieve. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Your good listener skills will be needed: you'll be surprised at what you discover. Avoid hanging around conservative types; you need to let your hair down. CANCER (June 22-July 22).

Overlook people's minor faults. Dream vacations are a distinct possibility. Make preparations now or in the very near future. Find out why your child won't eat properly. LEO (July 23-Aug.

22). Keep your life on an even keel, though it may be hard. Others are bound to make heavy demands on your time. Set priorities and take them in order. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY (May 21) Changes in the daily life and fresh adventure.

June shows financial and personal independence. Investments in July look favorable. October is best for moves. Money is spent on pleasure or socializing in September and January. Love with Cancer or MARRIAGE LICENSES Robert C.

Alexander Des Peres, Cathleen J. Hinant, 530 West 44th Street. Daniel W. Watson, 4544 Mission Drive; Kelly J. Olinger, Centerville.

Anthony J. Cox and Kim L. Giddens, both of 4445 Mission Drive. John F. Holloran Dallas, Texas; Donna R.

Watness, 6015 Orinoco Avenue. Milton P. Bacon, 4926 Winthrop Avenue; Robin E. Dean, 429 Harvard Place. William M.

Smith, 2930 West 11th Street; LaDonna K. Barnett, Indianapolis. Moulay A. Lalaoui and Kathleen R. Jeffers, both of 1475 North Delaware Street.

Lawrence W. Grau and Karen A. Furore, both of 8492 West Rimwood Avenue. Thomas E. Moon and Connie M.

Swininger, both of 1543 Cottage Avenue. Mark Leyden, 9375 College Drive; Maureen T. Battle, 9430 Kungsholm Drive. Jeffrey W. Wolter and Patricia J.

Gahan, both of 5939 Winthrop Avenue. Michael D. Fortune and Cassie S. Fields, both of 4699 Londonderry Court. Gary W.

Walker, 4115 South Weaver Avenue; Dawn M. Manning, 3722 Aurora Street. Mark W. Inman, 8221 Zona Drive; Janice L. Purcell, 1617 Buckridge Drive.

Robert R. Cornwell, 5002 North College Avenue; Sharon L. Gillespie, 4646 North Abington Drive. Mark L. Schuttler and Tracy L.

Schuttler, both of 121 North Euclid Avenue. William T. Barclay and Janie J. Duncan, both of 1239 South Whitcomb Avenue. Peter S.

Davis and Angela D. Robinson, both of 9309 Wittfield Court. Chris A. Arrick and Rebecca L. Miller, both of 10730 Pendleton Pike.

Richard E. Ellis and Penny D. Wright, both of 2440 South Rybolt Avenue. Richard W. Osborn, Muncie; Judy K.

Haag, 6447 Hoover Road. William J. Peacock and Anna M. Raines, both of 355 South Bancroft Street. Thomas D.

Spears, 226 Narcissus Drive; Paula E. Miles, 8211 Trevellian Way. Nathan D. Aliff and Marilyn Street; both of 7819 Rea Road. James T.

Caudill, Taylor Mill, Diana J. Stevens, 5538 Blue Hill Circle. Charles W. Roan, 3965 North Meridian Street; Linda M. Johnson, 3948 North Butler Avenue.

Jay E. May and Kimberly A. Presley, both of 1119 East Hoyt Avenue. Lee A. Benjamin, 7924 Vineyard Drive; Andrea A.

Hoppenrath, 3505 Green Ash Carl D. Wilhite, 6065 North Michigan Road; Victoria A. Pacheco, Columbus. Harold G. Campbell and Gloria J.

Brown, both of 9814 Conway Drive. Todd W. VanParis, South Bend; Sandra L. Berg, 8008 Valley Farms Court. Leon C.

Slayton and Phyllis L. Martin, both of 1906 High Eagle Trail. David C. Bettis and Susan P. Carpenter, both of 7047 Lockerbie Drive.

Leonard R. Setser, Indianapolis; Shirley A. Fairchild, 1212 New Field Lane. Fred D. Gray and Danatte M.

Woolbright, both of 1717 South Asbury Street. James M. White and Twylia J. Lewis, both of 2111 Singleton Street. Jeffrey L.

McGrew, 2220 Harbor Drive; Lacy L. Whitecotton, 115 North Boehning Street. Thomas L. Haynes and Deborah AnnMarie DeSpain, both of 8121 Braeburn North Drive. Gary D.

Keener Jr. and Anna M. Edwards, both of 413 Parkway Avenue. Robert M. Getchell and Cindy L.

Holder, both of 5951 Coquina Key Drive. James M. Mead and Anne Healey, both of 8190 Jordan Lane. Gemini. A quieter November; work things out on your own.

Luck through friends in August, and a chance for a raise. Decide in February whether or not to have children. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).

Avoid trying to pretend emotions you don't have. The truth will cause less pain in the long run. Learn more about business and management. Get good advice. LIBRA (Sept.

23-Oct. 23). Try being direct rather than beating around the bush. Forget an emotional hurt and get on with your life. You are thinking more about family life.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Follow the pattern that is best for you, even if others disapprove. Make changes on your own before life forces them on you.

Keep business partners upto-date on happenings. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Others may not be able to keep up with your physical pace.

You may be getting tired of playing the field in love. Think more about settling down. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19).

Set aside your feelings for now and get down to business. You'll have to make the first move if you want to meet that new person. Money stabilizes. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

18). Others may be overwhelmed by your directness. Use your sense of humor to change people's opinions of you. Spending time with young people will lift your spirits. PISCES (Feb.

19-March 20). Favors come from superiors. Do what you can to subtly further your aims. Find ways to renew your emotional batter. ies.

Tribune Media Services Inc. 5210 Broadway; lawn mower. 5238 North Park Avenue; stereo 3536 North Pennsylvania Street;.

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